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Monday, October 12, 2009

Problems beset Afghan vote recount

By ROBERT H. REID and HEIDI VOGT, Associated Press Writers

KABUL – Efforts to resolve Afghanistan's fraud-marred presidential election suffered new setbacks Monday when one of two Afghans on the commission looking into alleged cheating resigned over "foreign interference" and U.N. officials acknowledged that errors and miscommunication had plagued the investigation.

Allegations of widespread fraud in the Aug. 20 balloting threaten to scuttle the international strategy to combat the burgeoning Taliban insurgency at a time when public support for the war in the United States and Western Europe is waning.

The U.S. and its international partners are anxious for a U.N.-backed commission to wrap up its investigation into fraud charges and determine whether President Hamid Karzai won or must face second-place finisher Abdullah Abdullah in a runoff.

One of the two Afghans on the commission, Maulavi Mustafa Barakzai, said he was resigning because the three foreigners on the panel — one American, one Canadian and one Dutch — were "making all decisions on their own."

A spokeswoman for the Electoral Complaints Commission, Nellika Little, rejected Barakzai's allegation, saying the Afghan commissioner "was an integral part of the commission" and took part "equally in all commissioner meetings." She said the resignation "will not distract" the group from completing its investigation.

Barakzai would not elaborate on his allegations against his non-Afghan colleagues, and it appeared the highly public resignation might be a bid by Karzai's supporters to discredit the commission.

Preliminary results released last month showed Karzai winning with about 54 percent of the vote. If the complaints commission voids enough ballots, Karzai could be forced into a runoff if his percentage falls below 50 percent.

Reporters were told of Barakzai's resignation and his news conference by members of the Karzai campaign. Barakzai was appointed by the Afghan Supreme Court, whose judges were named to their posts by the president.

U.N. spokesman Aleem Siddique called the resignation "regrettable" but said the U.N. continues to trust that the group will produce a fair outcome.

"We have full confidence in the ECC as the important work continues," Siddique said, adding that the U.N. "stands by the work that they are doing on behalf of the Afghan people."

Barakzai's resignation was the latest in a series of problems that have confounded the electoral process since the election, the first run by the Afghans since the war began in 2001.

Last month, the top-ranking American in the U.N. mission in Afghanistan, Peter Galbraith, was fired after he accused his boss, Norwegian diplomat Kai Eide, of downplaying fraud in the August ballot. U.S. Senator Barbara Boxer, a California Democrat who met Monday with U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, told reporters in New York that it was a "very sad day when someone is dismissed for telling the truth."

Other problems have plagued the partial vote recount, which began last week.

The chairman of the commission, Canadian Grant Kippen, told reporters Monday that it had misinterpreted the statistical analysis used to determine what percentage of votes for each candidate would be voided in ballot boxes deemed to have been faked.

Kippen told reporters last week that each candidate would lose votes in proportion to the number of fraudulent ballots cast for them in a sampling of suspect boxes.

But Kippen said Monday that each candidate would lose the same percentages of votes from suspicious boxes based on the number of fraudulent ballots found in the sample. That means votes legitimately cast for a candidate could be canceled if they were found in ballot boxes that were deemed to have been stuffed in favor of another contender.

Kippen insisted that the rules had not been changed and were statistically sound. But confusion stemmed from miscommunication between statisticians who designed the mathematical procedure and commissioners whose role is to determine whether the individual boxes are fraudulent.

"It hasn't affected the process," he said. "It has probably affected people's perception of the process."

The commission has also been beset by language problems. When the commission first ordered Afghan election officials to audit and recount ballots last month, officials said there were problems in the translation from English to the Afghan language of Dari.

New translations were issued and a system for counting a sample of the nearly 3,400 suspect ballot boxes was instituted. But Afghan election officials said many of the boxes earmarked for investigation did not meet the criteria set down by the commission. Scores of new boxes had to be examined, further delaying the process.

Meanwhile, violence continues.

NATO said Monday that its forces killed several militants the day before in southern Zabul province.

The same day Taliban militants attacked a border police outpost in neighboring Kandahar province. At least 14 attackers were killed in the assault, according to Gen. Saifullah Hakim.

Netanyahu: No war crimes trials for Israelis

By JOSEF FEDERMAN, Associated Press Writer

JERUSALEM – Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Monday vowed never to allow Israeli leaders or soldiers to stand trial on war crimes charges over their actions during last winter's military offensive in the Gaza Strip, furiously denouncing a U.N. report in a keynote address to parliament.

Netanyahu's fiery rhetoric — and his decision to open the high-profile speech with remarks on the report — reflected the deep distress felt among Israeli leaders after a U.N. commission accused Israel of intentionally harming civilians when it launched a massive attack in Gaza to stop years of rocket fire.

"This distorted report, written by this distorted committee, undermines Israel's right to defend itself. This report encourages terrorism and threatens peace," Netanyahu said in his address at the opening of parliament's winter session. "Israel will not take risks for peace if it can't defend itself."

The U.N. report, compiled by a team led by former war crimes prosecutor Richard Goldstone, accused both Israel and Hamas of war crimes and possible crimes against humanity. It specifically accused Israel of using disproportionate force, deliberately targeting civilians and destroying civilian infrastructure, and using people as human shields. It accused Hamas of deliberately targeting civilians and trying to spread terror through its rocket attacks.

Israeli officials across the board have condemned the report, saying their country had little choice but to take harsh action against militants who were terrorizing southern Israel. They also blame Hamas for civilian casualties, saying the Islamic militant group took cover in residential areas during the fighting. However, Goldstone's strong credentials as a respected South African jurist, his Jewish faith and past support for Israeli causes have made it hard for Israel to dismiss the claims.

Netanyahu angrily noted the report's portrayal of Israeli leaders as war criminals. "The truth is exactly the opposite. Israel's leaders and its army are those who defended the citizens of Israel from war criminals," he said, before vowing to defend the country's wartime leaders.

"We will not allow Ehud Olmert, Tzipi Livni and Ehud Barak, who sent our sons to war, to arrive at the international court in the Hague," he said.

While Netanyahu has repeatedly lashed out at the U.N. report, Monday's comments appeared to be a direct response to a new Palestinian push for a vote on the report in the U.N.'s Human Rights Council. If the vote takes place, the matter could be referred to higher U.N. bodies that could theoretically push for war-crimes prosecution.

Earlier this month, Abbas' government had agreed to delay the vote for six months. That decision, which came under heavy U.S. pressure, sparked sharp criticism and protests across Palestinian society, particularly from the rival Hamas government in the Gaza Strip.

U.N. spokeswoman Michele Montas said Monday that Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon spoke with Abbas on Sunday about the matter and said he would support Abbas' proposal to reopen discussion of the Goldstone report at the Human Rights Council in Geneva.

In contrast to predecessors who have used parliamentary addresses to speak of bold visions of peace, Netanyahu spoke in far bleaker terms. He focused on past Jewish suffering and criticized the futility of previous peace efforts, blaming Arab adversaries for their failure.

"The right to a Jewish state and the right to self-defense are two of the existential rights of our people," he said. "These basic rights of the Jewish people have been under greatly increasing attack. ... Our prime mission is to stave off this attack."

President Barack Obama has been trying to persuade the Israelis and Palestinians to restart peace talks, which broke down late last year. Even after receiving the Nobel Peace Prize, he faces a daunting challenge in just getting the sides to talk, let alone in solving one of the world's longest lasting and most intractable conflicts.

The Palestinians say they will not resume negotiations until Israel freezes all construction in Jewish settlements in the West Bank and east Jerusalem — areas they claim as parts of a future independent state.

Netanyahu says some settlement construction must continue to accommodate growth in the Jewish populations. He also says all of Jerusalem will remain in Israeli hands, although Israel's annexation of the eastern part of the city and its sensitive holy sites has never been internationally recognized.

Netanyahu, for his part, has demanded the Palestinians recognize Israel as a Jewish state — a demand the Palestinians criticize as upping the ante from previous negotiations. The Palestinians say it would discriminate against Israel's Arab minority and deprive Palestinian refugees of their rights to lost properties in what is now Israel.

"For 62 years, the Palestinians have been saying 'No' to the Jewish state. I am once again calling upon our Palestinian neighbors; say 'Yes' to the Jewish state." he said. "Without recognition of Israel as the state of the Jews we shall not be able to attain peace."

Maliki backs open voting system in Iraqi elections

Iraqi Premier has called for an open voting system in January parliamentary elections, following demonstrations protesting the adoption of a closed voting system by the parliament.

Nouri al-Maliki called on Parliament on Monday to adopt and approve the open-list system, which was also backed by top Shia cleric Grand Ayatollah Ali Husseini al-Sistani, Voices of Iraq news agency reported.

He made the request during his meeting with former parliament speaker Mahmoud al-Mashhadani, Premier's office said in a statement.

Maliki also called for holding of the January elections on time and avoiding its postponement.

However, based on the report, a debate is still underway in the Parliament about a possible suspension of the elections over the row on the election law.

Previously, the parliament had decided to adopt a closed voting system, which does not identify candidates standing for office.

The plan however provoked demonstrations across the country on Saturday, which came in support of a call by Ayatollah Sistani to adopt an open voting system for the parliamentary elections.

Sistani's official spokesman said earlier that the cleric warned against the closed system which may discourage people from participating in the upcoming vote.

Source: PressTV.
Link: http://www.presstv.ir/detail.aspx?id=108506§ionid=351020201.

Israel lifts ban on al-Aqsa Mosque compound

Israel has lifted its restrictions on Muslim entry to the al-Aqsa Mosque compound, after days of clashes between Palestinian worshipers and Israeli police.

"Access to the Temple Mount has been re-opened normally on Sunday morning to Muslims without age restrictions as well as to visitors during regular hours," Jerusalem police spokesman Shmuel Ben Ruby told AFP.

The latest tensions over the Al-Quds compound exploded into violence on September 27.

In September 2000, the second Palestinian uprising or intifada erupted after Ariel Sharon, a rightwing politician who went on to become Israel's prime minister, visited the site.

Iran to seek anti-Israel resolution at IPU assembly

Iran plans to make a request for the approval of an article to condemn Israel's crackdown on Palestinians in the Al-Aqsa mosque compound at the upcoming meeting of the Inter-Parliamentary Union.

An Iranian lawmaker said on Monday that Tehran wants an 'emergency item' on the Al-Aqsa issue to be included in the agenda of the IPU assembly in Geneva, scheduled to be held from October 20-22, IRNA reported.

Violent clashes erupted in the Al-Aqsa mosque compound after Israel closed the holy site to Palestinians in late September and deployed thousands of troops in the Old City to allow the holding of a Jewish religious ceremony at the site.

On Sunday, Israel lifted its restrictions on Muslim entry to the Al-Aqsa Mosque after days of clashes between Palestinian worshipers and Israeli police, which left 16 Palestinians dead and several Israeli police officers injured.

A parliamentary delegation, headed by Majlis Speaker Ali Larijani, will attend the assembly, said Rapporteur of the Majlis National Security and Foreign Policy Commission Kazem Jalali.

“The Iranian delegation seeks to obtain the approval of an emergency item on the Al-Aqsa issue,” Jalali said. “If approved, a resolution can be passed on the issue.”

Al-Aqsa flares up tensions between Israel, Jordan

Jordan has threatened to expel Israel's ambassador over the regime's aggression in the Al-Aqsa mosque compound in the occupied East Jerusalem Al-Quds.

According to a report by the pan-Arab newspaper Al-Quds al-Arabi, Jordan threatened the expulsion in response to Israeli violation of the sanctity of Al-Aqsa mosque over the last two weeks.

Israel deployed thousands of troops in the area after it closed down the Al-Aqsa mosque compound to Palestinians and allowed Jewish worshipers to hold a religious ceremony in the site.

The closure of the holy compound caused fierce clashes in the city.

Under a peace treaty signed in 1994, Israel recognized Jordan's right to look after all Islamic and Christian holy sites in East Jerusalem al-Quds, which is considered by the United Nations as an occupied territory.

Last week, a senior Jordanian official called on Israeli police to keep Jewish religious extremists away from the compound — known to Muslims as Al-Haram Al-Sharif and to Jews as the Temple Mount — and keep the Mugrabi Gate closed, Haaretz reported.

"That will calm the atmosphere while respecting the Jordanian role in Al-Aqsa mosque," said the official.

Before the outbreak of the second intifada in September 2000, visits to the holy site had to be coordinated with the Waqf religious trust, which is under Jordanian control.

Between 2000 and 2003, non-Muslims were completely barred from the area until the Israel police decided unilaterally to reverse the ban.

Israel occupied East Jerusalem Al-Quds during a 1967 aggression and later annexed it.

Hariri meets Aoun over cabinet lineup

As time is running out for a national unity government in Lebanon, Prime Minister-designate Saad Hariri holds a meeting with Christian leader Michel Aoun.

The two leaders discussed names and distribution of ministerial portfolios in a two-hour meeting in Rabiyeh on Monday, Lebanese media reported.

"The atmosphere is very positive and talks will continue," said Aoun.

Aoun had formerly accused internal elements of hampering the formation of a national unity government, saying "some parties" are putting a foreign agenda into action in order to weaken state institutions and to enable foreign powers to take control over Lebanon.

"Internal political sides severing the interest of foreign players in Lebanon are obstructing government formation," Naharnet quoted Aoun as saying.

Hariri, who left the meeting without making any statement, has been trying to form a national unity government since June, when his Western-backed March 14 Alliance won the parliamentary election.

His two first bids — with the 15-10-5 formula, which gives the ruling majority 15 portfolios, the opposition 10 and the president 5 — failed to secure support from the opposition who insists on having a say in who heads each ministry.

UAE convicts American for 'crimes' outside

The Federal Supreme Court in the United Arab Emirates has convicted an American for carrying out 'terrorist activities' outside the Persian Gulf country.

Naji Hamdan, 43, an American of Lebanese origin, was sentenced on Monday to 18 months in prison by the highest judicial body in the UAE.

Hamdan, who was tried over three terrorism-related charges including links with al-Qaeda in Iraq, denies the charges against him and insists he was, under torture, forced to sign a confession "to whatever they wanted to hear."

The American citizen was first questioned by the FBI in 1999 over alleged ties with terrorist groups. After moving to the Middle East, he was arrested in the UAE in August 2008 and was charged with supporting terrorism, collaborating with terrorist groups, and being a member of a terrorist organization.

UAE officials have admitted that Hamdan's alleged activities were carried out outside the sheikhdom.

''I'm disappointed because I was not acquitted,'' Hamdan told The Associated Press after hearing his sentence.

Rights groups say his trial in the UAE was masterminded by US officials who failed to prosecute him in the United States due to lack of conclusive evidence.

During his detention, the American citizen wrote a letter to the US embassy and asked for help, claiming he had been subjected to torture in Emirati custody.

Source: PressTV.
Link: http://www.presstv.ir/detail.aspx?id=108493§ionid=351020205.

28,000 Pakistani troops to mount S. Waziristan attack

Nearly 28,000 Pakistani troops have massed in the country's restive northwest, ahead of another offensive against pro-Taliban militant strongholds in the area.

The Pakistani army said it was waiting for Islamabad's go-ahead for the operation to be launched.

Pakistani Interior Minister Rehman Malik warned earlier of an imminent ground offensive in South Waziristan.

This comes as Pakistani war planes have been pounding militant hideouts in South Waziristan, near the Afghan border.

A Pakistani intelligence official said 31 militants were killed in the air raids.

Over the past week, at least 50 people have been killed in terrorist attacks across Pakistan.

In the latest incident, 22 people were killed in an attack on the army headquarters in the city of Rawalpinidi.

Islamabad says pro-Taliban militants in the country's northwest are behind the attacks.

North Korea fires missile amid US warship 'arrival'

North Korea test fires five short-range missiles off its east coast, declaring a "no sail" zone amid reports of the imminent arrival of a US warship at a South Korean port.

South Korea's Yonhap news agency reported Monday that the North has declared a "no sail" zone in the area for 10 days staring from October 10.

South Korean officials were not immediately available to comment on the reported missile launch — the first in about three months.

The report comes amid speculations that the aircraft carrier USS George Washington plans to dock in the South Korean port of Busan on Tuesday.

Amid tensions in the Korean peninsula, the leader in Pyongyang, Kim Jong-Il, recently told a visiting Chinese envoy that his country was willing to engage in bilateral and multilateral talks, hinting at its return to the six-party talks.

Pyongyang has also released two US journalists it had detained on espionage charges and allowed for the reunion of the families separated during the 1950s Korean War.

Syria bans smoking in public places

DAMASCUS (AFP) – President Bashar al-Assad has issued a decree banning smoking in a wide range of public places such as cafes and restaurants, official news agency SANA reported on Monday.

The decree "forbids smoking and the sale of tobacco in any form in cafes, restaurants and nightclubs as well as in schools, universities, hospitals, public transport, cinemas, theatres and museums."

"Tobacco is also banned in official meetings," it said, adding that designated smoking zones can be established in public places.

The Syrian government has passed several laws restricting smoking. A decree in 1996 banned tobacco advertising while a 2006 law outlawed smoking on transport and in some public places, introducing fines for offenders.

In March last year the Syrian ministry of local government and the environment issued a regulation banning the sale of tobacco to under-18s.

Algeria, Tunisia move closer to reaching World Cup

CAIRO (AP) - Algeria and Tunisia moved a step closer to reaching the World Cup by winning qualifiers Sunday, while Nigeria's slender chances of advancing to next year's tournament in South Africa were kept alive by a last-minute goal.

While Algeria beat Rwanda 3-1 and Tunisia won 1-0 against Kenya, Nigeria was jeered by its own fans as their patience reached breaking point before Victor Nsofor Obinna scored the winning goal in Abuja.

Goals from Abdelkader Gezzal, Nadir Belhadj and Karim Ziani in Blida ensured Algeria only needs to avoid losing by three goals at Egypt on Nov. 14 to become one of the six African teams at the event.

Ghana, Ivory Coast and host South Africa are through. The other spots will be decided Nov. 14 in the final qualifying round.

The Algerians topped Group C with 13 points, three more than Egypt, and have a superior goal difference.

Rwanda took a 20th-minute lead when Mafisango Mutesa's shot deflected past goalkeeper Lounes Gaouaoui.

Gezzal headed the equalizer in the 22nd, Belhadj made it 2-1 just before halftime, and Ziani added an injury-time penalty.

Algeria should have had another goal when Antar Yahia's shot was well over the line before the ball was cleared.

Tunisia scored in the sixth minute in Rades through Issam Jomaa, and was moments away from qualification until Obinna's goal.

The Carthage Eagles lead Group B with 11 points, two more than Nigeria's Super Eagles. Both are unbeaten. The group winner will be decided when Tunisia visits Mozambique and Kenya hosts Nigeria.

Meanwhile, Ghana conceded its first goal in five qualifying games in Group D, losing 1-0 at Benin as substitute Mohamed Aoudou scored in injury time.

"We're satisfied to have won at home, and especially scoring against Ghana, which didn't need the win," Benin coach Michel Dussuyer said. "I am proud of my boys."

In Group D's other match, Frederic Kanoute scored in the 89th minute Sunday for Mali to beat 10-man Sudan, which had Saeed Mustapha Balla sent off in the 41st minute.

Mali is second with eight points in the group, four behind Ghana. Benin has seven points and Sudan is last with one point.

In Group E, Moumouni Dagano scored a goal in each half to give Burkina Faso a 2-1 win at Guinea and a place in next year's African Cup of Nations in Angola.

2 mural paintings portraying heaven and hell discovered in Syria

Washington, October 12 : Archaeologists have discovered two mural paintings portraying Heaven and Hell, at al-Marqab Citadel in Tartous, Syria.

According to a report in Global Arab Network, Director-General of Ruins and Museums Bassam Jamous said that the paintings reveal the sophisticated capabilities of the Syrian artists and highlight social and religious rituals.

He added the analysis of the two paintings would lead to important results that give an insight into the social and ritualistic connotations.

Jamous said that the national mission at Tal al-Mosherfa unearthed a number of tombs dating back to the Middle Bronze era, around 700 B.C., as well as dozens of ancient pieces like earthenware containers, stressing that decoding them would expand knowledge of that era.

The castle, al-Marqab Citadel, located only 6 Km from Banias, sits on the side of an extinct volcano, over watching the sea.

Called ‘Qalaat Al Marqab’ in Arabic, it means Castle of the watchtower.

This is where Richard the Lionheart landed at the beginning of the third crusade.

Founded in 1062 by the Muslim Arabs, it was then taken over by the Byzantines, and then somehow passed into the hands of the principality of Antioch at an unknown date.

Saudi awakening, civil rights campaign momentum

A group of Saudi activists have announced the establishment of an association to fight the violation of civil and political rights amid perpetual attempts by the kingdom to stifle such movements.

"The idea is to form a society to defend civil and political rights," AFP quoted Mohammed al-Qahtani, co-founder and a politics professor as saying on Monday.

The veteran activists rushed out the announcement of the Association for Civil and Political Rights as the government was trying to stifle the move by questioning potential signatories, AFP reported Monday.

"They have started interrogating people who might sign this document," Qahtani added.

Eleven activists, including professors and law experts, sent their announcement to Saudi King Abdullah on Sunday night together with a call for the government to complete legislation that would permit the formation of private or non-governmental organizations.

The monarchy prohibits all political parties, unsanctioned private associations and NGOs.

Pro-democracy activists in the kingdom often face arrest and detention without charge or trial, according to activists.

"Depriving people of being able to express peacefully their views will push them to forming secret violent organizations," the group said in a statement.

They said that groups like theirs were necessary in the fight against extremist violence.

Source: PressTV.
Link: http://www.presstv.ir/detail.aspx?id=108485§ionid=351020205.

Journalist vows to follow up on 'Israel organ theft'

Six weeks after he caused a political storm over his article on alleged Israeli organ thefts, the Swedish journalist behind the controversy says he will not quit the story despite receiving hundreds of death threats.

Donald Bostrom told Press TV on Monday that he did not believe there was any real intention behind the threats, which he has been receiving via email.

While he said he could not guess who was behind the anonymous threats, he acknowledged that the piece had received a large amount of bad publicity over accusations of anti-Semitism, which he overruled.

"My article asks very simple question: what happened to this young man in Palestine?"

He added that he was proud of the way Stockholm had handled the issue according to the Swedish Constitution, staying out of the decision-making process at the Aftonbladet daily, which ran the piece on August 17.

He emphasized that with all the frenzy that piece caused, even causing a diplomatic row between Sweden and Israel, he felt it was his and the newspaper's obligation to follow up on article and further investigate and "explain" its facts.

The article accused Israeli forces of kidnapping and murdering Palestinian youths for the sale of their organs — a ruthless trade going back as far as 17 years.

It also noted a current case of an American Jew charged with trafficking kidneys of Palestinians.

Afghan judge leaves UN election complaints panel

A senior Afghan official has resigned from the UN-backed Electoral Complaints Commission (ECC), over what he calls foreign interference after the five-member council changed its fraud-tallying rules for the second time in less than a week.

Mustafa Barikzai, a Supreme Court judge, was one of two Afghan members of the body, which was established to probe voting irregularities.

He said the commission has been influenced by its UN appointed foreign members.

Accusing the foreign members of the council of disrespecting the Afghan Constitution, Barikzai said he had been excluded from the body's decision-making for "defending Afghan and Islamic values."

He claimed that the three foreigners on the panel — one Canadian, one Dutch and one American — make decisions on their own.

The news comes as the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) has expressed its full backing of Kai Eide, the UN special representative to Afghanistan, after Eide's former deputy accused him of hiding evidence of fraud in the August 20 presidential elections.

Iran MPs yet to agree on subsidy bill details

While Iran's parliament has reached consensus on one article of a subsidy reform plan, which would slash energy subsidies, lawmakers failed to agree on other details of the bill.

Majlis on Monday began discussing details of a subsidy bill, one day after the outline of the plan was approved.

Lawmakers reached an agreement on an article, which would gradually cut energy subsidies over the space of five years. The approval of the article would bring the heavily-subsidized fuel prices closer to international market prices.

Lawmakers amended the article so that the government would not be allowed to enforce a cut in energy and food subsidies in a period less than five years.

However, Majlis failed to agree on the rest of the 17-article bill. Lawmakers will continue to discuss details of the bill in a Tuesday session.

Under the current fuel rationing system, introduced two years ago, subsidized gasoline is priced at $0.10 per liter and is sold at $0.40 per liter on the free market.

Despite sitting on huge oil reserves, Iran still imports about 40 percent of its gasoline due to insufficient refining capacity. The country, however, plans to construct new refineries and modernize existing ones to reach self-sufficiency.

Israel Says Turkey More Radical

Turkey's decision to cancel Israel's participation in a joint military exercise may jeopardize strategic ties, an Israeli government official said.

Israeli government officials fear Turkey's decision is an attempt to form a closer alliance with Iran, an unnamed Israeli government official told Maariv Monday.

Turkey Thursday informed Israel it would not allow the Israel Air Force to participate in the Anatolian Eagle exercise because it was concerned the aircraft Israel intended to send had bombed Hamas targets in the Gaza offensive.

On hearing of Turkey's decision, the United States, Italy and Holland withdrew their participation, Haaretz said.

"There are fears here and also among leading western countries that Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan is determined to turn Turkey into a more radical Islamic country," a senior Israeli government official told Maariv.

Turkey has portrayed itself as a secular Muslim country seeking membership in the European Union, the official said. Erdogan appears to be intent on engaging in a process that will endear him to Iran and turn Turkey into a religious Muslim country, the official said.

Israeli officials told The Jerusalem Post the situation calls for the sales of advanced weapons sales to Turkey to be reviewed. A senior Israeli diplomatic official cautioned against taking drastic action in response to Turkey's stand, saying Israel should not act abruptly, the newspaper said.

Iran parliament moves ahead with fuel subsidy cuts

By NASSER KARIMI, Associated Press Writer

TEHRAN, Iran – Iran's parliament on Monday moved ahead with a bill to sharply slash energy and food subsidies, approving one article of a draft law that has the potential of stoking major unrest in a country struggling under international sanctions.

State radio said the article approved by lawmakers would gradually cut energy subsidies over five years, bringing the heavily discounted fuel prices more in line with international prices.

Officials say the cuts are needed to recoup some of the roughly $90 billion spent yearly by OPEC's second largest exporter on subsidies, and to target the funds more directly at helping poorer segments of the population as well as funding infrastructure projects.

Subsidies currently eat up about 30 percent of the government budget at a time when already high spending and the collapse of oil prices last year squeezed the country's economy.

"The plan would prevent an important part of excessive consumption (in Iranian society), as well as injustice in the redistribution of subsidies," state-run Press TV quoted President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad as saying in a live interview on Iranian television Sunday night.

Parliament had approved the broad outlines of the 17-article bill on Sunday.

The government had pitched a plan last year to revise the existing gasoline rationing system, but the proposal was withdrawn amid criticism in parliament.

Little was mentioned about it in the run-up to the contested June 12 elections — a race in which Ahmadinejad came under fire for economic policies critics say ran the country into the ground. His opponents maintain that massive spending on populist projects that did nothing but deplete the billions of dollars Iran earned as oil rallied to a record $147 per barrel by mid-2008.

A push in 2007 to scrap the fuel subsidy program resulted in widespread outrage, with gasoline stations burned to the ground in protest.

The latest proposal could present Ahmadinejad with one of his government's most serious challenges since the violence and protests resulting from the summer's presidential elections that critics and the opposition contend he stole through widespread fraud.

Iranians enjoy some of the cheapest gasoline prices in the world.

Under the current ration system, they pay $0.38 per gallon ($0.10 per liter) for the first 100 liters. Any gasoline bought beyond that limit costs $1.50 per gallon ($0.40 per liter).

The proposed plan would gradually strip away subsidies to bring the prices closer in line with international market prices.

Some economists contend, however, that the plan would only serve to sharply drive up inflation, further squeezing a country grappling with already high inflation and shouldering the weight of international sanctions.

Inflation has dropped in Iran to roughly 13.2 percent from highs last year of around 30 percent.

Iranian officials dispute that assessment.

Economy Minister Shamsoddin Hosseini was quoted Monday in the Doniay-e Eqtesad newspaper as saying the bill was aimed at "structural reforms to fight inflation."

The subsidy reduction plan also comes at a particularly pressing time for Iran, which is locked in a dispute with the United States and its allies over a nuclear program the West fears is aimed at developing weapons. Iran says the program is for peaceful purposes.

U.S. lawmakers have said they are ready to act alone with even tougher sanctions, including penalizing companies that export refined petroleum products to Iran.

Although Iran is one of the world's largest oil exporters, it imports over 30 percent of its gasoline because of insufficient domestic refining capacity.

The subsidy cuts, if approved, could further drive costs up — particularly if Iran does come under a gasoline import ban.

Iranian lawmakers must still re-ratify the vote on the article after reaching a decision on all 17 of the bill's provisions. A constitutional watchdog must then review the bill before it becomes law.

China court sentences 6 to death in Xinjiang riots

By CHRISTOPHER BODEEN, Associated Press Writer

BEIJING – A court in China's far western Xinjiang region sentenced six men to death Monday for murder and other crimes committed during ethnic riots that killed nearly 200 people. A seventh man was given life imprisonment.

The sentences were the first for any of the scores of suspects arrested in the July rioting between Muslim Uighurs and members of the Han Chinese majority in the regional capital of Urumqi. It was China's worst communal violence in decades.

The verdicts appeared aimed at placating Han Chinese who have rallied in Urumqi calling for swift justice. An overseas Uighur activist, however, said they were only likely to exacerbate the ethnic tensions.

Xinjiang has been under heavy security since the strife, and state TV showed paramilitary troops in riot gear surrounding the courthouse Monday.

The official Xinhua News Agency said seven people were convicted of murder, and some also convicted of arson and robbery. Six received the death penalty: Abdukerim Abduwayit, Gheni Yusup, Abdulla Mettohti, Adil Rozi, Nureli Wuxiu'er, and Alim Metyusup.

A seventh man — Tayirejan Abulimit — got a lesser life imprisonment because he had aided in the capture of another man, confirmed Li Jie, a spokesman for the Xinjiang regional government.

The names of the convicted men appeared to identify them as Uighurs.

Xinhua said Abdukerim Abduwayit had used a dagger and pipe wrench to kill five people during the riot, and he also set fire to a building. Gheni Yusup led Abdulla Mettohti, Adil Rozi and Nureli Wuxiu'er in beating four people to death and injuring another. They looted and set ablaze vehicles and shops, killing five people who were inside.

In another attack, Alim Metyusup and Tayirejan Abulimit killed three others and robbed them of their cell phones, Xinhua reported.

Public prosecutors presented witness testimony, autopsy reports, crime scene video and other evidence during the trial attended by some 400 people.

Police have said hundreds of people were detained following the rioting in Urumqi that the government says killed 197 people and injured more than 1,700. State media has reported that 21 people — mostly Uighurs — have been indicted on charges including murder and arson.

The violence flared on July 5 after police broke up a protest by Uighur youths demanding an investigation into a deadly brawl between Han and Uighur workers at a toy factory thousands of miles (kilometers) away in southern China.

Angry Uighurs attacked random bystanders in Urumqi, an overwhelmingly Han city in the heart of the Uighurs' traditional homeland. Two days later, Han vigilantes carried out revenge attacks in Uighur neighborhoods as security forces struggled to restore order.

The Chinese government blames the rioting on overseas-based groups agitating for greater Uighur rights in Xinjiang but has presented no direct evidence.

Many Uighurs have long complained of religious, political and cultural oppression by Chinese authorities, aggravated by large-scale Han migration into the region since the imposition of communist rule in 1949.

Dilxat Raxit, spokesman for the Germany-based World Uighur Congress, called the verdicts flawed and said they would likely aggravate tensions in the region. The timing appeared to indicate that China wanted the matter closed prior to next month's visit by President Barack Obama, he said.

"These verdicts were motivated by politics, not the desire to see justice served," said Raxit, who added the men could not have had a proper legal defense because their lawyers were appointed by the court.

Swift punishment of those arrested over the rioting were among the demands of Han protesters who swarmed into Urumqi's streets early last month calling for the firing of Xinjiang's powerful Communist Party boss Wang Lequan.

Wang, an ally of Chinese President Hu Jintao, held on to his job but Urumqi's party boss and Xinjiang's chief of police were both replaced.

Protesters had also demanded an end to a string of bizarre needle stabbings that had spread fear and panic throughout the region. Police quickly arrested a number of suspects in the attacks and an Urumqi court has sentenced seven to prison terms of up to 15 years.

Monday's sentences came three days after a Chinese court in southern China sentenced a man to death for his role in the factory brawl that sparked the riots in Xinjiang.

Loss of Innocence: Gaza Children's Artwork

Anne Candlin

October 11, 2009

Loss Of Innocence: Gaza children's artwork, is an exhibition of paintings and drawings done by children in Gaza following the Israeli 22 day assault earlier this year. The exhibition, supported by UNESCO Gaza office, was collated by Rod Cox who went to Gaza early this year with the British overland humanitarian convoy. He stayed through March and April to work with schoolchildren on this project. Younger children, taking part in a psycho-social therapy project, and older children at a Girls High School were asked to illustrate what they had actually experienced and what they hope for the future.

The paintings show the destruction of apartment blocks, mosques, ambulances and civilians, through the use of helicopters, planes, drones, phosphorous weapons, bulldozers and direct fire from soldiers. The sun, trees, birds and Gaza cry. Gaza sends an SOS and the world simply stands still and looks on. A Dove of Peace, in one painting, sails in a boat over a Desert of Indifference. As a result of Operation Cast Lead over 300 children were killed, many more injured, 1400 children orphaned of at least one parent, 30% of children suffer serious mental health problems and all the children are traumatized. Not surprisingly, the children say that what they dream of for the future is freedom and peace.

The launch of the exhibition took place in the cathedral on Saturday 26th September. The Cathedral Dean welcomed everybody and Professor Victor Merriman from Liverpool

Hope University, gave a remarkable and inspiring keynote speech. Rod Cox guided people around the exhibition adding interesting personal anecdotal material to each painting. A wonderful team of volunteer stewards have patiently watched over the precious paintings from 8am-6pm every day for the duration of the ten-day exhibition.

Hundreds of visitors have now viewed the exhibition. Their comments attest to being profoundly moved and shocked by the children's paintings. Photographs of the paintings in the setting of this magnificent cathedral, the largest cathedral in the UK, will be sent to the children in Gaza so that they can follow the progress of their artwork and know that people are seeing their truth: the truth of the assault. The exhibition has been booked by schools, colleges, conferences and hospitals in the UK where it will continue to do its invaluable work of reaching the hearts and minds of ordinary people.

Anne Candlin

Exhibition Co-ordinator, Liverpool

October 2009

FFI

Sources: Hamas-Fatah agreement to be signed on 15 October

October 11, 2009

Cairo – Ma'an Exclusive – The rival Palestinian factions Hamas and Fatah will finally sign a reconciliation agreement on 15 October, effectively ending two years of disunity and violence that began in the summer of 2007.

Ma'an has learned from informed sources in Cairo that the deal proposed by Egypt will be accepted by both parties without amendment.

According to these sources, Hamas and Fatah will receive copies of the draft agreement by Monday at the latest, and its signing will be scheduled as follows.

- Drafts will be handed to Hamas and Fatah within 24 hours.
- Hamas and Fatah will sign the document on 15 October.
- All other Palestinian factions will sign on 20 October.
- Egypt will unilaterally announce that all factions reached an agreement on 20 October.
- Mahmoud Abbas will issue a presidential decree on 25 October.
- The decree will announce legislative and presidential elections scheduled for 26 June 2010.
- A public inauguration of the unity agreement will be held after the Muslim Eid Al-Adha holiday.

Meanwhile, Ma'an learned from other sources in Cairo that President Abbas will deliver a major address on Sunday evening, which will likely focus on the national dialogue, the UN-backed Goldstone report, or both.

Afghanistan: the days of colonial occupation are numbered

Proletarian

October 11, 2009

Inter-imperialist contradictions are being forced into the open by heroic forces of patriotic resistance.

No sooner had the polls closed in Afghanistan on 20 August than the leading representatives of the occupation regime declared this electoral farce a success. Nato’s Secretary-General, Anders Fogh Rasmussen, praised the Afghan people’s determination to build democracy, while the leaders of the US, Britain, Germany and France – the main participants in the imperialist predatory war against the Afghan people – rushed to pat themselves on the back for facilitating this alleged exercise in democracy.

In view of the fact that US President Barack Obama, who has characterized the US war against Afghanistan as "a war of necessity", not of choice, is on record asserting that the August election was the most significant event in Afghanistan this year, even more important than the build-up of troops and civilian aid authorized by his administration, it is not surprising that he hailed the poll as "an important step forward" in the teeth of opposition from the resistance, and vowed that the US would achieve its goals, so that "our troops will be able to come home".

The Financial Times , one of the most representative organs of British monopoly capitalism, in its leading article of 22 August, described it as " something of a miracle that Afghanistan has been able to hold elections, given the circumstances, " namely, "a raging insurgency, in which Nato forces have been unable to regain initiative ... a central government that has failed to provide security, services or jobs, and whose writ barely reaches beyond the boundaries of Kabul ". The paper went on to laud the Afghans for having braved "the rockets and intimidation " to come out to vote, even if in sharply reduced numbers as compared to the 2004 election. ('Afghanistan votes and hopes for the best’)

Nothing according to script

The political, ideological and literary representatives of imperialism spoke too soon. A month after these farcical elections, while the result is still to be declared, everything lies in ruins. Nothing has gone according to the prepared script, which ran as follows: Karzai was expected to win in the first round by a wide margin, which would trump a low turnout; the US and Nato would claim 'progress’; and despite the fact that his writ does not run beyond Kabul (if that far), the corruption engulfing his administration and its singular inability to provide security, jobs and essential services, and the increasingly lukewarm support for him in Washington – the blemished Mr Karzai would stay put in the presidential palace, confirming Pashtun primacy, lending a veneer of legitimacy to the imperialist occupation, and helping the latter to restore some sort of stability in the face of fierce resistance by the Afghan people to the occupation of their country by foreign powers.

In the light of the unexpectedly strong showing by Abdullah Abdullah, a low turnout, and the allegations accompanied by clear evidence of electoral fraud on a mass scale, this script must now be torn up. Within hours of the polls closing, Karzai and his chief opponent, Abdullah, both anticipated the results and claimed victory, so undermining Mr Obama’s endeavors to portray the polls as a success.

The US administration had been banking upon the elections as an instrument for reversing the gains of the resistance by attempting to convince Afghans that 100,000-plus imperialist forces were enabling the country to elect an accountable government. That forlorn hope has been smashed to smithereens amidst deserted polling stations, deep cynicism among the electorate, and gigantic fraud practiced by the Karzai puppet regime.

Gigantic electoral fraud

Tribal leaders from the south of the country, who visited Kabul in the first week of September to lodge complaints against fraudulent electoral practices, spoke of tens of thousands of fake votes for Hamid Karzai at polling stations that were virtually deserted on polling day.

Haji Kamardin, a tribal leader from the Shomalzai district of southern Zabul province, stated that as a result of wholesale intimidation, out of a population of 200,000, a mere 50 people voted, adding that in the whole of Zabul province no more than 3,000 or 4,000 cast their votes as nobody was allowed to leave home. ('Bombs kill top Afghan official’ by Matthew Green, Financial Times , 3 September 2009)

Haji Mohammed, a tribal leader from the province of Kandahar, related the offer he received four days before the elections from the local police chief. If he ignored a plan for vote rigging in favor of Karzai, the police would pass on to him empty ballot boxes to stuff in favor of his nephew, who was contesting for the provincial assembly. On Haji Mohammed turning down the offer, the security forces collected all the ballot boxes earmarked for 45 polling stations in the Shorowak and Ragestan districts and packed them with ballot papers marked in favor of Karzai. There was no election on polling day, all the ballot boxes having already been stuffed.

"The chief of Shorowak told me personally that 29,823 votes were cast in favor of Mr Karzai," said Haji Mohammed.

Another tribal leader said, amidst laughter: "The whole population of animals and human beings in Shorowak cannot add up to 29,000."

Abdul Zahir, a landowner from Uruzgan province, told a similar story of vote rigging and ballot-box stuffing in favor of Karzai, adding that, while no more than 40 people actually voted, 4,700 ballots were officially declared to have been cast for Karzai and 650 for Abdullah. (Information in the preceding three paragraphs is drawn from 'Furious elders report widespread vote-rigging’ by Matthew Green , Financial Times , 7 September 2009)

The tribal elders gathered in Kabul accused Ahmed Wali Karzai, the puppet president’s brother and governor of Kandahar province, of organizing vote rigging to ensure he remained in office, a convenient and comfortable niche from which to run his business empire, including drug smuggling on a vast scale. Not for nothing is this scoundrel nicknamed 'King of the South’.

Such is the revulsion caused by the corruption, nepotism, intimidation and electoral fraud practiced by the Karzai brothers that vast swathes of even the Pashtun community, which accounts for 45 percent of the Afghan population, and from which the Karzai brothers hail, have become disaffected with them to the extent that they have been willing to support Mr Abdullah, who is half Tajik.

Clear evidence of massive electoral fraud in the south has pushed Pashtun anger to such boiling point that Abdul Zahir, the Uruzgan landowner already quoted above, issued a warning that many thousands of his supporters would reject results fabricated in Karzai’s favor. He added: "They won’t go on to the streets to protest. They will go straight to the mountains and start fighting the government." (Quoted in 'Pashtuns lose patience with the court of King Karzai’ by Matthew Green, Financial Times, 5 September 2009)

Staged by the occupying powers with the intention of binding the country and legitimizing the occupation by providing it with a façade of a democratically-elected and accountable administration, these elections have presented a spectacle of government ministers, district administrators, police chiefs, electoral officials, drug traffickers, criminal gangsters and some bought-off tribal leaders all stuffing ballot boxes in a "massive state-engineered fraud", to use Mr Abdullah’s words, a fraud designed to ensure a Karzai victory.

This obscene spectacle obliged Michael Semple, a former UN political officer to Afghanistan and deputy EU representative there, to damn those who claim that the vote was a success as harking back to "a fantasy that is not tenable in the YouTube age".

In view of the widespread knowledge of the mass electoral fraud, he says, "only those immersed in the fantasy of 'reasonably free and fair’ could hope that a majority out of this mess would confer any legitimacy on government", adding that trying to press on with a winner elected through fraud will leave the Afghan government too weak either to defeat the resistance or to negotiate with it. "Neither the Afghan population nor western electorates are going to tolerate much more investment in failure." (Quoted in Financial Times, 3 September 2009)

The occupation powers find themselves facing an unpalatable situation. Should Karzai be declared the winner in an election marred by widespread fraud and an extremely low turnout, especially in the south of the country where the resistance is at its strongest, the US would be obliged to give its backing to a government that lacks even the semblance of legitimacy and into the bargain is packed with warlords and drug barons.

None of this augurs well for Obama’s hope of conjuring up a plausible administration so as to wean away popular support from the resistance.

Panacea turns into a cause of division

Staged as a panacea for the troubles of the occupation, these elections have ended up by deepening divisions within the camp of imperialism and its puppets in Afghanistan.

The gulf between the Karzai regime and its imperialist masters, between the presidential palace and the Afghan people, and between the various occupying powers has widened further, thus making it all the harder to wage war against the resistance, which is in control of most of the country and is threatening to close in on Kabul.

In defiance of western pressure to withhold further results, on 8 September, the Afghan electoral officials of the so-called Independent Election Commission made public a new batch of preliminary results giving Karzai 54.1 percent of the vote from 91 percent of the polling stations, with Dr Abdullah allegedly receiving 28.3 percent. If these margins hold, Karzai would secure the simple majority that he needs to avoid a run-off in October against his main rival.

Its decision to release the results puts the puppet Karzai regime on a collision course with the US at a time when President Obama is facing a crucial decision over further troop reinforcements. The electoral commission released the suspect results a few hours after the UN-backed Electoral Complaints Commission had stated that there was " clear and convincing " evidence of fraud in many provinces in the south and ordered a recount in some areas.

US-German relations under stress

Meanwhile, relations between US and German imperialism have become further strained following the incident on 4 September when a Nato aircraft fired on two hijacked fuel tankers, igniting a firestorm that burned 100 people and dealt a fatal blow to the recently-announced US policy of avoiding civilian casualties.

This carnage, on a river bank in the northern Kunduz province, took place close to the village of Omer Khil, where every family lost a relative. The strike had been called by Colonel Georg Klein, a German commander, at a critical time when the eight-year-long imperialist intervention is struggling to contain fierce resistance in the face of fast-vanishing public support for the Afghan war in the US and Europe.

The strike also sparked a furious backlash among Afghans, with even the leading puppets questioning the use of air power, which has thus far caused so many Afghan deaths and horrendous devastation.

After the strike, while the Germans dithered and attempted to deny any civilian casualties, General Stanley McChrystal, the US and Nato military chief in Afghanistan, publicly offered his apology for the civilian deaths, causing great embarrassment to Germany, which had in 2002 denounced references to preemptive strikes in the US National Security Strategy as undermining deterrence. Now, in bombing the fuel tankers on 4 September, the Germans were guilty of precisely that which they had been preaching the US to stop doing. It was the turn of the Americans this time to lecture the Germans about the perils of preemption.

The US administration is in a cleft stick. On the one hand, it is trying to portray the image of a power attempting to win the hearts and minds of the Afghan people. As such, it is obliged to criticize the German action, even if it is along the same lines as US actions until only the other day and probably still continuing. On the other hand, it has to soften those criticisms in an attempt to keep together the fast-disintegrating imperialist coalition in Afghanistan, particularly in view of the fact that the Netherlands (1,600 troops) and Canada are due to draw down or pull out their troops in 2010 and 2011 respectively.

The air strike in Kunduz has shattered two German myths: first, that bad things don’t happen to Germans because they are good guys and somehow morally superior; second, that they are conducting a stabilization operation, not a combat mission, in Afghanistan. The incident of 4 September cannot but force the German military high command to realize that it is waging a predatory war against the Afghan people, just as the US, Britain and other imperialist powers are, and that in this war of conquest, its soldiers, by the very position they occupy in the war, behave no better than troops from other imperialist countries.

The Kunduz strike comes at a very inconvenient time for the German government and the two parties, the CDU and the SPD, that form the grand coalition which has governed Germany for the last four years, for they face the German electorate in elections due to be held on 27 September.

The majority of Germans, including fairly large sections in all parties, are against the war in Afghanistan. The Left Party is the only parliamentary party to oppose the Afghan war and support for it has consequently risen by four points to 14 percent, according to the latest opinion poll by Forsa for Stern magazine. With its call to bring home the troops immediately, the Left Party could gather further traction and win more votes, helped by the revulsion felt by the popular masses following the Kunduz incident.

Such an outcome, with the emergence of the Left Party as a major force, could upset the electoral arithmetic and frustrate Chancellor Angela Merkel’s attempts to form a CDU-FDP coalition following the elections at the end of this month. In equal measure, electoral gains on a major scale could oblige the SPD leadership to revise its previous decision not to ally with the Left Party.

Considering the gains by the latter in the regional elections in Saarland and Thuringia in August, such an outcome is by no means far-fetched. In both states, the CDU suffered double-digit losses, the SPD was weakened, and the Left Party obtained both its best ever vote (27.4 percent in Thuringia) and its best score in a west German state (21.3 percent in Saarland).

In addition, the mandate of the 4,500 German troops in Afghanistan comes up for renewal in December. Considering the political situation in Germany, such a renewal is by no means a certainty.

British cross-party consensus at risk

With British casualties mounting, public support for the war vanishing, and victory nowhere in sight, the opposition Conservative Party has used electoral fraud in Afghanistan as a pretext for breaking the cross-party consensus on the war, saying that British troops must not pay in blood to allow the Karzai government to stay in office following a "corrupt" election.

Writing in the Daily Mail of 10 September, William Hague, Shadow Foreign Secretary, hinted that the Tories might withdraw support for the Afghan war if the government rubber-stamps a fraudulent election. This is a major departure from tradition, for bourgeois opposition parties do not generally question ongoing British military operations.

Mr Hague stated that the Electoral Complaints Commission had uncovered " clear and convincing evidence of fraud " and had on record over 2,000 complaints, 726 of which were recorded in 'Priority A’ category. He went on to say that the EU’s monitors had confirmed " large scale ballot stuffing" at polling stations, "including hundreds of thousands of fraudulent votes accepted at the tally centre and included among the preliminary official results ". "Is it wise," he asked, " to declare the results final and the election over if irregularities took place on such a scale?"

Pointing out the failure of the occupying powers to win and retain the support of the Afghan people, William Hague went on to say: " We may fatally undermine our standing in the eyes of the Afghans [too late to worry about that, Mr Hague, for this standing is already fatally undermined!] if we are seen to rubber stamp disputed election results which disenfranchise sections of the population. " Such a course, he said, was bound to undermine further the military efforts of the occupation forces, for it carried the danger of violence from supporters of other candidates.

"It would be a serious mistake, " he wrote, " to think that fraudulent results on a large scale can simply be accepted. If the next Afghan government is compromised and built on corrupt electoral practices, there will be little support for us too. "

Mr Hague did not address, nor indeed would we expect him to address, the simple truth that there is no support for the occupation forces in Afghanistan; that whoever emerges victorious from this electoral charade, whether it is tainted by widespread ballot box stuffing and vote rigging or not, would still be a puppet of the predatory imperialist powers occupying Afghanistan and waging war against it; that such a regime and its imperialist masters would be totally alienated from the Afghan people and thus bereft of the latter’s support.

Leaving all this aside, the question arises: why are the Conservatives making such a fuss about electoral fraud in a country with whose subjugation by imperialism they have no disagreement – a subjugation that has disenfranchised the entire Afghan population, not just sections of it?

The answer lies in the fact that the Afghan war is increasingly unpopular with the British people and the Conservatives are attempting to tap into the popular resentment to secure some electoral advantage by deserting a sinking ship.

The Tories are just as capable of turning a blind eye to electoral fraud as are the Labor Party. There was plenty of electoral fraud during the 2004 Afghan election, but none of the bourgeois parties in Britain uttered a murmur about it then. The difference between then and now is that presently the war is going very badly for the imperialist occupying powers.

The victories of the Afghan resistance and the reverses suffered by the imperialist forces have caused dissensions within the ruling class. The Conservative first steps to break the cross-party consensus on the war are a reflection of these dissensions and disintegration in the camp of the British bourgeoisie, and are, as such, a most welcome development.

Cracks in imperialist alliance

To complicate matters further, Gordon Brown, Angela Merkel and Nicolas Sarkozy, the leaders respectively of Britain, Germany and France – all members of Nato and contributors of troops in Afghanistan – have issued a call for a UN conference on Afghanistan to be held this year, to set "new benchmarks and timelines in order to formulate a joint framework for our transition phase in Afghanistan", including handing power, security and policing over to the Afghans.

The three leaders agreed to build on the election of 20 August in Afghanistan, which they perversely claimed had marked "an important step in its democratic history". "Now is the right moment, together with the new Afghanistan leadership, to set out at the end of this year how the transfer of responsibility will happen," said Angela Merkel, the German Chancellor.

The proposal for a UN conference and Mrs Merkel’s remarks have set alarm bells ringing in Washington, for the US rightly perceives in them a wavering of commitment to the Afghan war on the part of its Nato allies. Mrs Merkel’s comments have been widely interpreted by western diplomats as hinting at an exit strategy far sooner than expected, and, as such, are causing much grief to the US administration.

Nato spokesmen are putting on a brave face and denying any split in the alliance. All the same, a Nato diplomat admitted that opinion polls in Europe and the US were worryingly moving against the war. "There is no wobble happening yet," said the diplomat, "but we can see public opinion polls that are not encouraging and we need to show people that this investment [in training the Afghan military] is actually getting somewhere."

Resistance winning

Meanwhile, ignoring the imperialist posturing on the Afghan elections, as well as the in-fighting within the camp of puppets of the occupation, the Afghan resistance is carrying on its fight for the liberation of Afghanistan from the imperialist occupying forces with relentless tenacity.

On 2 September, a suicide bomber killed at least 22 people, including Abdullah Laghman, the deputy head of intelligence, when he blew himself up in eastern Afghanistan. At least 40 people were killed the previous week in a car bomb attack in the city of Kandahar. On 8 September, hours before the Independent Election Commission released its results, a suicide bomber blew up his vehicle at Kabul’s main airport, killing three people, in the capital’s worst attack since 20 August.

On 17 September, in yet another blow to Nato’s efforts to subdue Afghanistan, a suicide car bomber rammed into a Nato convoy, killing six Italian soldiers and 10 civilians, while another 55 were wounded in the blast. The explosion led to growing calls in Italy for the withdrawal of the 2,800 Italian troops deployed in Afghanistan.

The US administration finds itself conducting this "war of necessity" amidst a massive electoral fraud, a grim assessment by US generals, a stretched army, a skeptical public and reluctant allies. Besides troops, the imperialist coalition can only be held together by resilience, mutual trust and loyalty – all of which are characterized by their near-total absence.

Last spring, soon after assuming the US presidency, Barack Obama sent 21,000 extra troops to Afghanistan, bringing the total of US troops deployed to 68,000. General Stanley McChrystal, who assumed control of US and Nato forces in Afghanistan in June, believes this number to be insufficient. In the first week of September, General McChrystal filed a report to the president on the deteriorating military situation and a request for extra troops.

The request comes at a time of growing opposition to a war which the public thinks is unwinnable. More than half of US citizens oppose the war or consider it not worth fighting. The Afghan resistance has proved far more formidable than anticipated by Nato, quadrupling the number of successful attacks on Nato forces in the last two years. With three months to go, 2009 is already the deadliest year for Nato forces, especially the Americans, since the invasion of 2001. Nearly 190 US soldiers have been killed in Afghanistan so far this year. In July alone, 44 US soldiers were killed. Nato’s losses this year stand at over 300.

Before long, Obama will discover that his "war of necessity" is as unpopular and as unwinnable as was Bush’s "war of choice". If he persists with this predatory war, he and his government will be just as much reviled as were George W Bush and his administration.

The days of colonial occupation have long past. For all its superior resources, overwhelming technological superiority, and up-to-date killing machines, imperialism will not prevail, will not be able to cow down the resistance of the Afghan people.

Refusing to learn the lessons of history, like all reactionary fools, imperialists are busy invading and occupying other countries. In the end they will have their skulls cracked and will doubtless be forced to make humiliating exits in a series of defeats at the hands of the oppressed peoples in the latter’s life-and-death struggles for liberation from imperialist war, occupation and exploitation.

Victory to the resistance!

Death to imperialism!

UK stops trade with two Iranian firms

Despite the recent positive talks between Iran and the world major powers, Britain moves to enforce a halt in financial ties with two Iranian firms.

The United Kingdom on Monday said it had ordered financial companies to stop all business with Iran's Bank Mellat and the Islamic Republic of Iran Shipping Lines (IRISL).

The decision has been made in response to a "significant risk to the UK's national interest posed by activity in Iran that facilitates the development or production of nuclear weapons," said a statement by the Treasury.

Ali Akbar Javanfekr, a media advisor to Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, dismissed Britain's decision and said sanctions in the long run would prove beneficial for Iran.

"If the British government decided to impose sanctions against Iran this would show that Britain is getting far from the realities of the current world and such a trend will be against the interests of the British people," he told Reuters.

Bank Mellat and IRISL have not so far commented on the UK decision.

“Iran continues to pursue its proliferation sensitive nuclear and ballistic missile activities in defiance of five UN Security Council Resolutions,” the Treasury said.

“On the particular entities in question, vessels of the Islamic Republic of Iran Shipping Lines (IRISL) have transported goods for both Iran's ballistic missile and nuclear program.”

“Similarly, Bank Mellat has provided banking services to a UN listed organization connected to Iran's proliferation sensitive activities, and been involved in transactions related to financing Iran's nuclear and ballistic missile program.”

Iran faces pressure to halt its nuclear enrichment activities, as some Western countries, spearheaded by the US and Israel, claim its program is aimed at building a nuclear bomb.

Tehran, however, has consistently denied seeking nuclear weapons and has called for the removal of all weapons of mass destruction from across the globe.

Washington, Tel Aviv and their European allies claim that Tehran has plans 'to build a nuclear weapon' and argue that the use of military force is a legitimate option in retarding Iran's nuclear progress.

Iran argues that the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) — to which it is a signatory — gives the country the right to enrich uranium for peaceful purposes, adding that nuclear energy is essential for meeting its growing energy demand.

1,500-year-old city unearthed in Iran

After a 45-day long excavation, Iranian archeologists have unearthed an ancient town in northeastern Iran dating back to the Parthian Dynasty (200 BC - 250 CE).

Iranian archeologists discovered a historical town belonging to the Parthian Dynasty in the northeastern province of Khorasan Razavi.

Archeologists have been excavating the historical site for 45 days. The town is measured 1,300 meters in lengths, 150 meters in eastern width and 450 meters in western width.

A number of decorative bricks and colorful earthenware, adorned with animal and plant designs, have been discovered in the site. The findings reveal that the town was an administrative place with important castles and palaces.

The architectural structure is mainly made of bricks and cob. Archeologists believe such structures have been designed prior to its construction.

The archeologists have succeeded in unearthing various architectural artworks, clay wares, and kitchen utensil in the historical site.

Iran deplores language of threat, sanction

Ahead of a planned nuclear meeting in Vienna, Iran slams the West's use of the language of "sanctions and threats" against the nuclear program of the Islamic Republic.

"So far, western powers have achieved nothing by using the language of threats and sanctions against Iran. The West, itself, knows that this language is useless," Iranian Foreign Ministry Spokesman Hassan Qashqavi told reporters Monday.

"We have always announced that we advocate negotiations," he added.

Officials from Iran, the United States, Russia, France and the UN nuclear watchdog plan to hold talks in Vienna on October 19 as Tehran weighs its options to supply its research reactor in Tehran with enriched uranium of 20 percent for producing radio-medicine.

The talks will come after Iran's top nuclear negotiator Saeed Jalili sat down with diplomats from permanent members of the UN Security Council plus Germany (P5+1) on October 1 in Geneva and exchanged views on a wide range of global issues based on Iran's package of proposals recently presented to the West.

During the Geneva talks, those western countries that have long been huffing and puffing about Iran's mendacity over its enrichment program back down from calling on Iran to halt the program.

After the seven-and-a-half hour Geneva meeting, both sides described the discussions as constructive and agreed to resume the negotiations through October.

During his Monday press briefing, Qashqavi referred to the warning tone of US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton over Iran's nuclear activities.

"Such comments that include any kind of threats, deadlines and timetables will have no impact on the Islamic Republic in any way," he said.

"Our commitment to international laws and conventions are based on our legal entity," he added.

Clinton on Monday claimed “the world will not wait indefinitely'' for Iran to cooperate on its nuclear issue.

"The international community will not wait indefinitely for evidence that Iran is prepared to live up to its international obligations," she said after a meeting with her British counterpart, David Miliband, in London.

Clinton and other US officials have not been clear about the kind of “actions” they would like to see performed by Iran.

The deadline has been brought up by the US, demanding Iran open its new Fordo nuclear enrichment facility to IAEA inspections by the end of the month.

The US talked of a deadline while Iran had already volunteered to have the site inspected by UN nuclear watchdog inspectors, and stressed that the matter had nothing to do with the Geneva talks.

On October 4, the Director of International Atomic Energy Agency chief Mohamed ElBaradei announced that inspectors would visit new plant in three weeks, based on arrangements made with Tehran.

Asked about Iran's request to buy 20 percent pure uranium from Russia and France, the spokesman said, "We have made our request on the fuel to the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA)."

"The tripartite meeting will be held to discuss price and ways of delivering the fuel," he added.

Iran's nuclear program has been under close scrutiny by the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), which has confirmed the civilian nature of Iran's nuclear activities. Iran is also a signatory of the Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) and has insisted on total dismantlement of all weapons of mass destruction throughout the world.

Iran dismisses Clinton warning on nuclear drive

TEHRAN (AFP) – Iran dismissed on Monday US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton's warning over Tehran's nuclear programme, saying such "threats" have no impact on the Islamic republic.

Iranian foreign ministry spokesman Hassan Ghashghavi said Iran would not listen to any deadlines and added that it was committed to following international laws when it comes to its nuclear programme.

"Our commitments under the international regulations are based on legalities. Remarks that bear threats, deadlines and timetables do not have any impact on us," Ghashghavi said at his weekly press conference, responding to Clinton's comments.

Clinton warned Iran on Sunday that world powers were running out of patience.

"The international community will not wait indefinitely for evidence that Iran is prepared to live up to its international obligations," Clinton said after talks in London with British Foreign Secretary David Miliband.

She said the six-party talks on Iran's nuclear programme in Geneva on October 1 were a "constructive beginning" but she said they "must be followed by action."

"Words are not enough," she added.

Western powers suspect Iran's nuclear programme is aimed at making atomic weapons, a charge strongly denied by Tehran.

Global powers were outraged after Iran, just days ahead of the Geneva talks, revealed to the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) that it was building a second uranium enrichment plant near the holy city of Qom.

Larijani: Powers behind regional atrocities

Iran's top lawmaker holds world powers responsible for atrocities committed in the region, stressing that they are the ones that must put things back in order.

"They must resolve the challenges and crises that regional countries face today," Parliament Speaker Ali Larijani said during a Sunday night meeting with the visiting head of Austria's National Council Defense Commission, Peter Fitschen Bauer.

Larijani also criticized the powers for what he called their inconsistency in fighting terrorism and said that Iran had always fulfilled a positive role in the region as its policies pursued peace.

For his part, the Austrian parliamentarian said that it was strategically important for Afghanistan to benefit from the capacities of a reliable neighbor like Iran in building a stable and peaceful country.

According to 2007 estimates published by an independent London-based polling agency Opinion Research Business over a million Iraqis have died in the violence since invasion of Iraq in 2003.

Unfortunately there are no estimates available on the number of civilians who have been killed in Afghanistan since the 2001 coalition invasion, but according to the latest UN report over 1,500 Afghans have been killed just in the first half of 2009.

This is the equivalent of 10 Virginia Tech shootings in Iraq and Afghanistan everyday.

Each fortnight as many Iraqi and Afghan civilians are killed as the entire amount of US military personnel killed since the beginning of the invasion of Afghanistan in 2002 and of Iraq in 2003.

Abbas wary of 'kiss of death' from Israel

Any Israeli concessions to the Acting Palestinian Authority Chief would be a "kiss of death" to him, a senior PA official says.

Israel faces growing US pressure to make more sweeping concessions to strengthen Mahmoud Abbas, The Wall Street Journal reported on Monday.

But some of the possible concessions Israel had reportedly been considering, such as approving a second mobile-phone network in the West Bank or plans to build a new Palestinian city north of Ramallah, would now likely only do further damage, Palestinian government spokesman Ghassan Khatib said.

"This will be the kiss of death for Abbas," Khatib said.

"It would give the impression that the Palestinian Authority dropped their support for the UN report in exchange for financial gains," he added.

Abbas came under fire from Palestinian factions and human rights groups over his support for the deferment of a UN vote about the Israeli war crimes in the Gaza Strip.

A UN inquiry, led by former South African Judge Richard Goldstone, detailed what investigators called Israeli actions "amounting to war crimes, possibly crimes against humanity," during Israel's winter offensive against the Hamas-ruled Gaza.

India test fires nuclear-capable missile

India says it has successfully test-fired two nuclear-capable Prithvi-II surface-to-surface missiles in the eastern state of Orissa.

The missiles were fired from the Integrated Test Range at Chandipore-on-sea, a source at the Defense Research and Development Organization said on Monday.

The 8.5-meter (28-foot) Prithvi-II missile has a range of 150-350 km (90-220 miles) and can carry conventional or nuclear payload.

The domestically developed and produced weapon was last tested on April 15 this year.

Prithvi, which means "Earth" in the Hindi language, is the country's first locally built ballistic missile.

Prithvi is one of five missiles being developed by the Defense Research and Development Organization, which include the intermediate-range ballistic missile Agni, the surface-to-air missile Akash and the anti-tank missile Nag.

Ahmadinejad: Subsidy bill stops squander

The Iranian President, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad says the subsidy redistribution bill would stop excessive consumption in the country.

"The plan would prevent an important part of excessive consumption (in Iranian society), as well as injustice in the redistribution of subsidies," President Ahmadinejad said in a live interview on Iranian TV Sunday night.

Ahmadinejad noted that for the proper implementation of the bill, several policies in different economic fields such as taxing, customs and banking need to be corrected.

On Sunday, Iran's parliament approved the outlines of a subsidy reform plan proposed by the government.

The approval comes seven months after lawmakers excluded the bill from the annual budget proposal on fears that it could increase inflation. The parliament still should approve the details of the bill which will be discussed on Monday.

Under the bill, subsidies on energy carriers such as gasoline, gas and electricity will be cut and a portion of the recovered revenue will be distributed among lower income citizens.

Iranian scientists braced for another spaceshot

After an impressive array of developments in its space program, Iran announces that a semi-domestic telecommunications satellite is ready for launch.

Iran's Minister of Communications and Information Technology, Reza Taqipour, said the Mesbah (Lantern) satellite has successfully completed pre-launch tests and is now ready for take off.

"The Mesbah satellite has been ready for launch for some time now," Taqipour told Mehr news agency on Sunday.

In February 2003, Iran and Italy agreed to cooperate on the construction and launch of the 60 kilogram (132 pounds) cube-shaped Mesbah satellite.

Sadly for Iran, the first attempt to launch the satellite failed in 2005.

Taqipour said the main reason behind the unsuccessful launch of Mesbah was Iran's lack of self-sufficiency in aerospace technology at the time.

“The main problem in the past, was the dependent nature of our space program. The Mesbah project was launched in cooperation with foreign countries and thus we did not succeed in carrying it out,” he said.

Taqipour said the Mesbah satellite will now be sent to space from a launch pad inside the country.

Earlier in February, Iran went down in history for placing its domestically-made satellite into orbit and thus joining a small group of countries that have the ability of both producing satellites and sending them into space using domestic launchers.

The Omid data-processing satellite was designed to circle the Earth 15 times every 24 hours and to transmit data via two frequency bands and eight antennas to an Iranian space station.

Omid is the third Iranian-made satellite to be sent into space. In 2005, Russia launched Iran's first satellite Sina-1, which carried photographic and telecommunications equipment.

Three years later, another research satellite, which had been jointly designed by Iran, China and Thailand, was also sent into orbit.

Spain supports Palestinian statehood on 1967 borders: FM

Foreign Minister of Spain Miguel Angel Moratinos said Wednesday that his country supports the establishment of an independent Palestinian statehood on the borders of 1967.

Moratinos made the statement in a joint news conference held in Ramallah with chief Palestinian negotiator Saeb Erekat, adding that Spain and the European Union "will keep exerting every possible effort to achieve the Palestinian goals."

"We can not wait for another 18 years after the Madrid peace conference. We should see a Palestinian statehood established on the borders of 1967," Moratinos told reporters.

Madrid hosted the first international peace conference in 1991, attended by Israel, the Palestinians, Syria, Jordan and Egypt. After the conference, Israel and the Palestinians held peace talks and signed Oslo peace accords in 1993.

He added that "the peace process will be frozen before Israel freezes settlement construction. We have asked the European Union to help us by forcing Israel to stop settlement activities."

The Palestinian National Authority (PNA) officials as well as President Mahmoud Abbas insist that there will be no resumption of peace talks with Israel, unless the latter completely freezes all the settlement activities in the West Bank.

U.S. President Barack Obama has been exerting efforts to resume the stalled Middle East peace process, in which the Israeli settlement activities are the major obstacles for the resumption of the process.

Spain sets five-year target for Afghan withdrawal

Spanish Defense Minister Carme Chacon said on Wednesday that she hoped the country would be able to withdraw its troops from Afghanistan within five years.

The remarks followed Spain's recent announcement that it would send another 220 soldiers to the Central Asian country to help in the continued struggle against the Taliban.

The reinforcement will be ratified by the Spanish parliament on Friday despite criticism from the opposition Popular Party.

Speaking on Cadena Ser radio, Chacon also tried to put a time limit on the deployment. "We need to fix times and a horizon to say that we will have achieved our objective in less than five years."

"That timescale seems reasonable to Spain," said the minister, who stressed the peacekeeping mission of the Spanish troops in Afghanistan.

"They will be involved in the establishment of stability, development and reconstruction of the country. We want the next elections in the country to be set up by Afghans themselves," she said, before making reference to accusations of fraud hanging over the Aug. 20 Afghan presidential elections.

"We hope that the Complaints Commission will eliminate those votes that appear to be false. We are waiting to see whether or not there will be a second round of voting," said Chacon.

With votes from 91.6 percent polling stations already counted, incumbent Afghan President Hamid Karzai has won 54.1 percent of the vote, moving closer to winning re-election, the Afghan Independent Election Commission announced on Tuesday.

Karzai major rival Abdullah Abdullah has garnered 28.3 percent of the vote.

Karzai needs to receive over 50 percent of support to avoid a run-off.

Spain considers sending 200 more soldiers to Lebanon

Spain is considering sending 200 more soldiers to the United Nations Interim Force in Lebanon (UNIFIL), raising the country's total force there to 1,100, the Defense Ministry said on Sunday.

This plan requires permission from the United Nations and Spain's legislature, the Congress.

UNIFIL is currently headed by Italian Force Commander and employs 12,000 soldiers and 1,000 civilians.

Spanish general Alberto Asarta is likely to take over command of the force soon.

In consequence, as widely expected, Spain will take over responsibility for transport, logistics and intelligence from Italy.

Prime Minister Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero will meet Spanish officers in southern Lebanon on Friday during his first visit to the Middle East.

UNIFIL was created by the United Nations Security Council in 1978 to confirm Israeli withdrawal from Lebanon and restore peace and security.

Irish National Liberation Army ends militancy

The 'Irish National Liberation Army ' (INLA) group, responsible for more than 100 killings, including the murder of a Tory MP, has renounced its armed struggle.

"The Republican Socialist Movement has been informed by the INLA that following a process of serious debate... it has concluded that the armed struggle is over," Martin McMonagle from the group's political wing said on Sunday.

He added that the paramilitary faction will now pursue its "objective of a 32-county socialist republic" through an "exclusively peaceful political struggle".

The statement -- made at a ceremony in Little Bray, south of Dublin -- referred to the aim of creating a united Ireland, which would bring together counties in the British province of Northern Ireland.

The decision by the INLA was welcomed by Irish politicians. However, questions still remain on whether the group would decommission its weapons.

INLA, a splinter group of the main paramilitary Irish Republican Army (IRA), was responsible for some of the bloodiest actions in the Irish conflict after it came to prominence in 1975.

In one of its highest-profile attacks, the group killed British Conservative Party's Northern Ireland spokesman, Airey Neave in 1979, by planting a booby-trap bomb beneath his car at the House of Commons.

Neave was one of former prime minister, Margaret Thatcher's closest supporters.

Finally, in 1998, a peace accord brought to an end most of the violence which plagued Northern Ireland for three decades, leaving at least 3,500 people dead.

However during recent weeks, the Northern Ireland peace process has hit a stumbling block, following disputes between the main Protestant and Catholic parties.

Israel holds emergency meeting on Turkish ties

Israel's foreign ministry has held an emergency meeting to discuss the mounting tension between Israel and Turkey, after Ankara canceled a military drill with Israel.

Turkey informed Israel of cancellation of the Anatolian Eagle exercise last week in protest to Israel's Operation Cast Lead on Gaza Strip earlier this year which killed at least 1500 Palestinians and injured many others, a large number of them women and children.

The US, Italy and NATO air forces were also to participate in the air force drill, which was to be held this week.

The military maneuver however was canceled after Ankara withdrew from the exercise over Tel Aviv's participation in the drill.

Turkey's move, which was taken over Israel's decision to send planes to the exercise which possibly took part in the Gaza war last December, caused "disappointment" in Washington, The Jerusalem Post reported on Sunday.

Israel is concerned about its jeopardized strategic ties with Turkey, a senior official at the ministry told Haaretz.

Israeli Foreign Ministry sources confirmed that the meeting had taken place following instructions by ministry director general Yossi Gal, but they declined to give details.

Israeli officials are debating the depth of the crisis. Some officials say the Turkish government under Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan is not interested in strategic ties with Israel.

"It may be that the reality has changed and the strategic ties that we thought existed have simply ended," said a senior Israeli official. "Maybe we need to be the ones who initiate renewed thinking regarding our ties and must adopt response measures."

Ahmadinejad warns of Weapons of Mass Media

President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad says Western powers have used full-fledged psychological tactics as a lever to influence nations against their better judgment.

Ahmadinejad said some regimes, including those in Israel, are using propaganda campaigns and psychological tactics as their prime weapon-of-choice against other countries.

"Once you take away these weapons, there is not much that they can do," said the Iranian President at a conference on media and psychological war in Tehran on Sunday.

He described the sheer lack of world action against Israeli war crimes in Gaza as a direct result of western propaganda campaign. "The Israelis have killed Palestinians from day one and yet they still come across as innocent victims in the world," he said.

Regarding the US invasion of Iraq, the president said they (the US) deploy their soldiers from thousand of miles away to Iraq and take control of all of the affairs of the Iraqi nation and then accuse others of meddling in the internal affairs of the country.

Elswhere in his remarks, Ahmadinejad brushed off the concept of 'Western-style liberal democracy', saying that real political oppression can be seen in the US and European societies.

"Claims of pluralist democracy in the West is nothing but a big lie," said the Iranian President.

The Iranian president said more than one hundred thousand people demonstrated in Pittsburgh in protest of the G20 summit, which did not receive attention in the Western media. But if 2000 people demonstrated in a country, which opposes US policies, then the incident would make headlines for a long period.

Ahmadinejad's remarks were a follow-up to his address to the Islamic Radio and TV Union Assembly last week.

In the meeting, Ahmadinejad said corporate media has turned into a weapon of subterfuge, with the sole aim of advancing the West's political agenda.

He went on to cite random examples of political bias in US and European media outlets, including the scant media coverage of Israel's three-week attack on Gaza and the lack of media attention to the brutal murder of Marwa el-Sherbini, a pregnant Egyptian woman who was stabbed to death in a German courtroom.

Clinton's new Iran demands amid renewed Israeli threats

Amid rampant speculations about an Israeli attack on Iran by next year, Washington claims “the world will not wait indefinitely'' for Iran to cooperate on its nuclear issue.

"The international community will not wait indefinitely for evidence that Iran is prepared to live up to its international obligations," said US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton after a meeting with her British counterpart, David Miliband, in London.

She said the six-party talks on Iran's nuclear program in Geneva on October 1 were a "constructive beginning, but must be followed by action.”

Clinton and other US officials have not been clear about the kind of “actions” they like to see performed by Iran, though they have very much followed the hawkish stance of the Bush administration regarding Iran's advances in the field of nuclear technology, despite their rhetoric of “change” which, by the way, won Obama the Nobel 'Peace' prize.

"Words are not enough," claimed the former first lady, who had previously threatened to “totally obliterate” Iran while campaigning against Obama to win the Democratic nomination for US presidency in the 2008 elections.

US officials have not responded to challenges by Iran and numerous other countries regarding Israel's possession of nuclear warhead and its refusal to sign any international regulatory agreement against the development, use, and proliferation of nuclear weapons.

Clinton, a self-described ally of Israel, made the remarks during a five-day European tour, which will take her to Switzerland, Britain, Ireland and Russia.

Her trip to Europe comes more than a week after Iranian diplomats and representatives of the P5+1 group of nations (Russia, China, France, Britain and the US plus German) met in Geneva to find a common ground on the nuclear issue.

The meeting, which was held within the framework of Iran's last package of proposals, has been described as “positive and productive” by all parties.

Iran's nuclear program has been under close inspection of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), which has confirmed the civilian nature of Iran's nuclear activities. Iran is also a signatory of the Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) and has insisted on total dismantlement of all weapons of mass destruction throughout the world.

Regardless of the upbeat forecast for future cooperation between Iran and the West, Israel resumed its military threats against Tehran.

“If no crippling sanctions are introduced by Christmas, Israel will strike,” said Ephraim Sneh, a former Israeli deputy war minister earlier last week. “If we are left alone, we will act alone,” he boosted.

Tel Aviv, which reportedly houses an arsenal of 200 nuclear warheads, views Tehran's nuclear program as a mortal threat. Israeli leaders have repeatedly warned of bombing Iranian nuclear facilities out of existence.

This is while the Islamic Republic, since its establishment in 1979, has gone to war only once, to defend itself against the Iraq-imposed war in 1980, whereas Israel has invaded Lebanon twice, bombed Syria and Iraq, and regularly bombed and attacked Gaza and other Palestinian areas at will.

The Israeli regime has also masterminded a wave of undercover operations and terror plots in numerous countries, including Jordan, Syria and Lebanon, Iran, Switzerland, and the US.

Turkey sets condition on Armenia peace accord

Historic agreements just signed between Turkey and Armenia, to resume diplomatic relations after decades of hostility, may have met its first hurdle.

Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan declared Sunday that the parliament would not look favorably on the accords, signed in Zurich on Saturday by the two nations' foreign ministers, unless Armenia withdraws from Nagorno-Karabakh in Azerbaijan.

He linked the condition to the provision in the fragile agreements, seeking the reopening of the common border, which Azerbaijan has slammed as a threat to regional stability.

The Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry has also threatened that the deals would "cast a shadow" on its ties with Istanbul.

"We want all the borders to be opened at the same time..., but as long as Armenia has not withdrawn from Azerbaijani territory that it is occupying, Turkey cannot have a positive attitude on this subject," Erdogan told a meeting of officials from his party on Sunday.

The US and European officials pushed for the Saturday's agreements, aimed at normalizing relations between the two nations, despite last-minute differences.

The disputed Nagorny-Karabakh region in Azerbaijan has long been a source of disputes between Turkey and Armenia.

Armenia says the Armenian-majority enclave, which broke free from Azerbaijan after a war, has no place in the reconciliation negotiations with Turkey, which backs Baku.