Tuesday, March 29, 2011

Portugal and Greece Downgraded on Debt Worries

BBC: Ratings agency Standard & Poor's has downgraded struggling Greece and Portugal on further debt worries.

S&P says investors in their bonds could lose out under the terms of a new eurozone bail-out package.

The move pushed up the countries' borrowing costs as lenders demanded a higher rate of return for buying government bonds.

The downgrades left Portugal one notch above junk rating and Greece's creditworthiness below that of Egypt. » | Tuesday, March 29, 2011
French Muslim Leader Calls for Protest

Mar 29 - A former top aide to French President Nicolas Sarkozy calls on Muslims to wear a green badge in protest against a government he claims stigmatizes the Islamic population. Nick Rowlands reports


SAPHIR NEWS: Les musulmans appelés à porter une « étoile verte » » | Rédigé par La Rédaction, Saphirnews.com | Lundi 28 Mars 2011
Japan: Nuclear Crisis "Very Serious"

Mar 29 - Plutonium found in soil near Japan's nuclear plant; Tokyo denies it's considering nationalizing plant operator TEPCO. Toshi Maeda reports

Libyan Rebels Retreat from Bin Jawad

Forces loyal to Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi have forced opposition fighters to abandon the town of Bin Jawad, a day after they had taken it, and retreat further east to Ras Lanuf

Empire - Information Wars

Information is power and in the age of the information revolution, cyber and satellite communication is transforming our lives, reinventing the relationship between people and power. How will governments deal with the information revolution?

Tensions Rise over Migrant Arrivals in Lampedusa

It is one of the gateways to Europe for people fleeing political unrest in North Africa. The Italian island of Lampedusa is a landing point for thousands of refugees.
But as Al Jazeera's Khadija Magardie reports, they are not getting a warm welcome

Pro-Assad Rally Staged in Damascus

Thousands of Syrians gathered to show their support for President Bashar al-Assad in the capital Damascus on Tuesday. This apparent outpouring of support comes after protesters in several Syrian cities took to the streets to demand more freedom. Al Jazeera's Cal Perry was among the crowds and sent us this report

London: World Leaders Speak on the Libyan Crisis

World leaders have met at a summit in London to discuss the ongoing conflict in Libya, and possible outlooks both for the military intervention, and humanitarian and development aid going forward. Here are excerpts from comments made by David Cameron, the British Prime Minister, Hillary Clinton, the US Secretary of State, and Ban Ki-moon, the UN Secretary-General

Talk to Jazeera - Muammar Gaddafi (September 25, 2009)

Muammar Gaddafi, the Libyan leader, addressed the United Nations General Assembly in New York in 2009. His 96-minute speech, which broke the alloted 15-minute protocol, marked the first time he addressed the international body since leading a coup in 1969 which ended rule by monarchy in Libya and brought him to power. In an interview with Al Jazeera's Ghida Fakhry, Gaddafi repeated his belief that a two-state solution is not a feasible approach to resolving the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and bringing peace in the Middle East

Japan Nuclear Radiation Detected In Glasgow

Minute traces of radiation from the Fukushima 1 nuclear plant in Japan have been detected in the air in Glasgow

Libyen-Konferenz in London

In der britischen Hauptstadt treffen sich am Nachmittag Vertreter aus über 40 Ländern. Sie wollen über die aktuelle Lage in Libyen diskutieren und nach Lösungen für den Konflikt suchen. Einschätzungen von Peter Balzli, SF-Korrespondent, London

Tagesschau vom 29.03.2011
Deutschland: Schlechte Stimmung auf Islamkonferenz


Deutsche Islam Konferenz (DIK) »
Italien bietet Tunesien Geld zur Grenzschließung

Islam and Muslims in Australia

James Bays Describes the Rebel Retreat from Bin Jawad

Troops loyal to Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi shelled rebels heading west on the coastal road to Sirte on Tuesday, forcing them to pull back to the small town of Bin Jawad. The retreat reversed a rapid, two-day advanced that saw the pro-democracy fighers push from Ajdabiya to Nawfaliya, where they met strong resistance. The mostly young, untrained fighters have not been able to adapt to combat and do not take standard military precautions to defend themselves, Bays reports

Syria: Cabinet Resigns amid Unrest

The Syrian government has resigned, an offer accepted by President Bashar al-Assad. We are also hearing Assad has appointed Naji Otari - the head of the now defunct government, as the new caretaker prime minister.
The president is expected to address the public in the coming hours.
Al Jazeera's Rula Amin, reporting from the capital Damascus, has the latest

Le gouvernement Syrien démissionne

CYBERPRESSE.CA: Le gouvernement syrien dirigé depuis 2003 par le Premier ministre Mohammad Naji Otri a présenté mardi sa démission au chef de l'État Bachar al-Assad, qui l'a acceptée, a annoncé l'agence officielle Sana.

«Le président Assad a accepté aujourd'hui la démission du gouvernement de Mohammad Naji Otri et lui a demandé d'expedier les affaires courantes», selon Sana. » | Agence France-Presse | Mardi 29 Mars 2011
'Foreign Spies' Hack into Australian PM's Computer

THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: Chinese hackers seeking information on commercial secrets are suspected of having broken into a computer used by Julia Gillard, the Australian prime minister.

Miss Gillard's parliamentary computer was among 10 machines used by senior government ministers which were compromised by the hackers, Australian intelligence officials have said.

Sydney's Daily Telegraph reported that American intelligence officials alerted their Australian counterparts to the security issue, warning that thousands of emails could have been stolen by the hackers.

"Four separate government sources confirmed that they had been told Chinese intelligence agencies were among a list of foreign hackers that are under suspicion," the paper said. Read on and comment » | Bonnie Malkin in Sydney | Tuesday, March 29, 2011

Les jeunes Suisses boivent et fument toujours autant

TRIBUNE DE GENÈVE: Selon une étude d’Addiction Info Suisse, la consommation d’alcool, de tabac et de cannabis des jeunes de 15 ans est toujours aussi élevée.

L’attitude des jeunes face à l’alcool, le tabac et le cannabis n’a guère changé: leur consommation reste toujours aussi élevée qu’il y a quatre ans, selon une nouvelle enquête réalisée par Addiction Info Suisse auprès des écoliers de 15 ans. Environ un quart des adolescents boivent de l’alcool une fois par semaine et un jeune sur dix fume quotidiennement.

La consommation d’alcool et de cannabis avait atteint un sommet dans l’enquête réalisée en 2002 auprès des 11-15 ans, a rappelé mardi l’organisation. L’étude est effectuée tous les quatre ans sur mandat de l’Office fédéral de la santé publique (OFSP). Cette fois, l’accent a été mis sur les jeunes de 15 ans, un âge qui représente une étape importante du développement des adolescents. » | ATS | Mardi 29 Mars 2011
"Russlands Bin Laden" angeblich getötet

DIE PRESSE: Islamistenführer Doku Umarow soll bei einem Luftangriff im Nordkaukasus getötet worden sein. Umarow hatte sich unter anderem zu dem Anschlag auf den Moskauer Flughafen bekannt.

Russische Spezialkräfte haben nach eigenen Angaben den als "Russlands Bin Laden" bekannten Islamistenführer Doku Umarow getötet. Das meldete die Agentur Interfax am Dienstag. Eine offizielle Bestätigung gab es vorerst nicht.

Dem Bericht zufolge wurde Umarow am Montag bei einem Luftangriff im Konfliktgebiet Nordkaukaus zusammen mit 16 weiteren Terroristen getötet. Allerdings war er bereits in der Vergangenheit für tot erklärt worden.

Der kremltreue tschetschenische Republikchef Ramsan Kadyrow sprach von einer "guten Nachricht für eine gesunde Entwicklung" der Unruheregion, sollte sich der Tod bestätigen. » | Ag. | Dienstag, 29. März 2011
Diplomats Discuss Libya's Future as Italy Plots Gaddafi's Escape Route

THE GUARDIAN: Rome is negotiating an African haven for the Libyan leader as international pressure mounts on him to go

Efforts appear to be under way to offer Muammar Gaddafi a way of escape from Libya, with Italy saying it was trying to organise an African haven for him, and the US signalling it would not try to stop the dictator from fleeing.

The move came amid mounting diplomatic and military pressure on Gaddafi as Britain tries to assemble a global consensus demanding he surrender power while intensifying air strikes against his forces. An international conference in London – including the UN, Arab states, the African Union, and more than 40 foreign ministers – will focus on co-ordinating assistance in the face of a possible humanitarian disaster and building a unified international front in condemnation of the Gaddafi regime and in support of Nato-led military action in Libya.

On the eve of the conference, Italy offered to broker a ceasefire deal in Libya, involving asylum for Gaddafi in an African country. "Gaddafi must understand that it would be an act of courage to say: 'I understand that I have to go'," said the Italian foreign minister, Franco Frattini. "We hope that the African Union can find a valid proposal."

A senior American official signalled that a solution in which Gaddafi flees to a country beyond the reach of the international criminal court (ICC), which is investigating war crimes charges against him, would be acceptable to Washington, pointing out that Barack Obama had repeatedly called on Gaddafi to leave. » | Julian Borger and Richard Norton-Taylor | Tuesday, March 29, 2011
Inside Story: UK March for an Alternative

In an event dubbed the march for the alternative, hundreds of thousands gathered in London - protesting against the coalition's planned spending cuts - the largest cut-backs since the Great Depression. Organised by the Trade Union Congress, the protests remained largely peaceful. However events were overshadowed by violence that later erupted. But as Europe is still struggling to avoid another financial crisis, would such measures have any impact? And what are the social and political implications?
 Inside Story, with presenter Ghida Fakhry, discusses with: Jeremy Batstone-Carr, head of research at Charles Stanley stockbrokers; Max Keiser, financial analyst and renowned banking critic [Wiki] and Tom Clougherty, executive director of the Adam Smith Institute, a U.K.-based think tank dedicated to free market policies.

Kadhafi : "Stoppez votre offensive barbare et injuste contre la Libye"

LE POINT: Une quarantaine de pays sont attendus mardi à Londres pour la première réunion du "groupe de contact" sur la Libye.

Le dirigeant libyen Muammar Kadhafi a exhorté dans un message le "groupe de contact" sur la Libye qui se réunit mardi à Londres à mettre fin à l'"offensive barbare" contre son pays, la comparant aux campagnes militaires de Hitler en Europe. » | Le Point.fr | Mardi 29 Mars 2011
Saudis and Oil Key to Global Economy

THE SYDNEY MORNING HERALD: The fate of the world's economy and financial markets lies with Saudi Arabia's political stability and the price of oil over the next three months.

That's according to independent economist David Hale, who says an escalation of friction between oil producers Saudi Arabia and Bahrain could tip the world back into recession.

Mr Hale's opinion is backed by Magellan Financial Group's chief executive Hamish Douglass, who says a major conflict involving major oil producers could have the oil price skyrocket by $US200 a barrel.

Saudi Arabia's intervention in Bahrain two weeks ago to quell a civil uprising polarised, rather than stabilised, the situation that had since quietened down, said Mr Hale, who is global economic adviser to the Commonwealth Bank of Australia.

"I think it was probably too pre-emptive and probably destructive," he told AAP in an interview in Melbourne.

"I think the critical issue of a tipping point is Saudi Arabia and political stability.

"If that's jeopardised, that could send the oil price up (by) $US50 a barrel, $US100 a barrel. That would tip us into a new global recession." » | Alison Bell | AAP | Tuesday, March 29, 2011
The Failure of Multiculturalism and How to Turn the Tide

Below is the speech given by Geert Wilders last night (March 25) at the Annual Lecture of the Magna Carta Foundation in Rome

GATES OF VIENNA: Speech by Geert Wilders, Rome, 25 March 2011

Signore e signori, ladies and gentlemen, dear friends of the Magna Carta Foundation, molte grazie. Thank you for inviting me to Rome. It is great to be here in this beautiful city which for many centuries was the capital and the centre of Europe’s Judeo-Christian culture.

Together with Jerusalem and Athens, Rome is the cradle of our Western civilization — the most advanced and superior civilization the world has ever known.

As Westerners, we share the same Judeo-Christian culture. I am from the Netherlands and you are from Italy. Our national cultures are branches of the same tree. We do not belong to multiple cultures, but to different branches of one single culture. This is why when we come to Rome, we all come home in a sense. We belong here, as we also belong in Athens and in Jerusalem.

It is important that we know where our roots are. If we lose them we become deracinated. We become men and women without a culture.

I am here today to talk about multiculturalism. This term has a number of different meanings. I use the term to refer to a specific political ideology. It advocates that all cultures are equal. If they are equal it follows that the state is not allowed to promote any specific cultural values as central and dominant. In other words: multiculturalism holds that the state should not promote a leitkultur, which immigrants have to accept if they want to live in our midst.

It is this ideology of cultural relativism which the German Chancellor Angela Merkel recently referred to when she said that multiculturalism has proved “an absolute failure.”

My friends, I dare say that we have known this all along. Indeed, the premise of the multiculturalist ideology is wrong. Cultures are not equal. They are different, because their roots are different. That is why the multiculturalists try to destroy our roots.

Rome is a very appropriate place to address these issues. There is an old saying which people of our Western culture are all familiar with. “When in Rome, do as the Romans do,” it says. This is an obvious truth: If you move somewhere, you must adapt to the laws and customs of the land.

The multicultural society has undermined this rule of common sense and decency. The multicultural society tells the newcomers who settle in our cities and villages: You are free to behave contrary to our norms and values. Because your norms and values are just as good, perhaps even better, than ours.

It is, indeed, appropriate to discuss these matters here in Rome, because the history of Rome also serves as a warning. Continue reading and comment » Speech by Geert Wilders | ROME | Friday, March 25, 2011

HT: Jim Ball, Australia’s Number 1 Overnight Radio Presenter »
Obama: Gaddafi Has Been Stopped

Mar 28 - U.S. President Obama says that Libya's Gaddafi's forces have been stopped, but alliance would crumble if regime change is pursued. Deborah Lutterbeck reports


Related »

Mar 28 - Yemen President Ali Abdullah Saleh remains publicly defiant as talks to broker a transition of power stall. Deborah Lutterbeck reports

On Libya Intervention, Obama Says US Is "Different"

US President Barack Obama laid out a rationale for military intervention against Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi in a nationally televised address on Monday night.
"Some nations may be able to turn a blind eye to atrocities in other countries," he said. "The United States of America is different."
But in defending his order to launch air strikes on Libya, Obama appeared to be putting forward an argument that contradicts his defense secretary, Robert Gates, who has said the United States has no vital interest in the country.
Al Jazeera's Patty Culhane reports from Fort McNair, Washington

Pace of Events in Middle East Unprecedented, Says Crowley

PJ Crowley, the former State Department spokesman, in an interview with Al Jazeera, has said that the events in Middle East are unfolding at an unprecedented speed and scope and that it's very difficult to predict outcomes.
Crowley has denied that there was a split between the Pentagon and the State Department over the military action in Libya.
He said that it's difficult and challenging to construct an approach that has the right balance of military action and diplomacy.
The former State Department spokesman reiterated that the US approach to the region has been consistent and it has evolved over time

Violent Clashes Continue in Syria

Protest violence continues in Syria, as police reportedly used tear gas against demonstrators in the town of Deraa on Monday. The government, however, maintains that protesters were carrying weapons and fired on police, who had no choice but to defend themselves. Al Jazeera'sCal Perry reports from Damascus

America 'Must Practise What It Preaches'

BBC: PJ Crowley was, until two weeks ago, US Assistant Secretary of State for Public affairs.

He resigned under heavy political pressure after describing the Pentagon's treatment of Bradley Manning, the US soldier suspected of spilling secrets to Wikileaks as "counterproductive and stupid".

Private Manning is being held at a maximum security jail, in shackles and in solitary confinement.

In an exclusive interview for HARDtalk Mr Crowley told Stephen Sackur he didn't regret expressing his views, but declined to say whether he had been asked to resign. (+ video) » | Monday, March 28, 2011

BBC: PJ Crowley: 'No regrets' over Bradley Manning remarks – Ex-US state department spokesman PJ Crowley, who quit after criticising the treatment of the man accused of leaking secret cables to Wikileaks, has told the BBC he has no regrets. » | Monday, March 28, 2011
Saudi Terror Suspect Aldawsari Denies Texas Charges

BBC: A Saudi student has pleaded not guilty to charges he sought to make a bomb and planned terror attacks in the US.

Khalid Ali-M Aldawsari, 20, is charged in Texas with attempted use of a weapon of mass destruction. If convicted, he faces life in prison.

His list of targets allegedly included the house of former President George W Bush in Texas.

Prosecutors say Mr Aldawsari bought a gas mask, hazardous materials suit and toxic chemicals for use in bomb-making.

Mr Aldawsari is in the US legally on a student visa, and was studying business at South Plains College near Lubbock in Texas, the justice department said.

A jury trial is due to begin in federal court in Lubbock on 2 May. » | Monday, March 28, 2011
Muslim Model Defends Miss Universe Contest Bid

BBC – RADIO 1 – NEWSBEAT: A model bidding to become the first Muslim to represent the UK in the world final of Miss Universe has been defending her decision to enter.

Shanna Bukhari, who is 24 and lives in Manchester, said she's been sent racist and abusive messages since making it to the beauty contest's UK final.

She believes Muslims in the UK should be allowed to have a western lifestyle.

But Muslim groups have accused her of disrespecting Islam.

Shanna was born in Blackburn and she became a full-time model after finishing her degree.

'Swimwear round'

She said it's her dream to be crowned Miss Universe - but has been told she's going against her religion.

"[I get] comments like 'you're not a Muslim because you're doing this' and it's like - this competition does not make me a bad Muslim at all.

"So it does hurt me to think that people are thinking like that," she said.

One of the main reasons some Muslims are angry is that Shanna would have to appear in swimwear in one round of the competition.

Mohammed Shafiq is from the Ramadhan Foundation, a group that works with young Muslims in the UK - he's against Shanna taking part.

"Islam is very clear that a woman should dress modestly and we do not believe that parading yourself in a bikini is appropriate," he said. » | Anthony Baxter, Newsbeat reporter | Tuesday, March 29, 2011

Monday, March 28, 2011

Mubarak Put Under House Arrest

THE GUARDIAN: Egypt's ruling military council refutes rumour former president has taken refuge in Saudi Arabia

Ousted president Hosni Mubarak has been placed under house arrest, according to a statement by Egypt's ruling generals, countering speculation that the 82-year-old has gone to Saudi Arabia for medical treatment.

The Supreme Council of the Armed Forces has been in power since Mubarak's three decades of rule succumbed to revolution last month.

An announcement on its official Facebook page said: "Out of the supreme military council's belief in the importance of maintaining communication with the Egyptian people and the youth of the revolution, we stress [that] news of the departure of former president Mohamed Hosni Mubarak to Tabuk in Saudi Arabia is not true, as he is under house arrest along with his family."

The Saudi monarch, King Abdullah, has been a stalwart supporter of Mubarak throughout Egypt's recent turmoil, and has repeatedly offered the former president sanctuary in the kingdom.

For now, Mubarak remains in internal exile in the Red Sea resort of Sharm El Sheikh. He and his family are facing corruption charges and are under a travel ban and asset freeze.

The news of Mubarak come amid criticism of the armed forces as they begin to prepare for national elections later this year and a planned transition towards democratic, civilian government. » | Jack Shenker | Monday, March 28, 2011

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British Teacher Faces Beheading for Friend's Death in Saudi Arabia

MAIL ONLINE: A British teacher could be beheaded in Saudi Arabia if found guilty of murdering a friend with whom he came to blows during a heavy drinking session.

Formal charges could soon be laid against Andrew Cannon, 41, for the death of 57-year-old Robert Colman.

Cannon, from Basingstoke, Hampshire, admits there was a fight, but insists he did not cause his friend’s death.

The two men worked as English teachers in the Saudi capital, Riyadh. » | Daily Mail Reporter | Monday, March 28, 2011
EU to Ban Cars from Cities by 2050

THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: Cars will be banned from London and all other cities across Europe under a draconian EU masterplan to cut CO2 emissions by 60 per cent over the next 40 years.

The European Commission on Monday unveiled a "single European transport area" aimed at enforcing "a profound shift in transport patterns for passengers" by 2050.

The plan also envisages an end to cheap holiday flights from Britain to southern Europe with a target that over 50 per cent of all journeys above 186 miles should be by rail.

Top of the EU's list to cut climate change emissions is a target of "zero" for the number of petrol and diesel-driven cars and lorries in the EU's future cities.

Siim Kallas, the EU transport commission, insisted that Brussels directives and new taxation of fuel would be used to force people out of their cars and onto "alternative" means of transport.

"That means no more conventionally fuelled cars in our city centres," he said. "Action will follow, legislation, real action to change behaviour." » | Bruno Waterfield, Brussels | Monday, March 28, 2011
Deutscher über den Islam: Der Bekehrte spricht

Kantonalwahlen in Frankreich: Sarkozys Partei verliert - Front National legt zu

FRANFURTER ALLGEMEINE: Im Stichwahlgang der Kantonalwahlen in Frankreich hat die rechtsextreme Partei Front National starke Stimmenzuwächse verzeichnet. Die Partei von Präsident Sarkozy UMP verlor dagegen massiv an Stimmen.

In der französischen Präsidentenpartei UMP ist am Montag ein Richtungsstreit über den Umgang mit dem rechtsextremen Front National (FN) entbrannt. Im Stichwahlgang der Kantonalwahlen am Sonntag hatte die von Marine Le Pen geführte Partei große Stimmengewinne verzeichnet. In den 403 Kantonen, in denen FN-Kandidaten im zweiten Wahlgang antreten konnten, steigerte die Partei ihr Ergebnis von 620.000 Stimmen im ersten Wahlgang auf 915.000 Stimmen im zweiten Wahlgang. » | F.A.Z./mic. | Montag, 28. März 2011
Moubarak en résidence surveillée en Égypte

LE POINT: L'ancien président égyptien ne serait donc pas parti en Arabie saoudite pour un traitement médical.

L'ancien président égyptien Hosni Moubarak et sa proche famille sont en résidence surveillée en Égypte, a déclaré lundi l'armée égyptienne, démentant des informations selon lesquelles il serait parti en Arabie saoudite pour un traitement médical. L'ancien président et ses proches "sont en résidence surveillée à l'intérieur de l'Égypte", a précisé le Conseil suprême des forces armées, l'instance qui dirige le pays, dans un communiqué posté sur sa page officielle sur Facebook, sans mentionner d'endroit précis. "Les informations qui ont circulé sur son départ pour Tabouk (Arabie saoudite, ndlr) sont erronées", poursuit le communiqué, en référence à une rumeur persistante en Égypte. » | Source AFP | Lundi 28 Mars 2011
Libyen: Weitere Luftangriffe

Die Allianz hat erneut Angriffe auf Gaddafis Einrichtungen geflogen. Die Rebellen kämpfen sich inzwischen weiter vor. Gerüchte, sie hätten Gaddafis Geburtsstadt Sirte erobert, wurden jedoch von verschiedenen Seiten dementiert




Tagesschau Mittag vom 28.03.2011
Libyan Rebels Make Gains

Mar 28 - Libyan government calls NATO immoral, fighting continues. Julie Noce reports

Volunteers Come Together in Japan

Mar 28 - People from all over Japan work together with tsunami survivors to clean up devastated regions in the northeast. Julie Noce reports

Armed Groups Clash in South Yemen Town

Hundreds of armed men took control of Jaar and several nearby areas in Abyan province in southern Yemen.
 The armed group has been touring the town in military vehicles and carrying weapons captured from a nearby arms factory that was looted on Sunday. The town has witnessed heavy clashes between rival armed groups on Sunday

Mahatma Gandhi 'Racist and Bisexual' Claims New Book

THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: A controversial biography of Mahatma Gandhi has claimed that the revered political leader was racist and bisexual.

Great Soul, written by former New York Times executive editor Joseph Lelyveld, makes several new claims about the man who led India to independence.

The book alleges that as an older man he held "nightly cuddles" – without clothes - with seventeen year-old girls in his entourage, including his own niece.

It also suggests that he was in love with German-Jewish architect and bodybuilder, Hermann Kallenbach, for whom he left his wife in 1908. » | Monday, March 28, 2011
10 Things Libya Tells Us about Barack Obama and War

TELEGRAPH – BLOGS – TOBY HARNDEN: America’s intervention in Libya, riding on the coattails of Britain and France, may yet turn out for the best. There are indications that coalition air power has given the rebels the opportunity to stem and perhaps even turn the military tide against Colonel Muammar Gaddafi’s forces.

Regime change may not be a declared objective but if Gaddafi remains in power, that will be a huge blow to American prestige, not to mention the effect on the human rights of ordinary Libyans. But it is very possible that Gaddafi will be killed or overthrown in the coming days.

Much of the Republican opposition to President Barack Obama’s intervention strikes me as disingenuous and partisan. There is a moral case for war and the, er, rather unfortunate Western coddling of Gaddafi after 2003 does not alter the fact that his continued presence as Libyan leader represents a threat to America.

Be all that as it may, however, if success is achieved then this will be as much despite as because of Obama’s policies. The past few weeks have betrayed a number of startling truths about the way Obama views the world. Here are 10 of them: Continue reading and comment » | Toby Harnden | Monday, March 28, 2011
Libyan Rebels Advance on Muammar Gaddafi's Home Town

THE GUARDIAN: Revolutionaries move further west along Libya's coastal road, seizing several towns without resistance, and reach Sirte








Libyan rebels are advancing on Muammar Gaddafi's home city, Sirte, after retaking all the ground lost in earlier fighting as government forces broke up and fled under western air strikes.

Revolutionary forces rapidly moved more than 150 miles west along Libya's coastal road, seizing several towns without resistance, as the first witness accounts emerged of the devastating effect on Gaddafi's army and militia of the aerial bombardment that broke their resistance at Ajdabiya on Saturday.

A Libyan rebel spokesman said Sirte had been captured by the rebels on Monday morning, but there is no sign the city has fallen. Sirte marks the boundary between the east and west of Libya and has great symbolic importance as Muammar Gaddafi's hometown. » | Chris McGreal in Bin Jawad and Ian Black in Sirte | Monday, March 28, 2011
Shoe Thrower Targets Iraq's PM

Protests have also been taking place in Iraq - as demonstrators there call for sweeping reforms. In their midst is Muntadhr Al Zaydi, the man known internationally for throwing a shoe at former US president George Bush.
He had to stay away from his country for months after serving jail time, but he is now back on the streets of Baghdad. He is on a mission that is again putting him at odds with authorities.
Al Jazeera's Rawya Rageh explains