Saturday, July 31, 2010

Gaza-Streifen: Hamas verbannt Damenunterwäsche aus Schaufenstern

ZEIT ONLINE: Die islamistische Hamas hat ein neues Verbot verhängt, um die öffentliche Moral wieder herzustellen: Damenunterwäsche darf nicht mehr in Schaufenstern ausgestellt werden.

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Eine muslimische Frau steht vor einem Schaufenster, in dem Unterwäsche ausgestellt wird. Bild: Zeit Online

Die im Gaza-Streifen herrschende Hamas-Organisation hat Damenunterwäsche in Schaufenstern verboten. Damit solle die öffentliche Moral in der palästinensischen Gesellschaft wieder hergestellt werden, sagte Polizeisprecher Aiman Batnidschi in Gaza.

Unter das Verbot fallen auch Schaufensterpuppen. Darüber hinaus müssen Ladenbesitzer künftig Sicherheitskameras abschalten und die Türen zu ihren Geschäften offen halten. Polizisten würden Ausschau halten, ob es zwischen Verkäufern und Kundinnen zu einem "verdächtigen Verhalten" komme, sagte der Sprecher. Er wies zugleich Vorwürfe zurück, die Hamas wolle die Gesellschaft weiter islamisieren. Weiter lesen und einen Kommentar schreiben >>> Zeit Online, dpa | Donnerstag, 29. Juli 2010
Iran Stoning Sentence Woman Asks to Be Reunited with Her Children

THE GUARDIAN: Sakineh Mohammadi Ashtiani's supporters call for support to free her from prison, after sentence was changed to hanging

The Iranian woman whose sentence of death by stoning was commuted to hanging after an international campaign, today sent a message from inside Tabriz prison calling for further support so that she might be reunited with her children.

Sakineh Mohammadi Ashtiani, a 43-year-old mother of two, said she thinks of nothing other than hugging her children and that she was mentally broken when authorities flogged her 99 times in front of her then 17-year-old son, Sajad.

She thanked the world for launching the campaign for her release but said part of her "heart is frozen". "Every night before I go to sleep, I think who would throw stones at me?", she said.

The message was read by Mina Ahadi, of the Iran Committee against Stoning (ICAS), at a press conference in Conway Hall, in London, this morning.

"Put Sakineh's picture beside Neda Agha-Soltan's and don't let Iran repeat what it did with Neda again with Sakineh," said Ahadi, an Iranian human rights activist. Agha-Soltan was shot to death in the aftermath of Iran's disputed election in June 2009 and became a symbol of Iran's post-election rebellion. >>> Saeed Kamali Dehghan | Friday, July 30, 2010
Der Rabbi, der Israel abschaffen will

ZEIT ONLINE: Neturei Karta ist eine Gruppe ultraorthodoxer Juden, die gegen den Staat Israel kämpft. Ihr Leiter will Berater der palästinensischen Regierung werden.

Rabbi Meir Hirsh sitzt in seiner Wohnung in Me’a Sche’arim und wartet. Es ist das Viertel der ultraorthodoxen Juden in Jerusalem. Weiße Häuser, Balkone aus geschwungenen Eisenstangen, alles ein wenig schmuddelig. Putz bröckelt, auf manchen Hausmauern sind Graffiti zu sehen: eine palästinensische Flagge, ein Hakenkreuz. Ultraorthodoxe Juden eilen schnellen Schrittes durch die engen Gassen. Eine Treppe aus weißem Stein führt zur Wohnung von Rabbi Meir Hirsh. Er möchte Berater der palästinensischen Regierung werden.

"Ein Jude ist kein Zionist" steht auf seinem Klingelschild. Meir Hirsh trägt einen schwarzen Mantel, einen luftigen, langen weißroten Bart, die Judenlocken locken sich nicht. Auf dem Kopf sitzt ein Hut, auf der Nase eine dicke Hornbrille. Der Rabbi wartet auf einen Anruf, eine E-Mail, auf einen Brief von Palästinenserpräsident Mahmud Abbas. Mit ihm ist er in regem Kontakt, er will Berater der palästinensischen Regierung werden.

Seit drei Monaten leitet Rabbi Meir Hirsh die Organisation Neturei Karta, eine Gruppierung von ultraorthodoxen Juden, die gegen Israel kämpft. Die Errichtung des Staates Israels von Menschenhand spreche gegen die Thora. Hier steht geschrieben, dass erst nach Ankunft des Messias ein jüdischer Staat entsteht, durch göttliche Fügung. Bis dahin sei es Juden erlaubt hier zu leben, aber nur unter der Führung eines anderen Volkes. >>> Von Viktoria Kleber | Freitag, 30. Juli 2010
Fires Kill Dozens in Russia Heatwave

ABC News: Forest fires sweeping across eastern Russia have killed at least 25 people and the forced the evacuation of thousands in the hottest weather since records began 130 years ago.

Fanned by strong winds, fires ripped through woods and fields that have been scorched for weeks by a heatwave, incinerating hundreds of wooden houses.

"We don't know where to go," said Galina Shibanova, 52, standing outside her burning home in the town of Maslovka in the Voronezh region, about 500 kilometres south of Moscow.

"We called the emergency services, and not one person answered the phone," said Ms Shibanova.

Igor Vlasnev, head of the Voronezh region fire services, said the situation was expected to worsen on Saturday because of rising temperatures.

"Everyone is waiting, and wishing, for rain," he said.

"The forecast for tomorrow is that the situation will worsen both in terms of temperature and wind conditions, which are expected to change (on Saturday night)."

Russia has been sweltering since June in a heatwave that has destroyed crops and pushed thousands of farmers to the verge of bankruptcy. >>> Reuters | Saturday, July 31, 2010

Russia Mobilizes Army to Fight Deadly Fires

Pakistan Cancels Visit to Britain Over Cameron Terror Comments

THE TELEGRAPH: Pakistan's intelligence agency has cancelled planned talks with security experts in Britain following David Cameron's claim that elements within the country are promoting the export of terror, it is reported.

Mr Cameron's comments sparked outrage in Islamabad during this week's trip to India.

The decision precedes a three-day visit to the UK by Asif Ali Zardari, the Pakistani President, during which he is expected to stay with the Prime Minister at his country home, Chequers.

The Times reported that senior officers from Pakistan's Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) had been due to come to London for talks on counter-terrorism co-operation with British security services.

An ISI spokesman sadi: ''The visit has been cancelled in reaction to the comments made by the British Prime Minister against Pakistan.'' >>> | Saturday, July 31, 2010

David Cameron Should Speak Frankly About Britain's Own Terrorists

THE TELEGRAPH: David Cameron's outspoken comments about Pakistan smack of hypocrisy and grandstanding, says Charles Moore.

Since David Cameron is setting a fashion for being blunt, let's join in. He got his tour this week to Turkey and India wrong.

In advance, everyone was promised that British foreign policy would now be politically and financially realistic. It would eschew Blairite ambitions to put the world to rights. It would strengthen bilateral relations and boost trade. Diplomats would no longer be valued for their thoughtful telegrams about the situation in Ruritania, but by their ability to get out and sell British goods and services. We must cut our coat according to our cloth, was the message – and then flog the coat abroad.

And so it was that a huge party of ministers and businessmen accompanied the Prime Minister to the sub-continent, talking about contracts, green initiatives and universities.

But, by Wednesday, things were not going quite right. I was struck by a juxtaposition of stories in this newspaper. One carried the headline: "Gaza is like a prison camp, says PM." Next door, was a report in which Mr Cameron proclaimed that he was approaching India with "humility". Although the Gaza remarks were made in Turkey, not India, the stories did not sit happily together. Was Mr Cameron being blunt or humble? It's hard to be both at once.

When he actually reached India, he did not lower the temperature. Speaking in Bangalore, he said that "we cannot tolerate the idea that this country [Pakistan] is allowed to look both ways and is able… to promote the export of terror". The new Foreign Secretary, William Hague, tactfully explained that the Prime Minister "wasn't accusing anyone of double-dealing". But anyone not trained as a politician or diplomat could see that he was.

Faced with protests, Mr Cameron decided to defend himself. He was simply an honest man abroad, was the line. The British people, he said, did not expect him "to go around the world telling people what they wanted to hear".

Yet the fault in his "gaffes" had something to do with the fact that he was telling his immediate audience what it wanted to hear. In saying that Gaza was a "prison camp", without even mentioning Hamas, he was repeating the line of his host, the Turkish prime minister, Recep Erdogan. Mr Erdogan recently said: "I do not accept Hamas as a terrorist organisation", and one Hamas leader declared: "Mr Erdogan has become our voice." Everything, for Mr Erdogan and for Hamas, is the fault of Israel. Mr Cameron seemed to endorse this. Continue reading and comment >>> Charles Moore | Saturday, July 31, 2010
Nicolas Sarkozy Orders Air Sarko One Plane

THE TELEGRAPH: Nicolas Sarkozy's dream of having his own presidential jet to rival America's Air Force One are about to come true with "Air Sarko One", a £150 million aircraft complete with bedroom, air filter system so he can smoke cigars, and a shower.

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Mr Sarkozy's 176 million euro (£147 million) purchase and refit of the jet from tourist airline Air Caraïbes has raised eyebrows. Photo: The Telegraph

The specially upholstered Airbus A330-200, has just been taken on its first test flight in Bordeaux, southwestern France, with all internal fittings due for completion by October.

The plane will also include a 12-man meeting room, 60 business class seats, top-grade encrypted communications systems, a reinforced fuselage and missile decoy system.

A fleet of smaller jets is also to replace the current Falcon 50 and 900 models at ministers' disposal. This includes two Falcon 7Xs, models often favoured by the world's jet set.

Presidential air force officials have dubbed it "Air Carla One" after his ex-supermodel wife.

The French leader is understood to have long envied the luxurious conditions in which Barack Obama, the US President flies across the world in his Boeing 747-200B, and has complained that his two smaller Airbus A319s lacked the necessary presidential stature. >>> Henry Samuel in Paris | Friday, July 30, 2010

Friday, July 30, 2010

Israeli Rabbis Clamp Down On Burka

THE TELEGRAPH: Israeli rabbis are to clamp down on the growing number of devout Jewish women wearing the burka by declaring the garment an item of sexual deviancy.

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The move was prompted by the husbands of some burka-wearing women. Photo: The Telegraph

At the insistence of the husbands of some burka-wearing women, a leading rabbinical authority is to issue an edict declaring burka wearing a sexual fetish that is as promiscuous as wearing too little.

A small group of ultra-orthodox Jews in the town of Beit Shemesh chose to don the burka, usually associated with women in repressive Islamist regimes, three years ago in a bid to protect their modesty.

Since then, the habit has spread to five other Israeli towns causing alarm among ultra-orthodox religious leaders who once saw it as a relatively harmless eccentricity – even though the number of Jewish burka wearers is not thought to be more than a few hundred.

“There is a real danger that by exaggerating, you are doing the opposite of what is intended [resulting in] severe transgressions in sexual matters,” Shlomo Pappenheim, a member of the rabbinical authority preparing to make the edict, was quoted as saying. >>> Adrian Blomfield in Jerusalem | Friday, July 30, 2010
Islamische Gerichte sind in England legal

SCHWEIZER FERNSEHEN: Wer an Scharia hört, denkt an die Steinigung von Ehebrecherinnen. Tatsächlich steht die Scharia in manchen Teilen im Widerspruch zu den Menschenrechten. Trotzdem gibt es in Grossbritannien seit Jahrzehnten legale Schariah-Gerichte. Doch auch Muslime kritisieren diese religiöse Sondergerichte.

10vor10 vom 26.04.2010
British Muslims Demand Sharia Law

British Muslims Want to Take Over the UK



TELEGRAPH – BLOG – ANDREW GILLIGAN: Fundamentalists one step closer to power: Lutfur Rahman, the politician who was three times barred by the Labour Party from its shortlist for the powerful elected mayoralty of Tower Hamlets, is today back on the list after a legal challenge. >>> Andrew Gilligan | Friday, July 30, 2010
Editorial: Breaking a Promise on Surveillance

THE NEW YORK TIMES: It is just a technical matter, the Obama administration says: We just need to make a slight change in a law to make clear that we have the right to see the names of anyone’s e-mail correspondents and their Web browsing history without the messy complication of asking a judge for permission.

It is far more than a technical change. The administration’s request, reported Thursday in The Washington Post, is an unnecessary and disappointing step backward toward more intrusive surveillance from a president who promised something very different during the 2008 campaign. …



… President Obama campaigned for office on an explicit promise to rein in these abuses. “There is no reason we cannot fight terrorism while maintaining our civil liberties,” his campaign wrote in a 2008 position paper. “As president, Barack Obama would revisit the Patriot Act to ensure that there is real and robust oversight of tools like National Security Letters, sneak-and-peek searches, and the use of the material witness provision.”

Where is the “robust oversight” that voters were promised? Earlier this year, the administration successfully pushed for crucial provisions of the Patriot Act to be renewed for another year without changing a word. Voters had every right to expect the president would roll back authority that had been clearly abused, like national security letters. But instead of implementing reasonable civil liberties protections, like taking requests for e-mail surveillance before a judge, the administration is proposing changes to the law that would allow huge numbers of new electronic communications to be examined with no judicial oversight.

Democrats in Congress can remind Mr. Obama of his campaign promises by refusing this request. Read it all here >>> | Thursday, July 29, 2010
Michael Bublé: Cry Me A River (Official Video)

Argentine Couples Wed Under New Gay Marriage Law

ASSOCIATED PRESS: BUENOS AIRES, Argentina — An architect and a retired office worker are the first couple to wed under Argentina's historic law legalizing same-sex marriage.

Jose Luis Navarro and Miguel Angel Calefato said "I do" Friday morning in the city of Frias, Santiago del Estero Province, shortly after the law took effect.

They have been partners for 27 years. >>> AP | Friday, July 30, 2010

ADVOCATE.COM: Gay Couples Wed in Argentina: The first couples have tied the knot under Argentina’s historic law legalizing same-sex marriage. >>> Advocate.com Editors | Friday, July 30, 2010
Nicolas Sarkozy Threatens to Strip Citizenship from Immigrants Who Target Police *

THE TELEGRAPH: President Nicolas Sarkozy has given warning that France will strip French nationality from any immigrant who uses violence against police or public officials.

French president Nicolas Sarkozy. Photo: The Telegraph

"French nationality should be stripped from anybody who has threatened the life of a police officer or anybody involved in public policing," Mr Sarkozy said.

Speaking in the eastern city of Grenoble, scene in recent weeks of clashes between police and armed rioters, Mr Sarkozy said that foreign minors who commit crimes would henceforth find it harder to get citizenship on coming of age.

And he promised to review the welfare payments made to non-documented immigrants living in France, in a speech made amid renewed accusations that he had swerved to the right to distract from his political woes. >>> | Friday, July 30, 2010

* Is Nicolas Sarkozy the only politician with balls in the West? – © Mark

TRIBUNE DE GENÈVE: Sarkozy: «La nationalité française se mérite» : IMMIGRÉS NATURALISÉS | Le président français veut pouvoir déchoir de leur nationalité les Français d’origine étrangère en cas d’atteinte à la vie d’un policier. >>> AP | Vendredi 30 Juillet 2010
Shock TIME Cover Illustrates the Plight of Women Under the Taliban

GUARDIAN – BLOG – GREENSLADE: Time magazine's latest issue carries this disturbing cover image. It's a portrait of Aisha, a shy 18-year-old Afghan woman who was sentenced by a Taliban commander to have her nose and ears cut off for fleeing her abusive in-laws.

Aisha posed for the picture because she wants the world to see the effect a Taliban resurgence would have on the women of Afghanistan.

Her picture is accompanied by a powerful story on how Afghan women have embraced the freedoms that have come from the defeat of the Taliban — and how they fear a Taliban revival.

Richard Stengel, Time's managing editor, writes: "I thought long and hard about whether to put this image on the cover... First, I wanted to make sure of Aisha's safety and that she understood what it would mean to be on the cover. Continue reading and comment >>> Roy Greenslade | Friday, July 30, 2010

TIME: The Plight of Afghan Women: A Disturbing Picture >>> Richard Stengel, Managing Editor | Thursday, July 29, 2010

TIME: Women of Afghanistan: Living Under the Taliban Threat – Photographer Jodi Bieber meets the extraordinary women of a war-torn nation >>>

Photographing Aisha for the Cover of TIME

Imran Khan Says David Cameron Is Making Pakistan a Scapegoat for Afghanistan Failures

THE TELEGRAPH: David Cameron is trying to make Pakistan a scapegoat for the failure of the war in Afghanistan, former cricketer-turned-politician Imran Khan has said.



During a trip to India, the Prime Minister accused the country of promoting the "export of terror" in Afghanistan and around the world.

Mr Khan compared the treatment of Pakistan with that of Cambodia during the Vietnam war.

"There is obviously a lot of anger in Pakistan at David Cameron's statement because here people feel this country is the biggest sufferer of terrorism," he told the BBC Radio 4 Today programme.

"We are being blamed for the complete failure of the Afghanistan campaign, this doomed campaign. Pakistan has become the scapegoat. Pakistan has become what Cambodia was in the Vietnam War.

"The failure in Vietnam was blamed on Cambodia and Cambodia was destroyed by the bombing. Today Pakistan is being bombed by its ally, the US... killing mostly innocent people." >>> Rosa Prince, Political Correspondent, in Bangalore and Rob Crilly in Islamabad | Friday, July 30, 2010
Liban : Le président syrien et le roi saoudien à Beyrouth pour apaiser les tensions

LE TEMPS: Le président syrien Bachar al-Assad, qui effectue sa première visite au Liban depuis l’assassinat de l’ex-premier ministre Rafic Hariri, est arrivé vendredi à Beyrouth. Il était accompagné du roi saoudien Abdallah pour une mission conjointe destinée à apaiser les tensions.

Les deux dirigeants sont arrivés en début d’après-midi à l’aéroport international de Beyrouth à bord du même avion, celui du roi saoudien, en provenance de Damas, où ils s’étaient entretenus la veille.

Ils ont été accueillis par le président libanais Michel Sleimane, le premier ministre Saad Hariri, un proche de Ryad, le président du Parlement Nabih Berri, plusieurs ministres, dont un représentant le Hezbollah, et d’autres officiels. >>> ATS | Vendredi 30 Juillet 2010
Die meisten Pakistaner sehen in den USA einen Feind: Laut Umfrage einhellige Ablehnung von Drohnenangriffen auf mutmassliche Extremisten

NZZ ONLINE: Trotz massiver Unterstützung sehen einer Umfrage zufolge die meisten Pakistaner in den USA einen Feind. Fast sechs von zehn in einer Umfrage des US-Meinungsforschungsinstituts Pew befragten Personen äusserten diese Einschätzung, nur einer von zehn sah in den USA einen Partner.

Das geht aus einer Umfrage hervor, die Pew im April bei 2000 Pakistanern in Regionen des asiatischen Landes durchführte, die 84 Prozent der Bevölkerung repräsentieren. In den Stammesgebieten zur afghanischen Grenze fanden keine der persönlichen Befragungen statt, teilte Pew bei Vorstellung des Ergebnisses am Donnerstag in Washington mit.

Seit den Anschlägen vom 11. September 2001 sind viele Milliarden Dollar US-Finanzhilfe zur Antiterror-Bekämpfung nach Pakistan geflossen, allein in diesem Jahr wurden 7,5 Milliarden Dollar für die nächsten fünf Jahre freigegeben. Dennoch bezweifelten in der Pew-Umfrage ein Viertel der Befragten, dass die USA wesentliche Unterstützung gäben. Ein Viertel sagte, die USA gäben wenig, zehn Prozent erklärten, Washington gebe kaum etwas. Weiter lesen und einen Kommentar schreiben >>> ddp | Donnerstag, 29. Juli 2010

Egg-throwing Extremist Who Shouted 'Cameron's Bitch' at Muslim Tory Minister Is Jailed

MAIL ONLINE: A Muslim convert who pelted a Tory peer with eggs was jailed for six weeks yesterday.

Gavin Reid, 23, targeted Baroness Warsi as Islamic extremists shouted abuse at her, including 'Cameron's bitch', in a 'planned and deliberate' confrontation.

At least three eggs were hurled at the high-profile champion of Muslim women's rights, one of which broke on her face, soiling her hair and jacket.

At the time of the attack last November, Baroness Warsi - now chairman of the Conservative Party and one of David Cameron's rising stars - was on a visit to Luton with a Tory election candidate.

The group of ten protesters shouted abuse in English and Urdu at the Dewsbury-born former solicitor, accusing her of not being a proper Muslim and supporting the deaths of civilians in Afghanistan. They also demanded the introduction of Sharia law, the Islamic code of conduct, in Britain.

Former removals man Reid, of Luton, was found guilty of an offence under the Public Order Act yesterday at City of Westminster Magistrates Court in London.

Sentencing, District Judge Elizabeth-Roscoe said: 'Throwing eggs goes beyond legitimate political protest and is quite clearly disorderly behaviour, and it is also threatening, abusive and insulting behaviour.' >>> David Wilkes | Thursday, July 29, 2010
Muslim Brides Becoming Virgins Again with Hymen Replacement Operations on the NHS

MAIL ONLINE: Increasing numbers of Muslim brides are having taxpayer-funded ‘virginity repair’ operations before marriage.

There were 116 hymen replacement operations carried out on the NHS between 2005 and 2009. The total for 2009 was 30, up 25 per cent from 24 in 2005.

The health service figures echo a trend reported by private clinics, which are seeing a huge surge in demand for the procedure from Muslim women paying up to £4,000.

One Harley Street clinic said that demand for its half-hour procedure had tripled in recent months.

Doctors say patients are under pressure from future husbands or relatives who insist that they should be virgins on their wedding night.

Critics, including moderate Muslim groups, have condemned the trend as a sign of the spread of Islamic fundamentalism in the West.

During the hymenoplasty procedure – viewed by some as invasive and degrading – the hymen is stitched or reconstructed so that it will tear again and bleed on the woman’s wedding night.

In some cases, the vaginal lining can be used to create a false hymen. A blood capsule can then be inserted into the lining to ensure realistic blood flow when the membrane is broken. >>> Claire Ellicott | Thursday, July 29, 2010
Smoking Ban Extension That Would Outlaw Lighting Up Outside Pubs Is Axed

MAIL ONLINE: Smokers will continue lighting up outside pubs and offices after ministers yesterday scrapped plans to extend the ban.

The last government had proposed enlarging ‘smoke-free’ zones to include the areas around building entrances, but this has been shelved.

Anne Milton, public health minister, said: ‘We have studied the smokefree legislation and decided not to proceed with the planned review.’ >>> Sophie Borland | Thursday, July 29, 2010

Thursday, July 29, 2010

Indian Lecturer Barred from Teaching by Students for Refusing Burka

THE TELEGRAPH: A female lecturer has been prevented from teaching at a Muslim university in eastern India by students demanding that she wear a burka, according to a report.

Aliah University in Calcutta is the first Muslim university in India's West Bengal state and has no formal dress code, but its student union has demanded that female teachers cover themselves with a Muslim veil in class.

Sirin Middya told the Indian Express she had refused to comply and had been prevented from teaching for three months.

"Most of the teachers do not like the diktat of the students to wear the burka, but they have no option but to accept it," she told the newspaper. "This is the Talibanisation of educational premises and there is no one to come to our rescue." >>> | Thursday, July 29, 2010
Barack Obama Criticised Over Daytime TV Appearance

THE TELEGRAPH: Barack Obama became the first sitting US President to appear on a daytime chat show as he attempted to reach out to ordinary Americans following a slump in his opinion poll ratings.

During the unprecedented appearance he was hoping to appeal to so-called "soccer moms" who are being heavily courted by the Republican and answered questions on family life and even the misfortunes of the actress Lindsay Lohan.

Critics have accused Mr Obama of demeaning the office of President by appearing on the sofa of ABC's "The View" alongside the veteran interviewer, Barbara Walters, and Whoopi Goldberg[.] >>> Robert Winnett, Washington | Thursday, July 29, 2010

Is This Man the President of the USA, Or Is He a Media Star?

Britain to Be Biggest Country in Europe by 2050

THE TELEGRAPH: Britain will be the biggest country in Europe by 2050, overtaking both France and Germany, according to official projections.

Britain will see its population swell from today's 62.2 million to 77 million, an increase of 24 per cent.

This will make it bigger than France, projected to be 70 million and Germany, which is predicted to have 71.5 million citizens.

The forecasts come form the Population Reference Bureau, a US body which supplies data to governments and institutions around the world.

The predictions suggest that Britain will see its population increase over the next 40 years at a far faster rate than nearly every other European country. The extra 15 million equates to the combined populations of Glasgow, Birmingham, Manchester, Leeds and Liverpool being added to the total national population over the next two generations.

Britain's population has started to climb sharply in recent years. Last year the Office for National Statistics indicated that mothers had more children than at any time since 1973.

Immigrant mothers accounted for more than half of the increase in births, but the fertility rate among British-born women also rose sharply. >>> Harry Wallop, Consumer Affairs Editor | Thursday, July 29, 2010
David Miliband Calls the Prime Minister a 'Loudmouth'

THE TELEGRAPH: David Miliband has criticised Prime Minister David Cameron, accusing him of being a ''loudmouth'' over his remarks about Pakistan's record on terrorism.

The former Foreign Secretary was speaking as the row continued over comments Mr Cameron made during his trip to India.

Mr Miliband said there was a ''big difference between straight talking and being a loudmouth'' as he claimed Mr Cameron had been ''going off script'' in recent public statements.

The Labour leadership contender said everyone had ''two ears and one mouth'' and it was important to use them ''in that proportion'' when it came to foreign policy.

Mr Cameron caused anger in Islamabad when he warned that Pakistan should not be allowed ''to promote the export of terror'' in the world.

But the Prime Minister denied his comments had overshadowed his trip and maintained that he had good relations with Pakistan, whose president will be visiting him at his country retreat, Chequers, next week.

''I don't think it's overshadowed anything,'' he said. ''I think it's important to speak frankly and clearly about these issues. I have always done that in the past and will do so in the future.'' >>> | Thursday, July 29, 2010

THE TELEGRAPH: David Cameron and Manmohan Singh call on Pakistan to tackle terrorism: Manmohan Singh, the Indian prime minister, and David Cameron have called on Pakistan to tackle terrorist groups operating from its territory. >>> | Thursday, July 29, 2010
Oxford University Lecturer 'Discriminated Against' After Converting to Christianity

THE TELEGRAPH: A lecturer at Oxford University’s centre for Jewish studies claims colleagues discriminated against her after she converted to Christianity.

Dr Tali Argov says she was overlooked for promotion, stripped of her privileges and cold-shouldered at social gatherings.

She says staff wanted to vet her lectures to make sure that, as a Christian, she would not criticise Israel.

Eventually she claims she was made redundant from her post at the prestigious Oxford Centre for Hebrew & Jewish Studies, despite offering to take on new roles.

“It is my belief that, following firstly the conversion of my husband and then the conversion of myself, the treatment which I received as an employee of the Respondents was very different and a number of incidents occurred which led me to believe that I was being discriminated against,” Dr Argov told Reading Employment Tribunal hearing this week.

Dr Argov told the hearing, where she is claiming unfair dismissal and discrimination on the grounds of religion or belief, that she and her husband, Eran, were raised in the Jewish faith and lived in Israel until he was offered a place at Brasenose College, Oxford, to write a doctoral thesis.

They moved to England in 1996 and in 2000 Dr Argov, then studying for a PhD at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, was offered the full-time post of Lector of Modern Hebrew at the Oxford Centre for Hebrew & Jewish Studies. The centre is independent but its students are part of the traditional Oxford college system.

Dr Argov said she was welcomed and appreciated but the “honeymoon” ended after her husband was baptised into the Church of England in 2005, after which time “all those kind, heart-warming gestures disappeared overnight” and she was “considered guilty by association”.

Dr Argov also converted from Judaism to Anglicanism in January 2008, having become “actively engaged” with St Mary Magdalene church in the centre of Oxford, but did not dare tell her parents until after the event. >>> Martin Beckford, Religious Affairs Correspondent | Thursday, July 29, 2010
Carry On Working Past 65 as Default Retirement Age to Be Scrapped in 2011

THE TELEGRAPH: Workers will be able to stay in their jobs into their seventies under new rules to be announced by the Government.

Ministers said they would end the “discrimination” of the Default Retirement Age, which allows companies to force staff out as soon as they turn 65.

Personnel groups welcomed the move, which they claimed would boost productivity and improve employees’ freedom to shape their careers.

Longer working is widely seen as necessary to keep income tax receipts up and reduce the burden on pension funds as Britain’s population ages.

But business leaders warn that employers will find it difficult to plan for the future if they do not know when staff will step down, although compulsory retirement ages could still be enforced in physically demanding jobs such as front line policing.

Older workers who do stay in their posts beyond 65 may also find themselves facing claims that they are not up to the job any more, or that they are keeping younger candidates out of work. Some fear it could lead to more employment tribunal claims from staff who believe they were sacked for being too old.

Ed Davey, the Employment Relations Minister, said: “With more and more people wanting to extend their working lives we should not stop them just because they have reached a particular age. We want to give individuals greater choice and are moving swiftly to end discrimination of this kind.

“Older workers bring with them a wealth of talent and experience as employees and entrepreneurs. They have a vital contribution to make to our economic recovery and long term prosperity.” >>> Martin Beckford and Louisa Peacock | Thursday, July 29, 2010

THE TELEGRAPH: After banning racism and sexism, it's high time to ban ageism >>> Ian Cowie | Thursday, July 29, 2010
Weep for Britain: 1940 This Is Not

THE SPECTATOR: When David Cameron became Britain’s Prime Minister, I warned that he would turn out to be even worse than Labour on the related issues of Israel and the global threat from Islamism to Britain and the west. This was because Cameron had no knowledge of or interest in foreign affairs, and so was always likely merely to reflect the most politically expedient views he encountered – which, given the current poisonous attitude within the British establishment and intelligentsia, were likely to push him into appeasing Britain’s mortal enemies in the Islamic world and dumping on Israel, Britain’s strategic ally in that great struggle.

But even I did not foresee just how cynical Cameron would turn out to be -- and how dangerous therefore to the British national interest. Today’s truly shocking and quite astoundingly stupid speech in Turkey has now laid bare the fathomless shallowness and frightening ignorance and idiocy of Britain’s new Prime Minister.

Declaring himself a fervent supporter of Turkey’s bid to join the EU, Cameron declared that those who opposed this bid fell into one of three categories: protectionists; those who believed wrongly in a ‘clash of civilisations’ between east and west, whereas in fact
Turkey can be a great unifier, because instead of choosing between East and West, Turkey has chosen both;

or

those who wilfully misunderstand Islam

because they

... see no difference between real Islam and the distorted version peddled by the extremists.
Astonishingly, Cameron thus totally ignored the fact that Turkey’s Prime Minister, Recep Erdogan, is no secular Ataturk but an Islamic extremist; and as a result Turkey is changing from a secular state and strategic ally of the west into an Islamist tyranny and a new strategic enemy of the west. Here is what Turkish political economy professor Dani Rodrik wrote recently in the Wall Street Journal (£):
I no longer recognize Turkey, the country where I was raised and spend most of my time when I am not teaching in the U.S. It wasn't so long ago that the country seemed to be taking significant strides in the direction of human rights and democracy... But more recently, the same government has been responsible for a politics of deception, dirty tricks, fear, and intimidation... It's clear now that Turkey is no longer the liberalizing, emerging democracy under the AKP that it was only a few years ago. It's time the U.S. and Europe stopped treating it as such—both for their own sakes, and for the sake of the Turkish people.
Into which category of prejudice would Cameron place the horrified Professor Rodrik – Turkish protectionist, Turkish culture warrior or Turkish Islamophobe?

Or what about the alliances Erdogan has been forging with Islamic terror regimes such as Hamas, Hezbollah, Syria and Iran – and not forgetting his warm overtures to Russia? Is this what Cameron regards as evidence that Turkey is playing the role of ‘great unifier’ between east and west? Continue reading and comment >>> Melanie Phillips | Tuesday, July 27, 2010
US Law to Counter 'Libel Tourism' in British Courts

THE TELEGRAPH: The US has passed a bill to protect American writers and authors from "libel tourism" in British courts by decreeing that foreign libel judgments are not enforceable in the United States.

The move came after years of bewilderment with what are regarded as draconian UK libel laws that saw a string of cases being heard which would never have been brought in the US.

Many involved celebrities or foreigners suing American publications and books whose content was viewed by a relatively small number of people in Britain.

Supporters of the Securing the Protection of our Enduring and Established Constitutional Heritage (Speech) Act said "libel tourism", in which plaintiffs shopped around for countries with tough libel laws, undermined the cherished first amendment of the US constitution that guarantees free speech rights.

The legislation will prevent US federal courts from recognising or enforcing a foreign judgment for defamation that is inconsistent with the first amendment and will bar foreign parties from targeting the American assets of an American author, journalist, or publisher as part of any damages.

Campaigners for more liberal libel law in Britain said they hoped the new law would influence the Government as it prepares a draft reform bill for publication in January.

Padraig Reidy, a spokesman for the Index on Censorship, said: "It's a vindication of our argument that English libel laws in their current state do not encourage or protect free expression. The fact that Britain's best ally feels the need to protect itself from the English libel courts demonstrates the need for reform." >>> Alex Spillius in Washington | Wednesday, July 28, 2010
It’s Romance for Bruni and Her Hollywood Co-star, But Drama Off-screen as Sarkozy Loses His Cool

THE TELEGRAPH: It was supposed to be her great acting debut, as Carla Bruni-Sarkozy, the French first lady, shot her first scene in a romantic comedy by Woody Allen in Paris.

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Nicolas Sarkozy visits his wife Carla Bruni on location during the shooting of Woody Allen's latest film 'Midnight in Paris'. Photograph: The Telegraph

But the real drama appeared to unfold off the set of Midnight in Paris, as the former model engaged in what looked like a real-life lover’s tiff with her husband, President Nicolas Sarkozy.

The reason for Mr Sarkozy’s histrionics was a mystery. But as he watched his wife saunter in and out of a Left Bank grocer’s alongside the film’s star, the Hollywood actor Owen Wilson, the notoriously highly strung leader appeared moody and on edge. >>> Henry Samuel in Paris | Thursday, July 29, 2010

George Clooney’s Girlfriend Implicated in Sex and Drugs Scandal

THE TELEGRAPH: George Clooney’s Italian girlfriend Elisabetta Canalis has been implicated in a wide-ranging sex and drugs scandal involving businessmen, celebrities and high-class prostitutes.

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The Italian press has speculated for months that George Clooney might be about to propose marriage to Elisabetta Canalis. Photo: The Telegraph

Miss Canalis, a former showgirl, is said to have taken cocaine at a nightclub in Milan that is now at the centre of an investigation into an alleged prostitution ring in which rich clients enjoyed the favours of high-class escort girls while taking drugs.

In court documents released in Milan this week, a French escort girl testified that she saw a number of young models and starlets taking cocaine at the clubs, among them Miss Canalis, now aged 31.

“I used cocaine along with other people, among whom was Elisabetta Canalis,” said the French woman, Karima Menad, 26.

Her evidence forms part of a dossier which has been put together by prosecutors on the alleged prostitution ring. The investigation into two Milan nightclubs - 'The Club’ and 'Hollywood’ - resulted in the arrest of five people on Monday and the closing down of the two nightclubs. >>> Nick Squires in Rome | Wednesday, July 28, 2010

CITY JOURNALIST DIRECTORY: Karima Menad sees Elisabetta Canalis Snort Cocaine – Girlfriend of George Clooney >>> Rome / Milan, Thursday, July 29, 2010

Wednesday, July 28, 2010

Saudi Arabian Treasures in Paris

CNN: CNN's Icon previews a new collection of Arabian artifacts, the fruit of a 40-year archeology project.


Sarkozy veut démanteler 300 camps de Roms

20 MINUTES: Le gouvernement français entend démanteler dans les trois mois environ 300 camps illégaux installés en France par des gens du voyage et des Roms.

La France procédera, parallèlement au démantèlement des camps, à la reconduite «quasi immédiate» en Roumanie et en Bulgarie des Roms ayant commis des atteintes à l'ordre public, a ajouté M. Hortefeux à l'issue d'une réunion interministérielle sur les gens du voyage, à l'Elysée. En 2009, plus de 10'000 Roms ont été expulsés de France.

Dans un communiqué, le président de la République Nicolas Sarkozy précise qu'une réforme législative sera entreprise «afin de rendre plus efficace le dispositif d'évacuation des campements illégaux.» >>> ats | Mercredi 28 Juillet 2010
Bild: Google Images

Aus für Schweizer Sonderwünsche

DIE PRESSE: Gewitterwolken über der Beziehungen zwischen der Schweiz und der EU: Brüssel will die bilateralen Beziehungen vereinfachen und drängt auf stärkere Integration. In der Schweiz löste dies eine neue Europa-Debatte aus.

Eigentlich sah man sie schon lange aufziehen, die Gewitterwolken über den schwierigen Beziehungen zwischen der Schweiz und der EU. Zuletzt schwand die Geduld der EU-Länder mit der eigenwilligen Schweiz, die in ihren Verträgen mit der EU stets auf Sonderwünsche pocht. So akzeptiert sie derzeit nur den rechtlichen Status quo zum Zeitpunkt eines Vertragsabschlusses, lehnt aber den automatischen Nachvollzug späterer Regelungen ab. Dies wäre mit der Souveränität der Schweiz nicht vereinbar. Eine klare Bevorzugung des Drittlandes Schweiz, wie Kritiker monieren.

Damit sei jetzt Schluss, verkündete EU-Ratspräsident Herman Van Rompuy überraschend deutlich, als die Schweizer Bundespräsidentin, Doris Leuthard, vergangene Woche nach Brüssel reiste. Künftig müsse die Schweiz bei Verhandlungen über eine Kooperation mit der EU das jeweilige EU-Recht und dessen Weiterentwicklung übernehmen. Zudem will die EU das unübersichtliche Netz an Abkommen mit der Schweiz einfacher verwaltbar machen. Nun steht die Schweiz unter Druck. >>> Von Carola Schneider | Mittwoch, 28. Juli 2010
US President Barack Obama, First Lady Michelle Obama and their daughters Sasha and Malia tour Hopi Point with Park Ranger Scott Kraynak at Grand Canyon National Park. Photograph: The Independent

Last Minute Decision Blocks Parts of Arizona Immigration Law

THE INDEPENDENT: A federal judge on Wednesday blocked the most controversial parts of Arizona's immigration law from taking effect, delivering a last-minute victory to opponents of the crackdown.

The overall law will still take effect Thursday, but without the provisions that angered opponents — including sections that required officers to check a person's immigration status while enforcing other laws.

The judge also put on hold parts of the law that required immigrants to carry their papers at all times and made it illegal for undocumented workers to solicit employment in public places.

U.S. District Judge Susan Bolton ruled that those sections should be put on hold until the courts resolve the issues. Other provisions of the law, many of them procedural and slight revisions to existing Arizona immigraiton statute, will go into effect at 12:01 a.m.

The ruling came just as police were making last-minute preparations to begin enforcement of the law and protesters were planning large demonstrations to speak out against the measure. At least one group planned to block access to federal offices, daring officers to ask them about their immigration status. >>> Associated Press | Wednesday, July 28, 2010
KZ-Gedenkstätte Buchenwald: Neonazis haben die Internetseiten der Gedenkstätte zum Teil zerstört. Foto: Berliner Zeitung

Neonazis zerstören Buchenwald-Internetseite

BERLINER ZEITUNG: Weimar - Die Internetseiten der KZ-Gedenkstätte Buchenwald sind am Mittwochmorgen von Neonazis zum Teil zerstört worden. Die Hacker hätten die Startseite (www.buchenwald.de) gelöscht und stattdessen rechtsradikale Symbole und Parolen eingestellt, teilte Stiftungsdirektor Volkhard Knigge mit.

Außerdem seien die Seiten mit Internetangeboten verlinkt worden, auf denen der Holocaust geleugnet werde. Die Stiftung hat Anzeige erstattet. >>> © dpa | Mittwoch, 28. Juli 2010

Buchenwald >>>
David Cameron Accused of Stoking Anti-Western Feeling on the Streets of Pakistan

THE TELEGRAPH: David Cameron was accused of stoking "anti-Western" feeling on the streets of Pakistan after accusing the Islamic nation of promoting the "export of terror" in Afghanistan and around the world.



In words which were greeted with indignation in Islamabad, the Prime Minister also suggested that Pakistan had links with terrorist groups, and was guilty of double dealing by aligning itself with both the West and the forces it was opposing.

Mr Cameron’s attack was even more unwelcome given that he was speaking during a visit to India, Pakistan’s neighbour and great military rival.

Further inflaming the situation, the Prime Minister announced that export controls on British companies selling nuclear technology and secrets would be lifted, and two UK firms signed a £700 million deal to supply Hawk fighter jets.

Mr Cameron's remarks came during a question and answer session following a speech in Bangalore, after he was asked by a member of the audience why the UK was pouring money into Pakistan, given reports that it was linked to the 2008 Mumbai terrorist attacks. >>> Rosa Prince, Political Correspondent, in Bangalore and Rob Crilly in Islamabad | Wednesday, July 28, 2010
US Fury At Lockerbie Inquiry Snub

SKY NEWS: US senators conducting an inquiry into possible links between BP and the release of the Lockerbie bomber have reacted with fury after British ministers refused to give evidence. Greg Milam reports.

Cameron Angers Pakistan With 'Crude' Comment

SKY NEWS: David Cameron has angered Pakistan after warning it should not be allowed "to promote the export of terror".



Read on >>> Miranda Richardson, Sky News Online | Wednesday, July 28, 2010

Grèce : Le groupe responsable de la mort d'un journaliste promet de nouveaux attentats

LE MONDE: Le groupe grec d'extrême gauche Secte rebelle, dans un message revendiquant l'assassinat du journaliste Sokratis Giolias le 19 juillet dans la banlieue d'Athènes, menace de multiplier les attentats et de perturber la saison touristique en Grèce.

Dans cette revendication de sept pages que publie mercredi le journal de centre gauche Ta Nea, le groupe, qui avait tué un policier antiterroriste à Athènes en juin 2009, promet de frapper encore plus de policiers, de journalistes et d'agents de l'administration pénitentiaire. >>> LEMONDE.FR avec AFP | Mercredi 28 Juillet 2010
Douglas Murray. Photograph: The Jerusalem Post

A Political Culture Gone Bad

THE JERUSALEM POST: Douglas Murray says it’s five minutes to midnight in Britain’s battle against radical Islam.

Listening to Douglas Murray, one gets a picture of a world turned on its head, one where relativism has trumped common sense, where the state pays its enemies more than its soldiers and where turning in the inciters becomes an act of incitement.

Murray is the 31-year-old director of the Center for Social Cohesion, a London-based think tank that studies radicalization and extremism in the UK, and he is an outspoken critic of the British government’s response to the challenge of radical Islam.

Our meeting takes place shortly after the fifth anniversary of the 7/7 attacks, four suicide bombings committed by British Muslim men that killed 52 people and wounded hundreds of others. Murray believes that while the security services have learned the lesson of that event, government and politicians have so far failed to do so.

Britain’s thinking and its political culture, Murray says, have “gone bad” and it has become afraid to state its own values. Britain has become a society that no longer knows how to draw the line.

He is particularly critical of the government’s “Prevent” strategy, set up after the 7/7 bombings to tackle Muslim radicalization by providing a counternarrative. “Prevent,” says Murray, is an example of the government attempting to “do theology.”

“When the British government comes out after 7/7 and says, ‘Islam is a religion of peace,’ you can understand the reasons it is saying this – it is trying to reach out – but obviously there is something terribly counterproductive about this,” says Murray. “The problem is that the government seems to believe it can do theology. I’m a small government guy and I like government to do as little as possible.

The way I see it is that government can’t do many things very well – it doesn’t even do taxes very well, it doesn’t do policing very well, but the thing it definitely can’t do very well is theology, in particular a theology it knows very little about, or is only starting to learn about.”

For Murray the answer lies not in outreach, but in affirming the values of the state and in laying down the law.

“Instead of getting embroiled in endless wars and debates about a religion which is not our national religion, which after all is a minority religion and has no particular history of any significance in Britain – instead of getting involved in that conflict, which may or not be won by the progressives, you say what you are as a state,” he declares.

“A lot of young Muslims have said to me in recent years, ‘You ask me to integrate, but what are we integrating into? What is Britain, what are British values?’ It’s very hard to tell people to integrate if you don’t tell them what they are integrating into. It’s very hard to tell them to be British if they don’t know and you don’t know what Britishness is. The fact is that we have been very poor in saying what we are and we have also been very poor is saying what we expect people to be. We’ve been very good in stressing what rights people get when they come to Britain and very bad at explaining what responsibilities come with them.”

Britain, says Murray, has made a terrible mistake in the direction it has taken with its Muslim minority since the Salman Rushdie Satanic Verses affair.

“The problem is,” he explains, “that the British government has pushed young Muslims into becoming young Muslims when it should have pushed them into becoming young Brits. In other words, the direction of travel it sent them in has been deeply backward.” Continue reading and comment >>> Ilan Evyatar | Thursday, July 15, 2010
Who Is David Cameron to Say What the 'Real Islam' Is?

TELEGRAPH – BLOGS – ED WEST: David Cameron was in Turkey yesterday endorsing Turkish membership of the EU, as blogger Laban Tall says, “doubtless driven by that grass-roots Tory pressure for a few million Turks to come to the UK”.

Personally I’m quite happy for Turkey to have our EU place, if they really want it; or to be a fellow member of a new free trade area along EFTA lines, with restrictions on free movement until some point when its median income reach western European levels.

But until that happens membership of the EU is a non-starter, and everyone knows it.

And as well as being disingenuous about the EU, Cameron is also playing the disingenuous theologian. Rod Liddle points out that he criticises opponents of a Muslim country joining the EU by claiming:
“They see no difference between real Islam and the distorted version of the extremists. They think the values of Islam can never be compatible with the values of other religions, societies or cultures.”

Cameron is falling into exactly the same trap as his predecessors, by trying to play the theologian. Tony Blair called the Koran a “progressive” book, while Jacqui Smith called Islamic terrorism “anti-Islamic” activities, while the phrase “religion of peace” has been used so much by well-meaning politicians that it is now used, exclusively, in an ironic sense by cynics.

Who on earth is Cameron to say what is the real Islam? If a fresh-faced politician from the Islamic world told us that the fundamentalist Christians who funded settlements in the West Bank because they believed in some crazy end times were not “real Christians”, I’d be flattered that he recognised differences within a large and wide ranging religion, but I’d also think “Who are you to say?” Continue reading and comment >>> Ed West | Wednesday, July 28, 2010

Meanwhile, Damian Thompson, in his blog, tells us that Islam is not a cult. Then he goes on to define a cult. Here’s his definition…
My rough and ready definition of a typical cult involves a charismatic leader, radical teachings that tend to alienate adherents from their friends and families, and therefore a high degree of tension between the group and the surrounding environment.
But surely, Mr Thompson, isn't this a perfect definition of Islam, for wasn’t prophet Muhammad the ultimate in charismatic leaders? Aren’t the teachings of Islam radical by anyone’s standards? Doesn't Islam alienate its adherents from their friends and family (if they are not Muslims), and isn’t there a high degree of tension between Muslim groups and the surrounding environment?
Read on and comment >>>
Bullfighting Ban Ordered by Catalonia

THE TELEGRAPH: Catalan lawmakers have voted to ban bullfighting across the northeastern region striking a blow to aficionados of the most emblematic and controversial Spanish tradition.

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Catalonia has only one functioning bullring in Barcelona. Photo: The Telegraph

The Parliament of Catalonia voted 68 in favour and 55 against with nine abstentions to abolish bullfighting on the grounds of animal cruelty ushering in the first outlawing of the tradition on mainland Spain.

The vote followed months of impassioned debate over the subject of bullfighting that pitted animal rights activists against the supporters of what is known as Spain's “national fiesta”.

Campaigners against the “cruel and unnecessary spectacle” hailed the result as a “historic victory” and one that they hoped would be taken up across other regions of Spain.

”Today five centuries of cruelty have ended because the people of Catalonia wanted it,” said Deborah Parris, a spokesman for anti-bullfighting group Prou! – meaning Enough!

”The suffering of animals in Catalan bullrings has been abolished once and for all. It has created a precedent we hope will be replicated in other democratic parliaments, in those regions and countries where such cruel bullfights are still allowed.” >>> Fiona Govan, in Barcelona | Wednesday, July 28, 2010

Catalonia Votes To Ban Bullfighting

SKY NEWS: Catalonia has become the first region in Spain to ban the country's foremost sport - bullfighting. Simon Newton reports.



NZZ ONLINE: Katalonien verbietet den Stierkampf: Entscheid mit 68 zu 55 Stimmen im Regionalparlament >>> sda/dpa/afp | Mittwoch, 28. Juli 2010
L'Oréal Cosmetics Heiress's Daughter's House Searched in Paris

THE TELEGRAPH: French police on Wednesday searched the home of the daughter of the L'Oréal cosmetics heiress Liliane Bettencourt amid probes into her financial affairs that have tainted President Nicolas Sarkozy's government.

Financial fraud officers targeted the home of Francoise [sic] Bettencourt-Meyers, the estranged daughter of the 87-year-old billionaire, who lives about 50 yards from her mother in the chic Paris suburb of Neuilly-sur-Seine.

Five separate judicial investigations are underway regarding Mrs Bettencourt's fortune, including into allegations of tax evasion and illegal campaign funding involving Mr Sarkozy's labour minister, Eric Woerth.

Mrs Bettencourt-Meyers has accused her mother's entourage, in particular the society photographer François-Marie Banier, of taking advantage of the heiress, whom she claims is no longer in a fit mental state to manage her €15.6 billion (£13 billion) fortune.

One of the investigations centres on conversations secretly taped by Mrs Bettencourt's former butler in which she and her financial adviser allegedly plot to evade taxes. They also discuss the ownership of an island in the Seychelles.

Le Figaro newspaper's website claimed the aim of Wednesday's police raid was to find out whether Mrs Bettencourt's daughter had encouraged the butler to secretly record his employer's conversations. She has denied doing so. >>> Henry Samuel in Paris | Wednesday, July 28, 2010

Related >>>
With a Little Help from Your Friends You Can Live Longer

YAHOO! LIFESTYLE UK : Study finds being sociable is good for your health, while loneliness is as bad for you as smoking 15 cigarettes a day

A life of booze, fags and slothfulness may be enough to earn your doctor's disapproval, but there is one last hope: a repeat prescription of mates and good conversation.

A circle of close friends and strong family ties can boost a person's health more than exercise, losing weight or quitting cigarettes and alcohol, psychologists say.

Sociable people seem to reap extra rewards from their relationships by feeling less stressed, taking better care of themselves and having less risky lifestyles than those who are more isolated, they claim.

A review of studies into the impact of relationships on health found that people had a 50% better survival rate if they belonged to a wider social group, be it friends, neighbours, relatives or a mix of these.

The striking impact of social connections on wellbeing has led researchers to call on GPs and health officials to take loneliness as seriously as other health risks, such as alcoholism and smoking.

"We take relationships for granted as humans," said Julianne Holt-Lunstad, a psychologist at Brigham Young University in Utah. "That constant interaction is not only beneficial psychologically but directly to our physical health." >>> The Guardian | Tuesday, July 27, 2010
David Cameron: Pakistan is promoting the ‘export of terror’

THE TELEGRAPH: David Cameron has risked inflaming international relations after suggesting Pakistan is promoting the ‘export of terror’ in Afghanistan and around the world.

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David Cameron visits a technology company in Bangalore. Photograph: The Telegraph

In words which will be greeted with alarm in Islamabad, the Prime Minister also suggested that Pakistan had links with terrorist groups, and was guilty of double dealing by aligning itself with both the West and the forces it was opposing.

Mr Cameron’s attack will be even more unwelcome given that he was speaking during a visit to India, Pakistan’s neighbour and great military rival.

During a question and answer session following a speech in Bangalore, he was asked by a member of the audience why the United Kingdom and the United States were pouring money into Pakistan, given suggestions that it was linked to the 2008 Mumbai terrorist attacks.

Members of the Taliban are also feared to be receiving semi-official succour from Pakistan.

Mr Cameron said that the issue was one that he was extremely concerned about, adding that he had already discussed the problem with US President Barack Obama and would do so also with Manmohan Singh, his Indian counterpart.

He then went on: "We should be very, very clear with Pakistan that we want to see a strong, stable and democratic Pakistan.

“We can not tolerate in any sense the idea that this country is allowed to look both ways and is able, in any way, to promote the export of terror, whether to India or whether to Afghanistan or anywhere else in the world. >>> Rosa Prince, Political Correspondent in Bangalore | Wednesday, July 28, 2010