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Thursday, November 26, 2009

Greater Amman Municipality prepares for the development project of the Hashemite Yard

Wednesday, November 25 - 2009

Modernization works have commenced in the Hashemite Yard (Plaza) in the city center according to Greater Amman Municipality (GAM) resources; the work started with removing the current warehouses, floor tiles and the drilling works to build social and entertaining facilities and others that embody the features of Al Seil Al Qadeem (the old stream) which was passing through the area in the past.

The project space area is 40 Donums as indicated by Eng. Mohammed Kharabsheh, Head of Supervision and Projects Department. This area includes activities hall in front of the Roman Amphitheatre with a space area of 4000 m2, a four storey building with a space area of 1200 m2, and a basement for services, while the other floors will contain display screens, coffee shop, restaurant and terraces.

Al Kharabsheh clarified that the project will be paved with stone, asphalt and basalt tiles with different sizes, including the stream course covering the Hashemite Yard from beginning to end, and a 300 meter long of the space area will be paved with natural colored stone.

He said that the whole area of the stream will be covered with 30 metal sunshades, and another 22 sunshades to be installed on the side passage.

The project, which will take 660 days, includes metal edifices with 210 m2 space area, allocated to sell tickets and 4 coffee shops.

Al Kharabsheh pointed out that the project shall boast natural scenes such as dancing fountains around the stream course, and the lightning which will be covered with different kinds of trees and flowers, in addition to constructive and complementary works like water drainage system, sanitary facilities, irrigation networks with installations from the water reservoirs to all the planted basins.

He mentioned that GAM seriously considered the expansion of the green areas in the project, noting that this part of the city is lacking on green spaces.

Chavez calls Ahmadinejad 'gladiator' against imperialism

Caracas - Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez received Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad Wednesday in Caracas as a "friend and brother" with full military honors. The left-wing Chavez and arch-conservative Ahmadinejad, united in their animosity toward the United States' government, declared their desire to expand mutual economic ties. Both countries are OPEC members, and the two leaders signed 70 agreements to increase cooperation in areas including energy and agriculture.

Chavez called Ahmadinejad a "gladiator of the anti-imperialist fight."

The visit is Ahmadinejad's fourth to Venezuela.

Chavez voiced support for Iran's nuclear program, which is strongly opposed by Washington.

Venezuela's political opposition rallied against Ahmadinejad, calling him a "dictator."

Indonesian maid jailed for three years for trying to hurt babies

Singapore - A Singapore court on Thursday sentenced an Indonesian maid who attempted to harm her employer's twin babies by putting detergent in their milk powder to three years in jail, a media report said. Titin Agustiana, 24, had earlier pleaded guilty and testified that she had been unhappy with her employer for scolding her because of poor work performance.

Hoping that her employer would pay more attention to the two-and-a-half-month-old boys and less attention to her work, Titin in August added a pinch of detergent to the babies' milk powder as she wanted to make them sick, the online edition of Straits Times newspaper reported.

However, the twins' mother spotted some blue particles in the milk powder and noticed its fragrant smell.

As she suspected that her helper was responsible, her husband took the woman to the maid agency where she confessed, the report said.

Titin told the judge that she regretted her crime and felt very sorry.

Source: Earth Times.
Link: http://www.earthtimes.org/articles/show/296407,indonesian-maid-jailed-for-three-years-for-trying-to-hurt-babies.html.

Chinese premier to attend Copenhagen climate talks

Beijing - Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao will attend global talks on reductions of carbon emissions in Copenhagen early next month, the Foreign Ministry said on Thursday. Ministry spokesman Qin Gang said China aimed to "reach a fair and reasonable arrangement" during negotiations in Copenhagen on global reductions in carbon emissions.

US President Barack Obama is to travel to Copenhagen during the early stages of the UN-sponsored summit starting on December 9, US officials announced on Wednesday.

Qin declined to say why China planned to send Wen, rather than President Hu Jintao, to Copenhagen.

On Wednesday, Yu Qingtai, the ministry's top official for climate change negotiations accused developed nations of lacking the faith to take the lead on agreeing a new treaty on climate change.

"The reason why there was not enough progress in the negotiations is the lack of faith by developed countries," Yu said.

Technological and financial aid promised to developing countries to battle climate change since 1992 had never materialized, Yu told reporters.

Asked whether China would still pursue a legally binding climate deal in Copenhagen, Yu said: "What is more important is the substantial content of the outcome than the title of the agreement."

China insists that developed nations should take the lead on reducing emissions since they have produced most of the carbon that spurred global warming.

It wants any agreement in Copenhagen to include substantial reduction targets for developed nations plus financial and technological aid for developing countries, Yu said.

International environmental group Greenpeace on Wednesday speculated that the Chinese government could announce new targets for emissions reductions at a press conference scheduled on Friday.

Turkey to join group to monitor Philippine peace talks

Manila - Turkey has accepted an invitation to be part of an international group that would monitor peace talks between the Philippine government and the country's largest Muslim separatist rebel group, an official said Thursday. Britain, Japan and Saudi Arabia were also invited by the Philippines and the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) to join the International Contact Group (ICG).

Rafael Seguis, chairman of the government peace panel with the MILF, said he and his rebel counterpart Mohaqher Iqbal have received letters confirming Turkey's participation in the ICG.

"This is indeed a positive step as it clears the way towards the actual resumption of formal peace talks in the first week of December," Seguis said in a statement.

The Philippines and the MILF agreed on September 15 to form the ICG as part of efforts to resume peace negotiations, which have been stalled since August last year due to the non-signing of a key territory agreement.

The two sides also forged an agreement obliging government security forces and MILF fighters to "refrain from intentionally targeting or attacking non-combatants" in times of fighting in the southern region of Mindanao.

In August 2008, fighting broke out between the MILF and the military in a number of provinces in Mindanao after a key territorial agreement with the rebel group was junked by the government due to strong opposition.

More than 300 people were killed and more than half a million people displaced in the hostilities. While some of the refugees have returned home or moved in with relatives, many are still in evacuation camps.

Top German army officer resigns over Afghan civilian bombing

Berlin - Germany's highest army officer has resigned over his handling of a Afghan bombing raid which left dozens of civilians dead, it was announced Thursday. The resignation of General Inspector Wolfgang Schneiderhan was announced by the country's Defense Minister, Karl Theodor zu Guttenberg, in parliament, at the opening of a debate on the German military deployment in Afghanistan.

The highly controversial September 4 airstrike in Kunduz left an unknown number of civilians dead, but generally reckoned to be dozens.

The German parliament was opening its debate on the country's military deployment in Afghanistan, with North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) chief Anders Fogh Rasmussen due in Berlin for talks with Chancellor Angela Merkel later Thursday.

Germany has up to 4,500 troops in the northern Kunduz region, and operates strict parliamentary control over the activity of its military.

New Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle opened the tense debate by calling for "openness and trust" in relation to army's deployment in the Hindu Kush.

The debate was preceded by a report in the mass-circulation Bild newspaper suggesting that the government had not been honest about its knowledge of civilian victims in the German-ordered airstrike in Kunduz.

Bild said that despite having knowledge of the presence of civilian victims in the attack, in which up to 142 people died, former defense minister Franz Josef Jung had initially insisted that there had been none - in newspaper interviews and in parliament.

Defense Minister Guttenberg told parliament that Schneiderhan had offered his resignation himself.

In recent weeks the Kunduz attack has caused outrage in Germany, which according to opinion polls, a majority of the population opposes involvement in the Afghan war.

Last week the German cabinet approved an extension of the mandate there, which must now be voted on by the parliament.

The opposition Social Democrats and Green party immediately threatened to instigate a committee of investigation over the government's handling of the Kunduz incident.

NATO - and specifically US President Barack Obama - are currently formulating their future strategy for the Afghan conflict, eight years after the US-led invasion.

Obama is expected to announce his strategy on Tuesday, which could involve thousands of extra soldiers, and to urge European allies to increase their financial and troop commitment to the war.

Germany's Westerwelle said on Thursday that there would be no discussion of increasing German troop numbers until the NATO strategy in Afghanistan was clear.

Thanksgiving Day kicks off with slew of parades

By DEEPTI HAJELA, Associated Press Writer

NEW YORK – The 83rd annual Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade has kicked off in New York City with a 60-foot-tall Kermit the frog hovering over holiday revelers.

Thursday's extravaganza features marching bands, clowns, performers and two dozen floats. Thousands of tourists from across the country have lined up to catch a glimpse of a Thanksgiving tradition as pervasive as turkey and pumpkin pie.

Shailesh Dighe and his family split their time between Manhattan and Princeton, N.J. Despite the crowds, he says coming to the fabled parade is "totally worth it."

Dighe says: "When you watch it on TV, you don't get that feeling."

Elsewhere, thousands gathered in Detroit for the 83rd annual America's Thanksgiving Parade. The country's longest-run Thanksgiving Day parade is being held in Philadelphia for its 90th year.

Saudi floods kill 77 while Muslims perform hajj

By HADEEL AL-SHALCHI, Associated Press Writer

MOUNT ARAFAT, Saudi Arabia – Muslim pilgrims holding white umbrellas against the blazing sun clambered up a rocky desert hill for prayers Thursday during the annual hajj, following a day of torrential rains that killed at least 77 people.

Flooding from the unusually heavy downpours hit hardest in the Red Sea coastal city of Jiddah, about 40 miles (60 kilometers) away from the holy city of Mecca and its surrounding sacred sites where the 3 million Muslims from around the world were performing the rites of the pilgrimage.

Most of the deaths occurred in Jiddah, where streets were swamped with water, some houses collapsed and mudslides took place, and in areas around the main highway to Mecca, Civil Defense officials said.

It did not immediately appear that any pilgrims were among the dead. Jiddah's civil defense chief Capt. Abdullah al-Amri said 21 of the victims were identified as Saudis and the rest were believed to be residents of Saudi Arabia.

Wednesday's downpours snarled the opening day of the hajj, drenching pilgrims and knocking out roads that caused epic traffic jams as the faithful tried to make their way to the holy sites. The rains, if they continue as meteorologists predict, could raise safety hazards — particularly the perennial danger of deadly stampedes, since a trip-up on slippery walkways could lead to people getting trampled in crowds.

But skies cleared for most of Thursday, and the heat rose. The umbrellas that protected pilgrims from the rain now were shades from the hot sun as they conducted their rituals in the desert plateau of Mount Arafat, about 12 miles (20 kilometers) east of Mecca.

The site is where Islam's Prophet Muhammad delivered his farewell sermon. The faithful climbed up the Mountain of Mercy, a rocky hill at Arafat, and prayed for God's forgiveness of their sins in what Muslims consider the spiritual high point of the pilgrimage.

Afterward, they prepared to head for the nearby plains of Muzdalifah, where they will pick stones for the next step in the hajj: Starting Friday, they will pelt stones at three walls representing the devil in a symbolic rejection of temptation. The stoning takes place for three days in the mountain valley of Mina, until the end of hajj on Sunday.

Saudi Arabia's biggest worry for months ahead of the hajj has been swine flu. The pilgrimage is one of the most crowded in the world, with the masses of Muslims from every corner of the globe packed shoulder to shoulder in prayers and rites — a perfect incubator for the virus, according to epidemiologists.

The Saudi government has been working with the United States' Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to set up clinics and take precautions to stem any outbreak.

It often rains in Mecca and Jiddah during the winter months, but Wednesday's downpour was the heaviest in years during the hajj. Jiddah was swamped with 7 centimeters (2.76 inches) of rain, more than it would normally get in an entire year, according to Dale Mohler, senior meteorologist at the Web site, AccuWeather.com.

Somalia: Hisbul Islam Bans the Business of Kat in Beledweyn Town

Beledweyne — The Islamic administration of Hizbul Islam in central Somalia has banned the business of Kat in Beledweyn town in Hiran region in central Somalia. Officials said on Wednesday.

Reliable sources said that the administration also refused the vehicles with the black screens traveling through the town adding that the women were also ordered to cover their bodies hard veil calling for all the businessmen to close their shopping centers at the time of praying.

The officials said to the Kat traders to sell it outside of the town while owners of the black screened trucks were given a time to clear all banned things from their cars.

Mohamed Wehliye Odawa, one of the officials of Hisbul Islam in the region held a press conference in Beledweyn town and reiterated that their orders would be implemented from that day pointing out that there were forces loyal to Hisbul Islam who will conduct operations assuring the security of the region.

Somalia: Aweys Condemns Fighting Between Rebel Groups

The leader of Somalia's Hizbul Islam, Sheikh Hassan Dahir Aweys has condemned the on-going clashes between his group [and] the militant group Al-Shabaab.

Speaking after officiating the reopening of Asaley airstrip and Elman seaport in northern Mogadishu, Sheikh Aweys said that its unfortunate the two brotherly groups can turn on each other over the control of Somalia's Lower Jubba region.

"It is regrettable that the mujahidins are fighting between themselves over the control of Lower Jubba, and that was not our agreement between us and Al-Shabaab," he said.

He urged the Al-Shabaab guerrillas to stop the fighting and allow the Hizbul Islam officials to return to the region.

"We are calling on our brothers in Al-Shabaab to stop the war and instead focus on the fight against the enemy," he added.

The Hizbul Islam leader has recently held secret talks with Al-Shabaab officials who asked him to join the group.

Al-Shabaab has on Sunday ousted their one time ally turn enemy from southern Somali town of Afmadow, the only remaining town under the control of Hizbul Islam.

Relation between the two groups has disintegrated after Al-Shabaab unilaterally formed a new administration for Kismayo, a lucrative southern Somali port city that is source for insurgence activities across the war-torn country.

Hezbollah's right to defend Lebanon acknowledged

Beirut approves right of resistance to liberate all Lebanese territory from Israeli occupation.

BEIRUT - Lebanon's new cabinet has agreed on a policy statement that acknowledges Hezbollah's right to use its weapons to defend the country against Israeli aggression.

Information Minister Tarek Mitri said late Wednesday after a cabinet committee set up to draft the statement met for the ninth time that an agreement had been reached.

He said the new statement will retain the same clause approved by the previous cabinet as concerns the arsenal of Hezbollah.

The clause states the right of "Lebanon, its government, its people, its army and its resistance" to liberate all Lebanese territory.

Hezbollah is commonly referred to as the resistance in Lebanon.

Israel waged a bloody 34-day war on Lebanon in the summer of 2006 after Hezbollah fighters seized two Israeli soldiers in a deadly cross-border raid that aimed to free Lebanese soldiers from Israeli prisons. The bodies of the soldiers were returned in a prisoner swap.

The war claimed the lives of more than 1,200 people in Lebanon, most of them civilians, and more than 160 Israelis, most of them soldiers.

Hezbollah, originally a resistance group formed to counter an Israeli occupation of south Lebanon, had forced the Israeli military out of Lebanon in 2000. Israel, however, continues to occupy the Lebanese Shabaa Farms.

Israeli flights over Lebanon occur on an almost daily basis and are in breach of UN Security Council resolution 1710, which in August 2006 ended the war.

Mitri said that reservations concerning the clause by members of the majority would be noted in the government program.

Some Christian members of the majority, including the Phalange Party and Lebanese Forces, argue that Hezbollah's arsenal undermines state authority and runs counter to UN resolutions.

However the resistance party, which has two ministers in the 30-member unity cabinet, has made it clear that its weapons are for defending Lebanon, and that is not open to discussion.

The party argues its arms are necessary to protect the country against any future aggression by Israel.

Lebanon's new cabinet is headed by Prime Minister Saad Hariri.

The winning alliance headed by Hariri won 71 seats in the 128-member parliament in the election against 57 for the opposition led by Hezbollah.

The Hezbollah opposition had actually secured the majority (52%) of the votes in Lebanon, but could not secure a majority of Parliamentary seats (it won 45%) because of the nature of the sectarian government system in the country.

Heavens open as 2.5 million pilgrims begin hajj

Day-long downpour starts annual hajj as thousands of people walk from Mecca to Mina.

MECCA - A day-long downpour started the annual hajj on Wednesday, as thousands of people walked from Mecca to Mina.

Some of the 2.5 million Muslims on the world's largest annual pilgrimage said they would skip the traditional overnight stay in Mina valley because the rain had bottled up bus transport from Mecca.

Instead they planned to stay in the holy city and travel on Thursday morning directly to Mount Arafat, where the Prophet Mohammed gave his last sermon and where pilgrims are required to recite the holy Koran and pray.

"We delayed going to Mina because of the heavy rain in Mecca. We were afraid of becoming sick," said Iraqi Iyad Badawi, 40, undertaking the hajj with his wife. "We will go to Arafat directly after midnight" by bus, he said.

A sea of pilgrims from all over the world, dressed in white robes and towels, began the five-day hajj late on Tuesday and early on Wednesday, circling the Kaaba inside Mecca's Grand Mosque.

Few people appeared concerned over swine flu.

Four pilgrims had died from the disease before the rites officially began. Saudi health officials said that all four had already been suffering from other health problems, one from cancer and another from heart disease.

Proven and suspected infections from the A(H1N1) flu among hajj participants were just 67, health ministry spokesman Dr Khaled Marghlani said on Wednesday. "Everything is going smoothly, thanks to God," he said.

Swine flu has killed some 6,750 people around the world this year, the World Health Organization said on Friday, and Saudi authorities have deployed as many as 20,000 health workers.

Marghlani said the rain could increase health risks for pilgrims, but that the authorities had "planned for this possibility."

Ceremonies begin with the "tawaf," circling seven times the cubic Kaaba building in the center of the massive, one-million-person capacity Grand Mosque, in whose direction all Muslims around the world pray.

The next stage is the overnight stay at Mina before climbing Mount Arafat.

On Wednesday afternoon, thousands of people plodded through the rain on the eight-kilometer (five-mile) trek to Mina, as others tried to go by bus.

The Saudis were expecting about two million foreigners this year for the hajj. But the number of pilgrims from inside the kingdom, estimated at near one million last year, was expected to be down because of swine flu fears.

Source: Middle East Online.
Link: http://www.middle-east-online.com/english/?id=35921.

Ahmadinejad, Chavez vow to counter 'imperialism'

Iranian President gets strong support from Venezuela, Bolivia, Brazil, Cuba's Fidel Castro.

CARACAS - Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad vowed Wednesday next to President Hugo Chavez that Iran and Venezuela would "stand together until the end" in the face of US "imperialism."

Ending a tour of Latin American allies, Ahmadinejad praised his "brave brother" Chavez, saying: "Today the people of Venezuela and Iran, friends and brothers in the trench warfare against imperialism, are resisting.

"We'll stand together until the end," he yelled, raising Chavez's hand in front of the television cameras and shouting in Spanish: "Viva Venezuela! Viva Chavez!"

Before arriving in Caracas late Tuesday Ahmadinejad was in Bolivia, where he and President Evo Morales, another close Chavez ally, hailed their own alliance against "imperialism," meaning the United States.

The Iranian leader's three-day regional tour has been seen as a clear affront to Washington, a fact illustrated by an unusual letter sent by US President Barack Obama.

After Ahmadinejad's first stop in Brazil, it emerged that Obama had sent a letter to the regional power urging it to be more critical of Tehran.

The letter, written to Brazilian leader Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva on the eve of Ahmadinejad's visit, outlined Washington's foreign policy goals and opposition to Iran's nuclear program.

After receiving the letter on Sunday, Lula on Monday recognized Iran's right to develop nuclear energy.

Chavez, long a thorn in the side of Washington, has publicly backed Iran's right to a peaceful nuclear program and supported the Iranian leader's re-election in June.

He said he had made a "lightning" visit to Cuba on Tuesday, where he met for seven hours with ailing former president Fidel Castro, who told him to deliver a big "hug" to Ahmadinejad on his return to Caracas.

"Fidel told me: 'tell Ahmadinejad that reaching Venezuela is like reaching Cuba, because it's the same homeland. So I'm also welcoming you to Cuba, brother,'" Chavez said.

On the economic front, Venezuela and Iran, both members of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC), launched joint projects, including a binational bank, housing programs and bicycle, car and tractor assemblies.

Chavez and Ahmadinejad signed a dozen cooperation agreements in housing, farming, tourism and energy sectors and announced the opening soon of a direct, Caracas-Teheran air flight by Iran's Mahan Air -- "to bring us closer still," Chavez said.

"I'm looking forward to visiting you in Tehran next year to continue promoting our already historic brotherhood," Chavez told his guest.

"I'll be waiting for you in Tehran," said Ahmadinejad.

Indonesia demotes chief of detectives amid corruption scandal

Jakarta - Indonesia's chief of detectives was removed from his post amid allegations of involvement in a conspiracy to frame two senior anti-corruption officials, media reports said Wednesday. Susno Duadji's demotion at the National Police came one day after President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono ordered the country's law enforcement agencies to launch broad legal reforms.

Police spokesman Nanan Soekarna said Duadji would remain a "high-ranking official" in police headquarters, the state-run Antara news agency reported.

Duadji was one of several officials allegedly involved in an attempt to frame two deputy chiefs of the country's respected Corruption Eradication Commission (KPK).

The public scandal arose from a power struggle between the KPK and other law enforcement agencies, including the police and the attorney general's office. The furore prompted to Yudhoyono to intervene and order the corruption charges be dismissed against the two officials.

Yudhoyono also urged law enforcement agencies to initiate internal reforms and said he would set up a task force to eradicate what he called "the legal mafia," referring to the practice of bribery and other forms of corruption among police, judges and prosecutors.

A Facebook page in support of the anti-corruption commission has attracted more than 1.3 million people.

Taped recordings played in a televised court hearing this month revealed apparent evidence of a plot to frame the commissioners among a prosecutor, police investigators and the brother of a businessman who was the subject of a corruption probe by the oversight panel.

The autonomous commission, set up in 2003 to fight corruption in one of the world's most graft-prone nations, has the authority to arrest and prosecute. It has been widely praised by the public for a series of successful prosecutions of high-profile offenders.

Legislators, governors, former ministers, businessmen, one prosecutor and top central bank officials, including an in-law of Yudhoyono, have been jailed by a special corruption court.

Source: Earth Times.
Link: http://www.earthtimes.org/articles/show/296234,indonesia-demotes-chief-of-detectives-amid-corruption-scandal.html.

Four in five flu cases in Lebanon are swine flu: minister

Beirut - Lebanon's Health Minister Mohammed Jawad Khalifeh warned Wednesday that test results showed that 80% of flu-victims are carrying the H1N1 virus in Lebanon. Khalifeh told the daily As Safir newspaper that tests carried out by several laboratories under the ministry's supervision on 2,000 cases revealed that 40% of them had flu, among which 80% were infected with swine flu.

"This means that we have moved to the stage of epidemic not only on the local level but also on the international level," the minister said.

Khalifeh said that most people infected with H1N1 are being cured at home by taking medications such as Panadol and Tylenol. However, when high body temperature is registered, swine flu patients are undergoing treatment at hospital.

The minister also revealed that the ministry will provide the anti-viral drug Tamiflu to state hospitals and distribute them for free to children.

Indonesian police arrest Greenpeace activists in Sumatra

Jakarta - Indonesian police on Wednesday arrested 14 Greenpeace activists for blocking the export facilities of a major pulp mill company in eastern Sumatra. The activists were in police custody in Pekanbaru, the capital of Riau in eastern Sumatra, for questioning while four others were still tied to cranes on the site, media reports and witnesses said.

Nine of the detained activists were foreigners, and the activists still blocking the crate-loading crane chains were said to be from Germany, the Netherlands and the Philippines.

Police and officials of the Asian Pulp and Paper (APP) company were trying to negotiate with them, the state-run Antara news agency reported.

Greenpeace said in a statement that the activists blocked the crane activity to stop pulp exports.

The activists displayed banners reading: "Forest Destruction: You can stop this," and urged world leaders including Indonesian President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono to act to avert climate chaos and to provide a global fund for forests.

"Deforestation is one of the roots of the climate crisis," said Shailandra Yashwant, Greenpeace's campaign director for South-East Asia.

"We are shutting down the exports of one of the world's largest pulp mills at the frontline of forest destruction to tell our elected leaders that they can - and must - pull us back from the brink of catastrophic climate change," Yashwant said.

Greenpeace is also campaigning to preserve peat-swamp forests in Kampar Peninsula, Riau, ahead the upcoming Copenhagen UN Climate Summit in December. They alleged sustained intimidation by the authorities including threats, arrests and deportations.

Paper giant APP sells its products in China, the US, Europe and Australia and supplies many international brand distributors with paper products, including Vogue, Kentucky Fried Chicken and Marc Jacobs.

Greenpeace accused the company and its main competitor, APRIL, of destroying rainforests and carbon-rich peat soil across Indonesia.

"Indonesia is climate change's ground zero," said Bustar Maitar, a Greenpeace spokesman. "Stopping forest destruction here and around the globe is not only one of the quickest but also one of the most cost-effective ways to prevent runaway climate change."

Indonesia is the world's third-largest polluter after China and the US, mainly as a result of the ongoing destruction of its forests and their peat soils.

Globally, 1 million hectares of forests are destroyed every month - an area the size of a football pitch every 2 seconds - emitting so much carbon dioxide that deforestation is blamed for about 20 per cent of global greenhouse gas emissions.

Source: Earth Times.
Link: http://www.earthtimes.org/articles/show/296247,indonesian-police-arrest-greenpeace-activists-in-sumatra.html.

Indonesian vice-president: Government will weather political storm

Jakarta - Indonesian Vice President Boediono said Wednesday he was confident that the government would be able to weather a political storm over a graft scandal and a controversial bank bailout. President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono has been under pressure to take strong action after revelations of an apparent high-level plot involving law enforcement agencies to undermine the country's anti-corruption agency sparked a public outcry.

Parliament has also demanded the government explain its decision to bail out a troubled small bank last year, after critics alleged that some of the money was used to save millions of dollars deposited by politically well-connected people.

The state audit agency said this week that part of the disbursement had no legal basis and the central bank, then led by Boediono, appeared to have manipulated data on the condition of the lender.

"These issues will be cleared up," Boediono told journalists. "I'm very optimistic this government will get through this very well."

"We received a landslide mandate and I think we'll stick to that and we'll stick to our promises, including a clean government," he said.

Yudhoyono began a second five-year term in October after a resounding election victory in July.

The government initially injected 1 trillion rupiah (106 million dollars) to boost liquidity at Bank Century, but the cost of the bailout later soared to 6.7 trillion rupiah.

Boediono said rescuing the bank was necessary to protect the economy amid the global financial crisis.

"I think we did the right thing and the result was good. If there are any questions we will answer," he said.

The Constitutional Court this month played taped recordings that anti-graft activists said revealed a plot to frame two deputy chairmen of the Corruption Eradication Commission, as part of what they described as a high-level conspiracy to weaken the panel.

Some critics have linked the alleged conspiracy and the bailout of Bank Century to election funding for Yudhoyono, which the president dismissed as slanderous.

Under mounting public pressure, Yudhoyono on Monday called for corruption charges against Commissioners Bibit Samad Riyanto and Chandra Hamzah to be dropped, citing lack of faith in the process among the public.

The issues have transfixed Indonesians for weeks.

Source: Earth Times.
Link: http://www.earthtimes.org/articles/show/296252,indonesian-vice-president-government-will-weather-political-storm.html.

Belgian king to appoint Leterme as premier for a second time

Brussels - King Albert of Belgium was to appoint Yves Leterme as the country's prime minister for a second time Wednesday following the departure of incumbent Herman Van Rompuy, who is to become European Union president. Political commentators said Van Rompuy and his cabinet were expected to resign during the course of the day, so as to allow Leterme to be sworn in as the new premier.

The move follows a political deal reached earlier this week among Belgium's fragmented ruling coalition parties.

A Flemish Christian Democrat, Leterme headed the Belgian government for much of 2008 after emerging as the surprise victor of national elections in 2007. Over 800,000 voters marked him as their personal preference, a Belgian record.

But his time in office was marred by vicious political infighting between the country's Dutch-speaking majority and French-speaking minority. He resigned in December amid accusations of political meddling over the sale of troubled bank Fortis, but was later cleared of any wrongdoing.

Belgian media said the new cabinet was expected to remain largely unchanged.

As well as trying to steer Belgium towards economic recovery, one of Leterme's biggest challenges will be to find a deal on redrawing the electoral boundaries of Dutch-speaking areas around largely French-speaking Brussels.

Meanwhile, Van Rompuy was expected to visit Riga and Helsinki next week.

The trip, which he had originally planned in his capacity as prime minister, will be his first since his appointment by fellow EU leaders as the bloc's first full-time president of the European Council, a post created by the Lisbon Treaty.

While the treaty comes into force on Wednesday, Van Rompuy is not due to assume office until January.

Somali insurgents order WFP to stop importing food aid

Mogadishu - Somali insurgent group al-Shabaab on Wednesday ordered the United Nations World Food Programme (WFP) to stop importing food aid, claiming it is damaging Somali agriculture. Half the Somali population - almost four million people - is dependent on food aid due to combination drought, conflict and rising food prices. The WFP is one of the major providers of assistance.

"We have decided that WFP must stop deploying food into Somali territory and purchase food crops from Somali farmers, which will be distributed to the needy," al-Shabaab, which controls much of south and central Somalia, said in a statement.

Al-Shabaab said that external food aid had damaged the agricultural sector by discouraging Somalis from growing their own crops and warned all local contractors to stop working with the WFP.

"We warn all Somali business contractors who have relations with this agency to stop dealing with it by January 1 and the WFP to empty all its warehouses in Somalia by the same date," the statement said.

A WFP spokesman in Nairobi declined to respond immediately to the ultimatum.

The insurgents did not say what the consequences would be if the agency and its contractors failed to comply with the directive.

Al-Shabaab is battling the weak Western-backed government in Somalia, which has been without effective leadership since the 1991 ouster of dictator Mohamed Siad Barre.

An estimated 19,000 civilians have died since early 2007 in the insurgency, which was prompted by neighboring Ethiopia's invasion to kick out the Islamist regime.

Kadhafi and Erdogan discuss Mideast, UN

TRIPOLI — Libyan leader Moamer Kadhafi on Tuesday held talks with visiting Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan on the Middle East peace process and other "international issues," news agency Jana said.

Kadhafi and Erdogan also discussed the reform of the United Nations, a constant theme of the Libyan leader who wants an end to the system in which five nations hold veto power.

In a speech to the UN General Assembly in September, Kadhafi denounced the Security Council as a "Terror Council" and blamed it for failing to prevent 65 wars since its creation in the aftermath of World War II.

Erdogan also held discussions Tuesday, the first day of an official visit, with his Libyan counterpart, Baghdadi Mahmudi, on ways to promote bilateral investment and commercial exchanges, Jana said.

The prime minister is accompanied by some 200 Turkish businesspeople and officials, the report added.

The two countries enjoy close economic ties and Turkish companies have in recent years won numerous infrastructure, housing and hydrocarbon contracts.

Greece, Cyprus reject Turkey's call for five-party summit on Cyprus

Exchanges between Greek prime minister George Papandreou and his Turkish counterpart Recep Tayyip Erdogan are raising some hopes of a new dynamic in negotiations on Cyprus, but Athens and Nicosia have made it clear that they do not accept Ankara’s call for five-party talks on the future of the island.

Cyprus has been divided since the 1974 invasion by Turkey, which continues to maintain a military deployment in the part designated "Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus" which Ankara is alone in recognizing.

Two factors have given potential impetus to engagements between Athens and Ankara on a number of vexed bilateral issues, including Cyprus – the election of George Papandreou as prime minister, seen as having a track record of making progress when previously foreign minister in negotiations with Turkey; and Ankara’s stated aspirations to EU membership, an issue due for discussion when the European Council meets on December 7 2009.

On October 30, Erdogan wrote to Papandreou with a series of proposals on solving bilateral disputes including Cyprus and the long-standing row about air space in the Aegean.

Media reports said that Papandreou had composed a reply, underlining that he welcomed Ankara’s readiness to solve the problems but, among other things, rejecting the idea of a multilateral summit on Cyprus outside the existing UN-backed process.

Turkish media said earlier that Ankara wanted a summit involving Greece, Turkey, Cyprus, the "Northern Cyprus" state on the future of the island, with some reports saying that Ankara also wanted the United Kingdom to participate.

On November 24, quoting Greek and Turkish media, Bulgarian news agency said that Turkey wanted to arrange a meeting of Greek and Turkish ministers to discuss Cyprus.

Ankara wants referendums to be held in Cyprus in early 2010 and in northern Cyprus before presidential elections there in April 2010, while the negotiations process would continue.

While there had been a positive sign in the October 9 meeting between Erdogan and Papandreou, Greece’s alternate foreign minister Dimitris Droutsas has made clear that Athens wants to see Turkey make genuine progress on a number of reforms if it wants to make progress in its EU hopes.

"(Turkey) must fully respect international law and Greece’s territorial integrity; it must respect human and minority rights; it must protect the rights of the Greek minority in Turkey;
it must respect religious freedoms and protect the Ecumenical Patriarchate rather than obstruct its operation; it must cooperate effectively on tackling illegal migration; it must contribute constructively to the resolution of the Cyprus issue. it must have good neighbourly relations with everyone; it must normalize its relations with the Republic of Cyprus and of course, since we’re talking about December, it must implement the Protocol on the Customs Union vis-a-vis the Republic of Cyprus. At the European Council, we will judge Turkey based on the actions it has taken or not taken – rigorously and objectively. All the options are on the table and no one should take us for granted," Droutsas said in a November 20 interview.

Meanwhile, talks between Greek Cypriot leader Demetris Christofias and northern Cyprus leader Mehmet Ali Talat have involved a review of issues discussed so far and areas of agreement and disagreement, Turkish media said on November 20. Talks between the two are expected to resume in early December.

Christofias has rejected the Turkish proposal for five-party talks, saying that it would mean an effective downgrade of the status of Cyprus at such talks.

Meanwhile, against a background of Cypriots being unable to access their property in the Turkish-occupied north, one of the several key elements of the dispute, the Greek Orthodox Church of Cyprus has announced court action because of inability to access and worship at churches and monasteries in the occupied north.

Canadian journalist, Australian photographer freed in Somalia

New York - A Canadian journalist and Australian photographer have been freed after 15 months of captivity in Somalia, Canada's CTV News reported Wednesday. In a telephone interview from Mogadishu, journalist Amanda Lindhout told CTV that a ransom was paid "by our families" to the kidnappers to free her and photographer Nigel Brennan.

"It's a long story. It's been sort of going on for the last couple of weeks, and tonight finally everything came together and the men who had kidnapped us turned us over to the federal government in Somalia. They have now taken us to a hotel and it sounds like tomorrow, we'll be in Nairobi," Lindhout said.

Lindhout and Brennan were kidnapped near Mogadishu on August 23, 2008. She said she was researching a story on internally displaced people in Somalia, when her vehicle was ambushed by a group of gunmen.

They "proceeded to take us around the country and keep us in different houses, extremely oppressive conditions," Lindhout said.

"I was kept by myself at all times. I had no one to speak to. I was normally kept in a room with a light, no window, I had nothing to write on or with. There was very little food. I was allowed to use the toilet exactly five times a day," she said.

Jordan reports three new swine flu deaths raising total to 14

Amman - The Jordanian health authorities on Wednesday reported three new swine flu fatalities which raised the country's total to 14 so far, according to a Health Ministry statement. The ministry said 87 people tested positive for the H1N1 virus this week, raising the total to 2,955 since the illness was first detected in Jordan last June.

At least 52 infected people are still receiving medical treatment in hospital, the ministry added.

Israel offers settlement suspension, Palestinians reject - Summary

Jerusalem/Ramallah - Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu Wednesday announced a 10-month moratorium of Israeli construction in the occupied West Bank, urging Palestinians to accept the offer and renew long-stalled peace negotiations. But Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas quickly rejected the offer, with his spokesman saying the Palestinians insisted on a total freeze, including East Jerusalem.

Washington welcomed the announcement as a "positive" step that could help move peace negotiations forward, although it noted the move fell far short of a full settlement freeze.

Abbas has made such a total freeze a precondition for resuming the talks that were broken off late last year as Israel headed into new elections, which brought the hardline Netanyahu to power.

Netanyahu said the moratorium meant Israel would build no new settlements, nor expropriate more land for the expansion of existing settlements.

Nor would he allow any new constructions to start within existing Jewish settlements for a period of 10 months - excluding "public buildings that are essential for the continuation of a normal life."

The construction of under 3,000 homes that had already begun within existing settlements would also be allowed to be completed.

Most importantly, Israel would not stop building in East Jerusalem - or Jewish neighborhoods built within the city limits but on occupied land, beyond the "green line" separating Israel from the West Bank.

"We will not stop the existing construction of homes. We will continue to build synagogues, schools and kindergartens ... Regarding Jerusalem, our sovereign capital, my position is well know. I won't put any limitation whatsoever on building in our capital," Netanyahu told a news conference in Jerusalem, speaking first in Hebrew, then in English.

"It falls short of a full settlement freeze but it is more than any Israeli government has done before and can help move to an agreement between the parties," the special US envoy for the Middle East, George Mitchell, told reporters Wednesday.

Eleven ministers of Netanyanu's inner security cabinet earlier voted in favor of the move, and only one against.

Those who voted in favor included ultra-right Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman, of the Israel Beiteinu party, Netanyahu's largest coalition party. Lieberman lives himself in a settlement near Jerusalem, but he said he wanted to avoid giving the Palestinians an "pretext" to avoid peace peace negotiations.

Spanish princess to divorce after 14 years of marriage

Madrid - Spain's Princess Elena, 45, eldest child of King Juan Carlos, will divorce her husband after 14 years of marriage, lawyers of the couple announced Wednesday. Elena married aristocratic banker Jaime de Marichalar, 46, in a lavish royal wedding in 1995 in Seville.

The couple separated two years ago. Their children, 11-year-old Froilan and 9-year-old Victoria, are reportedly living with their mother.

In 2001, Marichalar suffered a stroke that forced him to undergo rehabilitation.

The couple were expected to ask the Vatican to invalidate their marriage. After the divorce, Marichalar will lose the title of Duke of Lugo, which the king granted him upon his marriage.

Elena is fourth in line to the throne after her younger brother Felipe and his two children. Her divorce is the first in the Spanish royal family.

Felipe is married to former journalist Letizia Ortiz, while Elena's sister, Cristina, is married to former handball player Inaki Urdangarin.

Jethmalani's remarks on Wahabism prompt Saudi envoy to walk out of meet

The former Union Law Minister and senior lawyer, Ram Jethmalani, caused a flutter at an international conference on terrorism here on Saturday by alleging that Wahabism was responsible for terrorism, provoking a walkout by Saudi Arabia’s Ambassador to India Faisal-al-Trad.

In his address, Mr. Jethmalani, who is president of the All-India Senior Advocates Association, said: “Unfortunately in the 17th century, they produced an evil man in Saudi Arabia by the name of Wahab, who was concerned about the decline of the Muslim world, but he hit upon a wrong remedy.”

He alleged that the Wahabi terrorism instilled rubbish in the minds of young people to carry out terrorist attacks. When he said “India had friendly relations with a country that supported Wahabi terrorism,” Saudi Arabia’s Ambassador Faisal-al-Trad was seen walking out of the conference held at Vigyan Bhavan.

Adish C. Aggarwala, chairman, All-India Bar Association and joint organizer of the conference, said the Ambassador returned after Union Law Minister M. Veerappa Moily clarified that Mr. Jethmalani’s views were not those of the government.

Mr. Jethmalani said: “It was unfortunate that entire Islam as a religion was being blamed for terrorism. There are also Hindu terrorists and Buddhist terrorists.” He said he was a student of all religions, including Islam, and had the highest respect for the Prophet, who he said was a man of peace.

Describing the Non-Aligned Movement and Panchsheel as evil, he said India should align with the forces of good to combat evil forces. “India and its Foreign Ministers must learn to reassess the doctrines of the past. India’s foreign policy establishment should be courageous to shun the country’s relationships with its enemies.”

Mr. Jethmalani, who is representing the Anil Ambani group RNRL in the Ambani brothers’ gas dispute in the Supreme Court, said the government, in its arguments, had said it intended bringing gas from the country which supported terrorism, an apparent reference to the Iran-Pakistan-India gas pipeline project.

Taking exception to Mr. Jethmalani’s remarks, Mr. Moily said: “India’s commitment to the Non-Aligned Movement would not be shaken by any country or any individual. The views expressed by my senior colleague Mr. Jethmalani are not the views of the government.”

He said: “Terrorism cannot be attributed to any particular religion, as no religion teaches terrorism.” The government was against any attempt to link terrorism to a particular religious community, but it stood for “inclusive development” of all. In July, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh proposed a comprehensive convention on international terrorism at the Non-Aligned Movement summit in Egypt, and the government was committed to dealing with trans-border terrorism in that spirit, he said.

Singapore Chief Justice Chan Sek Keong described the Mumbai terror attacks as a “grave tragedy” against humanity. He called for better coordination among nations to deal with the menace, because no individual nation could fight it on its own. “The countries must exchange and share information with each other to tackle terrorism.”

Justice Awn S. Al-Khasawneh, judge of the International Court of Justice, asked Mr. Jethmalani not to make sweeping statements. He decried any attempt to link terrorism to any religion, thus creating a fear psychosis. “The message from this conference must not be fear-mongering, but tackling terrorism within the framework of law. Combat it with methods such as combination of cooperation among countries by preaching the message of law and peace rather than fear mongering.”

Source: The Hindu.
Link: http://beta.thehindu.com/news/national/article52666.ece.

Preparing for 'Eid in Gaza

By Rami Munir Almeghari

IOL, November 25, 2009 Muslims worldwide mark their second annual event with 'Eid Al-Adhaa. Capable adult Muslims follow this through the religious ritual of slaughtering a goat/sheep etc., in honor of the tradition set by Prophet Ibraham thousands of years ago.

For the past three years in the Gaza Strip, the situation has been increasingly difficult, as a result of the Israeli blockade imposed on Gaza, contributing to higher poverty rates, which make people unable to afford a sheep.

"I have been looking for a cheap goat since the early morning. As you see this goat costs 180 Jordanian Dinars ($US280), yet I still feel that I cannot buy it, and look for another," said 'Abu Razzaq Abu Etawi.

'Abu Etawi is a 65-year-old man, who spoke to me while looking for a goat at a local live stock market in the central Gaza Strip refugee camp of Alburaij. He and others circulate around the sheep and scapegoats, arguing with those selling the live stock at the market. Tradesmen, whether big or small, invite customers to look at their livestock.

"Since the early morning, I have been showing off my live stock to customers, but I have only sold 3 sheep out of the 40 I have. We do hope that with the flow of government employees' salaries soon, selling would improve", said Marwan 'Abu Medain, a live stock tradesman said.

Another trader from the Jabalya refugee camp in northern Gaza Strip has been staying at the market, in the hope he would be able to sell some of his live stock over there.

"The prices for the live stock are high and unaffordable by many residents. Trade is very tight under these circumstances. Look, the fodder for the live stock is sold for high prices for the needed quantities of fodder are not that available because of the borders closure during the past three years," said Ahmad Sa'adallah, merchant of live stock.

Some Meat is Even Unaffordable!

Kamel Abu Jazzar, a resident of Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip, has been unable to follow the Islamic ritual of slaughtering a sheep for the past few years.

"Unfortunately, I can no longer afford buying a sheep for 'Eid Al-Adhaa, because of the deteriorated humanitarian situation in Gaza," said Abu Zazzar, who is responsible for a 20-member family.

"Can you imagine, even if I want to buy some meat for my children in the 'Eid, I need at least 10 kilos, which cost me a lot of money, yet I cannot afford that, as the meat prices are so high. In the past few weeks the prices got lower, but they are still unaffordable", Abu Jazzar added.

Bad Business

In Gaza city, butcher Atiya Alshawa, owner of the well-known Alshawa butchery and restaurant in Gaza city, complained of the people's inability to purchase cow meat, saying that for the past three years, the situation has been difficult, as the majority of customers have turned to low priced frozen meat instead.

"I have been in business for almost 20 years now. In the past three years, only less than 30 percent of my customers were able to afford meat, while others could not buy it. For example, during the years before the current Israeli blockade, I used to sell at least 200 kilos of meat, but nowadays I can hardly sell 40 kilos a day", said Al Alshawa.

He added that the quantities of cows allowed in Gaza from time to time do not meet the actual needs of the population.

"With the shortage of meat, one kilo of meat costs about 45 shekels (US$12). Prior to the recent flow of cows into Gaza, one kilo of meat used to cost about 70 shekels (US$15)," said Al Alshawa.

On Thursday midday, which is the beginning of the weekend in Gaza, only few customers entered Atiya's shop. Ehab Ahmad, an accountant, complained of the high prices for meat.

"Before meat prices got high in the past couple of years, we in the family used to purchase at least 6 kilos of meat per week, but now we can only afford two kilos no more", added Ahmed, while buying some meat.

No Room for Independency

In the past two weeks, Israeli occupation authorities have allowed more than 4000 cows into Gaza. This was a precedent throughout a crippling Israeli blockade of the coastal enclave since June 2007. However, agricultural officials in the Hamas-ruled Gaza asserted that such quantities cannot meet the real needs of Gaza's residents especially that the 'Eid is coming soon.

"Since 2007, the Israeli occupation has denied access of live stock or cows into the region. Sources of protein in Gaza have been scarce, as the residents suffer from sharp shortage of live stock or cows for the past period", explained Dr. Ibrahim Alqedra, Assistant-deputy minister of agriculture in Gaza.

Dr, Alqedra said that the Israeli authorities used to allow some limited quantities of live stock of cows into the Gaza Strip throughout the past three years.

"Having been pressured by some international bodies, the Israeli occupation authorities have allowed only 4000 cows into Gaza in the past two weeks. Nevertheless, such quantities are inadequate, as we need 1500 cows and 20000 live stock for the four-days of 'Eid alone. Seventy per cent of the allowed quantities have been depleted already for households' use these days," he added.

Asked by IOL whether the agriculture ministry has attempted to depend on producing live stock or cows locally in order to compensate the widespread loss of such goods, Alqedra made clear:

"Actually, our capabilities have been limited because of the closure that has prevented regular or smooth entry of fodder, and other essential components for breeding live stock locally."

Commenting on entry of live stock through underground tunnels on the Gaza-Egypt border line in southern Gaza, Alqedra mentioned that even if there are some quantities that come through underground tunnels, they are limited and of poor quality.

For more than three years now, Israel has been enforcing a blockade on Gaza, sealing off 6 major border crossings, with frequent irregular openings, allowing some goods and commodities into the coastal territory.

According to local estimates, unemployment here in Gaza has hit a high of 65 per cent of Gaza's labor force, while poverty has hit the highest records, with an estimated poverty rate of more than 70 per cent.

"In previous years, I used to make good business during 'Eid Al-Adhaa, but nowadays, I can hardly sell any live stock", said Ahmad Sa'dallah, merchant of live stock at the central Gaza Strip's market!

Tel Aviv will not release Barghouti and Saadat

Middle East Monitor

November 25, 2009

Tel Aviv has officially announced that it will not release Marwan Al Barghouti, Fatah's Secretary General in the West Bank, and Ahmed Saadat, the Secretary General of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, in the context of the prisoner swap deal with Hamas, which is being negotiated through Egyptian-German mediation.

In a statement that was broadcast Monday night, Israel's Vice Prime Minister Silvan Shalom said that the Israeli government will not agree to release Al Barghouti and Saadat in the context of the prisoner swap deal with Hamas. He didn't provide further details.

In the same context, the Israeli "National Union" bloc expressed its opposition to the release of "terrorists" in the deal through which Israel aims at the release of the captive solider Gilad Shalit.

The bloc's head Yakov Katz said that Israel has to change its approach regarding kidnapping, stressing that if the Prime Minister changes his stance, he has to bravely face the bereaved families.

The vice head of the same parliamentary bloc, Arieh Eldad, said, "Netanyahu is crossing (former PM Ehud) Olmert's red lines. Netanyahu does not stop at red light; not even Olmert's red light." He added that the people will be shocked when they learn that murderers who are planned to be released in the context of the swap deal.

Why Afghans Dig Empire Graveyards

WARNING: Article contains propaganda!

* * * * *

November 25, 2009

Editor’s Note: Many Americans – and especially U.S. media pundits – view the world through a self-absorbed nearsightedness, acting as if the histories of countries only began when they did something that attracted U.S. attention.

In ancient lands like Iraq and Afghanistan, this American myopia has become very dangerous, by ignoring how and why these countries have resisted past instances of foreign imperialism, as Nicolas J S Davies notes in this guest article:

Afghanistan is known as the "graveyard of empires." But just why do empires keep sending thousands of their young people to die in Afghanistan?

American blood-letting in Afghanistan is generally explained in terms of the Taliban and al-Qaeda, but it was the earlier U.S. involvement in Afghanistan (in the 1980s) that led to the emergence of these movements in the first place, not the other way around.

Since Sept. 11, 2001, the U.S. government has used al-Qaeda’s terrorist attacks to justify much more than simply retaliation for 9/11 or even prevention of some future recurrence of 9/11. The attacks have served as an excuse for U.S. invasions and occupations (including Iraq which had nothing to do with 9/11), flagrant war crimes (including torture), and the largest U.S. military budget since World War II.

To accomplish this, the government has persuaded many Americans that their country faces a unique and unprecedented threat that justifies these extreme measures, not least the savage, eight-year war in Afghanistan.

A Dutch friend of mine tried to have a rational conversation with an American co-worker about 9/11 and the so-called "war on terror," and was told, "You can't possibly understand. Your country has never been attacked like this."

The puzzled Dutch woman had to ask, "Did you never hear anything about the Second World War?"

Of course, it is precisely the far greater dangers that people in other countries have faced in the past that enable them to put the threat of terrorism in perspective. Paradoxically, it is the relative safety of the United States that makes Americans so vulnerable to panic and propaganda when faced with such a limited threat.

In fact, the response of the U.S. government to the terrorist attacks has been exactly as Osama bin Laden and his colleagues intended. They did not expect to defeat the United States by knocking down a few buildings. Nor were they motivated by some irrational hatred of freedom.

Rather the attacks were designed to provoke a reaction that would expose the hypocrisy of the United States, laying bare the hard iron fist of militarism and violence within the soft velvet glove of Hollywood and soda-pop.

The explicit goal was to goad the American empire into using its vast arsenal of destructive weapons in ways that would gradually undermine its own economic and military power. Bin Laden and his second-in-command Ayman al-Zawahiri understood so much better than America’s deluded leaders that this would be a war the United States could not win.

But neither the opportunism nor the hypocrisy of U.S. policy explain why American soldiers are fighting, killing and dying in Afghanistan of all places.

While Americans think of the war in terms of 9/11 and terrorism, Afghans are not afflicted with such a myopic view. They see the war in the context of a much longer history that is shaped by their country's mountainous geography and strategic location between Iran to the west, Russia to the north and India and Pakistan to the south and east - and of their own ability to defend it against the world's greatest empires.

Or, as noted in the resignation letter of Matthew Hoh, an American diplomat who resigned in protest from his post in Afghanistan last September: "I have observed that the bulk of the insurgency fights not for the white banner of the Taliban, but rather against the presence of foreign soldiers and taxes imposed by an unrepresentative government in Kabul. The United States military presence in Afghanistan greatly contributes to the legitimacy and strategic message of the Pashtun insurgency."

Unlike Destroyer

At first glance, Afghanistan seems an unlikely destroyer of empires.

My friend Gregg spent seven years there in the 1970s, and he encountered nothing but the legendary hospitality of the Pashtun tribes-people. That's why he stayed for seven years. But then Gregg was a respectful traveler fleeing the violence of his native Northern Ireland, not a soldier in an occupying army.

Conventional military powers consistently underestimate the Afghans until they are over-committed and faced with humiliation.

The first modern empire brought down by the Afghans was the 200-year-old Safavid Empire of Persia. Local Pashtun tribes-people rose up in rebellion under Mirwais Khan Hotak in 1706 and expelled Persia from Western Afghanistan.

Mirwais's son, Mir Mahmud Hotaki, continued the war and sacked the splendid Persian capital of Isfahan in 1722. The Safavid dynasty was already economically weak, as Dutch merchant ships were sailing away with the bulk of regional trade from its formerly lucrative trade-routes. But the Afghans delivered the coup de grace.

In the early 19th century, as the Russian Empire expanded in the Caucasus and Central Asia, a weakened Persia gradually lost territory. The British came to see Persia as a Russian puppet and adopted a "forward policy," to keep Afghanistan as a buffer between British India and the expanding Russian Empire.

This effectively made Herat in Western Afghanistan the new outer frontier of the British Empire that Britain was committed to keeping out of the hands of Russia and Persia.

A Persian army besieged Herat for 280 days in 1837-1838. The failure of the siege exposed the weakness of Persia, which continued to disintegrate. But it also highlighted the vulnerability of Afghanistan, which was ruled at the time by different tribal leaders in Herat, Kandahar and Kabul, following the collapse of the Durrani dynasty.

So the British and their Sikh allies from the Punjab marched into Afghanistan to restore the former Amir of Afghanistan, Shah Shuja, who had been deposed and exiled in 1809.

This was the so-called First Afghan War. In a parallel with the present crisis, the British plan was to stay only as long as necessary to leave Shah Shuja in firm control of the country, but this proved to be impossible. He effectively ruled only Kabul, where he owed his position to the presence of British and Indian troops and officials.

The longer the British stayed the more they alienated the Afghans.

British officials brought their families to Kabul and established a small colony, complete with soirees and cricket matches. Their expenditures caused runaway inflation, which alienated the merchant class of Kabul, and a riot in Kabul in November 1841 soon grew into a full-blown rebellion against British occupation.

Mohammed Akbar Khan, the son of Dost Mohammed, the leader the British had deposed in Kabul, came down from the mountains to lead the rebellion.

The Afghans killed the British commander General MacNaghten, dragged his body through the streets of Kabul and put it on display it in the bazaar. His deputy General Elphinstone negotiated with Akbar Khan for safe passage to Jalalabad for occupation officials and their families.

Death Trap

Seven hundred British troops, 3,800 Indian troops and 12,000 civilians set out for Jalajabad, 90 miles away, on Jan. 6, 1842. At every pass through the mountains they were greeted by Afghan tribesmen waiting in ambush. They were all massacred or they froze to death long before they could reach Jalalabad.

The sole survivor, assistant surgeon William Brydon, rode into Jalalabad with a piece of his skull sheared off by a sword after being rescued by an Afghan shepherd. Asked for news of the British army from Kabul, he replied "I am the army".

The British sent another expedition to rescue some prisoners and take revenge on the people of Kabul, but they abandoned the effort to occupy or control Afghanistan. The Afghans had established their independence, and neither Britain, Russia nor Persia occupied Afghan territory for the next 36 years.

Mohammed Akbar Khan died, but Dost Mohammed and his other sons united Afghanistan and established mutually respectful relations with the British. Ironically, a truly independent Afghanistan served as a very effective buffer between the British and Russian Empires, and the British helped the Afghans to repel more Persian attacks on Herat in 1852 and 1856.

The Second Afghan war began after Sher Ali Khan, Dost Mohammed's third son, accepted a Russian diplomatic mission to Kabul in 1878 but then rebuffed a British one. This resurrected the recurring specter of British insecurity over Afghanistan.

Britain invaded again and occupied much of the country. Sher Ali died in February 1879 and the British persuaded his son Mohammad Yaqub Khan to sign the Treaty of Gandamak, which ceded Quetta and the Khyber Pass to Britain and gave Britain control over Afghan foreign policy in exchange for financial support.

The British army withdrew, but it left behind a diplomatic mission in Kabul. A few months later, the remaining British officials were all killed during a local rebellion.

The British invaded again. After 10 months of savage fighting, they defeated an Afghan army under Yaqub's brother Ayub Khan at Kandahar. The British finally withdrew, but this time they did not leave a diplomatic mission behind in Kabul to be killed!

Afghanistan became fully independent from Britain as a result of the Third Afghan War in 1919, which was an Afghan invasion of the North West Frontier province of British India.

Existential Concerns

Throughout the 20th century, Afghanistan's people confronted the same existential questions as people in other non-Western countries. What aspects of modern Western technology and culture could they adopt without losing what they valued in their own way of life?

As elsewhere, different classes within Afghan society answered this question according to their own interests, and the resulting divisions left Afghanistan vulnerable to opportunistic exploitation and intervention by foreign powers, including Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, the Soviet Union and the United States.

Amanullah Khan, the King of Afghanistan who won independence from Britain in 1919, admired the modernist regime of Kemal Ataturk in Turkey. He mandated compulsory elementary education, opened co-educational schools and formally abolished the burqa for women. But conservative tribal and religious leaders rebelled, and forced him to abdicate in 1929.

The last King of Afghanistan, Zahir Shah, ruled for 40 years (1933-1973) by pursuing a more gradual approach to modernization.

Afghanistan was still in the same position geographically, but the world around it had changed. Instead of being sandwiched between the Russian and British Empires, it was now wedged between the Soviet Union and independent Pakistan.

Mohammed Daoud Khan, the King's cousin, was his prime minister from 1953 until 1963. Daoud envisioned a reunification of the Pashtun territories on either side of the British colonial border between Afghanistan and Pakistan.

After this initiative was rebuffed by Pakistan, Daoud increasingly turned northward to the U.S.S.R. for both military and development aid.

In 1973, Daoud seized power from his cousin, but, instead of declaring himself King, he abolished the monarchy and became Afghanistan's first President. He began by renewing Afghanistan's relationship with the U.S.S.R. and used Soviet aid to build up the Afghan army.

But he soon broke with his Marxist allies in the Peoples Democratic Party of Afghanistan (PDPA), distanced Afghanistan from the Soviet Union, and began to improve relations with Pakistan, Egypt and other Western-oriented Muslim countries.

In 1978, a leading PDPA politician was murdered, leading the other PDPA leaders to believe that Daoud was planning to have them all killed. They staged a coup, killed Daoud and his family and formed the new Democratic Republic of Afghanistan.

The Marxists launched a radical secular reform program, banning burqas and forced marriages, closing mosques, redistributing land and abolishing farmers' debts.

Anehita Ratebzad, a female member of the Revolutionary Council, wrote in a New Kabul Times editorial, "Privileges which women, by right, must have are equal education, job security, health services, and free time to rear a healthy generation for building the future of the country ... Educating and enlightening women is now the subject of close government attention."

The U.S.S.R. quickly provided $1.2 billion to build roads, schools, hospitals and wells. The relatively small urban population welcomed the reforms and new development, but the interests of rural landowners and tribal and religious leaders were seriously threatened and they began to fund and support mujaheddin to commit terrorism and resist government forces.

A New Great Game

Seeing Afghanistan as a new front in the Cold War, the U.S., Pakistani and Saudi governments began to provide funds, training and weapons to the mujaheddin. A new version of the "great game" was under way.

For the Soviets, Afghanistan had lost none of its value since the 19th century. Their empire extended from Europe to Siberia, but nowhere did it reach southward to warm-water ports and the sea-routes to South Asia and Africa.

The United States now controlled those sea-lanes and had the same interest as Britain in the 19th century in keeping a buffer between the Russians and the ports of Pakistan. The establishment of a Soviet client state in Afghanistan offered the U.S.S.R. the tantalizing promise of fulfilling historic ambitions.

In funding, supplying, supporting and training the mujaheddin, U.S. policy-makers believed they had found a low-cost means to neutralize a serious geostrategic challenge.

U.S. President Jimmy Carter and his Soviet counterpart Leonid Brezhnev began this new "great game" as a proxy war, to be fought mainly by Afghans against other Afghans. But the conflict escalated dramatically after Ronald Reagan came to power in 1981.

Before withdrawing in 1989, Soviet forces lost 13,000 lives, while Afghan dead were estimated at about one million. Even after the Soviet departure, both Moscow and Washington continued supplying their client Afghan armies. [See Consortiumnews.com’s "Why Afghanistan Really Fell Apart."]

During the period, both the United States and the Soviet Union became engaged in Afghanistan because they had important strategic interests at stake, long before the emergence of the Taliban or Al Qaeda.

Since the end of the Cold War, the two main thrusts of U.S. foreign policy have been to impose military control over every part of the world where oil is produced or shipped; and to encircle Russia with a ring of U.S. allies and military bases from Poland to Georgia to Central Asia.

Afghanistan's position between Iran, Central Asia and Pakistan makes it a critical part of the pipeline map, potentially supplying Pakistan and India with oil and gas from Western operations in the Caspian Sea via the projected Unocal (now Chevron) pipeline through Afghanistan.

A strategically-located Afghanistan – allied with the United States and permitting American bases – would add an important link in the military encirclement of Russia, China and Iran.

On the other hand, if Afghanistan were aligned with Russia, it could equally well serve as a route for a pipeline to transport Russian oil and gas to Pakistan and beyond, and place Russian military or intelligence bases on the borders of Pakistan and Iran.

The U.S. interest in denying the Russians a pipeline route to the Arabian Sea and a client state on the border of Pakistan corresponds closely to Britain's fears of Russian expansion into Afghanistan in the 19th century.

Equally frightening from a U.S. point of view, even an independent Afghanistan that was free from U.S. or Russian influence could link Iran to China via yet another pipeline route.

Fear of Russia

It was fear of Russian ambitions that led Britain to keep intervening in Afghanistan in the 19th century, more than any ambitions of its own to rule this unconquerable country.

The United States is now reluctant to withdraw from Afghanistan because of similar fears, that Russia and/or Iran will move in to fill the vacuum, consolidating their dominant roles in the region, gaining extraordinarily valuable strategic and commercial assets and excluding U.S. interests.

But as in the mid-19th century, a genuinely independent Afghanistan could actually be a stable and effective buffer between the great powers.

As the Maliki government in Iraq has gradually slipped the American leash, it has awarded oil contracts to Russian, Chinese and South Korean companies as well as to Western ones, and a future Afghan government could ultimately do likewise, playing suitors for pipeline deals off against each other in the traditional fashion.

In Iraq, Western oil companies have welcomed partnerships with Asian companies that can supply cheaper labor and equipment and are not tainted by a role in the invasion and destruction of the country.

In fact, as commerce of all kinds has begun to flow again in Iraq, the United States has been delivered a powerful message that aggression and military occupation do not pay.

Total Iraqi imports grew from $25.7 billion in 2007 to $43.5 billion in 2008. But even as other countries' trade with Iraq has grown, exports from the United States to Iraq have remained flat at a meager $2 billion per year, most of that stemming from existing contracts with the U.S.-backed government.

By contrast, Turkey, which refused to support the U.S. invasion, has become one of Iraq's largest trading partners, with exports of $10 billion to Iraq in 2008. At a recent trade fair in Baghdad, an Iraqi executive explained that his construction company preferred to do business with Turkish firms because costs were lower and the Turks "are not an occupier."

Other countries that opposed the invasion, in particular Iran, France and Brazil, have likewise become major trading partners. On condition of anonymity, a European ambassador to Baghdad told the New York Times that his country's business relations with Iraq improved greatly once it withdrew its troops.

"Being considered an occupier handicapped us extremely," he said. "The farther we are away from that, the more our companies can be accepted on their own merits."

In some of the largest government contracts awarded since the invasion, the Iraqi transportation ministry recently awarded $30 billion to rebuild Iraq's railroads to a combination of British, Italian and Czech companies. And the Russian company RusAir has won an exclusive air cargo contract that has forced FedEx to terminate its operations in Iraq.

The Afghan Dilemma

As in other parts of the world, the U.S. effort to control events by the threat and use of military force is the central obstacle to a peaceful resolution for Afghanistan. The resurgence of the Taliban and other fighting forces in Afghanistan since 2006 can be directly traced to a massive escalation of U.S. air-strikes that year, even as numbers of U.S. casualties remained flat.

Only 98 American troops were killed in Afghanistan in 2006, one less than the 99 killed in 2005. And yet the number of air-strikes exploded from 176 in 2005 to 1,770 in 2006, a ten-fold increase.

The flat casualty figures make it clear that this was an escalation initiated by U.S. forces, not by the Afghan resistance. The year 2007 saw a further escalation to 2,926 air-strikes.

The successful response of the Afghan resistance to the American escalation was entirely predictable, but it appears to have surprised U.S. planners.

As in Iraq, the U.S. reacted to the failure of its puppet government to establish any legitimacy or control over most of the country with a massive escalation of military force, launching a desperate and bloody campaign to bomb and terrorize the population into submission.

This brutal escalation was an abysmal failure, leading directly to the brink of defeat, where U.S. forces now find themselves.

The so-called "surge" in Iraq provided cover for a similar escalation of aerial bombardment, from 229 air-strikes in 2006 to 1,119 in 2007, and 110 per month through most of 2008.

In Afghanistan as in Iraq (and Vietnam), despite endless lip-service to phrases like "winning hearts and minds" and "clear, hold and build," American military strategists cling to the core belief that their virtually unlimited capacity for violence can ultimately carry the day if enough legal and political constraints are removed.

Instead, the failures of U.S. military force and the success of "Anti-Coalition Forces" everywhere have confirmed Richard Barnet's Vietnam-era judgment that, "at the very moment the number one nation has perfected the science of killing, it has become an impractical instrument of political domination."

The United States military budget is higher than at any time since the Second World War because U.S. officials now regard more of the world as critical to U.S. interests than ever before and are determined to militarily control all of it.

Fortunately for people everywhere, this policy, if it even deserves to be called one, is neither realistic nor economically sustainable. But the whole world faces a critical period of transition as the U.S. military-industrial complex wrestles with the impossible challenge of an unconquerable world, experimenting with new weapons and strategies at the expense of countless lives and squandering resources that could otherwise be used to solve real problems.

Gabriel Kolko has been writing for decades about the failure of U.S. foreign policy to define its interests in a way that leads to achievable or manageable goals. Instead of defining and prioritizing its interests like any other country, the United States wreaks havoc in international affairs by clinging to virtually unlimited ambitions that it pursues on an opportunistic basis, with no regard for the impact on billions of human beings or the future of the world.

This has resulted in gigantic military budgets and a long series of unwinnable wars that the United States should never have embarked on, even from the amoral "realist" point of view that its deluded strategists aspire to.

Collapsing Empires

Afghans believe that it was they who brought down the Safavids and the Soviets. While the Afghans definitely did their part, the forces that led to the collapse of those empires were really much closer to home in both cases.

The real graveyard of the Soviet empire lay in the Kremlin, where absolute power insulated its leaders from the forces at work in the real world beyond its walls. The Afghan war was only one of many causes of discontent and dissolution within the Soviet political and economic system.

A quiet underground movement of non-violent popular opposition grew steadily beneath the surface until, in defiance of all conventional wisdom, it burst through into the light of day and the U.S.S.R. was quite suddenly dissolved.

The American people now face a similar crisis. It should be no surprise that a predatory political and economic system that won't provide healthcare, public services or economic opportunity to its own people is also resorting to war and militarism in a desperate effort to feed its insatiable appetite for growth and profit.

Since the 1970s, America's leaders have consolidated their political and economic power into effective monopolies. Most industries are dominated by two or three huge firms, and the political system is controlled by a similar duopoly.

Research on economic competition has established that such near-monopolies take on many of the characteristics of actual monopolies, stifling innovation and competition, destroying smaller businesses, exploiting employees, building inefficient bureaucracies and spending more on marketing than on research and development.

The U.S. health insurance industry employs 30 times as many administrative staff as it did in 1970. American firms spend $290 billion per year on advertising, almost $1,000 for every person in the country.

And corporate control of politics has systematically dismantled every mechanism that could restore effective management or halt the system's relentless drive to devour everything including itself. Looking for solutions from any of the leaders promoted by such a dysfunctional system is pure folly.

However, by learning from the example of popular movements in other countries throughout history, ordinary people in the United States can organize politically to elect very different people to public office and to stimulate mass public opposition to war, militarism and corporate politics.

It is the policy of the United States, not that of Afghanistan, that is filling the graveyards, and the great game that can stop the funerals will not be played out in Afghanistan but in Washington and in local communities all over the United States as Americans begin to organize for a post-imperial, post-corporate and more democratic future.

Source: Uruknet.
Link: http://www.uruknet.de/?s1=1&p=60456&s2=26.

LEBANON: Refugees Remain Skeptical of Nahr al-Bared Reconstruction

By Ray Smith

November 25, 2009

NAHR AL-BARED, Lebanon, Nov 25 (IPS) - More than two years after their refugee camp was destroyed in a war between the Lebanese army and the Islamist militant group Fatah al-Islam, Nahr al-Bared refugees Wednesday witnessed the start of the camp’s reconstruction. Their relief is mixed with skepticism, however.

Established in 1949, the Palestinian refugee camp of Nahr al-Bared in north Lebanon’s Akkar region has become home to more than 30,000 residents. In the summer of 2007, the camp was totally destroyed as the Lebanese Armed Forces (LAF) fought a group of well-equipped, mostly non-Palestinian militants who had taken over the camp.

During the 15-weeks of war, a local grassroots commission was quickly formed. By early 2008 it had worked out a master plan for the camp’s reconstruction, which was approved by the Lebanese government and the United Nations Works and Relief Agency for Palestine Refugees (UNRWA).

Rubble removal and the actual rebuilding works were delayed several times, however. In spring 2009, the foundation stone for the reconstruction of Nahr al-Bared was laid and ceremonial speeches were given, but the bulldozed area remained untouched. Again in the summer of 2009 work was to start, but the leader of the Free Patriotic Movement and former general Michel Aoun blocked the government decision to rebuild Nahr al-Bared and a two-month moratorium issued by Lebanon’s state council stopped all work on the ground.

In the early morning hours of Nov. 25, officials of the UNRWA, representatives of various Palestinian parties and community organizations - including displaced residents of Nahr al-Bared - guarded by Lebanese soldiers, witnessed and applauded as concrete for the basements of the first houses was poured from a truck.

Mahmoud Eshtawi, a father of two, has been living in a 18 square meter iron barracks adjacent to Nahr al-Bared for the last one and a half years. Currently, his only job is to drive the local kindergarten bus twice a day. He feels relieved: "We’ve been living in very difficult conditions in our barracks. What I’ve seen today makes me feel better and gives me hope that they’ll rebuild the camp." His sister Manal nods: "I’m happy. Although not knowing how long it will take, I have hope to return home. Our return is most important."

The various delays over the last two years have caused widespread pessimism among Nahr al-Bared’s refugees. "From the beginning until today, we’ve faced a lot of obstacles and delays.

Within the last two and a half years we could have rebuilt the camp," says Abu Khaled Freji. He’s been working with the Nahr al-Bared Reconstruction Commission (NBRC) since its establishment during the war. He explains that people who have been living in garages and barracks often felt betrayed and lied to, adding: "This is just the beginning, nothing more. Always we’ve swung between hope and frustration. Living in a very difficult and tiring situation, I’m cautious to feel extremely happy just because they poured some concrete today."

Access to Nahr al-Bared’s outskirts as well as to the construction site is still controlled by the LAF.

Amr Saededine, a journalist closely following developments in Nahr al-Bared points to the LAF as a big obstacle to the reconstruction process. "The army interferes in anything. Nahr al-Bared was declared a military zone. But this here is a civilian area, not an army base!"

Saededine says the LAF have over and over demanded changes in the master plan for the reconstruction. "In the beginning, the army didn’t want the houses to have balconies, for example. They also demanded the streets to be wide enough so tanks could enter."

The funding for Nahr al-Bared’s reconstruction is yet another open question. As for now, UNRWA has only been able to raise about a third of the 328 million dollars required. Last week, representatives of about a dozen donor organizations visited Nahr al-Bared. UNRWA officials have recently expressed their optimism that the beginning of the reconstruction and the forming of the new Lebanese government will attract more funding.

As a result of the LAF’s siege of the camp and the destruction of its businesses, unemployment has drastically spread in Nahr al-Bared.

Wednesday, many young males gained hope. Mohammad Eshtawi has spent the last two years mostly drinking coffee and sitting around, only rarely having a chance to work and earn some money. His mood has changed to cautious optimism. "We’ve been waiting for the start of the reconstruction for a long time. I hope that many of us will find work in the reconstruction," Eshtawi said. "It is a long undertaking. I hope me and my father will be employed there, too."

Message of Felicitation of the Esteemed Amir ul Momineen on the Eve of Eid ul Odha

Mullah Mohammad Omar

November 25, 2009

Message of Felicitation of the Esteemed Amir ul Momineen on the Eve of Eid ul-Adha.

In the Name of Allah, the Most Merciful, the Most Compassionate

Praise be to Allah Who honored His pledge and granted victory to His servant and exalted His army and lonely defeated all armed confederates. Peace be on the leader of Mujahideen and chief of the Messengers, owner of lofty behavior, our master and prophet, Mohammad and on his descendants and all his companions.

The Almighty Allah says in the Holy Quran:

(Such (is his state): and whoever holds in honor the Rites of Allah, (in the sacrifice of animals)

Such (honor) should come truly from Piety of heart.

In them, ye have benefits for a term appointed:

In the end, their place of sacrifice is near the Ancient House." S. 22:32-33

I extend my heartfelt felicitation:

-To all Mujahid people of Afghanistan,

- To the esteemed families of martyrs and prisoners who have been imprisoned by the enemy,

- To the gallant Mujaheddin,

-And to all believing masses of the Islamic Ummah on the occasion of this Eidul Odha.

I pray to Allah (SwT) to always bestow on this Ummah, the blessing of celebration of Eid ul Odha while they are dignified and having independence and grant them happiness, prosperity and success in these blessed days. Likely, I pray to Allah (SwT) to accept the pilgrimage of the pilgrims and accept in His Sight their worship and prayers. I also pray to Him to make this congregation (of Muslims), a factor for the unity of the whole Ummah.

While extending to you my felicitation on the eve of Eid ul Odha, I want to touch on some essential issues as regards the current situation:

1. To The Mujahid Nation:

I thank my Muslim people for their positive response to the Call of the Islamic Emirate (of Afghanistan) and for their foiling the American melodrama by avoiding participation in the American process under the name of elections. I firmly believe, if the Mujahid people remain constant in their multi-sided and honest help (with Mujahideen), the Almighty Allah will expose and thwart all conspiracies of the enemy one after another. It is due to your selfless sacrifices that the arrogant enemy is facing both defeat, jittery and disgrace. I hope you will continue your legitimate Jihad and struggle in the way of realizing your Islamic aspirations; help the sacrificing Mujahideen of the path of freedom and strengthen their ranks with your persons and wealth, particularly, show your protection and empathy with the blessed families of the martyrs and prisoners on the basis of your Islamic responsibility and break off all relations with the stooge Kabul Administration.

Those who have occupied our country and taken our people as hostage, want to use the stratagem of negotiation like they used the drama of elections for some time in order to achieve their colonialist objectives. The invaders do not want negotiation aimed at granting independence to Afghanistan and ending their invasion but they want negotiation which will prolong their evil process of colonization and occupation. However, the people of Afghanistan will not agree to negotiation which prolongs and legitimatizes the invaders military presence in our beloved country. Afghanistan is our home. No one will ever be ready to negotiate with any one else about ownership of one’s home --still more to give share in administration and control of the home and himself ends up becoming homeless, powerless and servant in his own home.

The foreigners have occupied the land of the Afghans by dent of (military) might and savagery. If they want solution of the issue, they should put an end to the occupation of Afghanistan. The invading Americans want Mujahideen to surrender under the pretext of the negotiation. This is some thing impossible. Otherwise, we have noble principles and vast experiences for solution of our internal differences and commencement of good conduct with the people of the world. Therefore, the stand of the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan as regards the negotiation emanates from our Islamic and national interests and is based on strong grounds.

2. To the Gallant and Honor-loving Mujahideen of the Front lines!

Your victory over the invading disbelievers is the result of the Divine help. If you seek His pleasure, as a gratitude to the blessing of Allah (SwT), and make the service of common people your objective, Allah (Swt) will bestow on you His ever growing blessing. The enemy will lose their hearts and you will have the honor to defeat the greatest colonialist power of this century. The signs (of this victory) have been appearing, if God willing.

Implement the injunctions of Allah practically and fully; constantly strive for unity among your ranks and keep away from discord and friction. Obey your chiefs in all affairs of Jihad; pay heed to the protection of public and national properties during the conduct of military operations, particularly during martyrdom-seeking operations, focus on the invaders and their lackeys and other important targets. It is the Islamic responsibility of every believing man to avoid causing casualty to common people. There is no justification in Sharia for murder and injury of common people, nor is there any room for such deed in our sacred religion.

The cunning enemy wants to attack people’s congestion places like religious centers, mosques and other similar places in order to malign Mujahideen. They also launch sanguinary attacks under the name of martyrdom-seeking operations to mar the good name of Mujahideen. The Mujahideen should be on guard against these activities of the enemy and fully avoid from carrying out any analogous activity. Well-being and prosperity of people should make your priority. Pay respect to elders and influential among the people and have compassion over the youngsters. Observe true justice when you are authorized to dispense to a deserving person his due right. Implement the Regulation of the Code of Conduct of the Islamic Emirate and observe other principles in order to ensure achievement of ever-increasing advancement in the affairs of Jihad. Make the most of experience, consultation and proven tactics in the military operations and other affairs of Jihad so that you will block the door of differences, complaints and losses. Similarly, take every precaution for the protection of your persons and make efforts in this way. Take care of the rights of those who surrender to you from the enemy side. This process (of surrendering to Mujaheddin) is now continuing.

The (former) communists formed tribal and unscrupulous groups under the name of tribal militia at a time when they were on the verge of defeat. The aim was to provoke internal conflicts, biases, racial differences and resultantly revenge themselves on (our) Mujahid people. The Americans and their allies too want to repeat the same failed experience. I am of the opinion that the recent efforts launched by the enemy will further malign it and will meet its defeat but you should make every effort to foil this last conspiracy of the enemy with the help of your Mujahid people. Mete out an exemplary punishment to those who are leading these mischief-making activities so that the dark and notorious history of the barbaric militias does not recur anew.

3. To the Ruler’s and Employees of the Puppet Administration of Kabul:

Stop oppressing and torturing your miserable Muslim people as a sign of your service and slavery to the non-believing invaders. The foreign invaders are not benefactors of the Afghan people. They are bent on wiping out the belief and holy places of this people and want to bring under their belly all our material wealth. They use the empty slogans of development and reconstruction of Afghanistan for realization of their illegitimate objectives. They have stashed away thousands of millions of dollars in their pockets which they had collected in the name of reconstruction of Afghanistan.

They want to keep our country entangled in a net of usury and interest according to a calculated conspiracy and are determined to subjugate our distinguished people.

I call on you all as I did last time and as per my responsibility, to put an end to your life of humiliation; shun hostility with your people and join the Mujahideen in the strongholds of pride, honor and belief instead of continuing with your present life of debasement. The enemy want to lay his gun over your shoulder and kill your countrymen but you should try, and by utilizing a proper opportunity, should rescue yourself from the fate of the pro-Britain Shah Shuja, pro-Russian Taraki, Amin , Karmal, Najib and their followers. If you honestly part ways with the evil, you will have success in this world and in the world to come.

You should understand that the epoch of dread of the Western colonialism has reached its end. Ground realities in our beloved country indicate that the invaders are about to escape. The caravan of truth is steadily approaching its rationale destination of victory. Mujahideen gain strength with the passage of time as they obtain good experience in political, media, and social fields. The invaders and their stooges’ moribund efforts are tantamount to erecting a mound of sand in front of the turbulent river of the Jihadic movement. These waves of resistance which have been originated from the midst of the honor-loving nation will wash away the torsos of the arrogant invaders, if God willing.

4.To Islamic Conference and the So-called Human Rights Organizations:

I call on the Islamic Conference and all organizations that have been established under the name of human rights protection to take steps for the prevention of civilian casualties caused by the invading forces of America and the coalition and should raise voice for the punishment of the perpetrators of this crime. Similarly, the invading forces under the leadership of America and the surrogate regime of Kabul have erected prisons under different names in all parts of the country in contravention to international principles. A great number of our miserable and innocent countrymen are brutally tortured there. All human rights organizations who claim being advocates of human rights should promptly and as per their responsibility, take steps to prevent occurrence of such brutal acts. Many of our prisoners have been martyred and maimed as a result of harsh conduct and torture in these prisons. If the human rights organizations are not willing to fulfill their responsibility in order to please America and the West, then they should renounce their title of human rights advocacy as a matter of moral obligation.

5. To Scholars, Writers and Men of Letters.

I urge independent scholars, teachers and statesmen to raise the legitimate cause of their miserable people in every hearing and forum and support it. Inform the countrymen and public of the world about the ground realities in Afghanistan through your write-ups and speeches. By waging a Jihad of words and pen, render thanks for the gift of talents bestowed on you by God. I call on all distinguished writers and journalists to play their due role in this critical juncture of our history when our land is under the blatant aggression. They should struggle in the field of media for the obtainment of independence of our Islamic country and a true Islamic system and, as per their responsibility, portray the impeachable facts so that they reach the ears of the public. With the power of belief and an unflinching ardor, make struggle to tell and unveil the truth.

I also urge the committed and sensible poets to preserve the Jihadic epics and acts of heroism of Mujahideen in their poems and literary pieces and generate emotions for independence, honor , national unity and Islamic resurgence. Not only that but further bolster them.

6. To Regional and Neighboring Countries:

Colonialist plans of expansionism of the West are in full swing in the region. The economic assistance, the mercenaries, the overt and covert ploys of the wicked companies have paved the way for (execution of these plans) and have set off hatred, discrimination and rivalries in the region.

In fact, this is an act against the humane values, justice, peace, rules of interstate relations and independence. If the regional countries still remain neutral versus the colonialist interventions of America and the vast military presence, the whole regional will be gripped by instability; the process of development will hamper and ultimately (the region) will become powerless.

We emphatically say that the strong determination and unwavering resistance (of Mujahideen) has eroded the capability of the enemy; has wiped out (their) shock and awe era and frustrated their wicked plans. Therefore, as a sign of gratitude for the sacrifices offered by our oppressed people, you should assist us in the cause of freedom of our country. The Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan wants to take constructive measure together with all countries for mutual cooperation, economic development and good future on the basis of mutual respect.

We consider the whole region as a common home against colonialism and, as a responsible force, want to play our role in stability and peace of the region in future.

7. To the Rulers of the White House and the Belligerent Americans:

The ground realities in Afghanistan indicate, the Americans and other allied invaders will certainly face a route --this is a defeat which can’t be averted by reinforcement and formulation of successive irrational strategies. You should understand that coercion and militarism has lost its splendor. You will not be able to subjugate the brave Afghan people with the power of your military might or the mantra of your devilish ploys.

The people, whom you have chosen for confrontation, have the honor of dismantling the arrogant empires. They have good capability and historical experience. Our believing people will not allow the Western colonialism to make our country a hotbed against our independence and vital values and aggressive designs against regional countries. These are the people who before you, have wiped out two empires – the British and Russians empires-- from the map of the world. They are holding the stronghold of honor and Jihad with strong determination and high morale against the demoralized and moribund troops. And on the basis of their belief, they are sure that they will gain victory and you will face defeat.

It is better for you to choose the path of rationale instead of militarism and put an end to the occupation of Afghanistan. You should understand your belligerent and aggressive policy will create for you so many enemies in the world which would make for you this world a bed of thorns. It will make your life harsh because the policy of coercion and tyranny is intolerable to all.

8. To the Public of Europe Particularly To the Freedom-loving People of the West:

Your colonialist rulers have invaded our country under the pretext of terrorism to augment the wealth of a few capitalists and spread the net of neo-colonialism over our country.

Every day, our youths, old men, women and children are martyred by your bombs and rounds of mortars. The invaders raid houses of our people at night. They destroy our green gardens, public properties, educational and commercial centers.

Countering this atrocity and aggression and the defense against it, is our legitimate and national right. We will use this right of ours with all our resources and sacrifices.

You should not fall prey to the misleading assertions of your colonialist rulers as they call this war, a war of necessity. This is a farce weapon in the hands of your rulers under the colonialist pretext of fight against terrorism. Thus they want to throw dust into the eyes of people. It is the demand of your conscience and moral duty to raise your voice for the prevention of this savagery.

We only want establishment of an Islamic system in our country which will protect rights of all individuals of this nation both men and women—a system depending on its own feet, fully independent, its internal and external policy being based on this Islamic principle: not harming others and not allowing others to harm us.

Fight against terrorism is an unjustified colonialist term fabricated by Pentagon and Washington. They want to colonize independent countries by using this proposition and bring under their belly natural riches and economic resources of these countries and trample on belief and religious traditions of these countries.

9. To the Islamic Ummah:

I remind Muslim brothers in every part of the world, of the words of Hazarat Omar Farouq (May Allah be pleased with him), the Great Caliph of Islam who said: "We are people whom Allah exalted by Islam. If we still seek exaltation in things other than Islam, Allah will humiliate us."

I advise you to fully abide by the sacred rules of Islam in order to achieve the magnanimity and grandeur of Islam. Help (your) oppressed Muslim brothers and use your wisdom, sagacity and sobriety in the cause of Jihad and confrontation with the tyrant aggressors, particularly, the chiefs of the Jihadic movements should ponder over all aspects during performance of affairs of Jihad; avoid disunity and splintering among your ranks and be heedful to the conspiracies being engineered to malign Mujahideen.

Avoid from deeds that cause great losses to Islam and Muslims instead of bringing in benefits to the Muslims. Focus your efforts on beating the invading, usurping enemy; do not engage in purposeless activities, rather turn your attention to the main objective.

All Muslims should remember in their prayers, the Mujaheddin-- the protectors of Islam and Islamic Ummah-- and extend them moral and Islamic support and should defend their cause as a legitimate Islamic cause. The Americans and its allies have been hammering out plans overtly and covertly to destabilize the Islamic world and provoke differences in the Islamic countries. Every Muslim should realize his/her arch enemy and be on guard against the conspiracies of the enemies.

To end, I remind all my Muslim brothers of this Divine verse (bearing) good news (of victory):

"Or do ye think that ye shall enter the Garden (of Bliss)

Without such (trials) as came to those who passed away before you?

They encountered suffering and adversity,

And were so shaken in spirit that even the Messenger

And those of faith who were with him Cried:

"When (will come) the help of Allah"

Ah! Verily, the help of Allah is (always) near!"

Al-baqara: V.124.

Mullah Mohammad Omar Mujahid

Source: Uruknet.
Link: http://www.uruknet.de/?s1=1&p=60458&s2=26.