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Friday, July 17, 2009

Facebook 'breaches Canadian law'

Popular social networking site Facebook is breaching Canadian law by holding on to users' personal information indefinitely, a report has concluded.

An investigation by Canada's privacy commission found the US-based website also gave "confusing or incomplete" information to subscribers.

Facebook says it is aiming to safeguard users' privacy without compromising their experience of the site.

More than 200 million people actively use Facebook.

They include about 12 million in Canada, more than one in three of the population.

'Practical solutions'

Canadian Privacy Commissioner Jennifer Stoddart laid out the findings of the report at a news conference in Ottawa.

She accepted that Facebook regarded privacy issues as a top concern "and yet we found serious privacy gaps in the way the site operates".

Facebook's policy of holding on to subscribers' personal information, even after their accounts had been deactivated, was one area that breached Canada's privacy laws, she said.

The law requires organisations to retain such information only for as long as it necessary to meet appropriate purposes, she was quoted by the AFP news agency as saying.

The report said Facebook's information about privacy practices was "often confusing or incomplete", and urged the site to make its policies more transparent to users.

Facebook was also criticised for failing to adequately restrict access of users' personal details to some of the 950,000 developers in 180 countries who provide applications, such as games, for the site.

In response, Facebook Chief Privacy Officer Chris Kelly told AFP it was working with the commission to resolve the issues.

"Overall, we are looking for practical solutions that operate at scale and respect the fact that people come to share and not to hide," he said.

"We continue our dialogue and have every confidence that we will come to acceptable conclusions. I think the concerns are fully resolvable".

Ms Stoddart said she would review Facebook's progress in 30 days.

Under Canadian law, she can take the case to a federal court to have her recommendations enforced, the BBC's Lee Carter in Toronto says.

The Palestinian Struggle for East Jerusalem: Families in Sheikh Jarrah Face Imminent Eviction, Imprisonment

July 14, 2009

Residents of the Sheikh Jarrah neighborhood in East Jerusalem, composed of 28 Palestinian families, held a press conference yesterday (13 July 2009) appealing to the international community to help save their homes of over fifty years. Speakers included affected families, community leaders, International Solidarity Movement activists, Sheikhh Raed Salah, leader of the Islamic Movement in Israel, and the Consul-General of Great Britain, Richard Makepeace. The event was held at the tent of Um Kamel al-Kurd, who was violently evicted from her home in Sheikh Jarrah in November, 2008. Solidarity tents were erected in front of Israeli Consulates and Embassies all over the world yesterday in support of East Jerusalem neighborhoods such as Sheikh Jarrah—in Glasgow, London, Egypt, Sweden, Demark, Spain, the Netherlands, New York, San Francisco, and Chicago.

The press conference took place less than a week before the Hanoun and Ghawi families in the neighborhood must meet their final evictions orders to either "voluntarily" abandon their homes, or face fines of 50,000 NIS and $50,000 each, forceful eviction, and in one case imprisonment. On 19 July, the Hanouns and Ghawis will potentially share the unfortunate fate of Um Kamel al-Kurd; the remaining twenty-five families in the neighborhood live with the constant fear that their turn will soon follow.

For many years, the Palestinian residents of Sheikh Jarrah have battled Israeli settlers for control of their property. The Sheikh Jarrah neighborhood was erected jointly by the UN and Jordan in 1956, and was designated for use and ownership by Palestinian refugees from the 1948 Middle East War. However, Israeli settler organizations claim that their right to the land dates back further, and in 1972 they were able to falsely register the land as their own. In 1982, Israeli settler organizations began demanding rent from the Palestinian families of Sheikh Jarrah, who at that point had been living in the neighborhood for almost thirty years—and when a number of the families refused to pay this rent, the first eviction orders were issued.

The legal proceedings continued over the years, and in 2006 it was ruled by court that the settler organizations did not have rights to the land, and the Israeli land registration department agreed to revoke the settler associations’ ownership. However, this decision was overturned and Israeli authorities have ignored new documentation of land ownership obtained from the Turkish Archives, and have refused to recognize the Palestinian families’ property rights. Despite pending appeals and the lack of solid legal ownership of land in the neighborhood, the settler organizations sold their property claim in 2008 to an investment company that plans to demolish the 28 Palestinian homes and build 200 settlement units for new Jewish immigrants. Further, the Applied Research Institute, Jerusalem reports that two additional construction plans being currently reviewed by the Jerusalem Municipality would create an additional 150 housing units, for a total of 350 new housing units for Israelis, as well as a synagogue in Sheikh Jarrah.

Interestingly enough, the reasons given by the Jerusalem Municipality for the initial Sheikh Jarrah eviction notices vary among the families. In the case of Ibrahim Farhan, as reported by the Palestinian News Network, paying rent to the settler organizations was not enough to avoid eviction. Farhan, along with his wife and mother, was given eviction orders for his house as it is "abandoned". The court’s orders were based on the fact that the house is in the name of his brother, who lives in the nearby neighborhood of Beit Hanina; the Farhan family living in the house for over 60 years and meeting all of its financial obligations was irrelevant.

Equally noteworthy is the location of Sheikh Jarrah. According to ARIJ, the evictions and demolitions in Sheikh Jarrah would allow for a link between Mount Scopus and settlements in the area, and a variety of Israeli government institutions north of the Old City.

Iraq Suffers as the Euphrates River Dwindles

CAMPBELL ROBERTSON

July 14, 2009

JUBAISH, Iraq — Throughout the marshes, the reed gatherers, standing on land they once floated over, cry out to visitors in a passing boat.

"Maaku mai!" they shout, holding up their rusty sickles. "There is no water!"

The Euphrates is drying up. Strangled by the water policies of Iraq’s neighbors, Turkey and Syria; a two-year drought; and years of misuse by Iraq and its farmers, the river is significantly smaller than it was just a few years ago. Some officials worry that it could soon be half of what it is now.

The shrinking of the Euphrates, a river so crucial to the birth of civilization that the Book of Revelation prophesied its drying up as a sign of the end times, has decimated farms along its banks, has left fishermen impoverished and has depleted riverside towns as farmers flee to the cities looking for work.

The poor suffer more acutely, but all strata of society are feeling the effects: sheiks, diplomats and even members of Parliament who retreat to their farms after weeks in Baghdad.

Along the river, rice and wheat fields have turned to baked dirt. Canals have dwindled to shallow streams, and fishing boats sit on dry land. Pumps meant to feed water treatment plants dangle pointlessly over brown puddles.

"The old men say it’s the worst they remember," said Sayid Diyia, 34, a fisherman in Hindiya, sitting in a riverside cafe full of his idle colleagues. "I’m depending on God’s blessings."

The drought is widespread in Iraq. The area sown with wheat and barley in the rain-fed north is down roughly 95 percent from the usual, and the date palm and citrus orchards of the east are parched. For two years rainfall has been far below normal, leaving the reservoirs dry, and American officials predict that wheat and barley output will be a little over half of what it was two years ago.

It is a crisis that threatens the roots of Iraq’s identity, not only as the land between two rivers but as a nation that was once the largest exporter of dates in the world, that once supplied German beer with barley and that takes patriotic pride in its expensive Anbar rice.

Now Iraq is importing more and more grain. Farmers along the Euphrates say, with anger and despair, that they may have to abandon Anbar rice for cheaper varieties.

Droughts are not rare in Iraq, though officials say they have been more frequent in recent years. But drought is only part of what is choking the Euphrates and its larger, healthier twin, the Tigris.

The most frequently cited culprits are the Turkish and Syrian governments. Iraq has plenty of water, but it is a downstream country. There are at least seven dams on the Euphrates in Turkey and Syria, according to Iraqi water officials, and with no treaties or agreements, the Iraqi government is reduced to begging its neighbors for water.

At a conference in Baghdad — where participants drank bottled water from Saudi Arabia, a country with a fraction of Iraq’s fresh water — officials spoke of disaster.

"We have a real thirst in Iraq," said Ali Baban, the minister of planning. "Our agriculture is going to die, our cities are going to wilt, and no state can keep quiet in such a situation."

Recently, the Water Ministry announced that Turkey had doubled the water flow into the Euphrates, salvaging the planting phase of the rice season in some areas.

That move increased water flow to about 60 percent of its average, just enough to cover half of the irrigation requirements for the summer rice season. Though Turkey has agreed to keep this up and even increase it, there is no commitment binding the country to do so.

With the Euphrates showing few signs of increasing health, bitterness over Iraq’s water threatens to be a source of tension for months or even years to come between Iraq and its neighbors. Many American, Turkish and even Iraqi officials, disregarding the accusations as election-year posturing, say the real problem lies in Iraq’s own deplorable water management policies.

"There used to be water everywhere," said Abduredha Joda, 40, sitting in his reed hut on a dry, rocky plot of land outside Karbala. Mr. Joda, who describes his dire circumstances with a tired smile, grew up near Basra but fled to Baghdad when Saddam Hussein drained the great marshes of southern Iraq in retaliation for the 1991 Shiite uprising. He came to Karbala in 2004 to fish and raise water buffaloes in the lush wetlands there that remind him of his home.

"This year it’s just a desert," he said.

Along the river, there is no shortage of resentment at the Turks and Syrians. But there is also resentment at the Americans, Kurds, Iranians and the Iraqi government, all of whom are blamed. Scarcity makes foes of everyone.

The Sunni areas upriver seem to have enough water, Mr. Joda observed, a comment heavy with implication.

Officials say nothing will improve if Iraq does not seriously address its own water policies and its history of flawed water management. Leaky canals and wasteful irrigation practices squander the water, and poor drainage leaves fields so salty from evaporated water that women and children dredge huge white mounds from sitting pools of runoff.

On a scorching morning in Diwaniya, Bashia Mohammed, 60, was working in a drainage pool by the highway gathering salt, her family’s only source of income now that its rice farm has dried up. But the dead farm was not the real crisis.

"There’s no water in the river that we drink from," she said, referring to a channel that flows from the Euphrates. "It’s now totally dry, and it contains sewage water. They dig wells but sometimes the water just cuts out and we have to drink from the river. All my kids are sick because of the water."

In the southeast, where the Euphrates nears the end of its 1,730-mile journey and mingles with the less salty waters of the Tigris before emptying into the Persian Gulf, the situation is grave. The marshes there that were intentionally reflooded in 2003, rescuing the ancient culture of the marsh Arabs, are drying up again. Sheep graze on land in the middle of the river.

The farmers, reed gatherers and buffalo herders keep working, but they say they cannot continue if the water stays like this.

"Next winter will be the final chance," said Hashem Hilead Shehi, a 73-year-old farmer who lives in a bone-dry village west of the marshes. "If we are not able to plant, then all of the families will leave."

Source: Uruknet.
Link: http://www.uruknet.de/?s1=1&p=56004&s2=15.

Afghanistan War Resister to "Put the War on Trial"

Dahr Jamail

July 14, 2009

US Army Specialist Victor Agosto served a 13-month deployment in Iraq with the 57th Expeditionary Signal Battalion. "What I did there, I know I contributed to death and human suffering," Agosto told Truthout from Fort Hood, in Killeen, Texas, in May, "It's hard to quantify how much I caused, but I know I contributed to it."

His experience in Iraq, coupled with educating himself about US foreign policy and international law, has led Agosto to refuse to deploy to Afghanistan. "It's a matter of what I'm willing to live with," he said of his recent decision, "I'm not willing to participate in this occupation, knowing it is completely wrong."

Agosto's lawyer, James Branum, who is also the legal adviser to the GI Rights Hotline and co-chair of the Military Law Task Fore, told Truthout during a phone interview on July 10 that, contrary to mainstream opinion that believes Afghanistan to be a "justified" war, the invasion and ongoing occupation are actually in violation of the US Constitution and international law.

"Victor is approaching this from the standpoint of law and ethics," Branum explained, "It's his own personal ethics and principles of the Nuremburg Principles, that the war in Afghanistan does not meet the criteria for lawful war under the UN Charter, which says that member nations who joined the UN, as did the US, should give up war forever, aside from two exceptions: that the war is in self-defense, and that the use of force was authorized by the UN Security Council. The nation of Afghanistan did not attack the United States. The Taliban may have, but the nation and people of Afghanistan did not. And under US Law, the Supremacy Clause of the US Constitution, any treaty enacted by the US is now the "supreme law of the land." So when the United States signed the UN Charter, we made that our law as well."

The Supremacy Clause is a clause in the United States Constitution, Article VI, Paragraph 2. The clause establishes the Constitution, Federal Statutes, and US treaties as "the supreme law of the land." The text establishes these as the highest form of law in the American legal system, mandating that state judges uphold them, even if state laws or constitutions conflict.

This was also the basis for the stand taken by Lt. Ehren Watada of the US Army, who in 2006 was the first commissioned officer to publicly refuse a combat deployment to Iraq.

In an article for Truthout published August 14, 2006, I posted the text of a speech given by Watada at a National Convention of Veterans for Peace in Seattle, Washington, where I was present.

Watada outlined the principled stand he took, which applies to that of Victor Agosto today:

"The oath we take swears allegiance not to one man but to a document of principles and laws designed to protect the people. Enlisting in the military does not relinquish one's right to seek the truth - neither does it excuse one from rational thought nor the ability to distinguish between right and wrong. "I was only following orders" is never an excuse.

"The Nuremburg Trials showed America and the World that citizenry as well as soldiers have the unrelinquishable obligation to refuse complicity in war crimes perpetrated by their government. Widespread torture and inhumane treatment of detainees is a war crime. A war of aggression born through an unofficial policy of prevention is a crime against the peace. An occupation violating the very essence of international humanitarian law and sovereignty is a crime against humanity. These crimes are funded by our tax dollars. Should citizens choose to remain silent through self-imposed ignorance or choice, it makes them as culpable as the Soldier in these crimes.

"Aside from the reality of indentured servitude, the American Soldier in theory is much nobler. Soldier or officer - when we swear our oath - it is first and foremost to the Constitution and its protectorate, the people. If soldiers realized this war is contrary to what the Constitution extols - if they stood up and threw their weapons down - no president could ever initiate a war of choice again. When we say, "... Against all enemies foreign and domestic" - what if elected leaders became the enemy? Whose orders do we follow? The answer is the conscience that lies in each soldier, each American, and each human being. Our duty to the Constitution is an obligation, not a choice."

In a victory for Lieutenant Watada, the Justice Department decided in May to drop any further attempts to retry the officer for his refusal to deploy to Iraq.

Having served three years and nine months in the US Army, Agosto was to complete his contract and be discharged on August 3, but due to his excellent record of service and accrued leave, he was to be released at the end of June. Nevertheless, due to the stop-loss program (a program used to keep soldiers enlisted beyond the terms of their contracts which has affected over 185,000 soldiers since September 11, 2001) the Army decided to deploy him to Afghanistan anyway.

When Agosto refused, the Army issued him a Counseling Statement (a punitive US Army memo) on May 1, which outlined actions taken by the Army to discipline Agosto for his refusal to obey a direct order from his company commander, Michael J. Pederson. Agosto wrote on the form, "There is no way I will deploy to Afghanistan. The occupation is immoral and unjust. It does not make the American people any safer. It has the opposite effect," and posted it on his FaceBook page.

On another Counseling Statement dated May 18, Agosto wrote, "I will not obey any order I deem to be immoral or illegal."

On May 27, rejecting an Article 15 - a nonjudicial punishment imposed by a commanding officer who believes a member of his command has committed an offense under the Uniform Code of Military Justice - Agosto demanded to be court-martialed instead.

In words prophetic of Agosto's ethical and lawful refusal to deploy to Afghanistan, Watada said:

"I have broken no law but the code of silence and unquestioning loyalty. If I am guilty of any crime, it is that I learned too much and cared too deeply for the meaningless loss of my fellow soldiers and my fellow human beings. If I am to be punished it should be for following the rule of law over the immoral orders of one man. If I am to be punished it should be for not acting sooner."

Agosto continues to show up for duty at Fort Hood in Killeen, Texas, where he is currently stationed, but refused to take part in any duties that supported either the occupations of Iraq or Afghanistan. He told Truthout during a recent telephone interview he was "cleaning the motor pool" and "pulling weeds," and that the Army was being careful not to order him to do anything that would cause him to refuse to comply.

Meanwhile, Branum was in negotiations with the Army in efforts to seek a lower-level court-martial so that Agosto would suffer the minimum penalties possible.

"We were working with the Army's Trial Defense Services (TDS), and Victor has a military lawyer on his side as well, which I recommended he have," Branum told Truthout during a July 10 phone interview.

"TDS had communicated to the prosecution for me that we were willing to accept an Article 15 and do a month of extra duty, then if he (Agosto) got a summary court-martial we'd take it - which would mean Victor would serve a maximum of 30 days in jail, and receive an Other Than Honorable discharge," Branum explained, "So TDS said they took this offer to the CG (Commanding General) who was to sign off on it, but they said he made a mistake and wrote "special" rather than "summary" on the court-martial and sent it back down."

Branum explained that "a summary court martial is little more than an Article 15. Supposedly there was an "honest" mistake made by them handing down this special court martial, but I think they are playing games with us."

Branum, angered by this recent turn of events, explained the difference between the types of court martial, "They (the Army) are not acting in good faith here. What this still means, is the cap went from 30 days (of possible jail time for Agosto with a summary court martial) to a year (with a special court martial), so a pretty big jump I would say, and a leap from an Other Than Honorable discharge (summary court martial) to a bad conduct discharge (special court martial), which means once he is convicted his pay would stop."

Due to the perceived breach of good faith by the Army during the negotiating process, Branum believes he has no choice now but to up the stakes in Agosto's upcoming court-martial.

"Now we're going to put the war on trial with their special court-martial," Branum said, "They had their chance to keep this quiet and move on, but now we're going to pull out all the stops and put the war on trial, and show how the whole thing is illegal."

The most significant factor in Agosto's case is that he has taken a principled stand against the occupation of Afghanistan long before the "point of crisis," according to Branum. The "point of crisis" to which he refers is generally an ethical crisis a soldier experiences when he or she is getting on the plane to deploy.

"He connected the dots long before that point of crisis," Branum explained, "To me, this is a very morally developed point of view. Most resisters don't reach that point until much later on."

It is a similar point reached by Watada, who in the aforementioned speech precisely articulated this experience:

"Now it is not an easy task for the Soldier. For he or she must be aware that they are being used for ill-gain. They must hold themselves responsible for individual action. They must remember duty to the Constitution and the People supersedes the ideologies of their leadership. The Soldier must be willing to face ostracism by their peers, worry over the survival of their families, and of course the loss of personal freedom. They must know that resisting an authoritarian government at home is equally important to fighting a foreign aggressor on the battlefield. Finally, those wearing the uniform must know beyond any shadow of a doubt that by refusing immoral and illegal orders they will be supported by the people not with mere words but by action."

Agosto spoke with Truthout on July 8, immediately after receiving the news of his "special" court-martial. "I was escorted over to the headquarters of Fort Hood and was handed a folder with the paperwork that said he (Commanding General Lt. Gen. Rick Lynch) approved this kind of court-martial. We were in the middle of negotiating a deal where I would have taken a summary court-martial, where the maximum penalty is 30 days in prison and an Other Than Honorable discharge. But somehow during this process someone submitted the case over to the general's discretion, and that' s not something that is supposed to happen in this negotiation phase. I'm surprised, because I thought this deal was going to go down last week and it didn't. I was with my military lawyer, and we were talking about the case, and during that discussion she got the call from the prosecuting attorney that the case had been referred to the general, and then we knew it wasn't likely we would get the deal I'd sign ed off on. So yesterday I went to the III Corps building and got the news."

Agosto said he has "gotten the indication" that he will be leaving the company he is currently in to be moved to the Battalion's rear-detachment company "because that's the one that will stay here. I think they want to avoid a Jeff Paterson moment, I guess that's their thinking. They won't try to deploy me, they just want to punish me for my intentions and for what I've done so far."

Jeff Paterson was a US Marine during the US attack against Iraq in 1991. Paterson opted to apply for conscientious objector status. When that was denied, he refused to board the plane that was heading to Saudi Arabia during the build-up to the war by literally sitting down on the tarmac and refusing to move. Eventually his unit left without him. Paterson told his story to Truthout last summer in Oakland, California.

"Leaving without me is what I thought they were going to do. I was a sort of liability. Also I had been on a hunger strike the previous week, and had at that point become a medical issue for them. So they left me behind, and I was taken instead to the Pearl Harbor brig, where I did the next two months in pre-trial confinement. I was court-martialed for a number of offenses. Ultimately they chose to cut their losses and give me a quiet discharge even before the court-martial ended."

Agosto's stand has already inspired another member of his unit to refuse to deploy to Afghanistan as well. Sgt. Travis Bishop, who served 14 months in Baghdad with the 57th Expeditionary Signal Battalion - the same battalion as Agosto, who served north of the Iraqi capital - recently went AWOL from his station at Fort Hood, Texas, when his unit deployed to Afghanistan. He insists that it would be unethical for him to deploy to support an occupation he opposes on moral grounds.

On his blog, he writes about his position:

"I love my country, but I believe that this particular war is unjust, unconstitutional and a total abuse of our nation's power and influence. And so, in the next few days, I will be speaking with my lawyer, and taking actions that will more than likely result in my discharge from the military, and possible jail time ... and I am prepared to live with that."

Truthout spoke with him briefly after he turned himself in at his base in early June. He said he'd chosen to follow Specialist Agosto's example of refusal, which had inspired him, and wanted to be present at his post to accept the consequences of his actions. Like Agosto, he, too, hoped others might follow his lead.

Agosto and Bishop are not alone. In November 2007, the Pentagon revealed that between 2003 and 2007 there had been an 80 percent increase in overall desertion rates in the Army (desertion refers to soldiers who go AWOL and never intend to return to service), and Army AWOL rates from 2003 to 2006 were the highest since 1980. Between 2000 and 2006, more than 40,000 troops from all branches of the military deserted, more than half from the Army. Army desertion rates jumped by 42 percent from 2006 to 2007 alone.

Branum, who has defended over a dozen war resisters, told Truthout, "As far as I know, this is the first time since Vietnam that we've had two resisters in the same unit."

Adam Szyper-Seibert, a counselor and administrative associate at Courage to Resist, an organization that supports war resisters, recently told Truthout that "in recent months there has been a dramatic rise of nearly 200 percent in the number of soldiers that have contacted Courage to Resist." Szyper-Seibert suspects this may reflect the decision of the Obama administration to dramatically increase efforts, troop strength and resources in Afghanistan. "We are actively supporting over 50 military resisters like Victor Agosto," Szyper-Seibert says. "They are all over the world, including André Shepherd in Germany and several people in Canada. We are getting five or six calls a week just about the IRR [Individual Ready Reserve] recall alone."

The IRR is composed of troops who have finished their active duty service but still have time remaining on their contracts. The typical military contract mandates four years of active duty followed by four years in the IRR, though variations on this pattern exist. Ready Reserve members live civilian lives and are not paid by the military, but they are required to show up for periodic musters. Many have moved on from military life and are enrolled in college, working civilian jobs, and building families.

Agosto told Truthout he stands willing to face the consequences of his actions.

"Yes, I'm fully prepared for this. I have concluded that the wars [in Iraq and Afghanistan] are not going to be ended by politicians or people at the top. They're not responsive to people, they're responsive to corporate America. The only way to make them responsive to the needs of the people is for soldiers to not fight their wars. If soldiers won't fight their wars, the wars won't happen. I hope I'm setting an example for other soldiers."

"One who breaks an unjust law that conscience tells him is unjust, and who willingly accepts the penalty of imprisonment in order to arouse the conscience of the community over its injustice, is in reality expressing the highest respect for law," Dr. Martin Luther King Junior said, words that concisely explain the ramifications of Agosto's position.

As evidenced by the stand being taken by Sergeant Bishop, Agosto's hope has already been realized. However, with 19,000 US soldiers recently added to the occupation of Afghanistan (bringing the total to 68,000) and violence continuing to escalate, there is an increasing likelihood for more to follow Agosto's lead.

Source: Uruknet.
Link: http://www.uruknet.de/?s1=1&p=56012&s2=15.

From WW II To WW III: Global NATO And Remilitarized Germany

By Rick Rozoff

Global Research, July 15, 2009
Stop NATO

The reunification of Germany in 1990 did not signify a centripetal trend in Europe but instead was an anomaly. The following year the Soviet Union was broken up into its fifteen constituent federal republics and the same process began in Yugoslavia, with Germany leading the charge in hastening on and recognizing the secession of Croatia and Slovenia from the nation that grew out of the destruction of World War I and again of World War II.

Two years later Czechoslovakia, like the Soviet Union and Yugoslavia a multiethnic state created after the First World War, split apart.

With the absorption of the former German Democratic Republic into the Federal Republic, which since 1949 had already claimed an exclusive mandate to govern all of Germany, the entire nation was now subsumed under a common military structure and brought into the NATO bloc.

Wasting no time in reasserting itself as a continental power, united Germany inaugurated its new claim as a geopolitical - and military - power by turning its attention to a part of Europe that it had previously visited in the two World Wars: The Balkans.

With military deployments and interventions in Croatia, Bosnia, Kosovo and Macedonia from at least as early as 1995-2001 onward, the German Bundeswehr had crossed a barrier, violated a taboo and established a new precedent that paralleled the re militarization of the Rhineland in 1936, the latter in flagrant contravention of the 1919 Treaty of Versailles. Hitler's sending the Wehrmacht into the Rhineland in that year has been observed by historians to have marked a decisive turning point in plans by the Third Reich towards territorial expansion and war. In fact, the standard argument runs, the provocation in 1936 made possible the next year's bombing assault on the Spanish town of Guernica, the Munich betrayal of Czechoslovakia and the Anschluss takeover of Austria in 1938, the attack on Poland in 1939 and with it the beginning in earnest of a second European conflagration which wouldn't end before some fifty million people had been killed.

The comparison between German military deployments in the Rhineland in 1936 and later ones in the Balkans in the 1990s will only appear extreme if the history of the years immediately following World War II are forgotten.

In the last of three meetings of the leaders of the major anti-Axis powers in the Second World War - Britain, the Soviet Union and the United States - in Potsdam, Germany after the defeat of the Third Reich, Winston Churchill [later replaced by his replacement as prime minister Clement Attlee], Joseph Stalin and Harry Truman met and discussed precise plans for Europe in general and Germany in particular for the post-war period.

The Potsdam Conference issued a Protocol which stipulated that there was to be "a complete disarmament and demilitarization of Germany" and all aspects of German industry that could be employed for military purposes were to be dismantled. Additionally, all German military and paramilitary forces were to be eliminated and the production of all arms in the nation was prohibited.

It is now evident in retrospect that two nations whose heads of state were present either had no plans at the time to adhere to the Potsdam Agreement or if so quickly abandoned them.

A British document from the months preceding the surrender of Nazi Germany in May of 1945 and the subsequent Potsdam Conference of July 17-August 2 called "Operation Unthinkable: 'Russia: Threat to Western Civilization'" was declassified and made public in 1998. A photocopy of the Joint Planning Staff of the British War Cabinet report identified by the dates May 22, June 8, and July 11, 1945 is available for viewing on the website of Northeastern University in Boston at: http://www.history.neu.edu/PRO2/pages/002.htm

"The overall political objective is to impose upon Russia the will of the United States and the British Empire.

"A quick success might induce the Russians to submit to our will....That is for the Russians to decide. If they want total war, they are in a position to have it."

A few years ago a Russian appraisal of the document would state "This was the groundwork for the notorious Operation Unthinkable, under which World War II was to develop immediately, without interim stages, into a third world war, with the goal of ensuring the total defeat of the Soviet Union and its destruction as a multinational community." The total defeat of the Soviet Union and its disappearance as a multinational community in fact occurred in 1991.

The British wartime document consistently refers to the then Soviet Union as Russia, incidentally, and as such suggests plans not only for war but for a change of political system and a vivisection of the sort seen later in a post-war - that is, post-World War III - Russia.

When revelations concerning Operation Unthinkable became public in the late 1990s the strongest response to them came, not surprisingly, from post-Soviet Russia.

In March of 2005 Russian historian Valentin Falin was interviewed by the Russian Information Agency Novosti website in a feature called "Russia Would Have Faced World War III Had It Not Stormed Berlin" and spelled out the details of Churchill's plans:

"The new war was scheduled to start on July 1, 1945. American, Canadian, and British contingents in Europe, the Polish Expeditionary Corps and 10-12 German divisions (the ones that had not been disbanded and kept in Schleswig-Holstein and Southern Denmark) were supposed to participate in the operation."

In further observations that provided the article its title, Falin added, "Behind the determination of the Soviet leadership to capture Berlin and reach the demarcation lines established during the 1945 Yalta conference attended by Stalin, Roosevelt and Churchill was a task of great importance - to make all possible efforts to foil a political gamble envisioned by the British leader with the support of influential US circles, and to prevent the transformation of World War II into World War III, where our former allies would have turned into enemies."

The Russian scholar, author of the book The Second Front, argued further that the taking of Berlin, which cost the lives of 120,000 Soviet soldiers, preempted Western plans for what may well have triggered a continuation of the Second World War into a third one.

"The battle for Berlin sobered up quite a few warmongers and, therefore, fulfilled its political, psychological and military purpose. Believe me, there were many political and military figures in the West who were stupefied by easy victories in Europe by the spring of 1945.

"One of them was US General George Patton. He demanded hysterically to continue the advance of American troops from the Elbe, through Poland and Ukraine, to Stalingrad in order to finish the war at the place where Hitler had been defeated.

"Patton called the Russians 'the descendants of Genghis Khan.' Churchill, in his turn, was not overly scrupulous about the choice of words in his description of Soviet people. He called the Bolsheviks 'barbarians' and 'ferocious baboons.' In short, the "theory of subhuman races" was obviously not a German monopoly.

In a subsequent interview with the same source, Falin provided more information:

"U.S. Under-Secretary of State Joseph Clark Grew wrote in his diary in May 1945 that as a result of the war the dictatorship and domination of Germany and Japan passed over to the Soviet Union, which would present as much threat to Americans in the future as the Axis powers. He added that a war against the Soviet Union was as imminent as anything in this world can be. Grew was supposed to be a friend of the late President Roosevelt."

Recalling the dimensions of the proposed Operation Unthinkable - the
combined attack (and invasion) force was to consist of 112-113 divisions including 10-12 Wehrmacht divisions - the Russian historian added that "The file on Operation Unthinkable declassified in 1998 says nothing about the propaganda chimeras about Moscow's alleged plans of occupying 'defenseless Europe' and pushing to the Atlantic coast, as the Chiefs of Staff worked on practical operations directives."

Falin wrote an article a year later titled "Cold War an offspring of 'hot war'" in which he says that the British "MI5 head, Sir Stewart Menzies, held a series of secret meetings with his German counterpart, Admiral Wilhelm Canaris, in the unoccupied part of France to discuss making Germany a friend and the Soviet Union an enemy."

Sixty five years after the defeat of Nazi Germany there is more rather than less examination of the accusation that American and British government and military figures conspired with the Nazis before World War II and with German Defense Ministry and Wehrmacht officials in the waning days of the war.

In commenting on the rising tide of WWII revisionism in the West, reaching its nadir - to date - on this July 3rd with the passage of a resolution called Reunification of Divided Europe by the Parliamentary Assembly of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) which in effect makes the former Soviet Union (and by implication current Russia) co-responsible for provoking WWII, veteran Russian journalist Valentin Zorin reminded his readers of several events usually swept under the carpet by leading Western circles and their compliant media and scholars:

"The infamously failed Munich conspiracy of the western politicians and the Nazi Fuehrer sought to make the German Army march against the Soviet Union. In those days Moscow was pressing for forming an anti-Hitler coalition and invited a British and French delegation to that end. The talks proved long and fruitless. London and Paris actually sabotaged the talks while urging the Fuehrer to attack the USSR.

"Even after the war had broken out, top-echelon leaders in London and Paris would not give up their attempts to make Hitler's divisions turn about and attack the Soviet Union. A several-month-long period of strange developments came to be known as a Phoney War. While deliberately inactive at the front, the British and French rulers engaged themselves in secret bargaining with Hitler.

"The secrecy of the bargaining was buried for a good half century later, on the 17th of August 1987, when Hitler's Deputy in the Nazi Party Rudolph Hess, tried at Nuremberg and sentenced to life in prison, died at Berlin's Spandau Prison in unexplained circumstances. 10 days before Germany attacked the Soviet Union Hess flew solo to Scotland to start secret talks with the circles close to the British government. It later transpired that the talks focused on ending fighting between the UK and Germany and agreeing on joint action against the Soviet Union...."

It's important to point out that neither the academician Falin nor the journalist Zorin is invested in invoking the events of 1939-1945 in defense of the former USSR and its leadership at the time or in settling scores regarding conflicts of past decades. Instead they and others, including Russia's current political leadership, are far more concerned - more alarmed - about matters of the present and the impending future.

With the NATO Alliance, which in recent years has come to refer to itself routinely as Global and 21st Century NATO, encroaching upon contemporary Russia from most all directions and with increasingly brazen historical revisionism growing out of Western post-Cold War triumphalism reaching the point that Nazis and their collaborators are being exonerated while modern Russia is being tainted ex post facto as a villain in the Second World War, the prospect of a "transformation of World War II into World War III" mentioned above is not so far-fetched.

As Valentin Zorin's article also says, "Some quarters would like to redraw the post-war boundaries in Europe and the Far East, question the validity of the UN Charter and bury the Nuremberg Tribunal rulings in oblivion. It is these modern-day revenge-seekers that channel and obviously fund the large-scale propaganda campaign of falsifying the history of the Second World War."

It's been seen above that the leaders of Britain, the United States and Soviet Russia agreed in the summer of 1945 at the Potsdam Conference to the total demilitarization of Germany. All indications were that once that systemic disarming of the nation was completed Germany would never militarize again.

Instead in 1950, while fighting a war in Korea which included troops from most of its new NATO allies and which escalated into armed conflict with China, the United States started the process of forcing the rearming of West Germany and its eventual incorporation into NATO. Members of the US-led military bloc pushed for the creation of a European Defence Community (EDC) with an integrated army, navy and air force, composed of the armed forces of all its member states.

A European Defence Community treaty was signed in May of 1952 but defeated by Gaullists and Communists alike in France. With that nation in opposition, the EDC was dead but the US and Britain found other subterfuges to remilitarize the Federal Republic.

With the creation of the Western European Union in 1954 West Germany was permitted - for which read encouraged - to rearm and was given control over its own armed forces, the Bundeswehr.

The following year the Federal Republic of Germany was inducted into NATO. The Soviet Union and its allies responded by establishing the Warsaw Pact later in 1955.

Two of the fundamental purposes in launching the North Atlantic Treaty Alliance in 1949 were to base nuclear weapons, which the US had a monopoly on at the time of the bloc's founding, in Europe and to rearm Germany as a military bulwark on the continent and for use abroad.

Anyone still in thrall to the notion that NATO was planned as a defensive alliance against a Soviet military threat in Europe would do well to recall that:

The Warsaw Pact was formed six years after and in response to NATO, especially to NATO's advance into Germany.

The Warsaw pact, already long moribund, officially dissolved itself in 1991. Eighteen years later NATO still exists without any pretense of a Soviet or any other credible threat.

In the past decade alone it has expanded from 16 to 28 member states, all of the twelve new ones in Eastern Europe and four of those bordering Russian territory.

During the same ten year period it waged its first air war, against Yugoslavia, outside the bloc's own defined area of responsibility and its first ground war, in Afghanistan, a continent removed from Europe, half a world away from North America and nowhere near the North Atlantic Ocean.

That NATO officially expanded into the former Warsaw Pact by admitting the Czech Republic, Hungary and Poland at its fiftieth anniversary summit in 1999 while in the midst of its first war, the 78-day bombing onslaught against Yugoslavia - ten years after the end of the Cold War - is an irrefutable retroactive indictment of its true nature and purpose since inception.

The bloc continues to maintain nuclear warheads in Europe, including on air bases in Germany, with long-range bombers and missiles able to deliver them. NATO recently renewed the commitment to its nuclear doctrine, which continues to include the first use of nuclear weapons.

The world's largest and only surviving military bloc, one which now takes in a third of the planet's nations through full membership or various partnerships, was born out of the last days of World War II in Europe. It's fundamental purpose was to unite the military potential of the countries of the continent's west, north and south into a cohesive and expanding phalanx for use at home and abroad. Victors and vanquished of the most mass-scale and murderous conflict in history - Britain, the US and France and Germany and Italy - were gathered together under a joint military command.

If the transition from WW II to a far deadlier, because nuclear, WW III was averted, an argument nevertheless exists that the Second World War never ended but shifted focus. As an illustrative biographical case study of the seamless adaptation, the New York Times ran a reverential obituary three years ago from which the following is an excerpt:

"Gen. Johann-Adolf Count von Kielmansegg, a German Panzer division officer during World War II who became commander in chief of NATO forces in Central Europe during the height of the cold war, died on May 26 in Bonn. He was 99....By the start of World War II, he was commander of a Panzer, or armored, division. In 1940, he took part in the German invasion of France, sweeping around the Maginot line's obsolete fortifications in eastern France and rushing to the English Channel. After fighting on the Russian front, he joined the General Staff in Berlin. Restored to tank duty, he fought the American Army in western Germany...."

It would be intriguing to learn what Count von Kielmansegg thought at the end of his nearly century-long life about the return of his homeland to the ranks of nations sending troops to and waging war against others both near and far.

It would prove equally edifying to hear whether he thought that his career as a military commander ever truly changed course or rather pursued a logical if not inevitable path from the Wehrmacht to NATO.

Lastly, it doesn't seem unjustified to believe that the Count might at the end of his days have been proud of a Germany that had become the third largest exporter of weapons in the world, one which has arms agreements with 126 nations - over two-thirds of all countries - and that had troops deployed to war and post-conflict occupation zones in at least eleven countries at the same time and would soon, at this year's NATO summit, use its army at home again.

Source: Global Research.
Link: http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=14377.

Afghanistan Civilians View Taliban as Liberators

Andrew Moran

July 15, 2009

Corruption and coercion brew in Afghanistan as the U.S. and NATO try to push back the Taliban, while villagers view the Taliban as liberators rather than oppressors.
After the initial invasion of Afghanistan began eight years ago, the situation in the region is nothing but a quagmire; Usama Bin Laden has not been captured, the Taliban are still rampant, the war is spreading into Pakistan and United States cannot afford it much longer.

In a published report that was released on Monday, many civilians in Afghanistan look to the Taliban for aid and in some regions within Afghanistan many of the populace view the Taliban as liberators rather than oppressors.

In an Associated Press report, "Afghans across the country complain bitterly about the country’s police, whose junior ranks earn only about $150 a month. Police pad their salaries by demanding bribes at checkpoints or kickbacks to investigate complaints, and police in opium poppy-growing regions turn a blind eye to drug smuggling for a cut of the profits, many Afghans complain."

The report continued, "A 2007 International Crisis Group report entitled 'Reforming Afghanistan’s Police’ found that Afghans often view the police 'more as a source of fear than of security.’ It said ending corruption was critical if police were to provide a 'professional, consistent service to citizens."

According to the Washington Post, Afghanis view the government as brutal and corrupt, which they then turn to the Taliban for help.

The Washington Post further added, "The police would stop people driving on motorcycles, beat them and take their money," said Mohammad Gul, an elder in the village of Pankela, which British troops have been securing for the past three days after flying in by helicopter.

He pointed to two compounds of neighbors where pre-teen children had been abducted by police to be used for the local practice of "bachabazi," or sex with pre-pubescent boys.

"If the boys were out in the fields, the police would come and rape them," he said. "You can go to any police base and you will see these boys. They hold them until they are finished with them and then let the child go."

Afghan Interior Ministry Spokesman Zemarai Bashary told reporters, "On an average basis, six to 10 police lose their lives [every day] while on duty, providing security for the people. Last year we had an average of six police dying every day but this year we have six to 10."

Some officials and analysts believe that Afghanistan could turn out to be worse than Iraq. In this case, the enemy the U.S. and NATO are trying to defeat is an enemy the U.S. created. During the Russian invasion of Afghanistan in 1979, Jimmy Carter funded an operation called 'Operation Cyclone’ in which they created a group that would defeat the Russians, which is now known as the Taliban.

Uighurs and Afghans are pawns in the geopolitical chess game

By Eric Walberg
Online Journal Contributing Writer

Jul 16, 2009

Last week’s riots in Urumqi, resulting in 180 deaths, recall similar protests in Tibet last year, though only 19 people were killed there. Both Uighurs and Tibetans exiles demonstrated during the Chinese Olympics, to little effect.

Both regions, remote from the heart of Han China, were taken over under the Communists, and are important strategically and as storehouses of mineral wealth to feed the new capitalist China’s voracious appetite. They remind us that old-fashion colonialism is alive and well. Neither the Uighurs nor the Tibetans have any hope of independence, but they rightly would like the Han to be less greedy and invasive.

As in Tibet, it is the flood of Han immigrants and the wholesale destruction of the local culture that is the problem. The massive recent influx of Han Chinese, who now make up more than 50 percent of the population (70 percent in the major cities Urumqi and Kashgar), has reduced Uighurs to a minority in their homeland, ominously called “Xinjiang” (New Frontier) in Chinese. The use of “Eastern Turkestan,” the traditional name for this region, is outlawed, along with the blue star-crescent Uighur flag. Ethnic Han Chinese dominate nearly all big businesses in the region. All Uighurs must study Chinese, and very few Uighurs can dream of going to university.

Like the Kurds, they have no official state, only a hollow autonomous region, along with large diaspora communities in Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Uzbekistan and the West. They number 8-10 million worldwide. There are Uighur neighborhoods in Beijing and Shanghai. Their history is the story of a nomadic tribe from the Altai Mountains rising to challenge the Chinese empire, founding their own in the 8th century, which stretched from the Caspian Sea to Manchuria. Because of their strategic location on the Silk Road, they thrived on trade. They came under Han sovereignty only in the 17th century, but after numerous revolts expelled Qing officials in 1864 and founded an independent Kashgaria kingdom, recognized by the Ottoman Empire, Russia and Great Britain, which even had a mission in the capital, Kashgar. As usual British support depended on its imperial schemes and when the Chinese attacked in 1876, fearing Tsarist expansion, Great Britain supported the Manchu invasion forces. The Brits (excuse me, the Manchus) “won” and East Turkestan became Xinjiang.

The Soviets established the Revolutionary Uighur Union in 1921, but dissolved the organization in 1926 when Stalin abandoned dreams of world revolution. Undeterred, Uighur independence activists staged several uprisings, briefly in 1933 and then in 1944.

In 1949, East Turkestan’s revolutionaries agreed to form a confederacy within Mao’s People’s Republic of China; however, on the way to Beijing to negotiate the terms, the Chinese plane crashed, killing all the leaders. The Chinese army immediately invaded what is now Xinjiang Uighur Autonomous Region. As with the Tibetans a decade later, East Turkestan Republic loyalists went into exile.

Uprisings occurred through the 1990s, supported by exiles in the West and Western governments, which are happy to use disgruntled expatriates from countries such as Iraq, Iran, China and Russia as geopolitical pawns, promoting unrest and calling for independence. The World Uighur Congress (WUC), based in Munich, and the Uighur American Association work hand-in-glove with the US government-funded National Endowment for Democracy.

The Uighurs and Tibetans have old and unique cultures which the Chinese would do well to respect and nurture within greater China. But supporting the independence struggle is part of a cynical geopolitical chess game, and merely worsens the Uighurs’ plight. We are reminded of Britain’s scheming there in the 19th century. If Britain had stood by the Uighurs then, there would probably be an Uighuristan today. Instead, the destruction of Urumqi and the Old City in Kashgar continue. The latter will soon be a theme park where Uighurs will dress up and sell Han tourists plastic souvenirs.

However, Chinese colonialism -- veni, vidi, vici -- pales in comparison to the US/ British variant in nearby Afghanistan: We come, destroy, and murder in the name of freedom. It is repulsively hypocritical for the Western press to take such delight in exposing China’s dirty linen, as it slavishly hails US neo-imperial ventures in Iraq and Afghanistan. As Uighurs riot, US drones massacre hundreds of innocent Afghans and Pakistanis, and Obama sends thousands more troops to Afghanistan in a mission that makes China’s arrogant encroachment on Eastern Turkistan look like an act of selfless generosity.

With huge new bases in Afghanistan and 90,000 troops, the death toll on both sides is skyrocketing as Afghans prepare to “elect” the hated -- by both Afghans and Americans -- Hamid Karzai on August 20. The new US strategy is designed to reduce civilian casualties, according to General Stanley McChrystal, the new commander of NATO forces in the country, though “a price worth paying,” he assures us.

But civilian deaths are increasing. Twenty-two Afghans were killed in the central Ghazni province in an airstrike last week. And crime knows no borders, as 59 “militants” were killed just last week in neighboring South Waziristan by US drones, just days after a US missile strike there killed 16. The airstrikes are said to be aimed at militants, but Pakistani news outlets say only one in six have targeted Taliban insurgents in the country. More than 500 Pakistanis -- most of them civilians -- have been killed over the past year in the US drone strikes.

In any case, the terms civilian and militant are meaningless, as most so-called militants are local boys fighting the infidel invader, as they have every right to do. It would be more accurate to call them resistance heroes or martyrs. Their deaths are just as criminal as the deaths of children and women.

McChrystal’s boys are also dropping like flies with his new strategy. There were 82 Taliban attacks in June, compared with 24 in June 2007, killing 23 troops. On one day, 6 July, seven American troops were killed, the highest casualty rate recorded since the invasion. British fatalities since 2001 reached 184 last week when eight British soldiers were killed in 24 hours, surpassing the new US record. This compares to the 179 British deaths during the six-year military campaign in Iraq.

There are a few voices of sanity, even if retired and hence powerless. Drones are described by retired British lawmaker Lord Bingham as “so cruel as to be beyond the pale of human tolerance” and should be outlawed along with cluster bombs and landmines. But current Western “leadership” stands firmly behind the Bush wars. The slaughter is in fact accelerating under Obama.

What unites China and the US these days, is how they justify their respective crimes by blaming them on Al-Qaeda and Osama bin Laden, a bogeyman that was created by the US itself during its earlier anti-communist phase. Uighur “terrorists” at Guantanamo were finally released, but China insists they are devotees of this bin Laden and wants them back.

Both the support of secessionists and the creation of the likes of bin Laden are examples of the infiltration of the enemy to subvert it from within -- an age-old tactic. The Pakistani Taliban leader Mehsud’s ex-comrade Qari Zainuddin, critical of Mehsud’s policy of blowing up mosques and schools, accused Mehsud of being an American and Mossad agent. “These people are working against Islam,” he said last week, shortly before he was assassinated. Where does Mehsud get his sophisticated arms?

Afghanistan’s unending torment is very useful to the US, bringing Europe and Russia into line, as Obama’s summit in Moscow revealed. Initially after 2001, all of Central Asia and Russia were in thrall to America’s “Operation Enduring Freedom,” though there have been snags. Under Obama, things are back on track. Now even isolationist Turkmenistan has agreed to allow the US military to use its airbases. With its new lease to the US of Manas airport, Kyrgyzstan is back on board the US gravy train to Afghanistan.

Is all this part of a new Great Game, this time directed not against Russia, but even using Russia as part of a long-term strategy to contain the rising powerhouse China? The Chinese point the finger for the recent unrest at the WUC, Washington-based Rebiya Kadeer and the spread of rumors over the Internet to incite and coordinate riots. President George W Bush lauded Kadeer more than once as an “apostle of freedom.”

Whatever its claims to be supporting the cause of freedom, etc, the US clearly assists the expatriates to foment unrest and destabilize China. This was and is being openly done in the case of Iraq and Iran. It most certainly will backfire for the poor Uighurs, who can only expect more repression. Any sincere attempt to help preserve Uighur culture and civil rights -- in particular the destruction of the Old City of Kashgar -- should be carried out through, say, UNESCO, not covertly to incite civil war. The best scenario for an easing of the Uighurs’ plight, of course, would be if the US operated on a policy of promoting peace and of not threatening and plotting against other nations. Alas.

Perhaps the Chinese and Russians are tolerating US meddling in Central Asia in line with the age-old strategy of playing off your enemies against each other -- in this case, the Americans and the Taliban. Recall Truman’s famous quip: “If we see that Germany is winning we ought to help Russia and if Russia is winning we ought to help Germany and that way let them kill as many as possible, although I don’t want to see Hitler victorious under any circumstances.” It can just as well be used against the Americans today.

Source: Online Journal.
Link: http://onlinejournal.com/artman/publish/article_4914.shtml.

Bangladesh police force Rohingyas from makeshift camp: MSF

GENEVA (AFP) - Medical charity Doctors without Borders (MSF) on Wednesday condemned an "aggressive and abusive" attempt by Bangladeshi police to forcibly displace Rohingya refugees by destroying and looting their makeshift homes.

"The systematic use of intimidation, violence and forcible displacement against residents of the makeshift camp is absolutely unacceptable," MSF said in a statement.

The charity said that its staff had witnessed the incident at the makeshift Kutupalong camp in the southeastern district of Cox's Bazar, where police and local officials destroyed 259 homes, "looting people's possessions in the process.

"This incident is another in a series of aggressive and abusive moves by the authorities against the makeshift camp dwellers," it added.

Thirty police and local officials on Tuesday moved material from the destroyed homes into a neighboring UN refugee agency camp, according to the charity.

They also warned residents of the camp that they had just 48 hours to clear out before their homes were burnt down.

Thousands of people were already forced to move out in late June from the Kutupalong camp, some through acts of violence, said MSF, which added that it treated many women and children for injuries during this period.

"This vulnerable population has fled persecution and discrimination in Myanmar, only to be left unrecognized and unassisted in Bangladesh," said the group.

Buddhist-majority Myanmar denies the Bengali-speaking Rohingya Muslim minority citizenship and property rights, leading to their abuse and exploitation.

Some 28,000 Rohingyas live in two official refugee camps in southern Bangladesh where the United Nations provides medical care.

The UN estimates up to 300,000 Rohingyas live outside the camps, many of them blending in with the local community.

Bangladesh, which borders Myanmar, has not granted any Rohingyas refugee status since 1992.

Taliban Insurgents Re-Emerge In Afghanistan's Helmand Province

Taliban fighters who evaded a major Marine Corps thrust into insurgent-held towns along the Helmand River valley this month are now probing Marine positions and using roadside bombs to impede U.S. troop movements, according to senior Marine officers.

Several hundred Taliban had been occupying the populated agricultural lands, known as the “green zone,” where the Marines are now setting up positions. Many of the Taliban fighters laid low during the offensive, the officers said. In recent days, however, insurgents throughout the area have reemerged to mount fresh attacks, said Col. George S. Amland, deputy commander of the 2nd Marine Expeditionary Brigade, which has some 4,000 troops operating in central and southern Helmand.

The Taliban, Amland said, is looking “for weak points or points that he thinks he can exploit and come back and reclaim the territory that he has left.” While usually unwilling to attack the Marine units head on, the Taliban is instead relying on “hit and run” tactics, said another officer, who spoke on condition of anonymity because he had not been authorized to speak on the record.

After observing the Marines, the Taliban fighters have attacked with makeshift bombs known as improvised explosive devices, or IEDs.

“The use of IEDs has proliferated,” said Amland. The bombs are relatively unsophisticated and made of readily available agricultural materials, but are nevertheless lethal.

Two Marines on a road-clearing crew were killed Monday in Helmand’s Garmsir District, after they traced the wire of a suspected bomb into a house that was rigged to explode, according to an officer with their unit. Since the U.S. launched its Helmand operation, Western troops in Afghanistan have been dying at a rate of three a day, far higher than the normal rate.

The bomb attacks have slowed or obstructed the Marines’ use of the network of narrow, unpaved dirt roads that link farming villages in the river valley. The bombs have already disabled several vehicles which are further hampered by their bulk in navigating the primitive roads. The Marines’ mine-resistant armored protection vehicles “are just too big for those roads,” said Col. Eric Mellinger, operations officer for the Marine brigade.

Commanders have made some roads off limits, instead requiring slow-going travel through adjacent deserts, or foot marches through fields and canals. Many of the supplies for the troops are being flown in by helicopter.

Taliban insurgents, meanwhile, have lost some freedom to operate as the Marines have pushed deep into areas that have not been occupied by coalition forces since the U.S-led invasion of Afghanistan overthrew the Taliban government in 2001.

Still, the Taliban are able to hide in plain view by blending in with the population. U.S. officers say local residents continue to receive threatening notes from the Taliban warning them not to cooperate with coalition forces. “They are still intimidated, still getting night letters saying ‘don’t meet with the coalition’,” said Mellinger.

At the same time, large swaths of the river valley remain without coalition forces, including Marja, which is near the provincial capital of Lashkar Gah. Insurgents are known to be taking refuge there, Amland said. U.S. military reports indicate that senior Taliban leaders are not employing their best-trained fighters, and as a result the attacks are not highly sophisticated, officers said. “The Taliban senior leadership is husbanding their assets. They know the guys who choose to fight us will be killed,” one officer said.

Overall, officers say they expect a drawn-out campaign against the Taliban in the Helmand River valley, with Marine deployments expected to continue here for years.

“We know the Taliban are going to come back and challenge us and lay IEDs, terrorize the population and try to make us cause civilian casualties,” said Mellinger. “They’ll do all these things for the battle of influence, and we have to continue to convince the population that we are here to help.”

Explosions at 2 Hotels in Indonesian Capital Kill 4

JAKARTA, Indonesia (AP) -- A police official says bombs at two luxury hotels in the Indonesian capital have killed four foreigners.

South Jakarta police Col. Firman Bundi says their bodies have been taken to a hospital.

The facade of the Ritz-Carlton hotel was blown off in one of the blasts Friday morning. Another explosion hit the neighboring Marriott hotel.

UN to breed owls to combat rat scourge in Laos

By MICHAEL CASEY,AP Environmental Writer

BANGKOK, Thailand – When the rats descended in swarms and wiped out an entire season's rice harvest, hungry Lao villagers supplemented their diets by hunting barn owls, snakes and other wild animals.

But now, the U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization plans to persuade villagers that protecting the pale-faced owls is a much better way to ensure their food supply. The owls are natural predators of rats, and one can eat a dozen rodents in a day.

After traps failed and pesticides offered mixed results, the U.N. decided to breed the birds to end the rat scourge and educate villagers about their vital role in the ecosystem.

"Some people can joke about this, but it is a very good bird and can do a lot of good work," said Serge Verniau, the country representative in Laos for the U.N. agency, known by its acronym FAO.

"Some villagers eat the barn owls," he continued. "If they know the barn owl could be their ally to fight against the rodents, we are convinced they will change."

Verniau said the rodent outbreak first hit the farming communities last year after flowering bamboo _ which bloom every 50 years _ provided the rats with a plentiful food source. The rats wiped out much of the November harvest of rice, cassava and sesame, leaving families with little to eat in a country where hunger is already widespread. The rodents have destroyed crops in seven provinces in the country's north.

The World Food Program has stepped in, distributing 5,500 tons (5,000 metric tons ) of rice to affected communities. It estimates that the outbreak has left 130,000 people short of food in a country of more than 6 million people.

"People in some villages have lost everything. All their crops were destroyed last year. That is why there is an urgency for food assistance," Verniau said.

Elisabeth Faure, the food program's acting country director in Laos, said that the rat infestation is the sort of disaster _ along with floods _ that sends vulnerable families over the edge. Laos is one of the poorest countries in Asia, with one of two children under 5 in rural areas chronically malnourished and two-thirds of the population routinely facing food shortages, she said.

"When I went up to the north, farmers were telling stories of their rice huts shaking and a swarm of rats eating everything around them. It was like a sea of rats," Faure said. "Many people had lost absolutely everything. It is a big shock on a top of a bad situation."

In the government-run Vientiane Times, Lao Minister of Labor and Social Welfare Onchanh Thammavong acknowledged the outbreak Thursday and welcomed the international food assistance. She did not comment on the plan to use owls to address the problem, and another Lao official did not respond to a request for an interview.

Biologists acknowledge that meddling with ecosystems carries risks, especially when new species are introduced. The U.N.'s plan would appear to be less risky, though, because the barn owl is an established predator.

British Agency Rules Against Israel's Attempt To Wipe Palestine Off The Map

16/07/2009

IMEMC - After over 1,000 people with Jews for Justice and the Palestine Solidarity Campaign in the UK sent complaints, the British Advertising Standards Authority (ASA) ruled against allowing the Israeli Tourism Ministry to distribute maps in the UK that showed no West Bank, Gaza or Golan Heights, but instead put “Israel” in each of these occupied territories.

In a decision reached on Wednesday July 15th, the ASA ruled that the maps portraying the Palestinian Territories of the West Bank and Gaza and the Syrian territory of the Golan Heights as being part of Israel violated a regulation requiring truth in advertising.

The maps were part of an advertising campaign called “Experience Israel”, created by the Israeli Tourism Ministry to try to encourage tourism and Jewish immigration to Israel. The campaign included posters with the maps that were plastered throughout the British Underground subway system beginning in May.

According to the Palestine Solidarity Campaign in Britain, the ASA received a total of 441 complaints, which it considered in its ruling. A further 600 complaints were received by Transport for London.

The maps are considered inaccurate, and are an example of what cartographers call “cartographic aggression”, in which a nation redefines its borders on the maps it prints, in order to expand its territory or gain political pressure in land disputes.

Israel, which has never defined its borders since its creation in 1948, illegally occupied the three territories in question beginning in 1967. Israel continues to maintain an illegal military occupation and settlements in the Golan Heights, despite that territory's recognition by the entire international community (save the US) as Syrian land. The Israeli military occupation of the Palestinian territories, the West Bank and Gaza Strip, continues until today with the continuous disenfranchisement of the indigenous Palestinian population and the rapid expansion of Israeli settlements on illegally-seized land.

This is the second time that the Israeli Tourism Ministry has been cited by the ASA for advertising inaccurate maps of Israel and the Occupied Territories.

Hugh Lanning, chair of the Palestine Solidarity Campaign, said in a statement released Wednesday, "At a time when Palestinian history, culture and memory are all under threat of extinction, this ruling by the ASA is welcome and significant. It demonstrates an awareness amongst a wider public, not just campaigners, that Palestine does exist and that it is struggling against an unjust and illegal occupation. This crude attempt by the Israeli tourist office to wipe Palestine off the map has rightfully failed. It was particularly sickening to see Gaza being included on a tourist map of Israel, when it is suffocating under Israel’s brutal blockade."

UN-AU mediator suggests resumption of Darfur peace talks in August

The joint mediator of the United Nations (UN) and the African Union (AU), Djibril Bassole, said on Wednesday that he had put forward to the parties of the conflict in the western Sudanese region of Darfur to resume the peace talks in August in Doha, capital of Qatar.

"I have provided a proposal to hold the next round of negotiations in August. We hope that can be achieved, and we are seeking a broad participation by the armed (rebel) movements in Darfur," Bassole told reporters following a meeting with Ghazi Salah al-Din, the chief negotiator of the Sudanese government on the Darfur issue.

Bassole said that his mediating team was having constant contacts with Abdul Wahid Mohammed Nour, the leader of the Sudan Liberation Movement, one of the major armed movements in Darfur, saying "Abdul Wahid is still refusing to hold dialogue (with the government), but I am still optimistic about the possibility of his participation in the negotiations."

The joint mediator stressed the importance for the armed movements in Darfur to unite their positions, and the importance to reach a comprehensive cease-fire before entering into the new round of negotiations.

Commenting on the requirement of the rebel Justice and Equality Movement (JEM) to limit the negotiations to the Sudanese government and the movement only, Bassole said "We will continue the discussion with (the JEM leader) Khalil Ibrahim to convince him that the lasting peace will only be realized through the participation of all movements."

Ghazi Salah al-Din, on his part, stressed the Sudanese government's readiness to resume the negotiations with the Darfur rebels movements on the date to be determined by the joint mediator.

While seeking a resumption of the Darfur peace talks, the international mediator also said that it will be meaningless to start the next round of talks when the Darfur rebel groups, whose number has mounted to more than two dozens, insist on their own positions without reaching a united one.

The JEM, which has the most powerful military strength among the Darfur rebel movements, requires the release of hundreds of its elements detained by Khartoum, and an exclusion of other rebel groups from the upcoming negotiations.

Source: People's Daily.
Link: http://english.people.com.cn/90001/90777/90856/6702029.html.

India-controlled Kashmiri town ends 47-day shutdown

The Shopian town of India-controlled Kashmir Thursday called off a 47-day strike against the rape and murder of two women, after a court appealed for the ending of the shutdown.

Local officials said life in the town, 50 kilometers south of Srinagar, came back on rails after 47-day-long shutdown.

Shops, business establishments and educational institutions were opened up, and movement of traffic resumed on the roads.

"We have decided to call off the strike on the assurances of High Court that guilty will be punished," said Mohammed Shafi Khan, committee spokesman spearheading the agitation.

The High Court in India-controlled Kashmir Wednesday appealed the people of Shopian district to end their strike. The appeal was made by the Chief Justice of the Court, Justice Barin Ghosh, while hearing the case.

'The case is progressing. This is not your case, this is our case. You have suffered a lot, now the suffering should end and Iappeal to you to end this strike and cooperate with special investigations team (SIT)," Justice Ghosh said.

The Court also directed the SIT probing the case to arrest and produce the four suspended police officials in the court and get their blood samples for DNA profiling, and ordered that no court shall grant bail to these four suspended police officials instead should sent such pleas to the high court.

Last week, a judicial commission headed by retired judge Justice Muzaffar Jan submitted its report to the government.

The commission has failed to identify the real culprits but asked the government to probe the case further.

Earlier, it has asked the government to suspend four police officials for not having investigated the case properly and thereby contributing to the destruction, dissipation and suppression of evidence in the case.

On May 30, two women aged 17 and 23 years were found dead under mysterious circumstances in Shopian town. Locals alleged the duo were first raped and then murdered. They suspected the hand of Indian troopers in to the incident.

Hamas' Haneya meets anti-Zionism Jews rabbis in Gaza

Deposed Hamas Premier Ismail Haneya on Thursday met anti-Zionism Jews in the Gaza Strip.

The meeting between the Islamic movement's leader and the four rabbis, members of Neturei Karta movement, lasted for nearly two hours at his office in Gaza city.

The rabbis, whose small movement calls for dismantling the state of Israel, arrived in Gaza last night as part of a Viva Palestine convoy, which included some 200 American and international pro-Palestinian activists, led by British MP George Galloway.

"Hamas has no problem with the Jews, the problem is only with the Israeli occupation which is based on the Zionism," Haneya told reporters after the meeting.

Haneya praised the Jews who "expressed their rejection to the occupation" by joining the aid convoy. "You reject the existence of people on the land of other people, so we have nothing but to respect these positions and appreciate your ideology," Haneya addressed the rabbis.

The convoy is the second in four months Galloway brings into the Israeli-blockaded Gaza Strip. "This convoy is of a special interest because most of its members have come from the United States," Haneya added.

The U.S. government deems Hamas a foreign terrorist organization since its charter calls for the destruction of the Jewish state. But Haneya said the American presence in the convoy "proves that not all the American people are supporting the Israeli occupation and the siege."

Israel has been imposing a blockade on the Gaza Strip for two years in response to Hamas' violent seizing of power in the coastal enclave. In January, Israel completed a fierce three-week offensive here, killing more than 1,400 Palestinians and destroying thousands of houses.

Pentagon eyes plan to increase Army by 30,000

By LOLITA C. BALDOR, Associated Press Writer

WASHINGTON – The Pentagon is considering a plan to add 30,000 soldiers to the Army to bolster a force depleted by a growing number of troops who are wounded, stressed or for other reasons cannot deploy with their units.

Struggling to wage wars on two fronts, the Army says it needs a temporary increase in order to fill vacancies in units heading to the battlefront.

The 547,000 member active duty force was beefed up by 65,000 in recent years, but military leaders say it hasn't been enough to make up for the roughly 30,000 soldiers who — at any one time — are injured, pregnant, suffering from post-traumatic stress or health problems, or have been assigned to other jobs.

Military leaders have been warning Congress that the problem has been getting worse, as the number of soldiers unable to return to the battlefield has increased by as much as 3,000 in the last several years, according to Gen. Pete Chiarelli, the Army's vice chief of staff.

"It is a stretched and sometimes tired force that is meeting all the requirements, but at the same time it is difficult to get our units up to the operating strength they need to before deployment," Chiarelli said.

According to the Army, 13 percent of the personnel in a typical unit heading to war are not available, compared to 11 percent previously.

Roughly 9,400 soldiers are in so-called "warrior transition units," with either physical or stress-related injuries. Another 10,000 are unavailable because of other less serious injuries, medical screening problems and pregnancy.

In addition, about 10,000 have been tapped for other duties, or have just returned from the battlefront, guaranteed one year at home before they redeploy.

Defense Secretary Robert Gates said Thursday that he plans to decide as early as next week whether to approve the temporary boost — which would be filled largely from intensified Army recruiting. Senators, however, have already introduced legislation calling for the increase.

If officials are given the go-ahead to increase its ranks, the Army expects to be able to do it rapidly.

One senior defense official said that a substantial number of Army recruits have signed up but are in the delayed entry program awaiting a training slot and enlistment into the active duty Army. The plan would be to tap that pool of recruits quickly to begin closing the deficit, said the official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because discussions are still preliminary.

The buildup in Afghanistan and the shift in Iraq from a combat to a training and assistance force have fueled the problem, by pulling individual soldiers out of their units to fill specialized positions.

Those include the recent Obama administration decisions to create special advisory brigades with extra trainers and other specialists for Iraq, and a new three-star command in Afghanistan headed by Lt. Gen. David Rodriguez.

Also contributing to the problem is the Pentagon's ongoing effort to do away with the unpopular practice of requiring troops to continue to serve beyond their enlistment dates.

Pentagon Press Secretary Geoff Morrell said the funding question underscores the need for Congress to go along with the administration's push to slash additional funding, citing the legislative fight over more F-22 fighters.

"We cannot afford things we do not need," said Morrell, "because it forces us to take money from something else that we do need."

Muslim women to enjoy greater rights in marital law

Muslim women married under shariah law edged closer to full enjoyment of the rights provided under South African marital law. On Wednesday the Constitutional Court ruled that Muslim women involved in polygamous marriages can now inherit a share of their deceased husband’s estate.

The Intestate Succession Act recognizes widows married in civil ceremonies, widows in monogamous Muslim marriages and widows in polygamous cultural marriages, but not women in polygamous Muslim marriages.

Fatima Gabie Hassam was one of two wives. When her husband died without a will, the executor of his estate refused her claim to a share of her husband’s estate. In 2004, she took her case to the Western Cape High Court, asking to be recognized as an heir to her husband’s estate.

The Western Cape High Court ruled in Hassam’s favor, and referred the case to the Constitutional Court for confirmation of constitutional invalidity. In her judgment, Concourt Judge Bess Nkabinde confirmed the high court’s ruling, saying the Act violated Hassam’s right to equality and that she had been discriminated against on grounds of religion, marital status and gender.

Nkabinde’s order means that the Intestate Succession Act will now refer to “spouse or spouses” as inheritors to include widows from polygamous Muslim marriages. The judgment did not “foreshadow any answer” on whether polygamous marriages are “consistent with the Constitution”, Nkabinde said.

She added that, while the question was still open, this should not preclude women in polygamous marriages from appropriate protection.

Jennifer Williams, director of the Women’s Legal Centre, which entered the case as a friend of the court, said that courts have previously argued in favor of Muslim women in polygamous marriages on specific issues regarding pensions, medical aid and the Road Accident Fund. But such a “piecemeal” approach is inadequate, she said.

Professor Pierre de Vos, a constitutional law expert from the University of Cape Town, said Muslim marriages are analogous to same sex unions before these were recognized in law. Courts “used to deal with them piecemeal, as in the case [with Muslim marriages] today. But in the end, they realized that those marriages had to be recognized in some way.

“One could argue that Muslim marriages might follow the same route here, though I think this issue is a bit more complicated because of the question of what would serve women best.”

The Women’s Legal Centre is currently awaiting judgment from the Constitutional Court in a case that aims to secure recognition of Muslim marriages. “What concerns us is that in the case of divorce, they [Muslim marriages] are not recognized,’ Williams said. “Obviously, the state is aware that this is unconstitutional. Hopefully [this case] will provide the impetus for them to speed up the process and finally legislate in terms of these marriages.”

Ahmed Mayet, senior impact ligitation attorney of Legal Aid South Africa, for the Muslim Youth Movement who were friends of the court, said there are instances where men take on a second wife, "sometimes without even the knowledge of the second wife, and then the second wife usually is younger and she gets all the benefits and the first wife is ignored, even though she has children".

# Meanwhile, the Constitutional Court ruled on Wednesday that minimum sentencing legislation could not be applied to 16- and 17-year olds as it infringes on their rights as children. Minimum sentencing for these ages had been made compulsory for certain serious crimes by a 2007 amendment to the Criminal Law (Sentencing) Act, and the University of Pretoria’s Centre for Child Law challenged the statute. A majority of the court found that the minimum sentencing regime directed judicial officers away from options other than incarceration and therefore limited children’s rights under the Constitution.

UNIFIL conducts maritime exercise

BEIRUT, Lebanon, July 15 (UPI) -- Peacekeepers with the U.N. Interim Force in Lebanon conducted maritime exercises off the coast of Lebanon to facilitate cooperation with the Lebanese navy.

The maritime task force of UNIFIL deployed off the coast of Lebanon in 2006 following the 34-day conflict between Hezbollah fighters and the Israeli military.

The task force seeks to curtail arms smuggling in the region and has referred roughly 300 suspect vessels to Lebanese authorities since their operation began.

Maj. Gen. Claudio Graziano, the force commander for UNIFIL, said Lebanese participation in the recent exercise was vital to national security.

"The Lebanese navy's participation in this exercise is of paramount importance in light of the future hand-over of the full responsibility of their territorial water," he said.

Italian naval forces assumed responsibility over the U.N. maritime task force in June. It is the first naval force deployed as part of a U.N. peacekeeping mission.

UNIFIL is among the longest-standing U.N. peacekeeping missions, deployed in Lebanon since 1978. Its mandate was revamped in the wake of the 2006 conflict to expand operations along the southern Lebanese border with Israel.

Tribes 'losing steam' against Taliban

PESHAWAR, Pakistan, July 15 (UPI) -- Tribal militias on the Pakistani border with Afghanistan took on Taliban fighters with modest success, but their ability to endure is in doubt, officials say.

Islamabad had encouraged tribal leaders in the region to form militias to help control the growing influence of the Taliban along the border.

In recent clashes, around 150 members of a tribal militia in the North-West Frontier province took on Taliban insurgents, killing as many as 23, the online Long War Journal reports.

The tribal militias, however, are reluctant to accept government or military support, leaving themselves vulnerable to sustained Taliban attacks. Meanwhile, a lack of regional coordination and challenges from the local geography make any tribal effort to drive out the Taliban difficult at best.

While the tribes have claimed modest success in fights against the Taliban, the militias are "losing steam," officials told the Journal.

Furthermore, the Journal notes, the recent fighting between tribal militias and members of the Pakistani Taliban undermine claims by the Pakistani government that the region is "under the control of law enforcement agencies."

Meanwhile, al-Qaida leader Ayman al-Zawahiri in an audio message released Wednesday called on Pakistanis to support Islamic militants in their fight against the United States or face punishment from God.

Somalia: Rebels Advance Towards State House

Abdulkadir Khalif

Mogadishu — Nowadays, mortar shells regularly land inside the presidential palace in Mogadishu, killing, this week alone, three African Union peacekeepers from Uganda and injuring others. Even gunfire and stray bullets hit the walls of the fortified compound.

The nearest post held by anti-government fighters is Florenza, just about 1,000 meters away from Villa Somalia, the state house in Mogadishu.

Even without a telescope, the presidential guards can see masked men along Wardhigley alleys, trying to shoot pro-government forces in the frontline. To further tighten the noose around the State House, more Islamist fighters have been deployed to the northeastern road junctions including Sinai, Afarta Jardino and Sana'a.

This made Wadnaha Avenue technically unusable because strategic road intersections like Hararyale, Adan Adde and Howl-wadag have all fallen in to the hands of Al-Shabaab and Hizbu Islam, the Islamist groups vehemently opposing the Transitional Federal Government.

The eastern portion of Mogadishu has always been considered as safe, Karaan, Abdulaziz and Shibs districts being the first to see the sun rising from the Indian Ocean. Until recently, no major fighting had taken place even during the 15 years of rule by the infamous secular warlords in the Somali capital.

The fortune of the inhabitants of these districts changed in early June. In one of the most unexpected ways, opposition fighters loyal to Al-shabaab movement and Hizbu Islam waged an offensive at Galgalato suburb, cutting off supply route between Mogadishu and the boroughs to the north of the city.

No one believed that those Islamists could advance to areas mainly inhabited by government supporters and by people displaced from other areas of the city affected by previous confrontations. Contrary to all imaginable guesses, the masked Islamists chased the pro-government forces from their positions through nocturnal operations.

Many people woke up to see the Jihadists at their doorsteps and around Karaan market.

Since clan militias in informal dresses and paratroopers mainly in green uniforms were in strategic positions, the Islamists would never find the pro-TFG a pushover. By June 18, however, the strongest government barriers were broken and gunfire could easily be heard in downtown Mogadishu.

The newly affected

The greatest exodus from the newly affected areas was triggered.

Given that the residents of those northern districts had not experienced major changes, the rapid advances by the Islamists caused shockwaves. The only thing many people could do was to grab children, water containers and few other possessions.

Suddenly, other parts of Mogadishu still within the government 'green zone' like Shangani, Hamarweyne, Hamar Jabjab and Waberi districts were overcrowded by the displaced peoples. Thousands of families have been forced out of their homes in less than a week. "All I could think doing was to get hold of my three children, a couple of mattresses and 5-litre plastic container," remarked Dr Ali Mohammed Mohamud, a chemist running a private laboratory in Karaan district. "I asked other family members to follow me," said the chemist.

"I was very lucky to find relatives at Waberi district," he added. Dr Mohamud's extended family of nine members was cramped into a relatively spacious room. The facility, however, did not offer a normal life compared to the abandoned 4 bedroom house, TV sets with satellite decoder and receptive dishes.

For Dr Mohamud it was like moving from 21st century back to the 19th. "I did not have even time to pick my laptop," lamented the analyst. The Speaker of Somalia's Transitional Federal Parliament, Sheikh Aden Mohamed Nur Madobe, held a hasty press conference in Mogadishu on 20th of June. He cried for the international community's help to salvage the TFG from Islamist takeover.

Source: allAfrica.
Link: http://allafrica.com/stories/200907160864.html.

Did Abbas, Dahlan conspire to murder Arafat?

By Khalid Amayreh in the West Bank

July 16, 2009

In an impromptu news conference in the Jordanian capital, Amman , on 12 July, Fatah Secretary-General Farouk Kaddumi revealed that Palestinian Authority (PA) leader Mahmoud Abbas and former Gaza strong man Muhammed Dahlan conspired to murder Yasser Arafat in connivance with Israel and the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA).

Kaddumi disclosed that Arafat had confided to him the transcript of a secret meeting involving Abbas, Dahlan , US intelligence officials as well as former Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon. The meeting allegedly took place in March 22, 2004.

According to the document, whose authenticity couldn’t be verified independently, Sharon told Abbas and Dahlan during the meeting that Arafat should be killed by way of poisoning.

The transcript showed that Abbas protested, saying that murdering Arafat could complicate things and cause serious difficulties.

The Arabic version of the transcript showed Sharon saying the following to Abbas and Dahlan: 'To start with, we should kill all the military and political leaders of Hamas, Jihad, al-Aqsa Brigades and the Popular Front in order to create chaos within their ranks which would make it easier for you to finish them off.’

Sharon then allegedly responded to a suggestion by Dahlan to first abide by a 'period of calm’ by saying:

'As long as Arafat is still sitting in the Muqata’a in Ramallah, you will definitely fail, because this cunning fox will surprise you all, as he has done in the past, because he knows exactly what you want to do and he will work to make it fail.’

Sharon then added the following: 'The first step therefore should be to poison Arafat and to kill him. I don’t want to send him into exile unless there are guarantees from the country that will take him to place him under house arrest…’

Later on in the transcript, Sharon allegedly mentions the names of senior Hamas and Islamic Jihad leaders to be assassinated, including Abdel Aziz Rantisi, who was murdered by Israel on April 17, 2004.

The document presented by Kaddumi doesn’t spell out the ultimate Israeli-American goal behind the liquidation of Arafat and the top leaders of the resistance. However, it is probably safe to deduce that endgame envisaged behind the alleged conspiracy was the creation of a collaborationist Palestinian regime whose central mission and raison d’etre would be to bully the Palestinian masses into accepting a "peace deal" with Israel that would allow the latter to impose its will and conditions on the Palestinians.

Kaddumi is an important figure in Fatah, and it is difficult to dismiss his revelations as hallucinations as his opponents have done.

Non the less, it is hard to indict Abbas based on these revelations. However, it is also difficult to grant him a certificate of innocence, because Abbas is not beyond suspicion and is certainly not an impeccable figure.

I remember I spoke with Sakhr Habash, a close confidante of Yasser Arafat, two days before the latter’s death, who told me that he was 100% sure that "they killed him."

I pressed him to identify the killers, the people he was referring to. He said "you know them, these people around him, the agents of Israel ."

Dahlan

While one is prompted to speak cautiously about Abbas’s alleged role in poisoning Arafat, that is if indeed the late Palestinian leader died of poisoning, one feels freer and more confident to speak about Dahlan’s not-so-secret treacherous dealings with the Israelis and the Americans.

A few years ago, I remember I listened to a secret audio-taped briefing by Dahlan to some of his supporters at the al-Hurriya Radio in Gaza .

In the briefing, Dahlan was heard swearing to make Hamas regret the day it decided to take part in the elections of 2006.

"I will make them eat..expletive.., and if any Fatah guy dares participate in the Hamas government, I will know how to deal with him."

Dahlan made more horrifying remarks which one would prefer not mentioning because of their poor taste.

In 2008, the American magazine "Vanity Fair" published an extensive investigative report titled "How the Bush Administration Lied to Congress and Armed Fatah to Provoke Palestinian Civil War Aiming to overthrow Hamas."

The report pointed out that the White House tried to organize the armed overthrow of the Hamas-led government after the Islamic liberation group swept Palestinian elections in 2006.

Obviously, Dahlan was the would-be coup leader whose job was to destroy Hamas, arrest or kill its leaders in collaboration with Israel .

According to the report, the Bush administration lied to Congress and boosted military support for Fatah in the aim of provoking a Palestinian civil war they thought Hamas would lose.

Vanity Fair dubbed the episode "Iran Contra 2"-a reference to the Reagan administration’s funding of the Nicaraguan Contras by covertly selling arms to Iran .

David Wurmser, a Bush administration official, was quoted in the report as saying hat he believed that "Hamas’s seizure of power in Gaza last year might have likely been a preemptive measure against the anticipated US-backed coup."

In light, there is overwhelming evidence that Dahlan brazenly collaborated with the Israeli and American intelligence services against his own people just as it is amply clear that the current regime in Ramallah is collaborating, coordinating and conspiring with Israel to liquidate the resistance in the West Bank .

True, Abbas might argue that he played no part in plotting to murder Yasser Arafat. However, he and his regime in Ramallah can’t deny the fact that their security agencies, now trained and armed under the supervision of the American intelligence officer Keith Dayton, have been closely collaborating with Israel for the purpose of eradicating all resistance activists in the West Bank .

Indeed, the recent killings in Qalqilya recently was a damning proof, if a proof were needed, that the PA regime is just another layer of the Israeli occupation.

This, coupled with the unmitigated inquisition of hounding, repression, arrest, dismissal from jobs, seizure and closure of institutions as well as the rampancy of torture which in many instances lead to cruel death demonstrates that the PA is working in concert with Israel to harm and undermine national Palestinian interests.

This alone, and irrespective of who poisoned Arafat, is sufficient to indict the present leadership in Ramallah for collaboration with Israel and treason.