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Tuesday, November 9, 2010

Armenians Plead Guilty in Georgia to Uranium Smuggling

By Loretta Duchamps
Epoch Times Staff

Nov 9, 2010

Two Armenians have pleaded guilty to smuggling nuclear bomb-grade uranium from their country into Georgia, as decided during a secret trial, said officials on Monday according to AFP.

In March, the two men, Sumbat Tonoian and Hrant Ohanian, attempted to sell 18 grams (0.6 ounces) of the smuggled uranium for $1.5 million. Their client turned out to be an undercover agent posing as an Islamic radical, said Interior Ministry spokesman Shota Utiashvili according to AFP.

The uranium, about 90 percent enriched, was smuggled by the two in a cigarette box on a train from Armenia’s capital Yerevan to Tbilisi.

“Most likely, the materials were stolen in the mid- or early 90s when a big amount of material disappeared. It’s hidden somewhere and from time to time, someone is trying to find new buyers,” Archil Pavlenishvili, who heads a nuclear smuggling unit in Georgia’s Interior Ministry, told The Guardian.

Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili communicated about the case with world leaders in April at a nuclear summit, but details couldn’t be made public before the two had been found guilty, reported Civil.ge.

The United States has equipped Georgia with radiation detection equipment at all land, air, and sea border crossings.

To safeguard the identity of the undercover agents, the trial took place in Georgia behind closed doors. The men face prison terms of a minimum of 10 years, reported Radio Free Europe.

This case is the third nuclear smuggling incident exposed in Georgia.

Source: The Epoch Times.
Link: http://www.theepochtimes.com/n2/content/view/45648/.

Religious affairs ministry warns of ideological war

09-11-2010

Al Qassam website - Palestine’s religious affairs ministry in Gaza warned the Israeli government’s announcement to relaunch the Jerusalem 2020 project, which would reduce the city’s Palestinian population to 20 per cent, could spark a “painful” ideological war in the holy city.

The ministry’s Jerusalem committee said in a statement it issued Monday that the plan would mean obliterating Islamic holy sites and landmarks around the Aqsa Mosque in hopes of taking control of the mosque, destroying it and building the alleged temple on its ruins.

The committee added that the Israeli government seeks to transfer the largest possible number of Jews to the holy city and adjoin communities to achieve this goal and transform it from a “fundamentalist Jewish city into a city of life”.

The ministry underlined that the construction of thousands of apartments and a train system between Tel Aviv and Jerusalem and a railway linking the city’s Gush Etzion settlement community places the city as a national priority.

Jerusalem’s Arab population reached 300,000, but with the separation wall isolating 120,000 residents, and 14,000 family’s who were denied citizenship as a result of identity card revocation, and Resolution 1650 that deprived thousands of family reunification, the number of Arab residents plummeted to 175,000, while the number of Jews in east Jerusalem rose to 200,000.

In a separate development, an official report issued by the Israeli insurance foundation noted a significant increase in the poverty level in 2009 in 1948-occupied Palestinian territories.

The report issued Monday said the majority of family’s under the poverty level since the beginning of last year are Arabs living in territories occupied by Israel in 1948.

The foundation said the poverty level rose by six per cent, with 15,000 Palestinian and Jewish families falling below the poverty line, most of them Palestinians and Jewish extremists.

Source: Ezzedeen Al-Qassam Brigades - Information Office.
Link: http://www.qassam.ps/news-3746-Religious_affairs_ministry_warns_of_ideological_war.html.

Protesters shout down Netanyahu in New Orleans

09-11-2010

Al Qassam website - New Orleans- Angry protesters interrupted Zionist Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's speech to a prominent American Jewish group on Monday, the same day his government said it would move ahead with hundreds of new illegal housing units in the occupied east Jerusalem.

The angry protesters, members of the Young Leadership Institute of Jewish Voice for Peace, stood up and shouted at different times during Netanyahu's speech to the Jewish Federations of North America.

The five Jewish-American and Israeli protesters stood up and held banners denouncing the illegal settlements.

The first protester, who interrupted Netanyahu barely moments after he began his 30 minute speech, was ejected while shouting "the loyalty oath delegitimizes Israel".

Subsequent interruptions of regular intervals protested Israel's occupation, claiming that it too delegitimizes what so clled "Israel".

Rae Abileah, a 28-year-old protester from San Francisco, shouted "the settlements betray Jewish values" as she was grabbed by Orleans Parish sheriff's deputies and pulled out of the hall. She said a man sitting in front of her tried to stuff a seat cover into her mouth to silence her. Audience members pushed a male protester and cursed at him after he interrupted the prime minister's speech.

Hannah King, a 17-year-old student and member of the Jewish Voices for Peace, which organized the protests, said that the protesters had been escorted out of the hotel, where they were handed over to the police.

King said that she had been driven to act as she felt Israel’s behavior went against her Jewish upbringing.

“We believe that the actions that "Israel" is taking, like settlements, like the occupation, like the loyalty oath, are contrary to the Jewish values that we learnt in Jewish day school,” she said. “This is not "Tikkun Olam". Oppressing people in refugee camps is not Tikkun Olam. And it is a hypocrisy that I cannot abide.”

Netanyahu accused the protesters of joining those who believe "Israel is guilty until proven guilty!."

Obviously, Interruption of Netanyahu's speech by angry protesters is not the first, previously, former Zionist PM Ehud Olmert was also interrupted by a group of angry protesters in Chicago university in 15 October 2009.

Protesters inside the hall read off the names of Palestinian children killed during Zionist occupation assault on Gaza last winter. They shouted that it was unacceptable that the war crimes suspect be invited to speak at a Chicago university when his army destroyed a university in Gaza in January. They reminded the audience of the more than 1,400 Palestinians killed during the Gaza attacks and the more than 1,200 killed during the Zionist occupation invasion of Lebanon in 2006. Both invasions happened during Olmert's premiership.

Source: Ezzedeen Al-Qassam Brigades - Information Office.
Link: http://www.qassam.ps/news-3749-Protesters_shout_down_Netanyahu_in_New_Orleans.html.

Algeria, Portugal launch bilateral talks

2010-11-08

Algerian Prime Minister Ahmed Ouyahia arrives in Lisbon on Monday (November 8th) to hold bilateral talks with Portuguese counterpart José Socrates. The 3rd Algeria-Portugal High Level Commission will focus on co-operation in the energy, public works, education and scientific research sectors, El Khabar reported. Several agreements are expected to be signed during the two-day session.

Source: Magharebia.com.
Link: http://www.magharebia.com/cocoon/awi/xhtml1/en_GB/features/awi/newsbriefs/general/2010/11/08/newsbrief-06.

'LibDex' defense expo opens in Tripoli

2010-11-08

Libyan defense and security exhibition "LibDex 2010" opens on Monday (November 8th), PANA reported. Some 120 companies from 21 countries are attending the three-day event at Tripoli's Mitiga International Airport. Organizers bill the exhibition as an opportunity for international manufacturers to network with government's officials, armed forces representatives and "all bodies involved in the defense and security industry in Libya and North Africa".

Source: Magharebia.com.
Link: http://www.magharebia.com/cocoon/awi/xhtml1/en_GB/features/awi/newsbriefs/general/2010/11/08/newsbrief-07.

Vote turnout exceeds 50% one hour ahead of ballot closure

AMMAN (JT) - Jordanians continued to cast their ballots Tuesday evening to elect the 16th Parliament.

By 6pm, voter turnout stood at 50,3 per cent, elections spokesperson Samih Maaytah announced, with North Badia district witnessing the highest, at 80.2 per cent, and Amman the lowest, at 31 per cent, one hour ahead of the closure of ballots.

Officials are authorized to extend the period by two hours if turnout in certain areas is too low or if a relatively high number of voters shows up at election centers in the last hour of the vote.

The capital apparently saw higher voter participation in the afternoon hours; at 1:20pm, 18 per cent of the voters had cast their ballot, but at 4pm, the turnout had increased to 24.8 per cent.

Officials said the voting process was going smoothly despite sporadic incidents of violence and disturbance, including the detention of 20 persons who were blocking the way of candidates in the governorate of Madaba and Mafraq, and the detention of a voter who attempted to vote twice in the governorate of Zarqa.

One person was killed and two injured in violence involving two tribes on the backdrop of election rivalry in Karak Tuesday afternoon, Maaytah told reporters, and police managed to calm violent incidents in Madaba, Wadi Sir and other areas.

His Majesty King Abdullah checked on the voting progress during a visit to the central operations room at the Interior Ministry, the Jordan News Agency, Petra, reported.

Interior Minister Nayef Qadi had said earlier in the morning that all preparations were in place to facilitate the voting process, emphasizing the government’s keenness to enforce the law to ensure that citizens practice their right unimpeded.

Meanwhile, Jordanian National Commission for Women Secretary General Asma Khader urged Jordanian women to head to the polls and choose representatives capable of representing them and their cause.

Khader expressed hope that women candidates would be able to win seats without resorting to the quota system, according to which 12 seats are reserved for women deputies, one for each of the Kingdom’s 12 governorates.

She said that the current quota system does not give a fair chance to women from major cities who, she said, are more politicized than their counterparts in the rest of the Kingdom.

Political Development Ministry Secretary General Malek Twal said the government was keen to ensure a transparent process and gave permits to local and foreign observers to access polling centers all over the Kingdom.

He said by Tuesday, the number of foreign observers had reached 356, while local observers totaled 3,500.

In the governorates, turnout percentages were as follows:

Amman 31

Irbid 59.2

Balqa 61

Karak 71.2

Maan 71

Zarqa 33.4

Mafraq 71.6

Tafileh 72.2

Madaba 71.9

Jerash 68.5

Ajloun 70.2

Aqaba 56

North Badia 80.2

Central Badia 75.4

South Badia 79.6

9 November 2010

Source: The Jordan Times.
Link: http://jordantimes.com/?news=31704.

Vote goes on smoothly; 'minor incidents' reported - officials

King checks on situation during visit to Interior Ministry

AMMAN (JT) – Jordanians headed to the polls on Tuesday to elect their 16th Parliament.

His Majesty King Abdullah checked on progress in the vote during a visit to the central operations room at the Interior Ministry, the Jordan News Agency, Petra, reported.

Overall voter turnout rose to 32.2 percent by 1.20pm Tuesday, according to the government. In Amman it stood at 18 percent. The highest voter turnout was in the Northern Bedouins District with 61 percent. In Mafraq, it was 50 percent, in Karak it stood at 49.5, in Zarqa 20.9, in Irbid 37, in Aqaba 31.5 percent.

Interior Minister Nayef Qadi said all preparations were in place to facilitate the voting process, emphasizing that the government is keen to enforce the law to ensure that citizens practice their right without any hindrances.

According to officials, “minor incidents that did not affect the process” took place, including the detention of 20 persons who were blocking the way of candidates in the governorate of Madaba and Mafraq, and the detention of a voter who attempted to vote twice in the governorate of Zarqa.

Meanwhile, Jordanian National Commission for Women Secretary General Asma Khader urged Jordanian women to head to the polls to choose representatives who are capable of representing them and their cause.

Khader expressed hope that female candidates would be able to win seats without resorting to the quota system which reserved 12 seats for women deputies, one for each of the Kingdom’s 12 governorates.

She added that the current quota system does not give a fair chance to women from major cities whom she described as more politicized than their counterparts in the Kingdom.

Political Development Ministry Secretary General Malek Twal said the government is keen to ensure a transparent process and has given permits to local and foreign observers to access polling centers all over the Kingdom.

He said by Tuesday, the number of foreign observers reached 356, while local observers totaled 3,500.

9 November 2010

Source: The Jordan Times.
Link: http://jordantimes.com/?news=31703.

Jordan arrests knife wielders blocking polling stations

Tue, 09 Nov 2010

Amman - Twenty people armed with knives were arrested in a western Jordanian city on Tuesday when they tried to prevent people from voting in a general election, according to the kingdom's Election Committee.

Polling stations opened at 7 am (0500 GMT) and in most areas the election was running smoothly, state run media reported, with the booths expected to close at 7 pm. Key opposition groups have boycotted the polls.

A spokesman for the Election Committee, Samih Maayta, gave no further details on the people wielding knives in Madaba, some 30 kilometers west of the capital Amman, but said the detainees were being interrogated by the security forces.

In another incident, armed men tried to stop people from reaching polling stations in Mafraq, east of Amman, according to an accredited observer with Rased, a coalition of civil society organizations.

The observer, Amer Bani Amer, said there were also some other signs of irregularities, including people using forged identity cards and trying to vote more than once.

A total of 763 candidates, including 143 women, are vying for the lower house of parliament's 120 seats, 12 of which are reserved for women under a quota system.

The main opposition group, the Muslim Brotherhood-affiliated Islamic Action Front, is boycotting the polls, charging that not enough was done since the 2007 elections to prevent fraud.

In the lead up to the opening of the polling booths, political observers believed turnout would be the main challenge for the government, with dissatisfaction among the population said to be rising, particularly in regards to a sluggish economy.

King Abdullah II disbanded the outgoing parliament, elected in 2007, two years earlier than planned, saying the chamber had failed to perform its legislative and supervisory functions properly.

The government has allowed more than 2,500 local and foreign observers to monitor the polling process, the Elections Committee said.

The US-based National Democratic Institute reported it had prepared 61 accredited observers from 18 countries to monitor the voting in various parts of the kingdom.

Source: Earth Times.
Link: http://www.earthtimes.org/articles/news/352657,wielders-blocking-polling-stations.html.

A plan to turn Jordan into a state for Palestinians

09-11-2010

Al Qassam website -Netherlands MP Geert Wilders, known for his hostility against Islam, is scheduled to attend a conference in Israel to discuss a plan to turn Jordan into a national homeland for Palestinians and shoot down the two-states proposal which provides for the establishment of a Palestinian state in the West Bank.

Israeli Knesset members will discuss during the conference the advantages and disadvantages of allocating Jordan as a state for the Palestinians and dumping the two-states solution.

MP Wilders previously called for a ban on building mosques in Holland and spread an offensive film about the Prophet Mohammed that outraged more than a billion and a half Muslims across the planet.

Israeli MK Aryeh Eldad said: “The Dutch MP was invited to the conference as one of the strongest supporters of the establishment of a Palestinian state in Jordan.”

Source: Ezzedeen Al-Qassam Brigades - Information Office.
Link: http://www.qassam.ps/news-3745-A_plan_to_turn_Jordan_into_a_state_for_Palestinians.html.

Jordanians vote in parliamentary elections boycotted by Islamists

Tue, 09 Nov 2010

Amman - Jordanians headed to the polls Tuesday in parliamentary elections boycotted by the main opposition group, the Muslim Brotherhood, and its political arm, the Islamic Action Front (IAF).

A total of 763 candidates, including 143 women, are vying for the lower house's 120 seats, 12 of which are reserved for women under a quota system.

Official statistics indicated that 86 candidates represented political parties, but analysts said tribal, family and factional affiliations would be the crucial factor in the polls, in which, the Interior Ministry said, 2.37 million Jordanians were eligible to vote.

Turnout would be the main challenge facing the government of Prime Minister Samir Rifai. It was expected to be low amid dissatisfaction with the National Assembly and a sluggish economy.

The IAF, the left-leaning Popular Unity Party and independent politicians have not only boycotted the vote, but they have also campaigned throughout the country to urge citizens not to vote.

They cited the government's failure to adopt a modern election law providing proportional representation as part of a package of political reforms.

Polling stations are to be open from 7 am (0500 GMT) to 7 pm with election authorities in each province having the right to extend the process by up to two hours if voters are waiting at closing time.

The government has allowed more than 2,500 local and foreign observers to monitor the polling process, Elections Committee spokesman Samih Maayta said.

The US-based National Democratic Institute said Monday that it had prepared 61 accredited observers from 18 countries to monitor the voting in various parts of Jordan.

Source: The Earth Times.
Link: http://www.earthtimes.org/articles/news/352626,parliamentary-elections-boycotted-islamists.html.

China to build nuclear plant in Pakistan

Tue Nov 9, 2010

China has reportedly agreed to build another nuclear reactor for energy-starved Pakistan, amid calls on the South Asian country to pen the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT).

This will be the fifth Chinese-built atomic reactor in the country, boosting Beijing's growing support for Islamabad. The Pakistani government has declined to comment further on the plans for the fifth reactor.

The supply of a fifth nuclear reactor to Pakistan comes after Beijing confirmed earlier this year that it had agreed to build two 650MW nuclear energy reactors at Chashma, in the central part of Pakistan's Punjab province, The Financial Times reported on Monday.

China has already built one nuclear energy reactor at Chashma and is expected to complete a second at the same site next year.

“We have an ongoing program of cooperation for the peaceful use of nuclear energy with China," Pakistan's Defense Minister Ahmed Mukhtar was quoted as saying.

Washington opposes the plans because nuclear-armed Islamabad refuses to join the NPT.

A Chinese official said in September there had been discussions between the two countries about building a 600MW or 1GW plant in Pakistan, in addition to another two 300MW plants that Chinese companies are expected to build at Chashma.

Not only is China keen on boosting ties with Pakistan, but the new deals also reflect Chinese commercial ambitions to become a significant player in the nuclear industry.

Source: PressTV.
Link: http://presstv.ir/detail/150207.html.

Recalled Japan envoy back in Moscow

Tue Nov 9, 2010

Japan's envoy to Moscow who was recalled last week in reaction to Russian President Dmitry Medvedev's visit to disputed Islands has returned to the country.

Kono said he was keen on negotiating a possible meeting between Japanese Prime Minister Naoto Kan and Medvedev in Yokohama, Japan, Russia's Itar-Tass news agency reported on Monday.

Medvedev visited the island of Kunashir, one of the four islands known as the Kuril Islands in Russia and the Northern Territories in Japan on November 1. The visit was the first of any such visit made by a Russian leader.

The Japanese premier quickly expressed regret over the controversial visit to the remote Pacific islands.

“Japan's stance is that those four northern islands are part of our country's territory, so the president's visit is very regrettable,” Kan said.

Japanese Foreign Minister Seiji Maehara also said any such visit would “hurt the feelings of the Japanese people.”

Meanwhile, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov denied that Medvedev's trip to the disputed islands was politically motivated.

The Russian president "does not take advice from anyone" on which region of Russia he should visit, Lavrov said on Friday.

Kono was temporarily recalled to Tokyo for consultations after Medvedev's visit to the Kunashir Island.

The Kurils Islands have rich fishing grounds, mineral deposits, as well as potential oil and gas reserves.

The archipelago of some 56 islands, which are home to about 19,000 people, has been controlled by Moscow since being seized by Soviet troops in 1945. All of the islands are under Russian jurisdiction, but Japan claims that the four southernmost islands as part of its territory.

Tension over the disputed Kuril Islands has snarled ties between Tokyo and Moscow, preventing the signing of a formal peace treaty to end WWII hostilities.

Source: PressTV.
Link: http://presstv.ir/detail/150202.html.

Iran Majlis okays satellite activity

Tue Nov 9, 2010

The Iranian Parliament (Majlis) has ratified a bill requiring the government to enhance its efforts to design and launch satellites and satellite carriers.

On Monday, Iranian lawmakers voted in favor of Article 49 of a bill in the country's Fifth Five-Year Economic Development Plan (2011-2015), which will authorize the government to set up the infrastructure needed for the Islamic Republic's satellite projects, IRNA reported.

The new law reads, "Regarding the importance of space expertise and the attainment of related technologies, the government can take necessary action in order to meet the country's needs in the field of space."

The government has accordingly been required to develop relevant industries for the construction, testing, and launching of satellite systems, including satellites and their carriers and controllers.

Iran joined the club of countries with satellite launching expertise in 2009 with the launch of its domestically produced Omid satellite, which blasted into space on a carrier called the Safir.

The Omid is the third Iranian-made satellite to be sent into space. Russia launched Iran's first satellite in 2005. Three years later, another satellite, which had been jointly designed by Iran, China, and Thailand, was launched into orbit by China.

Tehran also plans to launch the country's first manned mission into space by 2019.

Source: PressTV.
Link: http://presstv.ir/detail/150198.html.

Singh disagrees with Obama on Kashmir

Tue Nov 9, 2010

Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh has disagreed with US President Barack Obama's stance on the India-Pakistan negotiations over the Kashmir issue.

"We're not afraid of the K-word," Singh declared. "But talks can only happen when Pakistan has ceased its policy of terror-induced coercion. You (Pakistan) cannot simultaneously be talking while the terror machine is active as ever before," Singh said at a joint press conference with Obama in New Delhi on Monday.

However, the Indian prime minister said it is no secret that he would like to resolve disputes with Islamabad during his term in office.

He also took issue with US media outlets' claims that India has taken jobs away from the US, saying, "Indians are not in the business of stealing jobs from Americans."

Before coming to India, Obama and the US media had spent the last couple of days talking about a perception in the United States that jobs were being shipped out to India through outsourcing.

In recent months, Obama has also spoken about outsourcing to India, warning the US against being "Bangalored," in reference to the city of Bangalore, the hub of India's IT industry.

"The outsourcing industry, I believe, has helped to improve the productive capacity and productivity of American industries", The Times of India quoted the Indian prime minister as saying.

Before the joint press conference, the two leaders emphasized the importance of their global strategic partnership and pledged to deepen cooperation between the two nations.

Singh and Obama agreed to promote bilateral ties, cooperate in advanced technology and innovation, expand prosperity in both countries and global economic growth, and support sustainable development.

The two leaders called their meeting a "historic milestone."

On Monday, it was also announced that Singh would travel to Washington in 2011.

Source: PressTV.
Link: http://www.presstv.ir/detail/150196.html.

'WikiLeaks created media hype on Iran'‎

Mon Nov 8, 2010

After the publication of secret military files on the Iraq war, independent journalists and pundits have criticized Western media for cherry picking the information.

Whistleblower website WikiLeaks, collaborating with Al-Jazeera News, The Guardian and Le Monde, disclosed some 400,000 military documents last month.

However, Western media turned its focus to details provided by an unidentified "source" over Iran's alleged involvement in the war-torn country.

"A source provides details to the American government about the nefarious activities of a Middle Eastern country. That information ends up in scores of secret US government documents," writes New York-based journalist Ali Gharib in an article published by the Columbia Journalism Review.

"Subsequently, the information winds up on the front pages of major newspapers, and is heralded by war hawks in Washington as a casus belli," he add.

The article goes on to cite the "blaring headlines" dominating the front pages of US media, with most stories based on what US soldiers on the ground believe they saw; more specifically the "shadow" of Iran.

“The field reports also provide a detailed account of what American military officials on the ground in Iraq saw as Iran's shadowy role training and equipping Iraqi Shiite militias to fight the US.,” wrote Julian Barnes in The Wall Street Journal. “American intelligence believed the training was provided not only by the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps in Iran, but also by Hezbollah, their Lebanese ally.”

NYU Center on Law and Security fellow Nir Rosen and John Hammond of the Foreign Policy Journal share Gharib's view that the claims are disputable.

Gharib points to several articles written for The New York Times, Newsweek, and The Wall Street Journal, cautioning readers to read between the lines:

University of Minnesota professor William Beeman wrote on his blog that the documents do not constitute proof, but rather only give “verbatim internal reports” instead of broader accusations previously made by senior military officials in Iraq….

And at the Foreign Policy Journal website, Jeremy Hammond, in the course of picking apart the Times piece for inconsistencies, notes that the claim that some revelations were “broadly consistent” with other classified documents and official accounts -- all of which would also come through the lens of the US government.

“As for being 'broadly consistent' with public accounts by military officials, this is a meaningless statement from which no conclusions about the accuracy of the reports may be drawn,” continues Hammond.

“After all, the infamous documents purporting to show that Iraq under Saddam Hussein had sought to purchase yellowcake uranium from Niger were 'broadly consistent' with public claims about Iraq's possession and pursuit of weapons of mass destruction (WMD), but they were fabrications nevertheless.”

"And therein lies the call for more caution in reading single-source US government (in this case, military/ intelligence) reports-mistakes have been made before, and they left Iraq in a bloody shambles," Gharib concludes.

The WikiLeaks files also showed that the United States' largest private security contractor in Afghanistan and Iraq, Xe Services LLC, formerly known as Blackwater, was responsible for more excesses in Iraq than previously revealed.

Blackwater, which has been barred from operating in Afghanistan, rose to notoriety in 2007 when guards opened fire on a busy square in central Baghdad, killing 17 Iraqi civilian.

However, the leaked documents suggest 10 more civilians were killed and another seven were wounded by the US security contractor's employees in suppressed incidents.

The leaked documents have cast doubt on Washington's tally of war casualties in the country following the 2003 US-led invasion that toppled the regime of Saddam Hussein.

"The reports detail 109,032 deaths in Iraq, comprised of 66,081 'civilians;' 23,984 'enemy' (those labeled as insurgents); 15,196 'host nation' (Iraqi government forces) and 3,771 'friendly' (coalition forces)," WikiLeaks said in a statement on October 22 regarding the documents' release.

"The majority of the deaths (66,000, over 60 percent) of these are civilian deaths. That is 31 civilians dying every day during the six-year period," the statement added.

Source: PressTV.
Link: http://edition.presstv.ir/detail/150158.html.

Pharaonic inscription found in S Arabia

Mon Nov 8, 2010

Saudi archeologists have discovered an inscription near the ancient oasis of Tayma in Tabuk Province, which might have belonged to an Egyptian pharaoh.

The Saudi Commission for Tourism and Antiquities (SCTA) announced that the hieroglyphic inscription was found about 400 km north of Madinah.

"The rock was bearing an inscription of King Ramses III, one of the kings who ruled ancient Egypt from 1192 BCE to 1160 BCE," SCTA Vice President for Antiquities and Museums Ali Ibrahim Al-Ghabban told reporters on Sunday.

The discovery suggests that Tayma was once on an important land route between the western coast of Arabia and the Nile Valley.

Recent findings also show that Tayma has been inhabited since the Bronze Age and the trade route has been used by caravans for centuries.

"The route connected the Nile Valley, Port Qulzum, the city of Suez, and then went by sea to Srabit near the port of Abu Zenima on the Gulf of Suez, where the archaeologists found a temple dedicated to King Ramses III, then across the Sinai Peninsula, where they also found several inscriptions similar to that found in Tayma," Al-Ghabban explained.

The route passed through Aqaba, Jordan, where similar inscriptions have been discovered, Arab News reported.

Tayma is mentioned in ancient Assyrian texts dating back to the 8th century BC, and the Hebrew Bible.

Babylonian King Nabonidus spent 10 years in Tayma, where he constructed his royal complex. The monument is currently under excavations and part of a cuneiform text bearing his name was discovered at the site last year.

Source: PressTV.
Link: http://www.presstv.ir/detail/150173.html.

Turkey rejects NATO singling out Iran

Mon Nov 8, 2010

Amid Western efforts to entice Turkey into joining the NATO missile system, Ankara says that a plan which singles out Iran as a threat will be unacceptable.

"NATO is a defense organization. A defense system is being developed against anyone in the world who has ballistic missiles and does not belong to NATO," Turkish President Abdullah Gul said in an interview with the state-run BBC's Turkish service on Monday.

"Mentioning one country, Iran... is wrong and will not happen. A particular country will not be targeted.... We will definitely not accept that," AFP quoted Gul as saying.

In September, Secretary-General of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) Anders Fogh Rasmussen proposed to develop a EUR 200-million ($253 million) missile system around Europe against possible attacks by "rogue states."

The NATO chief then named Iran's nuclear program as one of the reasons that justify the necessity of a missile system, and said, "If Iran eventually acquires a nuclear capability, that will be very dangerous, and a direct threat to the allies."

This is while the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) has repeatedly verified the non-diversion of Iran's nuclear program.

Iran, as a member of the IAEA and a signatory to the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, has declared that it has no plan to develop a military nuclear program.

"We do not perceive any threat from any neighbor countries and we do not think our neighbors form a threat to NATO," Turkey's Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu said in October.

NATO member states have also been trying to ensure Russia's cooperation in the project.

Russia, however, has opposed the plan, arguing that the missile system would be a threat to its sovereignty and that it is meant to pacify its ballistic capability.

We should first determine "who, how and when can get hold of missile technologies capable of posing a threat to both Russia and NATO member states," Russia's Ambassador to NATO Dmitry Rogozin said earlier this year.

Russian Defense Minister Anatoly Serdyukov said in October, "We don't share all the West's views on the capacities of the Iranian nuclear program."

France has also voiced concerns about the missile systems. After a meeting with Rasmussen in March, French Defense Minister Herve Morin asked, "What threat are we responding to? What are the risks?"

Source: PressTV.
Link: http://edition.presstv.ir/detail/150166.html.

Hamas invites Ahmadinejad to Gaza

Mon Nov 8, 2010

Hamas Foreign Ministry has invited Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad to visit Gaza to "revive the spirit" of the Palestinian resistance movement.


“We invite Ahmadinejad to visit the Gaza Strip and we are confident that this trip will be of paramount importance,” the democratically-elected Hamas government's Deputy Foreign Minister Ahmed Yousef said on Monday.

Referring to Ahmadinejad's trip to Beirut, Yousef said the aim of the visit to Gaza would be to raise the spirits and strengthen the Palestinian resistance movement just like what happened in Lebanon.

Ahmadinejad paid a visit to Lebanon in mid-October upon an invitation from his Lebanese counterpart Michel Sleiman.

During the visit, the Iranian chief executive met with Lebanon's top officials, political leaders, academics and university students, and addressed large crowds of people in Beirut and southern Lebanon.

Many analysts believe Ahmadinejad's visit to Lebanon had a positive impact on the growing support for anti-Israeli resistance fronts.

Source: PressTV.
Link: http://www.presstv.ir/detail/150180.html.

Turkish PM to visit Bangladesh after joining G20 summit

Erdogan will travel to Seoul, South Korea to attend the G20 summit to be held on November 11 and 12.

Monday, 08 November 2010

Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan will travel to Seoul, South Korea to attend the G20 summit to be held on November 11 and 12.

Following the G20 meeting, Erdogan will head for Bangladesh on a formal visit on November 13 and 14, his office said in a statement on Monday.

Turkish State Minister for economy & Deputy Prime Minister Ali Babacan, State Minister Mehmet Aydin, who is also the co-chairman of the Turkey-Bangladesh Joint Economic Committee, Finance Minister Mehmet Simsek and Energy Minister Taner Yildiz, as well as a delegation of lawmakers and businessmen will accompany Erdogan during his visits to South Korea and Bangladesh, the statement said.

G20 summit will discuss international economic developments; measures to be taken for a strong, sustainable, and globally balanced growth; global economy; reform of international financial institutions; financial reforms; global financial security networks; as well as several other issues such as development, climate change, energy and fight against corruption.

During his visit to Bangladesh, Erdogan will have meetings with President Muhammed Zillur Rahman, Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina, Foreign Minister Dipu Moni and main opposition leader and former prime minister Khaleda Zia. He will also meet businessmen at an event to be organized by a business federation of Bangladesh.

Source: World Bulletin.
Link: http://www.worldbulletin.net/news_detail.php?id=66088.

Erdogan Seeks Re-Election as Turkish Health-Care Plan Trumps Headscarves

By Steve Bryant - Nov 8, 2010

Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan is pushing out a nationwide system of personal healthcare that may win him more votes in next year’s election than all his rows with Turkey’s secular-minded generals.

Next month Erdogan’s government says it will complete a network of family doctors -- one for every 3,500 Turks. That’s a first for the European Union membership candidate where infant mortality is 17 in a thousand, the highest in the 33-nation Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development.

The overhaul is the latest step in a drive toward universal healthcare that has won record approval ratings. It’s key to Erdogan’s bid to win a third term, explaining his willingness to stretch the budget as medical spending is set to rise five times faster than overall costs next year. The World Bank says outlays are manageable, and pollsters say the benefits they buy matter more to most Turks than Erdogan’s bid to rein in the military and ease curbs on religious symbols such as the headscarf.

“Voters aren’t particularly moved by the ideological debates, it’s not what they talk about on the street,” said Adil Gur, head of Istanbul-based polling company A&G Arastirma, which correctly predicted the outcome of the last three elections. “There are very few developing countries that have done what Turkey has in terms of healthcare and it has a direct relationship to voting.”

Erdogan, 56, was re-elected in 2007 with the biggest majority in 40 years, after a series of clashes with the army and courts, which say measures such as the easing of a ban on Islamic-style headscarves undermine Turkey’s secular system.

Unequal Benefits

Health reforms have been central to Erdogan’s second term. He unified three systems of hospitals and insurance for different professions that were criticized for offering unequal benefits and reserving the best hospitals for civil servants while others waited in long queues.

Approval of the system rose to 65 percent in 2009 from 56 percent in 2005, according to the state statistics agency’s annual Life Satisfaction Survey. Turks consistently cite health as the government’s most important achievement, and health chief Recep Akdag as one of the Cabinet’s most successful ministers, studies by pollsters A&G and Ankara-based MetroPOLL show.

Erdogan’s government ended restrictions on the pharmaceuticals market and let Turks use their state benefits at private hospitals. The measures have drawn investment from funds, including Carlyle Group, the world’s No. 2 private equity firm, which bought 40 percent of hospital operator Medical Park Saglik Grubu AS for an undisclosed price last year.

Dubai-based Abraaj Capital Ltd., a private-equity firm that manages $6.6 billion, bought 54 percent of hospital chain Acibadem Saglik Hizmetleri & Ticaret AS for $606 million in 2007 and 2008. Acibadem shares have surged 4,500 percent since 2002 and the benchmark ISE-100 Index increased about sixfold.

Green Cards

Erdogan has given Green Cards guaranteeing free treatment to more than 9 million poorer Turks. The Health Ministry says infant and maternal mortality have fallen, and measles and malaria have been all but eradicated.

“The health status of the Turkish population today is hugely better than it was,” Ulrich Zachau, director of the World Bank’s Turkey unit, said in an interview.

The measures aren’t cheap. The Health Ministry budget is due to increase 24 percent next year to 17.2 billion liras ($12.2 billion), while overall spending climbs 5 percent.

The social security fund, which pays pensions and medical benefits, is owed contributions of 47 billion liras, its head Emin Zararsiz said on Oct. 16. Transfers to the fund will rise 11 percent to 62.4 billion liras next year, one-fifth of the budget. Spending on Green Cards has risen eightfold since 2002.

Fiscal Risks

Now Erdogan is adding a new layer: the family doctors who are charged with holding down costs by treating locally, catching conditions like diabetes and obesity early, and only referring serious cases to hospitals that previously were the only recourse for many patients with minor ailments.

The Ankara-based institute Tepav, which monitors Turkey’s budget, cites rising spending on pharmaceuticals and poor collection of social security premiums as fiscal risks. “The financial structure can only be set on a sustainable path by policies to strengthen the revenue side” and ensure patients are treated more cheaply by family doctors instead of at hospitals, it said in a November 2009 report.

Erdogan scrapped proposed legislation in September that mandates the government reduce a fiscal deficit that was 5.5 percent of gross domestic product last year, raising concern that he may loosen budget discipline as elections approach.

Turkey’s health spending at 6 percent of GDP is lower than all OECD members bar Mexico, and compares with 16 percent in the U.S., the OECD said last month.

Spending is “affordable and manageable,” Zachau said. “The challenge is to keep it that way.”

‘Incredibly Bad’

Reha Denemec, a deputy leader of Erdogan’s Justice and Development Party, said the government has rebuilt a system that was “incredibly bad eight or 10 years ago.” He said Erdogan was personally motivated to make the changes after he was shunted from hospital to hospital following a car accident in the late 1980s. The premier is also an outspoken anti-smoker and has banned cigarettes from restaurants and bars.

The Turkish Medical Association considers the market-based changes “wrong for Turkey in terms of delivery and in terms of financing,” said Eris Bilaloglu, president of the group that represents about 90,000 doctors. The new system requires patients to supplement the government contributions with top-up fees for treatment that some of them can’t afford, and thus isn’t fair on the poor, he said.

Family Clinic

Erdogan’s party “depends on the votes of relatively poor people and it takes some skill to act against their interests,” Bilaloglu said. “But that’s what they’ve done.”

There’s satisfaction with the system, though, at a new family clinic in the Mamak suburb of Ankara, where patients leave after examination and cross the road to the pharmacist opposite, bearing a prescription.

“We don’t need to go to the hospital now, for basic things we can just come here,” says Elveda Abatay, 29, guiding her two-year-old daughter, Busra. “It’s much better. Doctor Omer knows who Busra is and says hello when we arrive. That didn’t happen before.”

Source: Bloomberg.
Link: http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2010-11-07/turkey-s-erdogan-seeks-re-election-as-health-care-plan-trumps-headscarves.html.

Turkey's AKP: Liberalist or Islamist?

"Is AKP a reformed Islamist party leading its country towards the European Union and European principles?

Monday, 08 November 2010

By Ä°smail Duman, World Bulletin

“Is AKP a reformed Islamist party leading its country towards the European Union and European principles? Or is it an Islamist party disguised as a reform party leading its country towards a fulsome embrace of political Islam?” asks Jonathan Kolieb in the name of the people who have not an exact definition about Turkey’s AKP(Justice and Development Party).

On the other hand, according to Bulat Akhmetkarimov, “Many observers of Turkish political life have argued that secular foundations of Turkey have been significantly challenged since the 1970s and tensions between secularists and ‘Islamists’ reached apogee during the rule of the Justice and Development Party (AKP).”

Nowadays, Turkey’s political history is witnessing one of the most interesting periods under the rule of AKP government. On the one hand, secular elites try to describe the dynamics of AKP in the light of its both domestic and foreign policies; on the other hand, Muslim groups have confusion about the identity of AKP. Is it an Islamic party or a liberal party? Although it describes itself as a conservative democratic party, Islamic backgrounds of its leaders and emphasizes on Islamic values cause some question marks in people’s mind.

There is no any other period in which many opponent groups who are both Muslims and leftists are so incorporated into ‘the system’. Thus, AKP’s eight years deserve to be questioned in terms of domestic and foreign policies and its relations with global system.

The Emergence of the AKP

As is known, after the closure of the Fazilet Party, which had been led by the Islamic leader Necmeddin Erbakan, after a postmodern coup in February 28th 1997, a group led by the current Prime Minister Recep Tayip Erdogan and President Abdullah Gul split from Erbakan’s Islamic movement, Milli Gorus (National Consideration), and formed the AKP on August 14, 2001.

What are the causes of this separation? Although we can simply say that there were ideological reasons, this cannot be a selective analysis. According to Soner Cagaptay, “The AKP has roots in Turkey’s Islamist movement, including the Welfare Party (RP), the mother ship of Turkish Islamism. The AKP’s founders, including party leader and Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, cut their teeth in the RP, an explicitly Islamist party, which featured strong anti-Western, anti-Semitic, anti-democratic, and anti-secular elements” because “Erdogan and his comrades drew a lesson from this experience(the closure of the party); the Turkish Islamists would be better served to reinvent themselves in order to be successful. In due course, Erdogan re-created the party with a pro-American, pro-EU, capitalist and reformist image”.

I think, here, it can be an important step to give an ear to Ozan Örmeci in order to understand the main causes of separation between Erbakan’s group and Erdogan’s group:

“While comparing the two important Islamic parties, it is worth to take into account some concepts defined by Daniel Brumberg. He mainly distinguishes the types of Islamism into three categories; namely ‘radical or militant fundamentalism, reformist fundamentalism and strategic modernism or Islamic Liberalism’. Accordingly, parties who pursue radical fundamentalism aimed at changing the system of the country through force and at the end form a regime based on Islamic laws. In reformist fundamentalism, the parties have the same aim with the radical fundamentalist that is establishing a state based on Islamic laws but those parties pursue moderate policies and continuously reject violence. In other words, through establishing mass electoral support they try to win the elections and construct a hidden agenda. This is also called dissimulation (takiyye). On the other hand, ‘Islamic Liberals, which are quite rare in the Middle East, seek to extend religious freedoms in a broadly democratic environment.’ Unlike the radical and reformist fundamentals, Islamic Liberals do not aim at forming an Islamic state. Instead of doing this they try to co-exist with the secular establishment of the state. In this sense, we can call WP a reformist fundamentalist party having some elements of militant fundamentalism and JDP an Islamic Liberal party carrying some aspects of reformist fundamentalist party by looking at analyzing their policies and the deeds of their leaders.”

When we look at differences between the preferences of two parties, we cannot only say that this is a simple separation. I think, we should read this process in the light of changing global system projects. In Turkey, whenever political Islam has gained a power, some liberal-religious parties have emerged. I am evaluating Democratic Party, Motherland Party and lastly AKP in a same picture. In last period, AKP has liberalized many ‘radical’ groups successfully. So, when we describe its position, we should more focus on its dynamics. As Seyfeddin Kara says, “AKP’s official program and ideology are not dissimilar to many political party platforms in the West. The AKP adheres to ‘democratization’ and civil society, rule of law, fundamental rights of freedom, and liberal economic policy. The official party program has no reference to Islam or Muslims and none of the policies have had any Islamic discourse. Even the leader of the party, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, who is known for his Islamic background, has so far not made any statement indicating an Islamic agenda. Yet it has been branded by Western analysts to be an ‘Islamist’ party.”

Then, we should ask this question: How is it possible to entitle AKP as an Islamist party?

The Agenda of the AKP

As Ozan Örmeci has said, the AKP has sought to bring morality, integrity and democracy to the forefront of politics, and to meld values based on a religious belief system with the contemporary vision of a secular Turkey moving forward toward further Westernization and full membership in the European Union. Prime Minister Erdoğan has put forth considerable effort to strength the ties with the West.

“Contrary to widespread stereotyping, the AKP barely fits the image of a Muslim Democrat party. Probably, much better it presents an image of a unifying centrist party that gets electoral support from all segments of the society across the country. The Turkish prime minister and leader of the AKP, Erdogan, refused various descriptions and repeatedly stated that his party supported a liberal regime based on laicism. Many of the AKP officials have also rejected their ties with earlier Islamist parties in Turkish history and referred to the Justice and Development Party as a conservative democratic party.” says Bulat Akhmetkarimov. “Looking at the AKP’s own discourse and performance, the Justice and Development Party cannot be regarded as even mildly Islamist. Rather, it seems to be a party aimed at preserving traditional cultural values and advocating liberal tenets in politics.... Contrary to widespread accusations, the AKP has never attempted to install or even discussed the possibility of adopting Sharia law.”

So, when we evaluate its agenda, we can say that AKP has a very liberal agenda. Although leader of the AKP, Erdogan, mentions the rights of the headscarved students, he describes this right in terms of EU standards. Although it seems that many problems have been solved in favor of Muslims, actually, it does not stem from AKP’s Islamic agenda. On the contrary, it evaluates these issues in the context of civil liberties in relation to EU. Interestingly, although many opponent groups, both Muslims and leftists, have remained out of the line in Motherland Period in 1990s, today; they are active members of this process. So, this period is very interesting in order to be questioned. While seculars say that the AKP is the member of a transformation of the global Muslim community from a cultural-religious one into a religious-political one, today, we are witnessing that AKP’s performance and actions do not stem from their dissimulation (takiyye).

When we look at the AKP’s agenda more deeply, we come across two issues; one is economic policies and the other is civil rights. The AKP was born in the midst of a Turkish economic crisis which took the country to the brink of bankruptcy; but it tried to solve this problem by undertaking bold economic reforms and a liberal market economy approach. On the other hand, in AKP rule, civil liberties and freedom of expression have greatly improved. Again also, as Seyfeddin Kara says, “The AKP has also significantly curbed the influence of the Turkish army that had formerly held great sway over political affairs and carried out four coup d’états.” But, when we evaluate this picture, we can see that they are all liberal reforms, not Islamic reforms. This should be taken into more account.

Criticisms of the Secular Elites

The role of the AKP in the political arena has mainly discomfort Turkey’s secular elites. According to them, AKP’s political actions aim to change the regime which was established by Mustafa Kemal Ataturk. Actually, the article of Soner Cagaptay entitled “Turkey’s transformation under AKP: Rise and demise of moderate Islamism” represents the anxieties of Turkey’s secular elites.

“Ever since the sultans started to Westernize the Ottoman Empire in the 1770′s, Mustafa Kemal Ataturk continued these reforms making Turkey a secular republic in the 1920′s, and the various political parties of the Turkish democracy in the twentieth century cast their dice with the West, the Turks have adopted a pro-Western stance in foreign policy, embraced secular democracy at home, and marched towards the European Union (EU). But, today, THIS IS CHANGING” says Cagaptay.

With a reference to a recent poll by TESEV, which says that the number of people identifying themselves as Muslim increased by ten percent between 2002 and 2007; in addition, almost half of those surveyed describe themselves as Islamist, seculars ask this question: Where is Turkey heading under the AKP, and what are the lessons that can be drawn from the AKP experience?

There is an agreement between all the groups that “The AKP firstly promoted reforms, pro-business and pro-EU policies after coming to power.” But according to Soner Cagaptay, “soon the party’s transformation appeared to be a cynical one. The AKP began to undermine the liberal values it supposedly stood for. For instance, it began to hire top bureaucrats from an exclusive pool of practicing, religious conservatives.”

As Alex Stevenson emphasizes, secular elites think that ‘after the Gul episode returned the party to power with a strengthened hold over parliament, the AKP's party changed. Now it is state-oriented, pursuing "Islamic populism", and paying only "lip service" to the EU accession process.’

According to them, in parallel with Ergenekon case, the effective elimination of military and court pressures against the AKP has hastened the party’s return to its core values. The AKP began abandoning its displays of pluralism, dismissing dissent, ignoring checks and balances, and condemning the media for daring to criticize them.

While AKP claims that Ergenekon case is a step to advance towards EU, secular elites see this picture as an elimination of main owners of the Kemalist regime. For them, elimination of opponent media is another step which follows the elimination of military and judiciary institutions.

On the other hand, according to these criticisms, the AKP is shaping its own agenda and regime. As an example to this argument, they mention the new elites of AKP. “The AKP has become Turkey’s new elite in charge politically, economically, and socially. The party is supported by a growing business community, which it nurtures through government contracts that are awarded by using orthopraxy as a yard stick“ says Soner Cagaptay. “As the new elite, the proverbial ‘wind over the Anatolian landscape’ the AKP is shaping Turkish society in its own image, promoting orthopraxy through administrative acts. Accordingly, it is not religiosity that is on the rise in Turkey — i.e., the number of people attending mosque services or praying — but rather government-infused social conservatism.”

It is very interesting point that although they know that the actions of the AKP do not aim to radicalize people, they discomfort ‘government-infused social conservatism’. I think, ‘social conservatism’ concept is important to think over it because with this concept, the AKP represent a new type of a group, neither Islamist nor secularist.

Interestingly, at the same time, the foreign policy of the AKP is very debatable for secular elites. As a main opponent of American-EU regimes, Iran tries to enter into good connection with Turkey. And today, Turkey’s giving green light to Iran has been causing to important criticism. On the other hand, the support of the AKP for Hamas and Palestinians is also controversial. “Far from being the gateway to a long-standing alliance, Turkey's new engagement with the Middle East and vocal support for the Palestinians could trigger Iranian suspicions and eventually restore the formerly competitive relationship between the two countries” says Cagaptay.

As a conclusion for secular groups, “In Turkey, the AKP has shifted Turkish foreign policy away from the West, helped catalyze a transformation of the Turkish identity towards Islamist causes, and is busy imposing an illiberal view of society, defined by orthopraxy as well as a disregard for check and balances”.

Criticisms of the Islamists

As Seyfeddin Kara said, in a short time, the AKP was embraced by most of the supporters of Erbakan’s Milli Gorus movement, conservatives, democrats, Sufis and some moderate nationalists and leftists. This picture is a very new position for Turkey’s political arena.

I think that ‘social conservatism’ concept can be very definitive in order to understand this picture. Today, some people, who were against the Kemalist regime and they had never goes to polls because of the corruption in the regime, began to join the AKP.

There is, according to some Islamists, an important problem because people began to abandon their ideals at the expense of conservative thoughts. For new conservative people, every thought can be blurred because liberal thought needs to respect for other thoughts. Actually, this is a new global project within neo-liberal times. We should think over it more and more.

According to Akif Emre, a columnist in Turkey’s Yeni Safak Newspaper, the AKP has changed the understandings of the people about thoughts on laicism. “Any person can deny that people who were accused of engaging in deception underwent a transformation about their political discourse, especially about the issues like the relation between politics and the religion.” says Akif Emre. “The AKP stands in front of us as a party which underwent a transformation in favor of the system(regime).”

On the other hand, evaluations of Atasoy Muftuoglu, who is well known Islamist writer, are very important in order to understand the criticisms of Islamists: “The lives, intellects and perceptions of the dependent existences are governed by the sovereign authority. So, as a dependent to America and Israel, Turkey’s emotional responding rather than real responding against to Israel and America is a sign of its dependent to these powers.”

I think, here, giving an ear to Seyfeddin Kara can be very productive in order to describe the problems of Islamist with the AKP:

“There remain some areas in which the AKP has performed poorly during its eight-year rule, thus prompting criticism from some intellectuals and activists.

The AKP has failed to implement a social justice policy. Using the principle of a liberal capitalist economic model, the AKP distributed wealth disproportionately. The party has been implementing controversial International Monitory Fund (IMF) dictated policies which prioritize the rights and prosperity of capitalist elites. Consequently, the working class and civil servants have continued to suffer under the IMF regime. Due to intensifying criticism in March 2010, the government announced that it would not sign a stand-by agreement with the IMF; however the same policies remain in place.

There have been limited developments in terms of religious freedoms, especially the rights of practicing Muslims. A strictly implemented headscarf ban still exists at schools, universities, work places and official institutions. There have been great restrictions for students of the Imam-Hatip School (semi-Islamic vocational schools) in their entry bid to Higher Education and difficulties remain for opening of Qur’an schools.

Despite ameliorating the fundamental rights and freedoms of other groups, Muslims so far remain left out. In 2008, an unsuccessful attempt was made to remove the headscarf ban. The AKP-dominated National Assembly enacted a short-lived amendment to the law annulling the headscarf ban. However, in June 2008 the Constitutional Court overturned the amendment on the grounds that it contradicted the founding principles of the constitution.

Failure to embrace the rights of Muslims has put the AKP in a strategic dilemma domestically as it could not deliver promises made to its grassroot supporters. Since the first days of its rule, the AKP has followed pro-EU policies which it has used as a tool to curb the influence of the military and secular oligarchy. Hence, rights and freedoms have been granted according to EU standards. The policy worked fairly well for weakening the “internal foes” but did not do much to recognize the rights of its allies. The EU, due to its own Islamophobic stance, showed no interest in pressing for the rights and freedoms of Muslims.

Although the AKP has managed to contain some aspects of the widespread corruption in politics, it has not been able to erase it from the system. At lower levels, some party members have been exposed to corruption. Critics also argue that the AKP has created its own wealthy class by awarding lucrative business contracts. Many party members suddenly became wealthy, jumping through social classes. The extravagant lifestyle of these members has been exposed in the media, sharpening the tone of critical voices against the AKP. “

New elites and the green bourgeoisie

As Seyfeddin Kara emphasizes in his third point, there is a new wealthy class which is related with AKP. This point is very supportive in order to claim that the AKP is a liberal project rather than Islamic project because in global system, every global project wants to shape a new elite group rather than identified groups.

The Hurriyet Daily News, Turkish newspaper, has prepared a file about this issue. This file is very interesting with its examples.

“It helps to be pious when doing business with ErdoÄŸan’s government, says Hakan Kalkan, who helps oversee $1 billion in investments at Autonomy Capital Research in London. “Let’s say you want some business from the government; you’re going to have to act a little more religious now,” he says. The success of these enterprises has begun to create wealth approaching that of older business dynasties.”

With the conservative democrat identity of the AKP, there emerged new type of Muslim profiles. Today, there are many people with Islamic identity who are in the same areas with the secular elites. According to Morton Abramowitz and Henri J. Barkey, “Turkey has always been a conservative country, and the vast majority of Turks have traditionally voted for center-right parties. The rise of the AKP represents a struggle between the military and civilian bureaucratic elites -- which have controlled the state and the economy since independence -- and the new, largely provincial and pious middle class. This new bourgeoisie took advantage of the market reforms of the 1980s to build an export-driven industrial base in the backwater of Anatolia. As its wealth grew, it began to challenge the economic elites traditionally favored by the state and its military backers.”


The Hurriyet Daily News discusses this new elite group with examples so:


“Kiler Holding, which built this $250 million blue glass tower, the tallest in Europe outside of Moscow, was primarily a grocery operator as recently as a decade ago. Since Recep Tayyip ErdoÄŸan became Turkey’s prime minister in 2003, beginning a period in which gross domestic product per capita has climbed by 150 percent, the company has expanded into construction, energy and tourism and tripled its revenue.

‘Today we are among the biggest companies in the construction sector,’ Kiler says.

Kiler Holding is one of a crop of companies, thriving under ErdoÄŸan that threaten to overshadow the business dynasties that have dominated Turkey for decades. ‘We’ve seen a lot of them being very successful, even in sectors where they weren’t involved at all,’ says Wolfango Piccoli, an analyst who tracks Turkish politics at Eurasia Group in London.”

On the other hand, Rizanur Meral, who runs Tuskon, one of the Islamic business groups that works with the government promoting Turkish industry, says complaints about favoritism are misplaced. Newly successful Turkish companies, including members of Tuskon, have been far-sighted and smart. “They are reading the world of politics and economics much better than anyone else,” he says.

Conclusion

According to Ozan Örmeci, the Welfare Party and the Justice and Development Party at first glance seem to have much in common as Islamist parties, but given a closer look, the differences in many areas outweigh the similarities. “Looking at three examples of these differences – the first issue is the development of further relationships with Islamic countries versus Western countries. While the Welfare Party was quite determined to make a statement to the world of wishing stronger ties with Islamic countries, the JDP has maintained close relations with the West while also keeping friendly relations with the Islamic countries when possible. The top priority of EU membership is undoubtedly a strong factor in this position of the JDP’s foreign relation policies.

Secondly, while both governments desired an improvement of the vocational/religious schools, and passed legislation accordingly, the WP was very forceful in implementing changes in the number of Prayer Leaders and Preacher Schools and the Koran courses that were offered, while the AKP (JDP) did not force the legislation to pass and has put this issue on the “back political burner” at the current time. The third issue – that of wearing headscarves in the public arena has been handled entirely differently – the WP once again forcing the allowance of headscarves in the public, which in part contributed to their political demise by the military, but the JDP has not made this an issue to do battle over; rather having remained sensitive to the wishes of the secular state and downplayed the issue as much as possible.”

Örmeci’s conclusion is very remarkable: “The final conclusion that can be drawn from these comparisons is that the Justice and Development Party, while having strong personal religious beliefs, truly believes Islam and secularism can co-exist, and has hopes for the future, as stated by Prime Minister ErdoÄŸan, “I dream of a Turkey which will be the strongest bridge between civilizations”.

Although Ozan Örmeci made an entry for this article so: After the victory of AKP in 2007 general elections, the party’s liberal Islamism quickly turned into reformist fundamentalism in many areas including foreign policy, internal policy and cultural policies, and AKP started to act differently. But, actually, I could not see any structural differences between the actions of AKP before 2007 elections and after this election.

After referendum success, this issue has been debated most times. But, although I accept the differences between AKP’s operations, in my opinion, this new type of discourse is very romantic and nostalgic because main reference sources of AKP are very liberal. So its dependent to global system prevents the AKP from acting freely.

There are some people who claim that this regime will change gradually. This is very wrong argument because states always possess a melting effect. We can see this melting process in the AKP period. Although some people in AKP had evaluated some actions and operations in the past as a dissimulation (takiyye), today, the system has transformed their beliefs with parallel to global ideological thought system.

Hence, this should be understand properly that today, dominant political ideology is ‘liberalism’ and if the AKP insist on playing with the rules of this global political system, it is obliged to undergo a transformation in its own right and to transform Muslim population as a new religious liberals. Maybe, this action can be irreparable damage for Turkey’s Muslims.

Even, it can be the part of Greater Middle East Project which is supported by US.

Source: World Bulletin.
Link: http://www.worldbulletin.net/news_detail.php?id=66072.

Jordan and Iraq sign military training cooperation agreement

Mon, 08 Nov 2010

Amman - The Jordanian and Iraqi armies on Monday signed a training cooperation agreement, according to Jordan's official Petra news agency.

The signing ceremony was attended by the Iraqi Chief of Staff General Babakr Zibari, a delegation from the NATO military alliance and senior army officers from the two countries, the agency said.

The accord provides for "boosting cooperation in the fields of training, education and exchange of experience between training military establishments" in the two countries, it added.

The agency gave no details, but the Jordanian security forces trained at least 32,000 Iraqi police personnel after the US-led invasion toppled the regime of Saddam Hussein in 2003.

Source: Earth Times.
Link: http://www.earthtimes.org/articles/news/352565,jordan-and-iraq-sign-military-training-cooperation-agreement.html.

Deaths in Western Sahara camp raid

Raid by Moroccan forces on a Western Sahara protest camp leaves four dead and scores injured, on the eve of peace talks.

08 Nov 2010

At least four people have been killed and 70 injured in a raid by Moroccan forces on a protest camp in the disputed region of Western Sahara, sources on both rival sides have said.

The Gdaim Izik camp, which houses 12,000 Saharawi refugees, had sprung up outside Laayoune, the main town in Western Sahara, four weeks ago, in protest against the deterioration of living conditions in the area.

The violence, which later spread to the streets of Laayoune itself, comes on the eve of talks between Morocco and the Polisario Front movement, which seeks independence for the Western Sahara, in the US aimed at ending the conflict over the region.

Protesters, including women and children, said security forces attempting to shut down the camp used tear gas and beat them with batons.

Morocco said two of its police officers and a firefighter were killed by protesters, while the pro-independence Polisario Front said Moroccan security forces killed a 26-year-old activist during the raid.

Officials said the camp had been stormed to release people being held against their will.

The Polisario Front accused the security forces of injuring hundreds of people in the dawn raid.

Mohamed Salem Ould Salek, the foreign minister in a self-appointed government for the region, said the attack "left hundreds of wounded".

"I can't yet tell you the exact figure, notably if anyone was killed, but the hospitals are full," he said.

He said the Moroccan forces had "repressed in a ferocious and undiscriminating fashion the defenseless civilians who found themselves in the camp".

The Polisario minister also condemned what he described as an "aggressive speech" by Mohammed VI, Morocco’s king, who last week marked the 35th anniversary of the "green march," when thousands of Moroccans headed to the Western Sahara to liberate it from the Spanish colonization.

Mustapha Khalfi, publisher of the Moroccan daily Attajdid, said that the Polisario movement had "politicized" what had begun as a protest over social rights.

The outbreak of violence risked affecting talks in the short term, he told Al Jazeera.

"This social protest will have a negative impact on the negotiations," he said.

Stalled negotiations

Western Sahara was annexed by Morocco in 1975 after the Spain withdrew from the area.

The Polisario Front fought against Moroccan rule until the UN brokered a ceasefire in 1991.

The current unrest comes as Morocco and the Polisario Front prepare for talks in New York this week.

The Polisario Front wants a UN-organized self-determination referendum, with independence as one of the options.

Morocco has so far rejected any proposal that goes beyond greater autonomy.

The clashes came two weeks after Al Jazeera was expelled from the country, for its coverage of a range of issues including the Western Sahara.

Source: Al-Jazeera.
Link: http://english.aljazeera.net//news/africa/2010/11/2010118211324842212.html.