Tuesday, November 08, 2011

Nicolas Sarkozy Complained to Barack Obama of Liar Benjamin Netanyahu

THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: Barack Obama and Nicolas Sarkozy have inadvertently broadcast a private exchange during which they confessed their distaste for Benjamin Netanyahu, the Israeli prime minister, and branded him a “liar".

The French and American presidents were speaking during an encounter on the sidelines of the G20 summit in Cannes last week without realising that a simultaneous translation of their words was being transmitted to journalists outside the room.

As the conversation drifted to Israel, Mr Sarkozy is reported to have said: “I cannot bear Netanyahu, he’s a liar.”

Mr Obama did not challenge the assertion, instead replying: “You may be sick of him, but me, I have to deal with him every day.”

The exchange provides the most tantalising evidence yet of the growing antipathy with which Mr Netanyahu is said to be held by many Western leaders.

President Obama has had a frequently strained relationship with the Israeli leader. In March last year, Mr Netanyahu was left to stew in a White House meeting room for over an hour after the president allegedly walked out of tense talks to have dinner with his family. » | Adrian Blomfield | Tuesday, November 08, 2011

THE GUARDIAN: Sarkozy and Obama's Netanyahu gaffe broadcast via microphones: French president called Israeli PM a liar in exchange with US president inadvertently shared with journalists » | Harriet Sherwood in Jerusalem and Angelique Chrisafis in Paris | Tuesday, November 08, 2011

MAIL ONLINE: Sarkozy: 'I can't stand him… he’s a liar': Obama: 'You're fed up with him - I have to deal with him every day!'
Presidents' unflattering comments about Israeli PM Netanyahu are broadcast at G20 summit
»
| Anthony Bond | Tuesday, November 08, 2011
'This Isn't a Party Town!' Mayor Warns Prince Harry Not to 'Fornicate the Night Away' as He Settles into Sleepy Arizona Township

MAIL ONLINE: Gila Bend was chosen by the MoD for Apache helicopter training because the desert region resembles the mountain terrain of Afghanistan / 'Fathers here would go to extremes to protect their daughters,' says the town's mayor

Prince Harry has been ordered to be on his best behaviour on his latest posting in the United States.

The party-loving prince has been moved to the tiny town of Gila Bend in the Arizona desert for the final stage of a two-month advanced weapons training course.

Ron Henry, mayor of the 1,700-strong community where many residents are devout Christians, says Harry should take care as his reputation as a ladies' man has gone before him.

'There are probably some fathers here who would go to extremes to protect their daughters,' said Mr Henry, 64. 'Some of the dads won't take too kindly to a Prince fornicating the night away.' » | REBECCA ENGLISH, ROYAL CORRESPONDENT | Tuesday, November 08, 2011

THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: Prince Harry warned over 'fornicating' in Christian US town: The mayor of a US town where Prince Harry is staying during helicopter training has warned him to be on his best behaviour with its young women. » | Tuesday, November 08, 2011

Monday, November 07, 2011

Comment l’austérité est appliquée en Grèce

US Election 2012: Woman Breaks Silence to Say Herman Cain Sexually Groped Her

THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: A woman broke her silence to accuse Republican presidential contender Herman Cain of sexually groping her in a car, when she asked him for help in finding a new job in 1997.

Sharon Bialek became the first woman to go public with detailed allegations, amid swirling accusations by four different women of sexual harassment by Cain, vying to be crowned the Republican Party's nominee for the 2012 elections.

She also became the first to offer graphic details of what has been referred to as "inappropriate behaviour" by Cain, a former pizza company executive now at the top of the opinion polls in the Republican White House race.

Bialek said she had appealed to Cain for help after she was let go from her job with the educational department of the National Restaurant Association, of which he was the then president. The two were driving in a car in Washington, when Cain pulled over.

"He suddenly reached over and he put his hand on my leg under my skirt and reached for my genitals. He also grabbed my head and brought it towards his crotch," Bialek told a packed press conference in a private club in New York.

"I was very, very surprised and very shocked. I said, 'what are you doing? You know I have a boyfriend. This isn't what I came here for.' Mr Cain said, 'You want a job, right?'" » | Monday, October 07, 2011
Women & Islam: The Rise and Rise of the Convert

THE INDEPENDENT ON SUNDAY: Three-quarters of Britons who become Muslims are female. Now a major new study has shed light on the difficulties they face in adjusting to their new life.

Record numbers of young, white British women are converting to Islam, yet many are reporting a lack of help as they get used to their new religion, according to several surveys.

As Muslims celebrate the start of the religious holiday of Eid today and hundreds of thousands from around the world converge on Mecca for the haj, it emerged that of the 5,200 Britons who converted to Islam last year, more than half are white and 75 per cent of them women.

In the past 10 years some 100,000 British people have converted to Islam, of whom some three-quarters are women, according to the latest statistics. This is a significant increase on the 60,000 Britons in the previous decade, according to researchers based at Swansea University.

While the number of UK converts accelerates, many of the British women who adopt Islam say they have a daily struggle to assimilate their new beliefs within a wider culture that both implicitly and explicitly positions them as outsiders, regardless of their Western upbringing.

More than three-quarters told researchers they had experienced high levels of confusion after conversion, due to the conflicting ways Islam was presented to them. While other major religions have established programmes for guiding new believers through the rigours of their faith, Islam still lacks any such network, especially outside the Muslim hubs of major cities.

Many mosques still bar women from worship or provide scant resources for their needs, forcing them to rely on competing cultural and ideological interpretations within books or the internet for religious support. » | RICHARD PEPPIATT | Sunday, November 06, 2011
Turkey Investigated Over Chemical Weapons Claim

THE SUNDAY TELEGRAPH: A Turkish human rights group is investigating claims by Kurdish activists that Ankara used chemical weapons in an attack on militants in the east of the country last month.

The activists are circulating gruesome pictures of some of the 24 rebels, from the PKK guerrilla group, killed in the Kazan Valley in air raids that began on October 19. Blackened and dismembered, the corpses lie in a morgue in a nearby town with weeping relatives nearby.

Their allegations have forced their way into the open in Turkey, which is usually fiercely nationalist when it comes to accusations of abuse by the Kurds, whose campaign for autonomy is a long-running sore. The prime minister, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, made a public denial of them as a "slander" while on his recent trip to the G20 summit in Cannes.

The activists say the only explanation for the type of burns exhibited is that some chemical agent was used. Their claims has now been raised by MPs from the legal pro-Kurdish party, the BDP, and taken up by the Turkish Human Rights Association (IHD). » | Richard Spencer, Middle East Correspondent | Sunday, November 06, 2011
Theresa May: We Will Never Know How Many People Got Through Without Proper Checks

THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: Theresa May, the Home Secretary, admitted today that the number of people who entered the country without being checked against a Home Office database of terror suspects and illegal immigrants will never be known.

Mrs May said she had launched three inquiries in to what happened at the force as she told MPs senior staff had extended a pilot scheme she had authorised in April designed to focus checks on high-risk passengers entering the UK.

She told the House of Commons senior officials had "let down" hard-working staff and promised that those found guilty of relaxing checks without authorisation from ministers would be punished.

Mrs May said UK border force head Brodie Clark "authorised the wider relaxation of border controls without ministerial sanction."

Mr Clark, has since been suspended amid reports that border guards were told this summer not to bother checking fingerprints and other personal details against a Home Office database of terror suspects and illegal immigrants.

The Home Secretary said in July she agreed the UK Border Agency (UKBA) could "pilot a scheme that would allow Border Force officials to target intelligence-led checks on higher-risk categories of travellers". Read on and comment » | Monday, November 07, 2011

Why the hell is border control such a problem? Other countries are able to control their borders, to wit Switzerland, so why can't we? Are we really that dumb? – © Mark

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Herman Cain Faces Fourth Sexual Harassment Claim

THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: A fourth woman to accuse Republican presidential candidate Herman Cain of sexual harassment will outline allegations against him at a news conference in New York today.

The woman alleges she was sexually harassed by Cain "when she sought his help with an employment issue when he was President of the National Restaurant Association," according to a statement by her lawyer, Gloria Allred. The news conference is scheduled for 1:30pm (1830 GMT).

She will become the first person to give her name and come forward publicly to lay out her case against Cain, a front-runner in the Republican presidential race.

At least three other women have accused him of sexual harassment from his time as the restaurant industry's top lobbyist in the mid-1990s. Cain, 65, insists the claims are baseless and that he was wrongfully accused. » | Monday, November 07, 2011
Israel droht mit Militärschlag


Verwandt »

DIE PRESSE: Frankreich warnt vor Militärschlag gegen den Iran: Frankreichs Außenminister Juppe befürchtet eine "völlige Destabilisierung" der Region, sollte Israel Ziele im Iran angreifen. » | Ag. | Sonntag 06. November 2011
Rechtsextreme wollen ein "Russland nur für Russen"

WELT ONLINE: Am "Tag der nationalen Einheit" protestieren Tausende vermummte Rechtsextremisten in Russland. Sie fordern einen Zuzugsstopp von "Nichtrussen" aus Zentralasien.

Tausende Nationalisten und Rechtsextreme haben in Moskau und anderen Städten zum „Tag der nationalen Einheit“ für ein starkes und slawisches Russland demonstriert. „Russland nur für Russen“, skandierten die teils mit schwarzen Masken vermummten Rechtsextremen unter starkem Sicherheitsaufgebot in der russischen Hauptstadt. Die Polizei sprach Medien zufolge von 7000 Teilnehmern, die Organisatoren dagegen gaben die Zahl mit 25.000 an.

Vor der Parlamentswahl in einem Monat forderten die Demonstranten die Regierungspartei auf, den islamisch geprägten Nordkaukasus nicht weiter „zu füttern“. Die Spannungen zwischen Nationalisten und den Kaukasiern sind traditionell groß. Die Neonazis zeigten bei Kundgebungen auch in anderen Städten wie so oft am 4. November Hakenkreuze und forderten einen sofortigen Zuzugsstopp von „Nichtrussen“ aus Zentralasien und dem Kaukasus. » | dpa/jm | Freitag 04. November 2011
Imran Khan Predicts 'a Revolution' in Pakistani Politics

THE GUARDIAN: Former national cricket captain vows to fight corruption and negotiate with the Taliban in address to 100,000 at Lahore rally

At the height of his cricket glory days, Imran Khan would visualise winning – standing on the podium, cup held aloft – and propelling Pakistan to victory. Last weekend, standing before a sea of supporters in Lahore, he had a similar epiphany about his political career.

"As I stood there, watching them, I knew the moment had come," Khan, who is the leader of the Pakistan Tehrik-e-Insafr party, said. "Now nothing can stop us. This is a revolution, a tsunami. We will not just win the next elections – we will sweep them."

Whether the former cricket captain can translate rhetoric into reality is hotly debated. Yet few doubt that last weekend's rally sent shockwaves across Pakistan's moribund political system.

Over 100,000 people crammed into a historic Lahore park. Many were middle-class Pakistanis – young, urban, educated – drawn by Khan's rhetoric and their anger at conventional politics.

"This is the emergence of a new force. The cry for change is resonating across Pakistan," said Ayaz Amir, a parliamentarian from rival Nawaz Sharif's party, who was there. "Young, old, professionals, women – I've never seen such people at a public meeting in Pakistan before."

The sight, Amir added, had "scared the living daylights" out of his own party. » | Declan Walsh in Islamabad | Sunday, November 06, 2011
Russia Warns Against Air Strike On Iran

THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: Russia’s foreign minister Sergei Lavov has warned that a military strike on Iran would be a “very serious mistake” with “unpredictable consequences”, after Israel’s president Shimon Peres said that an attack was increasingly likely.

n comments published in the Israeli daily Hayom, Mr Peres said that “the possibility of a military attack against Iran is now closer to being applied than the application of a diplomatic option”.

"We must stay calm and resist pressure so that we can consider every alternative," he added.
The drumbeat of war is expected to grow louder this week when United Nations nuclear watchdog, the IAEA, issues its most detailed report to date on nuclear research in Iran.

It will provide what Western officials and experts regard as irrefutable evidence that Tehran is compiling the capacity and skills to build a bomb. It will be used as leverage for a fifth round of sanctions at the UN, but could also provide Israel, with the tacit support of Washington, to finalise plans for an air strike.

Among its findings are that Tehran was helped by nuclear experts from two countries, believed to be Russia and Pakistan. The Washington Post reported that key assistance was provided by Vyacheslav Danilenko, a former Soviet nuclear scientist, hired by Iran's Physics Research Centre. » | Alex Spillius | Monday, November 07, 2011

Related »

Japan's Emperor Admitted to Tokyo Hospital

THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: Japan's emperor has been admitted to hospital suffering from persistent fever and bronchitis symptoms.

Emperor Akihito, 77, was taken to University of Tokyo Hospital late Sunday evening where he was being treated by medical staff, according to the Imperial Household Agency.

Television footage showed the emperor arriving at the hospital by car, accompanied by his wife Empress Michiko. » | Danielle Demetriou in Tokyo | Monday, November 07, 2011
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad Accuses Israel and US as Tension over Possible Strike Grows

THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has accused Israel and the United States of seeking world support for a military strike on Iran nuclear facilities, ahead of the publication of a report expected to show the regime is making efforts to develop a warhead.

The Iranian president warned against a military attack on Iran and again insisted Tehran's atomic programme was for peaceful purposes only.

"Iran's capabilities are increasing and it is progressing, and for that reason it has been able to compete in the world. Now Israel and the West, particularly America, fear Iran's capabilities and role," Ahmadinejad told Egypt's Al-Akhbar newspaper.

"Therefore they are trying to gather international support for a military operation to stop (Iran's) role. The arrogant should know that Iran will not allow them to take any action against it," he said.

Ahmadinejad added that Washington wanted to "save the Zionist entity, but it will not be able to do so."

"This entity (Israel) can be compared to a kidney transplanted in a body that rejected it," he said. "Yes it will collapse and its end will be near."

Ahmadinejad's diatribe against Israel, Iran's arch-foe, come after Israeli President Shimon Peres warned in a television interview on Saturday that an attack on Iran was becoming "more and more likely." » | Monday, November 07, 2011

THE SUNDAY TELEGRAPH: Ehud Barak refuses to rule out military strike against Iran: Ehud Barak, the Israeli defence minister, refused to rule out military action against Iran yesterday, heightening expectations that his government is preparing to authorise an attack on Tehran's nuclear facilities. ¶ In an interview with the BBC, Mr Barak said that sanctions and international diplomacy had so far failed to deter Iran from seeking to build a nuclear bomb, a prospect that would, he warned, threaten the stability of the "whole world". » | Adrian Blomfield, Jerusalem | Sunday, November 06, 2011

WATCH BBC VIDEO: Ehud Barak: Middle East is 'tough neighbourhood' – Israeli Defence Minister Ehud Barak has described the Middle East as a "tough neighbourhood" when describing the risks of a confrontation with Iran over its nuclear programme. ¶ Speaking on the Andrew Marr Show the former Israeli Prime Minister said "Israel is the strongest country for the thousand miles around Jerusalem, we plan to remain the strongest country around." ¶ "But we are at the same time peaceful, we are ready to make peace at any moment with any one of our neighbours." » | Sunday, November 06, 2011
Islam Is the Solution, Grand Mufti Says in Haj Sermon

ARAB NEWS: ARAFAT – More than 2.5 million pilgrims from around the globe prayed for peace and security on the sprawling plains of Arafat on Saturday amid a forceful condemnation by Saudi Arabia's Grand Mufti Abdul Aziz Al-Asheikh of those who provoke hostilities between the Ummah and its leaders.

The “wuqoof” or “the standing” in Arafat was the high point of the annual pilgrimage. It was also an extraordinary symbol of the unity and equality in Islam.

Delivering the keynote sermon at the majestic Al-Nimira Mosque, the grand mufti said: “Solve your problems without seeking interference from your enemies...and beware of those provoke hostility between you and your leaders.”

The mosque was packed with the faithful and hundreds of thousands of pilgrims prayed out in the open streets.

“Islam is the solution for the problems of Muslims,” he said, and warned Muslims of a media and cultural invasion that seeks to weaken their faith.

Al-Asheikh called on rulers in the Muslim countries not to oppress their people but to help them lead a dignified life.

“It is the duty of Muslim leaders to maintain justice and fight corruption. Their priority should be the welfare of their people,” Al-Asheikh said.

While the ruler strives to help solve the problems of the citizens, the subjects should obey, love and pray for their rulers, Al-Ashiekh said.

The mufti also advised government officials to shun bribery and nepotism, reminding Muslims that the Islamic world was passing through one of its most dangerous and challenging periods. » | ARAB NEWS | Sunday, November 06, 2011
Church of England 'Must Curb Its Attacks on the City'

THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: The Church of England must resist igniting a 1980s-style war of words with the Government over its attacks on the City, according to a senior banker and church official.

Ken Costa, a former bank chairman and head of a newly appointed Church committee charged with rebuilding links with the financial sector, has warned against a repeat of the bitter row that broke out after the publication of the clergy's landmark Faith in the City report 25 years ago.

At the time, the report provoked fury among senior Conservatives by levelling some of the blame for economic and spiritual decline at the door of the Thatcher administration.

Mr Costa, the chairman of the St Paul's Initiative, established by the Church to open up a debate on ethical capitalism, said the clergy's response to the ongoing protests outside St Paul's Cathedral must not turn into a "reheated Faith in the City".

In his first public comments since his appointment, Mr Costa insisted that a flourishing banking sector was "essential to any successful economy" and that financial incentives are "both valid and effective".

He also said that stiffer regulation of financial services was not necessarily the solution to the global economic crisis, saying, "you cannot regulate into existence a culture of honesty, integrity, truthfulness and responsibility". » | Graeme Paton | Monday, November 07, 2011

Ken Costa, a one-time Marxist turned City banker, seems to be saying that the Church should do and say nothing. So he wants the Church to shut up to allow the banksters to continue their theft and corruption, eh? I say that if the Church wants to be taken seriously, it should step up its attack on these fraudsters, not shut up.

In my opinion, it is time for bankers to have a code of ethics, just as doctors have in the Hippocratic Oath. Then, if they are found to be engaging in foul practice, they can have their licence to work in the banking sector taken away from them.
– © Mark


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Sunday, November 06, 2011

Arab League Warns of 'Disastrous Consequences' for the Middle East after Syria Peace Plan Fails

THE SUNDAY TELEGRAPH: The head of the Arab League warned of "disastrous consequences" for the Middle east on Sunday as the Assad regime heightened fears of civil war in Syria by inflicting a fresh round of bloodshed on its people.

Defying the terms of a regional peace initiative that President Bashar al-Assad agreed to uphold last week, Syrian security forces killed at least 13 people in Homs, the opposition said, bringing the three-day death toll in the restive city to more than 40.

The Arab League initiative was seen as an "eleventh hour opportunity" to restore a semblance of peace in Syria, where more than 3,000 people have been killed since the uprising against Mr Assad began nearly eight months ago.

"The failure of the Arab solution will have disastrous consequences in Syria and the region," Nabil Elaraby, the Arab League's secretary-general, said from his Cairo headquarters yesterday.

Under the terms of the peace plan, the Syrian government was meant to order tanks off the streets, end the killing of protesters, release 70,000 political prisoners and embark on negotiations with the opposition.

Although a few hundred prisoners have been freed, Mr Assad's non-compliance prompted fresh hints that Syria could be suspended from the Arab League. » | Adrian Blomfield, Middle East Correspondent | Sunday, November 06, 2011
Papandreou Out as Greek Leaders Agree Unity Government Deal

THE GUARDIAN: PM and opposition leaders agree formation of new coalition government in bid to break political deadlock

The Greek prime minister and opposition have agreed on the formation of a new coalition government in a bid to break the political deadlock and pave the way for an EU bailout for the debt-stricken country.

Prime minister George Papandreou and opposition leader Antonis Samaras battled over the weekend to strike the deal – which will see a new leader appointed to take over from Papandreou – ahead of the opening of the global financial markets this morning.

A statement from the Greek presidency said the leaders will meet again on Monday to discuss who would head the coalition government, but made no mention of how long the interim government would last.

Officials from the two parties were continuing with talks late on Sunday to try to set the time needed to implement the bailout.

Under the auspices of the nation's president, Karolos Papoulias, Papandreou and Samaras struck the deal to form an interim administration to agree on how to enact a bailout agreement, and so steer Greece through its worst crisis in modern times. » | Helena Smith in Athens and Tom Kington in Rome | Sunday, November 06, 2011
Les musulmans du monde entier célèbrent l'Aïd

LE FIGARO: EN IMAGES - La plus importante fête de l'Islam, qui commémore la fidélité du prophète Ibrahim, coïncide avec le grand pèlerinage de La Mecque, où plus de 3 millions de musulmans sont rassemblés.


À la galerie »
Far Right On Rise in Europe, Says Report

THE GUARDIAN: Study by Demos thinktank reveals thousands of self-declared followers of hardline nationalist parties and groups

The far right is on the rise across Europe as a new generation of young, web-based supporters embrace hardline nationalist and anti-immigrant groups, a study has revealed ahead of a meeting of politicians and academics in Brussels to examine the phenomenon.

Research by the British thinktank Demos for the first time examines attitudes among supporters of the far right online. Using advertisements on Facebook group pages, they persuaded more than 10,000 followers of 14 parties and street organisations in 11 countries to fill in detailed questionnaires.

The study reveals a continent-wide spread of hardline nationalist sentiment among the young, mainly men. Deeply cynical about their own governments and the EU, their generalised fear about the future is focused on cultural identity, with immigration – particularly a perceived spread of Islamic influence – a concern.

"We're at a crossroads in European history," said Emine Bozkurt, a Dutch MEP who heads the anti-racism lobby at the European parliament. "In five years' time we will either see an increase in the forces of hatred and division in society, including ultra-nationalism, xenophobia, Islamophobia and antisemitism, or we will be able to fight this horrific tendency."

The report comes just over three months after Anders Breivik, a supporter of hard right groups, shot dead 69 people at youth camp near Oslo. While he was disowned by the parties, police examination of his contacts highlighted the Europe-wide online discussion of anti-immigrant and nationalist ideas.

Data in the study was mainly collected in July and August, before the worsening of the eurozone crisis. The report highlights the prevalence of anti-immigrant feeling, especially suspicion of Muslims. "As antisemitism was a unifying factor for far-right parties in the 1910s, 20s and 30s, Islamophobia has become the unifying factor in the early decades of the 21st century," said Thomas Klau from the European Council on Foreign Relations, who will speak at Monday's conference. Read on and comment » | Peter Walker and Matthew Taylor | Sunday, November 06, 2011

Europe's 'nationalist populists' and far right – interactive: Political groups and parties studied by researchers investigating a new wave of hardline nationalist and anti-immigrant sentiment » | Peter Walker and Paddy Allen | Sunday, November 06, 2011

THE SUNDAY TELEGRAPH: Far-Right groups in Europe 'on the rise': The eurozone crisis and immigration is fuelling the rise of the far-Right across Europe, according to a study by the Demos think-tank. » | Telegraph’s Foreign Staff | Sunday, November 06, 2011

TRIBUNE DE GENÈVE: L’extrême droite séduit de jeunes Européens grâce à la crainte de l’islamisme: ÉTUDE | Les thèses de l'extrême droite rencontrent un écho grandissant chez les jeunes hommes de moins de 30 ans, selon une étude par le centre de réflexion britannique Demos. » | ATS/AFP | lundi 07 novembre 2011
Vatican : des féministes ukrainiennes stoppées

leJDD: Trois féministes du mouvement ukrainien Femen, dont les militantes ont pour habitude de manifester les seins nus, ont été stoppées dimanche par la police italienne avant de pouvoir atteindre la place Saint-Pierre, a constaté un photographe de l'AFP.

Elles voulaient attirer l'attention sur leur cause au moment où le pape Benoît XVI prononçait la traditionnelle prière dominicale de l'angélus sur la Place Saint-Pierre. La police les a interceptées dans la matinée avant qu'elles n'arrivent sur la place. [Source: leJDD] | dimanche 06 novembre 2011
"C'est moi qui ai piraté Charlie Hebdo"

leJDD: EXCLUSIF - Juste après l’incendie du siège du journal satirique, son site Internet a été hacké. À Istanbul, le JDD a retrouvé Ekber, l’auteur du piratage, qui menace aujourd’hui Libération.

C’est un jeune homme de 20 ans qui se présente au rendez-vous donné dans un café discret, sur la rive asiatique d’Istanbul. En jean et chemise noire, Ekber arrive avec son ordinateur portable sous le bras. Il est étudiant à l’université Isik, futur ingénieur informatique. Originaire de Rize, sur la mer Noire, comme le premier ministre Erdogan, qu’il admire. Un jeune Turc lambda qui n’a pas vraiment le profil du taliban croqué par Cabu! "Black Apple", son nom de code de hacker, est celui qui a realise le piratage du site Internet de Charlie Hebdo, mercredi matin.

Ce jour-là, un peu avant 6 heures, la page d’accueil de l’hebdo satirique est victime d’une attaque. Un message s’affiche en turc, traduit dans un mauvais anglais: "Avec vos caricatures haineuses, vous attaquez le grand prophète de l’Islam, sous couvert de la liberté d’expression. Que la malédiction de Dieu s’abatte sur vous. Nous serons votre malédiction dans le monde virtuel!". Signé des Akincilar, un groupe de neuf hackers turcs qui a adopté le nom des guerriers légendaires de la cavalerie ottomane. À 6h54, heure d’Istanbul, Black Apple annonce le succès de l’opération sur un forum. "Il fallait donner la réponse qu’elle méritait à cette revue qui prononce de telles imbécillités." » | Guillaume Perrier, correspondance à Istanbul (Turquie) - Le Journal du Dimanche | samedi 05 novembre 2011

Liens en relation avec l’article »
Millions of Muslim Hajj Pilgrims Perform Symbolic Stoning of the Devil on Eid al-Adha

On the final day of the annual hajj pilgrimage, Muslims throw stone pebbles at walls representing Satan.


Read article here | Sunday, November 06, 2011

NZZ am SONNTAG: Millionen Muslime auf Pilgerfahrt Hadsch: Aufstieg auf Berg Arafat und Steinigung des Teufels » | dapd | Sonntag 06. November 2011

NZZ am SONNTAG: Blutiger Beginn des muslimischen Opferfestes: Bomben explodieren im Norden Afghanistans und im Irak » | dapd | Sonntag 06. November 2011
We Are Paid Too Much, Bankers Confess in St Paul's Survey

THE INDEPENDENT ON SUNDAY: As politicians shift ground on high earners, City workers admit public sector gets raw deal

British bankers have admitted that they are paid too much, a report into moral standards in the City of London will reveal tomorrow.

A survey of 500 workers in City financial institutions, carried out for the Christian think-tank St Paul's Institute, found that "a substantial number" believed they were overpaid compared with other professions – particularly frontline workers including teachers and, most of all, nurses.

The results will fuel continuing bitterness towards the industry over its culpability for the financial crisis and its apparent failure to rein in huge salaries and bonuses . Last night The Sunday Times reported the publicly owned Royal Bank of Scotland is planning to pay its investment bankers about £500m in bonuses.

The Archbishop of York, Dr John Sentamu, yesterday joined the attack on bankers' pay, claiming excesses in the financial sector had helped to create huge inequalities in wealth, "demonstrating how scandalously unfair our society is". » | MATT THOMAS, BRIAN BRADY | Sunday, November 06, 2011
Oklahoma Rattled by 5.6 Earthquake

THE GUARDIAN: Homes damaged and roads buckled by series of shocks including the biggest on record in US state

Earthquakes of up to 5.6 magnitude have shaken Oklahoma, damaging buildings and roads and sending a handful of people to hospital.

The first quake was recorded on Saturday morning at a magnitude of 4.7. The second came on Saturday night and is the largest ever recorded in Oklahoma, topping a tremor of 5.5 magnitude in 1952, according to the US Geological Survey.

In Prague, Oklahoma, where the first quake was centred, city manager Jim Greff said part of the town library's ceiling collapsed and a chimney fell through the roof of a home. There were no serious injuries. » | Reuters | Sunday, November 06, 2011
GOP Set to Embrace Mitt Romney as Candidate Who Can Beat Barack Obama

THE GUARDIAN: The frontrunner exudes confidence as polls suggest he could seize the White House, reports Paul Harris in New Hampshire

Mitt Romney walked into the old Town Hall in the New Hampshire town of Exeter late last week already looking like an American president sent straight from Hollywood. He had the square jaw, the perfect smile and, walking beside him, his gorgeous blonde wife, Ann. He also had a speech that read like a horror movie and described an America in mortal peril of bankruptcy and social chaos.

"If we keep spending like we are spending and borrowing like we are borrowing, at some point we can face what Greece faces," he told a room that was packed to overflowing.

But Romney does not just look the part of president. In the race to be the Republicans' 2012 nominee, and challenge Barack Obama for the White House, Romney is riding high. And with Obama facing the challenge of a worsening economy and anaemic approval ratings, a growing number of commentators believe that the former governor of Massachusetts could be the next occupant of the Oval Office.

He is the undoubted frontrunner in the Republican race, with the rest of the field scrabbling to be the sole "anti-Romney" candidate. One by one, Newt Gingrich, Michele Bachmann and Rick Perry looked likely contenders before their bubbles burst and support withered. Now the latest anti-Romney candidate, former pizza magnate Herman Cain, is mired in a sexual harassment scandal.

With less than two months until Iowa and New Hampshire kick off the vital early contests, Romney is sitting pretty. More than a few of those 200 people inside the hall felt they just might be looking at their nominee: their great hope of making Obama a one-term president. "He has the money. He has the experience. Romney is the most well-rounded candidate," said Rene Bonnin, 63, a local retired naval worker. » | Paul Harris in Exeter, New Hampshire | Saturday, November 05, 2011

Saturday, November 05, 2011

Church Leaders Accuse Bankers of Losing Their 'Moral Moorings'

THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: The Church of England has launched a fierce new attack on bankers accusing them of greed and having "slipped their moral moorings".

A series of senior figures stepped up their attack on the City in an assault that comes a week after the Church refused to evict protesters from outside St Paul's Cathedral in central London.

They spoke of a financial sector which sets a moral tone for a society which had become "scandalously unfair".

The interventions included:

• A call in an article in The Sunday Telegraph today for fundamental reform of how the financial world works. It was made by Ken Costa, a former bank chairman and the Church’s newly appointed leader of an initiative to build links with the City;

• The Archbishop of York, Dr John Sentamu, said executive salaries were creating a gulf between rich and poor that made “societies less cohesive” and called for an end to official honours for financiers;

• Dr Giles Fraser, the cleric who quit as canon chancellor of St Paul’s over plans to evict protesters, said there was “financial injustice” that had to be addressed;

• A report written by Dr Fraser on behalf of a think tank endorsed by the Archbishop of Canterbury, Dr Rowan Williams, is to be published tomorrow, claiming the City’s reliance on technology was dehumanising its values. » | Jonathan Wynne-Jones and Kamal Ahmed | Saturday, November 05, 2011

This is all the result of Reaganism and Thatcherism. The Old Gipper and the ol' 'Milk Snatcher' have a lot to answer for. In Britain, Maggie Thatcher institutionalised greed; in the US, Reagan did the same. – © Mark

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Greek MP Who Wants Papandreou to Quit Says 'I Haven't Slept for Days. This Is the Point of No Return.'

THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: Greece needs a government that can reassure people it is staying in the Eurozone, says Eva Kaili, a key politician who has stopped backing prime minister George Papandreou.

The stage was set for the final act. Crowds gathered outside the seat of power, waiting, after a series of epic plot twists, for the embattled leader to fall on his sword.

Except George Papandreou, the Greek prime minister, appeared not to have read the script. Confounding all expectations, the protagonist in this most gripping of Greek dramas was last night still clinging to power, defying both critics inside his government and the opposition who had demanded his resignation.

Instead, he yesterday went to President Carolos Papoulias to ask for permission to form a coalition government, and begin uniting his fractious politicians, reassuring euro leaders, and securing Greece's economic lifeline.

He is in for a rough ride. Even those who were supportive a week ago are now calling for his head.
"He has to step down," said Eva Kaili, an MP from Mr Papandreou's PASOK party, before the vote on his future in the early hours of Saturday. Read on and comment » | Harriet Alexander, Athens | Saturday, November 05, 2011
Berlusconi Rejects Calls to Resign Over Fiscal Crisis

THE WALL STREET JOURNAL: ROME—Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi on Saturday rebuffed calls to resign as thousands of protesters poured into the streets criticizing his handling of Italy's economy and calling for new leadership to steer the country out of the euro-zone debt crisis.

In a defiant statement, Mr. Berlusconi labeled as "gossip" Italian newspaper reports stating he has come under pressure from key advisers to step down.

"Responsibility in the face of voters and the country requires us and our government to continue this battle for civility that we are conducting in this difficult moment of the crisis," he said.

The protest rally in Rome Saturday was organized by the main opposition party, the Democratic Party, which has repeatedly called on the prime minister to resign. Center-left opposition leader Pier Luigi Bersani said that "either he resigns or he will lose the next election round." » | Stacy Meichtry and Sabrina Cohen | Saturday, November 05, 2011
Griechenland: Übergangsregierung in Planung

Um Haaresbreite hat der griechische Ministerpräsident Giorgos Papandreou im Parlament die Vertrauensabstimmung gewonnen. Nun soll innert weniger Tage eine Übergangsregierung auf Mehrparteien-Basis entstehen.

Tagesschau vom 05.11.2011
NY Mayor Talks Tough on OWS as Momentum Grows

Sharia Law

New Dark Age Alert! Preview of Islam Will Dominate the World Conference

New Dark Age Alert! Daniel Embraces Islam in Birmingham at the Hands of Anjem Choudary

May Allah grant you long life to witness the day Britain will become an islamic state. We support your efforts towards establishing Sharia accross Europe and the the whole earth to become under the BANNER of LA ILLAHA ILLALAH.

Mädchen geschändet: Türkisches Gericht rechtfertigt Vergewaltigung

KRONE.at: Schreckliches musste die junge Nailan im Jahr 2002 in der osttürkischen Provinz Mardin ertragen: Mehr als zwei Dutzend scheinbar ehrenwerte Bürger - darunter Beamte, Lehrer, Soldaten und der Chef der örtlichen Landwirtschaftskammer - verschafften sich über zwei Zuhälterinnen Kontakt zu dem 13-jährigen Mädchen und vergewaltigten es regelmäßig. Eines Tages konnte Nailan flüchten und fand Unterschlupf bei Anwälten, die die Täter vor Gericht brachten. Doch diese könnten nun nahezu ungeschoren davonkommen.

Vor wenigen Tagen entschied das höchste Berufungsgericht des EU-Bewerberlandes Türkei, dass die Vergewaltiger nur Mindeststrafen erhalten dürften - weil das Mädchen den Geschlechtsverkehr selbst gewollt habe. » | AG/red | Freitag 04. November 2011
Bachmann Opposed to Sharia Law, Says It ‘Usurps’ Constitution

abcNEWS: Michele Bachmann said Wednesday she was troubled that American judges would cite sharia law in U.S. courtrooms and that the practice would “usurp” the U.S. Constitution.

“It’s very troubling to see some United States justices bring in sharia law,” Bachmann said in a radio interview with WHO Radio in Iowa. “Sharia law … certainly does not have a place in a United States courtroom, nor should it be followed by United States judges.”

Bachmann was responding to a question from a caller who asked the GOP hopeful’s opinion on judges “sneaking sharia law into courts.”

After a New Jersey judge cited the Muslim religious law in a 2010 decision, some conservative activists and politicians have taken a hard line against the idea of recognizing the practice in American courts and warned that the practice growing.

While some prominent Republicans, most notably New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, have condemned the concerns as “crazy,” Bachmann and fellow presidential candidate Rick Santorum have taken firm positions against sharia. » | Russell Goldman | Wednesday, November 02, 2011
Archbishop of York Attacks High-paid Executives

THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: Dr John Sentamu has attacked the salaries of top executives saying that huge differences between the rich and poor "weaken community life and make societies less cohesive".

Archbishop Sentamu, the second most important figure in the Church of England, said that excesses in the financial sector have helped to create huge inequalities in wealth, "demonstrating how scandalously unfair our society is".

Writing in the Yorkshire Post, Dr Sentamu called for a change in public attitudes towards excessive personal wealth as profound and rapid as moves against racism, homophobia and sex discrimination in recent decades.

He said: "If they [FTSE 100 chief executives] have a responsibility to their staff, it is hard to imagine a more powerful way of telling someone that they are of little value than to pay them one-third of one per cent of your salary.

"Top pay has been found to bear little or no relation to company performance, but even if it did, isn't the performance of a company dependent on the work and well-being of all its staff?

"Among the ill-effects of very large income differences between rich and poor are that they weaken community life and make societies less cohesive." » | Saturday, November 05, 2011

YORKSHIRE POST: Sentamu hits out at greed culture of fat cats: THE Archbishop of York has urged the Government to introduce a radical overhaul of the tax system and called for greed to be made as socially unacceptable as racism and homophobia. ¶ Dr John Sentamu claimed many of the wealthiest in society are avoiding paying their dues in a stinging attack on the growing divide between Britain’s rich and poor. » | Saturday, November 05, 2011

Dr John Sentamu: Our Unequal, Unjust Society... the Richest Are Getting Richer and the Poorest Lose All Hope

YORKSHIRE POST: WITH renewed public outrage at the excesses of the financial sector and the huge inequalities in wealth it has helped to generate, we are being confronted daily with new evidence of extremes of wealth and poverty, demonstrating how scandalously unfair our society is.

But how is this to be addressed? This is the urgent task for us all. The news that chief executives (CEOs) of the FTSE 100 companies last year received average pay increases of almost 50 per cent adds urgency to our cause.

Typically, these CEOs receive 300 times as much as the least well paid British employees in their companies. If they have a responsibility to their staff, it is hard to imagine a more powerful way of telling some people that they are of little value than to pay them one-third of one per cent of your own salary.

Top pay has been found to bear little or no relation to company performance, but even if it did, isn’t the performance of a company dependent on the work and well-being of all its staff?
Among the ill effects of very large income differences between rich and poor are that they weaken community life and make societies less cohesive.

If the concept of the Big Society is to become a reality, so that people come to know and take more care of each other, income differences must surely be reduced. No one wants a “dog eat dog” society in which people feel obliged simply to fend for themselves.

But over the last few decades, the gains from economic growth have gone disproportionately to those who already have most. In contrast, forecasts suggest that child poverty will increase. The danger is that rather than increasing equality of opportunity, social mobility will slow down and people will become more divided by class and status. » | Dr. John Sentamu | Saturday, November 05, 2011
Sarkozy Insult to 'Island' Britain: Snarling French President Dismisses the English Saying 'You Don't Understand Europe'

MAIL ONLINE: French president Nicolas Sarkozy launched an astonishing attack on Britain’s attitude to Europe last night.

The furious French leader was branded the ‘new de Gaulle’ after claiming the British can’t comprehend Europe because we are ‘an island’.

‘You come from an island, so maybe you don’t understand the subtleties of European construction,’ he snapped at BBC Newsnight’s economics editor Paul Mason.

Mr Sarkozy had been asked whether it was right for the European Union to be attempting to block an EU referendum and install a coalition government in Greece.

His outburst was quickly seen as evidence that the diminutive French premier has contempt for both Greece and Britain.

His comments come less than two weeks after he snapped at David Cameron at a Brussels summit, telling the Prime Minister to stop telling the eurozone ‘what to do’ about the economic crisis. ‘You have lost a good opportunity to shut up,’ he said.

Also at the Brussels summit Mr Sarkozy publicly snubbed Mr Cameron by turning away as the Prime Minister offered his hand in friendship. » | James Chapman and Hugo Duncan | Saturday, November 05, 2011

What is this? The 'Little Englanders' Saturday Forum'? Europhobia abounds on this small island. Sarkozy is right: The English don't understand Europe at all. I am so glad he didn't include the Celtic fringe in his assertion. I truly believe that you will find very different attitudes to the EU in Scotland, Ireland, and Wales. Attitudes to Europe in the English press rarely speak for me, not being English, and certainly no 'Little Englander'. – © Mark

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Clinton Rounds On Obama in New Book

THE INDEPENDENT: Indulging in the luxury of being an ex-president with little at stake except his own reputation, Bill Clinton is to release a new book that will suggest – bluntly – that the American economy is "a mess" and that part of the blame lies with his Democratic successor in the White House, Barack Obama.

Due out next Tuesday, the new book, Back To Work, is partly an analysis of how America came to be where it is now, with Washington enmeshed in partisan gridlock and Main Street suffering from an unemployment crisis that shows no signs of easing quickly. » | DAVID USBORNE | Saturday, November 05, 2011
Oxford Tories' Nights of Port and Nazi Songs

THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: With two prime ministers and 13 cabinet ministers among its alumni, the Oxford University Conservative Association has become a conveyor belt for future leaders since it was founded in 1924.

But the student body, whose patron is Baroness Thatcher, is facing potentially the biggest crisis in its history after its own officers accused members of anti-Semitism, debauchery and snobbery at its alcohol-fuelled meetings.

Four of the Association’s most senior members have announced they will be resigning after members allegedly sang a Nazi-themed song, while others complained that members from working-class backgrounds were ridiculed by a clique of former public schoolboys.

Students are now facing possible disciplinary action by both the University and the Conservative Party, both of which have launched investigations.

OUCA, whose honorary president is William Hague, uses its website to promote a public image of studious debate, with recent guest speakers including Sir John Major and Iain Duncan Smith.

At its weekly “port and policy” meetings, however, drunkenness and discrimination have been the main items on the agenda, according to some disillusioned members.

One officer claimed that members regularly sang a song which includes the words: “Dashing through the Reich…killing lots of kike (Jews).” » | Gordon Rayner, and Richard Alleyne | Friday, November 04, 2011

Friday, November 04, 2011

'Against Policy' to Ban Burqa

THE AUSTRALIAN: THE burqa may be confronting but to ban it would fly in the face of religious freedom, a top public servant has told university students.

"Banning the burqa or any other form of religious dress in Australia would be inconsistent with our principles and traditions of religious freedom and tolerance,'' said Andrew Metcalfe, secretary of the Department of Immigration and Citizenship.

Mr Metcalfe acknowledged that "some Australians find the burqa confronting''.

He was speaking last month at the University of Western Australia on "Australian government approaches to Islam''.Asked whether Mr Metcalfe was speaking personally or expressing a government position, a spokesperson for DIAC said his remarks were "consistent with the government's multicultural policy''.

That policy "allows those who choose to call Australia home the right to practise and share in their cultural traditions and languages within the law and free from discrimination''. » | BERNARD LANE | The Australian | Saturday, November 05, 2011
Le masque de l'indignation: plus populaire que jamais

LA PRESSE: Il s'agit de jeter un coup d'oeil aux photos des «indignés» du mouvement «Occupy» dans les journaux à travers le monde pour apercevoir une poignée de personnes qui portent le masque d'un homme souriant au regard mystérieux arborant une fine barbe.

Ce masque représente - de façon stylisée - Guy Fawkes, un Britannique qui a tenté de faire sauter l'édifice du parlement britannique le 5 novembre 1605.

«Ce sont des masques qui ont une signification puissante», a lancé Alexandre Ricciardelli, qui s'affairait jeudi à rouler une cigarette sur une table à pique-nique du parc Zuccoti, deux jours avant l'anniversaire de l'acte terroriste raté du 17e siècle.

«Mais l'idée n'est pas de faire sauter quoi que ce soit, a-t-elle précisé. C'est plutôt pour rester anonymes - et pacifiques.»

Pour la jeune femme du New Jersey âgée de 20 ans, le fait de porter le masque de Fawkes signifie «être opposé à L'Homme («The Man»), le pouvoir qui opprime (la société)». » | Tamara Lush et Verena Dobnik | Associated Press | New York | vendredi 04 novembre 2011
Disillusioned Greeks despair at political drama

GLOBE AND MAIL: Already exasperated by a seemingly endless wave of pay cuts and tax hikes, Greeks watched the latest political drama unfolding in their capital with a mixture of despair and disbelief.

In an extraordinary week even by the chaotic standards of Greek politics, Prime Minister George Papandreou first declared a vital bailout lifeline would be put to a popular vote before backing down in the face of an uproar at home and abroad.

“We are suffering from austerity and this man is smiling in parliament and telling us the referendum plan was just a joke,” said Alexandra Rouva, a 27-year-old Greek who has been unemployed for more than a year.

“Well, this is not the right time for stupid jokes. He cannot play with our lives.” » | RENEE MALTEZOU | ATHENS | Friday, November 04, 2011
Damas demande aux Syriens de rendre les armes

LE FIGARO: Tout en poursuivant la répression, le pouvoir propose l'amnistie contre les fusils.

Le plan de paix de la Ligue arabe pour une sortie de crise en Syrie a fait long feu. Après l'avoir accepté mercredi, Damas n'a pas cessé de tirer sur les manifestants. L'organisation panarabe demandait au régime de retirer l'armée des villes, de libérer les prisonniers politiques, de dialoguer avec l'opposition et de laisser circuler médias et observateurs. Vendredi, au lendemain d'un jeudi meurtrier qui avait fait au moins 20 morts, le massacre s'est poursuivi, tuant au moins 17 personnes, selon les chiffres provisoires donnés en milieu de journée par l'Observatoire syrien des droits de l'homme (OSDH) et les comités locaux de coordination (CLC). » | Par Pierre Prier | vendredi 04 novembre 2011
2.5 Million Pilgrims Prepare for Hajj

THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: Around 2.5 million Muslims begin Friday the rituals of the hajj pilgrimage, the world's largest annual assembly, leaving Saudi authorities with a daunting security and safety challenge.

Saudi authorities have mobilised some 100,000 security and civil defence personnel to insure a smooth pilgrimage and avoid deadly incidents that marred the extremely crowded rites in the past.

"We will mobilise all our means to prevent any harm against any pilgrim or any group of pilgrims," Saudi Interior Minister Prince Nayef bin Abdul Aziz, who recently became the crown prince of the Muslim kingdom said on Tuesday.

He made the remark during an inspection tour of hajj preparations as anti-riot and anti-terrorism police paraded in front of the kingdom's internal security tsar as police and rescue helicopters hovered overhead.

The hajj rituals begin Friday and peak on Saturday when all pilgrims assemble in the Arafat plain outside Mecca, and end with Eid al-Adha, or the Feast of Sacrifice, which will be celebrated on Sunday.

Around 1.7 million Muslims are due to descent on Mecca from around the world while between 700,000 and 800,000 pilgrims will be coming from inside Saudi Arabia. » | Thursday, November 03, 2011

Millions of Muslim Pilgrims Arrive in Mecca for Hajj

Islam's holiest site is heaving with pilgrims from around the world, many thousands of whom pray shoulder to shoulder outside Mecca's Grand Mosque as part of their hajj pilgrimage.


Read short article here | Friday, November 04, 2011
Demütigung und Ende von Europas krankem Mann

WELT ONLINE: Italiens Premier wird beim G-20-Gipfel gerügt und muss einer Beobachtung seines Landes zustimmen. Es naht das Ende einer schillernden Karriere.

Wenn du denkst, es geht nicht mehr, kommt von irgendwo ein Lichtlein her: Mit dieser Devise hat es Silvio Berlusconi ziemlich weit gebracht.

Doch jetzt naht das Ende, es geht einfach nicht mehr. Die Art, wie auf europäischen Gipfeln mit ihrem Ministerpräsidenten umgesprungen wird, müssen alle Italiener als tiefe Demütigung wahrnehmen.

Über das Land, das zu den Gründungsstaaten der EU gehört und das ziemlich lange europabegeistert war, beugen sich die EU-Kapitäne wie über einen kranken Mann und machen es vom Subjekt zum Objekt. Das kann sich Italien aus Selbstachtung nicht länger leisten. Es kommt kein Lichtlein mehr. » | Autor: Thomas Schmid | Freitag 04. November 2011
California: Occupy Oakland Strike vs Tear Gas, Flashbangs, Rubber Bullets