Friday, April 29, 2011

William and Kate: The Royal Wedding

To the Los Angeles Times picture gallery » | Posted by Jerome Adamstein | Friday, April 29, 2011
The Jewellery Editor’s Official Tiara Gallery

May 17 Sotheby's Auction, from the collection of Princess Katharina Henckel von Donnersmarck and probably the work of Chaumet. Photo: The Jewellery Editor

To the gallery »
Royal Crowns and Tiaras

Royal-Wedding Jewelry: Kate Middleton Wears the Cartier Halo Tiara

Photo: Vanity Fair

VANITY FAIR: Kate Middleton chose to wear the Cartier “halo” tiara, which was made in 1936 and purchased by the Duke of York (later King George VI) for his wife, Elizabeth's mother (also Elizabeth). » | Rebecca Sacks | Friday, April 29, 2011
Duchess Kate Middleton a Vision in Ivory and Lace

HERALD SUN: CATHERINE Middleton, the new Duchess of Cambridge, arrived only four minutes behind schedule, looking stunning.

Her dress, simply, was ivory and white satin, created by Sarah Burton of British fashion house Alexander McQueen.

The heart-shaped bodice and sleeves were covered with white English and French Chantilly lace.

The bodice was narrowed at the waist and padded at the hips, a hallmark of McQueen's designs.

The dress pays homage to Britain's arts and crafts tradition. The lace applique of the bodice and the skirt was hand-made by the Royal School of Needlework.

The lace was hand-engineered using the Carrickmacross lace-making technique from Ireland.

In a tribute to McQueen's wedding dress, individual roses, thistles, daffodils and shamrocks were hand-cut from lace and sewn on to the ivory tulle veil.

The gown, with its long sleeves, full skirt and a 3m train, took almost a minute to fold into the the bride's Rolls-Royce across the lap of Kate's father, Michael Middleton.

THE TIARA

Kate's diamond tiara was a story in itself.

Lent to her by William's grandmother, the Queen, the little known "halo" tiara was made by Cartier in 1936 and was bought by the Queen's father for her mother, three weeks before he succeeded his brother, King Edward VIII, who was to abdicate.

The tiara was given to the Queen by her mother on her 18th birthday. It was, in the royal bridal tradition, "something borrowed". » | Miranda Devine | Herald Sun | Saturday, April 30, 2011
The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge Kiss on the Balcony, and Watch Fly Past

Die Highlights der Hochzeit von Prinz William und seiner Kate

Eine Märchenhochzeit und ein Traum von einem Kleid: Prinz William und seine Kate haben sich das Jawort gegeben. Alles lief exakt nach Plan – nur der Ehering hat kurz geklemmt

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The Royal Wedding

Prince William & Catherine Middleton

Watch the Royal Wedding live on the BBC (the build-up has already begun) here
The Royal Wedding

Prince William & Catherine Middleton

Watch the Royal Wedding live here through ‘The Official Channel of the British Monarchy’ on YouTube. The broadcast will begin at 10am Londton time. That’s 2am (PST), 5am (EST), 10am (BST London), 11am (CEST), 7pm (EST), and 9pm (NZST)
Prince William and Kate Middleton's New Titles Revealed

THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: Prince William and Kate Middleton have been given the titles of Duke and Duchess of Cambridge to mark their wedding today.

Buckingham Palace announced at 8am on Friday that the Queen had bestowed the title of Duke of Cambridge on her grandson.

His bride, Miss Middleton, will be known as the Duchess of Cambridge after the royal wedding ceremony at Westminster Abbey.

A dukedom is the highest rank in the British peerage.

They have also been given the Scottish titles of Earl and Countess of Strathearn, which may reflect the fact that they met at St Andrews University.

The couple's third title is a Northern Irish one, Baron and Baroness Carrickfergus.

Buckingham Palace said in a statement: "The Queen has today been pleased to confer a Dukedom on Prince William of Wales.["]

"His titles will be Duke of Cambridge, Earl of Strathearn and Baron Carrickfergus.["]

"Prince William thus becomes His Royal Highness The Duke of Cambridge and Miss Catherine Middleton on marriage will become Her Royal Highness The Duchess of Cambridge." » | Martin Beckford | Friday, April 29, 2011
Royal Wedding: Open-topped Carriage So Crowds Can See Newlyweds Prince William and Kate Middleton

THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: Prince William and Kate Middleton will travel from Westminster Abbey to Buckingham Palace in an open-topped carriage come rain or shine, it has been confirmed.

With showers forecast there had been fears the couple would use an enclosed carriage as they travelled down The Mall after the royal wedding ceremony.

But a Buckingham Palace spokeswoman confirmed this morning that Prince William and Miss Middleton would use the 1902 State Landau used by the Prince and Princess of Wales on their wedding day in 1981.

The decision will mean the tens of thousands of spectators who are expected to flock to the royal wedding procession route will get a good view of Prince William and Miss Middleton.

The royal couple will be leaving the abbey at 12.15pm and the Landau will be part of a Captain's Escort mounted by the Household Cavalry Mounted Regiment with one squadron in front of the carriage and another behind.

Prince Harry, William's best man, and Pippa Middleton, the bride's sister and maid of honour, will follow in two separate Ascot Landau carriages, also open, with the young bridesmaids and page boys. » | Nick Collins | Friday, April 29, 2011
Royal Wedding Security: Snipers on Rooftops as 5,000 Police Officers Take to Streets of London

THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: Britain's biggest security operation in a generation is under way for the royal wedding, with 5,000 police officers under orders to deal ''robustly and firmly'' with any threats.


As the attention of the world fixes on London, detectives have thrown a multimillion-pound ring of steel around the royal wedding.

They appealed to the public to be the police's ''eyes and ears'' to help keep troublemakers at bay.

Snipers are taking to rooftops and undercover officers are mingling among the crowds as part of a massive covert and overt operation to avoid an atrocity.

Security against potential threats from al Qaeda-inspired extremists, dissident Irish republican terrorists, anarchists and even lone stalkers is being balanced with the desire to let onlookers enjoy the day of pageantry.

Around 70 people are banned from the City of Westminster as part of their bail conditions after being arrested or charged over various previous alleged disorder offences. » | Friday, April 29, 2011
Royal Wedding: Three Arrested for 'Mock Execution' Plan

THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: Three protesters who were planning on staging mock executions outside Westminster Abbey this morning have been arrested by Scotland Yard.

Watch YouTube video here
Bahrain Sentences Four Democracy Protesters to Death

THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: Bahrain has risked further inflaming tensions after recent unrest by sentencing to death four protesters whose car ran over and killed two police officers.

The four were all from the island kingdom's Shia majority, which has led protests against the rule of the Sunni Muslim monarchy.

The Shia complain they suffer discrimination and are excluded from the best jobs in Bahrein, as well as being condemned by the election system to a minority voice in the country's parliament.

A report on the state news agency website confirmed that the four, named as Ali Abdullah Hassan al-Singees, 21, Qasim Hasan Matar Ahmad, 20, Saeed Abduljalil Saeed, 20, and Abdulaziz Abdulridha Ibrahim Husain, 25, had been found guilty of murder by the National Safety Lower Court. Three other men were sentenced to life in prison.

The state of national safety is the government's term for a state of emergency imposed when troops were sent in to clear public squares occupied by protesters last month.

The report described the deaths of the two officers as "one of the most gruesome murders in Bahrain". It was captured on camera, and videotapes were shown to the court. » | Richard Spencer, Middle East Correspondent | Thursday, April 28, 2011

Thursday, April 28, 2011

Royal Media Frenzy Hits London

Hundreds of thousands of people have gathered in London, Britain's capital, a day before Prince William ties the knot with his long-term girlfriend Kate Middleton.



The event on Friday is expected to attract the biggest TV audience on record of a royal wedding.

Not surprisingly, the world's media is jostling for position in London to cover it. 



Stephen Cole reports on the plans to broadcast the big day across the globe.


Worst US Storms for 40 Years Kills at Least 230

THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: More than 230 people have been killed by hundreds of tornadoes raging across the south of the United States, in the region's most devastating storm outbreak for almost 40 years.


Entire US towns were destroyed, as six states were struck by huge twisters. One that was captured on extraordinary video footage measured a mile wide – 20 times larger than the typical tornado.

States of emergency were declared by the governors of Alabama, Arkansas, Georgia, Kentucky, Mississippi, Missouri, Oklahoma and Tennessee, and the death toll was expected to rise.

Alabama, one of America's poorest states, was worst hit. More than 131 people there died, 36 in the city of Tuscaloosa alone. Walter Maddox, its mayor, said the city had been "obliterated".

"I don't know how anyone survived," said Mr Maddox. "It's an amazing scene.

There are parts of the city I don't recognise and I've lived here my entire life." » | Jon Swaine, New York | Thursday, April 28, 2011
Un mariage, trois leçons

LE POINT: L'union de Kate et William scelle l'alliance de la classe moyenne et de la monarchie.

Il y a le fracas insensé d'une pipolisation mondiale, un mariage en mondovision. Mais derrière les cortèges de la monarchie triomphante, on peut sous le parchemin royal déchiffrer un sous-texte en trois lignes de force.

Première ligne du sous-texte : il s'agit de marquer la pérennité de la couronne britannique. Ce mariage, en présence de la reine Elizabeth II, fait écho à ses propres noces en 1947. Depuis lors, la reine aura connu les années folles du Swinging London et les rages du punk sans que le protocole soit altéré. On a eu les cris de John Lennon, le fracas des Who, le règne rock'n'roll du temps court ? Fort bien, mais John Lennon est mort, Paul McCartney est anobli, et les carrosses roulent toujours. Ce qui est ainsi proclamé, c'est le temps long de la monarchie anglaise. Après la génération prince Charles - celle qui attend toujours le pouvoir -, la génération prince William, celle qui devra s'armer de patience pour y accéder à son tour. Le mariage, avant d'être une promesse, est une durée. Il marque une permanence. » Par Marc Lambron | Jeudi 28 Avril 2011
Bahrain 'Torture Service' Official to Attend Royal Wedding

THE GUARDIAN: Ambassador to UK was previously in charge of Bahraini agency that is accused of electric shocks and beatings

The former head of an agency accused of torture and human rights abuses is expected to be a guest at Friday's royal wedding, the Guardian has learned.

Sheikh Khalifa Bin Ali al-Khalifa is a former head of Bahrain's National Security Agency (NSA) and will attend the wedding in his role as the current Bahraini ambassador to London.

British sources confirmed he had been invited and a spokesperson for the Bahraini embassy in London said he was expected to attend.

Khalifa was head of the agency from 2005 to 2008. The pressure group Human Rights Watch alleges that in 2007 detainees in Bahrain suffered torture including electric shocks and beatings. » | Vikram Dodd | Thursday, April 28, 2011
At Least 14 Killed in Morocco Café Blast

THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: At least 14 people were killed by a blast in a café in the Moroccan city of Marrakesh.

The blast appeared to have been caused by gas canister catching fire inside the Argana café, in the main Jamaa el-Fna square.

Witnesses reported rescue services pulling casualties from the café.

"There was a huge bang, and lots of smoke went up, there was debris raining down from the sky. Hundreds of people were running in panic, some towards the café, some away from the square. The whole front of the café is blown away," Andy Birnie, of north London, told The Associated Press by telephone. Mr Birnie is honeymooning in Marrakech.

"It was lunchtime so the square was very busy. We had just walked into the square, but were shielded by some stalls. The locals are telling us it was gas bottles exploding."

"It was lunchtime so the square was very busy. We had just walked into the square, but were shielded by some stalls. The locals are telling us it was gas bottles exploding." » | Thursday, April 28, 2011

THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: Row brews over Moroccan alcohol law: It is illegal to sell alcohol to Moroccan Muslims, but this is a law that is broken openly every day. » | Omar Brouksy, in Rabat for AFP | Tuesday, February 15, 2011
Kate Middleton Arrives at ‘The Goring Hotel’, Belgravia

Royal Wedding: Syrian Ambassador's Invitation Withdrawn

THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: Syria's ambassador to London has had his invitation to the royal wedding withdrawn in the wake of controversy over his presence on the guest list.

The Foreign Office said it had decided Dr Sami Khiyami's presence at the royal wedding ceremony would be "unacceptable" in the light of the killing of up to 450 pro-democracy demonstrators in recent weeks.

Kevan Jones, the shadow defence minister, had warned Buckingham Palace of the damage that would be done by the "horrific spectre of killing on the streets of Syria while the Syrian ambassador is in Westminster Abbey for the royal wedding."

A statement from the Foreign Office said: “Representatives of countries with which the UK has normal diplomatic relations have been invited to the wedding.

"An invitation does not mean endorsement or approval of the behaviour of any government, simply that we have normal diplomatic relations with that country.

"In the light of this week’s attacks against civilians by the Syrian security forces, which we have condemned, the Foreign Secretary has decided that the presence of the Syrian Ambassador at the Royal Wedding would be unacceptable and that he should not attend.

"Buckingham Palace shares the view of the Foreign Office that it is not considered appropriate for the Syrian Ambassador to attend the wedding.” » | Gordon Rayner, Chief Reporter | Thursday, April 28, 2011
Syria Crackdown: Hundreds Resign from Ba'ath Party

THE GUARDIAN: Members of president Assad's ruling party have resigned in protest as uprising claims at least 500 lives

Hundreds of president Bashar al-Assad's ruling Ba'ath party have resigned in protest at an increasingly bloody crackdown on pro-democracy protesters which is now believed to have claimed more than 500 lives.

News of the resignations emerged as a deeply divided UN security council failed to agree on a European and US-backed statement condemning the government's use of violence.

The draft – proposed by France, Britain, Germany and Portugal – was opposed by several within the 15-member security council, including Russia, Lebanon and India.

Alexander Pankin, Russia's ambassador to the UN, warned that a "real threat to regional security could arise from outside interference in Syria's domestic situation".

France, Britain, Germany, Italy and Spain all summoned Syrian ambassadors in their countries and told them that they condemn the violence and said Assad must change tactics. » | Katherine Marsh in Damascus and agencies | Thursday, April 28, 2011
Hamas and Fatah Sign Reconciliation Deal

THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: Fatah and Hamas signed a reconciliation deal on Wednesday, setting Mahmoud Abbas, the Palestinian leader, on a collision course with Israel.

In a surprise announcement following secret talks in Cairo, Mr Abbas’s moderate Fatah party and its Islamist arch-rival Hamas said they had put a four-year rift behind them.

The two parties pledged to form an interim unity government with elections in both the West Bank and Gaza in December.

The rapprochement is seen as a vital step towards the creation of a Palestinian state but immediately stoked fears in Israel that the moderate Palestinian Authority, led by Mr Abbas and dominated by Fatah, would swing towards radicalism.

Benjamin Netanyahu, the Israeli prime minister, immediately condemned the deal.

“The Palestinian Authority must choose either peace with Israel or peace with Hamas,” he said. “There is no possibility for peace with both. Hamas aspires to destroy Israel and fire rockets at our cities ... at our children.” » | Adrian Blomfield, Middle East Correspondent | Wednesday, April 27, 2011
British Men among Fattest in Europe

THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: British men are among the fattest in Europe, while as a nation we do less exercise than almost every other nation on the planet, according to a report by the World Health Organisation (WHO).

The study, into the rise of heart and lung disease, cancer, stroke and diabetes, ranked UK men as the third fattest in Europe, with 67.8 per cent of males 15 or over either overweight or obese.

Only Greece (77.5 per cent) and Malta (73.3 per cent) are fatter.
Globally, British men are the 21st fattest of 192 countries while our women fare much better, at the 51st fattest.

However, contrary to the lean 'Crocodile Dundee' image Australian men like to portray, they are significantly fatter than their British cousins. More than three in four (75.7 per cent) of Australian men are overweight or obese, WHO reported. Read on and comment » | Stephen Adams and Martin Beckford | Wednesday, April 27, 2011
Royal Wedding: The American Media Comes to the Party

THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: The cream of the US media has landed as the fascination for all things royal and British captivates viewers back home.

Tomorrow morning, a number of alarm clocks will be set for 4am by the octogenarian residents of Fox Run nursing home in Novi, Michigan. After being served with hors d'oeuvres, they'll gather around television sets for several hours of blanket coverage of the royal wedding live on all the Detroit stations, with the ceremony starting at 6am local time.

On-screen commentary will be courtesy of all three network anchors – Katie Couric of CBS, Diane Sawyer of ABC and Brian Williams of NBC. Each member of that triumivurate of American television royalty will be broadcasting from specially constructed studios outside Buckingham Palace. Other American media icons such as Barbara Walters, whose television special William & Catherine: A Modern Fairytale, was shown on ABC this week, will be flown in. Joan Rivers and comedienne Kathy Griffin will be there, along with Britain's own exports to the US, Tina Brown and Piers Morgan.

For the American media, the timing of the wedding hits a broadcasting sweet spot. The vows will be uttered as people are getting up, giving the opportunity for wall-to-wall coverage throughout the day.

According to Nielsen, the global media measurement company, online media coverage of the wedding is "considerably higher" in America than in Britain. In addition, blogs, Twitter and Facebook are generating a "greater volume of buzz" online in the US than on the other side of the Atlantic. "By any definition, this is a news story," says Mark Lukasiewicz, vice president of NBC News. "It is an unusual event, because events of this size don't happen that often.

"We feel that, collectively, people are eager for a bit of a break from the tough news cycle we've been living in for the past few months, and the royal wedding will be a chance to focus on something that has a little bit of fun and pageantry, in the grand British style." Continue reading and comment » | Toby Harnden | Wednesday, April 27, 2011

THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: Royal wedding Order of Service: Jerusalem and Greensleeves to be played in Westminster Abbey: Prince William and Kate Middleton today released their wedding Order of Service, and said they have been ''incredibly moved'' by the public affection shown to them. » | Thursday, April 28, 2011
Royal Wedding: Syrian Ambassador Invitation Angers MPs

THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: The Syrian ambassador to Britain has been invited to the Royal wedding in a move which threatens to exacerbate an ongoing row over the guest list.

Labour MPs said it “bordered on the grotesque” for Sami Khiyami to attend the event when the former Prime Ministers Tony Blair and Gordon Brown had been excluded.

The Syrian government of Bashar al-Assad has been threatened with prosecution for alleged war crimes linked to the deaths of an estimated 450 pro-democracy protesters during marches in recent weeks.

Dr Khiyami’s presence at the ceremony will come despite him being given a formal diplomatic warning yesterday by the most senior official at the Foreign Office for his government’s crackdown on its people, which has included the use of tanks.

Denis MacShane, the former Minister for Europe, said: “Rolling out the red carpet for petty tyrants who back home chop off people’s arms and hands, or, in the case of Syria, send tanks to crush peaceful protests, is bordering on the grotesque.”

Michael Dugher, a shadow Defence Minister, said: “It seems odd that two former Prime Ministers are excluded but we have some quite dubious people being invited. » | Andy Bloxham | Thursday, April 28, 2011
University Campuses Are 'Hotbeds of Islamic Extremism'

THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: Islamic fundamentalism is being allowed to flourish at universities, endangering national security, MPs and peers say.

Islamic fundamentalism is being allowed to flourish at universities, endangering national security, MPs and peers said yesterday.

Academics are turning a blind eye to radicals because they do not want to spy on students, a report claimed.

Despite "damning evidence" of a serious problem, little progress had been made in tackling the unsustainable situation, the All-Party Parliamentary Group on Homeland Security said.

They urged the Government to tackle the issue on campuses with "utmost urgency".

Such extremism "endangers our security at home and has international implications that are serious enough to threaten our alliance relationships", said the group, which includes the former home secretary Lord Reid.

Secret files obtained by The Daily Telegraph and WikiLeaks disclosed this week that at least 35 terrorists held at Guantánamo Bay were indoctrinated by extremists in Britain.

The leaked documents, written by senior US military commanders, illustrated how Britain effectively became a crucible of terrorism over the course of two decades. » | Duncan Gardham | Wednesday, April 27, 2011

Wednesday, April 27, 2011

Hochzeit von William und Kate: Promis mit Krone

SUEDDEUTSCHE: Selbst ein Livestream von Bunga-Bunga-Partys würde die Menschen nicht so interessieren wie die Hochzeit von William und Kate. Die Faszination der Monarchie lebt vom Mythos der Auserwähltheit. Doch die Nachkommen der Queen benehmen sich wie Popstars.

Vielleicht hatte der eminente englische Verfassungstheoretiker Walter Bagehot recht, als er bemerkte, dass Monarchien interessant, Republiken aber langweilig seien. Darauf könnte man zwar erwidern, dass manche Politiker - Nicolas Sarkozy oder Silvio Berlusconi - aufregender und unterhaltsamer sind als Königin Elisabeth oder Belgiens König Albert.

Aber wenn am Freitag der Enkel der Queen, ein 29-Jähriger ohne besondere Qualitäten oder Talente, eine ebenso farblose junge Frau heiratet, werden weltweit mehr als zwei Milliarden Menschen zusehen - fast jeder dritte Erdbewohner. Solche Quoten würde der italienische Cavaliere nicht mal mit einem Facebook-Livestream seiner Bunga-Bunga-Partys erzielen.

Mehr als 200 Jahre nachdem die Französische Revolution das Ende königlicher Herrschaft eingeleitet zu haben schien, gibt es nicht nur immer noch Monarchien, sie üben zudem anhaltende Faszination aus - auch und vor allem in Republiken wie den USA oder Deutschland. Die pessimistische Vermutung des 1952 gestürzten ägyptischen Königs Faruk jedenfalls ist nicht aufgegangen. Er hatte vorausgesagt, dass Ende des 20. Jahrhunderts nur fünf Könige überleben würden: die vier des Kartenspiels und der von England. » | Ein Kommentar von Wolfgang Koydl | Mittwoch, 27. April 2011
Etats-Unis: nouvelles tornades et inondations attendues

TRIBUNE DE GENÈVE: Le bilan des intempéries qui frappent depuis plusieurs jours une grande partie des Etats-Unis a atteint vingt morts mercredi. Et les services météorologiques craignaient de nouvelles destructions dues aux tornades et aux inondations.

La météorologie nationale (NWS, National Weather Service) a publié une alerte avertissant du «risque élevé» de tornades, de grêle, d’inondations subites et de foudre dans certaines parties de l’Alabama, de la Géorgie et du Mississippi, dans le sud du pays.

Au total, les intempéries pourraient concerner jusqu’à 21 Etats américains, sur une zone allant des Grands lacs au golfe du Mexique et à la côte Atlantique.

L’Arkansas fait partie des Etats les plus touchés, et comptait mercredi onze décès dus aux tornades et aux inondations subites. «Il y a des arbres abattus, des coupures d’électricité, des maisons endommagées (...) et beaucoup d’inondations en cours», a déclaré Renee Preslar, une porte-parole du ministère des Situations d’urgence de cet Etat. » | ATS / AFP | Mercredi 27 Avril 2011
Syrian Funding Causes Embarrassment at British University

THE GUARDIAN: University of St Andrews to review acceptance of funding arranged by Bashar al-Assad's controversial regime in Damascus

A prestigious British university is to review the work of one of its academic research centres because its funding was arranged by the Syrian regime of Bashar al-Assad, the Guardian can reveal.

The University of St Andrews, where Prince William and Kate Middleton studied, has received more than £100,000 in funding for its centre for Syrian studies with the assistance of the Syrian ambassador to the UK, Sami Khiyami.

Following questions on Wednesday from the Guardian about its relations with figures associated with the regime – and "in view of significant international concerns about recent events in Syria" – a spokesman for St Andrews said the university would be reviewing the centre's work "to ensure its high academic standards are maintained".

The university's association with the Assad regime has come under scrutiny in the wake of the violent crackdown on pro-democracy demonstrators in Syria which is estimated to have claimed 450 lives so far. » | Peter Beaumont and Jeevan Vasagar | Wednesday, April 27, 2011
WikiLeaks: Fear of Offending Muslims Allowed Extremists into Britain ahead of 7/7 London Bombings

THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: A fear of offending Muslims allowed extremists into Britain before the 2005 London Tube and bus bombings, a former Labour minister with close links to the intelligence services has admitted.

Kim Howells blamed “political correctness” for fostering a situation in which dozens of extremists being sent to fight the West after being indoctrinated in Britain.

The Daily Telegraph has disclosed this week how terrorist recruits from across Africa and the Middle East flocked to London to claim asylum.

According to leaked detainee files from the US detention camp in Guantanamo Bay, obtained by the WikiLeaks website and passed to The Daily Telegraph, at least 35 detainees were sent to fight against the West after being indoctrinated in Britain.

Mr Howells, a former foreign office minister and chairman of the influential Commons intelligence and security committee, blamed “political correctness” which meant that the extremists and their views were not challenged.

He said: “There is a great reluctance to talk about the whole issue. » | Christopher Hope, Whitehall Editor | Wednesday, April 27, 2011

Oh, for Christ's sake, grow a spine! (No blasphemy intended! Literally, for the sake of Christ! Otherwise the West will not belong to Christ.) You lot in Westminster and in other institutions are so, so weak. What the hell are we paying you weaklings for? Spineless creatures! Spineless to the Nth degree! Quite sickening! – © Mark
Libyan City Looks Like a Wasteland: Misrata

“Islam is the Solution to Our Problems”

Sary Farah on CNN giving a statement which is shared by millions of Muslims: We want Islam, not U.S. "Democracy"

The Ice Melts In Iran's Cold War With Egypt

RADIO FREE EUROPE / RADIO LIBERTY: The 2,400 kilometers or so separating Cairo from Tehran might have been enough to keep relations at arm's length. But for the past three decades, the realities of geography dividing Egypt and Iran have been stretched into a yawning chasm by the shadow of one Khalid Islambouli.

The Islamist army officer who assassinated Egyptian President Anwar Sadat in 1981 in revenge for signing the Camp David Accords with Israel has long stood as a symbol of the political and ideological divide between the two countries. Executed along with three co-conspirators for the crime the following year, Islambouli acquired pariah status in Egypt -- an embodiment of the perils lurking behind Islamic radicalism.

In Iran, by contrast, he is renowned as a hero and a martyr, a privilege reflected in a massive mural painting in central Tehran. One of the capital's most prestigious streets also bears his name, in what Egyptian officials have regarded as a provocation and a block to restoring long-severed diplomatic ties.

Now, however, the ghost of Islambouli is close to being laid to rest.

'Expansion Of Ties'

In what may be a blow to the interests of Israel and the United States, Egypt has declared itself ready to re-establish links with Tehran in the wake of February's overthrow of former President Hosni Mubarak, who saw Iran's Islamic regime as a bitter foe.

The new Egyptian foreign minister, Nabil Al-Arabi, signaled a thaw on March 30 when he voiced hopes for an "expansion of ties" with Iran. His comments came a month after Egypt -- in the wake of Mubarak's departure -- set Western alarm bells ringing by allowing Iranian naval ships to sail through the Suez Canal for the first time in 30 years.

Reasons to be wary were compounded this month by the Egyptian Foreign Ministry's spokesman, Mehna Bakhoum, who declared: "We are prepared to take a different view of Iran. The former regime used to see Iran as an enemy, but we don't."

The warm words have been reciprocated by Tehran, where the Foreign Ministry has confirmed it is preparing to appoint its first ambassador to Cairo since links were cut in 1979.

The contrast could hardly be greater with the tone set by Mubarak who, according to a U.S. diplomatic cable released by WikiLeaks, told Senator John Kerry that the Iranians "are big fat liars and justify their lies because they believe it is for a higher purpose." » | Robert Tait | Wednesday, April 27, 2011
From Sanctions to a Libya-style Showdown in Syria

Marine Le Pen: I Want to Free France from EU Straitjacket

Libya: Tribal Chiefs Call on Col Gaddafi to Go

THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: Chiefs or representatives of 61 Libyan tribes from across the country called for an end to Col Muammar Gaddafi's rule, in a joint statement released by French writer Bernard-Henri Levy.

"Faced with the threats weighing on the unity of our country, faced with the manoeuvres and propaganda of the dictator and his family, we solemnly declare: Nothing will divide us," said the text, drawn up in Benghazi on April 12.

"We share the same ideal of a free, democratic and united Libya," it said.

The African Union meanwhile urged an end to military actions targeting senior Libyan officials and key infrastructure, a statement said on Wednesday.

"Council urges all involved to refrain from actions, including military operations targeting Libyan senior officials and socio-economic infrastructure, that would further compound the situation and make it more difficult to achieve international consensus on the best way forward," the AU said.

The Pan-African body stressed the need for all the parties involved in the implementation of UN resolution 1973 on Libya "to act in a manner fully consistent with international legality and the resolution's provisions, whose objective is solely to ensure the protection of the civilian population." » | Wednesday, April 27, 2011
Muslim Group Claims Royal Wedding Is Legitimate Terror Target

THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: The royal wedding is a “legitimate target” for a terrorist attack because of Britain’s foreign policy and the invasion of Iraq and Afghanistan, a radical Islamic group has claimed.

Muslims Against Crusades, which had its application to protest on Friday turned down by police, yesterday urged Muslims to stay away from central London when Prince William marries Kate Middleton and to avoid all means of public transport due to the heightened risk of an attack.

Assad Ullah, leader of the extremist campaign group, insisted that it had no “inside knowledge” but was simply repeating security fears that have already been widely reported.

“There is a legitimate Islam opinion that those who have been attacked have the right to retaliate,” he said.

“British foreign policy is causing this kind of feeling and increasing the instability in this country. We do not advocate violence but can see how they made themselves a legitimate target for others.”

Announcing that the group had abandoned its plans to protest against the wedding, group spokesman Abu Abbas said: “We urge all Muslims to stay away from the royal wedding, not only because of the drinking, drug taking and sexual promiscuity but because of the likelihood of an attack by the Mujahideen.

"We urge all Muslims to stay away from public places and all public transport, trains, buses and tubes around central London.” » | Victoria Ward | Wednesday, April 27, 2011
From a Qaddafi Daughter, a Glimpse Inside the Bunker

THE NEW YORK TIMES: TRIPOLI, Libya — Aisha el-Qaddafi, the daughter of Col. Muammar el-Qaddafi of Libya, likes to tell her three young children bedtime stories about the afterlife. Now, she says, they are especially appropriate.

“To make them ready,” she said, “because in a time of war you never know when a rocket or a bomb might hit you, and that will be the end.”

In a rare interview at her charitable foundation here, Ms. Qaddafi, 36, a Libyan-trained lawyer who once worked on Saddam Hussein’s legal defense team, offered a glimpse into the fatalistic mind-set of the increasingly isolated family at the core of the battle for Libya, the bloodiest arena in the democratic uprising that is sweeping the region.

She dismissed the rebels as “terrorists” but suggested that some former Qaddafi officials who are now in the opposition’s governing council still “keep in touch with us.” She pleaded for dialogue and talked about democratic reforms. But she dismissed the rebels as unfit for such talks because of their use of violence, hurled personal barbs at President Obama and Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton and, at one point, appeared to disparage the basic idea of electoral democracy.

After arranging the interview last week, Ms. Qaddafi spoke for more than an hour late Sunday afternoon, just hours before NATO escalated its airstrikes with an attack that disrupted state television and another on the Libyan leader’s compound in Tripoli. Ms. Qaddafi, one of the many unofficial and sometimes rivalrous Qaddafi family power brokers who dominate Libya’s economic and political life, said the crisis had pulled the family together “like one hand.” » | David D. Kirkpatrick | Tuesday, April 26, 2011
Obama’s ‘Long-Form’ Birth Certificate Is Released

THE NEW YORK TIMES: President Obama on Wednesday posted online a copy of his “long-form” birth certificate from the state of Hawaii, hoping to finally end a long-simmering conspiracy theory among some conservatives who asserted that he was not born in the United States and was not a legitimate president.

The birth certificate, which is posted on the White House Web site, shows that Mr. Obama was born in Honolulu, Hawaii, and is signed by state officials and his mother.

“The President believed the distraction over his birth certificate wasn’t good for the country,” Dan Pfeiffer, the White House communications director, wrote on the Web site Wednesday morning. Mr. Pfeiffer said on the site that Mr. Obama had authorized officials in Hawaii to release the document broadly.

In a statement to the news media Wednesday morning, Mr. Obama said he decided to release the document in an effort to end the “silliness” about his birth that threatened to distract from the serious issues facing the country. » | Michael D. Shear | Wednesday, April 27, 2011

President Obama on His Birth Certificate & the Real Issues Facing America

President Obama discusses the release of his long form birth certificate, having long ago released his standard birth certificate, and says that "We've got big problems to solve. And I'm confident we can solve them, but we're going to have to focus on them -- not on this."


THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: Donald Trump 'proud' of Obama birth certificate publication: Businessman and potential Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump takes the credit for forcing Barack Obama to release a copy of his birth certificate. » | Wednesday, April 27, 2011
Medical Centres in Bahrain Raided

Mattar Ibrahim Mattar, a former member of parliament for Wefaq, the country's leading opposition group, told Al Jazeera that the families of medical staff who have been providing treatment to injured protesters were being arrested.



Human rights groups have accused Bahrain of arresting patients and medical staff suspected of taking part in protests, and sacking hundreds of public workers. Bahrain says it targets only those who committed crimes during the unrest in March.


Inside Story: Syria's Military Assault

On Monday the Syrian army advanced into the southern city of Deraa. In a statement the government said troops had been deployed on the request of citizens who were worried about "armed extremists".



Inside Story presenter Dareen Abughaida discusses with guests: Najib Ghadbian, a professor of Political Science at the University of Arkinsas; Hassan Nafaa, a professor of Political Science at Cairo University; and Ian Black, Middle East editor of The Guardian newspaper. 



This episode of Inside Story aired on Tuesday, April 26, 2011.


Kate’s Koran Lessons in Jordan

Source: Mail Online

Fury Erupts over Brown and Blair’s Wedding Invitation Snub »
Sarkozy and Berlusconi Find a Common Cause: Keep Immigrants Out

THE INDEPENDENT: Rules on free movement within Europe in doubt after crisis caused by influx of refugees from North African unrest

The leaders of France and Italy yesterday called for an overhaul of the system of passport-free travel across 25 European nations following alarm in Paris over the effect of a wave of migrants fleeing conflict in North Africa.

The Italian premier, Silvio Berlusconi, and French President, Nicolas Sarkozy, said they wanted new border restrictions in a notable watering down of the aims of the 1995 Schengen deal for free movement of people across most of continental Europe.

The pair issued their demand at a summit in Rome designed to repair relations between the two countries that had been damaged by the dispute over the fate of many of the 28,000 people who have fled political turmoil in North Africa. Most of those landed first on the Italian island of Lampedusa, creating a humanitarian and political crisis that the Italian authorities attempted to solve by diverting many to France, prompting a furious response from its north-western neighbour. Mr Berlusconi yesterday acknowledged the greater burden faced by France after the exodus triggered by the revolt in Tunisia, the first nation to topple its leader in the wave of unrest sweeping the Arab world. In another sop to France, Italy hours earlier also agreed to play a role in bombing Gaddafi forces in the French-inspired Libyan campaign.

The leaders detailed their demands in a joint letter to the EU, and said they were working on proposals to change Schengen. Both Mr Berlusconi and Mr Sarkozy – who faces a presidential election in a year's time – are under pressure from right-wing parties to adopt a tough line on immigration.

"We want Schengen to survive, but to survive Schengen must be reformed," Mr Sarkozy told reporters after the meeting. "We believe in free circulation but we believe in a state of law and a certain number of rules." » | Michael Day | Wednesday, April 27, 2011
Secret Police Detain More Than 500 as Syria Defies Western Threats

THE INDEPENDENT: Brutal security forces move in as government refuses to be cowed by warning of international sanctions

Syria's feared secret police raided hundreds of homes yesterday as authorities stepped up attempts to crush the pro-reform movement amid tentative signs of coordinated action by world leaders against the regime.

Forces were reportedly massing outside the north-western city of Baniyas last night amid fears that the government was planning an assault on a second rebellious city, where two weeks ago soldiers tried to quell protests against President Bashar al-Assad.

Thousands of army troops and tanks stormed the southern city of Deraa on Monday, killing at least 20 people in what appeared to be pre-emptive action against opposition to Assad rather than a response to demonstrations.

People braved sniper fire yesterday to pull the bullet-riddled bodies of the dead from the streets. More than 400 people have died during the uprising against the 11-year rule of Assad. » | Khalid Ali in Damascus and Rupert Cornwell in Washington | Wednesday, April 27, 2011

Robert Fisk: If the Rumours and Conspiracies Are True, then President Assad's Regime Is on the Road to Civil War

THE INDEPENDENT: If the dead soldiers are victims of revenge killings, it means the opposition is prepared to use force

Every night, Syrian state television is a horror show. Naked corpses with multiple bullet wounds, backs of heads sliced off. All Syrian soldiers, the television insists, murdered by "the treacherous armed criminal gangs" near Deraa.

One of the bodies – of a young officer in his twenties – has had his eyes gouged out. "Knives and sharp tools" appear to have been used on the soldiers, the commentary tells us. There seems no doubt that the bodies are real and little doubt that they are indeed members of the Syrian "security" forces – the word security needs to be placed in inverted commas these days – nor that the weeping, distraught parents in the background are indeed their families. » | Robert Fisk | Wednesday, April 27, 2011

Tuesday, April 26, 2011

Bahrain Cracks Down Abroad

Bahrain's authorities have cancelled the scholarships of several students who have demonstrated against the government in Britain. 



Students in the UK now face the prospect of having to return home at the end of the summer, once they are unable to pay tuition fees for the next academic year. 



The Bahraini Embassy in London says the decisions are not final and affect a relatively small number of students, but Bahraini opposition groups in the UK say they know of at least 35 students who have been affected and expect many more to come forward.



Charlie Angela reports


Tourists Flock to Britain for Royal Wedding

Preparations for the wedding between Prince William and Kate Middleton are in their final stages.



The couple tie the knot on Friday, and it is expected to attract the biggest television audience of any royal wedding to date.



Some 600,000 people are also expected to descend on London, the capital, for the big day.



Emma Hayward reports.