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Saturday, December 26, 2009

Japan unveils record $1 trillion budget

Japan has unveiled a record 92.29 trillion yen ($1 trillion) annual budget designed to revive its recession-hit economy.

Japan's three-month-old cabinet approved the budget for the next financial year that begins in April amid growing worries about its mounting debt.

The budget reflects Prime Minister Yukio Hatoyama's campaign pledge to increase spending for child support and slash wasteful outlay for public works.

"This budget is to protect lives. I exerted all my efforts to secure budgets to support child-rearing, employment, the environment and welfare," Hatoyama told a news conference.

Hatoyama said that his government will work to support Japan's fragile economic recovery as a 1.4 percent growth was projected for Asia's biggest economy in 1010.

"I will do my best to avoid a double-dip recession," Hatoyama added. This year Japan's economy experienced its worst downturn in decades.

The government also plans to release a record 44 trillion yen in bonds that would cover a plunge in tax profits, as its public debt is already the largest in the world.

The record bond issuance could cause fresh worries over the country's mountainous debt.

Source: PressTV.
Link: http://www.presstv.ir/detail.aspx?id=114683§ionid=3510213.

Uzbekistan to vote, West remains silent

Uzbekistan is to vote in a parliamentary election Sunday as the country's four pro-government political parties are allowed to participate in the elections.

The candidates from pro-government political parties have expressed support for President Islam Karimov's government.

They will compete for the 150 parliamentary seats, so the election is expected to make the president's position even stronger.

Uzbekistan has no official opposition party. Global rights groups classify the country as one of the world's most repressive.

The West was once critical of Uzbekistan's rights abuses, yet there has been no mention of the subject ahead of the Sunday vote.

Sending monitors to Uzbekistan has not been broached, as the Asian state has promised to support Washington's so-called war on terror in Afghanistan, which was allegedly aimed to eradicate militancy and to arrest or kill militant leaders including al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden in Afghanistan.

With the Taliban gaining ground in Afghanistan and NATO supply lines from Pakistan under attack, the West is concerned about stability in Uzbekistan, which lies on the new supply route for cargo to US troops fighting the Taliban.

Source: PressTV.
Link: http://www.presstv.ir/detail.aspx?id=114682§ionid=351020406.

Iranian weightlifting champion passes away

Veteran Iranian champion of Asian and world weightlifting competitions Ramazan Ali Teymouri has passed away in northern Iran as a result of a heart attack.

Teymouri embarked on his career as a heavy weightlifter in his hometown of Babolsar in Mazandaran Province, and after a short time made a success of it.

The Iranian athlete collected numerous awards during various Asian and World competitions, among them three gold medals from Asian Weightlifting Championships: in 1980 in Seoul, South Korea; in 1983 in Damascus, Syria; in 1984 in Tabriz, Iran.

Following his glittering career as a weightlifter, Teymouri made the decision to remain associated with the sport and became a weightlifting referee.

Teymouri is survived by wife and a son, Reza, who is also a weightlifter.

His body will be laid to rest on Saturday in Babolsar with officials from the Islamic Republic of Iran Weightlifting Federation, veteran Iranian weightlifters, sportspersons, as well as his bereaved relatives in attendance.

Source: PressTV.
Link: http://www.presstv.ir/detail.aspx?id=114681§ionid=3510211.

Pakistan air strikes kill 10 in Orakzai Agency

Pakistani military planes have bombed suspected militant hide-outs in the Orakzai tribal area, south-west of Peshawar, killing at least 10 people.

The attacks by Pakistan Air Force fighter jets on Friday morning killed at least ten people, three women and four children among them, and injured around a dozen others.

According to local officials, the house of tribal elder Zikria Khan was razed to the ground during the attack on the Feroz Khel area on the outskirts of Orakzai Agency.

In a related development, security forces said they killed four militants in Mohmand Agency on Friday.

The Orakzai tribal district is where the Pakistani army believes many of the pro-Taliban militants have fled following a military offensive in South Waziristan which began in October.

While the Pakistani army claims that the militants are being forced to flee, locals say civilians are getting killed in these assaults.

The officials maintain that members of the Tehrik-i Taliban who had escaped from South Waziristan were living in the house. Independent sources said Zikria Khan and his family had nothing to do with militants and all the victims were civilians.

Source: PressTV.
Link: http://www.presstv.ir/detail.aspx?id=114684§ionid=351020401.

Algeria considers quotas to boost female political candidates

The possibility of mandatory quotas to give female Algerian politicians a better shot at power received wide discussion at a recent meeting of Maghreb political and legal experts.

By Fidet Mansour for Magharebia in Algiers — 20/12/09

The idea of boosting the Maghreb's number of female office-holders through gender-based quotas, particularly in Algeria, is sparking debate in the region's political and legal circles.

Algeria offers one example of how Maghreb women's electoral fortunes have declined. Despite a strong presence in the education, justice and health-care systems, Algerian women saw their number of parliamentary seats fall from 35 in 1962 to 30 in 2007.

Such concerns spurred political and legal experts to meet on Sunday (December 20th) in Algiers to raise awareness about women's role in politics and their relationship to the media. But much of the debate at the event centered on the quota question.

"The quota is the only democratic formula that will allow women to get into politics," Algerian feminist activist and author Nassera Merah said at the event, which was held as part of a project on women's political power in Algeria, Morocco and Tunisia jointly run by the UN International Research and Training Institute for the Advancement of Women and the Center for Arab Women Training and Research.

"[Quotas] are nothing new: They already exist in Sweden, Norway and France, and they've enabled countries like Rwanda and Ethiopia to have a good percentage of women in Parliament," Merah said during the meeting, which targeted female parliamentarians and municipal council members, as well as party activists and journalists.

Algeria's proposed gender-based quotas drew mixed opinions.

"In Algeria, the laws are not discriminatory," said Nadia Bellal, a legal consultant for the UNDP in Algeria. "They don't prevent women from entering into political contests alongside men; the obstacles lie at the implementation stage and in people's thinking."

In spite of such opinions, Algerian Solidarity Minister Djamel Ould Abbas last week announced a bill aimed at strengthening women's participation in national political life.

"Despite political openness, women's representation within elected institutions, namely Parliament and the local assemblies, is still very low," Abbas told the press on December 13th. "The bill, to be published in January, will enforce the provisions of Article 31a of the new Constitution, which stipulates that 'the State shall work to promote women's political rights by increasing their opportunity to access representation in the elected assemblies'."

Under the bill, Algeria would opt for a quota system with clearly defined proportions of electoral lists composed of female candidates.

The new law would mean "fairer representation of women in politics," said the minister, adding that any lists that did not comply with the quota would be rejected.

The new bill is "the result of sacrifices made by campaigning organizations", said the director of the Information and Documentation Center on Women's and Children's Rights, Nadia Aït Zai.

Even though the bill's basic idea has been welcomed by Algerian political parties, some female politicians have their doubts.

"The quota system can't fix the problem of parity and equality in terms of access to political posts," said Louisa Hanoune, leader of the opposition Labor Party, which boasts nine women MPs.

Hanoune, who favors "skills" rather than quotas as the basis for political advancement, said "women must not appear on an electoral list unless they have the necessary skills and abilities. And if they do, then there's no need for us to limit their numbers."

For Algeria's 2012 elections, some political parties are already thinking of ways to boost women's representation in Parliament. But quotas or no quotas, ordinary Algerians who spoke to Magharebia seemed in favor of women playing a more prominent role in politics.

"There must be no obstacles put in the way of electing women to posts of political responsibility," said Zohir, 35.

Karima, 40, said women "must decide their own destiny. They must be free to enter or shun politics, as they wish."

Source: Magharebia.com
Link: http://www.magharebia.com/cocoon/awi/xhtml1/en_GB/features/awi/features/2009/12/22/feature-03.

Tunisian advocates for kids aim to unplug 'digital violence'

Parents and society need better tools to shelter young people from the onslaught of violent images in video games and the new media, say children's rights advocates.

By Jamel Arfaoui for Magharebia in Tunis – 22/12/09

The internet and video games are exposing young Tunisians to virtual violence that is seeping into the real world, according to children's advocates who met last week in Tunis to strategise on solutions.

"Digital violence is one of the most serious forms of violence practiced against children," the director general of the Observatory for Media, Training, Documentation and Studies on the Protection of Children's Rights, Adil al-Hentati, said at the December 17th event.

The conference gathered officials from various UN and Tunisian child welfare organisations to devise better ways to protect children from increasing rates of violence, which some say have been spurred by the emergence of the new media.

Presenters at the event also introduced a national program for combating violence against children and disseminating a culture of non-violence.

The program "is ...part of our efforts to enhance the protection of children so that they may not turn into a source of violence", said Tunisian Minister for Women, Family, Children and the Elderly Sarra Kanoun Jarraya as she delivered the conference's opening address. She said the proposed program will implement recommendations made by the UN secretary general in 2005.

The conference covered three main themes: promoting prevention of violence, strengthening the capability of civil society to prevent violence and enhancing the means of monitoring violence for research and study.

"The modern means of communication plays an important role in the spread of violence and turning scenes of violence into a normal thing for children," said Salwa Mallaf, who works to protect children's rights.

In Tunisia, schools recorded more than 2,000 cases of violence in the 2004-05 academic year.

"Children now exchange scenes of killing and violence, usually accompanied by sarcastic comments, as if violence, killing and scenes of blood no longer affect their feelings," she added. "This is an extremely serious thing, and all the components of society have to deal with it before it's too late."

UNICEF's Tunisia representative, Maria-Luisa Fornara, said there are "275 million children who are exposed to different forms of violence" all over the world.

Fornara welcomed Tunisia's efforts to prevent violence against children by implementing national programs. She also called for "strengthening the prevention side, given the close link between the violence against children and their behaviors in adolescence and middle age".

However, not all violence carried out by children is a result of the internet and video games, nanny Basma Mallakh pointed out.

"Family factors represent a main reason for the spread of the culture of violence among children," she said. "These factors include depriving children of parents' care and love at a very early age, family disputes, family disintegration and discrimination in the treatment of children."

A 2008 report by the World Health Organization claims that 150 million girls and 75 million boys under the age of 18 are victims of sexual violence. Between 133 and 275 million children are exposed to domestic violence, according to a 2008 International Labor Organization report.

Source: Magharebia.com
Link: http://www.magharebia.com/cocoon/awi/xhtml1/en_GB/features/awi/features/2009/12/22/feature-02.

Few Moroccan imams preach extremist politics, ministry contends

All 20,000 of Morocco's Friday-prayer leaders have pledged to fight fundamentalism, according to Islamic Affairs Minister Ahmed Toufik.

By Sarah Touahri for Magharebia in Rabat – 22/12/09

Moroccan imams who breach preaching guidelines to sermonize on political or fundamentalist topics are few in number, according to Moroccan Islamic Affairs Minister Ahmed Toufik.

"Several newspapers recently uncovered transgressions in a number of cities," Toufik told Parliament on December 15th in response to questions about the alleged use of Friday sermons to advocate extremism.

But the minister added that while some imams "have used sermons given in mosques for political ends", no more than 30 cases of misconduct had been recorded annually for the past seven years.

"Although some irregularities occur, they are the exception rather than the rule," said Abdelbari Zemzemi, an MP and imam. He said the regulations aim to keep the political and religious spheres separate.

"If an imam stands as a candidate, he is forbidden to preach on Fridays. Mosques cannot be exploited as platforms from which to convey political messages," Zemzemi added.

According to Toufik, of the 45,000 imams in Morocco, all of the 20,000 who conduct Friday services have pledged to eliminate fundamentalism.

Toufik insisted that his ministry keeps a very close watch on sermons, and correct errors by raising awareness and providing training.

Since the May 2003 terrorist attacks in Casablanca, the government has been more wary about the messages imams spread during Friday prayers, said political science professor Fouad Madani. Training imams and monitoring sermons are now part of the government strategy.

"The post of imam is no longer assigned to all those who come first," Madani said. "Over the past few years, young graduates have had the values of citizenship and tolerance instilled into them as part of efforts to promote professionalism and modernise the profession, as well as reduce the risk of fundamentalism."

The ministry launched its imam-training program in June to better prepare preachers for their public and clerical roles, after a 2008 survey conducted by the ministry discovered that 82% of imams had no formal religious training.

Under the new monitoring structure, if an imam preaches on a taboo topic, he is summoned by the local council of ulemas and is reprimanded.

Moroccans agreed that extremist imams are hard to find.

Mourad Boulaâlej, a 45-year-old from Taza, said he had never heard an imam deliver a political or fundamentalist speech. He acknowledged that his relatives had told him about imams delivering controversial speeches, but dismissed it. "Moroccans know how to separate things," he said.

"I've never seen imams deliver an obscurantist or terrorist speech," said Sara Ktiri, a 21-year-old political science student who has been attending Friday prayers for four years.

"On the contrary, sometimes the speech is very official because it comes from the minister of Islamic affairs," she added.

Source: Magharebia.com
Link: http://www.magharebia.com/cocoon/awi/xhtml1/en_GB/features/awi/features/2009/12/22/feature-01.

Saudi Arabia- Family visa now linked with salary

(MENAFN - Arab News) The Foreign Ministry will issue permanent resident visas for wives and children of expatriate workers in the Kingdom, without considering their profession, Al-Yaum Arabic daily has reported.

"The ministry's office in Riyadh issued such recruitment visas for three days last week and stopped it temporarily. It is expected that the ministry would resume the service next month," a ministry source told the paper.

The news is a relief for many of the seven million expatriate workers, who are unable to bring their families on resident visas due to their profession written on their iqamas.

The Foreign Ministry and the Recruitment Office only issued permanent resident and visit visas to those in white-collar jobs such as engineers, doctors and executives. The Al-Yaum report said the ministry would only look at the financial status of the applicant. "The family visa is no more linked with profession," the source said. He said the ministry stopped processing applications in order to implement the new criteria. "This is a great news for thousands of professionals like me who are unable to bring their wives and children to the Kingdom because of the profession in iqama," said Shabeer Ali, a computer engineer based in Jeddah.

Ali said he has been trying to bring his family to the Kingdom ever since his marriage. "Until now I could not, because they look at the profession on my iqama, which is an electrician. I had presented my Masters degree certificate in computer science attested by the Saudi Embassy, as well as my salary certificate, but they rejected my application," he said.

He said he had never known about this problem before coming to the Kingdom.

"I know that there are thousands of expatriate workers who are highly qualified and earn good salaries but cannot bring their families because of their profession. I take this opportunity to thank the Saudi government for changing this policy and consider it a great blessing from God." The Arabic daily said the ministry's branches in Jeddah and Dammam have not implemented the new system as they have not been informed about the changed criteria.

Over the past three weeks, the ministry's Riyadh office was issuing visit visas to all expatriate workers for their families without considering their profession.

K.C.M. Abdullah, a freelance journalist based in Riyadh, told Arab News that hundreds of people, including laborers, farmers and construction workers had benefited.

"Now they have stopped issuing visas to drivers and other house servants," he pointed out. Some people claimed the visa rules were relaxed to mark the return of Crown Prince Sultan to the Kingdom after a yearlong medical trip.

Abdullah said the ministry used to accept around 800 applicants daily, adding over 1,000 people stood in the queue from early in the morning to present their applications made through the ministry's website.

He said the revised service started a week before the Eid Al-Adha holidays.

After hearing the news of the relaxation in visa rules a large number of Indian workers approached the Indian Embassy in Riyadh and consulate in Jeddah to include names of their spouses in their passports.

Indian missions are now issuing new passports after including spouse names. People who want to include the names of spouses should attach attested marriage certificates. Those who have married recently should register their marriages by producing relevant documents.

By P.K. Abdul Ghafour

Source: Middle East North Africa Financial News (MENAFN).
Link: http://www.menafn.com/qn_news_story_s.asp?StoryId=1093291547&src=MOEN.

Saudi Arabia- Syrian cries for help to get rid of sponsor

(MENAFN - Arab News) The mental torture caused by a sponsor has resulted in the break up of a Syrian expatriate's family life and put him in deep trouble.

Hussam Nawaf, the expatriate, seeks assistance from philanthropists to provide him with SR20,000, the cost of regularizing his residence permit and thus escape from the clutches of his tormentor and save his family life. If Nawaf fails to find the money in two months he could be deported, he said.

The Syrian expatriate's agony is further deepened after his Saudi wife filed for divorce from him because he was not paying for her and their son's upkeep.

"How can I pay her as my employer does not pay me anything?" he asked.

All his troubles started when he started working with his present sponsor four years ago.

"When I started working with him, he asked me to buy a car for him in installments but in the name of his (sponsor's) wife. I must pay the monthly installment of SR805, which he will deduct from my salary for five years. After that period its ownership will be transferred to me."

Nawaf continued: "The work on the project I was working for the Saudi ended last year after four years. In the meantime I married a Saudi woman and had a child."

About that time the validity of Nawaf's resident permit also came to an end. Nawaf requested to transfer his sponsorship to his wife while renewing his iqama.

"But the sponsor refused my request. I complained to the Labor Office against the sponsor. After refusing to appear before the Primary Dispute Settlement Commission in Makkah several times, the sponsor finally responded to the commission's summons and stated that he never employed me.

"Although we had not made any written contract at the time of my employment, I had an introduction letter signed by him saying that I was his employee with a monthly salary of SR 3,000. the commission took this letter as a proof and ordered him to transfer my iqama with a condition that I should do it in two months or I will be deported."

However, the sponsor insisted that he would consent to the transfer of sponsorship only on condition that the worker waives his claim for salary arrears and the end of service benefits, he said.

Now his problem is that he does not have money, he said. The total cost of his sponsorship transfer, renewal of iqama and passport added up to SR20,000, he said.

"My woes are further deepened with my wife's present stance. She has filed a divorce petition against me. I don't blame her because I have not paid her anything for quite some time.

"Also I have not been very nice to her because of my disturbed frame of mind. She is further alienated from me because I could not care for our mentally disabled son. All our problems are basically because my sponsor did not pay me my salaries over the past four years. He owes me SR124,000 in arrears at the rate of SR3,000 a month for four years after deducting the monthly installment for the car."

The sponsor took away the Syrian's car because it was registered in the name of the sponsor's wife, he said.

By Badea Abu Al-Naja

Source: Middle East North Africa Financial Times (MENAFN).
Link: http://www.menafn.com/qn_news_story_s.asp?StoryId=1093291558&src=NLEN.

Saudi King pardons two Egyptian doctors

(MENAFN - Arab News) Two Egyptian doctors sentenced to prison and lashes in the Kingdom for illegally selling pharmaceuticals have returned home after being pardoned by Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques King Abdullah, the state news agency reported Friday.

The two arrived in Cairo late Thursday, the MENA news agency said. The royal amnesty came following a meeting between King Abdullah and President Hosni Mubarak in Riyadh on Tuesday.

Egyptian media welcomed the king's decision. Raouf Amin Al-Arabi and Shawki Ibrahim, the doctors, thanked King Abdullah and President Mubarak for the gesture.

"It was the most happy moment in my life when I heard the news of the royal pardon," Ibrahim said after arriving in Cairo on a flight from Jeddah. He said the interior minister issued an order to release us within 24 hours.

Al-Arabi was accused of driving a Saudi woman "to addiction" and was initially sentenced in Nov. 2008 to seven years in prison and 700 lashes. Following his appeal, the Saudi judge upheld the conviction and more than doubled the penalty � to 15 years in prison and 1,500 lashes. Ibrahim was sentenced to 20 years in prison and an unspecified number of lashes for selling drugs and having "illicit affairs" with his female patients. The arrest of the two doctors created an uproar in Egypt. At the height of the uproar, the Egyptian government briefly banned Egyptian physicians from working in the Kingdom.

The work ban was lifted after a month following what Egypt described as assurances from the Saudi government that Egyptian doctors would get contracts guaranteeing treatment equal to that of their Saudi counterparts.

Saudi Arabia is home to more than seven million foreign workers including a large number of Egyptians employed in sectors such as oil, business, health and engineering. The Health Affairs Department in Makkah said in a statement published in November 2008 that the charges against the two doctors' included theft, trafficking and misuse of narcotics.

Source: Middle East North Africa Financial Times (MENAFN).
Link: http://www.menafn.com/qn_news_story_s.asp?StoryId=1093291543&src=NLEN.

Burundians receive ID cards ahead of vote

The Burundian government plans to give identification cards to its nationals ahead of the country's presidential elections slated for May 2010.

The project, supported by the United Nations Development Program, will see close to a million Burundians over 18 years of age get the cards for free.

Poverty in the east African nation that is recovering from civil strife has prevented many citizens from acquiring the vital document.

"We believe this card will make it possible for Burundians to exercise their civil rights to vote in the coming elections," said the country's Interior Minister Eduoard Nduwimana.

Burundi has had chaotic elections since it plunged into civil strife following the death of Cyprien Ntaryamira, the former head of state, in a plane crash, in April, 1994.

Scientists say magma building up in Mayon volcano

By BULLIT MARQUEZ, Associated Press Writer

LEGAZPI, Philippines – Fewer earthquakes have been recorded in the Philippines' lava-spilling Mayon volcano, but magma continues to build up inside and any lull in activity could be followed by a bigger eruption, scientists said Saturday.

A hazardous eruption remains possible within days, and residents who live near the volcano's slopes should not be misled into leaving the evacuation centers that they spent Christmas in and venturing back to their homes, volcanologist Ed Laguerta warned.

"The number of volcanic earthquakes has gone down, but this is just part of the eruptive cycle of Mayon," he said.

The number of quakes decreased from 871 recorded during the 24-hour period ending Friday morning to 406 recorded during the next 24 hours, the Philippine Institute of Volcanology and Seismology said.

Laguerta said instruments showed the volcano remained inflated despite having spilled more than 26 million cubic yards (20 million cubic meters) of lava over the last two weeks. That means the lava being released is being replaced by magma coming from beneath the volcano.

"We are looking at not only at what Mayon is presently exhibiting, because that fluctuates. We are also looking at its past characteristics," he said, recalling that in 1984, a four-day lull was followed by Mayon's sudden, big eruption.

More than 47,000 people living within a 5-mile (8-kilometer) danger zone around the volcano have fled to evacuation centers. But soldiers are still trying to evacuate several hundred residents who have refused to leave their homes despite the danger, said Capt. Razaleigh Bansawan, a military spokesman.

The 8,070-foot (2,460-meter) volcano known for its perfect cone has erupted nearly 40 times over 400 years, sending people packing for months at a time. But never has it happened during the all-important Christmas celebration, when Filipinos gather with family and friends for traditional meals and songs.

Evacuation centers have been the scenes of daily entertainment for the past week as officials try to keep frustrated residents from sneaking back to their homes. Food, clowns, gifts and games brought cheer to evacuees who spent Christmas in the crammed centers.

Pakistan's Turmoil Endangers Its Archaeological Treasures

(WARNING): Article contains propaganda!

* * * * *

In the mountains and valleys of Pakistan's Northwest Frontier Province, palace ruins and crumbling Buddhist monasteries dot the hills above war-torn locations such as Mingora, Peshawar and the Swat Valley. These magnificent ruins are all that's left of the Gandhara kingdom, which flourished from the 6th century B.C. to the 11th century A.D. It vanished under the pressure of war and conquest, re-emerging only in 1848 when relics and ruins were re-discovered by the British archaeologist, Sir Alexander Cunningham.

Now, Gandhara is in danger of vanishing a second time from the same old threats. Just as the Afghan Taliban destroyed the 1,500-year-old statues of the Buddha in Bamiyan, Afghanistan in 2001, militants in Pakistan have attacked the Buddhist heritage in Pakistan, driving away foreign research teams and tourists, forcing the closure of museums and threatening the integrity of valuable digs. "Militants are the enemies of culture," says Abdul Nasir Khan, curator of the museum at Taxila, one of the country's premier archaeological sites and a former capital of the Gandhara civilization. "It is very clear that if the situation carries on like this, it will destroy our cultural heritage."

The Gandhara kingdom and its art are important because it shows the impact of Hellenistic influence brought by Alexander the Great and his Macedonians. Likewise Gandharan Buddhist art reached as far as China, Korea, and Japan. After it became part of the pre-Islamic Persian Empire, Gandhara's culture went on to influence artistic developments in the Middle East. Peshawar, Swat and much of northern Pakistan lay astride a portion of the old Silk Road, the ancient highway that transported riches between the east and west. Indeed, the Jehanabad Buddha looks out over a stretch of the old path. Later, in the 7th century, Swat Valley was the birthplace of Tantric Buddhism, and Chinese pilgrim Xuanzang described the valley as home to hundreds of Buddhist sculptures, monasteries and stupas. Only a fraction has been excavated so far.

Taxila should be a showcase of that civilization. Today a town about 20 miles northwest of Islamabad, it was a center of Buddhist learning, a must-visit for travelers like Xuanzang seeking Buddhist scripture and wisdom. Formerly part of the Persian Empire, Taxila was one of Alexander's conquests and is today a World Heritage Site. The museum there, started in 1918, is one of Pakistan's finest, with more than 4,000 artifacts from the Gandhara civilization. But no one comes to visit much anymore. Nasir Khan says there have been warnings of a possible attack on the museum, and some security procedures have been put in place, but he said they're insufficient.

The anxiety is palpable. In the last five days alone, Taliban militants have killed more than 100 people in near-daily bombings across the country in Peshawar, Rawalpindi, Lahore and now Multan. Foreign archaeological teams are being told not to come, warnings issued by their own governments or their institutions because of fear for safety. Local diggers can't get out to crumbling sites for security reasons as well.

The lack of archaeologists at many sites has led militants and vandals to close in. Kashmir Smast, about 70 miles northwest of Islamabad, is a Hindu site, not Buddhist, and thus unusual for the area. "But there's no preservation, no one to look after the site," says Dr. Nasim Khan, professor of archaeology at the University of Peshawar. "The local people are damaging the site because of illegal diggings." In Swat, the Taliban have long attempted to destroy the Buddhist heritage of the region. In October 2007, as militants cemented their hold on the former tourist area, the Taliban dynamited the face of the Jehanabad Buddha into oblivion. The 23-foot-high carving of the seated Buddha, dating from the 7th century, is regarded as the second most important Gandhara monument after the Taliban-eradicated Bamiyan Buddhas.

Dr. Fazal Dad Kakar, the director general of the Department of Archaeology and Museums, played down the damage done to the carving as the work of local villagers, not Taliban. Regardless, it shows that even without a direct threat from Islamic militants, the lack of security means important sites are unprotected and ill-preserved and can fall prey to vandalism and looting.

Robert Knox, who was Keeper of the Department of Asia at the British Museum until 2006, gave up on coming to Pakistan in 2001 after 9/11. He was working in Bannu agency on the border of Waziristan. Today's it's an active war zone. "We were in Bannu for a very, very long time," says Knox, who excavated there from the mid-1970s to 2001. "We scratched the surface. There's still an enormous amount to do and sites are lost more or less daily. It's almost a free-for-all, particularly in difficult war-like areas."

Foreign teams bring a lot of money for conservation and excavating, money the cash-strapped Pakistani government doesn't have to spend on preserving antiquities when it has a war to fight. The University of Peshawar's Khan says that there are usually excavations on the outskirts of Peshawar and Taxila, but even he can't go to these sites anymore, much less foreigners. To his knowledge, he said, there are no foreign teams scheduled to come to Pakistan. "We are not taking the risks to bring them to the sites," he says. "We need their help, we need to involve them. But unfortunately, that's not been happening for the last two years."

Foreign contracts also often include a commitment to help preserve and develop a site after the initial research is done. Without that, excavations are being started and then left open when local funding dries up, Khan says. "We don't have the resources to protect each and every site in Gandhara," he explains. "We don't have any resources to make it a model site for tourism, which would create jobs and bring in money."

Speaking from his home in London, Knox says that it would be catastrophic to lose Gandhara and other ancient civilizations that sprung up along the Indus Valley to direct threats from militants or neglect caused by the security vacuum. "Journalists can't even go there, quite apart from people who want to do field archaeology," he says of the sites near Waziristan and other war-ravaged locations. "I don't think I shall ever see those places again."

Millions of Muslims commemorate Tasu'a

Mourners throughout the world gather today to commemorate the anniversary of the martyrdom of Prophet Muhammad's grandson.

On the ninth of Muharram, known as Tasua, mourners beat their chests and scourge their backs in their grieve over the suffering and martyrdom of Imam Hossein (PBUH), along with 72 of his loyal companions in a place still called Karbala, in Iraq, in 680 CE.

Poems are recited, litanies chanted, and addresses once again break the hearts of those hearing them as the tragic massacre of Imam Hossein (PBUH), and his deceased companions is called to mind.

Imam Hossein (PBUH), his family and his companions offer a sublime example of human resistance against oppression and injustice, and not exclusively for the Muslim nations, but for all of mankind.

Today, with a mixture of wonder, sorrow, and admiration, the mourners listen to the tales of resolute courage, generous self-sacrifice and the infinite patience of Imam Hossein as he faced severe hardship for the attainment of a sacred goal.

Imam Hossein (PBUH) not only saved Islam from deviation, distortion and corruption by the forces of apostasy and oppression, but he also revived the institution of martyrdom. In a world of cowardly men, who loved life in this physical world, Imam Hossein achieved martyrdom because of his devotion to eternal truth.

Source: PressTV.
Link: http://www.presstv.ir/detail.aspx?id=114677§ionid=351020101.

PKKH Quaid's Day Special

Sumayya Chawla | Team PKKH
Jinnah: The Man of the Hour

Much has been written about our Quaid, Muhammad Ali Jinnah, about the amazing leadership qualities that he possessed and the determination and strength with which he fought for the attainment of an independent State for the Muslims of the subcontinent. His personality and his grace won the admiration of friends and foes alike.

However, there is a section of Pakistani society that deems Jinnah irrelevant to the present day Pakistan and does not miss any opportunity to belittle the impact that this great man had on humanity. There is a reason for this charade; Jinnah is a threat to the self-proclaimed ‘democratically elected’ leaders of Pakistan who are steeped in corruption and nepotism. In the Pakistan of today, we see political parties loyal to ‘Quaid-e-Awams’, each focusing on their own particular mantra or slogan, each waving their own flag. The one leader who united us, who taught us the meaning of dignity and courage, is missing not only from the walls of the President House, but also from the hearts and minds of the sheeple who blindly follow these so called leaders. This particular section of society seems to think that Pakistan was created for the elite. The concern that Jinnah had for the Muslim Ummah, the very community that Pakistan was created for, has been set aside and the poor and downtrodden who in the words of Allama Iqbal were encouraged by Angels to ‘shake the foundations of society’ , have been forgotten. While the Pakistani elite continue to grow stronger through political alliances and inter-marriages, common Pakistanis are struggling to break away from this stranglehold.

Some of us still remember the not-so-distant past when Quaid’s dream for Pakistan to become one of the most progressive nations on earth was within our reach. In the 1960’s, Pakistan was set to become the model for developing nations. Today however, things seem entirely different. As Pakistan faces many crises, both internal and external, the entire nation is in search for ‘Salahuddin’; someone who has the moral fibre, the courage and the dignity to restore this nation’s honour, someone who is not afraid to say ’No’ to the Imperialist forces exploiting our weaknesses, someone who stands firm in the face of adversity and leads by example, someone who is self-sacrificing in every aspect of his life, someone who is not intimidated by men of power and fortune. Today, almost six decades after his passing, Pakistan is sorely missing Jinnah. This one man has left us with a legacy unmatched by any other in the history of the Modern World.

Still, there is a side to this man that his nation is not fully aware of, an aspect of his personality that is still hidden from the majority of Pakistanis, and that is his utmost love and respect for the Holy Prophet (SAW). In Jinnah’s own words:

“I thought of seeing the various Inns in London and meeting students studying there in order to make up my mind in advance. My inquiries and discussions made me decide for another Inn than Lincoln’s. But then I had seen the name of our great Prophet engraved on the main entrance of Lincoln’s Inn among the greatest law-givers of the world. So I made a sort of ‘Minnat’ or vow that I would join the Lincoln’s Inn”

This is the level of devotion that he had for Rasul Allah (SAW). How could such a man not be relevant to the present day Pakistan; a country that was created in the name of Allah and his Beloved (SAW). Jinnah, the spiritual man, was a gift to this Ummah, a gift that we need to be thankful for in every way we can, and the best way to do that is to benefit from his wisdom and incorporate in us, the principles that he strongly adhered to.

Today, as our nation struggles to understand and recapture its place among the nations of the world, Jinnah’s words are as relevant as they were all those years ago. Giving hope to the Muslims of the sub-continent in their darkest hour, he said:

‘Only one thing can save the Musalmans and energise them to regain their lost ground. They must first recapture their own soul and stand by their lofty position and principles which form the basis of their unity, and which bind them in one body-politic.’

In the above lines is the wisdom behind the creation of Pakistan which was for the Muslims to find their own selves, to envision themselves as a powerful and strong nation and then to re-group and re-emerge, in the words of Iqbal ‘to form a living family of nations’.

Pakistanis as a nation, as a collective entity know that the time is now and we have to re-organize ourselves and focus on the challenges that we face today. There was nothing co-incidental about the creation of this Land and the amazing gift that was given to the Muslim Ummah in the form of Jinnah. He is the man for this century and the man of the hour.

Israel summons envoys from all over the world

Israel's ambassadors and consuls generals from all over the world have been summoned to attend a conference to be held over global challenges facing Israel.

The meeting to be attended in Jerusalem Al-Quds on December 27-31 is hosted by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, headed by Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman, the ministry reported on its website.

"The idea is to facilitate direct dialogue with the country's leaders, mutual updates on major diplomatic issues, and a discussion of action plans to deal with the challenges awaiting Israel in the international arena in the coming year, including the Iranian threat," it said.

This is while Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has called a report by the UN Human Rights Council's Gaza commission a real threat to Israel.

The UN Special Rappoteur for the occupied Palestinian Territories has also urged western powers to push Israel to end its blockade of the Gaza Strip immediately. Richard Falk also called for economic sanctions against Israel.

This is the first time a conference for all of Israel's heads of missions has been held.

Benyamin Netanyahu will also attend the conference along with Defense Minister Ehud Barak, Minister of Intelligence and Atomic Energy Dan Meridor, and other senior officials.

Russia: No proof of military N-plans in Iran

As Western powers batten down the hatches and prepare sanctions against Tehran, a senior Russian official says there still is no proof of an Iranian nuclear weapons program.

In remarks published on Friday, deputy Russian foreign minister Alexander Saltanov reiterated that Moscow is not convinced that Iran plans to weaponize its nuclear program, and moreover he has not been shown any collaborative evidence confirming that it is seeking to do so.

"Russia has no concrete information that Iran is planning to construct a weapon. It may be more like Japan, which has nuclear readiness but does not have a bomb," Primakov told The Jerusalem Post.

In order to pressure Iran into halting its nuclear work, Washington and a number of European countries have vowed to push for new UN sanctions early next year.

But the calls for renewed pressure were once more snubbed by China and Russia.

Saltanov said while "Iran has a positive potential" to cooperate with the West on its nuclear case, it is most evident that a military solution against the Tehran government would only make matters worse.

"If Israel attacks Iran it will cause great instability and will only postpone the Iranian program, not end it," he said.

Israel routinely threatens to bomb Iran's nuclear sites, arguing that the country's enrichment activities are a mortal threat to Tel Aviv, which ironically is reported to have the Middle East's sole nuclear arsenal and 200 nuclear warheads at its disposal.

This is while Iran, unlike Tel Aviv, is a signatory of the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty and has opened its nuclear facilities to routine inspections by the UN nuclear watchdog.

In response to Israeli war threats, Tehran warns that if Tel Aviv steps out of line, it will close the strategic Strait of Hormuz to maritime traffic, including the 15 or so supertankers that sail through on a daily basis to deliver the world's oil supplies.

A recent report by the US Office of Naval Intelligence (ONI) has confirmed that if the United States or Israel decide to bomb Tehran's nuclear sites, Iran's naval modernization and maritime capabilities have reached a point where it can shut down the strategic Strait of Hormuz.

"Given the importance of the Strait, disrupting traffic flow or even threatening to do so may be an effective tool for Iran," said the intelligence report, which was revealed by Joseph Farah's G2 Bulletin in November.

It notes that while Iran's ability to shut down the Strait of Hormuz may be transitory, the impact would undoubtedly have far-reaching consequences for the already-fragile world economy.

"[World economies would suffer] a serious economic impact from a sustain closure of the Strait of Hormuz due to greatly reduced supplies of crude oil, petroleum supplies and (liquefied natural gas)," ONI said.

On the same note, the report adds that not only has Tehran acquired "increasingly sophisticated systems" from China and Russia, but the “modernization” of the Iranian navy is to an extent that would help the government carry out such a closure if need be.

Japan's PM says decision on US base by May

Japan's Prime Minister Yukio Hatoyama has vowed to decide on the issue of the relocation of the US military base in Okinawa by next May.

The relocation of the US base has become an issue between Japan and the US since September, when Hatoyama launched a coalition government. Washington has been pressuring Tokyo to resolve the issue as soon as possible.

Hatoyama's center-left government, which came to power in August after almost five decades of conservative rule, pledged to reconsider past agreements concerning the US military presence in Japan and to adopt a position less subservient toward Washington.

During a press conference in Tokyo, Hatoyama said it is ''impossible'' to make the US wait too long before Tokyo decides on the issue.

The realignment plan involves moving about eight thousand US Marines from Okinawa to Guam.

Earlier this week, Japan's Defense Minister Toshimi Kitazawa set May as the deadline to decide where to relocate a controversial US military air base.

"We must work as quickly as possible," Kitazawa told reporters on Tuesday, stressing that Tokyo hopes to settle the issue as quickly as possible.

Locals in Okinawa, which currently hosts more than half of the 47,000 US troops stationed in Japan, associate the US military presence on the island with crime and pollution. They point to the account of the rape of a 12-year-old schoolgirl by three American soldiers in 1995.

Nasrallah: Americans first victims of US brutal policies

Hezbollah Secretary-General Seyyed Hassan Nasrallah has described American leaders as anti-human and brutal, saying US citizens are the first victims of such leaders.

"US authorities are anti-human," the 49-year-old Nasrallah said, adding the country is governed by the most brutal and greedy individuals.

The Hezbollah chief made the remark during a televised speech marking the eighth day of Muharram on Friday night.

In a reference to the US invasion of Afghanistan and Iraq in the aftermath of the 9/11 attacks Nasrallah said that "The American democracy has victimized the Iraqi and Afghan people."

Years after the US-led invasion of the two Muslim countries, daily violence is calming the lives of people in the two war-ravaged states.

The Hezbollah Secretary General also urged his country's politicians to "observe a one-year truce" in an attempt to avoid new conflicts.

Nasrallah also called for giving the unity government an opportunity to function.

"Let those who don't want to tackle the people's priorities resign from the cabinet," he noted.

Nasrallah has headed the Hezbollah resistance movement since 1992 when his predecessor, Abbas Moussaoui, was killed in an Israeli helicopter raid.

Turkish soldiers get jail for up to 30 months

Eight Turkish defendants captured by Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) militants in 2007 have been sentenced to jail terms of up to 30 months.

According to judicial sources, the order was issued by a Turkish military court in the eastern city of Van on Friday.

The sources said that the court sentenced one defendant to 30 months for insubordination and encouraging insubordination and ordered jail terms of 15 and 20 months to the others for negligence and insubordination; however, the lesser sentences were suspended.

The Turkish troops were accused of failing to resist the Kurdish rebels who took them to PKK bases in the mountains of northern Iraq following an ambush at the village of Daglica on October 21, 2007, which resulted in the deaths of 12 troops.

The PKK militants later handed the Turkish troops over to the Kurdish-run regional government of northern Iraq.

According to critics of the trial, the Turkish soldiers are being punished for "not having died."

The PKK is blacklisted as a terrorist organization by much of the international community, including Turkey, Iran, the US and the European Union.

More than 40,000 people have lost their lives since the militant group launched its armed campaign against Ankara in 1984, as part of a quest to establish an independent Kurdish state in southeastern Turkey.

Five Americans in Pakistan may face charges

Criminal charges are possible for five young American citizens arrested in Pakistan for alleged terrorist links to the Taliban, Pakistani media have reported.

Pakistani police investigators have reportedly concluded that the American terror suspects sought training for terrorist acts and intended to join extremist groups.

Pakistan's courts will ultimately decide whether to prosecute the suspects.

The US citizens were arrested two weeks ago in Sargodha, a city in northeast Pakistan, known for citrus production.

The young men disappeared in late November from their northern Virginia suburbs.

"They had left their video cassettes back there for the parents that they have left for jihad, wouldn't be back, so we suppose they were here for some very bad activities," said Pakistan's Sargodha police commander Usman Anwar.

Upon reaching Karachi, the men tried to join an extremist group. They attempted to join another group in Lahore, but both groups apparently rejected the Americans, in part because they were foreigners and had no local references.

Israeli soldiers shoot dead six Palestinians

Israeli soldiers have shot dead six Palestinians and left a seventh one wounded in separate incidents in the West Bank and the north of the Gaza Strip.

According to a Palestinian medical source, three Palestinians were killed in northern Gaza as they were on their way to cross over a wall to work in Israel on Saturday.

The source further added that another Palestinian was also wounded in the incident.

Meanwhile, Israeli soldiers shot and killed three members of the Fatah Movement in another incident in the West Bank city of Nablus after surrounding their homes, Press TV correspondent Sari al-Khalili reported.

The victims were members of the Fatah Movement, led by Acting Palestinian Authority Chief Mahmoud Abbas.

Sources say the two had been previously ordered by Fatah to disarm, and that one of them was wanted by Israel.

Palestinians protest Egyptian steel barrier

Palestinians have held a mass demonstration against Egypt's construction of an underground wall along the border with the Gaza Strip which claimed its first victim on Friday.

According to Palestinian security sources, a Palestinian man was killed after a tunnel collapsed over him due to the Egyptian excavation.

During the demonstration, Hamas spokesperson Hammad Ar-Ruqab urged Cairo to open the Rafah border crossing and facilitate the entry of food and construction materials needed to rebuild Gaza which is in ruins due to Israel's war which left thousands of homes destroyed last year.

"We in the Hamas movement announce our deep shock at the construction of the wall which bypasses every diplomatic rule. Egypt is building the wall between Gaza and Egypt in a sensitive period of time," Ma'an news agency quoted Ar-Ruqab as saying.

Reports revealed earlier in December that Egypt was building an underground wall with a depth of 30 meters (100 feet) and 10 kilometers long (six miles) along the Rafah border.

The barrier has reportedly destroyed many tunnels along the border that have served as a crucial lifeline since Israel and Egypt sealed off the Gaza Strip from almost all vital aid after Hamas took over Gaza in June 2007.

Israel which accuses the Palestinians of smuggling arms through the tunnels, bombed scores of them during its December-January offensive on the Gaza Strip.

Palestinians however began the reconstruction of the tunnels which they say are used to bring basic goods from Egypt.

Swiss minaret ban cancels Christmas in Kirkuk, cleric claims

Kirkuk, Iraq - Members of the Christian minority in the Iraqi city of Kirkuk canceled public Christmas celebrations this year in part because of Switzerland's ban on minarets, a priest said Friday. "For the first time, Christians in Kirkuk are canceling their holiday celebrations in sadness and pain," Father Haitham Saliywa, a priest at one of Kirkuk's largest churches, told the German Press Agency dpa.

"We have told our loved ones that the reason for cancellation is our sadness for the victims of the explosions in Mosul and Baghdad, and our solidarity with Muslims over the issue of the Swiss government's ban on minarets," he said.

In November, 57 per cent of Swiss voters and 22 out of 26 cantons voted in favor of a referendum seeking to ban the construction of minarets, the towers rising above mosques.

But Saliywa said the cancellation of public observance of Christmas also followed attacks and threats against members of the city's Christian community, amid rising tensions in the city.

Kirkuk and the surrounding countryside are home to a patchwork of religious and ethnic groups. Many Kurds hope to make it the future capital of an independent state, but Arab and Turkmen politicians view it as an integral part of Iraq.

Controversy over voting in the city delayed for months passage of a law to cover the 2010 parliamentary elections.

The issue of voting in the city and surrounding Tamim province has proved so thorny that both were left out of previous votes since the 2003 US-led invasion of the country.

As the March polls approach, sectarian sentiment is running high, often with deadly effect. Christian community leaders say members of the religious minority have often borne the brunt.

"Every holiday, Christians are targeted in an attempt to get us to leave our homes and our cities," Emad Hanna, head of the Assyrian Movement in Kirkuk, an organization that advocates for the interests of Iraqi Assyrian Christians, told dpa.

Edward Awrha, the province's deputy governor and a Christian, says the city and surrounding villages are home to roughly 10,000 Christian Iraqis, but that at least 10 families had fled in the past three months following a series of abductions.

In November, a Christian who works for an oil company in Kirkuk was abducted. Earlier, police discovered the body of a Christian businessman in al-Hai al-Askari neighborhood, a few days after his abduction.

Source: Earth Times.
Link: http://www.earthtimes.org/articles/show/300980,swiss-minaret-ban-cancels-christmas-in-kirkuk-cleric-claims.html.

Algeria injects $150 bln to stimulate national economy

By Fatiha Zamamoush
Friday, 25 December 2009

Algerian minister of finance Karim Djoudi asserted on Friday that Algerian government devised a USD 150 billion blueprint to support and revitalize the economy over the coming five years.

Answering a question by the Kuwait News Agency (KUNA) on the sidelines of a conference organized by the Economic and Social National Council in the Algerain capital, Djoudi said that Algerian president Abdulaziz Bouteflika has approved a blueprint to recover the economy, support the investment, finalize the infrastructure like bridges, roads, railways, dams and power plants.

Algerian finance minister has asserted that the blueprint which will last up to 2014 targets providing 3 million job opportunities and 2 million apartments in order to put an end to the unemployment and housing crisis in the country. Further, the blueprint will meet the needs of the Algerians in the fields of health, education, water and energy.

Djoudi went on to say that Algerian president Abdulaziz Bouteflika has issued strict instructions to the government to be rational in implementing the economic support program in the next five years.

He also asserted that there is a relative improvement in a number of the economic sectors in Algeria like agriculture, small and medium institutions and services compared with a weak growth of the oil sector due to reducing the output quotas to comply with the OPEC's decisions. Djoudi asserted that the inflation percentage in Algeria reached about 4.4 during 2008 and 2009. Djoudi admitted that Algeria did not come unharmed out of repercussions of the global financial crisis due to a retreat in the oil products and fall in the oil barrel price to about USD 53 during the first two quarters of 2009 after reaching some USD 100 throughout 2008.

Algerian top financial official stressed that measures taken by the Algerian president throughout this decade have enabled the country to sort out the crisis and continue the accelerated pace of development, thanks to the public revenues collected.

The Algerian official added, in this context, that Algeria's revenues of oil products exceeded USD 35 billion till the end of last October, while it totaled USD 79 in 2008.

The Algerian imports saw a relative stability during the first two quarters of this year after registering a considerable growth between 2005 and 2008 as they reached USD 38 billion last year.

Djoudi said that banking reserves reached USD 144 billion at the end of June 2009 and remained stable in July 2009, while it made USD 143 billion at the end of 2008.

On the external debts, the Algerian finance minister said that the Algerian government expects them to reach about USD 3.9 billion in the short and long run.

Algeria has recently managed to repay USD 16 billion of its debts and stop its resorting to external loans, besides taking all necessary measures to reduce the increase in imports.

One government soldier killed in roadside bombing in Algeria

Friday, December 25, 2009

ALGIERS, Dec. 25, 2009 (Xinhua News Agency) -- One government soldier was killed and two civilians injured in a roadside bombing on Friday in northeast Algeria, a local newspaper reported.

A home-made bomb was detonated near a village about 40 km east of the city of Tizi Ouzou, when a convoy of security forces was en route to its military operations against rebel militants, the French language daily El Watana reported.

One day earlier, a roadside bomb exploded and damaged a vehicle in the woods 50 km east of Tizi Ouzou. Hours later, security forces defused two other home-made bombs nearby.

Algerians face an increased threat by rebel militants since the 1990s. The security forces have recently launched massive military operations against them.

Turkish President Celebrates Christmas

ANKARA - Turkish President Abdullah Gul said that mosques, churches and synagogues had been co-existing side by side throughout Anatolian territories in full harmony.

President Gul released a message to mark the Christian world's Christmas.

"Churches and synagogues have been co-existing side by side throughout Anatolian territories for centuries in full harmony. Anatolian lands which have been the host of many religious faiths, have brought together people from different cultures and religious beliefs under the feelings of friendship, affection and solidarity. All our citizens are the equal and distinguished members of our nation which pays great attention to principles and values such as peace, tolerance, mutual respect and understanding," President Gul said in his message.

Amir Mehsud orders Islamic resistance fighters to abstain from unlawful tactics

Amir Hakimullah Mehsud of the Islamic resistance movement Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) issued an order on Thursday calling for all Waziristani resistance fighters to abstain from committing unlawful and un-Islamic acts in their struggle against the Pakistani aggressors.

December 25 - Amir Hakimullah Mehsud of Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) issued an order on Thursday commanding Islamic Resistance in the Republic of Waziristan to abstain from un-Islamic tactics in their armed struggle against the invading Pakistani forces.

"I order all Mujahideen in North Waziristan to refrain from kidnapping, lawlessness and other unlawful activities," Amir Hakimullah Mehsud said.

According to the order, violators found guilty of breaking would be subject to punishment.

On October 17, Islamabad unleashed a major offensive against the peoples of the Republic of Waziristan after months of pressure from Washington urging Pakistan to expand military operations as part of the West's imperialist campaign of aggression against the region.

Under the vanguard of Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan, the battle-hardened peoples of Waziristan have waged a fierce and determined struggle against Pakistani aggression in defense of Waziristani sovereignty.

King of Spain calls for unity in Christmas speech

MADRID, Dec. 24 (Xinhua) -- Juan Carlos, the King of Spain, called for unity in his Christmas message to the Spanish citizens broadcast on Christmas Eve.

All Spaniard should redouble their efforts to surpass the tensions, achieve economic growth, and create employment as soon as possible, and those efforts should be made through agreements between political, economic and social forces to allow maximum solidarity and to carry out necessary reforms, said the Spanish king.

Juan Carlos also urged Spanish citizens to coordinate efforts at the maximum level to reinforce the internal cohesion and exterior projection, because the security, progress and welfare of the Spaniards largely depend on efficient protection and promotions of their interests in the world.

The King also referred to the fact that Spain will take over the European presidency for the fourth time from Jan. 1 as the Lisbon Treaty takes effect.

"It is of vital importance to obtain a more united and dynamic Europe in the world," he said.

Spain to fund expansion of HCMC metro

VietNamNet Bridge - Spain will provide up to US$700 million to help finance the expansion of the planned metro in Ho Chi Minh City in Vietnam, it was announced Tuesday.

Under a memorandum of understanding signed by Spain’s Industry Minister Miguel Sebastian and Vietnam’s Deputy Prime

Minister Pham Gia Khiem, the funds will be provided “once viability studies are complete and reliable budget estimates are available.”

Spain has also agreed to provide $95 million to finance three water treatment plants in Vietnam.

“Spain has companies which are world leaders in these sectors which could opt to carry out these projects and demonstrate their capacity to build this infrastructure,” the statement said.

Officials in Ho Chi Minh City are building a rapid transit network that is to have six metro lines and three monorails by 2020 with a total length of more than 100 kilometers (60 miles) as part of attempts to tackle increasing traffic congestion.

In April a Spanish company, Idom Ingenieria Consultoria, signed a contract to prepare feasibility studies for two of the planned lines.

The metro deal came during a visit to Spain by Vietnam’s President Nguyen Minh Triet that began on Monday.

His visit is part of a 10-day European tour that began in Italy and included an audience with Pope Benedict XVI at the Vatican, before visiting Slovakia.

“Vietnam is ready to boost relations with the Vatican on the basis of respecting fundamental principles of international law, thus making an active contribution to peace, cooperation and development the world over,” Triet was quoted as saying by Vietnam News Agency.

The Vatican called Friday’s meeting in Rome between Triet and the Pontiff a “significant stage in the progress of bilateral relations” and expressed its pleasure at the visit.

It said in a communiqué that it hoped “outstanding questions may be resolved as soon as possible.”

Vietnam has Southeast Asia’s largest Roman Catholic community after the Philippines – about six million in a population of 86 million.

Early this year a senior Vatican official held the first formal meetings with Vietnamese authorities in Hanoi to discuss diplomatic ties.

VietNamNet/Thanh Nien