DDMA Headline Animator

Wednesday, April 21, 2010

Iraq to launch Baghdad vote recount

Iraq's Independent High Electoral Commission is preparing for a manual recount of votes cast in Baghdad's polling stations during the country's March 7 elections.

A judicial panel announced the recount on Monday in response to complaints of widespread fraud from Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki's State of Law bloc, which narrowly lost to former Premier Ayad Allawi's Iraqiya.

"We have no problem with manually recounting the votes in accordance with the court order," electoral commissioner Hamdiya al-Husseini said on Tuesday, adding that the commission began preparing for the recount following the court order.

She said the commission intended to employ well-trained staff for the recount and will notify political and other observer groups to monitor the process.

Husseini said the recount, scheduled for Saturday, would involve 11,000 polling stations in the capital, adding it would take no more than 10 days to recount the ballots.

Results from the elections showed Allawi's Iraqiya winning 91 seats in the 325-member parliament, with Maliki's coalition on its heels with 89 seats. The National Iraqi Alliance followed with 70 seats.

The State of Law coalition has dismissed allegations that the court's decision came under the government's pressure, saying the bloc had presented over 4,500 manipulated ballot forms to the court.

Source: PressTV.
Link: http://www.presstv.ir/detail.aspx?id=123959§ionid=351020201.

Iran hosts 1st Asian archery league

The Asian Archery Federation (AAF) has slated Iran to serve as the host to the first Asian Archery League which will be held this October.

The AAF President, Euisun Chung, elected Iran out of eight state candidates to host the first Asian Archery League.

Earlier, Iran had proposed its candidacy to the International Archery Federation (FITA).

The Iranians' programs and facilities led to its election as the host.

Source: PressTV.
Link: http://www.presstv.ir/detail.aspx?id=123958§ionid=3510211.

Inquiry: US bomb kills UK troops

In their call for air support, three British soldiers were killed in a "friendly fire" incident by an American F-15 bomb attack, an inquest has heard.

The soldiers died instantly when a 500 pound bomb dropped by an F-15, hit their position in Afghanistan after an army air controller radioed incorrect grid references to the plane, the inquiry suggested.

Privates Aaron McClure, 19, Robert Foster, 19, and John Thrumble, 21, who were under intense fire, were bombed instead of Taliban positions 1km to the north.

The soldiers were on a mission from their base at COP (combat outpost) Zeebrugge in Helmand, trying to locate and kill a Taliban sniper.

Major Tony Borgnis, commanding over 100 troops that day, described the moment the bomb struck, saying: "I saw it fly through the air. There was a large explosion. I knew in my heart what had happened and feared the worst."

"We had engaged in the wrong place. I knew there had been a problem with the grid reference."

Source: PressTV.
Link: http://www.presstv.ir/detail.aspx?id=123955§ionid=351020403.

UN urges world to care for Earth

UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon has urged all governments, businesses and citizens of the world to give Mother Earth the respect and care she deserves.

People all around the world raise their green environmental flags to commemorate the International Mother Earth Day one day a year, on April 22.

This year Ban Ki-moon sent a message promoting the right of all humans to live a healthy life in harmony with nature.

“Mother Earth —our only home— is under pressure. We are making unreasonable demands on her and she is showing strain,” Ban's message reads. “We are now beginning to see the consequences of failing to safeguard our investment.”

“The impact of our neglectful stewardship is being felt most by the world's most vulnerable people; those who live on desert margins, and indigenous communities,” he added.

“Environmental sustainability —the wise management of Mother Earth's bounty— is one of the eight Millennium Development Goals adopted a decade ago by United Nations Member States. The deadline for achieving the goals is 2015. Protecting mother Earth must be an integral component of strategy,” Ban further explained in the message.

The Millennium Development Goals aims to teach people more about saving Mother Earth, and promote environmentally friendly practices to help everybody go green.

Source: PressTV.
Link: http://www.presstv.ir/detail.aspx?id=123957§ionid=3510212.

Iran's IRGC to stage military exercise

The Islamic Revolution Guards Corps (IRGC) will stage a massive military exercise in the Persian Gulf and the Strait of Hormuz, a top IRGC commander announced.

"The three-day maneuver will start in the Persian Gulf and the Strait of Hormuz on Thursday," IRGC Deputy Commander, Brigadier General Hossein Salami, said on Wednesday.

He added that the drill, dubbed "Great Prophet 5," will be carried out to "lay emphasis on security of the Persian Gulf and the Strait of Hormuz."

The IRGC commander said that the Persian Gulf and the Strait of Hormuz sea passage are host to key economic and energy routes adding, "We intend to display Iran's constructive, positive and determining role in establishing security in the region."

He explained that new weapons including the IRGC's missile potential would be tested during the maneuver.

Salami said that the drill carries the message of "peace and friendship" for Persian Gulf states, adding, "The military exercise is not a threat for any neighboring country."

The event will coincide with the anniversary of the establishment of IRGC. The IRGC's naval, air and ground forces will take part in the drill.

Source: PressTV.
Link: http://www.presstv.ir/detail.aspx?id=123956§ionid=351020101.

North Korea's Yong-Nam to visit Iran

President of North Korea's Presidium of the Supreme People's Assembly (SPA) Kim Yong-Nam will pay a visit to Iran in summer, an Iranian official says.

"The visit by North Korea's high-ranking official to Iran is expected to take place in two or three months," IRNA quoted Iranian Deputy Foreign Minister for Asia and Oceania Ali Fathollahi as saying on Wednesday.

Fathollahi, who is expected to visit Pyongyang on Wednesday, did not give further details about North Korea's second-most senior leader's trip to Iran.

Yong-Nam's trip will come as the US and its allies accuse both Iran and North Korea of seeking nuclear weapons.

Unlike North Korea, Iran is a signatory to the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT).

Source: PressTV.
Link: http://www.presstv.ir/detail.aspx?id=123953§ionid=351020101.

Hezbollah warns of Israeli invasion

Recent breaches of the Lebanese border and rising violations of the country's airspace by Israeli forces have prompted warnings of renewed Israeli aggression.

"The Israeli enemy is going too far with its aggressive and provocative acts," said Hezbollah official Ali Fayyad, who also represents Marjayoun and Hasbaya in the Lebanese parliament.

Fayyad called on the Beirut government to file a complaint against the rising intensity of Israeli provocations and violations of UN Security Council Resolution 1701.

The remarks come after the Lebanon accused the Israeli army of dropping a number of flare-bombs over the village of Abbasiyah late on Saturday.

"This is construed as further provocation by the enemy who has been pushing the line of attack further and further on Lebanon," the Lebanese army said in a statement the next day.

Israeli warplanes also violated Lebanon's airspace and performed maneuvers in the skies above Beirut, Baabda, Naqoura and large parts of the south, the statement added.

In an interview with AFP, Fayyad earlier condemned Washington for echoing Israeli allegations that Syria had been delivering long-range ballistic missiles to Hezbollah, claims that both Damascus and Beirut vehemently rejected.

"With this position, [the Americans] are encouraging Israel to carry out an aggression against Lebanon that they are trying to endorse at the international level," he said.

Prime Minister Saad al-Hariri on Monday ridiculed allegations over Hezbollah's arsenal, likening them to false US claims about Iraq's weapons of mass destruction, which Washington used as a pretext to invade the country in 2003.

Source: PressTV.
Link: http://www.presstv.ir/detail.aspx?id=123952§ionid=351020203.

Larijani due in Turkey for OIC meeting

Iran's Parliament Speaker Ali Larijani will visit Turkey to attend a meeting of the executive committee of the Organization of the Islamic Conference (OIC).

Larijani will take part in the OIC meeting on May 10 and will exchange views with his counterparts on key issues of the Islamic world.

Ahead of his departure for Istanbul on May 9, the speaker will likely pay a visit to Damascus, Syria, to participate in a consultative meeting with various Islamic countries.

Iran, Indonesia, Syria, Uganda, Saudi Arabia, Turkey, Cameroon and Burkina Faso are members of the OIC executive committee.

Source: PressTV.
Link: http://www.presstv.ir/detail.aspx?id=123950§ionid=351020101.

Turkey defends Iran's nuclear right

As a member of the UN Security Council, Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu defends Iran's right to use nuclear energy for peaceful purposes.

"There was no deviation in Iran's peaceful nuclear program," Davutoglu stressed in a meeting with Parliament (Majlis) Speaker Ali Larijani in Tehran on Tuesday.

He added that Turkey believes that no country has the right to use nuclear technology to build weapons.

Larijani reiterated that Iran's nuclear program pursues peaceful purposes and criticized certain powers for adopting double-standards on the Islamic Republic's nuclear case.

"Negotiations will be the sole solution to the ongoing (nuclear) misunderstandings," he said.

He added that the possession and use of nuclear weapons has no place in Iran's religious beliefs.

Source: PressTV.
Link: http://www.presstv.ir/detail.aspx?id=123949§ionid=351020104.

New UAE visa regulation for Kenyans

Wed Apr 21, 2010

A new visa regulation set by the United Arab Emirates (UAE) requires citizens from Kenya to have at least a bachelor's degree to travel into the Arab country.

According to the new regulation, even Kenyan transit passengers will be detained at UAE airports if they fail to prove that they have at least a bachelor's degree.

"It is unfair for the Dubai government to punish all Kenyans over this misunderstanding," the chairman of Parliament's departmental committee on Foreign Relations and Defense, Aden Keynan, said on Tuesday.

"Mr Wetang'ula and his team must be proactive in their dealings with such crucial trade partners so that such hitches do not occur,” he added.

The UAE's new visa regulation took effect just four days after the UAE Foreign Minister Sheikh Abdullah al-Nahayan met with Kenya's high-ranking officials, including the Kenyan President Mwai Kibaki and the country's Foreign Minister Moses Wetang'ula.

The exact reasons for the new move are still unknown. However, Mr. Keynan said it was in response to the deportation of UAE nationals touring Kenya.

About 36,000 Kenyans are currently in Dubai for work and business purposes while others use the Arab state as a transit route to other Middle East countries.

Source: PressTV.
Link: http://edition.presstv.ir/detail/123939.html.

Iran: Ties with Kazakhstan 'strategic'

Iranian Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki says that the strategic ties between the Islamic Republic and Kazakhstan are under direct supervision of the respective presidents.

"Iran and Kazakhstan are strengthening their relations in various fields as authorities of the two countries are determined to promote relations," Mottaki said in a meeting with Kazakh Minister of Transport and Communications Abylgazy Kussainov in Tehran on Tuesday.

The Iranian minister stressed the importance of implementing agreements already signed between Tehran and Astana, saying, "The Islamic Republic enjoys high transit potential which can be used in export of Kazakh energy and agricultural products."

Kussainov, who is in Tehran to attend the 11th Iran-Kazakhstan cooperation commission, called for the continuation of consultations between the two countries with the intent to implement previous agreements.

He said that inauguration of railway projects in the region would accelerate trade and communications.

Source: PressTV.
Link: http://www.presstv.ir/detail.aspx?id=123940§ionid=351020101.

Iran opens new trade centers in China

Iran is to open four more foreign-based commerce centers in China in an attempt to further develop economic relations between the two countries.

"The new trade centers will be inaugurated in Chinese cities of Urumqi, Beijing, Hong Kong and Guan ju," the head of Iran-China Joint Chamber of Commerce Assadollah Asgarowladi told Iran's semi-official Mehr News Agency on Wednesday.

Asgarowladi further pointed out that Iran's first trade center, opened in 2009 in Shanghai, plays an already important role in promoting mutual commerce cooperation.

Iran and China enjoy broad economic relationships despite the UN Security Council sanctions imposed on the Islamic Republic.

With more than 100 Chinese state companies operating in Iran, Beijing aims to increase its presence in the Iranian market.

According to the Iranian Chamber of Commerce, Industry and Mines, bilateral trade between the two countries reached $27 billion in 2008, showing 35% growth over 2007.

Chinese trade in the energy sector is especially strong with Iran as China, which now gets more than 15 percent of its oil from Iran, reportedly has commitments of more than $80 billion in the country's energy sector.

Source: PressTV.
Link: http://www.presstv.ir/detail.aspx?id=123941§ionid=3510213.

Darfur rebels to release hostages

Wed Apr 21, 2010

The release of four South African peacekeepers abducted in Sudan's Darfur region will take place after the country's election results are out, captors say.

"We will release them after the results of the elections," Ibrahim al-Dukki, of the People's Democratic Struggle Movement, told AFP on the phone.

Four members of the joint UN-African Union peacekeeping mission, UNAMID, were kidnapped in Sudan's Darfur region on April 11.

Dukki's group had asked for $400,000 to release the hostages. The group says the main reason for the abductions was "to show the international community that security conditions in Darfur do not allow for elections."

The abductions came as Sudan was holding its first competitive elections after more than two decades.

Election observers from the European Union had pulled out of war-torn Darfur due to what they deemed as insecurity.

Darfur has been gripped by civil war since 2003. Over the past year, the region has also seen a wave of kidnappings.

Source: PressTV.
Link: http://edition.presstv.ir/detail/123930.html.

Israel launches fresh Gaza strike

Israel has launched new attacks on the Gaza Strip as the blockaded enclave strives to rise from the rubble left from Tel Aviv's last January offensive.

Israeli forces shelled Deir al-Balah in Central Gaza late Tuesday while its warplanes carried out raids elsewhere across the strip, a Press TV correspondent reported.

At least one missile was fired into Gaza, targeting a group of resistance fighters.

It is not yet clear whether or not the attacks left any casualties.

The populated Palestinian territory remains the scene of ruined buildings yet to be reconstructed a year after a devastating Israeli offensive, which left 1,400 Gazans killed.

Gaza's reconstruction has turned into a herculean task under the grip of a crippling Israeli blockade that prevents the import of construction materials needed to rebuild the beleaguered territory's fallen infrastructure.

Residents of the coastal strip have turned to pushing in non-standard concrete through hazardous underground tunnels across the southern city of Rafah, while many have resorted to mud huts.

Three weeks of Israel's relentless bombardment of the Gaza Strip damaged or destroyed an estimated 60,000 civilian homes, leaving more than 300,000 people affected.

Source: PressTV.
Link: http://www.presstv.ir/detail.aspx?id=123929§ionid=351020202.

Uyghur Barred from Travel

Ilham Tohti, a leading economist, is told to stay home.

ANKARA—Chinese authorities have barred a leading ethnic Uyghur economist based, in Beijing, from attending an academic conference in Turkey, along with four other Uyghur academics from the Xinjiang regional capital, Urumqi, organizers say.

“We invited four scholars from Urumqi, six from Beijing—and now only four scholars from Beijing’s Central University for Nationalities are joining the conference now,” Alimjan Inayet, the organizer of an international panel on Turkic culture at Ege University in Izmir, Turkey, said.

“We were surprised when we heard the restriction. We knew of Chinese officials’ sensitivity to political subjects, but this conference, as indicated by the title, is unrelated to politics.”

Ilham Tohti, an outspoken economist who has often clashed openly with the Chinese authorities, had received a Turkish visa and permission to attend from Central Nationalities University in Beijing, where he teaches, Inayet said.

Tohti was to arrive in Turkey on April 17, but police came to his home on April 15 and warned him against attending, Inayet said in an interview.

Four scholars based in Urumqi, capital of the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region (XUAR), were also warned against attending, he said.

Repeated calls to Ilham Tohti’s home number rang unanswered on Monday.

The identities of the other four Uyghur scholars barred from leaving the country weren't immediately available.

Tohti had already sent the text of his speech to the conference, and it addressed the role of energy in economic relations between Xinjiang and Central Asia, Inayet said.

Disappointment

“We are so sad about the event, because he was to be a very important speaker—most attendees at the conference expected to see him and listen to his speech.”

According to Qeyser Ozhun, president of the International Uyghur PEN Center, Tohti was also blocked last October from attending a PEN International conference in Norway, when police stopped him from obtaining a Norwegian visa in Beijing.

In August, soon after deadly clashes between majority Han and minority Uyghurs in Urumqi, Tohti was released without charge after he was detained for allegedly promoting separatism, but he said police then visited his home to warn him he could still be tried and executed.

Tohti’s blog, Uyghur Online, publishes in Chinese and Uyghur and is widely seen as a moderate, intellectual Web site addressing social issues. Authorities have closed it on several previous occasions.

Uyghur Online was specifically targeted, along with exiled Uyghur leader Rebiya Kadeer, in a July 5 speech by the governor of Xinjiang, Nur Bekri, as an instigator of the clashes.

Tohti has said he was interrogated repeatedly and accused of separatism after he spoke out in March against Chinese policies in Xinjiang, particularly the disproportionately high unemployment there among Uyghurs compared with Han Chinese.

Millions of Uyghurs—a distinct, Turkic minority who are predominantly Muslim—populate Central Asia and the XUAR in northwestern China.

Ethnic tensions between Uyghurs and majority Han Chinese settlers have simmered for years, and erupted in July 2009 in rioting that left some 200 people dead, according to the Chinese government’s tally.

Uyghurs say they have long suffered ethnic discrimination, oppressive religious controls, and continued poverty and joblessness despite China's ambitious plans to develop its vast northwestern frontier.

Chinese authorities blame Uyghur separatists for a series of deadly attacks in recent years and accuse one group in particular of maintaining links to the al-Qaeda terrorist network.

Original reporting by Erkin Tarim. Translated from the Uyghur by Shohret Hoshur. Written in English by Sarah Jackson-Han.

Source: Radio Free Asia.
Link: http://www.rfa.org/english/news/uyghur/tohti-uyghur-turkey-04192010143128.html.

Hamas: US unfit as peace mediator

A spokesman for the Hamas movement says the administration of US President Barack Obama lacks credibility as a mediator in Israeli-Palestinian peace talks.

Speaking on Tuesday, senior Hamas spokesman Sami Abu Zuhri criticized President Obama's statement on the occasion of Nakba Day, saying the US leader's remarks only reaffirmed his administration's favoritism toward Israel.

Abu Zuhri also said that Washington was not fit to play the role of an "honest broker" in the peace process between Israel and Palestine.

"Obama's statement was a clear message to all Arab parties concerned with the peace process not to bet on the American role in this regard," he said.

President Obama issued a statement on Tuesday, reaffirming the United States' "unbreakable bond" with Israel, adding that Washington is confident the relationship "will only be strengthened" into the future.

Israel's establishment on May 14, 1948, which according to the Jewish calendar corresponds to April 20 this year, is called "al-Nakba" or the Day of National Catastrophe by Palestinians.

More than 700,000 Palestinians were expelled from their villages and towns and forced to live in refugee camps. This year marks the 62nd anniversary of Nakba Day.

Source: PressTV.
Link: http://www.presstv.ir/detail.aspx?id=123921&sectionid=351020202.

Statement of the Leadership Council of the Islamic Emirate Regarding the Recent Propaganda about Negotiation

Tuesday, April 20, 2010

In the Name of Allah, the Most Beneficent, the Most Merciful.

Quoting the Daily Sunday Times, some mass media outlets have reported that the leadership of the Islamic Emirate is ready to participate in a dialogue with the USA. The Sunday Times has published the report against all codes of journalism, on the basis of two unknown and alleged members of the Leadership Council of the Islamic Emirate. Other news agencies have published it without any alternations and verification from the official and well-known spokesmen of the Islamic Emirate. The Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan, while believing that such farcical rumors is a fatuous propaganda stunt of the moribund enemy, declares its stand as follows:

1. The Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan emphasizes its unwavering stand regarding talks with the Americans and considers unconditional withdrawal of all invading forces from Afghanistan as a prerequisite for talks and negotiation with the Americans. Talks with America in conditions of presence of foreign forces would mean giving their invasion legitimacy.

2. The Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan believes that the presence of Americans in Afghanistan is the main factor of instability in Afghanistan and the whole region. So any deal under the name of negotiation is a betrayal to the Islamic aspirations of the people of Afghanistan and all vital interests as long as this factor remains in its place.

3. The Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan has an organizational set-up inside the country for the conduct and advancement of all Jihad activities against the invaders. The organizational entity by the name of Quetta Council which the enemy ascribes to the Islamic Emirate is a groundless and fabricated designation which has no existence on ground.

4. The Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan has appointed two spokesmen for the clarification and elucidation of its official policy. These two spokesmen are entrusted with the duty to pronounce stand of the Islamic Emirate and explain the policy of the Islamic Emirate regarding all pertinent issues of the country. If some one speaks on behalf of the Islamic Emirate, it should be verified from these two spokesmen. Every posturing or political course of action which bobs up in the Western media from time to time, being contrary to the official line of the Islamic Emirate and lacking prior verification from the official spokesmen of the Islamic Emirate, is categorically a part of the enemy maligning campaign against the Islamic Emirate. It does not reflect or represent the official stand of the Islamic Emirate.

5. The leadership Council of the Islamic Emirate respectfully urges all independent news agencies and media outlets to fulfill their due obligations of journalism while publishing such report and observe all journalistic rules and norms in this regards. Similarly avoid painting such assertions of unknown persons as the official stand of the Islamic Emirate without prior clarification and verification from the official spokesmen of the Islamic Emirate.

The Leadership Council

Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan.

Source: Theunjustmedia.
Link: http://theunjustmedia.com/Afghanistan/Statements/April10/Statement%20of%20the%20Leadership%20Council%20of%20the%20Islamic%20Emirate%20Regarding%20the%20Recent%20Propaganda%20about%20Negotiation.htm

American Colonialist Agenda

Monday, April 19, 2010

In the Name of Allah, the Most Beneficent, the Most Merciful.

The current war in Afghanistan is in all its shapes and manifestations a liberation struggle by indigenous people against foreign invaders and their internal surrogates. The Afghans have proved their mettle as a free and independent people throughout their history by never bowing to foreign aggressions. Though America paints this war as a fight against terrorism but in fact it is a colonialist slogan by Washington, aimed at extending its own tentacle over Asia and, by extension, all over the world.

In 1992, when the former Afghan president Najibulla’s regime fell, the Americans embarked on a colonialist policy, indirectly encouraging domestic war in Afghanistan. On the one hand, they stopped the annual assistance to the Afghans in the shape of humanitarian relief and weapons to the tune of $600 million which they used to give to the Afghan Mujahideen and refugees but on the other hand they insisted on inclusion of the remains of the former communists of Halq and Parcham in the new dispensation. They called it a broad-based set-up. Washington also did not insist on dissolution of some notorious militia groups of the Najibulla regime like Dostum militia, General Momin, Babajan and Naderi militias.

These militias had key role in turning Afghanistan into bloodbath and perpetrating atrocities, killing and looting innocent people and committing crimes that were unprecedented in the Afghan history. They should have helped to bring these criminal to justice but instead of supporting a clean, independent, efficient government in Kabul, Washington indirectly ignited the flames of war.

Pentagon strategist wanted to discredit the Mujahideen, weaken their manpower as a result of a war of attrition and get rid of the weapons that had amassed from the previous years. They began to call Mujahideen as warlords while previously they preferred to call them as freedom fighters. They provoked some unscrupulous elements inside the former Mujahideen groups to commit some heinous crimes against their own people because Washington believed it would end people’s enchantment with an Islamic government in Afghanistan.

In 1994, the Taliban Islamic Movement emerged to foil the American conspiracy and establish an Islamic government in the country. But Washington tended from day one to oppose the young Islamic government, until in October 2001 when America attacked Afghanistan under the spurious pretext of fighting terrorism.

Now we are in the ninth year of the war. Washington is still repeating the same hackneyed clichés of fighting terrorism, though it has lost its initial splendor. Throughout this period, Americans committed the worst kind of human rights violations in Bagram, Kandahar and Abu Gharib jails. They have tortured and killed many innocent prisoners in various secret cells of interrogations inside their military bases in Afghanistan which are run by CIA and special operation forces, bulldozing the dead bodies under the ground.

Now after almost one decade, many observers in the world have come round to believe that the American war in Afghanistan is not aimed at fighting terrorism as they claims but rather they want to:

1. Use Afghanistan as an outpost to destabilize and carry out a regime change in the neighboring countries.

2. To control central Asian natural resources by bringing to power pro-western elements in these countries of the former Soviet republics.

3. To change the regime in Iran by supporting anti-government forces in Iran, financially politically and militarily. To spark off racial and sectarians violence in that country. To disintegrate and destabilize Pakistan. To pave the way and ignite vast demonstrations in China through Faulong movement to destabilize that country; to monitor China internal politics and military arsenal by installing electronic equipment in Minhas base in Kyrgyzstan and in Marja Helmand province, Afghanistan to monitor Iran’s nuclear program.

4. To make alliance with the so-called big democracy i.e. India against China and Pakistan. American has already given green signal to New Delhi to ramp up its activities in Baluchistan by working closely with Baluchistan Liberation Army.

5. To create utopian fear among the establishment echelon in Islamabad by launching the Talibanization propaganda, encouraging them to support the so-called war on terror. However, the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan has made it clear time and time that it will not interfere in the internal affairs of any country and believe in the peaceful co-existence of countries with different social systems. Until and unless Washington achieves those goals, it will always say it is not right time to withdraw from Afghanistan peacefully or seek peace talks with Taliban. Future developments will unravel this.

The Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan

Source: Theunjustmedia.
Link: http://theunjustmedia.com/Afghanistan/Statements/April10/the%20Islamic%20Emirate%20of%20Afghanistan,%20American%20Colonialist%20Agenda.htm.

Libya recruits disabled graduates for energy-sector jobs

2010-04-20

Libya's National Oil Company (NOC) plans to hire scores of deaf and dumb graduates of vocational training institutes, PANA reported on Monday (April 19th). The new recruits will be appointed in Libyan and foreign petrol companies.

Source: Magharebia.com
Link: http://www.magharebia.com/cocoon/awi/xhtml1/en_GB/features/awi/newsbriefs/general/2010/04/20/newsbrief-06.

Tripoli International Fair kicks off

2010-04-20

Some 1,000 companies from the Middle East, Europe, Asia and Africa will attend the 39th Tripoli International Fair on Tuesday (April 20th), PANA reported. The program of the ten-day event includes science and trade conferences, as well as a forum on the Libyan-Tunisian partnership, the Libyan General Authority for Fairs announced on Sunday. The first edition of the Tripoli Fair was held in 1927.

Source: Magharebia.com
Link: http://www.magharebia.com/cocoon/awi/xhtml1/en_GB/features/awi/newsbriefs/general/2010/04/20/newsbrief-05.

Chinese grant supports Mauritania defense overhaul

2010-04-20

China on Monday (April 19th) donated ten million yuan (about 1.1m euros) to help Mauritania boost its defense capacities, Chinese news agency Xinhua reported. Under the agreement signed in Nouakchott by Mauritanian Defense Minister Hamadi Ould Hamadi and Chinese Ambassador to Mauritania Zhang Xun, the funds will supply the Mauritanian army with artillery equipment, bulldozers and other material used by the military. The Chinese donation comes as Mauritania restructures and strengthens its defense and security sectors, Ould Hamadi was quoted as saying.

Source: Magharebia.com
Link: http://www.magharebia.com/cocoon/awi/xhtml1/en_GB/features/awi/newsbriefs/general/2010/04/20/newsbrief-04.

Arab women in the arts debate modernity, cultural preservation

Thirty female Arab artists gathered in Tunisia last week to consider modernity's effect on Arab culture.

By Houda Trabelsi for Magharebia in Tunis – 20/04/10

Modernity and globalization's impact on Arab identity were the focus of a group of Arab women in the arts who met in Tunisia last Saturday (April 17th) for the 5th annual Festival of Creative Arab Women.

At their two-day meeting in Sousse, 30 creative women from across the Arab world shared personal experiences and discussed how Arab identity can be best preserved in an increasingly interconnected world.

"Preserving the identity is one of woman's roles," Amel Moussa said at the meeting. The Tunisian poet, journalist and sociologist criticized "certain ideological approaches" for promoting the idea that Arabism symbolizes extremism and exclusion of the other.

"Arab society is living in a crisis of identity and confusion," Moussa added. "The role of intellectuals is to make Arab citizens reconcile with this identity, and in this way they can understand the other and achieve moderation."

Arab women can help eliminate these "impurities" through their creative works, she said.

Saudi plastic artist Maha Bent Abdallah Sannen agreed, saying it is natural that "creative women try to … demonstrate the Arab heritage through their works".

All women can strengthen the Arab identity through motherhood, Sannen said, adding that Arab identity and patriotism are "among the deeply rooted values in them".

Moroccan singer-composer Salwa Choudari said Moroccan women turn to fashion to express their Arab identity.

"The Moroccan caftan has a worldwide fame through modern designs and continuous attempts to make it modern," she said.

Another artist, Iraqi director Aida Chlifer, argued that identity is rooted in everyday behavior. She pointed to her own experiences in maintaining her heritage despite growing up in Switzerland.

"Preserving Arab values through our personal behavior is the basis, so that this may be reflected in creativity," she said.

Jordanian journalist Besma Mohamed Ennassour said that preserving an Arab identity from "this fierce attack on all that is Arab" is of paramount importance for creative people.

However, she challenged the idea that women are solely responsible for maintaining Arab culture.

"The role of creative women is not different from that of creative men, given that creativity is a message through which we give the correct image about the Arab identity, which we can prove without necessarily being in conflict with other identities," she said.

Libyan novelist Razen Naim Maghrebi said it was not the duty of artists to preserve Arab identity or become social reformers, because ideology limits creativity and "should be avoided".

Tunisian journalist Dhafer Neji praised Arab women not only for their prolific contributions to the cultural scene, but also for their forward-thinking works.

"Creative Arab women are often more liberal and modern in their creative productions – they sweep away templates and limits and violate taboos," he said.

"It seems as if it is a case of revenge for the rest of women," he added.

Source: Magharebia.com
Link: http://www.magharebia.com/cocoon/awi/xhtml1/en_GB/features/awi/features/2010/04/20/feature-02.

Hezbollah condemns UN report

Hezbollah has censured the latest report by the inspector of UN Resolution 1559, Terje Roed-Larsen, saying it constitutes a flagrant tutelage on Lebanon.

According to Naharnet, the Lebanese resistance movement issued a statement on Tuesday saying that it is not a militia as described in the recent report issued by the UN secretary general's special envoy for the implementation of Security Council Resolution 1559.

Hezbollah added that it is defending their homeland and preventing Israeli aggression whether he likes it or not.

Hezbollah also pointed Larsen's complete commitment to the interests of Israel and his bias toward the Zionist enemy.

On Monday, the United Nations released the eleventh report on the implementation of Security Council Resolution 1559. The report said Hezbollah's arms posed "a key challenge to the safety of Lebanese civilians and to the authority of the government" and called on the group to "complete the transformation… into a solely Lebanese political party."

It also said the United Nations had information that "appears to corroborate the allegation of smuggling of weapons across the land borders."

On Tuesday, Prime Minister Lebanese Saad Hariri dismissed Israel's charges of Scud missile transfers to Hezbollah as "similar to those which were made of the presence of weapons of mass destruction in Iraq."

Source: PressTV.
Link: http://www.presstv.ir/detail.aspx?id=123918§ionid=351020203.

Anti-govt. demos held in Egypt

Wed Apr 21, 2010

Dozens of anti-government protesters have taken to the streets of the Egyptian capital Cairo to demand more political freedom.

The demonstrators slammed calls by politicians and officials loyal to President Hosni Mubarak to use force against anti-government protesters.

They also called for an end to emergency rule that allows indefinite detentions of people under the pretext of national security.

A lawmaker earlier questioned the Interior Ministry for being soft on the protesters. He said anti-government protesters should be shot.

Amnesty International has condemned the MP's outrageous remarks, saying that it was "a clear incitement to excessive force and potentially unlawful killing of protesters."

Mubarak has been the President of Egypt since 1981.

Source: PressTV.
Link: http://edition.presstv.ir/detail/123919.html.

Airports reopen across Europe

After six days of an air traffic crisis, European aviation authorities have allowed almost half of the scheduled flights to take to the skies.

According to the International Air Transport Association (IATA), the restoration of full timetables may take six more days as hundreds of planes are out of position and thousands of passengers are stranded.

Over 95,000 flights were canceled across Europe last week after a volcano in Iceland erupted, sending massive ash clouds across the continent.

The April 14 airspace shutdown, which is believed to be the biggest aerial shutdown since World War II, is said to have cost airlines more than $1 billion.

IATA issued a statement on Tuesday, saying "This crisis is costing airlines at least $200 million a day in lost revenues and the European economy is suffering billions of dollars in lost business."

Aviation officials say all airspace above 20,000 feet was open for flights with the exception of Finland's airspace.

Meanwhile, in Iceland, police said the plume of ash from the Eyjafjoell volcano was diminishing but warned that there was "still considerable volcanic activity at the site and three seemingly separate craters are still erupting."

Source: PressTV.
Link: http://www.presstv.ir/detail.aspx?id=123914§ionid=351020606.

Iran, Turkey call for nuclear-free world

Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu says Ankara supports Iran's call for total nuclear disarmament.

“Turkey, like Iran, wants all nuclear weapons to be eradicated from the world and especially from the [Middle East] region, and the recent conference in Tehran can be an important step for realizing this goal,” Davutoglu said during a meeting with Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad in Tehran late on Tuesday.

Iran held a nuclear disarmament conference in Tehran from April 17 to 18 that brought together representatives from 60 countries.

Ahmadinejad said, “Tehran and Ankara can play a key role in regional and international developments by enhancing their cooperation and consultation.”

“The enhancement of ties between Iran and Turkey will serve the interests of the two nations and will help establish security and stability in the region,” IRNA quoted the Iranian president as saying.

Ahmadinejad stated that Iran and Turkey and other independent countries in the region should make joint efforts to totally eradicate nuclear weapons.

Source: PressTV.
Link: http://www.presstv.ir/detail.aspx?id=123913§ionid=351020101.

Turkish minister punched in the face

Turkish Minister of Energy and Natural Resources Taner Yildiz has been attacked in the central province of Kayseri.

According to a report published by the newspaper Today's Zaman, on Tuesday Yildiz was punched in the face by an assailant during a funeral of a Turkish soldier killed in a military operation against the outlawed Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) in the eastern province of Sirnak.

Yildiz suffered a broken nose and deep cuts in his forehead and was hospitalized after the assault.

“This is the fist of the Turkish nation; here comes the initiative,” the attacker reportedly said while punching Yildiz's face.

The government of Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan has launched what it calls a comprehensive approach to settle Turkey's long-standing Kurdish issue.

However, some nationalist circles describe the initiative as a project to divide the country.

The attacker was detained by the police and later identified as Sahin Simsek. Media reports said that four other people suspected of involvement in the assault were also arrested.

A similar incident took place in the Black Sea province of Samsun last week as the former leader of the banned Democratic Society Party, Ahmet Turk, was punched in the face and had his nose broken after reading a press statement in front of a courthouse. The police chief of the province was temporarily removed from his post over the attack.

Source: PressTV.
Link: http://www.presstv.ir/detail.aspx?id=123904§ionid=351020204.

Turkey to host conference on Somalia

Wed Apr 21, 2010

Turkey plans to hold an international conference on the political situation in Somalia in which measures to fight piracy off the coast of the African country will be discussed.

According to Spanish Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs Angel Losada, the international conference on Somalia is scheduled to be held in Istanbul in mid-May.

The Spanish foreign minister said on Tuesday that the conference would also be examining the effects of international assistance to the interim government of Somalia, the Anatolia news agency reported.

Losada also stated that the idea of an international conference on Somalia was first put forward last year by Spanish Prime Minister Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero and French President Nicolas Sarkozy.

Somalia has been beset by unrest since the 1991 ouster of dictator Mohamed Siad Barre.

In addition, the Somali coast has been infested by piracy in recent years.

Attacks by heavily-armed Somali raiders in speedboats have prompted foreign navies to patrol the Gulf of Aden and the Indian Ocean and to provide escorts for commercial vessels traveling in the area.

Source: PressTV.
Link: http://edition.presstv.ir/detail/123917.html.