Monday, March 14, 2011

Saudi Arabian Troops Sent to Bahrain as Protests Escalate

THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: More than 1,000 Saudi Arabian troops have been deployed in Bahrain, following fresh protests over the weekend that pitted protesters from the tiny Gulf monarchy's Shia majority against riot police.

Local residents say they saw Saudi troops driving across the causeway that links the two countries early on Monday.

There was no official comment on the presence of the troops, but a Saudi official said "the force will work under the directions of the Bahraini government and protect vital facilities like oil and power."

The opposition Wefaq movement, however, described the presence of the troops as "an undeclared war" and "a blatant occupation."

Salman bin Hamad Al Khalifa, Bahrain's crown prince offered opposition groups a dialogue on Sunday, but added that "right to security and stability transcends any other consideration." Prince Salman's offer came after protesters after barricaded a road leading into its financial district on Sunday, a working day in the Kingdom, sparking off a two-hour street battle with police.

The clashes were the worst since February 17, when seven protesters were shot dead by police The protests broke out soon after Robert Gates, the US defence secretary, met Bahrain's king to persuade him to undertake reforms Washington believes are necessary to prevent Iran from capitalising on the arrest. » | Diplomatic Editor | Monday, March 14, 2011

Related »
Marine Le Pen à Lampedusa pour parler immigration

LE POINT: La présidente du FN doit se rendre sur l'île italienne, où accostent de nombreux clandestins venus d'Afrique du Nord.

La présidente du Front national Marine Le Pen devait se rendre lundi sur l'île italienne de Lampedusa, où accostent les clandestins venus d'Afrique du Nord, une façon spectaculaire de reparler immigration, thème fétiche de son parti, en pleine campagne électorale en France. Une visite éclair, à peine quelques heures en début d'après-midi sur cette île entre la Sicile et les côtes africaines, où ont accosté depuis quelques semaines des milliers de clandestins fuyant la Tunisie, peut-être la Libye. » | Source AFP | Lundi 14 Mars 2011
Why All Is Quiet on the Syrian Front

THE DAILY STAR: As millions of Arabs stir their respective countries with demonstrations and slogans of change and transition, certain Arab states have been generally spared, including some oil-rich countries and Syria. Syria stands out as a powerful regional player without the benefit of economic prosperity and with a domestic political climate that leaves a lot to be desired. Some say it combines the heavy-handedness of the Tunisian regime, the economic woes of Egypt, the hereditary rule aspects of Morocco and Jordan, and a narrower leadership base than any other country across the Arab world. Why, then, is all relatively quiet on the Syrian front?

We can delude ourselves by resorting to facile explanations related to the threat of severe coercion facing a potential uprising in Syria – which certainly does exist. But the reality of the matter is more complex. To begin with, one must account for the unexpected: a clumsy incident involving a disproportionately brutal reaction against civilians, even in Syria, will spin structural variables out of control.

Any cursory review of the Syrian press, or the press on Syria, reveals that many Syrians empathize with the grievances of their rebellious Arab brethren and share many of them. This includes those who actually protested in small numbers and were harassed or beaten, or both, on Friday, Feb. 4, the planned “Day of Anger” in Syria, and during the few days prior. Other sporadic incidents took place in the past few weeks, but none rose to the level of an explicit anti-regime demonstration, as happened in Egypt and elsewhere. This puts Syria in stark contrast with Egypt. >>> Bassam Haddad | Monday, March 14, 2011
As Afghanistan Falters and the Middle East Burns, How Obama Is Missing in Action

MAIL ONLINE: Every time I come to Washington, I pay a ritual visit to the White House, to stand among the tourists gawping through the railings, fantasising about about what great affairs its tenant might be engaged upon.

On a brisk, grey, early spring morning last week, the wedding-cake residence of the most powerful man on earth looked pretty much the way it did in December 1941 when Roosevelt welcomed Churchill to create the Grand Alliance; in 1962 when Kennedy faced the Cuban missile confrontation; in 1972 when Nixon launched détente with China.

But amid today’s historic upheavals in the Middle East, the occupant of the White House has taken the amazingly insouciant decision that he will watch this global crisis from the bench.

The world reels before the spectacle of the Arab oil nations in turmoil. There seems a danger that Libya’s civil war could merely be the first of a succession in the region. Yet the leader of the Western world has almost nothing to say about it all.

Last Thursday, President Barack Obama’s spokesman made it plain that the United States is content to let other countries lead the pack in forging a Western position.

Obama’s foreign policy is characterised by caution: towards Iran, China and now Libya. Most Europeans find this a welcome change from the adventurism of George W. Bush.

Few sensible people on either side of the Atlantic are clamouring for military intervention - the British Government’s fumbles and lunges have seemed cringe-making.

But, even if this is no time for Western troop engagement, it seems bizarre that Obama, the great speechmaker, is also so parsimonious with words.

America’s allies are bemused by the almost Trappist silence of this U.S. President, his reluctance to engage with many of the huge things that are happening both to his own country and to the world. >>> Max Hastings | Monday, March 14, 2011
Japan Reels from Tsunami Disaster

Al Jazeera's Gerald Tan reports on the emergency confronting Japan after a tsnumai devastates its Pacific coast.

Inside Story - Japan: Mixed messages

As some 200,000 people are evacuated from the area, is Japan facing a nuclear disaster?

Saudi Troops Enter Bahrain

THE AUSTRALIAN: MORE than 1000 Saudi troops, part of the Gulf countries' Peninsula Shield Force, have entered Bahrain where anti-regime protests have raged for a month, a Saudi official said.

The troops entered the strategic Gulf kingdom on Sunday, the official said, requesting anonymity.

The intervention came "after repeated calls by the (Bahraini) government for dialogue, which went unanswered" by the opposition, the official said.

According to the regulations of the Gulf Cooperation Council, "any Gulf force entering a member state becomes under the command of the government," the official added. >>> AFP | Monday, March 14, 2011

Related >>>

THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: Bahrain protests intensify as Foreign Office advises against travel to country: Thousands of anti-government demonstrators cut off Bahrain’s financial center and drove back police trying to push them from the Pearl Square in the most disruptive protests since calls for more freedom erupted a month ago. >>> | Monday, March 14, 2011
Gaddafis Truppen auf dem Vormarsch nach Bengasi

WELT ONLINE: Stück für Stück erobern die Soldaten des libyschen Machthabers das Land zurück. Die Arabische Liga fordert eine Flugverbotszone. Doch der UN-Sicherheitsrat zögert.

Elitetruppen des libyschen Machthabers Muammar al Gaddafi sind im Osten des Landes offenbar auf dem Vormarsch Richtung der Rebellenhochburg Bengasi. >>> dpa/dapd/ks | Montag, 14. März 2011
Japan Earthquake & Tsunami

This disaster is of epic proportions. Whoever could have imagined such a disaster? It has surely touched us all. The Japanese are in need of our help at this extremely difficult time. Let us HELP them NOW. Please make a GENEROUS donation.

BRITISH RED CROSS: Japan Tsunami Appeal >>>

Or donate by phone: 08450 53 53 53

AMERICAN RED CROSS: American Red Cross Responding to Japan Earthquake and Pacific Tsunami >>>

FACEBOOK: 10,000 strong to donate $10 each to the Japan disaster relief fund >>>
Moroccan Police Break Up Rally, Hurt Dozens-Witness

REUTERS AFRICA: RABAT - Dozens of people were injured in Morocco's biggest city, Casablanca, on Sunday when riot police used truncheons to break up a rally by several hundred demonstrators demanding reforms, witnesses said.

"This was a peaceful rally, we don't know what made the police attack a peaceful protest," Ghizlaine Benameur, an opposition activist who took part in the rally, told Reuters by telephone from Casablanca.

"This has been their most violent intervention since the start of the protests last month," she said.

Spokesmen at Morocco's interior ministry could not immediately be reached for comment. >>> Reuters | Monday, March 14, 2011
Pitched Street Battle in Yemeni Capital

Two more people have been killed and scores injured in the latest anti-government protests in the Yemeni capital Sanaa, bringing the number of deaths to more than 30 in just two months.
 According to medical sources, the latest violence erupted when police fired live rounds and tear gas.
 Claims that riot police are using excessive force and suspected prohibited nerve gas have been denied by General Yahya Saleh, the head of the Yemeni security forces.
 Al Jazeera's Hashem Ahelbarra reports from a makeshift clinic set up by protesters near University Square, the scene of ongoing protests. (Mar 14, 2011)

Iran Clamps Down On Ancient Spring Festival Fearing It Could Spark Off Political Protests

THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: Police in Iran have imposed restrictions on an ancient festival which celebrates the triumph of good over evil, fearing that it could catalyse growing public anger against the country's theocratic leadership.

Iranians traditionally leap over bonfires and set off fireworks to mark the pagan festival of Chahar Shanbeh Soori, which is celebrated on the last Tuesday before March 21, the Persian new year.

This year, faced with an increasingly repressive crackdown on dissent, opposition leaders [have] been calling on supporters to use the festival to express their resentment against the regime.

Esmail Ahmadi Moqaddam, a commander with the state security forces, warned that "buying and selling fireworks is illegal, and the police the police [sic] will severely confront offenders on the basis of the law."

Bahman Kargar, another security official, told state television that "more than 3,059,000 fireworks have been confiscated and 65 individuals distributing such material have been arrested."

Iran's rulers have become increasingly worried that they could be swept away by the rising tide of political protest across the region. >>> | Monday, March 14, 2011
Saudi Arabian Forces Prepare to Enter Bahrain after Day of Clashes

THE GUARDIAN: Crown Prince of Bahrain expected to invite Saudi support following anti-government demonstrations in capital

Saudi forces are preparing to intervene in neighbouring Bahrain, after a day of clashes between police and protesters who mounted the most serious challenge to the island's royal family since demonstrations began a month ago.

The Crown Prince of Bahrain is expected to formally invite security forces from Saudi Arabia into his country today, as part of a request for support from other members of the six-member Gulf Co-operation Council.

Thousands of demonstrators on Sunday cut off Bahrain's financial centre and drove back police trying to eject them from the capital's central square, while protesters also clashed with government supporters on the campus of the main university.

Amid the revolt Bahrain also faces a potential sectarian conflict between the ruling minority of Sunnis Muslims and a majority of Shia Muslims, around 70% of the kingdom's 525,000 residents.

The crown prince, Salman bin Hamad al-Khalifa, said in a televised statement that Bahrain had "witnessed tragic events" during a month of unprecedented political unrest.

Warning that "the right to security and safety is above all else", he added: "Any legitimate claims must not be made at the expanse of security and stability."

The crown prince has also promised that national dialogue would look at increasing the power of Bahrain's parliament, and that any deal could be put to nationwide referendum.

However, some protesters have pressed their demands further to call for the toppling of the Sunni dynasty. >>> Ben Quinn | Monday, March 14, 2011
Prime Minister: Japan Will Overcome Crisis

Mar 13 - Prime Minister Naoto Kan says he is confident Japan will overcome the earthquake-tsunami crisis. Deborah Lutterbeck reports

Prayers for Japan

Mar 13 - The Pope calls on the faithful to pray for the victims of Japan's earthquake as citizens of Germany and Russia offer condolences. Deborah Lutterbeck reports

Bahrain Erupts in Violence

Police fire tear gas to disperse crowds in Bahrain as violence erupts. Deborah Lutterbeck reports

Sunday, March 13, 2011

More Than 800 Injured in Bahrain Political Clashes

USA TODAY: MANAMA, Bahrain — Hundreds of people were injured in violent clashes Sunday between protesters and armed civilians backed by police in this small island nation.

The latest violence came after a month of protests led by the Shiite majority to demand sweeping political reforms and possibly the ouster of the nation's Western-allied Sunni monarchy.

The government's Ministry of Interior said in a statement that protest camp tents from near the harbor were "removed." The statement said attempts by uniformed police officers to persuade the protesters to re-open a road reached an impasse and that a group of protesters attacked unarmed police officers.

Police then sought to disperse approximately 350 protesters by using tear gas in order to clear the road, the statement said. >>> Nada Alwadi, USA TODAY | Sunday, March 13, 2011
Saudi Troops Intervene in Bahrain, Reports Say

TEHRAN TIMES: MANAMA – There are reports that Saudi Arabian troops have entered Bahrain to help put down the worst unrest in the country since the 1990s, BBC Arabic said on Sunday.

Earlier in the day, thousands of anti-Khalifa-regime protesters cut off Bahrain’s financial center and drove back police trying to push them from the capital’s central square -- shaking the tiny island kingdom with the most disruptive demonstrations since the calls for more freedom began a month ago. 



Demonstrators also took on King Hamad bin Isa al-Khalifa’s security forces and his supporters on the campus of the country’s main university. 



Riot police fired tear gas and rubber bullets at the demonstrators and surrounded the protesters’ main camp in Manama, AP reported. 



However, the authorities failed to dislodge the thousands of protesters blocking King Faisal Highway in Manama, who were demanding a greater political voice in the strategic Persian Gulf kingdom, the home of the U.S. Navy’s 5th Fleet. >>> Staff and agencies | Monday, March 14, 2011
Japan Earthquake: Race to Prevent a Humanitarian Disaster

THE SUNDAY TELEGRAPH: Japan was in a race to prevent a humanitarian disaster as rescuers struggled to reach tens of thousands of people left homeless by the tsunami.

The world’s third richest country was forced to send out an urgent international appeal for tents, blankets and other life-saving supplies to prevent the death toll rising beyond the current estimate of 10,000.

With night-time temperatures dropping below zero in some of the isolated towns and villages worst-affected by the disaster, charities warned that further lives could be lost if survivors were not given food and shelter quickly.

Last night 590,000 people, many of whom have lost their homes, were living in temporary shelters, including 210,000 people evacuated from the area around the Fukushima nuclear power plant, which suffered an explosion in a reactor building at the weekend.

Officials admitted that a second reactor at Fukushima could explode. A state of emergency was also declared at a separate site in Onagawa because of unusually high levels of radioactivity, while engineers reported problems with the cooling system at a third site in Tokai.

Although the official death toll stood at 1,596, the true scale of the tragedy remained unclear last night, with tens of thousands of people — including hundreds of Britons — still unaccounted for. >>> Gordon Rayner and Harry Wallop | Sunday, March 13, 2011
Crowley Quits Over Manning Comments

AL JAZEERA ENGLISH: US state department spokesman resigns after calling Pentagon 'stupid' over treatment of soldier accused over WikiLeaks.

US state department spokesman PJ Crowley has resigned from his post following controversial comments involving the whistleblowing website WikiLeaks.



The news on Sunday came three days after Crowley was reported to have criticised the Pentagon's treatment of detained US soldier Bradley Manning.

Crowley said the defence department's handling of Manning, who is accused of leaking thousands of confidential US documents to WikiLeaks, was "stupid" and "counterproductive". >>> Source: Al Jazeera and agencies | Sunday, March 13, 2011

Related >>>
News Bulletin - 1735GMT Update (March 13, 2011)

The main headlines on Al Jazeera English, featuring the latest news and reports from around the world

State Department’s Crowley Quits, Citing WikiLeaks Comments

BLOOMBERG: State Department spokesman Philip J. Crowley has resigned following comments criticizing the U.S. military for its treatment of Private First Class Bradley Manning, a soldier detained on allegations he shared classified documents with the anti-secrecy group WikiLeaks, according to a statement from the agency.

Crowley, known as P.J., said on March 10 the military has mistreated Manning and described the conditions of his detention as “ridiculous and counterproductive and stupid,” according to a blog posted by BBC reporter Philippa Thomas.

President Barack Obama said the U.S. Department of Defense assured him that Manning is not being mistreated. Crowley said the “impact of my remarks” led to his decision to leave the State Department. >>> Jeffrey Young | Sunday, March 13, 2011
Libya Says 'Armed Gangs' Cleared From Brega

Forces loyal to Muammar Gaddafi have cleared rebels from the eastern oil town of Brega, according to Libyan state television.


SKY NEWS: It quoted a military source as saying Brega was "purged of armed gangs". >>> Mike Bradbury, Sky News Online | Sunday, March 13, 2011
The Remains of a Japanese Town


Related >>>
Moammar Gadhafi Holds On


Related >>>
White House Chides Yemen, Bahrain Governments for Violence

REUTERS: The White House chided U.S. allies Yemen and Bahrain on Sunday for violence used against protesters in those countries and urged both to exercise restraint.

"We urge the governments of these countries to show restraint, and to respect the universal rights of their people," the White House said in a statement.

"We urge the government of Bahrain to pursue a peaceful and meaningful dialogue with the opposition rather than resorting to the use of force."

One person died and scores were hurt on Sunday when Yemeni police fired live rounds and tear gas at protesters in Sanaa demanding an end to President Ali Abdullah Saleh's 32-year rule, according to medical sources. >>> Reuters | WASHINGTON | Sunday, March 13, 2011

Related material here and here
Yemen Protests Continue Despite Clashes


REUTERS: One dead as Yemen police open fire on protesters: One person died and scores were hurt on Sunday when Yemeni police fired live rounds and tear gas at protesters in Sanaa demanding an end to President Ali Abdullah Saleh's 32-year rule, medical sources said. >>> Mohamed Sudam | SANAA | Sunday, March 13, 2011
Oman Sultan to Cede Some Powers after Protests

REUTERS: Oman's ruler has decided to cede some legislative powers to a partially elected council, the state news agency reported on Sunday, in an apparent effort to quell protests in the Gulf Arab sultanate.

The ONA agency also said Sultan Qaboos bin Said would double monthly welfare payments and increase pension benefits, becoming the latest Gulf ruler to offer handsome incentives to citizens in the wake of unrest that has rocked much of the Arab world.

The normally tranquil Oman, an oil-producing nation at the mouth of the Gulf, was stunned by protests in at least two cities last month that left one person dead.

The sultan, who has ruled Oman for 40 years, sacked a string of ministers in a recent cabinet reshuffle and on Sunday appeared to make his biggest concession yet by announcing that he would offer lawmaking powers to the Oman Council.

At present, only the sultan and his cabinet can legislate. >>> Saleh Al-Shaibany | MUSCAT | Sunday, March 13, 2011
Protesters Seal Off Bahrain’s Financial Center

THE NEW YORK TIMES: CAIRO — Thousands of antigovernment protesters in Bahrain blocked access to the financial district in Manama, the capital, on Sunday, preventing many workers from getting to their offices and pushing back the police who tried to disperse them. It was the most serious challenge to the royal family that rules Bahrain since protests began last month.
Witnesses said the police used tear gas and fired on the protesters with rubber bullets.

“This was a very, very big day,” Mohammad al-Maskati, president of the Bahrain Youth Society for Human Rights, said by telephone from Pearl Square, the epicenter for protests in central Manama. “Now the protesters control these streets. There are walls of rubble keeping out the police and armed groups. People say they will not sleep tonight.”

There were also clashes at the campus of the main university, where protesters contended that the security forces were protecting armed vigilantes accused of fomenting tensions between the 70 percent of the population that is Shia and the Sunni ruling family and elite. >>> Ethan Bronner | Sunday, March 13, 2011

Related >>>
Libye: l’armée progresse et coupe les communications à Benghazi

TRIBUNE DE GENÈVE: Toutes les communications des téléphones portables étaient coupées dimanche à Benghazi, le fief de l’insurrection dans l’Est libyen. En parallèle, l’armée du colonel Mouammar Kadhafi progressait vers la ville.

Les communications des opérateurs Libyana et Al Madar ne fonctionnaient plus. Il était toutefois difficile de savoir jusqu’où cette coupure s’étendait.

Dimanche, les loyalistes continuaient à avancer vers l’Est le long de la côte libyenne, repoussant davantage les rebelles, à coups de bombes, roquettes et mortiers. >>> ATS/AFP | Dimanche 13 Mars 2011
Police, Protesters Clash in Bahrain While Hundreds Rally in Saudi Arabia

THE WASHINGTON POST: DAMMAM, Saudi Arabia – Security forces and protesters clashed in Bahrain on Sunday during the most violent day in weeks, and hundreds marched in Saudi Arabia to demand the release of prisoners who have been detained without charges.

Witnesses in Bahrain said that hundreds of people were injured after police fired tear gas at protesters and attacked them with batons as they tried to shut down capital city Manama's financial center on the first day of the country's workweek. Protesters threw gas canisters and stones at police.

Later in the day, clashes between pro-government supporters and protesters took place near the University of Bahrain, witnesses said.

In Riyadh, hundreds of family members of people who have been jailed without charges rallied in front of the Ministry of Interior calling for their release, said Mohammed Al-Qahtani, founder of the Association of Civil and Political Rights in Saudi Arabia. The protest was peaceful, with no clashes between police and demonstrators, he said. >>> Michael Birnbaum | Sunday, March 13, 2011

Related video >>>
Ex-Libyen-Geisel Hamdani im Interview

584 Tage wurde er in Libyen festgehalten. Vor einem Jahr kam er frei. Jetzt spricht Rachid Hamdani in der Rundschau über die Forderung von Aussenministerin Calmy-Rey nach einer Strafuntersuchung und seine Hoffnung auf Gerechtigkeit.

Rundschau vom 09.03.2011
Immense Schäden in Japan

In Japan ist das Ausmass der Katastrophe riesig. Die japanischen Behörden sprechen von mehr als 1'400 Toten und tausenden Vermissten. Der zehn Meter hohe Tsunami hat zahlreiche Häuser einfach weggespült.

Tagesschau vom 12.03.2011

Verbunden >>>
Les forces kadhafistes chassent les insurgés de Brega

REUTERS FRANCE: AJDABIAH, Libye - Après Ras Lanouf la veille, les insurgés anti-kadhafistes ont évacué dimanche la ville pétrolière stratégique de Brega, sur le golfe de Syrte, après un violent bombardement des troupes gouvernementales qui ont fait sauter ainsi un nouveau verrou sur la route de Benghazi.

"Les rebelles ont quitté Brega. La ville a été évacuée", a déclaré par téléphone à Reuters un habitant de Brega, Oussama Djazouine, un anesthésiste de 33 ans. "Le bombardement a commencé vers 10h30 (08h30 GMT) sur l'entrée principale de la ville."

Un autre habitant de la ville, Abdoul Hakim, a confirmé que les combattants insurgés avaient quitté la localité.

La télévision publique libyenne, citant une source militaire, a annoncé que les rebelles étaient en retraite et que Brega avait été "nettoyée des bandes armées".

Dans la ville voisine d'Ajdabiah, les insurgés qui demandent l'aide internationale pour neutraliser l'aviation loyaliste semblent démoralisés. >>> Par Mohammed Abbas | Dimanche 13 Mars 2011
Japan Braces for Power Outages

Mar 13 - As tens of thousands of residents are evacuated from areas close to a damaged nuclear plant, earthquake survivors receive more bad news as authorities plan power cuts. Simon Hanna reports


Related / Verbunden >>>
Jewish-American Contractor Alan Gross Sentenced to 15 years in Cuba Jail

HAARETZ: Court said prosecutors proved case that Gross was working on a subversive program, paid for by the U.S., that aimed to bring down Cuba's revolutionary system.

HAVANA - A Cuban court yesterday found U.S. contractor Alan Gross guilty of crimes against the state and sentenced him to 15 years in prison, a verdict that is sure to have sweeping repercussions for already-sour relations between Washington and Havana.

The court said prosecutors had proved their case that Gross, 61, was working on a subversive program, paid for by the United States, that aimed to bring down Cuba's revolutionary system. Prosecutors had sought a 20-year sentence.

The Maryland native was arrested in December 2009 while on a USAID backed democracy-building project. The U.S. government and Gross's family say he was working to improve Internet access for the island's Jewish community and should be released. >>> The Associated Press | Sunday, March 13, 2011
Tear Gas Used on Bahrain Protesters

Footage appears to show man shot in chest with tear gas canister as police also use rubber bullets on Manama protesters


AL JAZEERA ENGLISH: Riot police in Bahrain have used tear gas and rubber bullets in an attempt to force a group of hundreds of anti-government protesters from blocking the capital's financial district. >>> Source: Al Jazeera and agencies | Sunday, March 13, 2011
Libyans Mourn Slain Al Jazeera Cameraman

An Al Jazeera cameraman has been shot dead while working in eastern Libya. The network has condemned the attack as a cowardly crime.
Ali Hassan al Jabr from Qatar was one of three people travelling in a car when it was ambushed.
Gerald Tan reports

Vent de réforme en Arabie Saoudite

leJDD.fr: La "journée de la colère" convoquée par des appels sur internet n’a pas fait recette dans le royaume pétrolier. Mais la vague de contestation dans le monde arabe pourrait produire des effets en Arabie Saoudite: le roi Abdallah s’apprêterait à faire entrer des chiites au gouvernement et à donner le droit de vote aux femmes pour les élections municipales.

"Une tempête dans un verre d'eau." C'est ainsi que le richissime prince saoudien Al-Walid ben Talal, neveu du roi Abdallah mais aussi l'une des plus grandes fortunes de la planète (25 milliards de dollars), a qualifié la journée du vendredi 11 mars. Une journée annoncée comme LA journée de la contestation dans le premier pays producteur de pétrole au monde. Finalement, il n'y a pas vraiment eu de manifestation dans le royaume saoudien vendredi, jour de grande prière.

Il convient de préciser que le dispositif de sécurité inédit mis en place par les autorités saoudiennes était impressionnant. Les quartiers du centre de la capitale, Olaya street, King Fahd road, étaient quadrillés, et les mosquées étaient placées sous très haute surveillance. Durant toute la semaine, le ministère de l'Intérieur avait multiplié des messages de mise en garde, rappelant à la population l’une des règles découlant de la charia: l'interdiction de manifester en Arabie Saoudite. Manifestation le 20 mars? >>> Clarence Rodriguez, correspondance à Riyad - Le Journal du Dimanche | Samedi 12 Mars 2011
Prince Andrew in New 'Cash for Favours' Row

THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: The Duke of York has been engulfed in a new “cash-for-favours” row after a close friend paid off £50,000 of his ex-wife’s debts.

David Rowland, a financier once described as “shady” in Parliament, gave the sum to the Duchess of York’s former press spokesman Kate Waddington, whom the Duchess owed in the region of £85,000.

In 2009, the Duke opened Mr Rowland’s bank in Luxembourg in his official capacity as Britain’s special representative for international trade and investment, despite the fact that the one-day visit was not officially sanctioned by the Government department in charge of promoting British business abroad.

While the vast majority of the Duke’s overseas visits are funded by UK Trade & Investment, Buckingham Palace admitted that the Duke had paid for the trip to Luxembourg to open Banque Havilland personally.

The disclosure that Mr Rowland has paid off a large part of what the Duchess owed Miss Waddington will add to concerns that the Duke is abusing his position for his own personal benefit. >>> Robert Mendick, Chief Reporter | Saturday, March 12, 2011

Related >>>
Drink Strength Cut in Alcohol "Pact" to Tackle Bingeing Epidemic

THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: The alcoholic strength of one of Britain’s bestselling drinks is to be cut by up to a quarter as part of a Government “pact” with supermarkets and the drink industry.

The deal, to tackle the growing binge-drinking culture, will also see one of the Big Four supermarkets restricting the display of beers and wines for the first time and the number of units of alcohol stamped on millions of pint glasses in pubs.

It will form a key part of a wide-ranging “responsibility deal” between the alcohol and food industries, retailers and the Government.

It is thought that when the deal is announced this week by Andrew Lansley, the Health Secretary, it will be the biggest voluntary agreement of its kind between the Government and business.

Food firms including McDonald’s, Subway, PepsiCo and Pizza Hut will also reveal a health pledge which will cover a reduction in salt and sugar content, health advice and information and better calorie labelling. >>> Kamal Ahmed, Business Editor | Saturday, March 12, 2011

My comment:

Lansley is an interfering, meddlesome sort of a guy, isn't he? He likes to stick his nose into all manner of things. First it was smoking, now it's drinking. What next? Perhaps they should make it compulsory for us all to convert to Islam. That way they'll have done with all these health problems. At a stroke! Maybe that's what these useless politicians are aiming for.

As for binge-drinking, I agree it is a dreadful problem. But these silly little measures won't do an iota of good in the fight against it, for the problem has its roots elsewhere.

If they are truly serious about tackling binge-drinking, then they need to start encouraging mothers to stay at home to look after their children; they need to start encouraging mothers to raise their children properly. So please pass the necessary laws to make this possible. Further, they need to discourage divorce: make a divorce much harder to obtain. And very importantly, the government needs to pass laws which promote family values, because these binge-drinkers, I'd bet a dollar to a dime, have no-one to sanction their bad behaviour. In an old-fashioned, traditional family, they would. The mother would be overseeing them, as would the father, and the grandparents.

So stop demonising the drink, and get dealing with the real issues – the true causes of the problem. Alcohol isn't the problem; its misuse is.
– © Mark


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Merkel will Konsequenzen aus Atomunfall in Japan prüfen

Inside Story - Japan's Nuclear Crisis

Is this the nightmare scenario of nuclear meltdown becoming real? And what can be done to contain the nuclear threat while at the same time dealing with the widespread destruction caused by Japan's largest recorded earthquake?


THE NEW YORK TIMES: Japanese Scramble to Avert Meltdowns as Nuclear Crisis Deepens After Quake: TOKYO — Japanese officials struggled on Sunday to contain a widening nuclear crisis in the aftermath of a devastating earthquake and tsunami, saying they presumed that partial meltdowns had occurred at two crippled reactors and that they were bracing for a second explosion, even as they faced serious cooling problems at four more reactors. >>> Hiroko Tabuchi and Matthew L. Wald | Sunday, March 13, 2011
Gaddafi Forces Gaining Ground?

Professor Comments on Japan's Nuclear Crisis

Dr Ilham al-Qaradawi, a professor of nuclear physics at Qatar University, talks to Al Jazeera about the risk of a nuclear meltdown in Japan


Related material here, here, here, and here
Japan on High Nuclear Alert

Official says a partial meltdown is "highly possible" as police chief says death toll could top 10,000


AL JAZEERA ENGLISH: A partial meltdown is likely under way at one nuclear reactor, a senior Japanese official has said, as operators
frantically tried to keep temperatures down at the Fukushima Dai-ichi power plant's other units following a devastating earthquake and tsunami that may have killed as many as 10,000 people. >>> Source: Al Jazeera and agencies | Sunday, March 13, 2011

New Footage Shows the Moment the Massive Tsunami Slammed into Japan's Coastline

Japanische Regierung schließt Kernschmelze nicht aus

REUTERS DEUTSCHLAND: Sendai - Die japanische Regierung schließt nicht aus, dass es in zwei Atomreaktoren des schwerbeschädigten Meilers Fukushima 1 zu einer Kernschmelze gekommen ist.

Zudem drohe in Block 3 der Anlage eine ähnliche Explosion wie am Samstag in Block 1, als das Betongehäuse einstürzte, sagte Kabinettschef Yukio Edano am Sonntag. Das Atomkraftwerk war bei einem Erdstoß der Stärke 8,9 am Freitag schwerbeschädigt worden. Das bislang stärkste Beben in der Geschichte Japans und ein dadurch ausgelöster Tsunami verwüsteten weite Teile im Nordosten des Landes. Es sei nahezu sicher, dass mehr als 10.000 Menschen ums Leben gekommen seien, zitierte der TV-Sender NHK den Polizeichef der Präfektur Miyagi, Naoto Takeuchi.

Auf die Frage von Journalisten, ob Brennstäbe in der Anlage teilweise geschmolzen seien, sagte Edano: "Diese Möglichkeit besteht." Bestätigen lasse sich dies nicht, da man nicht prüfen könne, was sich im Inneren der Reaktoren abspiele. Aber in beiden Fällen würden Maßnahmen getroffen, die auf einer solchen Annahme fußten. Später sagte Edano, es sei unwahrscheinlich, dass sich in Block 3 eine Kernschmelze ereignet habe. Womöglich hätten sich die Brennstäbe zum Teil verformt. Es bestehe nach dem Ausfall der Kühlung aber das Risiko einer Explosion, allerdings werde die eigentliche Hülle des Reaktors davon vermutlich nicht betroffen sein. Am Samstag hatte eine Explosion die Beton-Außenhülle von Block 1 zerstört. Die Stahlhülle des Reaktorkerns blieb aber nach Angaben der Regierung intakt. >>> Reuters | Sonntag, 13. März 2011