La jeune femme s'est confiée au quotidien russe Komsomolskaya Pravda. Selon elle, sûr, Kadhafi est en très bonne forme. "Il prend soin de sa santé et, tous les ans, il fait des examens médicaux. Et sa tension artérielle, on ne peut que l'envier... " déclare l'infirmière. Le personnel du leader a pris l'habitude de l'appeler Papa. C'est d'ailleurs ainsi qu'elle-même le désigne. "Côté gastronomie, Papa est un homme sans prétention. Il aime le couscous à la viande de chameau ou de mouton. Comme tous les Libyens, il adore la cuisine italienne, surtout les pâtes." » | Le Point.fr | Mercredi 06 Avril 2011
Wednesday, April 06, 2011
La jeune femme s'est confiée au quotidien russe Komsomolskaya Pravda. Selon elle, sûr, Kadhafi est en très bonne forme. "Il prend soin de sa santé et, tous les ans, il fait des examens médicaux. Et sa tension artérielle, on ne peut que l'envier... " déclare l'infirmière. Le personnel du leader a pris l'habitude de l'appeler Papa. C'est d'ailleurs ainsi qu'elle-même le désigne. "Côté gastronomie, Papa est un homme sans prétention. Il aime le couscous à la viande de chameau ou de mouton. Comme tous les Libyens, il adore la cuisine italienne, surtout les pâtes." » | Le Point.fr | Mercredi 06 Avril 2011

THE GUARDIAN: Bashar al-Assad also orders closure of Syria's only casino in bid to appease Muslims ahead of proposed anti-regime protests
Syria has closed the country's only casino and reversed a ban on teachers wearing the Islamic veil – moves seen as an attempt to reach out to conservative Muslims ahead of calls for pro-democracy demonstrations.
Syrian activists have urged protesters to take to the streets on Wednesday and the following two days to honour more than 80 people who were killed in a crackdown on demonstrations that erupted nearly three weeks ago.
President Bashar al-Assad's decisions on Wednesday were unusual concessions to religious concern in Syria, which promotes a strictly secular identity.
The recent protests, however, have brought sectarian tensions into the open with thousands of people taking to the streets calling for democracy in a country where Alawites – followers of a branch of Shia Islam who represent just 11% of the population – have been in power for nearly 40 years. The country is overwhelmingly Sunni Muslim. » | Associated Press in Cairo | Wednesday, April 06, 2011
Labels:
burqa,
female teachers,
gambling,
Islamic veil,
niqab,
Syria

KURIER.AT: Die Torte mit Nazi-Symbolen eines Bäckers bleibt nicht ohne Folgen. Der Konditor aus Maria Enzersdorf entschuldigte sich.
Ich wurde am Telefon als Nazi-Schwein beschimpft, man hat mir und meiner Familie den Tod gewünscht und Gäste haben mir ausrichten lassen, dass sie nicht mehr ins Lokal kommen." - Konditor Manfred Klaschka aus Maria Enzersdorf (NÖ) bekommt die Auswirkungen der "Torten-Affäre" deutlich zu spüren. Wie berichtet, hatte das "Mauthausen Komitee Österreich" Anzeige erstattet, weil sich in einer Mustermappe von Klaschka Fotos von Torten mit Nazi-Symbolen (vom Hakenkreuz bis zum Hitlergruß) fanden. » | Mittwoch, 16. April 2011
KURIER.AT: Zuckerbäcker bot Nazi-Torten an: Im Bezirk Mödling wurden Süßwaren gespickt mit Nazi-Symbolen feil geboten. Das "Mauthausen Komitee Österreich" hat Anzeige erstattet. » | Mittwoch. 04. April 2011
FOCUS ONLINE: Konditor wegen Nazi-Torten angezeigt: Österreich ist für seine vielfältigen Süßspeisen bekannt – eine sehr geschmacklose Kreation hat einem Konditor nahe Wien nun aber eine Anzeige eingebracht: Der Bäcker bietet mit Nazisymbolen verzierte Torten für jeden Anlass an. » | jba/dapd/dpa | Dienstag, 05. April 2011
DIE PRESSE: Niederösterreich: Konditor bäckt Torten im Nazi-Design – Im Bezirk Mödling wurde ein Konditor angezeigt, der mit NS-Symbolen verzierte Torten im Programm hatte. Er selbst "würde auch Gaddafi backen". » | APA | Dienstag, 05. April 2011
THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: Austria: 'Nazi' cakes cause outrage – A pastry maker in Austria has had a complaint filed against them [sic] by a Holocaust survivors group for baking cakes decorated with Nazi designs. » | Emanuelle Degli Esposti | Wednesday, April 06, 2011
24HEURES.CH: Signes nazis sur des gâteaux: un pâtissier autrichien dans la tourmente – Une association autrichienne de survivants de l’Holocauste a porté plainte contre un pâtissier qui décorait, à la demande, ses gâteaux avec des symboles nazis comme des croix gammées. » | AFP | Mercredi 06 Avril 2011
Labels:
Austria,
l'Autriche,
Österreich
Labels:
Iran
Mohamed Ibrahim Soliman, Egypt's former Housing Minister, has been arrested on corruption allegations, becoming the latest member of the former Mubarak government to be detained over allegations regarding deals worth billions of dollars.
Much less publicised in Egypt, however, are the cases of political activists who have been detained since the fall of Hosni Mubarak. Many have been charged with spreading "false information" and insulting the country's powerful military, which currently controls the state.
Al Jazeera's Zeina Khodr reports on one such case from Cairo.
Labels:
blogger,
Egypt,
military,
political prisoners
Internal unrest through the Arabian gulf.
But the country being painted as the aggressor is just 300 kilometres across the famous stretch of water - Iran.
The unrest is being billed as one between the Gulf Co-operation Council (GCC) nations and their Persian neighbour.
The foreign ministers of the six nations - Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates recently met in Riyadh.
They released a statement criticising what they called Iran's blatant interference in internal affairs, particularly in Bahrain and Kuwait. This comes after Iran's objection to Saudi Arabia sending in troops to Bahrain during the uprising there.
In return, Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said on Monday the GCC statement was issued under the pressure of the US government and its allies.
This episode of Inside Story discusses what 'Iranian meddling' may or may not amount to, and just what the GCC and indeed Iran are achieving by ratcheting up the rhetoric at this time.
Inside Story, with presenter Kamahl Santamaria, discusses with guests: Hussein Shobokshi, a columnist for Asharq Alaw-sat newspaper; Ghanbar Naderi, a political commentator and jounalist; and Fahad Shulemi, a security analyst and a former colonel in the Kuwaiti army.
This episode of Inside Story aired on Tuesday, April 5, 2011.
Labels:
Bahrain,
GCC,
Iran,
Kuwait,
Qatar,
rising tensions,
Saudi Arabia,
Sultanate of Oman,
the Gulf,
UAE
THE NEW YORK TIMES: PARIS — France’s governing party pressed ahead on Tuesday with a controversial debate on the nature of secularism and the challenges of Islam, an exercise criticized by some in the government and numerous religious leaders and ridiculed as cynical by both the Socialist opposition and the far-right National Front.
Held at a Paris hotel in the presence of some 600 religious leaders, legislators and journalists, the debate was shunned by prominent members of the government, and its title was altered to remove any reference to Islam, resulting in the anodyne “Secularism: To Live Better Together.”
It was three hours of debate after two months of fierce political squabbling.
Initiated by President Nicolas Sarkozy, the debate was organized by the leader of his party, the Union for a Popular Movement, Jean-François Copé. But the prime minister, François Fillon, quietly refused to take part, fearing that it would push the party too far to the right and might lead to “a stigmatization of Muslims,” he said, leading Mr. Copé to accuse him of “not being a team player.”
The concern is to help along a Westernized version of Islam that fits within the behavioral and cultural norms of France, which accept gender equality and the private nature of religious belief.
Mr. Copé said the debate was “controversial but necessary,” saying that “the values of France are like the Three Musketeers: liberty, equality, fraternity.” He would add a fourth, he said — secularism. » | Steven Erlanger and Maïa de la Baume | Tuesday, April 05, 2011
Labels:
debate,
Islam in France,
Secularism
NPR: The pastor of a Florida church says he does not plan to burn any more Qurans — but Terry Jones has said that before.
Jones first made headlines around the world last September, when he announced — and then called off — plans to publicly burn a copy of the Quran at his church in Gainesville, Fla. But on March 20, he actually did it — and though it drew little media attention at the time, it has since sparked protests in Afghanistan that have claimed 20 lives.
Jones' event was markedly different from the scene outside his church last year, when reporters, cameras and satellite trucks made him a dubious worldwide celebrity — at least for a while.
To make sure the word got out, Jones' church, the Dove World Outreach Center, videotaped the event and put it up on its website. It was a mock trial, complete with a prosecutor, a jury of church members and a judge played by Jones himself. The charges: "The Quran is charged with death, rape, torture of people worldwide whose only crime is not being of the Islamic faith."
At the conclusion of the trial, Jones and his jurors pronounce the Quran guilty, and a kerosene-soaked copy of the Muslim holy book is placed on a barbecue grill and set aflame.
Jones says he did it to raise awareness about the nature of radical Islam and was surprised when it attracted little notice at first. A few days later, however, the small flame Jones lit in Gainesville was kindled into something much larger half a world away.
Afghan President Hamid Karzai strongly condemned the act, leading to a series of protests in Afghanistan that have claimed more than 20 lives, including those of seven U.N. employees.
Jones says he feels no responsibility for those deaths. » | Greg Allen | Wednesday, April 06, 2011
Labels:
burning,
Christian fundamentalism,
Florida,
Koran,
USA
Tuesday, April 05, 2011
THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: Britain is responsible for many of the world’s historic problems, including the conflict in Kashmir between India and Pakistan, David Cameron has said.The Prime Minister appeared to distance himself from the imperial past when he suggested that Britain was to blame for decades of tension and several wars over the disputed territory, as well as other global conflicts.
His remarks came on a visit to Pakistan, when he was asked how Britain could help to end the row over Kashmir.
He insisted that it was not his place to intervene in the dispute, saying: “I don’t want to try to insert Britain in some leading role where, as with so many of the world’s problems, we are responsible for the issue in the first place.”
His remarks about Kashmir were greeted warmly by the audience of Pakistani students and academics, but drew accusations from historians that the Prime Minister was wrongly apologising for Britain’s past.
Daisy Cooper, the director of the Commonwealth Policy Studies Unit, said: “This is typical of the UK’s schizophrenic relationship with former colonies where it is both proud and embarrassed about its past. The Coalition has said that it has big ambitions for a modern Commonwealth and the UK should stop being embarrassed about its colonial past and they should work with other countries to help improve their human rights.” » | James Kirkup, in Islamabad and Christopher Hope | Tuesday, April 05, 2011
Labels:
David Cameron,
Kashmir dispute,
Pakistan
THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: Nick Clegg’s drive to stop privileged children with "sharp-elbowed" parents monopolising internships was undermined when he admitted securing a placement at a bank with the help of his father.The Deputy Prime Minister was embarrassed as he launched his landmark social mobility strategy, which includes at its heart a plan to open up work experience to all classes, after it emerged that he also employed unpaid interns in his parliamentary office.
Speaking at an event to launch the strategy, he said it had been “wrong” of his wealthy banker father to have secured him a placement at a Finnish bank by “having a word” with a friend who worked there.
“I think the whole system was wrong,” he added. “I am not the slightest bit ashamed of saying that we all inhabited a system that was wrong.”
Mr Clegg announced that he was banning the practice of unpaid work experience across his party after a former intern came forward to say that he had not even been paid out of pocket expenses such as travel and lunch while working for free for the Liberal Democrat leader.
The Coalition is moving to take action on the “tacit conspiracy” which sees privileged professionals give their children a leg up in life by using contacts to secure internships, which are often viewed as the first step on the career ladder.
As part of the strategy, Mr Clegg called on employers to pay interns the minimum wage, or at least reasonable expenses, to avoid excluding those who could not afford to work for free. » | Rosa Prince, Political Correspondent | Tuesday, April 05, 2011
Labels:
banking,
Nick Clegg,
social mobility

THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: Jeremy Irons has said that smokers deserve to be protected like disabled people and children, during a scathing attack on New York's crackdown on lighting up in public.
The veteran British actor has become one of the most high profile critics of efforts by Michael Bloomberg, the Mayor of New York, to improve public health by banning smoking in city-owned open spaces.
Earlier this year, Mr Bloomberg – himself a reformed ex-smoker – pushed through a law making it illegal to light up in 1,700 parks, public squares and beaches, including Central Park and Times Square.
The ban, which carries a £31 fine, came eight years after Mr Bloomberg prohibited smoking in all of the city's bars and restaurants. A similar ban was imposed in Britain four years later.
Mr Irons, who was in New York to guest-star in an episode of Law & Order, a television series, described the measures as "ludicrous and a terrible bullying of a minority that cannot speak back."
Smokers should be protected like "handicapped people and children", he told an interviewer for New York magazine [sic], who said the 62-year-old's teeth were "a testament to a life of indulgences." » | Jon Swaine, New York | Monday, April 04, 2011
AFP: 'Home-grown' rebellion fights New York smoking ban » | Sebastian Smith, AFP | Wednesday, March 23, 2011
BBC: Nick Clegg has come under fire over his plan to improve social mobility, with Labour claiming it is "mission impossible" with him at the helm.
In an angry Commons exchange, deputy leader Harriet Harman accused Mr Clegg of "betraying a generation of young people" by raising tuition fees.
But the deputy PM said Labour had failed to improve social mobility despite doubling public spending.
He said the coalition's "overriding mission" was to make society fairer.
The deputy prime minister faced questions in the Commons after unveiling the government's social mobility and child poverty strategies – entitled Opening Doors, Breaking Barriers.
He said he wanted to stop people getting on in life purely because of "who they know" and has announced that informal internships for young people in Whitehall would be banned.
"They should get an internship because of what they know," he told the BBC.
"It's not just because of someone who's met somebody at the tennis club or the golf club, who's whispered something into someone's ear and they've got an internship for their son or daughter." (+ video) » | Tuesday, April 05, 2011
THE SUN: PRINCE Harry is back on the cigs, The Sun can reveal.The royal soldier, 26, tried to give up after his ten-week stint in Afghanistan in 2008.
But he has been seen smoking again and took his favourite Marlboro Golds on his Walking with the Wounded North Pole challenge.
A source said: "Harry has really battled with fags, but he doesn't seem able to give up once and for all.
"One reason he smokes is boredom. He's been learning to fly helicopters - which is great when you're flying but there's a lot of sitting around, doing nothing.
"Harry has been training hard for his ice trek, but that hasn't stopped him puffing away.
"If he wants to give up, he's clearly got a challenge on his hands." » | Duncan Larcombe, Royal Editor and Richard White | Monday, April 04, 2011
Labels:
cigarettes,
Prince Harry,
smoking

THE GUARDIAN: A week before the burqa ban, French Muslims find themselves accused of violating republican values
Claude Guéant, France's interior minister, was in typically conciliatory mood when he described the growing number of Muslims in his country as a "problem". Pointing to the fact that this community had grown from "very few" when the republic became a secular one in 1905, to 5-10 million today, Guéant highlighted the sight of many of them "praying in the street" as particularly undesirable. Guéant's government has chosen a period of unprecedented tension and volatility in the Arab world to launch a debate about the negative influence of Islam on French society. As his own pilots attack Libya with a ferocity so far not displayed by other coalition members, President Nicolas Sarkozy will settle down on Tuesday to watch the epic discussion unfold at a Paris hotel. Continue reading and comment » | Nabila Ramdani | Tuesday, April 05, 2011
My comment:
I have full sympathy for Sarkozy and for what he is trying to achieve. The man has courage indeed. That’s more than can be said for the wimps that govern us.
It must be remembered that France takes its secularism very seriously. They didn’t have a revolution for nothing! The revolution stood for liberté, egalité, and fraternité. Those three concepts are precisely what Islam does not stand for. Islam does not stand for liberty (unless one is talking about the liberty to worship Allah); Islam does not stand for equality (unless one is a member of the faith and referring to the equality of Muslim brothers and sisters); and Islam does not stand for farternity (unless one is talking of the fraternity of the ummah).
So it is very understandable that Sarkozy and his colleagues want to launch this debate on Islam, secularism, and la République. Were I to be he, I should wish to do the same; moreover, I wish that our politicians had the courage to stand up for what we believe in too. Alas, they are far too cowardly. – Mark
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PINK NEWS: A study of older gay men, lesbians and bisexuals in California suggests that they have poorer health than their straight counterparts.
According to the data from the California Health Interview Survey, gay and bisexual men between 50 and 70 have higher rates of physical disability, diabetes and high blood pressure than straight men of the same age.
Older gay and bisexual men were 45 per cent more likely to report psychological distress and one in five said they were living with HIV.
Half lived alone, compared to just 13 per cent of straight men.
Lesbian and bisexual women also had poorer health, with higher rates of physical disability and psychological distress.
They were also more likely to live alone than straight women.
Steven P Wallace of the UCLA Center for Health Policy Research, who led the research, said: “Many aging LGB Californians do not have biological children or strong family support. » | Jessica Geen | Tuesday, April 05,
Labels:
bisexual,
California,
gays,
homosexuality,
lesbians,
study

PINK NEWS: Ireland’s first public civil partnership ceremonies were due to take place this afternoon.
The law came into force on January 1st, although the vast majority of couples were required to give three months notice of their intent to tie the knot.
Six couples who obtained a special court exemption have had civil partnerships since February 7th. The couples, who all requested privacy, will have been granted exemptions on compassionate grounds, for example, when one partner is terminally ill.
Today, Dublin couple Hugh Walsh and Barry Dignam will be the first to have a civil partnership without a court exemption. Another couple is expected to follow them. » | Jessica Geen | Tuesday, April 05, 2011
Labels:
Cairo,
Egypt,
state of emergency
Labels:
Gaddafi,
Libya,
peace,
Saif Gaddafi
THE NEW YORK TIMES: WASHINGTON — The Obama administration dropped financial sanctions on Monday against the top Libyan official who fled to Britain last week, saying it hoped the move would encourage other senior aides to abandon Col. Muammar el-Qaddafi, the country’s embattled leader.But the decision to unfreeze bank accounts and permit business dealings with the official, Moussa Koussa, underscored the predicament his defection poses for American and British authorities, who said on Tuesday that Scottish police and prosecutors planned to interview Mr. Koussa about the 1988 Lockerbie bombing and other issues “in the next few days.”
Mr. Koussa’s close knowledge of the ruling circle, which he is believed to be sharing inside a British safe house, could be invaluable in trying to strip Colonel Qaddafi of support.
But as the longtime Libyan intelligence chief and foreign minister, Mr. Koussa is widely believed to be implicated in acts of terrorism and murder over the last three decades, including the assassination of dissidents, the training of international terrorists and the bombing of Pan Am 103 over Lockerbie, Scotland.
“He was both the left arm and the right arm of the regime, its bloodhound,” said Dirk Vandewalle, a Dartmouth professor who has studied Libya for many years.
Mr. Vandewalle recalled a dinner with friends in Libya a few years ago when one man mentioned Mr. Koussa’s name, a dangerous faux pas. “The conversation just stopped,” he said. “People switched to a different topic. Koussa was considered beyond the pale.” » | Scott Shane | Tuesday, April 05, 2011
Labels:
defection,
foreign minister,
Libya,
sanctions
THE NEW YORK TIMES: WASHINGTON — Counterterrorism operations in Yemen have ground to a halt, allowing Al Qaeda’s deadliest branch outside of Pakistan to operate more freely inside the country and to increase plotting for possible attacks against Europe and the United States, American diplomats, intelligence analysts and counterterrorism officials say.In the political tumult surrounding Yemen’s embattled president, Ali Abdullah Saleh, many Yemeni troops have abandoned their posts or have been summoned to the capital, Sana, to help support the tottering government, the officials said. Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula, the group’s affiliate, has stepped in to fill this power vacuum, and Yemeni security forces have come under increased attacks in recent weeks.
A small but steadily growing stream of Qaeda fighters and lower-level commanders from other parts of the world, including Pakistan, are making their way to Yemen to join the fight there, although American intelligence officials are divided on whether the political crisis in Yemen is drawing more insurgents than would be traveling there under normal conditions. » | Eric Schmitt | Moonday, April 04, 2011
THE WASHINGTON POST: A painting at the Gauguin exhibit at the National Gallery was attacked last week by a gallery visitor, provoking considerable commotion, according to other museum visitors and gallery officials.Screaming “This is evil,” a woman tried to pull Gauguin’s “Two Tahitian Women” from a gallery wall Friday and banged on the picture’s clear plastic covering, said Pamela Degotardi of New York, who was there.
“She was really pounding it with her fists,” Degotardi said. “It was like this weird surreal scene that one doesn’t expect at the National Gallery.”
Gallery spokeswoman Deborah Ziska said no damage to the 1899 painting was immediately apparent after the 4:45 p.m. incident. But she said a more thorough examination will be conducted Monday.
In the painting, both breasts of one woman are exposed, as is one of the second woman’s breasts.
The woman who allegedly attacked the painting was “immediately restrained and detained” by the museum’s federal protection services officers, who charged her with destruction of property and attempted theft, Ziska said in a statement. » | R. Smith and Martin Weil | Monday, April 04, 2011
PINK NEWS: Woman attacks ‘evil homosexual’ Gauguin painting: A woman who attacked a Paul Gauguin painting in Washington DC’s National Gallery claimed she did it because it is “very homosexual”. » | Jessica Geen | Tuesday, April 05, 2011
Labels:
art,
Washington DC
ARAB NEWS: JEDDAH: A total of 30 officials of the Commission for the Promotion of Virtue and Prevention of Vice (Haia) have been trained on how to deal with cases of black magic.The three-day training program was held in the Eastern Province city of Al-Ahsa.
The commission has achieved remarkable successes in combating black magic in various parts of the country. It has set up nine specialized centers in the main cities to deal with black magicians. » | MD Humaidan | ARAB NEWS | Monday, April 04, 2011
Labels:
Saudi Arabia,
sorcery,
virtue and vice
THE INDEPENDENT: In this anti-elitist age, snobbery seems ridiculously outmoded. But, argues John Walsh, there's an awful lot of it about ...Like a duchess unwarily revealing her pants to the world's gaze, Oliver Letwin, the Cabinet Office minister, reportedly let slip a tiny flash of bigotry. He was talking to Boris Johnson about whether there should be more airports when he allegedly said: "We don't want more people from Sheffield flying away on cheap holidays."
Instantly, he revealed himself as a ridiculously old-fashioned snob – the kind who assumes that Northerners are whippet-owning paupers, that the poor should be persuaded to stay in their place, and that cheap holidays are less acceptable than expensive ones in Letwina, or wherever the minister goes in August.
The besetting sin of snobbery is that it reduces people, places, things and behaviour to one dimension, which can be despised without further thought (Kate Moss – common; Birmingham – ghastly; Saturday TV – vulgar; brown shoes worn in town – not done.) With luck they will live, and converse, with other snobs who agree with their views, so they can share conspiratorial shrieks about Kate Middleton's family background or Osborne & Little wallpaper. Sometimes, though, they'll misjudge their audience (to be fair, Letwin was speaking to a fellow Old Etonian) and the cat will be out of the bag. » | John Walsh | Tuesday, April 05, 2011
My comment:
This excellent article sums it all up perfectly. Thank you! The British have cornered the market in snobbery, I'm afraid. There's no snob like a British snob. The English, in particular, are past masters at the silly little game. Nowhere else in the world – and I have worked in a few countries – have I observed snobbery as bad as in the UK. By the way, looking at that photo of Oliver Letwin, it's hard to see what he has to be snobbish about! – © Mark
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THE GUARDIAN – BLOGS – RICHARD ADAMS: "GOP presidential contest begins to warm up," the Los Angeles Times declared. That was on 7 March. In the weeks since then, can you feel the excitement? No, me neither.
In fact the most dramatic thing to happen during the nomination contest to date is Barack Obama's announcement that he's running for re-election. And he faces no primary opposition.
Compared with the same stage in 2007, when the presidential primary season was running at full steam, 2011 is a flat tire. But it's not just the lack of activity – the Republican candidates being touted are a collection of has-beens, nobodies and deadbeats, several of them barely household names in their own households. And those are the most electable ones. Continue reading and comment » | Richard Adams | Tuesday, April 05, 2011
Labels:
Republicans,
US politics

CNN: Tripoli, Libya -- With no end to Libya's bloody war in sight, a source close to the country's leadership said a Libyan envoy is floating the idea of ruler Moammar Gadhafi passing his power to a son -- a notion rebel leaders deem merely cosmetic.
Under the proposal, Saif al-Islam Gadhafi, 38, would help to usher in swift reform, the source said. But Saif Gadhafi has become one of his father's most outspoken defenders since the start of the unrest, despite once being perceived as a leading reformer in the Libyan government.
But a proposal to shift power from Gadhafi to his second-oldest son is "a ridiculous offer," said Ali Aujali, a former Libyan ambassador to the United States who now represents the Libyan opposition in Washington.
"Libyan people, they decided, and they will not go back at all (to) Gadhafi or any member of his family," Aujali said. "His sons, they are killers -- they're just like their father."
Aujali said the rebels are willing to offer Moammar Gadhafi and his family safe passage out of Libya in an exchange for an end to the fighting -- but that's as far as their offer goes. » | CNN Wire Staff | Tuesday, April 05, 2011
FRANFURTER ALLGEMEINE – DER KOMMENTAR: Gaddafis Manöver: Gaddafis Versuch, über Verhandlungen sein Gesicht zu retten, ist zum Scheitern verurteilt. Schließlich ist die Gegenregierung im Aufwind: Ein französischer Diplomat wurde bereits in Benghasi akkreditiert, Qatar hat die Übergangsregierung anerkannt. » | Von Wolfgang Günter Lerch | Montag, 04. April 2011
Labels:
Libya,
rebellion,
Saif Gaddafi

THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: The Prince of Wales risked controversy on Monday as he laid a wreath at the tomb of a tyrannical former ruler of Morocco.
The Prince and the Duchess of Cornwall arrived in Rabat amid continuing protests against the country's undemocratic regime, and paid their respects at the Mausoleum of Mohammed V, where the late king and his son Hassan II are buried.
The reign of Hassan II, who died in 1999, was marred by the deaths of hundreds of people who protested against his regime, including more than 300 people who were killed during demonstrations and 174 who died in custody.
Morocco is in the middle of a "peaceful revolution" after the present king, Mohammed VI, promised to give up his executive powers, including the right to choose the prime minister and other ministers, following widespread street protests in the past two months.
Fouad Abdelmoumni, an economist and pro-democracy campaigner, suggested the timing of the Prince's visit to Hassan II's tomb was far from ideal.
He said: "Some people would think that it's not the best time for him to do this kind of thing, and not the best place to visit."
One of the leaders of the protests, who asked not to be named, said: "Hassan's human rights record was appalling and the families of people who were killed during his rule will not be happy with Prince Charles laying a wreath at his tomb, though I don't think the wide majority of Moroccans will have strong opinions about it."
Despite concerns before the visit that the Prince and the Duchess could be confronted by protesters during their three-day stay, the only time they saw demonstrators was when they drove past a group of teachers camped outside the education ministry demanding better pay and conditions. » | Gordon Rayner, Rabat | Monday, April 04, 2011
EXAMINER.COM: Charles and Camilla arrive in Morocco, meet King Mohammad VI » | Megan Knight | Royal News Examiner | Tuesday, April 05, 2011
Related »
Labels:
Camilla,
King Mohammed VI,
Morocco,
Prince Charles
THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: The son of Osama bin Laden has claimed he was invited to the White House in the final days of George W Bush's presidency in a last-ditch attempt to discover the whereabouts of the world's most wanted terrorist.Omar bin Laden, the fourth son of the al-Qaeda leader, claims he received a visit from White House staff in January 2009 at his home in Doha, the capital of Qatar.
"They invited me to accompany them to the White House, offered to defend, help and protect me, on the condition that I helped them find my father," he told Spanish daily newspaper La Vanguardia, in an interview published on Monday.
But the 29-year-old said he refused because of filial duty. "I told them I was sorry but it wasn't something I could do. He is my father and I am his son, and as is the way the son must love and respect his father," he said, adding: "Even if in many cases a man may be against the ideas of his father."
But the son who was once groomed to take over from bin Laden later admitted that he had had no contact with his father for almost a decade. Read on and comment » | Fiona Govan, Madrid | Tuesday, April 05, 2011
THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: A rift in the Gaddafi family has emerged as two hardline sons of the Libyan leader have dismissed efforts to implement a ceasefire as part of a diplomatic initiative to end the Nato bombing campaign.Mutassim Gaddafi, the National Security Adviser and Khamis Gaddafi, the commander of elite forces, have confronted supporters of a peace plan that has circulated in diplomatic circles in Tripoli.
Diplomats have said that Saif al-Islam Gaddafi, another son, had offered to act as interim president to oversee a transition to a democratic system. The offer would mean Col Muammar Gaddafi's withdrawal from power and the end of the family's tyrannical hold on power.
But one family aide said there had been arguments over Saif's initiative, which is supported by Saadi, another brother with power in the armed forces. He said: "It is not in the military interest of the government to have a ceasefire now. While we have the momentum, Mutassim wants to keep going." The official said that the brothers had argued over a ceasefire.
While Saif believes that talks would be impossible without a ceasefire, Mutassim wants to ensure the regime cannot be beaten. He is reported to have said: "People get sick of dying, we have to keep fighting until we've beaten the opposition."
Mutassim and Saif have been rivals for almost a decade. A US diplomatic cable said that Saif's overseas reputation – he cultivated British and US leaders while living in London as a PhD student – had made Mutassim jealous.
All four brothers are known to enjoy glamorous social events. The singer Beyoncé performed for Mutassim in the Caribbean at the New Year. » | Damien McElroy, Foreign Affairs Correspondent | Monday, April 04, 2011
Labels:
Libya,
Saif Gaddafi
Monday, April 04, 2011

THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: The Prince of Wales and the Duchess of Cornwall arrived in Morocco today where they were welcomed in traditional style - with a glass of milk.
The royal couple were greeted off their plane at Rabat airport by Prince Moulay Rachid, brother of the Moroccan King Mohammed VI and immediately sat down to milk, pastries and dates.
The traditional offering symbolises ''sweet and pure intentions'', the Moroccan hosts said, and it appeared to please the British royals who chatted animatedly with the prince and his wife, Princess Lalla Joumala Alaoui.
The visit comes as the North African nation reaches a historical crossroads following the Arab Uprisings.
Morocco has so far avoided persistent unrest but several people died in February during violence linked to protests.
King Mohammed made a rare television appearance on March 9 announcing major constitutional reform.
Speaking before he was introduced to the British royals, Moroccan prime minister Abbas El Fassi described it as a ''peaceful revolution''.
He said: ''This is a very big event for Morocco, for the King to have invited the Prince, and it will reaffirm the historic relationship between the two countries.
''There is conformity in our views in many areas - international problems, regional problems and the fight against terror.
''This visit is a symbol because it comes at a moment of instability in many countries and the Prince, by visiting Morocco, is confirming that Morocco is a stable country.'' » | Monday, April 04, 2011
Labels:
Camilla,
Morocco,
Prince Charles
Labels:
Deutschland,
Guido Westerwelle
THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: Adolf Eichmann, the bureaucratic mastermind of the Holocaust, regretted that he failed to exterminate all of Europe's Jews, saying "there was more we could have done", recordings have revealed.Eichmann showed only disappointment that some survived, according to newly declassified files. Looking back on his role in organising the systematic slaughter of Jews, gipsies and other groups, he says: "We didn't do our work correctly."
Recordings of Eichmann were made in the 1950s while he was hiding in Argentina. They have come to light after the German news magazine Der Spiegel found them in 4,500 files on his case recently opened by Germany's intelligence services. » | Matthew Day, Warsaw | Monday, April 04, 2011
Labels:
anti-Semitism,
Germany,
Holocaust,
Jews,
Nazi Germany
THE WALL STREET JOURNAL: ROME—Italy has recognized the governing body of rebel forces opposed to the regime of Col. Moammar Gadhafi as Libya's sole "legitimate interlocutor," Italian Foreign Minister Franco Frattini said Monday as Rome seeks a way to re-establish its access to Libyan oil and natural gas.
Speaking at a news conference after meeting with Ali al-Essawi, the foreign envoy of the rebel-backed Libyan National Transitional Council, Mr. Frattini said Italy planned to send an envoy to Libya in the coming days, becoming the latest Western nation to establish diplomatic relations with the council.
Rome's support is a boost to rebel forces, because Italy is Libya's largest trading partner and the biggest buyer of the North African country's oil and natural-gas supplies. Italy, which imports a quarter of its oil and 10% of its natural gas from Libya, is eager to revive Italy's access to oil production now in rebel territory.
"We have decided to recognize the council as the only political, legitimate interlocutor to represent Libya," Mr. Frattini said. He also said Italy is seeking to send medical supplies and other aid to Misrata. » | Stacy Meichtry | Monday, April 04, 2011
Labels:
Glenn Beck,
sharia finance
REUTERS DEUTSCHLAND: Tripolis/Athen - Nach drei Wochen westlicher Luftangriffe und festgefahrenen Bodenkämpfen wirbt der libysche Machthaber Muammar Gaddafi für einen Waffenstillstand.
Gaddafi diplomatische Offensive stieß am Montag auf ein geteiltes Echo: Während Italien den Vorstoß aus Tripolis kategorisch zurückwies, äußerte die Türkei die Bereitschaft zur Vermittlung. Auf dem Schlachtfeld gab es dagegen keine Anzeichen für eine bevorstehende Feuerpause. Die Kämpfe um die ost-libysche Ölstadt Brega und den Rebellen-Vorposten Misrata im Westen des nordafrikanischen Landes gingen mit unveränderter Härte weiter. Die Menschen in Misrata seien "in der Hölle gefangen", sagte ein Verwundeter.
Der stellvertretende libysche Außenminister Abdelati Obeidi traf am Sonntag überraschend in Athen ein, um bei der griechischen Regierung für einen Waffenstillstand zu werben. Ein Sprecher des griechischen Außenministeriums sagte, es müsse nun abgewartet werden, ob in Libyen ein nationaler Dialog möglich sei. Die Türkei, die am Montag den Besuch Obeidis erwartete, erklärte sich zur Vermittlung bereit. Die Regierung in Ankara wolle darüber auch mit einem Vertreter der Rebellen beraten. Beide Seiten hätten mitgeteilt, wie sie über einen möglichen Waffenstillstand dächten. Der türkische Ministerpräsident Tayyip Erdogan hatte Gaddafi im März vergebens zu überzeugen versucht, einem gewählten Präsidenten oder einer gewählten Führung die Macht zu übertragen. Am Dienstag wird Obeidi auf Malta erwartet. » | © Reuters | Montag, 04. April 2011
REUTERS DEUTSCHLAND: Tokio (Reuters) - Die japanische Regierung befürchtet katastrophale Auswirkungen für den Pazifik, wenn weiterhin radioaktiv verseuchte Substanzen aus dem havarierten AKW Fukushima ins offene Meer strömen.
"Wir müssen die Ausbreitung in den Ozean so bald wie möglich stoppen", sagte Regierungssprecher Yukio Edano. AKW-Betreiber Tepco ließ am Montag Millionen Liter schwach radioaktives Wasser ins Meer ab, um Platz in den Reaktoren zu schaffen. Angesichts der Erdbeben- und Tsunami-Katastrophe sprachen sich in einer Umfrage zwei Drittel der Japaner für die Bildung einer Regierung der nationalen Einheit aus.
"Wenn die gegenwärtige Lage mit der Anreicherung radioaktiver Substanzen über lange Zeit anhält, wird es riesige Auswirkungen auf den Ozean haben", sagte Edano. Die Betreiberfirma Tepco forderte er auf, schnell zu handeln. Diese ließ jedoch erst einmal zehn Millionen Liter schwach radioaktiv belastetes Wasser aus dem AKW ab. Es sei 100 Mal stärker verstrahlt als rechtlich zulässig, teilte das Unternehmen mit. Bei dem Wasser handelt es sich um Kühlwasser, das sich in den Reaktoren angesammelt hat. Es müsse abgelassen werden, um Platz für stärker belastetes Kühlwasser zu schaffen. » | © Reuters | Montag, 04. April 2011
Labels:
Japan,
Pacific Ocean

REUTERS FRANCE: PARIS - Le gouvernement français a diffusé un mode d'emploi pour l'interdiction du voile intégral musulman, stipulant qu'elle ne s'appliquerait pas près des mosquées et que les policiers ne pourront arracher le vêtement.
Cette loi votée en septembre et promulguée en octobre, qui entrera en vigueur le 11 avril, interdit "la dissimulation du visage dans l'espace public" et sert officiellement à réaffirmer les valeurs de la République et les droits des femmes.
Le texte, qui concernerait au maximum quelques milliers de personnes dans toute la France, prévoit une amende de 150 euros pour les porteuses de voile intégral - burqa ou niqab - couvrant tout le corps à l'exception des yeux.
La circulaire aux préfets signée le 31 mars par le ministre de l'Intérieur Claude Guéant, dont Reuters a eu copie, précise qu'il est toujours autorisé de dissimuler son visage avec un casque intégral de moto, des bandages médicaux, un masque de soudeur, un masque d'escrimeur et des déguisements de carnaval.
L'interdiction du voile s'applique partout sauf dans les domiciles privés, les chambres d'hôtel, les locaux d'une association ou d'une entreprise, sauf pour les parties dédiées à l'accueil du public. » | Thierry Lévêque, Nicolas Bertin, édité par Yves Clarisse | Lundi 04 Avril 2011
Labels:
interdiction,
Islam en France,
la burqa
REUTERS AFRICA: PARIS - France's ruling conservatives are pressing ahead with a public debate on Islam and secularism on Tuesday despite criticism that it is an excuse to pander to far-right voters ahead of a general election next year.Sarkozy's UMP party said in December that it would host a public forum to address fears about Islam's role in French society, following controversy over Muslim street prayers, halal-only restaurants and full-face Islamic veils.
But a hail of criticism from religious leaders and some party members has forced the UMP to downsize the event and fight off accusations that a focus on Islam will provide cover for the airing of anti-Muslim prejudices among the French.
"They can't cancel it now," said Jean-Francois [sic] Doridot, an analyst at the Ipsos polling agency. "It's a sort of trap that is closing around the UMP, and they are trying to get themselves out of it one way or another."
Amid sharp criticism from religious leaders, party officials have bickered over the need to hold a debate at all, France's largest Muslim group has announced a boycott, and Prime Minister Francois [sic] Fillon declined his invitation to attend.
The guest list for Tuesday's debate has yet to be confirmed, but Interior Minister Claude Gueant -- who came under fire recently for saying the French "no longer felt at home" -- will attend, as will party spokesman Jean-Francois Cope [sic].
With France's controversial ban on full-face veils going into effect next week, Gueant defended the debate by saying that some Muslim practices were problematic and needed to be addressed. » | Nick Vinocur | Monday, April 04, 2011
Labels:
debate,
Islam in France
REUTERS: President Barack Obama is no longer the outsider candidate who fueled his bid for the White House in 2008 with a flood of small donations from new and young voters inspired by his message of hope and change.As a sitting president he has far greater authority and media access and his 2012 re-election campaign is expected to raise $1 billion, which is unprecedented in U.S. politics.
"In 2008, he was very much an insurgent candidate, somebody from out of nowhere with a wholly different story. And the Obama campaign was as much a crusade as it was a traditional campaign for president," said Christopher Arterton, a professor of political management at George Washington University who has also been a Democratic consultant.
With early polls showing Obama leading potential Republican rivals, he announced his re-election campaign on Monday with e-mails and text messages to supporters and a video on the website www.barackobama.com. He is expected to file campaign papers with the Federal Election Commission as early as Monday.
That would allow him to start campaign fund-raising and much of his war chest is expected to come from the kind of big-money donations he has criticized in the past. » | Patricia Zengerle | WASHINGTON | Monday, April 04, 2011
Labels:
Libya
BBC: Yemeni security forces have fired on anti-government protesters, killing at least 15 people and wounding many more, medical sources say.
Witnesses said snipers opened fire from the rooftops when protesters reached the governor's offices in Taiz.
Snipers had also reportedly shot at protesters during a march in the fourth-largest city, Hudaida.
The unrest follows weeks of nationwide protests calling for President Ali Abdullah Saleh to stand down.
He has ruled the country for 32 years, and has signalled that he has no plans to leave immediately. (+ video) » | Monday, April 04, 2011
Labels:
Yemen
GATES OF VIENNA: Time to Unmask Muhammad » | Geert Wilders | Wednesday, March 30, 2011
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