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Saturday, January 9, 2010

Chavez says US military plane violated Venezuelan airspace

Caracas - Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez said a US military aircraft had violated the country's airspace for 15 minutes before being intercepted and driven out by two Venezuelan F-16s. Chavez said the aircraft had flown from the Netherlands Antilles' island of Curacao, and was escorted out of Venezuelan airspace, but later returned for 19 more minutes.

"They are warplanes used for the imperial war, not - as (the US) claims - specialized aircraft to combat drug trafficking," he said during a cabinet meeting Friday.

"We are watching them. We even know the name of the pilot. It is a warplane that took off from Curacao and we aren't making anything up. We are speaking the truth when we tell Holland what we are saying."

Chavez accused the Dutch government of allowing its "colonial territories of Aruba and Curacao to be utilized against Venezuela."

"We made contact with the plane, and didn't allow ourselves to fall into a trap of being provoked. I told our pilots to make it known that there is dignity here," he said.

Chavez accused the US and Dutch governments of trying to provoke Venezuela and create an excuse to attack the country militarily.

Source: Earth Times.
Link: http://www.earthtimes.org/articles/show/302819,chavez-says-us-military-plane-violated-venezuelan-airspace.html.

Karzai presents new list of cabinet nominees to Afghan parliament

Kabul - Afghan President Hamid Karzai's new cabinet lineup was formally presented Saturday to the country's parliament after the legislators rejected 17 designated ministers last week. The new 16 nominees included Zalmai Rasool, a former national security adviser slated to be foreign minister. The post was vacant in the previous list.

None of the rejected nominees was on the new list.

Three women were on the revised list presented to the lower house of the parliament by Vice President Karim Khalili. They were nominated as ministers of women's affairs, public health and public works.

No nominees were introduced to parliament for the energy and telecommunications ministries.

The legislature last week rejected 17 out of 24 cabinet nominees and only approved seven, including the defense, interior and finance ministers.

Karzai, who was sworn in for a second five-year term last month after polls marred by widespread fraud, has been under mounting pressure from Western countries to clean up his administration and crack down on rampant graft.

Source: Earth Times.
Link: http://www.earthtimes.org/articles/show/302820,karzai-presents-new-list-of-cabinet-nominees-to-afghan-parliament.html.

Islamic Jihad: Israel 'provoking' the resistance into a new war

Gaza - Israel's latest airstrikes on the Gaza Strip are intended at provoking Palestinian resistance into a new war, Islamic Jihad claimed on Saturday, according to the Palestinian Maan news agency. "The latest Israeli military escalation on Gaza comes within ongoing attempts by the occupation to provoke the resistance by dragging it into a military confrontation," Al-Quds Brigades spokesman Ahmad said in a statement.

The comments came after four Israeli airstrikes in the Gaza Strip on Friday. Three three Palestinians died and at least four were wounded. The strikes were in response to the launch of 14 mortar shells fired into Israel by the Popular Resistance Committees (PRC).

Islamic Jihad said it was ready to confront any new Israeli attack in Gaza. "The occupation's attempts will fail in weakening the spirit of resistance", the spokesman added,

Violence between Israel and Palestinian militants in the Gaza Strip has lately increased.

Some 280 rockets and mortars have been fired at Israel since the end of last winter's war, compared to more than 3,300 in the year building up to it, according to the Israeli military.

Israel has responded to the ongoing sporadic fire by launching what it says are pinpointed airstrikes, mostly on the smuggling tunnels along the border with Egypt.

The Israeli military vowed on Friday that it would continue to respond to any attempt by militants "to disrupt the calm in Israel's southern communities."

Source: Earth Times.
Link: http://www.earthtimes.org/articles/show/302826,islamic-jihad-israel-provoking-the-resistance-into-a-new-war.html.

Portuguese parliament approves same-sex marriage

Lisbon - The parliament of Catholic Portugal approved same-sex marriage in an initial debate Friday, with Prime Minister Jose Socrates defending the move as a normal step towards a more egalitarian society. Parliament approved the law with a clear majority, with leftist and ecologist parties supporting it while the two conservative parties voted against.

The law, which does not include the right of adoption for gay couples, will now pass through a parliamentary commission. It was expected to win definitive approval before Pope Benedict XVI visits Portugal in May.

Socrates said the law "put an end to pointless suffering" of homosexuals and constituted "another phase in the long history of democracies against discrimination."

Socrates rejected criticism that not including the right of adoption discriminated against homosexuals, arguing that marriage and adoption were "two totally different questions."

Today's Portuguese young people could hardly believe that homosexuality had been a crime in the country until 1982, the premier observed.

Socrates' government tabled the law proposal in late 2009, honoring a pledge made by his Socialist Party ahead of the September legislative elections, in which Socrates lost his absolute majority in parliament.

During his previous term, the government had still rejected proposals from far-left parties to legalize gay marriage in the socially conservative country.

The draft law came under criticism from several quarters. The main opposition conservative Social Democrats proposed "civil unions" to preserve marriage as a union between man and woman.

Gay activists, on the other hand, accused the government of only granting them "second-class marriages" without the right of adoption.

Activists close to the Catholic church collected 91,000 signatures requesting a referendum on the subject.

On the whole, however, Portugal's Catholic Church has been moderate in its criticism in comparison with neighboring Spain.

In Spain, church-sponsored rallies brought hundreds of thousands of people to the streets to protest a reform which finally gave gays full marriage rights, including adoption, in 2005.

Source: Earth Times.
Link: http://www.earthtimes.org/articles/show/302736,portuguese-parliament-approves-same-sex-marriage.html.

Togo team leaves tournament after deadly ambush

By SAMUEL PETREQUIN, AP Sports Writer

CABINDA, Angola – Hosting the African Cup of Nations was Angola's chance to show it is recovering from decades of war, but tragedy struck as gunmen sprayed bullets at Togo's national team, killing three people and forcing its withdrawal from the soccer tournament.

Africa's main soccer tournament was expected to open as planned on Sunday, even though players from other countries expressed shock at the ambush on the Togo team bus as it traveled through Angola's restive oil-rich Cabinda province.

"We have goose bumps ... who knows what is going to happen to us," Amade Chababe, assistant coach to the Mozambique national football team, told AP Television News as the squad passed through Johannesburg en route to Angola on Saturday.

In South Africa, the local organizing committee of the World Cup said the attack had no relevance to the upcoming global sports event that starts in June. Spokesman Rich Mkhondo said FIFA views Friday's attack as an isolated incident which could have happened anywhere in the world.

"We wish to state that there is no link between what happened in Angola and South Africa's preparations to host the 2010 FIFA World Cup," said Mkhondo, according to the South African Press Association. "We also cannot compare organization and security in Angola with South Africa just because the two countries happen to be in the same region in the world."

The attack in Angola, a former Portuguese colony, killed an assistant coach, a team spokesperson and the bus driver, according to the team and the Togolese government.

"Despite this, the championship will go on," Angola's Sports Minister Goncalves Muandumba said.

Togo forward Thomas Dossevi told The Associated Press in a phone interview that the team plans to withdraw from the continentwide tournament and fly out of the country early Sunday.

Emmanuel Adebayor who is captain of the Togo team and a top player for Manchester City, described a vicious attack on a defenseless team.

The violence came as a surprise because unrest associated with Cabinda, a northern enclave cut off from the rest of Angola by a strip of Congo, has been at low levels. The main separatist group is the Front for the Liberation of the Enclave of Cabinda, or FLEC. The Angolan information minister blamed the group for the attack.

Adebayor said that minutes after entering Cabinda "from nowhere gunmen began to open fire on our bus."

He said the team endured the gunfire for 13 minutes before Angolan soldiers repulsed the assailants.

Goalie Kossi Agassa — who plays for French club Istres and for the Togo team in the tournament — told France-Info radio that a Togo assistant coach and a spokesperson died and that a second team goalkeeper was badly wounded.

Kodjovi "Dodji" Obilale, an injured goalkeeper who also plays for the French club Pontivy, was flown to South Africa where he underwent surgery for injuries to his back, said club president Philippe Le Mestre by telephone from western France.

Richard Friedland, CEO of Milpark Hospital in Johannesburg, told reporters that Obilale suffered two gunshot wounds to the lower back and will undergo surgery tonight.

"He is fully receptive. He understands where he is," Friedland said.

In Togo, the government said the Angolan driver was killed.

Angola's Information Minister Manuel Rabelais said Friday that eight team members and one Angolan were injured.

Togo's bus in a convoy from the Republic of Congo was six miles across the border in Angola when it came under fire.

The African Football Confederation (CAF) condemned the attack. A delegation of Angolan officials and a CAF delegation headed to Cabinda, while the Angolan Prime Minister was to meet CAF president Issa Hayatou "to take decisions to guarantee the smooth running of the competition."

FIFA also expressed "utmost sympathy" in a statement and said it expected a report from CAF.

Ivory Coast general manager Kaba Kone told The Associated Press on Saturday that his team was "shocked and are living through very hard times" but never considered pulling out of the tournament. He said the Ivorian players visited their Togolese counterparts late Friday to express their sympathy.

Kone said CAF and tournament organizers are stepping up security measures to guarantee the team's safety in Cabinda.

"This event can still be a big party," he said.

Angola has been struggling to climb back from decades of violence, and its government was banking on the tournament as a chance to show the world it was on the way to recovery.

A building boom fueled by oil wealth has included new stadiums in Cabinda and three other cities for the tournament.

An anti-colonial war had begun in the 1960s, and a civil war broke out after independence. The fighting ended in 2002 when the army killed Jonas Savimbi, leader of the National Union for the Total Independence of Angola, known as UNITA, now the main opposition party.

President Jose Eduardo Dos Santos had beaten Savimbi in the first round of 1992 presidential election, but Savimbi refused to accept defeat and returned to war before the second round could be held. Dos Santos remains president.

U.S., NATO Expand Afghan War To Horn Of Africa And Indian Ocean

by Rick Rozoff

Global Research, January 8, 2010
Stop NATO

In parallel with the escalation of the war in South Asia - counterinsurgency operations in Afghanistan and drone missile attacks in Pakistan - the United States and its NATO allies have laid the groundwork for increased naval, air and ground operations in the Horn of Africa and the Gulf of Aden.

During the past month the U.S. has carried out deadly military strikes in Yemen: Bombing raids in the north and cruise missile attacks in the south of the nation. Washington has been accused of killing scores of civilians in the attacks in both parts of the country, executed before the December 25 Northwest Airlines incident that has been used to justify the earlier U.S. actions ex post facto. And, ominously, that has been exploited to pound a steady drumbeat of demands for expanded and even more direct military intervention.

The Pentagon's publicly disclosed military and security program for Yemen grew from $4.6 million in 2006 to $67 million last year. "That figure does not include covert, classified assistance that the United States has provided."

In addition, "Under a new classified cooperation agreement, the U.S. would be able to fly cruise missiles, fighter jets or unmanned armed drones against targets in the country, but would remain publicly silent on its role in the airstrikes."

On January 1 General David Petraeus, the chief of the Pentagon's Central Command, in charge of the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq as well as operations in Yemen and Pakistan, was in the Iraqi capital of Baghdad and said of deepening military involvement in Yemen, "We have, it's well known, about $70 million in security assistance last year. That will more than double this coming year."

The following day Petraeus was in the capital of Yemen where he met with the country's president, Ali Abdullah Saleh, to discuss "continued U.S. support in rooting out the terrorist cells."

White House counterterrorism adviser (Assistant to the President for Homeland Security and Counterterrorism) John Brennan briefed President Barack Obama on Petraeus' visit to Washington's new war theater and afterward stated "We have made Yemen a priority over the course of this year, and this is the latest in that effort."

The alleged terrorist cells in question are identified by U.S. and other Western governments as being affiliated with al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP). However, on January 4 CNN reported that "A senior U.S. official cited a rebellion by Huti [Houthi] tribes in the north, and secessionist activity in the southern tribal areas" as of concern to Washington.

The Houthis' confessional background is Shi'a and not Sunni Islam and the opposition forces in the south are led by the Yemeni Socialist Party, so attempts to link either with al-Qaeda are inaccurate, self-serving and dishonest.

In both the north and south the United States, its NATO allies - Britain and France closed their embassies in Yemen earlier this week in unison with the U.S. - and Saudi Arabia are working in tandem to support the Saleh government in what over the past month has become a state of warfare against opposition forces in the country. Saudi Arabia has launched regular bombing raids and infantry and armored attacks in the north of the country and, according to Houthi rebel sources, been aided by U.S. warplanes in deadly attacks on villages. Houthi spokesmen have accused Riyadh of firing over a thousand missiles inside Yemen, and in late December the Saudi Defense Ministry acknowledged that its military casualties over the preceding month included 73 dead, 26 missing and 470 wounded. In short, a cross-border war on the Arabian peninsula.

The West, though, has even larger plans for Yemen, ones which include integrating military operations from Northeast Africa to the Chinese border. Typical of recent statements by U.S. officials and their Western allies, last weekend British Prime Minister Gordon Brown disingenuously claimed that "The weakness of al Qaeda in Pakistan has forced them out of Pakistan and into Yemen and Somalia."

Brown told the BBC on January 3 "Yemen has been recognized, like Somalia, to be one of the areas we have got to not only keep an eye on, but we've got to do more. So it's strengthening counter-terrorism cooperation, it's working harder on intelligence efforts." It is up to Mr. Brown to explain why, if al-Qaeda has been "forced out" of Pakistan, he is adding soldiers to the U.S. and NATO surge that will soon bring combined Western troop numbers to over 150,000 in Afghanistan while intensifying deadly attacks inside Pakistan itself.

The British prime minister has also called for an international meeting on Yemen for later this month and announced that "The UK and the US have agreed to fund a counter-terrorism police unit in Yemen...."

In Western news reports, or rather rumor peddling, Yemeni rebels are accused of supplying weapons to Somali opposite numbers and the second are reported to have offered fighters to the former.

In short the officially discarded but in fact revived and expanded "global war on terrorism" is now to be fought in a single theater of war that extends from the Red Sea to Pakistan. A joint endeavor by the Pentagon's Central and Africa Commands and the North Atlantic Treaty Organization to build upon the consolidation of almost the entire European continent under NATO and Pentagon control and the ceding of the African continent to the new U.S. Africa Command (AFRICOM). (Except for Egypt, an individual Pentagon asset and NATO Mediterranean Dialogue partner.)

In fact the Central Command was inaugurated by the Ronald Reagan administration in 1983 on the foundations of the Rapid Deployment Joint Task Force (RDJTF) that his predecessor Jimmy Carter activated three years before. The latter developed out of the Rapid Deployment Forces (RDF) launched directly to counter developments in Afghanistan and Somalia in 1979 (an integral component of the Carter Doctrine) and was deliberately designed to establish military control of the Horn of Africa, the Arabian Sea and the Western Indian Ocean.

Administrations may depart - George W. Bush and Tony Blair have left public office - and names may change - the global war on terror has been rechristened overseas contingency operations - but Washington's global geopolitical ambitions, limitless since the collapse of the Warsaw Pact and the Soviet Union in 1991, have only grown more universal and the military means employed for their realization more aggressive.

The White House and its European allies have of late resuscitated and inflated the al-Qaeda specter to a degree not witnessed since the immediate aftermath of September 11, 2001.

Under the guise of protecting the American homeland from this shadowy and ubiquitous entity, the Pentagon is involved in military operations from West Africa to East Asia against among other decidedly non-Osama bin Laden-linked forces left-wing groups in Colombia, the Philippines and Yemen; Shi'a militias in Lebanon and Yemen; ethnic rebels in Mali and Niger; a Christian extremist rebellion in Uganda.

Like the infamous 19th century grave robbers William Burke and William Hare, paid so well to provide cadavers to the Edinburgh Medical College that, running out of corpses to sell, created them, al-Qaeda is a dependable villain to be evoked as needed.

Al-Shabaab fighters in Somalia can be conflated with pirates in the Gulf of Aden to provide the pretext for a permanent NATO and allied European Union naval presence in a nexus that includes the Red Sea, the Arabian Sea leading into the Persian Gulf and most of the eastern coast of Africa.

The American component of the Greater Afghan War is Operation Enduring Freedom, which takes in Afghanistan, Cuba (Guantanamo Bay Naval Base), Djibouti, Eritrea, Ethiopia, Jordan, Kenya, Kyrgyzstan, Pakistan, the Philippines, Seychelles, Sudan, Tajikistan, Turkey, Uzbekistan and Yemen.

Djibouti, which hosts some 2,500 U.S. military personnel in the Pentagon's first permanent base in Africa, is also the headquarters of the U.S.'s Combined Joint Task Force - Horn of Africa (CJTF-HOA), set up in 2001 several months before Operation Enduring Freedom and overlapping with it in many respects. The CJTF-HOA, based in the French military base of Camp Lemonier, was transferred from the Pentagon's Central Command to its Africa Command on October 1, 2008 when AFRICOM was formally activated.

Its area of responsibility includes Djibouti, Ethiopia, Eritrea, Kenya, Seychelles, Somalia, Sudan, Tanzania, Uganda and Yemen. Its areas of interest are Comoros, Mauritius, and Madagascar. The last three are, like Seychelles, island nations in the Indian Ocean. The U.S. expanded Camp Lemonier to five times its original size in 2006 and troops from all branches of the U.S. armed services "use the base when not working 'downrange' in countries such as Kenya, Ethiopia and Yemen."

In announcing recently that "Yemen has received military equipment from the United States to aid the government's fight against the al-Qaeda network in the south of the country," a German news agency added this background information: "Yemen, in the 1990s, welcomed back Arab fighters who left Afghanistan after the fall of the Soviet Union."

As with Afghanistan itself and other locations where the American military is fighting insurgent groups - the Philippines, Somalia and Yemen - the Pentagon is frequently confronting fighters funded, armed and trained by its own government in Pakistan from 1978-1992 under Operation Cyclone, the largest-ever CIA covert undertaking.

A 2008 edition of U.S. News & World Report, a magazine that can hardly be accused of being unfriendly to the White House and the Pentagon, wrote of the war in Afghanistan that "two of the most dangerous players are violent Afghan Islamists named Gulbuddin Hekmatyar and Jalaluddin Haqqani, according to U.S. officials."

An assessment repeated in the August 30, 2009 Commander's Initial Assessment of General Stanley McChrystal, commander of all U.S. and NATO forces in Afghanistan. The report, the basis for the White House increasing troop strength in the war theater to over 100,000, stated that "The major insurgent groups in order of their threat to the mission are: the Quetta Shura Taliban (05T), the Haqqani Network (HQN), and the Hezb-e Islami Gulbuddin (HiG)."

The U.S. News & World Report feature provided this background information:

"[T]hese two warlords — currently at the top of America's list of most wanted men in Afghanistan — were once among America's most valued allies. In the 1980s, the CIA funneled hundreds of millions of dollars in weapons and ammunition to help them battle the Soviet Army....Hekmatyar, then widely considered by Washington to be a reliable anti-Soviet rebel, was even flown to the United States by the CIA in 1985."

"U.S. officials had an even higher opinion of Haqqani, who was considered the most effective rebel warlord....Haqqani was also one of the leading advocates of the so-called Arab Afghans, deftly organizing Arab volunteer fighters who came to wage jihad against the Soviet Union and helping to protect future al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden."

In the name of combating the very same bin Laden and al-Qaeda, the U.S. and its NATO allies are now, in addition to increasing combined military forces waging a war in Afghanistan now in its ninth year to over 150,000, more than the Soviet Union ever deployed to that nation:

Intensifying deadly drone missile, helicopter gunship and commando attacks inside neighboring Pakistan. A recent government report in that nation tabulated that 708 people had been killed last year in CIA drone attacks alone. Only five of those were identified as al-Qaeda and Taliban suspects. On January 6 at least thirteen more were killed in a missile attack in the Pakistani tribal agency of North Waziristan.

Last month an American military newspaper reported that "A 1,000-strong Marine combat task force capable of rapidly deploying to hot spots could soon be at the disposal of the new U.S. Africa Command," which announcement came "just a few months after U.S. Special Forces staged a daring daylight raid deep inside southern Somalia" and after another Marine force "had already deployed in support of training missions in Uganda and Mali."

In late October of last year NATO Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen was in the United Arab Emirates [UAE] to rally NATO's Istanbul Cooperation Initiative partners for a future confrontation with Iran. Addressing a conference on NATO-UAE Relations and Future Prospects of the Istanbul Cooperation Initiative, he expanded his mission to recruit the Persian Gulf monarchies for the ever-expanding Greater Afghan War. "We have a shared interest in helping countries like Afghanistan and Iraq to stand on their feet again, fostering stability in the Middle East...and preventing countries like Somalia and Sudan from slipping deeper into chaos."

Two months earlier it was reported that "About 75 U.S. military personnel and civilians will be headed to the Seychelles islands in the coming weeks to set up...Reaper operations, which could start in October or November. U.S. Africa Command is calling the Navy-led mission Ocean Look.

"The U.S. will base the Reapers - to be used for intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance - at Seychelles' Mahe regional airport...." The Reaper is the Pentagon's newest "hunter-killer" unmanned aerial vehicle (drone) which is equipped with fifteen times the firepower and travels at three times the speed of its Predator forerunner, used to devastating effect in Pakistan and Somalia. Last October Somali rebels claimed to have shot down an American drone and local "residents routinely report suspected US drones flying over [their city]. The drones are believed to be launched from warships in the Indian Ocean."

The permanent stationing of U.S. military forces in Seychelles is part of a pattern in recent years of basing American troops to man missile batteries, interceptor missile radar sites, air bases, counterinsurgency forward bases and other installations in countries where their presence would have been inconceivable even a few years ago: Afghanistan, Colombia, Bulgaria, Djibouti, Iraq, Israel, Kyrgyzstan, Mali, Poland and Romania. A report of January 7 claims that the U.S. plans to establish an air base in Yemen in the Socotra archipelago in the Indian Ocean.

Later it was revealed that "In addition to the Reaper UAVs, the U.S. military is also considering basing Navy P-3 Orion patrol aircraft in the Seychelles for a limited time. Like the Reaper, the Orion can survey a large region...."

A Middle Eastern news source reported on this development as follows:

"The United States is taking its military venture in Africa to new levels amid suspicions that Washington could be advancing yet another hidden agenda.

"American operatives are expected to fly pilot-less surveillance aircraft over the Seychellois [Seychelles] territory from US ships off its coast, in what Washington claims are [deployments] meant to spy on Somali pirates....[S]imilar pretexts were used to justify the US invasion of Afghanistan, the missile attacks in Pakistan, and its waning military operations in Iraq....Washington has also started to equip Mali with USD 4.5 million worth of military vehicles and communications equipment, in what is reported to be an increasing US involvement in Africa."

It did not take long for the U.S. to put the Reapers into operation. In late October Associated Press reported "U.S. military surveillance drones are patrolling off Somalia's coast for the first time....U.S. military officials say unmanned drones called Reapers, stationed in the island nation of Seychelles, are patrolling the Indian Ocean.

"The developments come as the White House seeks grounds to establish a major military presence in Africa.

"The US military says it has deployed its drones ['the size of a jet fighter'], capable of carrying missiles to patrol waters off Somalia...."

Washington's attempt to establish an Afghanistan-Pakistan-Somalia-Yemen connection is intimately connected with its plans for Africa as a whole.

On January 4 a U.S. military website published this update:

"U.S. Africa Command has bolstered its anti-piracy forces with the recent addition of maritime patrol aircraft and more personnel in the Seychelles islands.

"The Navy last month deployed three P-3 Orion aircraft from the Maine-based VP-26 Tridents, along with 112 sailors, to the Seychelles to patrol the waters off East Africa....Patrol Squadron 26's insignia, a skull over a compass and two bombs or torpedoes that form an X, resembles the Jolly Roger flag, which symbolizes piracy."

What sort of pirates the Pentagon is using as the pretext for its military buildup in the Horn of Africa and Eastern Africa as a whole was demonstrated last September when "Foreign troops in helicopters strafed a car...in a Somali town...killing two men and capturing two others who were wounded, witnesses said. U.S. military officials said American forces were involved in the raid."

"Two U.S. military officials said forces from the U.S. Joint Special Operations Command were involved." The Joint Special Operations Command was headed up by Stanley McChrystal from 2003 to 2008. He has moved on from overseeing counterinsurgency operations in Iraq during those years to assuming control over all U.S. and NATO operations in Afghanistan.

A witness also reported that "the helicopters took off from a warship flying a French flag" and a rebel source said "We are getting information that French army gunships attacked a car, destroying it completely and taking some of the passengers."

French military forces remain in the former colony of Djibouti where they train for operations not only in Afghanistan but in several former African possessions. Troops, warplanes and armored vehicles from NATO nations - under the flags of NATO itself, the European Union, France and the United States - have intervened in civil and cross-border conflicts across the entire width of Africa over the past few years: Somalia, Djibouti-Eritrea, Chad, the Central African Republic, the Darfur region of Sudan and the Ivory Coast; from the Horn of Africa to the oil-rich Gulf of Guinea.

A report from last month provides some indication of the French role on the continent. Radio France Internationale described "French soldiers in Djibouti train[ing] for Afghanistan and keep[ing] an eye on Africa" with the following details:

"Twelve special forces commandos arrived first" and "the army...storm[ed] the beach....The exercise, seen as crucial for battle preparedness in a region infamous for its fractious politics, included all the country's military sectors - sea, land and air.

"As desert tanks zoomed onto the shore Mirage jets criss-crossed the open sky. Meanwhile, land troops were dispatched from the mouths of armoured personnel carriers and helicopters airlifted artillery guns onto the ground.

"'It's a show of force. It shows what France is able to do militarily,' said one army officer.

"In recent years French troops in Djibouti have been involved in a number of...military missions in Africa. They helped reinforce the UN brigade patrolling Cote d'Ivoire and last year provided logistical and tactical help to Djiboutian soldiers warding off an attack from neighboring Eritrea.

"For the time being, the first theater of combat these troops will see is Afghanistan, where France is part of the Nato contingent. The mountainous, arid countryside closely resembles Djibouti's own undulating moonscape.

"The troops taking part are a contingent of a 2,500-strong force based in Djibouti."

In addition to intermittent armed clashes between troops from Djibouti and Eritrea, in the past weeks reports have surfaced of deadly fighting within Eritrea and between that nation and neighboring Ethiopia. Djibouti and Ethiopia are the West's client regimes and military proxies in the Horn of Africa and, as is demonstrated above, the integration of the South Asian and Northeast African war fronts is proceeding rapidly.

Starting in the autumn of 2008 NATO began what it calls counter-piracy operations off the coast of Somalia and further into the Gulf of Aden, often in league with comparable deployments by the European Union, with which it shares warships, commanders and "common strategic interests" under the Berlin Plus and other arrangements.

The NATO naval surveillance and interdiction operation in and near the Horn of Africa is an extension of its effective takeover of the entire Mediterranean Sea with Operation Active Endeavor initiated in 2001 under the Alliance's Article 5 mutual military assistance clause and augmented by the blockade of Lebanon's Mediterranean coast by NATO nations' warships under UN Interim Force in Lebanon (UNIFIL) auspices that began after Israel's assault on the country in 2006. The latter's Maritime Task Force (MTF) "has hailed some 27,000 ships and referred nearly 400 suspicious vessels to Lebanese authorities for further inspection.

"Thirteen countries – Belgium, Bulgaria, Denmark, France, Germany, Greece, Indonesia, Italy, the Netherlands, Norway, Spain, Sweden and Turkey – have contributed naval units to the MTF."

The NATO and EU deployments in the Gulf of Aden are the first such naval operations in the region in both organizations' history and the EU's first in African coastal waters.

The expansion of military presence into the Gulf of Aden and the Arabian Sea gives NATO nations control of waterways ranging from the Strait of Gibraltar to the Strait of Hormuz.

As veteran Indian diplomat and analyst M K Bhadrakumar described it in 2008, "By acting with lightning speed and without publicity, NATO surely created a fait accompli.

"NATO's naval deployment in the Indian Ocean region is a historic move and a milestone in the alliance's transformation. Even at the height of the Cold War, the alliance didn't have a presence in the Indian Ocean. Such deployments almost always tend to be open-ended.

"In 2007, a NATO naval force visited Seychelles in the Indian Ocean and Somalia and conducted exercises in the Indian Ocean and then re-entered the Mediterranean via the Red Sea in end-September."

He added: "US officials are on record that Africom and NATO envisage an institutional linkup in the downstream.

"The overall US strategy is to incrementally bring NATO into Africa so that its future role in the Indian Ocean (and Middle East) region as the instrument of US global security agenda becomes optimal."

Last August the chief of AFRICOM, General William Ward, said that Somalia was "a central focus of the U.S. military on the continent."

To indicate the scope of Pentagon plans in not only Somalia but the region, "General William Ward has pledged continued support to Somalia's transitional federal government....He made his remarks during a visit to Nairobi, Kenya, which is a key U.S. ally in the region.

"When asked about U.S. warnings to Eritrea against its alleged support of al-Shabab, the U.S. general condemned any outside support for the Somali rebels."

U.S., British and other Western officials have been straining to establish (the most) tenuous connection between the so-called AfPak war front and the need for direct military intervention in East Africa and the Arabian Peninsula, as was seen earlier with the British prime minister's risible claim that NATO has been so successful in expelling alleged al-Qaeda elements from Pakistan that they have sought refuge in Somalia and Yemen. Rather than, more logically, in locations like Kashmir, Tajikistan and Uzbekistan.

Similarly, Western governments are sparing no effort to fabricate or exaggerate links between the numerous armed conflicts in the Horn of Africa. Somali rebels are accused of supporting the government of Eritrea in its border conflict with Djibouti; they are also accused of offering fighters for the internal conflict in southern Yemen.

In return, Yemeni rebels are accused of providing arms for Somalia's al-Shabaab fighters and hovering over it all is the implication that Iran is sponsoring Arab Shi'a forces in Yemen's north.

There is a plethora of evidence, however, documenting genuine foreign intervention in the region: U.S. missile, bombing, helicopter and special forces attacks in Somalia and Yemen and coordination with the armies of Djibouti and Ethiopia in conflicts inside Somalia and with Eritrea. Saudi air and land assaults in Yemen with the resultant deaths of hundreds and displacement of thousands of civilians. French commando operations in Somalia and combat training in Djibouti for warfare in the area and beyond.

The true outside forces engaged in military actions are ignored in the West in favor of unsubstantiated contentions that the region is being inflamed by the same adversaries the U.S. and NATO are waging war against on the Indian subcontinent and that the villains in and near the Horn of Africa are, in addition to being the local al-Qaeda franchise, inextricably linked and moreover somehow tied with piracy operations. Such are the tortured logic and far-fetched subterfuges used to prepare Western publics for an escalation of military intervention over 3,000 kilometers across the Indian Ocean from the Afghanistan-Pakistan war theater.

NATO warships are bridging the two extremes. Last August the military bloc launched its second naval operation off the coast of Somalia the name of which, Ocean Shield, alone indicates the scope of the Alliance's objectives in the Africa-Asia-Middle East triangle. The mission includes military ships from Britain, Greece, Italy, Turkey and the U.S. and according to NATO "other countries are thinking of coming to reinforce the operation which could evolve at any moment." A NATO spokesman said at the time, "No timeframe has been set for this long-term operation, which will last as long as it's deemed necessary."

The European Union is conducting a complementary mission, Operation Atalanta, "which has six frigates and works with fleets from the North Atlantic Treaty Organization and the U.S.-led coalition" and "operates in the Gulf of Aden and the Indian Ocean...from Somali territorial waters east to 60 degrees longitude, which runs south from the eastern tip of Oman and 250 miles east of the Seychelles." Rear Admiral Peter Hudson at the fleet's command center in Britain announced last month that the operation may expand its range even further, taking in most of the western Indian Ocean.

Last September the commander of NATO's Maritime Group 2 in the Gulf of Aden met with officials of Somalia's Puntland autonomous region to plan operations.

In mid-December NATO made a direct link between its South Asian war and its expansion into the Indian Ocean by announcing it was considering dispatching AWACS surveillance aircraft to the second location. "Commanders are seeking to back up a five-ship counterpiracy task force with one of the airborne warning and control system surveillance planes, possibly sharing it with the allied International Security Assistance Force fighting in Afghanistan."

On the first day of this year a Canadian news agency, in a feature titled "Canada to help defend Yemen from al-Qaida reinforcements," revealed that "A NATO spokeswoman said warships patrolling international shipping lanes through the Gulf of Aden, which separates Somalia from Yemen, were aware al-Shabab, an al-Qaida-inspired armed group based in Somalia, had announced plans to send fighters to Yemen" and as a result "A Canadian warship involved in NATO-led counter-piracy operations off Somalia's coast now has an additional task...."

Somalia and Yemen lie across from each other on either end of the Gulf of Aden where the Red Sea meets the Arabian Sea and the Mediterranean is connected with the Indian Ocean. An arc that effects the conjunction of three of the world's five most important continents. Territory too important for the United States, whose head of state last month proclaimed himself commander-in-chief of the world's sole military superpower, and what for the past decade has declared itself expeditionary and global NATO to leave untouched.

Source: Global Research.
Link: http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=16854.

Van Rompuy: Europe is on the defensive against new powers

Madrid - The European Union is "on the defensive" against the world's emerging powers following its humiliation at United Nations climate-change talks in Copenhagen, the bloc's full-time president said Friday. In Copenhagen, the EU was sidelined as the United States, China, Brazil, India and South Africa drew up a greatly watered-down deal between themselves. Analysts saw the moment as defining a shift towards a new world order in which Europe is a secondary force.

"There is now certainly, after Copenhagen, the awareness in all countries that things have changed in the world: the balance of power has shifted and Europe is more on the defensive now than it was a few years ago," Herman Van Rompuy told journalists in Madrid.

But at the same time, the EU's first-ever permanent president stressed that the Copenhagen conference produced a better result than many commentators had said.

"Without the EU, the outcome of Copenhagen would have been much less. There is no reason to be downbeat about the outcome, there are enough elements to build on and achieve concrete results for the benefit of our climate and our future," Van Rompuy said.

The Belgian, who took office on January 1, was speaking after talks with the head of the EU's executive, Jose Manuel Barroso, and Spanish premier Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero, whose country currently holds the EU's rotating presidency.

According to the Spanish presidency program, one of the EU's main tasks over the next six months will be to boost its prestige on the world stage, especially on climate-change issues.

Europe needs "a foreign policy in the defense of European interest," Zapatero said.

Van Rompuy has called for an extra EU summit on February 11 to discuss climate change and economic issues, with a particular focus on regaining influence over the global climate-change debate.

"I want the EU to bring its influence into future negotiations and to be both heard and respected," he said.

In particular, the bloc should "think how the UN process can be improved" ahead of the next major climate-change conference in Mexico at the end of the year, Barroso said.

Source: Earth Times.
Link: http://www.earthtimes.org/articles/show/302744,extravan-rompuyeurope-is-on-the-defensive-against-new-powers.html.

German Navy runs short of ammunition

Gluecksburg,Germany - The German Navy admitted Friday it is running short of ammunition, especially for sidearms. "We can't relieve it short term," said a spokesman at Gluecksburg naval base on the Baltic coast. "This year will be difficult for us."

A newspaper, the Kieler Nachrichten, said the navy was short of 9- millimetre cartridges for the Heckler & Koch P8 pistols used by frogmen and other naval special forces units. It still has plenty of shells, missile and torpedoes for its ships.

The spokesman said the German armed forces had been using up a lot of the cartridges in fighting in Afghanistan. Sailors seconded to Afghanistan had also fired off a big number of bullets during target practice with rifles and pistols.

He said the army and air force often donated their annual surplus to the navy, but the other forces had had nothing left over in 2009.

Source: Earth Times.
Link: http://www.earthtimes.org/articles/show/302747,german-navy-runs-short-of-ammunition.html.

Payback time: EU Parliament limits access to other EU bodies

Brussels- The European Parliament claims to be one of the most transparent democratic institutions of the world. But, a new policy for 2010 has made it more impenetrable to diplomats and officials from other EU institutions, it was reported Friday. The assembly's leaders have decided to end free access to its facilities for all EU officials, a response to the fact that members of parliament (MEPs) and their staff cannot walk in unannounced in the buildings of the council, where the representatives of the EU's 27 member states meet, or to those of the commission, the EU's executive body.

"It is a question of reciprocity", explained a parliamentary source who did not wish to be named. "We accept the presence of people from the council and the commission, but we apply the same rules they apply for us," he added.

The source insisted that the decision is not a "vendetta" against policies which strictly limit the number of MEPs allowed to enter the council's building in Brussels when summits of EU heads of state and government are taking place.

These meetings - taking place at least four times a year and extensively covered by the press - are an opportunity for MEPs to conquer at least some of the media spotlight.

"Parliament - the source explained - is not questioning the special arrangements in place for special events, and we also recognize that some parts of the buildings of the council, parliament and commission have to be more restricted."

The stricter rules, he added, are also a result of the entry into force of the Lisbon Treaty, which raised the parliament's powers and profile vis-a-vis other EU institutions.

According to the new policy, EU officials and diplomats are allowed to enter only if invited for a specific meeting, and, after subjecting themselves to security controls which do not apply for parliament's own staff.

Source: Earth Times.
Link: http://www.earthtimes.org/articles/show/302753,payback-time-eu-parliament-limits-access-to-other-eu-bodies.html.

Two more 9-11 victims identified

(WARNING): Article contains propaganda!

* * * * *

New York - New York City's medical examiners have identified two female victims of the terrorist attacks that brought down the World Trade Center on September 11, 2001, news reports said Friday. An estimated 2,750 people died in the attacks on the 110-storey twin towers, including hundreds of firefighters and police. But even eight years later, more than 1,100 victims have not been identified because the recovered body parts had been compromised by the extreme heat and passage of time.

News reports said some of the remains were found just a few years back from the burned debris of the towers that had been carted away. New scientifically developed DNA techniques helped in the identification of the victims, whose names were withheld at the request of their families.

Terrorists hijacked two commercial planes and used them as missiles to hit the twin towers, which collapsed to the ground.

Source: Earth Times.
Link: http://www.earthtimes.org/articles/show/302754,two-more-9-11-victims-identified.html.

Secret East German Stasi files may yield secrets soon

Berlin - German investigators are one step closer to reading thousands of secret service files, torn up during the final days of the East German regime, after a breakthrough in technology. The high-tech computer being built to reassemble millions of hastily torn-up files has learned to distinguish handwriting from typeface, project leader Joachim Haeussler told the German Press Agency dpa.

In addition, Hauessler said the machine can now recognize the color and contour of destroyed documents.

The Stasi record office, which looks after the former East Germany's secret police files, had hoped to begin 2010 making use of the new system to decipher 400 sackloads of documents, hastily torn up by ministry officials before the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989.

Technical delays at the start of the project three years ago mean this won't be possible before 2011, or early 2012.

In the final months of the East German regime, members of the security service resorted to tearing documents by hand, as their shredders overheated and stopped working in the panic to destroy evidence.

German authorities now hold up to 600 million fragments of paper, thought to contain key information about the final months of 1989. Since the mid-1990s, people have been tasked with painstakingly reassembling these documents by hand.

In many cases each page was torn twice, resulting in four pieces which landed in the same bag. However, the sheer volume of files has made the process slow and laborious.

After its 40-year existence, the Stasi left a legacy amounting to 160 kilometers worth of spy reports, recording suspicious-looking activities relating to the East German state.

In the months leading up to reunification, angry East Germans stormed the Stasi headquarters in East Berlin in January 1990, an event that will be memorialized in the coming days in Germany.

Source: Earth Times.
Link: http://www.earthtimes.org/articles/show/302758,secret-east-german-stasi-files-may-yield-secrets-soon.html.

Egypt declares UK politician persona non grata

By SALAH NASRAWI
Associated Press Writer

CAIRO -- Egypt on Friday declared renegade British lawmaker George Galloway persona non grata, accusing him of incitement after his harsh criticism of Cairo over delays in an aid convoy's entry into Gaza, the foreign ministry said.

"George Galloway is considered persona non grata and will not be allowed to enter into Egypt again," a Foreign Ministry statement said. The activist left Egypt Friday morning from Cairo airport.

Foreign Minister Ahmed Aboul Gheit described the aid convoy Galloway participated in as "farcical" and said the country would no longer allow such solidarity convoys into the Hamas-run coastal area.

In a statement later distributed to media, Aboul Gheit said future aid donations to Gazans would have to be unloaded at Egypt's port of El-Arish on the Mediterranean coast, from where Egyptian authorities and the Red Crescent would take the supplies and deliver them to the Palestinians in the blockaded area.

Earlier, British press reported Galloway had been deported from Egypt. They said he was forcefully taken by police from the Rafah crossing with Gaza to Cairo airport where he was put on departing British Airways plane.

A police officer maintained that security personnel only escorted him for his own protection.

"It was to protect him from the Egyptian people's anger," the officer said on condition of anonymity because he was allowed to speak to the media. "He was told that he is a troublemaker and his behavior is undermining Egyptian security."

Galloway led more than 500 activists as part of an international aid convoy to Gaza. They entered Gaza late Wednesday from Egypt after a month of traveling. Egypt gave them only 24 hours in the blockaded seaside strip before it said it would re-close the crossing.

On Tuesday, clashes erupted between members of the convoy and Egyptian riot police in El-Arish after the convoy was delayed due to the nature of some of the materials it was carrying, and dozens of protesters and police were injured.

Seven convoy members were ordered arrested when they return to Egypt.

A sympathy protest along the Gaza-side of the border Wednesday degenerated into stone-throwing scuffles and exchange of fire between Egyptian security and Palestinian gunmen, killing one Egyptian border guard.

The convoy was organized by the Britain-based group Viva Palestina, which planned to deliver hundreds of tons of aid.

Israel and Egypt imposed a blockade on Gaza after Hamas overran the strip in 2007, seizing control of the territory from Western-backed Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas.

Israel says the blockade is meant to pressure Hamas and prevent raw materials from reaching militants, while it allows limited humanitarian supplies into the territory. A trickle of aid is allowed in through borders with Egypt and Israel.

International groups have organized several aid convoys to the coastal strip, with tons of aid, although many of the convoy are meant as a protest against the blockade.

Source: Miami Herald.
Link: http://www.miamiherald.com/news/world/AP/story/1415399.html.

The "Allah" Controversy : The Future Implications of the High Court Decision

by Fatimah Zuhri

* Please forward/email this to as many people as you know. Feel free to translate to BM or to post/copy this in your websites/blogs. Feel free to send it to the newspaper. Please spread this message."

PART 1:

1. By now every single person in this country whether they are Muslim or not, would have realised that on 31st December 2009, Judge Lau Bee Lan have made a ruling to allow the usage of the word "Allah" to be published in The Herald publication.

2. Many of my Muslim friends who are bored/not interested in politics have asked me what is the big deal about this?

3. Let us take a closer look at the future implication of the High Court decision.

4. First of all, we have to understand how Legal System works.

5. When a judge makes a ruling/decision on a case they would tend to refer to previous decision made by the same Court.

6. For example (very simple example) :

a) On December 2000, Ali was caught of eating an apple which he took from his neighbour's garden. He was sentenced to pay RM500 and 1 day in jail.

b) On December 2009, Abu was caught with eating an orange which he took from his friend's refrigerator when he was visiting his friend's house.

c) When Abu is brought in front of Judge Fatimah, the Judge will check if there is any previous "similar" decision have been made. The prosecutor (peguam dakwa) will then recommend to the Judge to use the same setence which was made on December 2000 against Ali.

d) This is what we called as "precedent". Since there is an existing "precedent", Judge Fatimah will then sentenced Abu RM500 and 1 day jail.

e) If compared between Ali and Abu, it would look like Abu committed a lesser or different crime but in the eyes of the Law they both committed the same crime and the sentence should be the same.

7. Now let us go back to the High Court decision on the word "Allah". Judge Bee Lan decision was that The Herald is allowed to use the word "Allah" on the basis of "human rights".

8. Unfortunately, there are some highly irresponsible Muslim who say " So what?! ".

9. Well, let say a year from now, on 09.01.2011, a person of Hindu or Buddhist or ANY faith go to the court and say " I want the word Allah to be used to refer to my God ".

10. Since there is already a precedent (31.12.2009 - Judge Bee Lan decision), the court will then say OK using the same basis of "human rights" !

11. At the end of the day, everyone will then start to associate the name Allah with their God. It does not matter if the faith is Samawi based (Judaism, Christian and Islam) or non-Samawi based (Hinduism, Buddhism, Ayah Pin, etc...)

12. Again some Muslim will say "So what?".

13. Well, let say Ayah Pin followers go to the public and shouted, "Wahai orang ramai, Ayah Pin ialah Allah!"

14. Another example, a child who was born in a christian family. When this child grows up and see so many contradictions in the Bible (e.g. in 1 Corinthians 5:11 it clearly stated that a person should not drink alcohol, but in Luke Luke 7:33-34 it shows that Jesus/Isa a.s. did drink wine!), the child will grow up becoming an atheist (do not believe in any religion or any God).

15. When this child grew up to become an atheist, when his Muslim friend talk about Islam, he will ridiculed Islam and say " According to Malaysia's legal system, Allah in Islam and Christinanity is the same. So your religion (Islam) is no different from that of my parents (Christianity).

16. Worst, if he marries a Muslim women! I dare not imagine what will happen to their child...

17. If we did not have the High Court decision which equate Christian God = Allah, perhaps we can tell him,

"Look here my friend, my God is One God, He does not have a son nor does He has any parents, there is none equal or the same to Him. That my friend, is the difference between my religion and that of your parents!"

18. If there is no High Court decision which can equate Christian God = Allah, then the atheist can not say anything else.

19. Now, if you are tired after reading this 19 points, I suggest you have a break first, because there are another 15 points remaining. You can continue at a later time to read point 20-35.

PART 2 :

20. Let us take a look at another case. California Proposition 8 which was passed in November 2008 in the United States of America, a day after President Obama was elected to office.

21. Although the issue is different, the implication aspect of it is the same.

22. California Proposition 8 was a proposition to change the constitutional amendment of the United States.

23. A year before (in 2007) the California Supreme Court made a decision that equates Homosexual and Lesbian marriages = Heterosexual marriages.

24. Homosexual marriage is men marrying men and Lesbian marriage is women marrying women. While heterosexual marriage is between a men and a women.

25. The decision by the Court was made under the same basis which our own High Court made the decision on "Allah", which is "Human rights".

26. Imagine my dear readers, how can a marriage between a men and a women is equal to a marriage between homosexuals and lesbian? How can a homosexual or a lesbian couple can have a child? If half of the US population are involved in these sick marriage, in 20 years time, American population will be cut by half.

27, These were the questions raise all around California. The Christians, Muslim, Hindu, Buddhist and Jewish Californinans were upset by this decision.

28. What did they do? They held campaigns, pressured the state government, pressured the federal government and many more.

29. A year later, due to the pressure by the common people, the Court had to hold another round of proposition.

30. On the evening of November 4th 2008, the majority of the Californian people rejoiced and celebrated at the announcement that the proposition to reject the notion normal marriage = Homosexual/Lesbian marriage has succeded.

31. Anyone who have been to the United States, should know that California is like Bangsar. The Californian people are the most liberal people in the United States. Yet they manage to reject the sick notion that normal marriage between a men and a women = homosexual marriages.

32. Dear gentle readers, unfortunately in Malaysia, we have some Muslim who wants to make a political issue out of this. Irresponsible people such as Dato Seri Anwar Ibrahim (PKR) and YB Khalid Samad (PAS) wants to use this issue to gain non-muslim votes for their political party (Pakatan Rakyat)in the up-coming General Election.

33. This is really unfortunate. If one read and understood my points above, you would now realise the future impact of the High Court decision.

34. Currently, the Prime Minister Dato Seri Najib have asked the Home Minister Dato Seri Hishammudin to make an appeal so that the decision can be over-turned. We congratulate this excellent decision by the Government of Malaysia! However we have to continue our campaign. Please do not act in anger. Peaceful campaign and peaceful protest is the way forward.

35. Last, I urge that everyone of us can understand the issue. It is not just about losing a "word". It is more than that. It is for the future of our children and grand children. If we do not defend, a year from now every religion will call their God as Allah. Perhaps who knows, 5 years from now we will have Homosexual marriages as well. Do we want this to happen?

" Tepuk dada tanyalah selera..."

Thank you.

Salam,
Fatimah Zuhri.

* Fatimah Zuhri is a non partisan writer who writes for the well being and love for her children, grandchildren and for her beloved nation, Malaysia *

Source: Facebook Notes.
Link: http://www.facebook.com/note.php?note_id=269059818412&id=100000231316404.

Spain's youth feel EU jobs pain

By Stanley Pignal in Brussels

As an employee of a publicly funded organization in Barcelona, Elena Pinto had hoped to avoid the worst of the economic downturn.

But as a 27-year-old living in Spain, she takes comfort knowing her redundancy last month from a training institute for civil servants has more to do with the economic downturn than anything she did.

“My employer’s budget was cut. What can you do?” she asks, having joined the 43.8 per cent of young people in Spain without a job. “The situation in Spain will get better eventually, of course, but the next few months don’t look good.”

With limited opportunities at home, her job hunting is extending to Germany and Belgium, where unemployment rates are less than half the 19.4 per cent reported on Friday for Spain.

From a jobs vantage, Spain has been the hardest hit country in the eurozone because of a well documented credit and construction bubble. But the unemployment data out on Friday showed that all of the 16 users of the euro – indeed, all 27 members of the European Union – have seen unemployment rise in the past year.

The 10 per cent unemployment rate in the eurozone means that nearly 16m people – approximately the population of the Netherlands – are looking for work throughout the bloc. The 4.5m extra unemployed since the start of 2008 exceeds the population of Ireland.

The two countries exemplify how divergent the eurozone’s economies and social models are. The Netherlands’ unemployment is the lowest in the EU, at 3.9 per cent. Ireland, by contrast, has nearly 13 per cent unemployed, about three times its pre-crisis levels.

The Europe-wide rise comes despite extraordinary political measures to stem unemployment, starting with euro interest rates at 1 per cent for much of last year, and market rates lower still.

Many countries, including the Netherlands, have also initiated “short-work” schemes, where governments have given subsidies to employers that kept redundant workers on their payroll throughout the downturn.

An estimated 2.4m workers throughout the EU benefited from such schemes in 2009, over half of them in Germany, where unemployment has stayed below 8 per cent throughout the downturn – and fell modestly in November.

The push from policymakers is to keep these types of policies going until the numbers start falling noticeably.

Herman Van Rompuy, the EU’s full-time president, told reporters in Madrid on Friday that a revitalized economy should be the starting point: “We can’t pay on a sound basis for our social model, or what I call the European way of life, with our low economic growth.” He said boosting economic growth and modernizing Europe’s economic performance was “a matter of survival”.

The crumb of positive news is that the number of jobs lost has been falling steadily in recent months.

Source: Financial Times.
Link: http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/6a7b7892-fc82-11de-bc51-00144feab49a.html.

Spain presents new Internet anti-piracy law

MADRID — The Spanish government presented on Friday a proposed a new Internet anti-piracy law which will allow judges to shut down websites offering illegal downloads of music, movies and other entertainment.

"A judge's order will always be needed to take this decision through a quick procedure which is taken within four days at the latest after the judge has heard all sides," Justice Minister Francisco Caamano told a news conference.

The initial version of the law unveiled in November allowed for sites to be blocked or closed by a new regulatory body without a judge's order.

It sparked an outcry from bloggers and other Internet users who argued that it could be used by the government to censor websites.

A manifesto against the draft law was signed by tens of thousands of people in Spain, which has one of the highest rates of illegal downloads.

Last month Prime Minister Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero said his socialist government would introduce a new version of the draft law which addressed these concerns.

"If the draft law needs to be clarified, it will be. But the government feels that a country which wants to have intellectual property must protect it," he said.

The new draft law still must be approved by parliament before it it comes into effect.

The entertainment industry has been pushing the government to take action against illegal Internet downloads of copyright-protected material, arguing it cost them millions of euros (dollars) each year.

Syria's mysterious Dead Cities

It may sound like an Indiana Jones film, but Syria's abandoned Byzantine towns are real – though barely visited – archaeological treasures

Kevin Rushby

The stone window ledge has two rows of seven shallow depressions cut into it, and I am sitting next to them, trying to remember where on earth I've seen this pattern before. Far away, beyond the massive fortifications and the moat, are the white-capped mountains of Lebanon. I had not expected to see so much snow around, but then Syria throws up surprises all the time. Even this 12th-century crusader castle, Krak des Chevaliers, a fabulous place long picked over by archaeologists and historians, is full of mysteries. Like the timeworn inscription I found tucked away in a corner: "Ceso: LT:Bor . . ." What did it mean? A cryptic message from one of the Knights Hospitallers during the final Muslim siege of 1271, perhaps? My otherwise excellent guidebook to the monuments of the country by Ross Burns makes no mention of it.

Then more surprises: a local youth who has been watching me examine the ledge interrupts. "It's a game," he says, walking his fingers up and down the 14 hollows. "Mancala."

And I remember the African pastime, a bit like backgammon. "But how did it get here? Carved into the window ledge of the highest tower in a Crusader castle."

He shrugs and stands in the window, arms outstretched to hold the view. "I don't know, but isn't this great? I'm chuffed to bits to be here."

His English has a distant but distinct whine of Essex in it. Crusader ancestry?

"No, Top Gear," he explains, laughing. "I watch it over and over again on satellite. It's brilliant. I've never actually traveled outside Syria."

I leave him there and walk back to the entrance via the battlements, noticing the villages scattered below, some with mosques, others with churches. I've been in Syria only a couple of days, but the staggering complexity of history and culture are already clear. The previous afternoon it took me about three hours to walk a couple of hundred yards through old Damascus. Roman columns were tucked into medieval walls, the street itself following a route laid down by Alexander the Great, and the shops bursting out on passersby with the commonplace – carpets, cucumbers, Kurdish harem pants – and the rare – scarves made from the throat hair of Chinese deer, carnelian rings from Yemen, and lapis lazuli from Badakhshan.

From Damascus I had traveled north to Krak des Chevaliers, making one stop at the village of Ma'alula, a cluster of houses at the foot of a cliff and home to another surprise: it's the last place on earth where Aramaic, Jesus's mother tongue, is spoken. In the Greek Orthodox Church of St Sergius, Iranian tourists sat listening to the Lord's Prayer in Aramaic. The guide was not hopeful for the future survival of her native language. "If you come here in five or six years," she said sadly, "it will be a dead language. There are now about 50 families who speak it at home in Ma'alula."

Ma'alula and Krak des Chevaliers, however, were interesting stopping-off points on my way to my real objective, and a genuine mystery of Syrian history: the Dead Cities. These are 780 abandoned settlements dating back to between the fifth and eighth centuries, scattered across a vast swathe of northern Syria.

At Serjilla, an hour's drive south of Aleppo, I found one of the best-preserved sites dotted across a rolling upland area of treeless jagged limestone – at first glance, an impossibly inhospitable landscape. In fact, it was here that olive oil and wine manufacture made the inhabitants rich in the early years of Byzantium. The huge stone presses for oil and wine lie at the side of magnificent porticoed villas as though their owners had only recently stepped away.

I wandered through the grand old villas, exploring the town baths and church, admiring the bold Hellenistic architecture with its rich red stone. The late sun raked across pitted walls, revealing ornamental crosses and ancient inscriptions. This is an eerie and magical place, especially late on in the day when there were no other foreign visitors, just a couple of local families enjoying picnics and football matches – eighth-century columns doubling up as goalposts.

Adnan al-Hamwi, my guide and a published and respected historian, admitted that there is no proven explanation of why these cities were abandoned. "Maybe the economics changed: olive oil prices fell. Maybe a sequence of earthquakes discouraged them. The truth is, we don't know – it is a mystery."

Several of the Dead Cities have been dug by archaeologists and are laid out for visitors with useful signs and information; others lie within modern villages: strange stone towers sprouting from gardens, fragments of carved lintels lying under the pistachio trees. At one place, Qatura, we stepped through a sheep pen to reach a tomb entrance carved into the rock beneath a family house. Inside the entrance vestibule there were traces of Greek inscriptions; beyond, just a darkened sepulchre with stone benches where sacks of fertilizer were stored.

I spent the night in Aleppo at one of the many boutique hotels found in the Jdeida quarter, eating at the best restaurant in town, Beit Sissi), where black-clad waiters serve excellent Syrian wine at very reasonable prices. In the gallery, musicians played the oud, the Arab lute, with the violin – a tribute to the mixed nature of this diverse and colorful city, once a major caravanserai on the Silk Road.

Next morning I drove out with Adnan to the northern Dead Cities. At Ain Dara, we climbed a low hill overlooking the valley of Afrin where vast pomegranate and pistachio orchards spread all around. On the summit were the ruins of an Iron Age temple dating back to 1200BC: two large enclosures, one surrounded by basalt-carved figures of mythical lions.

"The dead would be brought here to the first room," explained Adnan, "and the lions would judge them and decide if they could pass to the second room – heaven."

"Judgment Day."

"Exactly. We think the idea came from Persia. The goddess worshiped here was the fertility deity, Ishtar. She is remembered in the English girl's name Esther."

We walked back down the hill and set off for the region's most famous historical site, the shrine of St Simeon Stylites. The vast ruined church, the most ambitious structure on earth in the late fifth century, contains the stump of the pillar where St Simon supposedly spent the last 36 years of his life until his death in 459AD. He was said to eat once a week, frugally of course.

"The locals say he never spoke to a woman in his life, not even his mother," Adnan explained, adding, "I don't believe it myself."

Simon's attempt to withdraw from the world up an 18m-tall pillar had one major effect. People flocked to see him. And when he died there was no respite: his body became a pawn in a power game between Byzantium and its distant, heresy-prone province. The church was abandoned in the 12th century and is now an atmospheric ruin where the wind moans in the pine trees and courting couples explore the further-flung ruins of the settlement.

Next day being Sunday I decided to tour Aleppo's churches and see for myself the toleration that Adnan claimed for Syria. He agreed to come along. "Why not? We Muslims have nothing to fear. Jesus is our prophet, too."

First was the Armenian Cathedral of the Forty Martyrs where a grand spectacle of theater was in progress for a rather small congregation. Under the watchful gaze of a large icon representing Judgment Day, the priests were chanting and counter-chanting across the nave. Robes were donned and changed. Incense swung. Holy texts uncovered and covered. The Armenian church's rites date back to the fourth century, and this was like a glimpse of Byzantium in its glorious heyday.

The Maronite, Syriac and Latin churches passed less memorably and Adnan fell asleep. I roused him for a coffee and shisha pipe in one of the wonderful old-fashioned cafes where old men while away the hours in card games and dominoes. Then we set out for the Shia shrine of Mashhad al-Hussein where the severed head of Hussein, the prophet Muhammad's grandson, is supposed to have been brought after his martyrdom in 680AD.

We found it with some difficulty, despite its important status in the Shia world. Pilgrims were praying, tapping their foreheads on tiny tablets of baked earth from Karbala in Iraq, scene of the martyrdom. Behind an ornate screen hung with green banners was the small stone on which the holy head rested for a night, leaving a bloody trace of its passage to Damascus. The Umayyad caliph, hoping to finish off this annoying succession dispute once-and-for-all, had ordered the head to be brought to his capital for the purposes of humiliation. As so often happens in religious matters, however, violence only strengthened his enemies.

One of the men finished praying and stepped outside with me. His face being rather stern, I expected a homily of some sort, but I was quite wrong.

"From England?" he asked in good, strongly accented, English. "You've got no chance. I'm sure the winners will be Brazil again." We stood for a while on the threshold, discussing the outcome of this summer's World Cup. Adnan came up and handed me one of the small clay tablets of Karbala clay: "Something to remember this place."

Over the city the sound of church bells could be heard in the distance, mingling with the cry of the muezzin at the Great Mosque.

Getting there
BMI (0844 848 4888) flies from Heathrow to Damascus daily and Aleppo three times per week from £357 rtn inc taxes. Exodus (0845 863 9601, tripcode AXJ) offers a 16-night itinerary which takes in Damascus, Aleppo, Palmyra and the Dead Cities of Syria, as well as Jordan, from £1,429-£1,739pp, including BMI flights. Exodus is also launching a new 'Week in Syria' itinerary which includes Damascus, Aleppo, Palmyra and the Dead Cities of Syria as well as Bosra.

Source: Guardian.
Link: http://www.guardian.co.uk/travel/2010/jan/09/syria-dead-cities-byzantine-archaeology?page=all.

Syria, Pakistan call for expanding bilateral cooperation

Damascus, Jan. 8 (Xinhua) -- Leaders of Syria and Pakistan on Friday voiced their desire to develop bilateral relations in Damascus, calling for expanding cooperation in various fields, the official SANA news agency reported.

The remarks came from the talks between Syrian President Basharal-Assad and the visiting Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari.

During the talks, the two presidents expressed their willingness to enhance bilateral relations and agreed to intensify exchange between the two governments.

The Pakistani president arrived in Damascus on Friday evening, starting his two-day official visit to Syria.

President Zardari briefed his Syrian counterpart on the latest developments and the situation in his country, SANA reported.

President Assad reiterated Syria's support to the Pakistan government's efforts to maintain security and stability in Pakistan.

The two presidents also discussed regional and international issues, and the two countries' roles in establishing stability and security in the Middle East and southern and central Asia, the report said.

Source: Xinhua.
Link: http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/2010-01/09/content_12779447.htm.

Xe Services aiming for Afghan police training deal

By RICHARD LARDNER, Associated Press Writer

WASHINGTON – Blackwater Worldwide's legal woes haven't dimmed the company's prospects in Afghanistan, where it's a contender to be a key part of President Barack Obama's strategy for stabilizing the country.

Now called Xe Services, the company is in the running for a Pentagon contract potentially worth $1 billion to train Afghanistan's troubled national police force. Xe has been shifting to training, aviation and logistics work after its security guards were accused of killing unarmed Iraqi civilians more than two years ago.

Yet even with a new name and focus, the expanded role would seem an unlikely one for Xe because Democrats have held such a negative opinion of the company following the Iraqi deaths, which are still reverberating in Baghdad and Washington.

During the presidential campaign, then-Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton, now Obama's secretary of state, backed legislation to ban Blackwater and other private security contractors from Iraq.

Xe eventually lost its license to operate as guardian of U.S. diplomats in Iraq and the State Department, with Clinton at the helm, elected not to rehire the company when the contract expired in 2009. Delays in getting a new company in place led to a temporary extension of the State contract.

A federal judge on New Year's Eve dismissed criminal charges against five of the Blackwater guards, citing repeated missteps by federal prosecutors. The Iraqi government has vowed to pursue the case, a new strain on relations between the U.S. and Iraq.

Xe on Wednesday reached a settlement in a series of civil lawsuits in which dozens of Iraqis accused the company of cultivating a reckless culture that allowed innocent civilians to be killed. On Thursday, however, two former Blackwater contractors were arrested on murder charges in the shootings of two Afghans after a traffic accident last year.

Despite the scrutiny, the U.S. relies heavily on Xe — pronounced "zee" — for support in Afghanistan and the workload may grow significantly.

Xe spokesman Mark Corallo declined to comment on whether the company, based in Moyock, N.C., is bidding for the Afghan police training contract. But a U.S. official knowledgeable of the deliberations said Xe is competing. The official requested anonymity to discuss sensitive information about the federal contracting process.

Xe provides security services in Afghanistan, though on a smaller scale than it did in Iraq. As of November, Xe had more than 200 security personnel on the ground in Afghanistan, according to documents highlighting Xe's operations.

Two Xe guards were killed Dec. 30 during a suicide bombing attack at a CIA base in southeastern Afghanistan, again raising questions about services the company provides for the CIA.

Late last year, CIA Director Leon Panetta terminated the use of Xe personnel in loading and other logistics for airborne drones used to hunt militants in Pakistan.

Xe is also a prolific provider of aviation services in Afghanistan, where travel on land is complicated by the country's rugged terrain and roadside bombs. In airplanes and helicopters, Xe has ferried thousands of passengers and millions of pounds of cargo and mail under contracts with U.S. Transportation Command with a potential value of more than $750 million, according to the company documents.

In 2009 alone, Xe projected total revenues at $669 million, the documents state, and three-quarters of the total stems from federal contracts to support U.S. troops in Afghanistan and Iraq.

The Afghan national police training contract is expected to be awarded soon and Xe is among five companies eligible to compete.

Obama is ramping up efforts to expand and improve the Afghan army and national police into a force able to handle the country's security burden so U.S. troops can begin withdrawing in July 2011. The private sector's help is needed because the U.S. doesn't have a deep enough pool of trainers and mentors with law enforcement experience.

Under an existing defense contract, Xe already trains the Afghan border police — an arm of the national police — and drug interdiction units in volatile southern Afghanistan, according to the documents.

The Defense Department's plan is to fold the border police training into the broader contract.

Charles Tiefer, a professor of government contracting at the University of Baltimore Law School, says Xe's foothold in Afghanistan could give it an edge over other competitors. And defense officials considering bids for the police training work may pay more attention to Xe's resume in Afghanistan than as a security contractor in Iraq, he added.

"Blackwater's current contract for the border police means it already has assets — experience, a proven record and existing capacity and personnel in Afghanistan — for a contract to train the Afghan national police," said Tiefer, a member of the independent Commission on Wartime Contracting.

The top military commander in Afghanistan, Gen. Stanley McChrystal, wants to build the Afghan national police to a force of 160,000 by 2013 — up from the roughly 94,000 now.

The Afghan army is in better shape than the national police, an organization riddled with corruption and generally unable to control crime or combat the Taliban.

At a hearing in December held by the Commission on Wartime Contracting, Fred Roitz, Xe's executive vice president of contracts and sales, sought to burnish the company's credentials. He said the company trains Afghan law enforcement units to operate effectively "in one of the most dangerous border regions in the world."

Roitz added that Xe has a new chief executive officer, Joseph Yorio, who replaced the company's founder, Erik Prince, in March. Prince's decision to step aside underscored the company's efforts to distance itself from the Blackwater brand.

Since 2003, DynCorp International of Falls Church, Va., has held a large State Department contract for training Afghanistan's national police. The most recent installment of the training contract was awarded in August 2008 and it generates about $20 million in revenue a month for DynCorp, according to company spokesman Douglas Ebner.

But a decision by McChrystal to give U.S. military officials control over all police training contracts is ending DynCorp's run and creating a major opportunity for Xe and the other companies.

DynCorp has filed a protest with the Government Accountability Office, alleging that the approach is "procedurally and legally flawed," according to company vice president Donald Ryder.

Military authorities gave responsibility for managing the expanded contract to a Navy office in Dahlgren, Va. The Counter NarcoTerrorism Technology Program Office has five pre-approved vendors: Xe, Lockheed Martin, Northrop Grumman, Raytheon and ARINC Engineering Services.

Viva Palestina Convoy Bids Farewell As They Complete Their Mission

From Kuzaimah Idris

GAZA, Jan 8 (Bernama) -- After 48 hours of getting the feel of Gaza, the Viva Palestina convoy finally bade goodbye to the Palestinians at 10am local time (Gaza time).

Although their stay in Gaza was a short one, the volunteer force of 450 people were satisfied as they successfully completed their mission in delivering trucks and ambulances loaded with humanitarian aid including educational and medical supplies directly to the Palestinians in Gaza.

Malaysia donated four trucks of humanitarian aid and one ambulance worth 100,000 pounds to the Gaza Elwafa hospital.

Dr Khamis Elessi, Head of Medical Rehabilitation, Elwafa Hospital said the Palestinians are grateful to Malaysians for donating the various supplies.

"We thank the Malaysian government, the Malaysian people for donating this truck for Elwafa Hospital Gaza, we are so grateful for Malaysian people for coming over such a long distance, we are so grateful that we find honest, courageous and generous people like the Malaysian people.

"The Palestinians in Gaza need thousands and thousands of tonnes (of medical aid), this kind of donation will for sure help many people recover and help make the lives of many people much better during these horrible times and miseries", he added.

Viva Palestina founder and organizer, George Galloway, said this mission was not the last.

"God bless Tun Dr Mahathir (Mohamad), god bless Viva Palestina, god bless Malaysia people who contributed in any way including the beautiful journalist for the success of the mission.

Similar missions of sending aid to the Palestinians in Gaza were organized in March and July last year.

"We will never stop until the siege is lifted, we will never stop, maybe we will come by sea next time then we'll only have one obstacles to deal with instead of many", he said.

The convoy of various nationals started their journey from London on Dec 6, traveling through various cities and towns in Turkey, Syria and Jordan.

They encountered various obstacles especially from the Egyptian Government for not allowing them to use its Nuweiba city as a gateway to Gaza via Rafah. This delayed their December 27 dateline to reach Gaza, marking a year of Israelis atrocities against the Palestinians.

The convoy started with 220 vehicles comprising trucks, ambulances and sedan cars, but upon arriving at the El-Arish port city, they were forced to leave behind 59 cars with the Egyptian government.

Their suffering did not end there. Many members were injured during a protest against the Egyptian authorities, resulting in seven being arrested, including a Malaysian student.

Source: Bernama.
Link: http://www.bernama.com/bernama/v5/newsindex.php?id=467113.

This Day in History

Saturday, January 09, 2010

Today is Saturday, January 9, the ninth day of 2010. There are 356 days left in the year.

Today's Highlight

2001: Some British schools begin handing out the morning-after pill to students, setting off a debate over parental rights as the government tries to curb an alarming rate of teenage pregnancy.

Other Notable Events

1951: United Nations headquarters opens in New York.

1962: Soviet Union and Cuba sign trade pact.

1964: Anti-US rioting breaks out in the Panama Canal Zone, resulting in the deaths of 21 Panamanians and three US soldiers.

1965: An estimated 500 people suspected of being rebels are executed by Congo government forces in Stanleyville in six weeks since city was retaken.

1970: France agrees to sell Mirage military jets to revolutionary regime in Libya.

1973: White-ruled country of Rhodesia closes its borders with Zambia to try to cut off black liberation forces.

1977: Palestinian nationalist, Abou Daoud, suspected of having planned attacks on Israeli athletes at 1972 Olympic games in Munich, is arrested in Paris by French intelligence agents.

1978: Islamic revolution erupts in Iran.

1987: The White House releases a memorandum prepared for US President Ronald Reagan in January 1986 that showed a definite link between US arms sales to Iran and the release of American hostages in Lebanon.

1991 US defense officials adopt a set of press rules for the impending war in the Persian Gulf that is criticised as bordering on censorship.

1992: Serbs in Bosnia-Herzegovina proclaim their own state.

1993: In a symbolic victory, government troops capture the headquarters of UNITA rebel leader Jonas Savimbi in central Angola. Savimbi, however, escapes.

1994: Gunmen attack a delegation including African National Congress chairman Cyril Ramaphosa in a township in South Africa, killing a photographer.

1995: Russian forces close in on the Chechen presidential palace in Grozny.

1996: Chechen rebels demanding an end to the war in their breakaway republic seize a hospital and at least 2,000 hostages in Kizlyar, Dagestan, and battle Russian troops in the town's streets. At least 40 people die.

1997: Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak inaugurates a pumping station designed to send Nile river waters west from Nasser Lake to create a second river valley for Egypt's growing population.

1998: Eight inmates die when a riot erupts in a prison in southeastern Brazil.

1999 In the first major violation of a three-month cease-fire, Yugoslav troops attack ethnic Albanian positions in Kosovo in an attempt to free captured soldiers.

2000: An investigation into leaks in Switzerland's vaunted bank secrecy turns up 13 people in eight countries who illegally received data on other people's Swiss bank accounts.

2002: Hamid Karzai, head of the interim Afghan government, announces a plan to disarm Afghan citizens and create a national army.

2003: Weapons inspectors Hans Blix and Mohamed El Baradei tell the UN Security Council they had not uncovered any "smoking gun" evidence proving that Iraq possessed or sought to develop chemical, biological or nuclear weapons.

2004: US National Security Adviser Condoleezza Rice admits that the United States has no credible evidence that Iraq moved weapons of mass destruction into Syria early in 2003 before the US-led war that drove Saddam Hussein from power.

2005: Mahmoud Abbas is elected Palestinian Authority president by a wide margin, winning a decisive mandate to renew peace talks with Israel, rein in militants and try to end more than four years of Mideast bloodshed.

2006: An Iranian military flight carrying a commander of the country's elite Revolutionary Guards and at least 10 others crashes while trying to make an emergency landing, killing all aboard.

2007: A cargo plane carrying Turkish construction workers crashes while landing at an airstrip north of Baghdad, killing 34 people. The Islamic Army in Iraq, a nationalist anti-occupation insurgent group, claims to have shot it down.

2008: Kosovo's parliament elects former rebel leader Hashim Thaci as prime minister in a vote foreshadowing a declaration of independence from Serbia.

2009: A US federal appeals court reinstates a human rights lawsuit against Mohamed Ali Samantar of Fairfax, Virginia. He is a former prime minister of Somalia who is accused of overseeing killings and other atrocities.

Today's Birthdays

Pope Gregory XV (Allesandro Ludovisi) (1554-1623); Thomas Warton, English poet laureate (1728-1790); Karel Capek, Czechoslovak author (1890-1938); Richard M. Nixon, US president (1913-1994); Sekou Toure, first president of Guinea (1922-1984); Joan Baez, US folk singer (1941-); Jimmy Page, English guitarist w/rock group Led Zeppelin (1944-).

Source: Jamaica Observer.
Link: http://www.jamaicaobserver.com/news/History-JAN-9_7314596.

Libya moves forward with nuclear program

2010-01-07

(Magharebia) Libya has launched its national nuclear program, PANA and state-run JANA reported on Wednesday (January 6th). The Libyan Nuclear Energy Board announced at a press conference that agreements and international treaties with France, Argentina, Ukraine, Russia and Canada in the field of peaceful nuclear energy production had been activated. According to the board's secretary, Dr Ali Mohamed Ghachout, the national nuclear energy program targets power generation and water desalination. A specialized commission will also reportedly identify sites for the construction of nuclear power stations.

If it is not now time for Khilafah, then when?

Thursday, January 7, 2010
By shark

The misery that Muslims of Pakistan face of bombings, assassinations and insecurity has now spread from NWFP to Punjab to Sindh province. On 28 December 2009, a Muharram procession in Karachi, Sindh’s capital and Pakistan’s financial capital, was attacked by an explosion, resulting in the death of over forty Muslims and injury to over a hundred more. Then, organized, well-trained gangs struck for many hours, uninterrupted by the government forces. They were skilled and able to break steel re-enforced locks on closed shops with single strikes. They caused fires with a special phosphorus-based fuel, which can only be prepared in advance and with great care, such that the fires spread widely and lasted for over two days. They caused over forty billion rupees worth of damaged and bought life to a standstill in Karachi, home to over twenty million people. And this was just one of a series of thoroughly prepared attacks that have shaken Pakistan for several months, causing a huge loss of life and destruction of property.

This organized brutal campaign is orchestrated by America, with the full co-operation of the Zardari regime. It was the Zardari regime that allowed entry to the American private military organization, Xe Services LLC, formerly known as Blackwater, which previously designed, organized and funded attacks in Iraq. It is the Zardari regime that allows the American agencies and private military organizations to implement their plans, roam the country and use their infiltration of the Taleban where necessary, without obstacles. There have now been several instances throughout Punjab, where heavily armed Americans have been stopped by security personnel, only to be released by the Zardari regime upon intervention by the US embassy. With support of the highest level, the Americans are swelled with arrogance to the extent that they have even threatened to shoot the Pakistani security personnel if they searched them. As for materials for causing mischief, the Zardari regime allows it to enter without restrictions. Ten sealed containers were directly handed over to US consulate staff upon arrival at Lahore airport on 20 December, without security inspection or customs clearance.

America unleashes these miseries to force the Muslims into submission regarding her presence in Pakistan and her war against Muslims. On 1 December 2009, US President, Barack Obama, said, “In the past, there have been those in Pakistan who have argued that the struggle against extremism is not their fight… But in recent years, as innocents have been killed from Karachi to Islamabad… Public opinion has turned.” The US Secretary of Defense Robert Gates said, “The more they get attacked internally, just like this terrible attack in Rawalpindi at the mosque, the more open they may be to additional help from us.” (Voice of America, 8 December 2009).

And as an additional service to its American masters, the Zardari regime is ensuring that America’s plans are unchallenged by making the life of Muslims a misery in many and varied ways: a sugar crisis in one of the world’s leading agricultural countries, a gas crisis in a country which possesses one of the largest gas reserves in the world, electricity shortages, during winter when electricity consumption is at its lowest and in a country which has abundant and varied sources to produce electricity and the striking down of the NRO (National Reconciliation Ordinance), with its resulting political drama played out by America’s agents amongst the rulers and so-called opposition.

Whilst the Zardari regime provides cover for America with a hostile campaign against its own people, America is entrenching herself and is furthering her war, preparing the ground for even greater miseries and dangers. American military forces are now present in Tarbela and Sihala, which is within striking distance of the nuclear facilities in Kahuta, and America is building a military base stretching over fifty six acres of land in Islamabad in the guise of an embassy. Moreover, air base facilities are under construction in Jacabobad, at a cost of over thirty billion Rupees, designed according to American air force specifications, with basements for missile storage, and are due for completion in June 2010. Already, in over seventy drone air strikes, America has killed over 660 Muslims, men, women, elderly and children, within Pakistan’s territory. And this is asides from night raids by American helicopter-borne soldiers entering into Pakistan from Afghanistan, which began in 2003 under Musharraf and continued under Zardari. And even though hundreds of thousands of Muslims are homeless in the harsh winter within South Waziristan, American military and state officials scream day and night at Pakistan’s armed forces for expansion of America’s war into Orakzai agency, North Waziristan and beyond.

And America is compelled to entrench itself within Pakistan, because it fears the Muslims will escape their control by rejecting America and making real change, by uprooting the current system and establishing Islam in its place. In an interview with the Washington Times on 24 November 2008, Army Maj. Gen. John M. Custer, commander of the U.S. Army Intelligence Center at Fort Huachuca, Arizona, announced with regret that, “The older military leaders love us, they understand American culture, and they know we are not the enemy, but they are aging out of the force.” In the Washington Post in March 2009, David Kilcullen, who advises CENTCOM commander General, David H Petraeus, on America’s war, said “Pakistan has 173 million people, 100 nuclear weapons, an army bigger than the US Army … We’re now reaching the point where within one to six months we could see the collapse of the Pakistani state … an extremist takeover – that would dwarf everything we’ve seen in the war on terror today.” And on 2 December 2009, in a Geo TV broadcast, US Secretary of State, Hillary Clinton, voiced concern about the work for Khilafah in Pakistan.

O Muslims of Pakistan!

Ten years ago when the dictator Musharraf ended the democratic government of Nawaz Shareef, you were relieved and gave Musharraf a chance, even though Hizb ut-Tahrir warned you from the beginning that Musharraf will unleash miseries upon you because he does not implement Islam and sides with the colonialists against you. Then when the dictator Musharraf resigned and Zardari assumed his democratic throne, Hizb ut-Tahrir warned you that your miseries will not end, but intensify, because the colonialist system remains. And now that you are swamped in crises and miseries, hating Zardari as much as you hated Musharraf before him, and Nawaz Shareef before that, we ask you now: will you be bitten from the same hole yet again?

And know that the Americans will allow the changing of faces, from time to time, as long as the current kufr colonialist system remains in Pakistan to secure her interests. Crises will continue to beset the country and faces will be changed when it is absolutely necessary to provide a brief release to frustration. Indeed, as you know, Musharraf was held aloft over your necks for years until America was compelled to bring a change in face through her agents Zardari and Gillani. NRO or no NRO, Seventeenth Amendment or no Seventeenth Amendment, minus one or minus two, 1973 constitution or Emergency Rule, democracy or dictatorship, Chief Justice or no Chief Justice, all such dramas are merely to prolong the life of this corrupt system of Pakistan, which is only deserving of uprooting and replacing by Islam.

O Muslims of Pakistan!

You may ask how does Hizb ut-Tahrir know these matters in advance, years before they happen? In answer we simply say that the Muslim does not have knowledge of the future, but heeds well the warnings and advice of Allah سبحانه وتعالى, Al-Baseer, Al-Aleem, Knower of the Unseen and Seen. So, the Muslim only expects hardship and misery from a system that is not based on Islam. Allah سبحانه وتعالى said,

وَمَنْ أَعْرَضَ عَنْ ذِكْرِي فَإِنَّ لَهُ مَعِيشَةً ضَنكًا

“Whosoever turns away from My Reminder verily, for him is a life of hardship.” [Surah Ta-Ha 20:124]

And the Muslim only expects oppressors to arise to ruling if they do not rule by all that Allah سبحانه وتعالى has revealed. Allah سبحانه وتعالى said,

وَمَنْ لَمْ يَحْكُمْ بِمَا أَنزَلَ اللَّهُ فَأُوْلَئِكَ هُمْ الظَّالِمُونَ

“Whosoever does not rule by all that Allah has revealed such are oppressors.” [Surah Al-Ma'idah 5: 45]

O Muslims of Pakistan!

Have you not had enough of life without the blessings of Islamic rule? Or will you be silent as more miseries are prepared for your children and their children at the hands of the colonialists and their agents? Is it not high time that you immediately moved to change the situation by uprooting these agent rulers and establishing the Islamic rule, Khilafah in their place? Indeed, within hours of assuming the rule in Pakistan, the Khaleefah will begin the transformation of this powerful country, with abundant resources, a brave and creative people, into a leading world power. This will not be due to his individual ability or genius, but solely due to the fact that he will implement the Divine Rules ordered by Allah سبحانه وتعالى King of Kings and Lord of all the worlds. So, the Khaleefah will remove all presence of the enemies of Muslims from the Islamic Lands, ensure that the basic needs of every citizen of the state are secured, irrespective of their religion, language or school thought and mobilize the resources of the entire Ummah so that they arise as the deserving leaders of humankind, as they were centuries under the shade of the True perfect Deen, Islam. Allah وتعالى سبحانه says,

أَلاَ يَعْلَمُ مَنْ خَلَقَ وَهُوَ اللَّطِيفُ الْخَبِيرُ

“Should not He Who has created know? And He is the Most Kind and Courteous (to His slaves), the Well-Acquainted (with everything).” [Surah al-Mulk 67:14]

Source: Haqeeqat.
Link: http://www.haqeeqat.org/2010/01/07/if-it-is-not-now-time-for-khilafah-then-when/.