DDMA Headline Animator

Wednesday, October 14, 2009

Survivor of Terror Attack Accepts Islam

Sunday, 11 October 2009

NEW YORK - An American Catholic Christian and survivor of a terrorist attack in Mumbai, India last November overcame hatred and opened his mind to learn and discover Islam and.. Becomes A Muslim.

Dennis O’Brien, a Catholic, wanted to comprehend the basis of faith of people accused of committing the attack in Mumbai. He discovered in fact, the gunmen were certainly not following Islam at all. In fact, anyone who might take the time to open their eyes, open their minds and open their hearts would have to come to the very same conclusion.

Sunday, just after Eid salat and standing before a crowd of thousands, Dennis O’Brien embraced Islam.
He declared..

..his belief - "There is only one God and the Prophet Muhammad is his last messenger".
O’Brien, who heads up the education committee of St Anthony’s Catholic Church in Wilmington, Delaware, says this was a surprise, even to him. But said he was at peace with it.
“Today I feel free of sin,” he remarked.

After several months of studies and asking questions of Muslim friends and associates, “I feel comfort in Islam,” he said.
O’Brien also said he wanted to express solidarity with Muslims, even though extremists who say they practice the faith “tried to kill me”.

Pastor John McGinley, of St Anthony’s, said Sunday he had not heard of O’Brien’s embrace of Islam. McGinley said he knew O’Brien is inquisitive and has expressed concern about the young men involved in the Mumbai attacks.

He would not say if the declaration of another faith would affect O’Brien’s position at the church, noting he had not spoken to him about Sunday’s events. “I think this is part of his journey of faith and we can work with that,” McGinley said.

Bangladesh, Myanmar build troops on border

Bangladesh is planning to send reinforcements to its border with Myanmar, in response to Yangon's military build-up along the frontier.

Officials in Bangladesh said Wednesday that they were monitoring the situation very closely, Reuters.

The development follows reports that Myanmar was erecting barbed-wire fences along its border with Bangladesh.

Myanmar is reportedly building up its military in the region. Bangladesh says its army is ready to act if necessary.

Border tension is common between the two neighbors, with minor clashes erupting at times.

Israel: No peace talks unless UNHRC drops Gaza report

A day before the UN Human Rights Council convenes to debate on a UN report accusing Israel of war crimes in Gaza, Tel Aviv threatens to scrap peace talks with Palestinians unless the damning report is dropped.

The threat came Wednesday as the report was being discussed at the UN Security Council (UNSC)'s regular monthly meeting on the Middle East.

During the UNSC meeting, Palestinian Authority Foreign Minister Riyad al-Maliki urged the 15-member body to adopt the report, compiled by a fact-finding mission headed by South African judge and international prosecutor Richard Goldstone.

The UN Human Rights Council (UNHRC) will hold a special session to debate the issue on Thursday. Israeli Defense Minister Ehud Barak called the foreign ministers of France, Britain, Spain and Norway on Wednesday and asked them not to back the Gaza report.

The Geneva-based body was initially set to vote on the report last week, but it was delayed until March 2010, after the Palestinian Authority withdrew its support for the report.

Having faced an unprecedented wave of condemnation and accusations of treason over his controversial decision, Acting Palestinian Authority Chief Mahmoud Abbas made a U-turn and called for a special session of the UN Human Rights Council to vote on the report in order to save his image.

Different Palestinian factions, including Hamas, had accused Abbas of betraying the victims of the three-week war by bowing to pressure from the US and Israel. Both Israeli and US officials dismissed the report as biased.

If adopted, the UN Human Rights Council could refer the report to the UN Security Council. The UNSC can call for the prosecution of senior Israeli officials in the International Criminal Court, if Tel Aviv fails to launch its own investigations into the Gaza war under international scrutiny.

Ahead of army offensive, scores flee Waziristan

Pakistan says thousands of civilians have fled the South Waziristan tribal region over fears of an Army offensive against pro-Taliban militants in the area.

Authorities have registered 90,000 people from South Waziristan on the Afghan border who have been displaced.

The recent wave of militant attacks in Pakistan has heightened fears that Islamabad will launch a retaliatory offensive against insurgents.

Militants have launched numerous attacks over the past couple of years, mostly aimed at government and security forces.

In June, the Pakistani government promised to crack down on Pro-Taliban militant strongholds in the country's troubled northwest.

The Pakistani army has been preparing for a major operation in the South Waziristan region after it forced out militants from the scenic Swat valley back in September.

Jordan discusses forthcoming polls in Iraq with top UN envoy

Amman - Jordanian Foreign Minister Nasser Judeh met Wednesday with special UN envoy in Iraq Ad Melkert, stressing the need for the participation of all shades of the Iraqi political spectrum in the January general elections. "Judeh underlined the importance of the forthcoming general elections as one of the pillars of the political operation in Iraq, urging the participation of all Iraqi citizens in the polling process," a foreign ministry statement said.

The Jordanian foreign minister assured the UN envoy that Amman would do its best to ensure that all facilities, particularly in education and health , were being extended to about 500,000 Iraqis currently living in Jordan.

From his part, Melkert expressed the world community's praise for all efforts and burdens shouldered by Jordan in hosting such a large number of Iraqis, who had fled after the US-led invasion in 2003.

Turkey's chief EU negotiator welcomes progress report

Istanbul - Turkey's chief European Union negotiator, Egeman Bagis, has welcomed the bloc's latest progress report on the country. Speaking at a Wednesday press conference, Bagis called the report "the most objective report so far."Responding to the report's singling out of a tax-evasion case against media group Dogan Media Holding, a vocal critic of the current government, as damaging the freedom of the press, Bagis said the case was an internal Turkish matter.

"The tax fine imposed on the Dogan group is a matter for the Turkish Finance Ministry, not foreign authorities, and if it can't solve it, it is a matter for the Turkish judicial system," he said.

Israel threatens no peace talks unless Gaza report dropped - Summary

Jerusalem - Israel threatened Wednesday that it would not renew peace talks with the Palestinians unless a United Nations report accusing it of having committed war crimes during last winter's Gaza war was dropped. The threat came as Israel and the Palestinians were preparing for a diplomatic war ahead of rescheduled debate on the report of the UN Human Rights Council, brought forward to Thursday after the Palestinians had initially demanded a delay until March.

Israeli Defense Minister Ehud Barak telephoned the foreign ministers of France, Britain, Spain and Norway Wednesday, urging them not to support the Gaza report.

This recommends that Israel and the radical Islamist Hamas movement be brought before the International Criminal Court unless they launch credible investigations of their own into "strong evidence" that they both committed war crimes during the war.

Palestinian Foreign Minister Riyad al-Malki on the other hand was scheduled to address the UN Security Council and urge it to adopt the report by South African judge Richard Goldstone.

Israel is making a mammoth effort to prevent the report from being referred from the Human Rights Council in Geneva to the Security Council in New York.

Israel has called the Goldstone report "one-sided" and says that the fact-finding mission which composed it contained members who had expressed advance judgments against it, and that it was established by a Human Rights Council hostile to it.

"Our argument is that as long as the Goldstone report is on the table and everywhere they are quoting it and supporting it - also states that are considered our friends - we cannot make progress in the peace process," Israel's ambassador to the UN Gabriella Shalev said.

"We will not sit at the table and will not talk with bodies and people who accuse us of war crimes. That is simply unacceptable," she said in an interview with Israel Radio.

If the international community expected Israel to take risks for peace as when Israel unilaterally pulled out of the Gaza Strip in 2005, it should not support the Goldstone report, which denied it of its "right to self-defense," she argued.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu himself had told the opening of the Israeli parliament's winter session in Jerusalem Monday that "Israel will not take risks of any kind for peace if it cannot defend itself." He called the Goldstone document a "distorted report written by a distorted committee."

At the same time, he reiterated that he was willing to revive peace negotiations with the Palestinians without pre-conditions, "and we are acting so that the joint efforts with the administration of (US) President (Barack) Obama will result in their renewal soon."

Less than two weeks ago, the 47-member council agreed to postpone until March a vote on a draft resolution endorsing the report, following a request by Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, who yielded to US and Israeli pressure.

Facing an unprecedented wave of criticism at home, Abbas however reversed his decision and submitted a new request, co-sponsored by 18 members, to bring forward the debate.

Since the December 27-January 18 Gaza war, launched in response to rocket fire from Gaza at southern Israel, the sides have largely observed an unspoken truce that was never formally agreed.

But Israel has responded by bombing smuggling tunnels on the border with Egypt to ongoing sporadic rocket and mortar attacks.

Israeli F-16 fighter jets bombed two more smuggling tunnels along the Gaza-Egypt border early Wednesday, killing one Palestinian who was working in the tunnel, health officials said.

Another Palestinian was injured in the 0100 (2300 GMT) airstrike in the southern Gaza Strip border town of Rafah, Gaza emergency services chief Mo'aweya Hassanein told reporters in Gaza City.

An Israeli military spokesman in Tel Aviv said the tunnels hit were used for smuggling weapons into the strip.

He said the strike was retaliation for a Palestinian rocket attack into southern Israeli territory Tuesday that caused no injuries.

Some 1,400 Palestinians, most of them civilians according to human rights groups, were killed in the Gaza offensive, as well as 13 Israelis.

Fayyad: Palestinians don't want 'Mickey Mouse' state

Ramallah - Palestinian Prime Minister Salam Fayyad said Wednesday that the Palestinians want no "Mickey Mouse" state in a small part of the West Bank. The new Israeli government of Benjamin Netanyahu should "explain exactly what kind of state it is talking about" when the hardline premier said in June he was willing to accept a demilitarized Palestinian state, Fayyad told a news conference in Ramallah.

Fayyad said Netanyahu had talked about a state without the Jordan Valley, which makes 27 per cent of the West Bank territory, and without areas classified as C in the Oslo agreement, which are the sparsely inhabited areas of the West Bank.

The Palestinian prime minister said his government's programme of building state institutions within two years requires in the end a decision of the UN Security Council endorsing an independent Palestinian state.

"Our right to statehood has to be enshrined in a Security Council resolution," Fayyad told foreign journalists. He said the Oslo interim peace agreement, signed 16 years ago, had failed to do that.

Fayyad was pessimistic about the peace process, saying "there is no end in sight to the conflict."

"We haven't lost hope" in US policy, he nonetheless added. "US leadership is essential for the success of the peace process."

In his last visit to the region, special US peace envoy George Mitchell did not publicly mention a former American prerequisite for resumption of negotiations and that was Israeli halt to settlement activities.

Palestinians viewed this position and earlier statements by US President Barack Obama in which he changed his rhetoric from freezing settlements to restraining them as a retreat in the US position Obama has held since he assumed office earlier this year.

Fayyad said that failure of the peace process so far had rubbed off on the Palestinian Authority, contributing to its weakness. The West Bank-based Palestinian Authority of President Mahmoud Abbas seems to have lost support as people have lost faith in its programme of a peace settlement through negotiations only.

He said that while Israel had lifted some of the military checkpoints around the West Bank, allowing more freedom of movement for local residents, this however was "not enough." Economic growth would not be possible without Israel lifting restrictions.

Political opportunism

Israeli opposition leader Tzipi Livni lashed out at Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu at the opening session of the Knesset on Monday, warning that a “Palestinian state will arise and it will not be the one you (Netanyahu) fear but a Palestinian state between the Jordan River and the Mediterranean Sea”.

The former Israeli foreign minister was obviously referring to the possibility that might arise in view of the obstacles the Israeli prime minister is placing on the way to establishing a Palestinian state in the West Bank on the basis of the two-state solution, which the entire international community is endorsing and calling for.

The alternative to the two-state solution, Livni said, could be a unitary Palestinian state that the Palestinians would eventually create in the entire territory of former Palestine “by the simple power of the right to vote”.

Here she was clearly alluding to the projected demographic changes that would make the Palestinians a clear majority in the territories of former Palestine in a matter of time.

Livni also reproached Netanyahu for having attained one single achievement, political survival, and that has come at a heavy cost which has “defeated America, humiliated the Palestinians and isolated Israel” from the rest of the world.

Such lucid understanding of the state of affairs is, unfortunately, falling on the deaf ears of the Israeli prime minister.

He will dismiss his political rival’s assessment of the situation because all he cares for is the political survival Livni was talking about. To ensure that, he will cling to power and appeal to the belligerent penchant of his right-wing government, even if that comes at the expense of his people.

That being the case, maybe sensible Israelis, and there are many, no doubt, will decide that their destiny is better taken care of if they take things in their hands.

Choosing a premier that has their interest at heart, that has the courage to settle the conflict with the Palestinians on a judicious basis, will be a sure way to provide the security and stability that both peoples need and deserve.

Fallen peacekeepers honored in Haiti

By Omar Obeidat

AMMAN –– The UN Stabilization Mission in Haiti (MINUSTAH) on Tuesday held a ceremony to honor the memory of five Jordanian and six Uruguayan officers who lost their lives on Friday in a plane crash in the southeast of the Caribbean country, according to a UN official.

The bodies of Colonel Obeidallah Mawajdeh, Lieutenant Colonel Jihad Mheirat, First Lieutenant Bilal Abu Hjeileh, First Warrant Officer Amer Rawashdeh and Major Mohammad Shorman, who were participating in the UN peacekeeping mission, were recovered at the site of the crash Saturday.

Their remains were due for repatriation immediately following the memorial ceremony, which was held in the Haitian capital of Port-au-Prince at 7:30am local time (3:30pm Amman time), Douglas Coffman from the UN Department of Public Information, told The Jordan Times via e-mail yesterday.

“On behalf of the entire United Nations system, I extend my deepest condolences to the family, friends and colleagues of the peacekeepers whose lives we honor and whose service we will forever cherish,” UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon said in a statement.

In the statement read by Ban’s special representative and chief of MINUSTAH, Hedi Annabi, the UN chief said: “Words provide little comfort, but their deeds speak eloquently. I have seen with my own eyes the remarkable progress that Haiti has made thanks to the efforts of our peacekeepers.”

“They were the proud sons of Jordan and Uruguay. But we can also claim them as our own,” the statement said, while thanking Jordan and Uruguay for their commitment to the enduring values and mission of the UN.

Ban ordered that the UN flag be flown at half-mast at the UN headquarters in New York to honor the fallen peacekeepers as well as World Food Programme staff recently killed in Pakistan, Coffman told The Jordan Times over the phone.

During the ceremony that took place at the headquarters of the Brazilian battalion - MINUSTAH’s largest military base - Haitian President Rene Preval bestowed the National Order of Honor and Merit on the fallen Jordanian and Uruguayan military personnel, according to David Wimhurst, MINUSTAH’s chief of public information.

Hundreds of UN staff, as well as Haitian and international dignitaries, attended the early morning ceremony at the battalion’s base in Tabarre. The 11 coffins were each decorated with a wreath of flowers laid by Annabi and the commanding officers of the Jordanian and Uruguayan battalions.

Meanwhile, the crash site has been secured and will remain secured until all necessary pieces of information from the investigation are collected, the UN official said.

Coffman said according to international norms, the investigators of the country owning the plane (Uruguay), the country where the plane was made (Spain) and the country where the accident took place (Haiti) will examine the wreckage to determine the cause of the tragedy.

Experts from the Untied Nations will also participate in the investigation which could take several weeks, he added.

Turkey cancels military exercises with Israel in favor of exercises with Syria

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Turkey and Syria will hold joint military maneuvers. As the Syrian Defense Minister General Ali Habib informed, joint exercises will be "a larger scale than in April this year."

Besides, the Foreign Ministers of Turkey and Syria, following the first meeting in Aleppo of the newly formed Council of the strategic cooperation between the two states signed an agreement to abolish the visa regime.

When the Turkish-Syrian relations are improving, deterioration of relations between Ankara and Jerusalem is observed. The Turkish authorities have abolished military exercises with military aircrafts of the Israeli army, the U.S. and Italy at the military base in the central Turkey. The exercises were to be held from October 12 to 23. The reason for cancellation was the intention of the Turkish government not to allow participation in the exercises of the Israeli Air Force, BBC reports.

Syria Preps Golan Awareness Summit

DAMASCUS, SYRIA

The Syrian expatriate community called for the restoration of the Golan Heights as its territory, state media reported.

Supporters met with Joseph Sweid, the Syrian minister of expatriates, at a solidarity forum in Damascus, expressing their desire for the restoration of their rights, the official Syrian Arab News Agency reports.

Sweid stated that his ministry had established a working plan to coordinate a week of seminars to highlight the issue of the Golan Heights.

The status of the Golan Heights is one of the more contentious issues in the region. Israel views the territory as an important strategic asset, while Damascus said it would not move forward with a peace settlement with Israel until the area is returned to Syria.

The Syrian Foreign Ministry in a recent report regarding the Palestinian territories accused Israel of disposing of nuclear, radioactive and other hazardous waste in tunnels throughout the Golan Heights.

Damascus said the move is part of an effort to prevent Syria from reclaiming the territory occupied and later annexed by Israel.

Algeria envisages road link with Mauritania

ALGIERS, Oct 13, 2009 (AFP) - Algeria's ministry of public works on Tuesday put out to national and international tender a feasibility study on a road link between the southwestern town of Tindouf and Choum in north Mauritania.

The offer comprises a "technical and economic feasibility study" on building such a road, which would be about 900 kilometers (560 miles) long, and is open to firms "having had a similar experience," the ministry announced.

Candidates have until December 21 to submit their applications.

The project was raised at a meeting of the Algerian-Mauritanian bilateral commission in June 2008, when Algeria decided to convert Mauritania's debts into investment schemes, the APS news agency said.

Officials gave no details of how much Mauritania had owed.

Iran-Egypt rapprochement plan back on track?

Wed Oct 14, 2009

In what appears to be a step toward the normalization of relations between Iran and Egypt, the two sides hold high-level talks in the red sea resort of Sharm el-Sheikh.

Iran's Interior Minister Mostafa Mohammad Najjar and his Egyptian counterpart Habib Ibrahim el-Adly discussed a wide range of regional issues on the sidelines of the sixth meeting of interior ministers of Iraq's neighbor states.

"Iran and Egypt have many areas of common interest," said Mohammad-Najjar.

"Radical ideas that prevent the betterment of ties between Cairo and Tehran should be cast aside," said the Iranian Interior Minister.

El-Adly agreed that "minor issues should not get in the way of Iran-Egypt relations," and added that his country was keen on improving economic and trade ties with the Islamic Republic.

Diplomatic ties between Iran and Egypt were severed in 1980 due to Cairo's recognition of Israel and its signing of a peace treaty with Tel Aviv.

Despite their contrasting views, Tehran and Cairo took steps in 2007 to fully restore diplomatic relations.

Normalization efforts were put on hold in the wake of Israel's three-week attack on the Gaza Strip, which left nearly 1,400 Palestinians dead.

The Tehran government strongly criticized Cairo's complicity with Israel in the imposition of its blockade on the bomb-scarred Gazans.

In response, Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak accused the Tehran government of meddling in Arab affairs and trying to dominate over the whole region.

Iranian officials have dismissed the allegations out of hand.

“We have always supported and respected Arab countries,” said Iranian Parliament Speaker Ali Larijani. “We believe regional countries should set aside their differences and join forces to ensure the Middle East's security.”

Israel is said to be attempting to take advantage of the current tension between Egypt and Iran to build a coalition and unite Arab nations against Iran.

Source: PressTV.
Link: http://edition.presstv.ir/detail/108678.html.

N. Korea 'regrets' causing flood in South

In a peace gestures, North Korea has expressed a rare regret over the deaths of six South Korean citizens following the flooding of a cross-border river.

Pyongyang made the move during talks with Seoul on how to prevent the flooding of the river.

The meeting was held at a joint Industrial Park in North Korea.

Last month, Pyongyang released millions of tons of water from a dam across the shared river, drowning the South Koreans, who were camping and fishing.

Relations between the two Koreas have been tense following the North's recent test-launch of short-range and ballistic missiles.

However, North Korea has lately made some gestures that could be viewed as peace offering towards the South.

Pyongyang has agreed to hold talks with Seoul on a number of bilateral issues — including the reunion of families separated by the Korean War.

Fatah signs reconciliation deal with Hamas

Palestinian party Fatah signed a reconciliation deal with Hamas in the West Bank city of Ramallah on Wednesday, senior officials said. Jamal Muheisin, a member of Fatah’s Central Committee told Ma’an news agency that Fatah signed the deal because of its “positive” outlook on the plan. He added that Fatah official Azzam Al-Ahmad will hand over the signed document Wednesday or Thursday.

Hamas sources said earlier its senior leadership had also approved the document. According to Muheisin, he doubted Hamas’ commitment to the agreement even if the party chooses to sign it. “Even if they sign the agreement, Hamas will search for pretexts to avoid implementation of the document’s conditions because they are not seriously seeking to end disagreement,” he was quoted as saying.

On Tuesday, Al-Ahmad said that Egypt asked both Hamas and Fatah to reply to its proposal with a simple “yes” or “no” by Thursday.

SCO vows active response to economic crisis

Six members of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO) have vowed to deepen economic cooperation in the face of the global economic meltdown.

The decision was made in Beijing Wednesday during a meeting between leaders from Russia, China and four Central Asian nations, Kazakhstan Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan and Uzbekistan.

Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao said after the meeting that the members took measures "to strengthen multilateral economic cooperation, handle the global financial crisis, and ensure economic development."

Wen also said that the SCO agreed to "vigorously develop exchanges and cooperation" in various fields.

Representatives from India, Iran, Mongolia and Pakistan also attend the SCO summit as observers.

Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin described the current economic crisis as a "catalyst for reform of the international financial system", calling on the organization to take part in the process.

Iran urges 'collective cooperation' for Iraqi security

As Iraq experiences increasing insecurity, Iran has called on its Iraqi neighbor to enhance bilateral cooperation aimed at restoring security to that country.

"The Islamic Republic of Iran believes that security in Iraq needs collective cooperation and joint consultation between Iraq's neighboring states," Iranian Interior Minister Mostafa Mohammad-Najjar said Tuesday, prior to his departure to Egypt's Sharm el-Sheikh to take part in a ministerial meeting on Iraq.

"The presence of foreign forces in Iraq has led to insecurity and instability," he added.

He urged foreign forces and the occupiers to withdraw from Iraq and to delegate full administration of the country's affairs to its nation.

The minister said that the participants at the sixth meeting of interior ministers of Iraq's neighbors would discuss a range of issues, including controlling common borders to prevent illegal entry of terrorists into Iraq.

"The meeting aims to help Iraq achieve its independence and to prevent interference of foreign countries in Iraq's internal affairs," he said.

Mohammad-Najjar expressed hope that the meeting would play a leading role in restoring peace and stability in Iraq.

"The US entered Iraq under the guise of fighting against weapons of mass destruction, but we have witnessed that terrorism and insecurity have spread in the country," he said.

The meeting will be attended by Iran, Egypt, Iraq, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Jordan, Syria, Bahrain and Turkey, as well as representatives from the United Nations, the Organization of the Islamic Conference (OIC), and the Arab League.

Egypt and Bahrain are attending the meeting as observers.

Diplomatic ties between Iran and Egypt were severed in 1979 due to Cairo's recognition of Israel as well as its signing of a peace treaty with Tel Aviv.

Despite their contrasting views, Tehran and Cairo took steps in 2007 to normalize diplomatic relations.

Source: PressTV.
Link: http://www.presstv.ir/detail.aspx?id=108673§ionid=351020101.

Turkey: Israeli delay in UAV delivery canceled air drill

Turkey has cited Israel's delay in the delivery of unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) to the country as the main reason behind the cancellation of an international air force exercise.

The revelation comes in contrast with earlier Israeli reports that Ankara banned the Israeli Air Force from participating in a joint military maneuver scheduled by the US, NATO, Italy, Israel and Turkey for later this month in protest at Tel Aviv's military offensive in Gaza.

Israel's all-out strike on the Gaza Strip at the turn of the year resulted in the loss of thousands of Palestinian lives, including many civilians, and brought about international condemnation for Tel Aviv.

However, a Turkish air force official denied the allegations on Wednesday, saying that there were no political motives behind the cancellation of the international air force exercise and that Tel Aviv should not draw a political meaning and conclusion from the postponement.

"Turkey needs those vehicles (the Israeli-made surveillance drones, known as Herons) in its fight against terror. What led to the recent crisis between Turkey and Israel was the delay in the delivery," Today's Zaman quoted the unnamed official as saying.

Turkey and Israel signed a multi-million dollar military deal four years ago, under which Israeli Aerospace Industries (IAI) and Elbit Systems, Ltd. were obliged to equip the Turkish military with ten surveillance drones by October 2009.

According to Turkish officials, Israel's failure to meet the deadline resulted in the cancellation of the annual drills.

Turkey has so far received two Heron UAVs from Israel, but the military has not accepted them due to persistent problems occurring in the strengthening of their engines.

Iraq government: 85,000 Iraqis killed in 2004-08

By SINAN SALAHEDDIN, Associated Press Writer

BAGHDAD – At least 85,000 people lost their lives from 2004 to 2008 during Iraq's violent, sectarian uprising, according to the first official report by the Iraqi government on the death toll since the war begun.

The report, released by the Iraqi Human Rights Ministry late Tuesday as part of a larger study on the country's human rights situation, said 85,694 people were killed from 2004-08, and 147,195 were wounded during the same period.

The Iraqi death toll has been a hotly disputed subject and critics on both sides of the political spectrum have accused the other side of manipulating the death numbers to sway public opinion.

As Iraq became increasingly violent following the 2003 U.S.-led invasion, it also became increasingly difficult to independently track such figures on a wide scale.

The report was based on death certificates issued by the health ministry and constitutes the first official finding by a government ministry on the death toll since the war begun in 2003.

Statistics for 2003 have been extremely difficult to obtain as there was no functioning Iraqi government during that time and the interim Iraqi government was not seated until mid-2004.

The report described the years that followed the U.S.-led invasion, which toppled Saddam Hussein's regime, as extremely violent years.

"Through the terrorist attacks like explosions, assassinations, kidnappings and forced displacements, the outlawed groups have created these terrible figures which represent a big challenge for the rule of law and for the Iraqi people," it said.

The report also breaks down some specific numbers, saying 1,279 children and 2,334 women were killed. It also puts the death toll of the university professors at 263, judges at 21, lawyers 95 and journalists at 269 — some of the professions which were specifically targeted as the country descended into chaos.

The toll also included 15,000 unidentified bodies who were not claimed by their families and are buried in special cemeteries.

India urges China to stop projects in Pakistan Kashmir

NEW DELHI, Oct 14 — India urged China today to stop building projects inside the Pakistan-ruled part of the disputed Kashmir region, the latest salvo prompted by a decades-long border dispute between the Asian giants.

The sharp exchanges between the two sides underline the fragility of their relations despite a warming of ties in recent years, primarily on the back of burgeoning trade. The two sides fought a brief but bloody war in 1962.

“We hope that the Chinese side will take a long-term view of the India-China relations, and cease such activities in areas illegally occupied by Pakistan,” an Indian foreign ministry statement said. India was reacting to a comment by Chinese President Hu Jintao reported by the official new agency Xinhua that China was “glad” to carry on the Pakistani projects.

It came a day after Beijing said it was “seriously dissatisfied” at a visit by India’s prime minister to the disputed Himalayan region of Arunachal Pradesh that is controlled by India but claimed by China.

Prime Minister Manmohan Singh travelled to the mountainous state, twice the size of Switzerland, earlier this month to woo voters ahead of a state assembly election.

Both countries jostle for resources and influence as they seek a global role. India has several anti-dumping cases against China pending with the WTO.

There has been a flurry of reports in Indian media of Chinese incursions along the border — shrugged off by both governments — and India this month protested against a Chinese embassy policy of issuing different visas to residents of Kashmir.

Beijing lays claim to 90,000 sq km of land in Arunachal Pradesh, and had already expressed its anger about a planned visit by the Dalai Lama in November. New Delhi sees Beijing as backing Pakistan and says Chinese involvement in Pakistan-held Kashmir was to undermine India.

India holds 45 per cent of the disputed Himalayan region while Pakistan controls a third. China holds the remainder of Kashmir.

India and Pakistan, which claim Kashmir in full, have fought two of their three wars over Kashmir since their independence from Britain in 1947.

“The Chinese side is fully aware of India’s position and our concerns about Chinese activities in Pakistan Occupied Kashmir,” the Indian statement said.

China is helping build a hydro-electric power plant and highways in Pakistan-ruled Kashmir.

New Delhi also expressed concern today over increased incursions by Pakistan-based militants into Indian Kashmir that has led to sudden spurt of separatist violence in the region. — Reuters

Palestinians Plan 30,000 New Housing Units

The most ambitious housing project to be mounted in Palestinian areas is being launched with support from the Palestine Investment Fund (PIF). Fund Chairman Dr. Mohammad Mustafa told The Media Line this week that capitalization will be almost $250 million, and that the goal is to build 30,000 new housing units during the next decade. PIF, which is expected to reach $2 billion in assets within the next five years, is active in many sectors of the Palestinian economy. Mustafa addressed a group of international entrepreneurs visiting the Palestinian territories, outlining a series of steps being taken to increase the private economic sector despite the Palestinian economy’s continued dependency on donations from the Arab world and the international community.

Turkey Follows Israel Snub with Syrian Exercises: U.S. Critical of Turkey

Turkey is following up its decision to allow joint military exercises with the U.S. and NATO dissolve rather than participate alongside Israel with another pointed tweak at Jerusalem. Syrian Defense Minister Ali Habib told a news conference on Tuesday that Damascus and Ankara will hold their own joint military exercises next week. In a rebuke to the Turks, U.S. State Department spokesman P.J. Crowley said it is “inappropriate for any nation to be removed from an exercise like this at the last minute," but stopped short of framing the American position in terms of the Arab-Israeli conflict or in terms of the specific affront to Israel. Turkey’s decision to ban Israel from the annual air force exercises was reportedly in response to pressure to punish the Jewish state for its military incursion into the Gaza Strip last January. Israel’s military manufacturers fear its industry is rapidly losing one of its best customers. Numerous reports of negotiations over arms deals drying up are being heard.

Iran proposes common SCO currency

Iran has proposed a regional currency for the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO) member states in a bid to boost their economic trade.

“Considering the high volume of production, consumption and trade of the SCO member states, it is proposed that they create and use a national and regional currency,” said Iran's First Vice President Mohammad-Reza Rahimi at a meeting of the SCO member states in Beijing Wednesday.

He called for s reform 'bilateral and multilateral monetary institutions' to bolster cooperation among SCO members.

“The SCO member states should also adopt measures to attract foreign investments,” said Rahimi further explained.

Rahimi also pointed out that active participation in the SCO activities was one of Iran's foreign policy' priorities.

Greater economic and cultural cooperation is the main issue on the agenda of the SCO meeting.

The meeting, held in the Great Hall of the People, is being chaired by Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao and attended by his counterparts from Russia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan and Uzbekistan, as well as representatives from the SCO four observer nations (Mongolia, India, Iran and Pakistan) and Afghanistan.

The SCO is an intergovernmental international organization founded in Shanghai in 2001 Iran was granted observer status in the organization in 2005.

US seeks China's cooperation on Iran

As Iran and the world major powers plan to hold talks later in October, the United States calls on China to show more cooperation to curb Iran's nuclear program.

"If we are to make real progress on sending a consolidated message to Iran, we are going to need the support of China," US Assistant Secretary of State Kurt Campbell said Wednesday during a visit to China.

"We're going to need to see more cooperation and coordination between the United States and China if we are going to be effective in Iran," he added.

Iran and the five permanent members of the UN Security Council — Russia, China, France, Britain and the US — plus Germany (P5+1) plan to meet at the end of October for a second round of talks.

Iran and the six countries held talks in Geneva on October 1 on the basis of Tehran's latest package of proposals presented to Western powers.

The seven-and-a-half hour Geneva meeting discussed Iran's points of view on a range of global issues and the country's concerns with specific Western policies and activities with six party members avoiding the call to insist on a halt to Iran's nuclear activities.

The sides also agreed to continue the talks through October.

Tehran has consistently denied Western allegations linking its peaceful nuclear activities to a secret nuclear weapons program and has called for the removal of all weapons of mass destruction from across the globe.

China, as a member of the P5+1, has thus far opposed tougher sanctions against Iran over its nuclear program.

Washington, Tel Aviv and their European allies claim that Tehran has plans to build a nuclear weapon and say 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.

Iran's nuclear program is supported by most countries.

Iraqi Kurdistan halts crude exports

The autonomous Iraqi Kurdistan has halted oil exports over a payment dispute with Baghdad, saying the central government must first pay the foreign companies in there.

"Oil exports from Kurdistan's fields have been stopped until an agreement is reached with the Iraqi oil ministry for mechanisms to pay the dues of the oil companies working in the region," Natural Resources Minister Ashti al-Hawrami said on Wednesday.

In a letter released by the regional government's website, Hawrami said that Norway's DNO and Turkey's Genel Enerji had not been paid for their exports because the oil sale revenues went directly to Baghdad.

But Iraq's Oil Ministry insisted it would only pay Kurdistan its 17 percent share of central government revenues, arguing the contracts with the firms operating in the northern region had not approved by Baghdad.

"The Iraqi government and the ministry did not sign any contracts with these companies and have not seen the details of the contracts agreed by the region," a senior Baghdad official told AFP on condition of anonymity.

Under an agreement with the region's authorities, the gains from Kurdistan's oil exports are deposited in the central government budget and the region gets its share of the central budget, he added.

Spokesman Assem Jihad also said the oil ministry's responsibility was to 'export Iraqi oil ... and then deposit the revenues with the central government'.

The oil ministry and Iraqi Kurdistan disagree on how to pay the international companies involved in extracting oil in the region.

Baghdad allowed Iraqi Kurdistan in May to export oil extracted by the companies which had signed deals in the regional capital Arbil, but the two remain at loggerheads over Kurdish officials' signing of their own contracts with foreign firms.

The energy-rich Iraq lies on the world's third largest proven reserves of oil, following the Middle East powerhouse Saudi Arabia and Iran.

Source: PressTV.
Link: http://www.presstv.ir/detail.aspx?id=108658§ionid=351020201.

Somali pirates ask $4m for Spanish boat

Wed Oct 14, 2009

Somali pirates have demanded $4 million in ransom for the release of 36 crew members of a Spanish tuna trawler held in their custody since 12 days ago.

A 30-year-old pirate, Abdi Yare, told AFP on the phone from coastal Harardhere Village that the Spanish fishing boat, Alakrana, could be swapped with two colleagues of Somali pirates held in Spanish custody.

"We also demand four million US dollars (2.8 million euros) as a payment for illegally fishing in Somalia. After that we will release the fishing boat. Unless those conditions are met, we will not make any deal," he said.

Yare said that the value of fish the Spaniards have stolen from Somalia is more than the ransom they have demanded.

The two pirates held in Spanish custody were captured by the Spanish navy after they left the Alakrana on a smaller boat.

On Monday, the captured pirates arrived in Spain, where prosecutors are to try them for their role in the October 2 hijacking.

Nationals of Spain, Ghana, Indonesia, Madagascar, Senegal and the Seychelles comprise 36 crew members of Alakrana.

Source: PressTV.
Link: http://edition.presstv.ir/detail/108664.html.

Shariah-based banking hit with Afghans

(MENAFN - Arab News) Around 30 million people have been waiting for a full-fledged Islamic banking system in Afghanistan as they do not want to deal with interest-based conventional banks, says Alam Khan Hamdard, Islamic banking chief of Kabul Bank. He was talking to Arab News on Tuesday on the sidelines of the World Islamic Retail Banking Conference at the Jumeirah Beach Hotel in Dubai.

The conference that opened on Monday highlighted that Shariah-compliant financial services were increasingly becoming a part of the financial mainstream in the wake of the global economic downturn. This was emphasized by Hussain Al-Qemzi, group CEO of Noor Islamic Bank, on Monday.

The conference with over 200 delegates, including CEOs and heads of Islamic and conventional retail banking, will conclude on Wednesday. The second day witnessed several interesting sessions such as Open Fatwa in Islamic Retail Banking and Domestic and International Remittances with mobile interface etc. The fatwa session discussed the future of Shariah- compliant retail banking in the Middle East.

Sheikh Nizam Yaquby, Shariah scholar from Bahrain, answered several questions including raffles and lucky draws offered by different Islamic banks in the region.

On Wednesday the conference will discuss Islamic finance and risk management. The training workshop will have four sessions: Credit risk, market risk, operational risk and challenges and issues.

Stressing the growth in liquidity in Afghanistan, Hamdard said: "We have around $32 billion circulating money in our economy, but only $1.4 billion has been invested in conventional banks. Because people dislike going with conventional banks as it is based on interest."

"When we announced the Islamic banking service last week, the response was immense and we have already got huge investment offers," he said. "Around 30 million people in the country want Islamic banking; unfortunately our country has no human resources to cope with this demand. However, we will seek help from our brotherly countries to get expertise and human resources to overcome this issue," he explained. "The current scenario for Islamic banking is very positive and some banks have approached the government to start Islamic services across the country. The Central Bank of Afghanistan is working to form a full-fledged Islamic banking law which will be ready within three months with the approval from the Parliament, said Hamdard, who is also a member of the Islamic banking law formation committee.

"Kabul Bank is going to start Islamic banking system in a wider and professional way. Initially it will be in Kabul but it will be extended to other provinces soon," he said, adding, "Further, we will go for tie-ups with different Arab countries including Saudi Arabia, United Arab Emirates and Kuwait. Additionally, we are cooperating with the Asian Development Bank and Islamic Development Bank in Shariah-compliant funds."

Dr. Abdul Shakoor, advisor of Islamic banking at Maiwandbank in Kabul, agreed that there was immense demand for Islamic banking products in Afghanistan. "Most of our people are Muslims and they want only Islamic banking products, and currently we are developing a faultless system for them," he said. "Regarding Islamic banking, we are first in Afghanistan. We announced our service three months ago and response was incredible."

On the opening day, the convention tackled the structural challenges of the industry and untapped opportunities, which if prudently addressed, could help in the revitalization and further shaping of the industry on a new international level. "Islamic banking is growing rapidly but it should focus more on its spiritual aspect than its physical facet," said Pervez Saed, director of Islamic banking at the State Bank of Pakistan.

While addressing a session titled "Regulatory Frameworks for Sustainable Industry Growth," he claimed that Islamic banking system in Pakistan has had 5 percent of the retail market for the last five years.

By K.T. Abdurabb

India to promote alternative medicines in Gulf countries

(MENAFN - Khaleej Times) A roadshow to promote India's alternative medicines, along with its traditional tourist spots, during a Gulf tourism campaign, demonstrates that the Indian government is serious about putting the country on the tourism map of the Gulf.

Sultan Ahmed, India's Minister of State for Tourism, told Khaleej Times that he is leading an Indian delegation on a special tour of the Gulf, to promote alternative medicines to the 
Arab world. "Tour operators, financial and trade businessmen and others from the hospitality and airline industries in my delegation have been able to meet their counterparts in the four countries during which they have gotten a very successful response," the minister said.

"We are promoting to the GCC India's ayurveda, homeopathy, pranic healing, yoga, chiropractic and other traditional medicine to treat even chronic diseases. I am glad that these four GCC countries are responding well to our road show and will be sending a delegation of 25 businessmen, journalists and youth to India to see for themselves what we are promoting to them either by end of November or early December," he added.

Among the traditional tourist areas promoted in the road shows are the Rajesthan belt, the golden triangle, Kerala Coast, Goa, North Eastern states, hill stations, coastal belt, and heritage areas. He admitted that Air India's recent strike had hit both the tourism and civil aviation industries, but now the issue has been settled and the airline is in full operation to all 
Gulf countries.

By Lily B. Libo-on

Source: Middle East North Africa Financial News (MENAFN).
Link: http://www.menafn.com/qn_news_story_s.asp?StoryId=1093276732.

Site studies begin for Aqaba nuclear plant

AMMAN - The Jordan Atomic Energy Commission (JAEC) on Tuesday launched environmental and feasibility studies for the location of the Kingdom's first nuclear power plant.

Yesterday marked the first gathering of the implementing parties of the site-selection and characterization study, a two-year process that will examine the proposed site, located in the southern strip of Aqaba, nine kilometres inland and 450 metres above sea level.

Over the next three months, Belgian engineering firm Tractebel-GDF Suez, along with a consortium including the French company Bureau Veritas and Arab Consultants Bureau, will determine whether the site, some 20km outside Aqaba city, will be suitable for the construction of a nuclear power plant.

If the site is confirmed to be suitable, Tractebel and the consortium will commence with the safety and environmental feasibility studies, expected to take around 18 months.

In case the site is deemed not feasible, the JAEC will have identified alternative sites nearby in Aqaba, JAEC Chairman Khaled Toukan said, expressing confidence that the site will meet all international standards.

"The government and the country are very keen on constructing the nuclear power plant as soon as possible to provide electricity in the coming decades," Toukan said at the launch, underlining His Majesty King Abdullah's directives that the peaceful programme proceeds with the "utmost transparency".

The JAEC spent the last year-and-a-half identifying potential sites for the nuclear power plant, expected to be a Generation III reactor with the potential to generate up to 1,000MW of electricity annually.

The number of proposed locations were limited due to water availability, he said, adding that after careful studies, other candidate sites in the Eastern Badia and the northern region were ruled out.

A further site in Wadi Araba to take advantage of the proposed Red Sea-Dead Sea Water Conveyance Project will depend on the progress of the project, according to the commission.

The JAEC selected Aqaba due to the abundant water sources of the nearby Red Sea and the proximity to infrastructure such as the Port of Aqaba and the electrical grid, the chairman said, noting that there are plans in place to establish up to six reactors at the site.

During yesterday's meeting, attended by French Ambassador in Amman Corinne Breuze and Belgian Ambassador Johan Indekeu, Toukan indicated that the JAEC is also considering a proposal to establish two power plants at the site simultaneously. The measure would decrease costs by 20 per cent through utilizing economies of scale, he added.

Meanwhile, international consultants said they were eager to carry out the studies, which will be in line with the International Atomic Energy Agency and US Nuclear Regulatory Commission standards.

"We believe in Jordan and in Jordan's nuclear programme," Tractebel Vice President Luc Resteigne told The Jordan Times, noting that the Belgian firm was attracted to the "transparency and soundness" of the project.

Stressing that Tractebel is "fully independent" from any current and potential service providers, Resteigne said previous experience in building and providing maintenance in Belgium's seven nuclear power plants will aid in examining the potential impact of the Kingdom's nuclear power programme.

Bureau Veritas Nuclear Market Director Didier Bienfait said the French firm "looks forward" to bringing its experience to the project.

The studies will examine demographic and industrial developments in Aqaba over the last 40 years and make projections for the next 60 years in order to anticipate any changes throughout the power plant's life cycle.

The studies will also include seismological standards, demographic growth and flight patterns in the area, among several diverse risk assessments.

Although a fault line of the Jordan Rift Valley runs through the port of Aqaba, the selected site is several kilometres away and is believed not to be affected.

The environmental survey will include complete mapping of the nearby coral reefs and other comprehensive studies on a level "never seen before in Jordan", Arab Consultants Bureau engineer Wa'il Abu-El-Sha'r told The Jordan Times.

According to Resteigne, the consortium will examine the impact of two power plants on the area, while taking into consideration the potential establishment of six reactors at the site in the near future.

All the while, the consortium will send updated reports to the Jordan Nuclear Regulatory Commission (JNRC), he added.

During the launch, Toukan announced that an international consultant will be selected soon to work with the JNRC in evaluating the reports.

The commission is also expected to announce this month the selection of an international firm to assist in the technology selection process.

The firm is expected to assist in selecting a bidder to construct the country's first power plant and establish a nuclear power utility company, a public-private entity, to own and operate the plant.

The Kingdom's peaceful nuclear energy programme is considered central to the country's efforts to energy independence. With future power plants, the energy source has the potential to provide the country with 60 per cent of its energy needs in the next 25 years and eventually transform Jordan into an energy exporter.

The Kingdom currently imports 96 per cent of its energy needs, at a cost of over 20 per cent of its GDP.

By Taylor Luck

© Jordan Times 2009

Jordan to Invest $750 Million for Development of International Airport

AL AIN -- Jordan plans $750 million investment in redevelopment of Queen Alia International Airport, or QAIA, in the capital, which will increase its capacity to 21 million passengers on completion.

This was announced on Tuesday by Curtis Grad, chief executive officer, Airport International Group, on the last day of an aviation conference called: 'Low Cost Airlines World MENA 2009'.

"We expect Phase I of this terminal to be ready by early 2012. It will have a capacity to handle 9 million passengers. The Phase II will be able to handle additional 12 million passengers. We are looking at inbound traffic from Abu Dhabi, Al Ain, Dubai and Sharjah and other parts of GCC markets to link up with QAIA and benefit from it," Grad said in a statement.

"There are already six Low Cost Carriers, or LCCs, that have a total of 80 arrivals and departures a week to Amman, Jordan. These are Air Arabia, Jazeera Airways, Bahrain Air, Sama Airlines, Nas Air and Fly Dubai," he added.

During the year, QAIA has witnessed a 15 per cent increase in flight volumes, 10 per cent increase in passengers during summer peak and 4 per cent increase in passenger numbers.

Grad said that there is a strong link with the UAE considering that Invest AD, an investment company based in Abu Dhabi hold 38 per cent of its equity, followed by Kuwait's Noor Financial Investments which owns 24 per cent equity.

In his presentation Tim Coombs, Managing Director, Aviation Economics Ltd mentioned that the barriers to start LCC will remain low considering that an airline operating 5 A320 aircraft can be set up with capital of just $10 million.

"The LCC model is well understood, easily copied and globally transferable today. And Hedge Funds / Private Equity industry has surplus funds of $150 billion. It is easy to start LCC even today," he said.

He said that the development of 17 open-skies bilateral agreements between a number of Arab Civil Aviation Commission is an important step for LCCs further success in the region.

Sherif Attia, chief executive officer, Air Cairo, said that the year 2008 was very encouraging compared to the previous year.

UN to discuss Al-Aqsa clashes

The UN Human Rights Council will hold a special session on the situation in the West Bank and East Jerusalem Al-Quds as a UN Gaza war report awaits a debate.

The session, demanded by the Palestinian Authority, is to discuss a report by independent fact-finding mission on Israel's military action against the Hamas-run the Gaza Strip in December and January, Palestinian diplomats said on Tuesday.

A UN statement, however, said that the 47-member council would hold a special session on the human rights situation in the occupied Palestinian territories and East Jerusalem Al-Quds on Thursday.

The decision follows two weeks of mounting tensions triggered by Israeli restrictions imposed on Palestinian worshipers to access the Al-Aqsa Mosque compound, the third holy site in the Muslim world.

Israel has deployed thousands of troops in the area to quell demonstrations by Palestinians protesters who were denied admission into the mosque compound while Jewish worshipers were allowed to hold a religious ceremony in the site.

The closure of the holy compound caused fierce clashes in the city between the Israeli soldiers and Palestinians, who accuse Tel Aviv of trying to remove the Islamic-Palestinian identity of the site, which is also holy to Christians and Jews.

Jordan, which reserves the right to look after all Islamic and Christian holy sites in East Jerusalem Al-Quds under a 1994 peace treaty, demanded Israel last week to keep Jewish extremists away from the compound and keep the Mugrabi Gate closed.

Israel seized East Jerusalem Al-Quds during the six-day war in 1967 and later annexed it despite opposition from the international community, who continue to consider the territory as occupied.

Earlier this month, the Human Rights Council debated the damning report on the Gaza war but decided to delay a vote on it until March 2010 under pressure from the US and Israel's European allies.

The head of the UN fact-finding mission, Richard Goldstone, recommended in August that the UN Security Council take up the report's findings and ask the International Criminal Court to examine possible charges, unless progress was made in investigations in Israel and the Palestinian territories within six months.

The report sparked furor among Tel Aviv officials for highlighting the Israeli army's violation of international laws during the 23-day offensive which left more than 1,400 Palestinians killed.

The Goldstone report is expected to be raised during a UN Security Council debate on the Middle East scheduled for Wednesday in New York.

China trade figures signal recovery

A new report shows stronger trade figures for china in September, signaling that its economy is on the recovery track.

The General Administration of Customs says the world's third-largest economy posted a 21.3 percent decline in exports to $846.6 billion in September from a year earlier while its imports dropped 3.5 percent to $103 billion in the same period.

The figures show a slower pace than in the previous month, when exports plunged 23 percent, and imports were down 17 percent.

"This is good news for China's recovery. Stronger external demand will provide an alternative source of support for growth and provide scope for Beijing to start tightening policy gradually from early 2010," Brian Jackson, an economist, told Reuters.

China's trade surplus stood at $12.9 billion in September from $15.7 billion in August.

The report also shows a 26 percent fall to $135.5 billion in trade surplus over January to September — down 26 percent compared with the same period in the previous year.

Pakistan MPs reject US aid package

Pakistani MPs have in majority rejected the US financial aid package, urging the government to withdraw from the Kerry Lugar Bill (KLB) by respecting public opinion and verdict of the country's parliament.

In a debate during a session of Pakistan's upper house of the parliament, senators of the opposition benches pressed the government to withdraw its support from America's war against terror, a Press TV correspondent reported Tuesday.

"We have suffered losses of $35 billion in the war on terror during the last eight years while the US has provided us with just $15 billion”, senator Ibrahim from Jamaat-e-Islami told the house.

He said that politicians who had stashed money in offshore accounts should bring it back to the country instead of accepting the US aid to the detriment of national interests.

“If our capitalists and corrupt politicians bring back their money stashed in foreign banks, several problems facing the country will stand resolved”, the senator said.

Senator Salim Saifullah belonging to the Pakistan Muslim League (PML-Q) said certain clauses of KLB had been incorporated therein at the desire of India.

Senator Muhammad Ali Durrani said the rejection of the KLB by the majority of senators was a success. Our government should honor public opinion and punish those who were behind the lobbying of this bill, he demanded.

Pakistan's Foreign Minister Mehmood Qureshi has traveled to Washington to convey Islamabad's concerns over accepting the generous, but conditional US 'security' aid package.

The bill, recently approved by US Congress, offers $7.5 billion in assistance to Islamabad. It, however, insists on controlling the way the money is channeled, expressing distrust of the Pakistani military and intelligence agency ISI.

" Pakistani military or its intelligence agency ceases support to terrorist groups that have conducted attacks against the US or its coalition forces in Afghanistan or the people in neighboring countries," reads one clause in the bill.

Pakistan would neither compromise on its sovereignty nor would it allow a micromanagement of our internal affairs,” Qureshi said.

The developments come as the US also considers extending to Pakistan its military campaign in Afghanistan, which, despite bringing about thousands of civilian casualties, has fallen short of arresting or eliminating any key militant leaders.

Somali militant commander surrenders

Wed Oct 14, 2009

A senior Hizbul Islam commander, Shuke Abdirahman Odawa, has joined the Somali government after relinquishing his armed opposition.

In a Tuesday meeting with top Somali officials, including National Security Minister Abdullahi Mohammed Ali, at the meeting in the Somali Presidential Palace, Odawa and his armed men denounced the insurgency, pledging support for the government, a Press TV correspondent reported.

"We are highly delighted as a government to have on board people who fought us yesterday and we called on others to emulate the good gesture," Mohammed Ali said.

For his part, Odawa, who commanded Hizbul Islam fighters in Elasha Biyaha in the outskirts of Mogadishu, pledged to defend the people, the religion and the government, adding that his 'wise decision' was not in any way linked to seeking position in power.

Elasha Biyaha, where most of Mogadishu's displaced civilians have fled since 2007, is the headquarters of Hizbul Islam chief Sheikh Hassan Dahir Aweys.

In the meantime, scores of Hizbul Islam fighters flooded towards Somali government bases and handed over their weapons to government officials at military bases across the country.

More than 270 fighters have reportedly surrendered themselves so far at Somalia government bases throughout the war-torn country.

Source: PressTV.
Link: http://edition.presstv.ir/detail/108639.html.

Memo reveals secret US-Japan nuclear pact

Declassified reports show Washington enjoyed a secret pact with Tokyo to transport nuclear weapons through Japan.

Both the United States and Japan have neither denied nor confirmed the allegations, while rejecting any inquiry into the matter.

The hush-hush pact was disclosed after Japan's left-leaning government, which won last month's elections to end more than half a century of conservative rule, launched a probe into thousands of files to settle longstanding suspicions.

The Cold War agreements also reveal secret US dealings with the Koreas, Vietnam, the Soviet Union and China through Japan, where the US has had military bases since the end of World War II.

According to a 1960 confidential memo, released by the National Security Archive at George Washington University on Tuesday, the United States had signed a deal with Japan which would allow them to use Japanese soil 'as needed' in an emergency if communist neighbor North Korea launched an attack.

The typeface deal adds that the White House had a 'full understanding' with Japan over the issue.

This is while, according to a negotiated deal between then US president Richard Nixon and Japanese prime minister Eisaku Sato, Japan was not to possess, produce or allow nuclear weapons on its soil.

The so-called 'three principles' carried out by Sato granted the former premier the Nobel Peace Prize in 1974.

The revealed documents would charge Tokyo with hypocrisy.

The nuclear issue in Japan is highly sensitive, as the Pacific island nation is the only country to have suffered a nuclear attack and has long since campaigned for the worldwide abolition of the ultra-destructive weapons.

In 1945, the United States dropped atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, killing more than 210,000 civilians.

Israel to raze 150 Palestinian homes

Israel has announced plans to demolish 150 Palestinian homes in the mostly Arab east Jerusalem Al-Quds in a move that would displace more than 1,000 Palestinians.

Palestinian homes that are threatened with imminent demolition are located in the neighborhoods of Beit Haninah, Shu'fat, Ashqariyeh, Nusiebeh Complex, Silwan, Thuri, Jabal al-Mukaber, Sur Baher, Mount of Olives, al-Zu'ayem, Isawieh and Ras Khamis.

The Jerusalem Center for Social and Economic Rights (JCSER) stated that the new list of Palestinian homes slated for demolition does not include the 125 homes and apartments against which Israel had previously issued demolition orders.

Israel frequently orders hundreds of Palestinians to leave their homes in the occupied east Jerusalem Al-Quds, claiming that they do not have proper documentation for their dwellings.

The residents, however, argue that Israeli military occupation officials withhold their documents or refuse to issue documents for their houses.

The status of Jerusalem Al-Quds is among the crucial outstanding issues of the Middle East peace process, with the Palestinians reiterating that any Palestinian state should include the city as its capital.

Israel captured the mostly Arab east Jerusalem Al-Quds in the 1967 War and later 'annexed' the area illegally in a move not recognized by the international community.

Tel Aviv continues to erect new homes for Jewish settlers illegally in the occupied Palestinian territory despite strong global opposition.

Palestinians and many other states insist that there can be no peace in the Middle East before Israel quits east Jerusalem Al-Quds, thus allowing it to revert to the Palestinians who want to establish it as the capital of an independent Palestinian state.

SICK AND TIRED OF THE ‘JEW THING’

Desertpeace

October 13, 2009

When will people realize that not all Jews are Zionists? When will these same people realize that not all Zionists are Jews?

As I browse through pro Palestinian Blogs, many written by Palestinians themselves, I see a growing trend of subtle anti-Semitism. This manifests itself in a few ways, one is the way the word Jew or Jewish is spelled…. with a lower case 'j’. This is an insult to all Jews, both in Israel and abroad.

As can seen in this chart, most Jews do not live in Israel….

Total population 13,155,000 Regions with significant populations
Israel: 5,393,000
United States: 5,275,000
France: 490,000
Canada: 374,000
United Kingdom: 295,000
Russia: 225,000
Argentina: 184,000
Germany: 120,000
Australia: 104,000
Brazil: 96,000
Ukraine: 77,000
South Africa: 72,000
Hungary: 49,000
Mexico: 40,000
Belgium: 31,200
Netherlands: 30,000
Italy: 28,600
Chile: 20,700
Belarus: 18,200
Uruguay: 18,000
Switzerland: 17,900
Turkey: 17,800
Venezuela: 15,400
Sweden: 15,000
Spain: 12,000
Iran: 10,800
Romania: 10,100
Latvia: 9,800
Austria: 9,000
Azerbaijan: 6,800
Denmark: 6,400
Panama: 5,000

Among the Diaspora Jews, there is a growing trend of not supporting the genocidal policies of the Zionist state. There has also been a significant drop in visits made by these people to Israel. On a daily basis, more and more Jews are expressing their disgust with Zionism.

From the likes of a Foxman I do not expect to see a differentiation between trends of anti-Semitism or anti Zionism. These people are not only the enemies of the Palestinian people, they are, in effect, enemies of the Jews themselves. From those who support the Palestinian cause I expect a different attitude. We must all work together…. Muslims, Christians and Jews. We must not alienate each other. Those of us that are involved in the actual struggle realize this for the most part, it is just a handful that seem not to.

Bottom line is that I am ’sick and tired of the Jew thing’……. let’s pull together. Only then will we see a victory and the creation of a Palestinian State.

Gaza Gets Ambitious With Mud

Eva Bartlett, In Gaza

SHEIKH ZAYED, Gaza, Oct 13 (IPS) – On a searing summer morning, workers are adding layers to the mud-brick police station being constructed in Sheikh Zayed, northern Gaza.

"We started building on Jun. 20," says Mohammed el-Sheikh 'Eid, a consultant engineer with Gaza’s Ministry of Interior. "Since this is the first time we’ve built something on this scale with mud bricks, we can’t estimate exactly how much longer it will take to complete. Maybe another two months or so."

He is confident, however, that they will finish before the winter rains begin.

Since the war on Gaza ended, a number of houses have been built using mud to create simple, square, two or three-room homes. The new Sheikh Zayed police station is one of the larger and more ambitious projects.

An intricate series of thick-walled, deep-arched chambers form what is on the whole a much more artistic rendition of the former square, cement police station bombed during the attacks. When finished, the station will be 550 square metres, including seven 3.5m by 3.5m office rooms and eight long, arched-roofed chambers 3m wide and 8m long.

In contrast to Gaza’s basic new mud-brick homes, with their cracked-earth finish inside and rough, straw-flecked outer layer, the police station design replicates that of the elegant, traditional Palestinian stone or brick buildings: neatly-packed rows of brick frame windows and doorways in graceful arcs; with surprisingly smooth domes that top off vaulted rooms and corridors. The one-level station, with its multiple rooftop domes, resembles the architecture of Palestinian homes from Nablus to Jerusalem.

The site, just off the coastal road serving Beit Lahia, is open and spacious, with a contrasting backdrop of cement block apartment buildings, built long before the Israeli siege on Gaza, when cement was accessible.

Engineer and site supervisor Sameh Al-Khalout explains the small-scale and hand-crafted construction process.

"The mud bricks take between one and two weeks to cast and dry," he says, gesturing at the rows of bricks drying in the sun. "Each brick costs roughly one shekel (a quarter of a dollar) to make."

Al-Khalout says the clay is brought from a nearby area of Beit Lahia, and the straw comes from local farmers. "We will put plaster on the roof, to seal it and protect it from rain."

Wood is temporarily used to buffer ceiling arches and windows until the clay mortar hardens. The wood is then removed and used elsewhere in the same manner.

Apart from these wood bracings, conventional and excessively expensive building materials are not used.

Cement smuggled in via the tunnels between Egypt and Gaza is as much as ten times the pre-siege price. A tonne of cement costs 3,400 shekels (850 dollars), compared to the 350 shekels it cost prior to June 2007.

Husam Toubil from the United Nations Development Programme says Gaza requires 50,000 tons of cement to rebuild destroyed homes, and 41,000 tons for public buildings.

Al-Khalout says problems extend beyond lack of availability of materials. "For most of our workers, this is their first experience building with mud bricks.

"Since we have to bring in clay, straw and gravel, and mix the mud cement, make the bricks and then build the actual station, we require more workers than we would using cement."

In an enclosed Strip where unemployment is near 50 percent and poverty has reached 90 percent, according to a recent UN Conference on Trade and Development (UNCATD) report, the workers will brave the heat for the chance to earn 40 shekels a day.

Since the siege on Gaza tightened in June 2007, almost no construction materials have entered Gaza, according to the OCHA report. This is in comparison to the pre-attacks, pre-siege import levels of 7,400 trucks per month, from January to May 2007.

According to the United Nations Relief Web news, 3,900 truckloads entered Gaza from January to May 2007. Over the same period this year, six trucks were allowed in. These carried material for water projects, greatly in need and long awaiting completion.

The Israeli authorities say the ban on building materials is to prevent Hamas from using so-called "dual use" items for military activities.

Yet, non-Hamas run agencies, schools, and healthcare centres are facing the same blanket restrictions on import of cement, gravel, wood, tiles, piping, paint, glass and steel bars, notes the OCHA report.

The mud brick technique, extended beyond the simple clay ovens prevalent in Gaza to the building of houses, potentially meets some of Gaza’s great construction needs.

East of Gaza city, in the Al-Shojayia district, engineers have tackled the challenge of a multi-level clay-brick building: a three-storey school for 600 disabled children is under construction, using a combination of mud brick and rubble from the remains of homes and buildings destroyed during the Israeli attacks.

According to a Guardian news report, engineer Maher Al-Batroukh and university engineers experimented with clay to create strong bricks. When finished, the school will be roughly twice the size of the Sheikh Zayed police station, with similar domed ceilings and plaster coating.

Noting the success of clay building endeavors, the Hamas Ministry of Public Works is likewise pursuing the mud-brick alternative, with plans to build multi-storey houses and re-build destroyed public buildings.

While some are finding means to get around the Israeli ban on nearly everything needed to re-build in Gaza, the on-going siege on the Strip continues to hit daily life to an extent that the latest UN report notes that closed borders and delays in allowing in goods are 'devastating livelihoods’ and causing gradual 'de-development’.

The OCHA report further cites the damage to education, including overcrowding due to destroyed or damaged schools, and denied or delayed education materials.

In an August 2009 statement, Maxwell Gaylard, the UN Humanitarian Coordinator for the occupied Palestinian territory, noted that the "deterioration and breakdown of water and sanitation facilities in Gaza is compounding an already severe and protracted denial of human dignity in the Gaza Strip."

Gaylard, along with the Association for International Development Agencies (AIDA), notes that the Israeli denial of entry of equipment and supplies needed for the construction, maintenance and operation of water and sanitation facilities since June 2007 has led to "the gradual deterioration of these essential services."

Further citing destruction from the Israeli attacks, the statement says Gaza’s sanitation and water services are on the "brink of collapse", noting that the sparse supplies allowed in have been "nowhere near enough to restore a fully functioning water and sanitation system."

About 60 percent of the population does not have continuous access to water, the statement notes. Roughly 10,000 people in Gaza have no access to the water network at all. This, combined with the 50-80 million litres of untreated and partially treated wastewater that is being discharged daily since January 2008, compounds the water and sanitation crisis.

Although some resourceful individuals have built homes despite the ban on cement, these various reports highlight that the manifold problems created by the ongoing siege and Israeli attacks on Gaza are too extensive to be solved by improvisation and mud alone.

The Palestinian Centre for Human Rights (PCHR) reports that 60 police stations were destroyed or damaged during the winter 2008-2009 Israeli attacks on Gaza.

The United Nations Office for Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) August 2009 report says more than 6,400 homes were destroyed or severely damaged, and over 52,000 suffered minor damage from bombing during Israel’s winter war on Gaza.

The OCHA report notes that the continued Israeli-led siege on Gaza has prevented reconstruction or repair of 13,900 homes, including approximately 2,700 homes damaged or destroyed in earlier Israeli military operations, and of 3,000 housing units intended to replace inadequate homes in crowded refugee camps.

Over 20,000 Palestinians remain displaced in Gaza, with approximately 100 families still living in emergency tents provided by aid agencies.

PCHR also reports that 215 factories and 700 private businesses, 17 universities or colleges, 15 hospitals and 43 health care centres, and 58 mosques were destroyed or damaged during the attacks. The United Nations says that 298 schools were destroyed or damaged.

They all await reconstruction, as does Gaza’s shattered economy.

The Wrong House

The Wrong House
Ask Awal Khan About Obama's Prize

By BRENDAN COONEY

CounterPunch, October 13, 2009

Giving Obama the Nobel Peace Prize is like giving someone the literature prize because you hope he writes some good books.

He doesn’t even have to be an aspiring writer. To say Obama aspires to peace is to ignore his escalation of the occupation of Afghanistan.

It may be a joke, but the Norwegians have told more morbid ones: Roosevelt in 1906 and Kissinger in 1973 both had records far more blood-soaked than anything Obama has had time for.

But he has had time to make an impact on people such as Awal Khan, who might want to weigh in on Obama’s prize.

Khan was serving as an artillery commander in the Afghan National Army away from his home in the eastern province of Khost on April 8, when U.S. forces came knocking. In a case of "wrong house," they killed his 17-year-old daughter, Nadia, and his 15-year-old son, Aimal. They also killed his wife, a schoolteacher who taught villagers for free. They killed his brother and wounded another daughter.

After she thought the dust had cleared, Khan’s cousin’s wife walked outside. She was nine-months pregnant. She took five shots to the stomach. Her fetus died, but she lived. She might have some thoughts on Obama as a man who "created a new climate," as the Nobel committee claimed.

U.S. military spokesman Colonel Greg Julian said the slaughtered family had no connection to U.S. enemies. "It was an unfortunate set of circumstances," he said.

A grieving Khan told Agence France-Press, "The (international) coalition has to stop this cruelty and brutal action."

Khan is not likely to get his wish from Obama. Even in his announcement that he would accept the prize, Obama resorted hawk talk: "I am the Commander-in-Chief of a country that's … working … to confront a ruthless adversary that directly threatens the American people and our allies."

That is audacity. At its greatest, the threat to the American people from the Taliban is indirect. And whatever the risk in pulling out, it’s something we have to live with. To say that it’s worth thousands of dead civilians to possibly reduce an indirect risk to Americans makes sense only in the twisted nationalistic calculus in which an American life is worth many foreign lives. A peace prize should go only to someone who believes in the following math: 1 human life = 1 human life.

Perhaps the only reason we know the name Awal Khan is that he was an army colonel. The Khost Provincial Council closed its offices for a month in protest. Provincial councils of Laghman, Logar and Zabol have closed their offices to protest other civilian killings. And Obama is still listening to military advisers talk about how the secret to counterinsurgency is winning over hearts and minds.

There are thousands of less "important" people we could interview. We could talk to the families of 95 children reported killed in a U.S. attack on May 4 and 5 in western Farah province. A list of the dead, with names and ages, was compiled by an Afghan government commission based on the testimony of villagers, said Obaidullah Helali, a lawmaker from Farah and a member of the government’s investigative team.

To see how things look from an Afghan perspective, why not read the independent newspaper Cheragh? Perhaps Obama would return his medal if he read the May 7 editorial on "the killing of so many humans, chopped bodies without coffins, and the orphaned children and widows. In reality, voices and murmurs are choked with pain, and pens are unable to write about it."

Compare that to Obama’s voice on the subject. Does someone who calls the occupation of Afghanistan "a war of necessity" and adds tens of thousands more troops to it have something to do with "the abolition or reduction of standing armies," as Alfred Nobel stipulated for the prize in his will?

In a Pew Global Attitudes survey in June 2009, a plurality or majority in every one of the 25 countries surveyed was opposed to increasing troops in Afghanistan. An overwhelming majority of Pakistanis oppose the drone attacks that Obama has launched. With 58 percent of Americans now opposing the war, one wonders why Obama will not listen to anyone arguing what seems so clear: that the United States has no business being in Afghanistan.

Instead of listening to the left, most of which is still stunned by his ethnicity as if hit with a cartoon frying pan, Obama wants to placate the right. Like a long line of liberals before him, he’s worried about looking weak. He has hesitated on Honduras, waffled on Guantanamo, and exacerbated Afghanistan. This is discouraging news for peacemongers. As Lou Brock said, "Show me a guy who’s afraid to look bad, and I’ll show you a guy you can beat every time."

Even U.S. Puppet Hamid Karzai has had enough with the civilian dead. In 2005 he said, "I don’t think there is a big need for military activity in Afghanistan anymore." In 2007: "The Afghan people understand that mistakes are made. But five years on, six years on, definitely, very clearly, they cannot comprehend as to why there is still a need for air power." On Nov. 5, 2008, after U.S. warplanes killed 23 women and 10 children at a wedding party, he said: "This is my first demand of the new president of the United States: to put an end to civilian casualties."

Karzai knows it can’t happen. Obama has taken withdrawal off the table, and as long as there is an occupation, civilians will be killed. Obama likely will be responsible for the deaths of thousands of people before he leaves office.

"Washington keeps bombarding residential areas in the country without paying any attention to the objections," said the May 7 editorial in Cheragh after the slaughter in Farah. Karzai is "sacrificing the people before the lords of the White House.... Can the US separate the people from the Taleban and Al Qa'idah, with the slogan that they are your killers and we are your saviours?! What a futile fancy and unrealizable ambitions."

Instead of blindly chasing hawks, Obama needs to listen to Afghan Parliamentarian Shukria Barakzai, who told the Christian Science Monitor that instead of sending 30,000 new troops, Obama should "send us 30,000 scholars... Or 30,000 engineers. But don’t send more troops -- it will just bring more violence."

The original Nobel committees of the first five years had it right. They gave peace prizes to people we’ve never heard of, but people who were warriors for peace. Norway was a part of Sweden at the time. Nobel, a Swedish arms trader and inventor of dynamite, is thought to have charged Norway with giving out the peace prize because it had no foreign-relations apparatus, so that its committee might be neutral. There seemed to be an implicit recognition that the nation-state and peace are like a shark and a leg, and that statesmen did not qualify for the award. But then Norway became independent and the next year tried to buy a big friend by giving the award to Teddy Roosevelt, opening the door to playing politics with the prize.

Obama has said he’ll give the $1.4 million purse to charity. With the United States giving a $2,000 condolence payment to the family of each civilian it kills in Afghanistan, that would pay for 700 lives.

Or he could give it to Dr. Sima Samar, to name one of thousands of more-deserving people. After graduating from medical school in Kabul in 1982, she has given her life to providing health care to women in Afghanistan and, chased into exile, in Pakistan. She’s won a slew of awards over the past 15 years for her bravery and work, but not the Nobel. She has brought peace to a lot of people. And she’s not likely to occupy any countries any time soon.

PM 'to boost Afghanistan troops'

Gordon Brown is expected to announce that Britain is to send an extra 500 military personnel to Afghanistan.

The UK has about 9,000 soldiers in the country, the second-largest contingent after the US, but there have been calls for increases in Nato troop levels.

To date, there have been 221 deaths among UK forces there and the PM has faced some calls to bring troops home.

Mr Brown will address MPs at 1230 BST, after the first prime minister's questions of the parliamentary session.

He is expected to begin PMQs with a sombre tribute to British forces, reading out the names of the 37 servicemen who have died in Afghanistan since the last prime minister's questions in mid-July.

It is believed that Mr Brown will agree to the deployment of 500 more British troops but with some caveats.

The BBC's defence correspondent Caroline Wyatt said: "The prime minister will want assurances from military chiefs that the extra troops will be properly equipped.

"He'll also expect Britain's Nato partners to follow suit by offering more forces themselves."

Nato defense ministers are likely to discuss troop reinforcements at an informal meeting in Slovakia next week.

US President Barack Obama is currently considering a request by General Stanley McChrystal, the commander of international forces in Afghanistan, for up to 40,000 more international troops.

'Bold move'

Col Richard Kemp, a former commander in Afghanistan, welcomed the expected British reinforcements.

"We're talking about an extra battle group, almost certainly deploying into Task Force Helmand, which is the main British area in central Helmand, which will give the commanders there extra combat power."

He added: "I think we probably do need more than that, but it's a contribution.

"I think it's quite a bold decision by the prime minister to reinforce at this time and particularly in light of the fact that we've heard about shortages of equipment, so there's obviously a risk got to be taken with equipment in deploying these troops, but I think it's a good move and a bold move."

British forces have been in Afghanistan since October 2001. More than two-thirds are stationed in the southern province of Helmand, a Taliban stronghold.

Military commanders have said extra troops are needed to build on the progress of this summer's Operation Panther's Claw, in which UK forces helped to expel insurgents from key areas but sustained heavy casualties in the process.

Last week Mr Brown's spokesman said: "We have always said that more troops would have to be subject to a number of criteria - the feasibility of sending the right equipment, the right strategy internationally, and particularly this issue of 'Afghanisation' which the president and prime minister talked again about yesterday, and obviously proper burden-sharing."

Political issue

In his speech to the Conservative Party conference, leader David Cameron pledged to send more troops to Afghanistan to speed up the training of Afghan soldiers.

The Liberal Democrats have claimed the Afghan mission is "failing" and called for a new strategy and "a political surge" rather than more troops.

The question of troop numbers in Afghanistan has become highly politicized in recent months.

The ex-head of the Army, Sir Richard Dannatt, has claimed that No 10 turned down a request to send up to 2,000 more troops earlier this year - a suggestion Downing Street has denied.

Sir Richard recently agreed to advise the Conservatives on defense matters.

Arab League secretary arrives for liaison office opening

The long-serving Secretary-General of the Arab League, Amre Moussa, is in Malta for the opening, tomorrow, of an EU-Arab League liaison office in Floriana. He will be joined tonight by the European Commissioner for External Relations, Benita Ferrero-Waldner.

The office, adjacent to police headquarters, will be inaugurated by Prime Minister Lawrence Gonzi.

Both Mr Moussa and Ms Ferrero-Waldner will have meetings with the Prime Minister and with Foreign Minister Tonio Borg. They will also meet the foreign affairs committee of the House of Representatives.

The liaison office will group experts from the European Commission and the Arab League, who will coordinate dialogue between the EU and the Arab League.

Dr Borg said that membership of the EU had placed Malta in a stronger position to broker dialogue between north and south.

"We are no longer a tiny nation trying to find our political position in this dialogue, we are indeed part of it."

Drop the Bush era slogans, Iran FM tells Clinton

Iran's foreign minister has urged his US counterpart to avoid using the anti-Iran slogans that were common when George W. Bush was in office.

Iranian Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki was commenting on US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton's remarks on Iran's nuclear program after her talks with Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov in Moscow on Tuesday.

Clinton said the US agreed with Russia that it is important to pursue diplomacy toward Iran but added that sanctions might become necessary if diplomacy fails.

"Stances adopted by Mrs. Clinton contradict the outcome of the Geneva talks and approaches such as the dual track lack efficiency," Mottaki said.

"We advise Mrs. Clinton to be realistic and to avoid repeating the useless slogans of the Bush era," Iran's top diplomat said.

Mottaki stated that Iran's latest package of proposals could pave the war for "constructive talks" between Iran and the major powers.

US mulling Chaosistan plan for Afghanistan

Gen. Stanley McChrystal, the US commander in Afghanistan, has said that he has received a recommendation advocating a plan called Chaosistan for the war-tron Central Asian nation.

He made the remarks in a speech in London earlier this month in which he commented on a paper on the Chaosistan plan.

McChrystal said the plan stated that Afghanistan should be allowed to become a "Somalia-like haven of chaos that we simply manage from outside."

But he did not reveal the paper's origins.

Later, two US intelligence officials told Newsweek that the reference almost certainly comes from a secret CIA analysis entitled "Chaosistan".

The document, prepared by a "red team" of CIA analysts, picks apart conventional analyzes of the war inside Afghanistan, according to the officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity.

Despite the presence of over 100,000 foreign troops in the country, the escalated militancy has made the current year the deadliest for foreign forces, as well as Afghan civilians.

Eight years after the US-led invasion of the Afghanistan, the militants have extended their influence from their southern power base to the relatively peaceful north and west of the country.

Brown to announce Afghan troop surge

The British prime minister is expected to announce that his country will deploy hundreds of extra troops to Afghanistan, extending the UK's commitment to the unpopular war.

Gordon Brown, who is expected to announce his decision on Wednesday, will set a number of conditions for sending the additional troops, the Wall Street Journal said in an article published Tuesday.

The conditions include a NATO strategy for the training of Afghan civil and military personnel, proper equipment and a new Afghan government being in place, the newspaper said, citing a person familiar with the matter.

The UK currently has around 9,000 troops in Afghanistan, the second-largest NATO contingent in the country after the United States. President Barack Obama has been struggling to persuade Washington's closest allies to send more troops to Afghanistan.

This comes as a recent opinion poll has found that opposition to Britain's involvement in the Afghan war has increased.

A survey conducted in August revealed that public calls for an end to Britain's Afghan mission has strengthened, with 57 percent of respondents saying the UK should end its mission in the war-torn country.

According to United Nations figures, Afghan civilians remain the main victims of the notorious war, which was launched in 2001 to allegedly destroy the militancy and arrest militant leaders, including Osama bin Laden.

Britain's mission in Afghanistan has never had massive public support. With the number of fatalities exceeding that of UK forces during the Iraqi occupation, it is now becoming even more unpopular.

China slams India 'border infringement'

China has strongly condemned a recent visit by Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh to disputed Arunachal Pradesh on the Nagaland border near China — a region of contention since 1962.

Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Ma Zhaoxu accused Singh of ignoring Beijing's concerns by visiting the disputed northeastern Indian state of Arunachal Pradesh.

"China has expressed its strong dissatisfaction of the prime minister's visit to the disputed area, which is in disregard of China's grave concerns", the statement said.

"We urge the Indian side to take China's solemn concerns seriously in the hope of maintaining calm over the disputed area with a view to ensuring the sound development of China-India relations."

The condemnation came after Singh and Indian Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee visited Arunachal Pradesh ten days ago to campaign for their elections.

The Chinese army and New Delhi forces fought a brief, but bloody war over their Himalayan border in 1962.

Over much of the last 40 years, China has unofficially claimed Arunachal Pradesh as its own territory. Beijing also lays claim to a slice of Indian-run Kashmir.

Kashmir has been the subject of a bitter territorial dispute between India and Pakistan since they secured independence from Britain in 1947.