Friday, February 21, 2014

Swiss Court Rules Police Officer's Slurs Did Not Breach Anti-racism Law

Switzerland's highest court said calling someone 'dirty' –
even if nationality was mentioned – was not against the law.
THE GUARDIAN: 'Foreign pig' and 'dirty asylum seeker' insulting but not against anti-racism law because specific ethnic group not mentioned

Calling someone a "foreign pig" or "dirty asylum seeker" is insulting but is not against Switzerland's anti-racism law, the country's top court has ruled.

The federal tribunal found in favour of a police officer who had used the slurs when he arrested an Algerian suspected thief. » | Agence France-Presse | Friday, February 21, 2014

101-year-old Runs for US Congress in Florida


THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: Florida centurion bids to become oldest person to be elected to US Congress

A Florida great-great grandfather has launched a campaign to run for the US Congress in November, running on a record of 101 years of life experience.

In a bid to become the world's oldest freshman, Joe Newman announced on his website joenewman101.com that he will present his candidacy to the House of Representatives for the first time on a promise that "all citizens be heard".

He is 76 years older than the minimum age of 25 required to serve in Congress. » | AFP | Friday, February 21, 2014

Bernie Ecclestone ‘Completely Agrees’ with Vladimir Putin’s Anti-gay Laws, and So Do ‘90 Per Cent of the World’, Says F1 Boss

THE INDEPENDENT: In an ill-advised move, the Formula One boss gave his support for Russia’s controversial laws ahead of the first Russian Grand Prix this year

Bernie Ecclestone has said that not only does he "completely agree" with Vladimir Putin’s anti-gay propaganda laws, but that he believes "90 per cent of the world" do too.

In an ill-advised move, the Formula One boss lent his support for Russia’s controversial legislation, which prohibits the publicity of what it calls "homosexual behaviour" in the country.

"He [Putin] hasn't said he doesn't agree [with homosexuality] just that he doesn't want these things publicised to an audience under the age of 18," Ecclestone told CNN in an exclusive interview.

"I completely agree with those sentiments and if you took a world census you'd find 90% of the world agree with it as well."

"I've great admiration for him and his courage to say what he says," the 83-year-old added. "[It] may upset a few people but that's how the world is. It's how he sees [the world] and I think he's completely right." » | Jenn Selby | Friday, February 21, 2014

Thursday, February 20, 2014

Korruptionsprozeß: Christian Wulff kommt ohne Strafforderung davon


Could This Be the Next Queen of Scotland? As Independence Looms, Will Stuart Crown Return?

Could the Duchess of Alba be the next Queen of Scotland?
DAILY EXPRESS: A YES vote in September’s referendum on independence for Scotland could reawaken centuries old claims to the Scottish crown from members of the House of Stuart.

And an 87-year-old billionaire from Spain might argue she has the strongest claim.

For the Duchess of Alba is said to be one of two main contenders from the Stuart dynasty, whose Scottish monarchs transformed the country during their time in power.

While First Minister Alex Salmond insists Queen Elizabeth II would remain as head of state after a Yes vote, others are not so sure.

Some Scots look back fondly in the history books to their Stuart kings, the first of whom was Robert II in 1371.

By the 17th century, they ruled all of England, Wales, Ireland and Scotland.

In 1603, James VI of Scotland became James I in London, unifying the two crowns. His son Charles I was executed and Charles II ascended to the thrones after Oliver Cromwell’s inter-regnum.

Charles II’s brother, Roman Catholic James II, then ruled until the Glorious Revolution saw him depart the British Isles.

The last Stuart monarch was Queen Anne, who died childless in 1714.

The Crown passed to the House of Hanover, but the Stuart line continued abroad. » | Ted Jeory | Thursday, February 20, 2014

Bittersweet Tears as Divided Koreans Meet after 60 Years

South Korean Park Yang-gon (R), 53, and his North Korean brother
Park Yang-su, who was abducted by North Korea, cry during their
family reunion at the Mount Kumgang resort in North Korea
THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: Elderly relatives meet in snowy North Korean resort at reunion brokered by high-level negotiations between Pyongyang and Seoul

Several hundred elderly South and North Korean relatives yesterday clung to each-other, rocking and weeping, and trading photos and faded memories as they met after 60 years Thursday at a reunion for families divided by the Korean War.

The emotional gathering at North Korea’s Mount Kumgang resort was the result of tortuous, high-level negotiations between Pyongyang and Seoul, which had nearly broken down over the North’s objections to overlapping South Korea-US military drills.

Television footage showed snow falling hard as 82 South Koreans - some so frail they had to be stretchered indoors - arrived at the resort in a convoy of buses to meet 180 North Korean relatives they have not seen for decades.

Inside the main hall, where numbered tables had been laid out, there were moving scenes as divided brothers, sisters, uncles, aunts, step-siblings and in-laws sought each other out and then collapsed into each others’ arms.

One of the oldest South Koreans, a 93-year-old man who was separated from his pregnant wife during the 1950-53 conflict, met the now 64-year-old son he had never seen. » | AFP | Thursday, February 20, 2014

Inside Story: Holy War in the Central African Republic?


We ask if the violence in the CAR is turning into a religious war.


WIKI: Anti-balaka »

Student Support: Snowden Elected Rector at Glasgow University


Fugitive whistleblower Edward Snowden may be in limbo over where his future lies, but one of the UK's most venerable institutions is happy to give him a position of trust. Students at Glasgow University in Scotland have nominated him as rector. Tesa Arcilla explains.


Edward Snowden élu recteur de l’Université de Glasgow »

Wednesday, February 19, 2014

My Journey, My Story, My Islam: Ex-Hindu (September 2013)


Edward Snowden élu recteur de l'Université de Glasgow


LA PRESSE: L'ancien consultant de l'Agence américaine de sécurité (NSA) Edward Snowden, inculpé d'espionnage dans son pays et réfugié en Russie, a été élu au poste purement honorifique de recteur de l'Université de Glasgow, a annoncé mardi la faculté écossaise sur son compte twitter.

Edward Snowden avait accepté l'invitation d'un groupe d'étudiants à se présenter à ce poste.

Il a été préféré à l'ancien champion cycliste écossais Graeme Obree, à l'écrivain Alan Bissett et à l'ecclésiastique Kelvin Holdsworth. Il succède à l'ancien dirigeant du parti libéral démocrate britannique, Charles Kennedy.

Parmi les précédents recteurs figurent également Winnie Mandela et le lanceur d'alerte israélien Mordechai Vanunu.

«Nous sommes ravis de voir Edward Snowden élu nouveau recteur de l'Université de Glasgow», ont également écrit dans un communiqué le groupe d'étudiants qui l'avait sollicité. » | Agence France-Presse, Londres | mardi 18 février 2014

Muslims 'Warned in Fatwa Not to Live on Mars'

'Fatwa' issued against Muslims going to live on Mars
THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: Fatwa reportedly issued warning Muslims not to make 'hazardous trip' to live on Mars

Muslims have been warned in a Fatwa not to go and live on Mars because it would pose "a real risk to life", according to a Dubai news organisation.

The General Authority of Islamic Affairs and Endowment (GAIAE) in the United Arab Emirates said that anyone making such a "hazardous trip" is likely to die for "no righteous reason".

They would therefore be liable to a "punishment similar to that of suicide in the Hereafter", the Khaleej Times reported. » | Barney Henderson | Wednesday, February 19, 2014

Barack Obama Apologises for Mocking Art History

President Obama wrote a note apologising for his "glib remark"
THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: Presdient pens personal note of apology to art historian who wrote to the White House

When the apology came it was handwritten and on White House stationary.

President Barack Obama sent a personal note of contrition to a university professor after she complained about him mocking art history during a recent speech.

Speaking in Wisconsin on a trip to promote American manufacturing, Mr Obama noted that workers could make more money in "skilled manufacturing or the trades than they might with an art history degree".

Sensing he may have offended academic sensibilities, Mr Obama quickly added: "Now, nothing wrong with an art history degree - I love art history. So I don't want to get a bunch of emails from everybody." » | Raf Sanchez, Washington | Wednesday, February 19, 2014

New Dark Age Alert! 24 Hours after the Establishment of the Islamic Caliphate (Khilafah)


Sarah Palin: "I Was Not Allowed" to Tell the Truth about Obama in 2008 (July 26, 2013)


Baroness Warsi ‘Saddened’ by Rise in Islamic Sectarianism

MP's comments come after Briton carries out suicide attack
in Shia-Sunni Syria conflict
THE INDEPENDENT: Islamic sectarianism has become a “deep and dangerous” problem in Britain that is being used to justify acts of religious extremism, the country’s most senior Muslim politician has warned.

In a speech during a trip to the Middle East, Baroness Warsi said that differences between branches of Islam were being used by extremists to cause “tension, turmoil and terrorism”. She warned that such preaching was stripping the “soulfulness and kindness of spirit” from the heart of the religion and called on Islamic leaders to “reclaim the true meaning of the religion”.

Her comments come just days after it emerged that a UK citizen had become the first known Briton to carry out a suicide attack in Syria. Abdul Waheed Majeed, from Crawley, joined Jabhat al-Nusra, an al-Qa’ida-aligned group, and drove a truck laden with explosives into the gates of a prison in Aleppo.

While the Syrian conflict is in part about the rule of President Assad it also has a very significant sectarian dimension. Mr Assad is supported by the Shia minority in Syria, while the opposition come from the almost exclusively Sunni majority.

In her speech, given at the Sultan Qaboos Grand Mosque in Oman, Baroness Warsi said such divisions were rarely confronted but posed “a great danger to faith and our world”. “The hatred that can exist between sects – between people who follow the same God – disturbs and saddens me,” she said.

“And even in Britain we are not immune from it. With division being preached by some, and belittling another’s faith or denomination being used as a way of reaffirming one’s own. Often the strongest condemnation seems to be reserved for your brother or sister in faith.” » | Oliver Wright | Tuesday, February 18, 2014

THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: Warsi warns of sectarian threat: Religious sectarianism “threat to world” says Baroness Warsi » | Matthew Holehouse, Political Correspondent | Tuesday, February 18, 2014

Extremist Preacher Anjem Choudary Taunts Home Secretary Theresa May

DAILY STAR: VILE Anjem Choudary yesterday laughed off calls to deport him, insisting: “Theresa May will have to chuck me in the North Sea.”

The notorious hate preacher sparked fresh fury after appearing on Channel 5’s The Big British Immigration Row: Live on Monday night.

He prompted a flood of complaints to Ofcom after warning more British troops would be targeted in Lee Rigby-style horror killings.

There were even calls to boot him out of the UK or seize his passport, with Choudary himself quipping that Home Secretary May, 57, was on his case.

But yesterday the defiant cleric, 47, snarled: “I was born here." » | Jimmy McCloskey | Wednesday, February 19, 2014

The Big British Immigration Row » | First broadcast on Monday, February 17, 2014

Assessment: North Korea



THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: Kim Jong-un out-spending extravagant father: UN report: North Korean leader raised $645 million for luxuries from ivory trade, underground sale of alcohol » | Julian Ryall, Tokyo | Wednesday, February 19, 2014

Prince of Wales Joins Saudi Sword Dancers in Traditional Dress


The Prince joined members of the Saudi royal family taking part in an Ardah or sword dance in a stadium in the capital Riyadh


Read the short Telegraph article here | News agencies | Wednesday, February 19, 2014

THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: BAE agrees pricing on Typhoon deal with Saudi Arabia: Years of uncertainty ends over multi-billion pound sale of fighters to Saudi Arabia in boost to defence giant ahead of annual results » | Alan Tovey | Wednesday, February 19, 2014

Tuesday, February 18, 2014

Ukraine Crisis: Kiev Clashes 'Like a War Zone'

BBC: At least nine people, including two police officers, have been killed in violent clashes in Ukraine's capital, Kiev.

Police used rubber bullets and stun grenades to stop thousands of protesters marching on parliament.

Bridget Kendall reports. (+ BBC video) » | Tuesday, February 18, 2014

Venezuela: Maduro fürchtet den Staatsputsch

Venezuelas Präsident Nicolas Maduro
ZEIT ONLINE: Wie sein Vorgänger Hugo Chávez wittert Venezuelas Präsident Maduro Verschwörung von allen Seiten. Die Opposition demonstriert, ihr Anführer stellte sich nun der Polizei.

Nicolas Maduro kämpft um seine Präsidentschaft. Venezuelas Staatschef hätte das Land aus der Krise führen müssen, in die sein Vorgänger Hugo Chávez es in seiner 14-jährigen Amtszeit gesteuert hatte. Stattdessen ging es in den vergangenen Monaten wirtschaftlich weiter rapide bergab.

Es kann daher kaum verwundern, dass sich die Unzufriedenheit in der Bevölkerung jetzt auf der Straße zeigt. Für den heutigen Dienstag ist eine weitere Großkundgebung in der Hauptstadt Caracas angekündigt. Nach dem Willen von Oppositionsführer Leopoldo López soll diese friedlich bleiben.Dass dies jedoch keinesfalls garantiert ist, beweisen die Proteste der vergangenen Woche, bei denen zwei Studenten sowie ein regierungsfreundlicher Aktivist getötet wurden. » | Von Sybille Klormann | Dienstag, 18. Februar 2014

Un rendez-vous secret entre Nicolas Sarkozy et Angela Merkel ?

Selon "Le Parisien". Nicolas Sarkozy et le chancelière allemande Angela Merkel
"ont prévu de se voir très prochainement sans doute en Allemagne".

LE POINT: Nicolas Sarkozy, qui se rendra à Berlin le 28 février pour une conférence devant la fondation de la CDU, pourrait en profiter pour rencontrer Angela Merkel.

Nicolas Sarkozy se rendra à Berlin le 28 février pour donner une conférence sur le thème des relations franco-allemandes devant la Konrad-Adenauer Stiftung, la fondation de la CDU, parti d'Angela Merkel, a-t-on appris lundi de sources concordantes. Selon un porte-parole de la CDU à Berlin, cette conférence portera sur le thème des relations franco-allemandes et sur l'avenir de l'Europe.

Vingt-deux mois après la défaite électorale de mai 2012, le couple "Merkozy" serait-il en passe de se reformer ? Le Parisien affirme en tout cas lundi, sans préciser de date, que l'ancien président et la chancelière allemande Angela Merkel "ont prévu de se voir très prochainement, sans doute en Allemagne". Cette rencontre, précise le journal, "a été préparée dans le plus grand secret par leurs deux entourages pour éviter 'les interprétations fâcheuses'". » | Le Point.fr | mardi 18 février 2014

Ukraine Crisis: Flames and Stun Grenades as Police Launch All-out Assault on Protesters in Kiev

Anti-government protesters throw stones and molotov cocktails
towards Interior Ministry members
THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: Police in the Ukrainian capital Kiev launch fierce attack on protesters in main city square after a day of violence and deaths

Fires lit up central Kiev as Ukraine’s security forces launched an assault on protest camps in the heart of the capital after a day of bloodshed that claimed nine lives.

A long-feared attack on the demonstrators who have occupied central Kiev since December appeared to have begun on Tuesday evening. The interior ministry announced the onset of an “anti-terrorist” operation after setting a deadline of 6pm local time for the protests against President Viktor Yanukovych to end.

Afterwards, central Kiev was sealed off and the metro closed down. Specialist riot police armed with assault rifles closed on Independence Square, the site of the biggest protest camp. Security forces overran the main barricade protecting this area and set the tents belonging to demonstrators ablaze. » | Roland Oliphant, David Blair and agencies | Tuesday, February 18, 2014

Gay No Go: Kansas Approves Bill Discriminating Against Same-sex Couples


A decision by the Kansas House of Representatives to pass a bill which would have allowed the legal discrimination of gay couples was met with outrage across the U.S. A somewhat embarrassed state Senate now plans to sink the legislation which would have allowed people to use their religious beliefs to openly deny services, care or employment to same-sex couples. RT's Gayane Chichakyan reports.

Prime Minister of Israel, Benjamin Netanyahu, Talks about the Boycott of the Jewish State



Related »

New Catholic Cardinal Renews Attack on 'Disgraceful' UK Austerity Cuts

The Archbishop of Westminster, Vincent Nichols, said the
government's crackdown on benefit cheats was disproportionate
as only 1% of the welfare budget went on fraudulent claims.
THE GUARDIAN: Roman Catholic archbishop Vincent Nichols, who is to be made a cardinal by Pope Francis, inundated with messages of support

The leader of the Roman Catholic church in England and Wales says he has been inundated with messages of support after branding the government's austerity programme a disgrace for leaving so many people in destitution.

In an interview with BBC Radio 4's Today programme to mark his imminent appointment as a cardinal by Pope Francis, Archbishop Vincent Nichols expanded upon his comments to the Telegraph when he criticised the government's welfare reforms as "punitive".

"The voices that I hear express anger and despair … Something is going seriously wrong when, in a country as affluent as ours, people are left in that destitute situation and depend solely on the handouts of the charity of food banks," Nichols said. » | Matthew Weaver | Tuesday, February 18, 2014

Egypt Warns Tourists of Islamist Terror Threat


THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: Warning follows an explosion on the bus which killed three South Korean Christian pilgrims heading from South Sinai to the Israeli border

Egypt’s prime minister yesterday issued a warning to the tourism industry after a terror group claimed a suicide bombing on a bus which killed three South Koreans and threatened to stage more attacks. The statement by Ansar Beit al-Maqdis, or Supporters of Jerusalem, celebrated the loss of one of its “heroes”, who it said attacked the bus as it was heading towards the “Zionist entity”.

An explosion on the bus, which was carrying South Korean Christian pilgrims and approaching the Israeli border crossing at Taba after visiting St Catherine’s Monastery in South Sinai, killed three passengers and the Egyptian driver, as well as the bomber.

“This is part of our economic war against this treacherous, agent regime,” the statement said. “We are watching this treasonous gang and we will target its economic interests everywhere, to cripple them and their actions against the Muslim people.” » | Richard Spencer in Cairo | Tuesday, February 18, 2014

Netanyahu Compares Israel Boycott Movement to Nazism

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu
THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: Calls for a boycott on the Jewish state are simply old-style anti-Semitism in new clothes, says Israel's prime minister

Benjamin Netanyahu has invoked Europe’s Fascist past to attack the growing calls for a boycott of Israel, comparing it to embargoes imposed on Jewish businesses by the Nazis and other anti-Semitic groups.

“The most disgraceful thing is to have people on the soil of Europe talking about the boycott of Jews. I think that’s an outrage,” the Israeli prime minister told a conference of US Jewish organisations in Jerusalem.

“In the past, anti-Semites boycotted Jewish businesses, and today they call for the boycott of the Jewish state and, by the way, only the Jewish state.”

Mr Netanyahu’s fiercest broadside yet against the boycott movement followed several meetings among senior government figures over how to tackle what Israel sees as a looming threat of economic isolation.

Mr Netanyahu singled out the Boycott, Divestment, Sanctions movement, a group run by pro-Palestinian intellectuals that calls for a boycott of Israeli goods due to Israel’s illegal occupation of Palestinian land. He called the group’s members “classical anti-Semites in modern garb” whose true goal was the destruction of the Israeli state. » Robert Tait, Jerusalem | Tuesday, February 18, 2014

Royal Cousins at War: Into the Abyss


The roles played by cousins Tsar Nicholas II of Russia, Kaiser Wilhelm II of Germany and King George V of England in the desperate, frantic summer of 1914.

Watch the BBC documentary here on BBC iPlayer

Episode 1: Royal Cousins at War: A House Divided »

Striking Back: Germany Considers Counterespionage Against US


SPIEGEL ONLINE INTERNATIONAL: Unsatisfied with the lack of answers provided by Washington in the NSA spying scandal, officials in Berlin are considering a new approach. Germany might begin counterespionage measures aimed at allies.

The question seemed out of place, especially when asked three times. A female journalist from a satire magazine wanted to know if Thomas de Maizière liked cheese snacks. "Questions like that are more appropriate for breakfast television than here," the minister snipped back. It was de Maizière's first visit as interior minister to the Federal Office for the Protection of the Constitution, Germany's domestic intelligence agency. And he was in no mood for jokes.

Instead, the minister preferred to focus on the basics during the appearance two weeks ago, with counterespionage at the top of his list. The issue, he warned, shouldn't be underestimated, adding that the question as to who was doing the spying was but of secondary importance.

In other words: Germany intends to defend itself against all spying efforts in the future, even if they are perpetrated by supposed friends.

While the minister's words may have sounded innocuous, they marked nothing less than the start of a political about-face. Away from the public eye, the German government is moving toward implementing plans to turn its own spies against partner countries like the United States, putting allies on the same level as the Chinese, Russians and North Koreans. » | SPIEGEL Staff | Tuesday, February 18, 2014

Inside Story: North Korea: Trumped Up Tyranny?


As a UN panel accuses Pyongyang of committing crimes against humanity, we ask what the international community will do.

Spain: Muslim Immigration Leads to Islamization


Allah hat bestimmt, daß ich muslim werde: Polizist Bernd

Amr Moussa: Arab Spring Has Not Improved Economy or Brought Stability to Egypt


The Arab Spring turned North Africa and the Middle East upside down, bringing with it hopes for change and a brighter future for millions. Three years down the track, tens of thousands have been killed, Syria and Libya lie in ruins, and Egypt's first democratically-elected president has been deposed in a military coup. Was it all worth it? Are violent revolutions really the best way to bring about change? Amr Moussa, the former Secretary-General of the Arab League, joins Oksana to unravel these issues.

Denmark Bans Halal and Kosher Slaughter as Minister Says ‘Animal Rights Come Before Religion’

New law, denounced as 'anti-Semitism' by Jewish leaders,
comes after country controversially slaughtered a giraffe
in public and fed him to lions
THE INDEPENDENT: Denmark’s government has brought in a ban on the religious slaughter of animals for the production of halal and kosher meat, after years of campaigning from welfare activists.

The change to the law, announced last week and effective as of yesterday, has been called “anti-Semitism” by Jewish leaders and “a clear interference in religious freedom” by the non-profit group Danish Halal.

European regulations require animals to be stunned before they are slaughtered, but grants exemptions on religious grounds. For meat to be considered kosher under Jewish law or halal under Islamic law, the animal must be conscious when killed.

Yet defending his government’s decision to remove this exemption, the minister for agriculture and food Dan Jørgensen told Denmark’s TV2 that “animal rights come before religion”. » | Adam Withnall | Tuesday, February 18, 2014

NATIONAL SECULAR SOCIETY: Denmark bans religious slaughter » | Friday, February 14, 2014

WORLD BULLETIN: Denmark to ban halal and kosher slaughter methods » | World Bulletin / News Desk | Friday, February 14, 2014

Monday, February 17, 2014

Sweden Begins To Realise What A Serious Muslim Infiltration Means (2012)


Saudi Woman Named First Editor-in-Chief of Newspaper

Somayya Jabarti said she felt a great sense of responsibility
BBC: A woman has been named editor-in-chief of a daily newspaper for the first time in Saudi Arabia.

The English-language Saudi Gazette announced on its website that Somayya Jabarti would succeed Khaled Almaeena.

In Sunday's edition of the paper, he wrote Ms Jabarti had won the opportunity on merit, describing her as a determined and dedicated journalist.

Ms Jabarti meanwhile said: "A crack has been made in the glass ceiling. And I'm hoping it will be made into a door."

In an interview with al-Arabiya News, she admitted she felt a great sense of responsibility.

"My actions will reflect upon my fellow Saudi women," she explained. » | Monday, February 17, 2014

Heavy Snow Revives US Interest in 86-year-old Sport

Heavy snows across America has led to the revival of Skijoring, a demonstration sport in the 1928 Winter Olympics


Read the Telegraph article here | David Millward, US Correspondent | Monday, February 17, 2014

WIKI: Skijoring »

Eurozone Countries Should Form United States of Europe, Says EC Vice-President

Viviane Reding: 'Like Winston Churchill, I believe that the UK
not be part of this, but it should remain a close ally with the
federated eurozone.'
THE GUARDIAN: Viviane Reding calls for full fiscal and political union for 18 eurozone countries but says UK should remain apart

A "United States of Europe" should be formed by the 18 eurozone countries to stabilise the European single currency, a vice-president of the European commission says in a speech on Monday evening.

Speaking at the Cambridge University faculty of law, Viviane Reding borrows Winston Churchill's historic 1946 phrase as she called for a full fiscal and political union on much of the continent.

Delivering the Mackenzie Stuart lecture, Reding says: "There is a strong case for a true fiscal and ultimately political union. In my personal view, the eurozone should become the United States of Europe."

However, Reding endorses Churchill's view, outlined in his Zurich speech in 1946, that Britain should remain apart from the United States of Europe. » | Nicholas Watt, chief political correspondent | Monday, February 17, 2014

North Korea[n] Prisoner: 'I Had to Bury My Son'

BBC: A former prisoner, who now lives freely in South Korea, has told the BBC what [what] life was like in North Korea's camps after having experienced it first-hand.

Kim Young-soon told reporter Paul Adams that she was imprisoned in North Korea during the 1970s, in an ordeal that lasted nine years.

"My parents were starved to death in Yodok camp... I had to take their bodies on my back and bury them... and I also had my nine-year-old son drowned and I had to do the same for my boy as well," she remembered.

Charity Amnesty International, which monitors prison camps in North Korea using satellites, estimates that there are now 200,000 people in such camps in the country.

And the organisation says that number is growing. (+ BBC audio) » | Tuesday, October 08, 2013

Counting the Cost: The Price of Closed Borders


We look at the global immigration debate and examine whether foreigners are good for a country's economy, or a burden.

Kim Jong Un Warned He Could Face Prosecution for 'Crimes Against Humanity'

THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: The United Nations has warned Kim Jong Un that he could end up in an international criminal court for his regime's human rights abuses

North Korea's leader, Kim Jong Un, has been warned that he could face prosecution for crimes against humanity after a United Nations inquiry accused him of some of the worst human rights abuses since World War II.

In some of the harshest criticism ever unleashed by the international community against the Pyongyang regime, a UN panel branded it "a shock to the conscience of humanity".

Michael Kirby, a retired Australian judge who has spent nearly a year taking testimony from victims of the regime, said its behaviour was akin to some of the atrocities carried by the Nazi regime and of Pol Pot's in Cambodia.

In a bid to put pressure on Kim Jong Un, he has now written to the North Korean leader to warn him that he could face prosecution for the activities of his henchmen, whom the inquiry accused of killing, imprisoning and torturing with impunity. » | Colin Freeman | Monday, February 17, 2014


Churches Block-book Cinemas for Son of God Opening

Diogo Morgado in the film poster for 'Son of God'
THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: Pastors distribute tickets to the faithful in pulpit promotion campaign for new film based on hit miniseries The Bible

American church groups are block-booking cinema multiplexes to fill seats with the faithful for opening night screenings next week of Son of God, the forthcoming film about the life of Jesus Christ.

They are buying up all the tickets and distributing them to churchgoers as part of a "theatre takeover" to promote the film which is based on the hit television miniseries The Bible.

Cinema chains said the pre-release buzz and demand for tickets was on a par with major blockbuster releases as pastors spread the word about the celluloid portrayal of the life of Christ from the pulpit.

Crossroads Church in Cincinnati has bought every seat in all 13 screens for a simultaneous showing of the film on February 27, according to The Hollywood Reporter. » | Phil Sherwell, New York | Monday, February 17, 2014


SUMMARY: This major motion picture event -- an experience created to be shared among families and communities across the U.S. -- brings the story of Jesus’ life to audiences through compelling cinematic storytelling that is both powerful and inspirational. Told with the scope and scale of an action epic, the film features powerful performances, exotic locales, dazzling visual effects and a rich orchestral score from Oscar®-winner Hans Zimmer. Portuguese actor Diogo Morgado portrays the role of Jesus as the film spans from his humble birth through his teachings, crucifixion and ultimate resurrection. [Source: The Hollywood Reporter]

Streit um Freizügigkeit: EU setzt Verhandlungen mit der Schweiz aus


SPIEGEL ONLINE: Der Zwist zwischen EU und der Schweiz verschärft sich. Die Eidgenossen hatten am Sonntag ein Abkommen zur Öffnung ihres Arbeitsmarkts für Kroaten gestoppt. Brüssel reagierte umgehend und setzte Verhandlungen zu Austausch- und Forschungsprogrammen aus. Der Schweiz könnten damit EU-Gelder entgehen.

Bern - Der Volksentscheid zur Begrenzung der Zuwanderung in der Schweiz belastet das Verhältnis zur Europäischen Union (EU). Die Regierung in Bern hatte ein geplantes Abkommen zur Öffnung ihres Arbeitsmarkts für Kroaten gestoppt. Nun folgt die Reaktion aus Brüssel: Demnach sollen die Verhandlungen über eine Beteiligung der Schweiz an dem Studenten-Austauschprogramm Erasmus Plus und dem milliardenschweren Forschungsprogramm Horizont 2020 vorläufig ausgesetzt werden, sagte ein Kommissionssprecher. Damit könnten der Schweiz EU-Gelder für Forschung und Bildung entgehen. » | vks/dpa | Sonntag, 16. Februar 2014

Sunday, February 16, 2014

Extreme Loneliness Worse for Health Than Obesity and Can Lead to an Early Grave, Scientists Say


THE INDEPENDENT ON SUNDAY: Feeling extreme loneliness on a long-term basis can be worse than obesity in terms of increasing the potentially lethal health risks that lead to premature death, scientists said.

Chronic loneliness has been shown to increase the chances of an early grave by 14 per cent, which is as bad as being overweight and almost as bad as poverty in undermining a person’s long-term wellbeing, a study has found.

As more people live longer, they are spending a bigger part of their lives feeling lonely. This is having a significant impact on their physical as well as mental health, the researchers found.

Loneliness is also becoming more common as people live alone or become isolated from relatives and friends, especially in retirement. Research has shown that at any given time between 20 and 40 per cent of older adults feel lonely. » | Steve Connor, Chicago | Sunday, February 16, 2014

Italian 'Mummy's Boys' Told by Church That 'Mamma' One of the Biggest Risks to Marriage

Italian men are traditionally very close to their mothers
THE SUNDAY TELEGRAPH: The Catholic church has warned that Italian men's adoration of their mothers is harming their marriages

The Italian male deference to their mothers may be seen from afar as an endearing trait – as joyously traditional a part of their heritage as pizza, pasta and Prosecco.

But the Catholic Church has issued a grave warning that "mammismo" – the classic attachment between Italian men and their mothers – is one of the biggest risks to marriage in the country today.

"Marriage has to be an act of free will and awareness," said Cardinal Angelo Bagnasco, archbishop of Genoa and president of the country's bishops conference.

"When you rely totally on your parents for every step, a spouse does not know what to do or not to do because he's constantly seeking the consensus of a third person." Read on and comment » | Josephine McKenna, Rome | Sunday, February 16, 2014

Royal Idiocy! Prince William Wants 'All Royal Ivory Destroyed'

THE INDEPENDENT ON SUNDAY: There are some 1,200 objects made with ivory in the royal collection. Their possible destruction is welcomed by wildlife campaigners, but not by some art enthusiasts

The Duke of Cambridge wants to strip all the ivory from Buckingham Palace and destroy it, The Independent on Sunday can reveal, in a move conservationists hailed as "extremely significant" in the fight against elephant poaching.

Some 1,200 items containing ivory are listed in the royal collection, including a throne from India that incorporates elephant-ivory plaques. The move would seek to encourage other heads of states to give up their ivory stocks and collections.

The revelation comes days after the Duke attended the world's largest ever conference on the illegal wildlife trade, which called for an end to the £12bn trade in animals and their parts, including ivory. At least 45 tons of ivory were seized in 2013, believed to be the biggest annual haul in a quarter of a century. » | Sarah Morrison | Sunday, February 16, 2014

My comment:

What a ridiculous suggestion! What good will destroying all those wonderful objets d'art do? That would be wanton destruction, rather like Salafists wanting to destroy the Sphinx and the Pyramids. I feel sure that the Queen would not warm to this suggestion!

If Prince William really wants to do something positive for elephants, then he can determine not to accept such gifts in future, and not purchase anything made with ivory from now on.

This suggestion is redolent of those women who took their fur coats and burned them. It did not bring back the animals who had to suffer to make them, not did it help to keep anyone warm.

This suggestion is more than silly, it's ridiculous. –© Mark


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Watch The Andrew Marr Show on BBC iPlayer here | Sunday, February 16, 2014