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Friday, April 15, 2011

China blocks coastal waters, enlarges military

Tuesday, April 12, 2011
Pacific’s chief calls shadowy move ‘troubling’
By Bill Gertz

China’s “troubling” military buildup coincides with new efforts by Beijing to block the Navy from international waters near its coasts and field new missiles, submarines and cyberweapons, the commander of U.S. forces in the Pacific told Congress on Tuesday.

Navy Adm. Robert F. Willard said during a hearing of the Senate Armed Services Committee that China’s intentions behind its decades-long buildup remain hidden and are undermining stability in the Asia-Pacific region.

The four-star admiral said the arms buildup is understandable because of China’s economic rise, but “the scope and pace of its modernization without clarity on China’s ultimate goals remains troubling.”

“For example, China continues to accelerate its offensive air and missile developments without corresponding public clarification about how these forces will be utilized,” he said.

Chinese officials, in meetings with their U.S. counterparts, have refused to explain the pace or goal of the arms buildup, defense officials have said.

Adm. Willard said Chinese weapons that pose concerns include a growing arsenal of ballistic and cruise missiles, including anti-ship missiles and advanced radar-evading stealth combat aircraft.

Also, “China is pursuing counterspace and cyber capabilities that can be used to not only disrupt U.S. military operations, but also to threaten the space- and cyber-based information infrastructure that enables international communications and commerce,” he said.

“Absent clarification from China, its military modernization efforts hold significant implications for regional stability,” the admiral said, noting that states in Asia, along with the United States, are becoming alarmed over what he termed “new anti-access and area-denial weaponry.”

China's government insists that the arms buildup is defensive but will not provide details on any of its most advanced weapons.

On Chinese cyber-attacks, Adm. Willard said, a “sizable percentage” of the large number of attempted computer intrusions detected daily come from China.

“We are defending our networks every day, not solely against Chinese intrusions, but against many intrusions that come from a whole host of global sources,” he said. “And I depend entirely, nearly, on cyberspace for the command and control of the broader Asia-Pacific, of our forces there.”

Chinese military statements indicate that the country would use cyberwarfare attacks against information systems and command-and-control networks in a conflict. “So there’s no doubt that there’s a need to be able to defend cyberspace,” he said.

China’s aggressiveness near its coasts also was singled out as increasing the potential for a miscalculation that could lead to confrontation.

Official Chinese statements and actions indicate growing encroachment by Beijing in “near seas” around China, posing “a direct challenge to accepted interpretations of international law and established international norms,” Adm. Willard said.

Adm. Willard was referring to China’s threats against Navy exercises in the Yellow Sea last year and earlier incidents of naval harassment against U.S. surveillance ships in the South China Sea.

China also threatened Japan after a naval confrontation between Japanese coast guard ships and a Chinese fishing vessel near the Senkaku Islands between Okinawa and Taiwan.

The Chinese maritime encroachment includes area of international waters in the Bohai Gulf, the Yellow Sea, the East China Sea and the South China Sea, Adm. Willard said.

He said recent statements from senior Obama administration officials at regional conferences in Asia prompted China to back off somewhat from the near-seas aggressiveness.

Adm. Willard also said China’s first aircraft carrier, a refurbished Russian ship, will begin sea trials as early as this summer, a development viewed with concern by nations in Asia.

China’s military has made advancements in numbers and capabilities for its submarine forces, which Adm. Willard described as a “sizable fleet” that is prompting other states in Asia, including Australia, Vietnam, Indonesia and Malaysia, to invest in their submarine forces.

Asked about the recent assessment of Director of National Intelligence James R. Clapper Jr. that China poses the greatest threat to the United States, Adm. Willard said he disagreed. North Korea is a more “imminent threat,” while China’s military buildup is a “great challenge.”

“If I were asked what biggest challenge I face as the Pacific Command commander, I would tell you it’s the relationship between the United States and China, in order to advance that relationship to ultimately become a constructive partnership, if that’s possible,” he said.

On North Korea, Army Gen. Walter Sharp, commander of U.S. Forces Korea who appeared with Adm. Willard, told the hearing that he does not think North Korea will give up its nuclear arms - “not without a whole bunch of pressure from really everyone around the globe.”

Asked by Sen. John McCain, Arizona Republican, about the nuclear talks, Gen. Sharp said: “To answer your question directly, no, I do not see that [North Korean leader Kim Jong-il] will give up his nuclear capability.”

© Copyright 2011 The Washington Times, LLC.

Source: The Washington Times.
Link: http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2011/apr/12/china-blocks-coastal-waters-enlarges-military/?page=all#pagebreak.

Russian Internet attacks stifle political dissent

* Kremlin sees Internet more important than TV in 2012 polls
* FSB calls for access to Gmail, Hotmail and Skype
* Cyber attack temporarily shuts top Russian blogging site

By Thomas Grove

MOSCOW, April 13 (Reuters) - Russian hacker attacks on the country's biggest blog site and a spy agency's warning to Gmail and Skype have raised fears that authorities are tightening their grip on dissent in a China-like assault on free speech.

With an eye on Arab unrest that has toppled two North African leaders and spurred Western military intervention in Libya, Moscow is keen to defuse potential turmoil ahead of a December parliamentary election and a 2012 presidential vote.

In a country where much media is state-run, the Internet is one of the last bastions of free speech. Russian bloggers freely criticize authorities, often scathingly, question high-level corruption and swap information without fear of censorship.

But the price of open dissent on the Internet may be too high ahead of next March's presidential election that could see Prime Minister Vladimir Putin, who served as president in 2000-2008, sweep back into Russia's top seat of power.

"People close to the government believe the Internet will be more crucial in the upcoming elections than traditional media," said Andrei Soldatov, head of the think-tank Agentura.ru.

The Internet has played a crucial role in the unrest that has rocked Northern Africa and the Middle East, prompting some governments to shut it down. Similar turmoil is unlikely in Russia, but authorities want to be prepared for the worst.

Last week, nearly five million bloggers -- including President Dmitry Medvedev -- were left in the dark due to a cyber attack that temporarily closed top Russian blogging site Live Journal www.livejournal.ru.

"This is a test drive during a very important year to see if it's possible to close down web sites, in particular social networking sites in case of demonstrations," Soldatov said.

Putin and his protege Medvedev both enjoy approval ratings of nearly 70 percent, but their popularity has eased, partly on perceptions that vast revenues from high oil prices are not reaching the population. They have said they will decide together which of them will stand for election in 2012.

NATIONAL SECURITY

The United States, itself wary of Russian and Chinese cyber attacks, said in its 2010 human rights report that Internet systems route Russian web traffic to the Federal Security Services (FSB), the main successor to the Soviet-era KGB.

The head of the FSB special communications center, Alexander Andreyechkin, said last week uncontrolled use of Gmail, Hotmail and Skype were "a major threat to national security" and called for access to the encrypted communication providers.

Google had no immediate comment on the likelihood of it sharing access to its Gmail with Russian authorities.

The Web search leader has clashed with China over Internet censorship and last month accused the Chinese government of making it difficult for Gmail users to access the service.

Microsoft , which owns Hotmail, said in an emailed statement: "Account security and privacy is a top priority for Hotmail, and we keep all customers' data private. We work closely with industry leaders and governments worldwide."

The FSB declined comment when contacted by Reuters.

The mastermind behind the latest cyber attacks has been a subject of speculation. Russian hackers are often contracted out by security organs to carry out attacks inside and outside the country, said Agentura's Soldatov in a book he co-authored, 'The New Nobility'.

The Live Journal site was brought down by a denial of service attack -- a tried and tested method of disrupting websites by flooding their servers with requests.

Chechen separatists and the Georgian and Estonian governments have been high-profile victims of similar attacks in the past. Supporters of WikiLeaks also used this method to attack organizations that blocked support for WikiLeaks.

A study released last month by internet research firm Comscore found that Russians are the world's most active social networking users, with visitors spending an average of 9.8 hours on social networks monthly, more than double the global average.

Overall use of the Internet has also soared over the past decade. Some 43 percent of Russians regularly use it today, up from just 6 percent in 2002, said Public Opinion Foundation, an independent Russian pollster.

Many in Russia's blogging community, outraged by the hacker attacks, remain defiant.

"It doesn't matter whether or not they close Facebook, Twitter or other popular means of communication," said user Viktor Korb on his Live Journal blog late last week.

"They will never realize that the more they forbid and pressure, the more they will suffer a blowback from their actions," he wrote. (Additional reporting by Alissa DeCarbonnel and Georgina Prodhan; editing by Gareth Jones)

Source: Alertnet.
Link: http://www.trust.org/alertnet/news/analysis-russian-internet-attacks-stifle-political-dissent.

Madrid gets first-ever 'clean' gas station

MADRID, April 14 (UPI) -- Recycled newspaper walls and wool insulation are some of the materials in the world's first sustainable fuel service station, an energy company in Madrid said.

Madrid Mayor Alberto Ruiz-Gallardon joined Repsol Chairman Antonio Brufau in a ceremony opening the world's first sustainable service station.

Builders used more than 7,000 recycled newspapers to build the interior walls and used sheep wool for insulation. Furniture inside the station is made of recycled plastic and wood shavings and collected rainwater is used for irrigation and sanitary purposes.

All of the lights at the service station are light-emitting diodes, which last five times longer and use 80 percent less energy than their conventional counterparts, Repsol said in an announcement.

The Spanish company said it embarked on a project to convert more than 500 of its service stations to clean buildings.

"Through this initiative, the company will have the largest network of accessible service stations in Spain and one of the largest in Europe," the company added.

Source: United Press International (UPI).
Link: http://www.upi.com/Science_News/Resource-Wars/2011/04/14/Madrid-gets-first-ever-clean-gas-station/UPI-71891302790545/.

George Galloway to sue Canada govt

LONDON — Firebrand former MP George Galloway is to sue the Canadian government for $1.5 million over claims made against him in 2009, it has been announced.

A statement of claim alleging defamation and misfeasance of public office was Tuesday served on Immigration, Nationalities and Multiculturalism minister Jason Kenney and his assistant Alykhan Velshi.

Kenney and Velshi accused the Scottish politician of being a member of a terrorist group and of being a threat to Canada's national security in 2009 when justifying Galloway's ban from entering the Commonwealth nation.

Galloway was notified in March 2009 by border officials that his donations of cars and cash to the Hamas-run government in Gaza made him inadmissible to Canada, as Hamas is listed in Canada as a terrorist organization.

He was later denied an injunction that might have allowed him to speak at anti-war forums in Canada.

A federal court dismissed an application by his supporters, saying: "Upon review, the court found that Mr. Galloway did not attempt to enter Canada, and so no legally reviewable decision to exclude him was made."

Galloway is best known for his testimony in the the US Senate in 2005.

The former lawmaker was summoned to defend himself over allegations of irregularities in the Iraq Oil-for-Food program, but ended up launching a scathing attack against US foreign policy.

Copyright © 2011 AFP. All rights reserved.

Jordanians demand to impose Sharia and restore Caliphate

14 April 2011

A Zio research agency, Memri, which monitors the activity of Islamic movements, reports that demonstrations, calling for the revival of the Caliphate and the implementation of the Sharia law, became more frequent in Jordan. One such demonstration was held on Friday in front of the mosque Irbid.

The demonstrators demanded to implement the Sharia laws in the country, to revive the Caliphate, to release Muslim prisoners and to liberate the Holy Sites of Islam.

The demonstrators chanted: "We want the Islamic Caliphate", "Neither East nor West - Just Islamic Unity", "Victory or Death", "The true Caliphate will soon return, Allah willing".

One of the organizers of the rally, speaking to the demonstrators, said: "We demand the release of Muslims, imprisoned for ordering the approved and forbidding the censured".

He called on the police and security forces not to oppose the protesters, reminding them of the bitter fate of their Egyptian counterparts, who are now incarcerated or "hiding like rats".

Speaking at the demonstration, Sheikh Jarrah Al-Rahahla denounced Nationalism, saying:

"I am Jordanian, Syrian, Lebanese, Palestinian, Iraqi, Hijazi, Afghani and Chechen. I am a Muslim, wherever I am. These tribal and national affiliations mean nothing to us, they [indicate only] one's family and place of birth. But the real, solid and strong affiliation is the religious [bond] that unites [us all], Persian and Arab, Palestinian and Jordanian, Syrian and [resident of the] Gulf, [based on our] devotion to Allah and His will".

The imam of Ibrid mosque, Sheikh Muhammad Al-Khatib, addressed to the Jordanian authorities:

"[Even] if you survive the political storm [rising] out of Tunisia, Egypt and Libya, the storm of military jihad is [rising] out from Pakistan, Afghanistan, Iran, Iraq, and Yemen. It will undoubtedly pass through Jordan, unless you fix the situation and implement the Allah's law".

Sources in Jordan reported that after the demonstration, security forces detained Sheikh Muhammad Al-Khatib for several hours, during which he was beaten and tortured.

Another Islamic leader, Dr. Sa'd Al-Hunaiti, said that the Muslims would fight against "Israel" and its agents in Jordan and establish the Sharia.

Memri said that flags of al-Qaeda (in fact, Islamic flags) had been raised during the demonstration.

Department of Monitoring
Kavkaz Center

Source: Kavkaz Center.
Link: http://www.kavkazcenter.com/eng/content/2011/04/14/14089.shtml.

Beastly Belgian police tortures Chechen refugee in Brussels dungeon

13 April 2011, 10:27

As reported by our sources in Europe, on April 12, 2011, several hundred demonstrators gathered on a square in front of the Royal Palace in Brussels with protests against the slow murder of a Chechen refugee by Belgian police, Arbi Zarmayev, in a Democratic dungeon.

According to rough estimates, up to 400 protesters gathered in the rally. 200 policemen with special means to disperse peaceful demonstrations were already present at the protest site. The police said the demonstration was illegal and demanded to disperse.

The source stressed that the organizers of the rally filed a formal request to Belgian authorities to allow the rally. They did not receive any answer at all - neither prohibiting nor permitting, although the Belgian authorities were obliged by the law to notify the organizers in advance about their decision. It was an obvious provocation by the Belgian authorities. Such authorities demand from the others to abide to their laws, but brazenly flout all laws if they only can.

Arby Zarmayev's father, Ali, asked a human rights defender, Imran Ezhiyev, to appeal to the crowd to go home. Ali Zarmayev said he did not want other people to get into trouble because of his son, the beastly Democratic police may arrest them and commit the same atrocities as they did to his son.

After a failed demonstration, the family of Arbi Zarmayev, together with Imran Ezhiyev, went to the Belgium ministry of "justice". A deputy director general of Belgian prisons came out to them. On the question, why the family and a member of the Euro parliament are not allowed to visit Arbi, the official mockingly smiled, and replied that "this was the will of the Arbi Zarmayev, it was his right".

The female deputy prison chief was then asked: "Was the stuffing him with psychotropic drugs, the breaking his ribs, the cleaving his brow, the mutilating of his hands and feet also done on his own will? Is that also his right?" She could not say anything and hastily left.

The Support Group for Arbi Zarmayev sent to the Commissioner for Human Rights at the Council of Europe, Thomas Hammarberg, a request to intervene in the case of Zarmayev. Thomas Hammarberg visited Chechnya in 2008 and learnt the opinion of human rights defenders. After hearing their reports, he stated that there was a cause for concern, even if only one person was illegally detained and tortured in Chechnya.

In 2011, Thomas Hammarberg did not express any concern that the Chechen political refugee Arbi Zarmayev was illegally detained and tortured by beastly Belgian Democratic police in the heart of Europe. Thomas Hammarberg never answered the letter sent to him.

Kavkaz Center

Source: Kavkaz Center.
Link: http://www.kavkazcenter.com/eng/content/2011/04/13/14092.shtml.

Libya-Crisis: Timeline of Events Since February 2011

Crisis-Libya - The crisis in Libya began in mid-February and has since led to deaths, injuries and the displacement of thousands. Nearly half a million people, including many third-country nationals who were working in Libya, have left the country. Some are still stranded at border points. Here is a timeline of some key events since February:

15 February - Riots in Benghazi triggered by the arrest of a human rights activist. The riots soon turn into a fight against government forces, with protesters demanding Col Muammar Gaddafi, who has ruled Libya for 41 years, step down.

24 February - Anti-government forces take control of Misrata after evicting forces loyal to Gaddafi.

27 February - UN Security Council passes Resolution 1970, imposing sanctions on Gaddafi and his family and refers the situation in Libya to the International Criminal Court. Next day, EU governments approve a package of sanctions against Gaddafi and his closest advisers, including an arms embargo and travel bans.

1 March - UN General Assembly suspends Libya's membership of the Human Rights Council. Aid agencies report that at least 147,000 people have fled across Libya's borders. More are on the move.

5 March - The Libyan National Council meets in Benghazi and declares itself sole representative of Libya. Gaddafi's forces continue to fight in other areas.

6 March - Former Jordanian Foreign Minister Jordan Abdelileh Al-Khatib appointed UN special envoy to Libya. Next day, a regional Flash Appeal for the Libyan crisis is launched by aid agencies. Foreign workers continue leaving Libya.

9 March - Over 100 physicians with medical supplies deployed in eastern Libya by the Arab Medical Union. Access to western Libya remains a problem.

10 March - Forces loyal to Gaddafi bomb the oil town of Brega and take back control of Zawiyah, about 50km west of Tripoli. France recognizes the opposition Libyan National Council (the opposition to Gaddafi) as the legitimate representative of Libya's people.

12 March - The Arab League calls for a UN no-fly zone over Libya to deter the bombardment of civilian targets by government forces.

15 March - Tunisia's Ministry of Public Health, supported by WHO, UNICEF and other health partners, start a vaccination campaign for an estimated 100 under-five children currently residing in Choucha transit camp on the Tunisia-Libya border.

17 March - The UN Security Council votes on Resolution 1973, which authorizes a no-fly zone over Libya and "all necessary measures" to protect civilians against government forces.

18 March - Reports of a critical shortage of medical personnel in Benghazi particularly as majority were migrant workers who have now left Libya. Next day, coalition air strikes on Libyan government forces start.

20 March - Libya declares a ceasefire, but fighting continues amid rising concerns for the safety of civilians in conflict areas. Next day, Gaddafi tells supporters he will not surrender and asks them to form a human shield to protect him at his Tripoli compound.

24 March - NATO says it will enforce the no-fly zone but stops short of taking full command of UN-mandated military operations to protect civilians. Continuing hostilities, particularly in Misrata, Ajdabiya and Zintan.

25 March - Report from eastern Libya of increased internal displacement including estimates that up to 25,000 people have been displaced.

28 March - Qatar becomes the first Arab country to recognize Libya's opposition as the people's legitimate representative. Over 50 anti-personnel and anti-vehicle mines discovered near power pylons outside Ajdabiya town.

29 March - Shortages of nursing staff, surgical equipment and water, particularly in eastern towns of Ajdabiya, Brega and Albethnan reported. Aid workers demand access to millions of Libyans trapped behind battle lines. "Tell them please, please have a ceasefire," Muftah Etwild, director of international relations of the Libya Red Crescent, tells IRIN.

31 March - Handicap International sends a team to Libya in response to concerns over risks to populations from the use of landmines and unexploded ordnance in recent fighting.

3 April - Warplanes fly over Brega as anti-government forces fight government troops for control of Brega. Government forces attack the towns of Zintan and Yafran. Some 213 people reported drowned in the sea after leaving Libya for Italy.

4 April - Italy recognizes Libyan rebels.

5 April - Turkish medical aid ship arrives in Turkey with injured Libyans from Misrata where fighting continues. Up to 13,600 people remain stranded at camps and transit points on the border with Libya.

6 April - WFP moves more than 1,500 tons of food into eastern Libya, enough to feed more than 100,000 people for a month. ICRC warns that the abundance of weaponry represents a major hazard for the country's civilian population.

15/04/2011

Source: Afrique en ligne.
Link: http://www.afriquejet.com/news/africa-news/libya-crisis:-timeline-of-events-since-february-2011-201104158947.html.

Israel's Foreign Minister to be indicted

JERUSALEM, April 14 (UPI) -- Israeli Attorney General Yehuda Weinstein informed Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman of plans to indict him for fraud and other alleged wrongdoing.

Weinstein said he plans to file an indictment for fraud, breach of trust, money-laundering and witness harassment, Channel Ten reported late Wednesday.

Weinstein announced his decision as Lieberman convened a meeting of the Israel Beitenu Party in Jerusalem.

"I have always acted according to the law, and I have no reason to worry," Lieberman said in response to Weinstein's announcement, The Jerusalem Post reported.

"After 15 years, I will finally have a chance to prove that I always acted according to the law -- as you know -- with me, my word is my bond," he said.

Lieberman said he planned to prepare for a hearing and if found guilty would resign from his position, Channel Ten said.

Source: United Press International (UPI).
Link: http://www.upi.com/Top_News/World-News/2011/04/14/Israels-Foreign-Minister-to-be-indicted/UPI-78661302782067/.

Israel to purchase more Iron Dome systems

JERUSALEM, April 13 (UPI) -- The Israeli army says it plans to buy an additional battery of the Iron Dome anti-missile defense system within six months and others by the end of 2012.

The decision to buy one more battery this year and three more next year was prompted by the increased threat of rocket fire into southern Israel from Gaza, Channel Ten reported Tuesday night.

In recent weeks, the army deployed two Iron Dome batteries outside Ashkelon and Beersheba to intercept incoming rockets from Gaza. The batteries intercepted eight missiles fired at the two Israeli cities.

The decision was part of the army's assessment of threats Israel will be confronted with in coming years, the TV station said.

Military officials believe Israel will be forced to contend with a multi-front conflict, citing not just the Gaza Strip but also threats stemming from Hezbollah in Lebanon and Syria, Channel Ten said. It is also unclear what the future Egyptian government's policy will be toward Israel.

Meanwhile, the Israel air force is examining the possibility of purchasing a used squadron of F-15 fighter jets from the United States after delays in a $2.75 billion deal to purchase 20 advanced F-35 stealth fighter jets, the report said.

Source: United Press International (UPI).
Link: http://www.upi.com/Top_News/World-News/2011/04/13/Israel-to-purchase-more-Iron-Dome-systems/UPI-57011302697025/.

Justin Bieber Insults Israel

April 13, 2011

By Brad Wilmouth, NewsBusters

According to the Haaretz article, "Netanyahu Cancels Bieber Date Over Refusal to Meet Kids Affected by Gaza Rockets," Barak Ravid recounts reports that Canadian singer Justin Bieber declined to meet children who narrowly escaped being hit by rocket fire as they exited an Israeli school bus shortly before it was hit several weeks ago. A 16-year-old boy was seriously injured in the attack.

The children had been invited to an already scheduled meeting between Bieber and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu as the prime minister sought to draw attention to the plight of children living in Israeli towns near the Gaza Strip which have in recent months come under increased fire from rockets launched by Palestinian terrorists.

According to Haaretz, Netanyahu canceled the meeting after his attempt to include the children was turned down.

Source: FOX News.
Link: http://nation.foxnews.com/culture/2011/04/13/justin-bieber-insults-israel.

Malian party welcomes Arab League's request for no-fly zone over Gaza

Bamako, Mali - Malian party Rally for Development and Solidarity (RDS) has welcomed the stand taken last Sunday by the Arab League, which ask the UN to impose a no-fly zone over Gaza. In a statement made available to PANA, RDS urged the Arab League to persevere in defending people martyred by the former colonial powers 'who came back to enslave us under cover of the United Nations'. According to RDS, the world must stand up and make it clear to Israel and its protectors that peoples' rights are universal and that the impunity 'unfairly granted to the Jewish state' must cease.

In an earlier statement, the Executive Board of RDS had requested that the international community should urgently establish a no-fly zone over Palestine and Gaza.

14/04/2011

Source: Afrique en ligne.
Link: http://www.afriquejet.com/news/africa-news/malian-party-welcomes-arab-league%E2%80%99s-request-for-no-fly-zone-over-gaza-201104148770.html.

Iran stops fuel supply for Western airliners: daily

TEHRAN, April 13 (Xinhua) -- Iran's First Vice President Mohammad Reza Rahimi said Iran stop the fuel supply for some Western airliners to retaliate their refusal to fuel Iranian aircrafts at their airports, the English-language Iran Daily reported Wednesday.

"Recently, fuel supply for Iranian passenger planes flying to Europe was stopped (by the Europeans). Now the question is, if they have problems with the Iranian government, why do they deprive the people of their rights," Rahimi was quoted as saying.

"Iran decided immediately to strike back and banned supply of fuel to Western passenger planes landing in Iran," he said when addressing a ceremony held here Tuesday.

The economic sanctions imposed on Iran had not produced the results desired by the West and the country had not suffered from the mounting pressures and sanctions, Rahimi said.

"The (Iranian) nation does not fear sanctions and can easily overcome the problems. The only thing is that those who have imposed these sanctions are being disgraced," he added.

Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad warned last week against the refusal of fuel supply by some countries and said Iran would take action against such moves, the daily said.

In October, Managing Director of the Iranian Airlines Farhad Parvaresh blamed certain fuel suppliers for refusing to fuel Iranian passenger planes at some European airports.

The Islamic republic had filed complaints for international arbitration and the issue had been referred to the International Court of Justice in Hague, Parvaresh was quoted as saying by the official IRNA news agency.

Source: Xinhua.
Link: http://news.xinhuanet.com/english2010/world/2011-04/13/c_13827337.htm.

Somalia: Nighttime curfew imposed on Puntland's commercial town Bosaso

Abdi Hajji Hussein
Bosaso, Puntland, Somalia
April 14, 2011

A nighttime curfew has been imposed on Bosaso, the commercial capital of the semi-autonomous region of Puntland, about 1,500 kilometers north of Mogadishu.

A statement from the authorities of Puntland said the curfew is aimed at curbing insecurity and beefing up overall tranquility in the town, which has witnessed a surge of repeated assassination plots against officials, prominent Somali elders and peace activists.

“The curfew starts at 11 p.m. local time and lasts the daybreak. During the curfew, all business centers must be closed and the movements of the people must stop just minutes ago according to the curfew,” the statement said.

Local residents said the curfew took effect Wednesday night as all streets and neighborhoods of Bosaso were filled with Puntland security forces with military vehicles.

Puntland authorities also have banned carrying guns.

Source: All Headline News (AHN).
Link: http://www.allheadlinenews.com/articles/90044856?Somalia%3A%20Nighttime%20curfew%20imposed%20on%20Puntland%26%23146%3Bs%20commercial%20town%20Bosaso.

Puntland gov't bans arms trade, weapons display

Shafi'i Abokar
Somalia
April 13, 2011

The northeastern semi-autonomous Somali state of Puntland has prohibited trade in arms and ammunitions in a bid to prevent further violence and targeted killings in the region, the region's top security official announced.

Puntland’s deputy minister for internal security, Abdi Jamal Mohamed, speaking to reporters in the region’s commercial city of Bosaso Tuesday night, said that terrorist acts have rocked the region and because of that the Puntland government deemed it important to ban arms trade.

He said that the widespread arms trade in public markets was the main cause of renewed violence, targeted assassinations and explosions in the regions, adding that terrorists have also benefited from such business.

“We are also declaring that carrying guns in towns and cities is totally prohibited, because it will be difficulty to differentiate the real security forces and the armed gangs or terrorists so we are urging our security forces to leave their arms at camps after they have ended duties,” the deputy security minister stated.

The ban went into effect Wednesday.

The Puntland region is customarily peaceful, compared to the rest of Somalia, but for the past several months there has been increasing insecurity in the region that witnessed targeted killings against government officials, traditional elders and human rights campaigners.

Last week the Puntland government said that terrorist elements connected to al Shabaab militants are operating in the region and it was drawing a new security initiative intended to prevent the organization from spreading into the region.

Source: All Headline News (AHN).
Link: http://www.allheadlinenews.com/articles/90044654?Puntland%20gov%27t%20bans%20arms%20trade%2C%20weapons%20display.

Kashmiri militants watch talks but ready to fight

13 Apr 2011
Source: Reuters

* Militants support India-Pakistan talks
* Pakistan has curtailed militants' infiltration into Indian Kashmir
* New fighters could be raised whenever needed, militant says

By Kamran Haider

MUZAFFARABAD, Pakistan, April 13 - Militants on the Pakistan side of divided Kashmir say they will give new talks with India a chance but they have little faith they will succeed and believe it is only a matter of time before they will have to fight again.

For now, many of them are engaged in peaceful pursuits such as small businesses, teaching or social welfare, and they face severe Pakistani restrictions on crossing the so-called Line of Control (LoC) separating Pakistani and Indian Kashmir.

"We have not given up arms, jihad, but are just giving another chance to talks," Abdul Aziz Alvi, chief of Jamaat-ud-Dawa (JuD) in Pakistani Kashmir, told Reuters.

The JuD is an Islamist charity which the United Nations says is a front for Lashkar-e-Taiba, one the main militant groups fighting Indian rule in Kashmir and blamed for a 2008 attack on the Indian city of Mumbai that killed 166 people.

"If India does not understand the language of negotiation, then guns will start speaking," Alvi said as he was attending a protest rally against Indian plans to build dams in its part of Kashmir.

India and Pakistan last month agreed to restart comprehensive talks which were called off by India after the attacks on Mumbai by militants based in Pakistan.

Mostly Muslim Kashmir has been at the heart of rivalry between the neighbors since British-ruled India was divided into independent India and Pakistan in 1947.

The Himalayan region, which both countries claim in full but rule in part, was the cause of two of the three wars they have fought since then.

India has long accused Pakistan of fomenting an insurgency in which nearly 50,000 people have been killed since it broke out in 1989. Pakistan denies the charge.

The bitterness generated by the dispute has an impact far beyond Kashmir's snow-capped mountains and lush valleys, including in Afghanistan, where many analysts say India and Pakistan are waging a proxy war.

India supports the U.S.-backed Kabul government while Pakistan, worried about hostile neighbors on both borders, secretly backs the Taliban in the hope of eventually ensuring a friendly Afghan government, analysts say.

Since 2002, the Kashmir militants' movement over the LoC has fallen significantly, partly because India has fenced the previously porous frontier but also because Pakistan has imposed tough restrictions on the movement of the fighters.

CONTROLLING THE LINE OF CONTROL

"There's been a huge impact. Previously, about 50 mujahideen (Islamist fighters) used to cross to occupied Kashmir a month, now hardly five are able to do so," said Abu Huzaifa Kashmiri, a member of the Harkat-ul-Mujahideen militant group, who now runs a hotel in Muzaffarabad, capital of Pakistani Kashmir.

Pakistan has always denied arming the militants and sending them to fight Indian forces but the plight of Kashmir's Muslims is an emotive issue in Muslim Pakistan and all governments have trumpeted their political support for the separatists in what it calls Indian-occupied Kashmir.

But Pakistan has been under U.S. pressure to stop militant attacks into India and with the talks with India set to resume, it is keeping the militants on a short leash.

"Their activities are under watch," said a security official in the region said.

But some militants have gone rogue and the chances of another attack in India, which could not only scupper the talks and even raise the prospect of a clash between the nuclear-armed neighbors, is possible.

"There are chances that some rogue elements come out and conduct operations like Mumbai, but the (militant) leadership does not seem ready for any confrontation with the (Pakistani) establishment," said defense analyst Hasan Askari Rizvi.

"It has to be seen how the militant leadership and establishment control these rogue elements."

A senior militant commander, who declined to be identified, said the failure of India and Pakistan to settle the dispute would ultimately benefit the militants.

"The breakdown of the talks will give impetus to our movement and justify our argument that India is not serious about resolving the issue but uses talks to drag it out."

Uzair Raza, a militant from Indian Kashmir, sitting in a tea-shop in the Manikpiyan refugee camp on a Pakistani bank of the Jhelum River, said hundreds of new fighters could be raised if necessary.

"If we are not free, our land is occupied, then why should we care about peace? We'll fight for our rights," he said.

Tens of thousand Kashmiris have migrated to Pakistan from Indian Kashmir since the insurgency began. Many, like Naseema Bibi, 50, say they will not go home until they get "freedom".

"I don't mind begging here but I'll not live under India's slavery," said Bibi, who runs a vegetable shop in the camp near Muzaffarabad. (Editing by Chris Allbritton and Robert Birsel)

Source: Alertnet.
Link: http://www.trust.org/alertnet/news/kashmiri-militants-watch-talks-but-ready-to-fight.

Protests rattle major cities across Yemen

SANAA, April 13 (Xinhua) -- Anti-government protests rattled Yemen's major cities on Wednesday after President Ali Abdullah Saleh and his opponents reached another deadlock following the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC)'s conciliation plan earlier this week.

At least 17 protesters were injured in clashes with police forces and government backers in Yemen's southern province of Ibb on Wednesday, witnesses said.

"The two sides clashed near Ibb University as protesters demanding an immediate end to the long time rule of Saleh defended themselves by throwing stones," a witness told Xinhua by phone, adding "at least four protesters were wounded by gunshots and were now in hospital."

About 80 km southeast of Ibb, thousands of protesters took to the streets in Al-Bayda province on Wednesday, whose provincial capital city witnessed a civil disobedience for the first time, according to a local official.

Meanwhile, protesters continued their rallies on Wednesday in southern provinces of Dhamar, Taiz, Hadramout and Aden, where at least two protesters were shot dead and dozens of others were wounded in clashes with police.

The ruling party's website said at least two policemen in Aden were injured by gunshots of protesters that belong to the opposition Joint Meeting Parties (JMP), adding that the police had arrested three people from the JMP in Taiz on Wednesday outside the headquarters of the ruling party.

Elsewhere, tens of thousands of demonstrators took to the streets in the northern provinces of Saada and Al-Hodeida, as well as the capital city of Sanaa, where protesters on Wednesday marched in streets close to the presidential palace in downtown Sanaa, said a Xinhua reporter, adding no casualties were reported.

Earlier in the day, some 10,000 Yemeni officers and soldiers of the Republican Guard, Central Security and Air Forces in Sanaa, declared defection from the government to join anti-government protesters, an army official attended the event told Xinhua.

The new wave of defectors came hours after a gunfight took place between dissident soldiers and pro-government security forces, leaving at least six dead from both sides.

Yemen has been witnessing daily anti-government protests across major provinces since mid-February, which resulted in a political crisis that undermined security and stability situations in the country.

The president on March 28 said that he has lost control over five provinces, which were seized either by tribesmen or by al- Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP) after the government pulled the police out from some towns of major provinces under the pretext of avoiding friction with protesters.

Source: Xinhua.
Link: http://news.xinhuanet.com/english2010/world/2011-04/14/c_13827656.htm.

Debate over suspects' candidacy continues to dominate agenda

14 April 2011, Thursday

The candidacy of 15 suspects, 14 of whom are currently in jail on charges of terrorism, in the upcoming June 12 elections is still a matter of contention for Turkey's politicians and jurists, whose opinions on whether they will be allowed inside Parliament if they get elected vary.

Prime Minister Recep Tayyip ErdoÄŸan said the Turkish nation will make a decision about the future of suspect candidates. He said he finds the nomination of suspects in the Ergenekon, Sledgehammer and Kurdistan Communities Union (KCK) trials as candidates by the three main political parties “thought-provoking,” and added, “I am curious about how my nation will react to their nominations.” The prime minister's remarks came on Tuesday as he was about to board his plane to Strasbourg.

The Republican People’s Party (CHP) included three suspects in the Ergenekon case -- former Ankara Chamber of Commerce (ATO) President Sinan Aygün, former BaÅŸkent University Rector Mehmet Haberal and journalist Mustafa Balbay -- in its list of candidates for deputy. The Nationalist Movement Party (MHP) nominated retired Gen. Engin Alan, a suspect in the Sledgehammer coup case, as a candidate while the pro-Kurdish Peace and Democracy Party (BDP) nominated six suspects in the KCK trial as candidates for deputy in the approaching parliamentary elections. Haberal, Balbay and Alan are currently in jail,while Aygün was released from prison in 2008 after a brief period of arrest pending trial.

The nominations of the suspects kicked off a debate as to whether they will be eligible for parliamentary immunity. While some are saying they will be eligible, others say the courts hearing these cases may allow the suspects’ release pending trial, but it is not a legal obligation. They say the suspects cannot enter Parliament without a court decision for their release.

According to the prime minister, the nomination of these suspects has shown the insincerity of the CHP and BDP in their demands for the revocation of parliamentary immunity. “The CHP and the BDP have asked for the revocation of parliamentary immunity. Now it has become evident who is willing to benefit from immunity,” ErdoÄŸan stated. The nomination of the suspects sparked a debate as to whether they will be eligible for parliamentary immunity. While some are saying they will be eligible, others say the courts hearing these cases may allow for the suspects’ release pending trial, but it is not a legal obligation. They say the suspects cannot enter Parliament without a court decision for their release.

CHP leader Kemal KılıçdaroÄŸlu, on the other hand, defended the nomination of terror suspects. He said he was “pleased” to see the suspects in his party’s candidate list. KılıçdaroÄŸlu additionally argued that the suspects were being tried due to their opposition to the AK Party government. “Those men [suspects] are not pro-government. They are people who contribute to the development of Turkey with their opinions. We are extremely happy to see them inside the CHP. They are people who did good things for Turkey. This is why we nominated them for the elections,” he added.

Some other suspects in the Ergenekon and Sledgehammer cases will also run in the June elections, but as independent candidates. Among these are journalist Tuncay Özkan, former Police Chief Hanefi Avcı, Workers’ Party (Ä°P) leader DoÄŸu Perinçek, retired Gen. Çetin DoÄŸan and retired Col. Atilla UÄŸur.

In addition, KılıçdaroÄŸlu responded to a question about the criticism directed at the CHP administration by party members and supporters due to the nomination of terror and coup suspects. The CHP leader said everyone presented their views about the nominations, and the party administration made their final decision. “There are 80 people on the [CHP] party council. All of our friends presented their views and suggestions. And the party council made the final decision,” he noted.

Ergenekon is a clandestine criminal network accused of working to overthrow the government through large-scale chaos. Sledgehammer is a suspected military plan devised at a military gathering in 2003 that allegedly sought to undermine the government in order to lay the groundwork for a military takeover. The KCK is the urban arm of the terrorist Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK).

In the meantime, CHP Konya deputy Atilla Kart told reporters on Wednesday that courts will decide whether to allow suspect candidates to enter Parliament if they get elected in the June polls. “Trials against those men will continue. They will continue to stand trial even if they are elected to Parliament. The judiciary may refuse to release them from prison [even if they get elected] based on an article enshrined in the Constitution,” he stated.

PM responds to questions on election list

Reporters also asked the prime minister why he refused to nominate State Minister for Family and Women’s Affairs Selma Aliye Kavaf and singer Ä°brahim Tatlıses as a candidates for deputy in the elections. “It is not possible to nominate all the applicants. Ä°brahim Tatlıses is a person whom I like and whose art I respect. Unfortunately has had an unfortunate incident. As I previously mentioned, we were supposed to nominate only one of every 10 applicants. We have received 6,000 applications. Please try to imagine what we felt when evaluating all those applications,” ErdoÄŸan stated.

Tatlıses was shot by armed assailants in mid-March. He is currently receiving treatment in Germany. After the Justice and Development Party (AK Party) rejected his application, he decided to run as an independent candidate from his hometown Åžanlıurfa. ErdoÄŸan also said the AK Party will benefit from the experience of Kavaf in a “different way.” However, he did not disclose his party’s plans for the minister.

The prime minister also expressed pleasure at having included Ahmet Kutalmış TürkeÅŸ, the son of legendary MHP leader Alparslan TürkeÅŸ, in the AK Party candidate list. “The son of Alparslan TürkeÅŸ is an AK Party candidate from Ä°stanbul. Another son of TürkeÅŸ has been nominated as a candidate from the MHP. The nomination of TürkeÅŸ’s son shows that the AK Party embraces all segments of society,” he noted.

Asked about claims of coded question booklets in the Transition to Higher Education Examination (YGS), the prime minister said he was satisfied by the explanations provided by the Student Selection and Placement Center (ÖSYM) head Ali Demir. “One thing is very clear at this point. … Some are trying to block the holding of the second exam by taking people to the streets. Such provocative acts should not negatively impact the YGS. I wish good luck to all students,” he added. Last week, the 8th Chamber of the Council of State ruled against the annulment of the YSG, saying it is not the authorized body to hear an appeal for the annulment of the test. The court said applicants should have filed an appeal for the annulment of the YGS at an administrative court.

Source: Today's Zaman.
Link: http://www.todayszaman.com/news-241000-debate-over-suspects-candidacy-continues-to-dominate-agenda.html.

Candidate lists show Ä°stanbul will be heart of election race

14 April 2011, Thursday
EMÄ°NE DOLMACI, Ä°STANBUL

Deputy candidate lists recently submitted by political parties to the Supreme Election Board (YSK) have shown that Ä°stanbul will be the heart of this year's parliamentary elections, with party leaders and their top officials running in the elections from Ä°stanbul.

Apart from MHP leader Devlet Bahçeli, who will seek to be a deputy from his hometown of Osmaniye, the leaders of almost all political parties will run as deputy candidates from İstanbul. Prime Minister and AK Party leader Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, CHP leader Kemal Kılıçdaroğlu, SP leader Mustafa Kamalak, HAS Party leader Numan Kurtulmuş, DP leader Namık Kemal Zeybek and DSP leader Masum Türker are all candidates from İstanbul.

Additionally, the fact that the YSK redistributed the number of seats in Parliament to provinces according to the 2007 results of the address-based population registration system and increased the number of seats for Ä°stanbul from 70 to 85 also makes Ä°stanbul of critical importance for the parties.

Political party leaders have also placed their top party officials on deputy candidate lists for Ä°stanbul. While ErdoÄŸan is the top nominee from Ä°stanbul’s first electoral region, he put State Minister Egemen Bağış in second place; parliamentary Constitutional Commission head Burhan Kuzu in the list for the second electoral region; and Labor Minister Ömer Dinçer and former Interior Minister Abdülkadir Aksu on the list of the third electoral region.

CHP leader Kılıçdaroğlu preferred to run from the second electoral region. CHP Secretary-General Bihlun Tamaylıgil follows him on the CHP list for this region. CHP Deputy Chairman Gürsel Tekin was put at the top of the list for the first electoral region.

Although MHP leader Bahçeli will run in the elections from Osmaniye, one of the party’s heavyweights, Meral AkÅŸener, is a candidate from Ä°stanbul’s third electoral region. The MHP nominated retired Gen. Engin Alan, a suspect in the trial involving the Sledgehammer military plot, from Ä°stanbul’s first electoral region, while former State Minister Murat BaÅŸesgioÄŸlu was nominated from the second electoral region.

In addition to the recent increase of seats for Ä°stanbul, the number of voters has also increased in Ä°stanbul when compared to the latest parliamentary elections held in 2007. Voter statistics are yet to be confirmed by the YSK, but the number of voters has reportedly increased by 2 million, and 9 million will cast vote in the elections in Ä°stanbul.

After the YSK redistributed the number of seats in Parliament to provinces, the YSK increased the number of deputies for 14 provinces that experienced a population increase and reduced the number of deputies for 28 provinces with a population decrease.

The YSK increased the number of seats from 70 to 85 for Ä°stanbul, from 29 to 31 for Ankara and from 24 to 26 for Ä°zmir. Among the provinces that lost more than two seats were Konya, Trabzon and Tokat. After the redistribution of the seats, the deputies from the three big provinces -- Ä°stanbul, Ankara and Ä°zmir -- will constitute almost one-fourth of Parliament. These three provinces together with 11 other provinces, which will have more deputies this year, will constitute almost half of Parliament.

The total number of deputies from these 14 provinces increased from 221 to 254.

Source: Today's Zaman.
Link: http://www.todayszaman.com/news-241001-candidate-lists-show-istanbul-will-be-heart-of-election-race.html.

Turkey, Pakistan vow support for Afghan dialogue

ANKARA — Turkey and Pakistan Wednesday voiced support for initiatives to stabilize conflict-torn Afghanistan, including efforts for dialogue with the Taliban.

Presidents Abdullah Gul of Turkey and Asif Ali Zardari of Pakistan made the pledges in response to a question on whether Ankara had agreed to host a representation office for the Taliban and whether Islamabad would be ready to to help any dialogue process.

"2011 is a very critical year for Afghanistan... as the foreign troops will begin to withdraw... We are using all our capabilities to secure Afghanistan's unity and integrity," Gul told a joint press conference.

"We are doing this in cooperation with Afghan President (Hamid) Karzai and all Afghan authorities... We will be part of any activity (aimed at) making further contributions to secure durable peace," he said.

He would not comment directly on the possible opening of a Taliban office in Turkey.

Zerdari, on an official visit to Turkey, said Pakistan "believes in a peaceful transition and dialogue" in Afghanistan, its western neighbor with whom relations have often been strained over insecurity plaguing their border.

"We'll be facilitators to any format that leads to peace... Whatever needs to be done, Pakistan will be playing a positive role and hoping to facilitate the transition and dialogue," he said.

In December, Karzai spoke of suggestions that the Taliban open a representation office in Turkey or another impartial country "to facilitate reconciliation" in Afghanistan, saying he would be happy if Turkey could provide such a venue.

In February, Turkey pledged to help Afghanistan's High Council For Peace (HCP), a body tasked with seeking dialogue with the Taliban, following talks with its chairman.

Karzai set up the HCP last year to pursue talks with the Taliban in return for them laying down arms and accepting the constitution. The Taliban have publicly rejected the peace overtures.

Turkey, NATO's sole Muslim-majority member, has also organized talks between leaders of Afghanistan and Pakistan since 2007 to push them to cooperate against Islamist insurgents.

Afghanistan has been in the grip of a deadly insurgency waged by remnants of the Taliban since their regime was toppled in a US-led invasion in 2001, with the militants holding rear bases in Pakistan.

There are around 140,000 international troops in Afghanistan, including a Turkish contingent. They are due to start limited withdrawals from July with the Afghan police and army scheduled to take full control of security by 2014.

Copyright © 2011 AFP. All rights reserved.

Thousands of Kandaharis protest peacefully against Qur'an burning

By Colin Perkel, The Canadian Press

KANDAHAR, Afghanistan — A protest against the burning of a Qur'an by a Florida pastor remained peaceful Wednesday despite fears it would erupt in violence like similar demonstrations did two weeks ago.

Afghan police were out in force in anticipation of trouble, and some stores and offices in Afghanistan's second-largest city stayed closed.

As many as 3,000 people took part in the protest, some waving the white flag of the Taliban.

While the protest was aimed at the Qur'an desecration, some used the occasion to denounce the presence of coalition forces in the city.

"Foreigners should leave Afghanistan as soon as they can," said one demonstrator, Haji Abdul Manan.

"They should not have raids on locals homes. They should not shoot locals on the streets."

Earlier in the month, nine people were killed and about 100 injured in Kandahar when protests against last month's Qur'an burning by Rev. Terry Jones turned into a riot.

The violence followed similar protests and bloodshed in other parts of the country, including an attack on a UN building in the northern city of Mazar-e-Sharif, where four Afghans and seven foreigners were killed.

Kandahar Gov. Tooryalai Wesa condemned the demonstrators as "aggressive" outsiders.

"They are from remote areas and other provinces," Wesa said Wednesday at a meeting in nearby Dand district. "That's why they are under the influence of the enemy."

Some of those on hand at the protest apologized for the earlier rioting, which included beating Afghan journalists, but blamed police for opening fire and infuriating the crowd.

"(Protesters) burnt some shops, a school bus and other things (and) we apologize for that," said Mirwise Agha.

"(But) instead of shooting, (police) should have used tear gas or rubber bullets."

Others said the police who opened fire should be brought to justice.

Jones's burning of the Qur'an sparked strong condemnation from U.S. President Barack Obama and other leaders.

- With files from A.R. Khan

Copyright © 2011 The Canadian Press. All rights reserved.

How a Persian Gulf backwater became an international power broker

SONIA VERMA
Thursday, Apr. 14, 2011

They came to discuss the conflict in Libya, but equally interesting was where this week’s landmark meeting of rebel and NATO leaders took place.

Qatar, a tiny, gas-rich emirate on the Persian Gulf, has proved more than a backdrop. It has emerged yet again as a key player in a complicated conflict, the perennial problem-solver in a troubled region.

Qatar became the first Arab country to grant political recognition to Libyan rebels, and the only one to send fighter jets in support of a Western-led assault to assist them. It has donated food, fuel and medical supplies to the rebels, and struck a deal to buy their oil. It has helped them broadcast their message via satellite TV. It has also armed them with French-made missiles.

Qatar’s bold intervention is evidence of its remarkable evolution. In less than a generation, it has transformed itself into the diplomatic center of the Arab world, an astonishing feat for a country with a native population of just 200,000 people. And it has sidestepped the Tunisian-inspired protests that have swept the region.

A decade ago, the emirate was a backwater, dwarfed by the ambitions of its neighbors – Saudi Arabia, Iran and Iraq. Glitzy Dubai and oil-rich Abu Dhabi outshone the sleepy city-state of Qatar. It was a dreaded destination for business people, who joked the only danger of traveling to the capital, Doha, was death by boredom.

Now, you’d be hard-pressed to find a part of the world where Qatar doesn’t hold diplomatic or economic interests.

It has negotiated with rebels in Yemen and Morocco, waded into conflicts in Ethiopia and Eritrea, and even taken a stab at resolving the intractable Israeli-Palestinian conflict, not to mention brokering an end to Lebanon’s political crisis in 2008.

It’s home to al-Jazeera, the influential international Arabic news channel. And in 2022, Qatar will play host to the World Cup.

The Qatar Investment Authority, the emirate’s secretive sovereign wealth fund, has gone on a spending spree in the last five years, snapping up significant stakes in the London Stock Exchange, Harrods Group, Sainsbury’s and the Walt Disney Company’s Miramax Films.

“It’s trying to be little Switzerland at the moment,” said Christopher Davidson, a professor of Mideast politics at Durham University in the United Kingdom. “It’s doing a pretty good job.”

In an interview on CNN, Emir Hamad bin Khalifa al-Thani explained his country’s foreign policy as pure self-interest: “We are a small country and we have to defend the interests of Qatar,” he said.

Engaging with Washington and Tehran means “both of them they have to accept our policy,” he said. “This is our policy, we are open for all the countries. … We will defend our interests”

The House of Thani, which has ruled Qatar as an absolute monarchy since 1825, is fueled by the twin factors of fortune and fear.

Vast natural gas and oil reserves have given Qatar an astonishing GDP per capita of $145,300, the highest in the world.

Qataris are so wealthy that the majority never have to work, profiting from a law that requires businesses to be majority-owned by a citizen, though foreigners do the actual work.

Its giant northern gas field, which straddles the border with Iran, is a guarantee of future wealth. It also serves as a stark reminder of how susceptible the desert kingdom is to a takeover.

“They have incredibly fortunate circumstances but they are also in an incredibly vulnerable position. Saudi Arabia could roll in tomorrow and nobody could stop them,” said Isobel Coleman, a senior fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations. “Iran could do the same.”

The ruling family has decided the best way to mitigate this risk is to make friends with the right people, namely the Americans, and it’s working.

U.S. President Barack Obama recently singled out the Emir of Qatar for his role in navigating the crises in Libya, Egypt and Tunisia.

“We would not have been able to shape the kind of broad-based international coalition that includes not only our NATO members and also includes Arab states without the Emir’s leadership,” he said.

But Doha’s extended circle of friends is an awkward group.

It has maintained close ties to Iran, and has financed Hamas after it won Palestinian elections in 2006, but Qatar also plays host to Israeli officials.

It is home to one of America’s largest airbases and U.S. Central Command, but Qatar has also offered sanctuary to Chechen rebel leader Zelimkhan Yandarbiyev and Saddam Hussein’s widow, Sajida Khairallah Tulfah.

Qatar’s ability to align itself with pretty much anyone is a testament to its neutrality, say supporters. Critics say its foreign policy borders on the schizophrenic. Its increased prominence has also earned the ire of the region’s traditional power brokers, such as Saudi Arabia, which severed diplomatic ties to the country, and Egypt.

“They are resentful of this little tin-pot country. This nouveau city-state has so much influence, not the great historic nations with 5,000-year-old traditions,” Ms. Coleman said. “Who are these people? Who are these Qataris? It drives them mad.”

Toby Jones, an expert on the modern Middle East who teaches at Rutgers University, says Doha is seeking something more valuable than money – influence.

“Qataris don’t seem to think they need anything in a tangible way, so it’s all symbolic,” he said. “That’s important in the Middle East. Who’s going to carry the mantle of Arab nationalism? Who’s going to lead the community?”

Sheik al-Thani took power in a bloodless coup in 1996 while his father was on a ski holiday in Switzerland. His rule has coincided with the country becoming the world’s biggest gas exporter.

“There was a lot of frustration amongst the Qatari people about the gas wealth and how it was going to be spent,” said Prof. Davidson, of Durham University.

Since then, the Emir and his favored wife, Sheikha Moza, have projected themselves as the modern face of the Middle East. They frequently travel as a couple and dine out together in restaurants. She wears glamorous designer clothes beneath her full-length abaya.

Unusually outspoken for an emir’s wife, she is understood to be one of the driving forces behind Qatar’s Education City, home to satellite campuses of Ivy League schools and al-Jazeera children’s channel.

Al-Jazeera itself has proven hugely influential in the decade since the 9/11 terrorist attacks, becoming a credible source of international news and hugely popular in the Arab world.

“Basically al-Jazeera has become more well-known than Qatar itself,” said Mustafa Alani, a senior adviser at the Gulf Research Center, based in Dubai.

Some analysts argue the ruling family has used al-Jazeera, and other symbols of democracy, such as the Doha Debates, as a front, deflecting attention from its own authoritarian rule.

“By creating al-Jazeera they actually negate the need for democratic political institutions,” Ms. Coleman suggested.

For the moment, nobody inside the tiny kingdom seems to be complaining.

“They have their own calculations,” Mr. Alani said. “In international politics, they have walked a long way. Once, nobody had even heard of them. Now, they are dancing in every party.”

Source: The Globe and Mail.
Link: http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/world/africa-mideast/how-a-persian-gulf-backwater-became-an-international-power-broker/article1986207/singlepage/#articlecontent.

Iraqi government plans to resettle Iranian opposition group

Erbil, April 12 (AKnews) – Iraqi authorities are planning to close down a camp where some 3,400 Iranian opposition members have been settled since the 1980s, and send the people abroad.

On Friday, Iraqi security forces allegedly attacked Camp Ashraf, where members of the Mujahedine Khalq of Iran (MEK) are residing, killing nine of the camp’s residents and injuring others.

“The Council of Ministers has agreed to make use of all political and diplomatic means to resettle those 3,400 residents of Camp Ashraf in another country,” said Iraqi government spokesman Ali al-Dabbagh in a statement after a meeting of the council of ministers on Monday evening.

Iran has been actively mounting pressure on the Iraqi government to expel those Iranian dissidents whom Iran calls the Munafegine Khalq (Hypocrites of Khalq).

Dabbagh said meanwhile that the Iraqi government “will not extradite the members of the MEK to the Iranian authorities”.

According to MEK fugues, some 33 people were killed and 300 others injured in the attack on the camp, while the Iraqi hospitals have announced conflicting figures. Medical sources say that only 10 were killed.

The camp has come under repeated attacks since the fall of Saddam Hussein in 2003. The Iraqi authorities consider the group an ally of the former Iraqi dictator. MEK is also accused by the Iraqi actors of participating in the attacks on Iraqi Kurds and Shias during Saddam’s rule.

The group is identified by Iran and the US as a “terrorist” organization. The US forces maintained the security of the camp after the 2003 allied invasion but handed over responsibility to the Iraqi forces in late June, 2009.

Zainab al-Taie, an MP from the Ahrar bloc affiliated with the Shia cleric Moqtada al-Sadr, told AKnews that the presence of the group in Iraq was the cause of many troubles. “There is evidence that this organization has funded a number of terrorist organizations,” she said.

“The Iraqi parliament and the Ahrar bloc support the government’s efforts to expel this group from Iraq,” she said, calling for the “accelerating of the implementation of the government’s decision”.

"The presence of MEK contradicts the Iraqi constitution, because it is a foreign organization," she continued.

Independent MP Safiya al-Suhail said the former regime of Saddam Hussein had armed the group even against the Iraqi people. She too, supported Iraqi government in expelling the MEK.

However, she said Iraqi should respect the human rights provided for in the Iraqi constitution and abstain from violence.

“Extraditing these refugees to the Iranian government contradicts the Iraqi constitution and the international treaties signed by Iraq,” she said, “The Iraqi government should cooperate with the Unites Nations Higher commissioner for refugees to safely move them to another country”.

Source: AK News.
Link: http://www.aknews.com/en/aknews/3/231454/.

Syrian Revolution - Peaceful against all odds!

Wednesday, 13 April 2011

As the Assads increase their reliance on local militia and gangs, the potential for a nationwide meltdown increases. Only the protesters’ continued commitment to nonviolence keeps the country together at this stage.

The village of Al-Baydah near the coastal city of Banyas today was the scene of a horror show mastered by the Shabbiha, the pro-Assad gangs who seem to be taking the lead in the nation-wide crackdown alongside regular security forces, loyal army troops, and selected unites of the Republic Guard. Few hundreds of them poured into the village’s main square, conduced house raids, arresting hundreds of inhabitants and dragging them to the public square where they were beaten with batons. The children were forced to watch then stage a pro-Assad rally.

We can now confirm as well, that several army officers have indeed been executed because they refused orders to open fire on unarmed protesters. The inhabitants of the city of Madaya, which remains under military siege after yesterday’s protests, assert that their son Murad Hajjo was killed by security officers for his refusal to open fire on protesters. This is what the inhabitants of the historic city of Tadmor (Palmyra) also think was the fate of their son, Muhammad Awad Al-Kanbar, whose funeral was held earlier on Tuesday.

Meanwhile, and despite the current state of siege imposed on each town in Deraa and on communities and suburbs throughout the country, several rallies were held today in support of the people of Banyas, including in Deraa City, Hrak, Kobani, Kisweh, Barzeh and Al-Tal.

Finally, around 75 students who took part in yesterday’s protests at Damascus University or refused to take part in the pro-Assad rally that hastily thrown afterwards have been summarily expelled from university or referred to a disciplinary committee for expulsion.

A Message to The International Community:

In his address to the Libyan people following the onset of Libyan Revolution, Saif Gaddafi explained in full nauseating details how the situation will be made to degenerate into a civil war between a Benghazi-led alliance and Tripoli-led one. In his first address to the Syrian people following the onset of the Syrian Revolution, Bashar Al-Assad, laid out the plan for Syria: security-led crackdown everywhere and against all protests under the pretext of weeding out infiltrators and resisting foreign conspiracies and designs, coupled with reforms that will unfold according to his vision, his timetable, and more importantly, under his leadership.

Considering, on the one hand, that protesters are already questioning the very legitimacy of Bashar’s leadership, that violence is not succeeding in stifling their commitment to the cause and that Bashar has proven time and again that he is incapable of carrying out true reforms, the questions facing the international community are all about choosing sides and ensuring that the situation in Syria does not follow the Libyan Scenario. Rather than waiting until Bashar’s thugs on the streets bring his “prophecy” to fulfillment, world leaders need to take action now to explain to the Assads that there will be consequences to their thuggery. Assets freeze, targeted sanctions, actions by UN Commission on Human Rights and UN Security Council, all these are now steps that need to be considered. Let’s see for once if we can prevent conflict, rather than manage it.

Commentary:

He was the first, and will be remembered in post-Assad Syria as one of our many, many principled and courageous heroes. His name was Khalid al-Masri, a young conscript soldier, who said no when his Assad-loyalist army commander gave him the despicable order to traduce a mosque in Deraa, and beat or shoot those at prayer in it. Khalid said no -- a word unknown in Assad 1& 2 Syria -- that sad prototype of the Orwellian police state, where Big Brother kills all who rebel against his cruel and absolute rule.

For saying no, Khalid al-Masri was shot in the head point blank, to make an instant example of him. Maybe because his extraordinary stand was far too costly to a dying regime. An army insurrection by conscript soldiers, belonging to a majority population, could bring it down more quickly than one can say 'Maher, Maher, ya jaban, khod junudak 'al Golan!' (Maher, Maher, you coward, take your troops to fight on the Golan) -- a furious chant that has gone up across the towns and cities of Syria, which rousingly sums up the accusation that both Bashar and his violent brother Maher, are lions when it comes to turning their guns on their own people, but pussycats when it comes to the Israelis.

Shooting Khalid al-Masri in the head made a hero of him, not an example. In the last 48 hours, more and more soldiers and heads of army units have categorically refused to fire on unarmed protesters, and have died for their patriotic stand.

For more than 40 years, the Syrian army has been denatured by packing into it in the most sensitive positions members of the Allawite community who profess utter loyalty not to Syria, but to the Assad clan. These Generals -- with their chestfuls of undeserved medals, pinned to the khaki that clothes their over-corpulent bodies; with their fabulous financial sinecures and their appallingly-corrupt record both in Syria and in Lebanon -- have nothing in common with Khalid al-Masri. They were at war with him when he was alive, and are at war with his memory now that he has been murdered, because he and others like him show them up to be the traitors to their country that they actually are, using a position -- once made glorious by Yusef al-Azmeh -- to enrich themselves obscenely and kill their down-trodden and impoverished fellow citizens shamelessly.
(Syrian Revolution News Digest)

Source: Global Arab Network.
Link: http://www.english.globalarabnetwork.com/2011041310676/Syria-Politics/syrian-revolution-peaceful-against-all-odds.html.

Protest erupts in Syria Aleppo University-activists

Wed Apr 13, 2011

(Reuters) - A demonstration demanding political freedoms erupted on Wednesday on the campus of the main university in Syria's second city Aleppo, human rights defenders in contacts with students said.

Aleppo, a strategic northern commercial hub near the border with Turkey, has been quiet since demonstrations against the iron fisted rule of the Baath Party started in southern Syria three-and a-half weeks ago. (Reporting by Khaled Yacoub Oweis; Editing by Jon Boyle)

Source: Reuters.
Link: http://www.reuters.com/article/2011/04/13/syrai-protests-aleppo-idUSLDE73C1J020110413.

Hamas may release Shalit 'sign of life'

GAZA, April 13 (UPI) -- Hamas may release a new tape of Israeli soldier Gilad Shalit but warned Israel will have to pay a price for the "sign of life," Hamas officials said.

Unnamed Hamas officials confirmed a request from International Red Cross representatives acting on behalf of Shalit's parents, Noam and Aviva, had been received by the movement, a report in Hamas's official weekly, al-Risala, said.

"Will Shalit be seen one more time on the video screen?" the Hebrew daily Yedioth Ahronoth Wednesday quoted the headline of the article as asking.

The release of an additional video of the soldier held captive in Gaza since his cross-border kidnapping in June 2006 would pressure Israel to consider the release of Palestinian security prisoners in exchange for the Shalit's freedom, the Hebrew language newspaper quoted the Hamas newspaper as saying.

An unnamed, high-ranking Hamas official said the movement has no intention of changing its demands for the soldier's release and holds Israel responsible for the lack of progress made, Yedioth Ahronoth said.

Source: United Press International (UPI).
Link: http://www.upi.com/Top_News/World-News/2011/04/13/Hamas-may-release-Shalit-sign-of-life/UPI-61481302696015/.

Palestinian Prisoners Await Light

By Saleh Jadallah

GAZA STRIP, April 13 (Bernama) -- The families of about 7,500 Palestinian prisoners held under intolerable conditions in Israeli jails hold a weekly sit-in demanding their release.

Holding pictures of the prisoners, they gather in front of the International Red Cross headquarters in Gaza City every Monday, declaring that they will not give up until all their sons, husbands, fathers, and relatives are set free.

Among them is the family of Emad Al-Saftawi, 47, captured by Israeli forces while trying to leave the Gaza Strip and enter Egypt at the Rafah border crossing in 2000.

As his wife was pregnant when he was arrested, Emad, who was sentenced to 18 years imprisonment, has only seen his daughter, Leen, when she visited his prison with his bereaved elderly mother.

His wife has never visited him in jail, but his sons, Hamza and Jihad, had visited their father once when they were under 12 years.

The Israeli authorities prevent people older than 12 years from visiting prisoners in the jails.

The visiting process was made more complicated after Palestinian militants captured Israeli soldier Gilad Shalit during a raid on an Israeli army site in the southern Gaza Strip in 2006.

Since then, Israel has prevented, without exception, all family members of Palestinian prisoners from visiting their sons and relatives.

Emad's children cannot bear the pain of not having seen their father for the last five years.

Leen, who last saw her father when she was four years old, is very eager to meet him again and see him safely at home.

"I have the right to see my father as any child in the world. I want to kiss his face and I want to play with him," said the schoolgirl.

The mother of Palestinian prisoner Bilal Al-Adeeni held the picture of her son and shouted: "Shalit will never see the light until our sons see the light," referring to the captured Israeli soldier.

"All the world talks about one Israeli soldier who was captured while killing our children, and they forget that we have thousands of prisoners in Israeli jails," said the grief-stricken mother, whose son was sentenced to 25 years of imprisonment in 2001.

Also, a three-and-a-half-year old girl, Heba Hanoon, was among the participants in the sit-in.

She does not know her father, Nidal, who was captured when she was 3 months old.

But like the others, she would continue to wait for his release for as long as it takes.

Source: Bernama.
Link: http://www.bernama.com/bernama/v5/newsindex.php?id=578667.

Morocco court frees Sahara activists after two years

RABAT — A Casablanca court released from jail Thursday three activists for the independence of Western Sahara detained for more than two years and on trial for undermining Morocco's internal security.

Ali Salem Tamek, Ibrahim Dahhane and Ahmed Naciri were released just before they were to announce a hunger strike, their lawyer Mohamed Sadqo said.

Their trial has been postponed several times since they were arrested in October 2009 at Casablanca airport on their return from Algeria's western town of Tindouf, a base for the Western Sahara independence movement, the Polisario Front.

"We submitted the request for provisional liberty a long time ago. This decision of the court shows that there is not enough evidence to convict them," Sadqo said.

"It is a positive step which comes with out doubt under pressure from the Moroccan authorities. We were going to hold a press conference next Monday to announce the decision of the activists to start a hunger strike."

International rights groups Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch had long called for their release, saying the charges were politically motivated.

The three men were arrested with four other people, including a woman Dakcha Lachguer, who were not taken into custody pending trial.

Initially a military court in Rabat had accused the activists of spying but in September 2010 but it declared itself incompetent to handle the case, which was referred to the Casablanca court.

The court's questioning had focused on the reasons for their trip to Tindouf, where they met Polisario representatives, and how it was financed.

Morocco annexed Western Sahara, a former Spanish colony, in 1975.

The Polisario Front, supported largely by Algeria, demands that there be a referendum on self-rule; Morocco has proposed it be allowed autonomy under its sovereignty but not independence.

Copyright © 2011 AFP. All rights reserved.

Benghazi port sends aid to besieged western bastion

* Rebel national council declines comment on arms shipments
* Hundreds of civilians said to have died in Misrata siege

By Alexander Dziadosz

BENGHAZI, Libya, April 14 (Reuters) - Fishing ships and tugboats loaded with weapons, food and medicine are leaving the rebel stronghold of Benghazi in eastern Libya to help relieve the western city of Misrata, port workers and witnesses said.

Hundreds of civilians are reported to have died during a six-week siege of Misrata, the lone rebel bastion in the west, even as fighting between insurgents and forces loyal to Muammar Gaddafi has ground toward a stalemate in the east.

This reporter saw pickup trucks bring rocket launchers and ammunition crates to a Benghazi port on Thursday, where men loaded them onto a boat bearing the red, black and green rebel flag. Port workers said the arms came from local storehouses.

"Zawiyah lasted about a month and then it fell. Why? Because there is no channel to give them weapons," said Mohamed Ali, a defected navy commander helping to oversee the harbor.

"If Misrata didn't get help from here, it would fall like Zawiyah."

A rebel spokesman, Mustafa Gheriani, said the Benghazi-based national council, had no comment on any arms shipment to Misrata but suggested private individuals may be providing weapons. Most ships are only bringing humanitarian aid, port workers said.

One tugboat's crew said the ship was headed to Misrata, but declined to give details about the shipment because they were afraid the information would be used to target them.

"These aren't weapons, this is baby milk," one crew member said, gesturing to a box labeled as ammunition. The ship's captain later said the boat was taking weapons to Misrata.

Most of the weapons on board appeared to be the sort of Cold War-era rockets and firearms often seen on Libya's front lines, where insurgents say they need heavier weapons to have any real hope of defeating Gaddafi's better armed and trained troops.

Rebel leaders have hinted that some countries are willing to arm the opposition, but there has been no visible sign of major weapons shipments into eastern Libya so far.

Ali, the ex-navy officer, said more than a dozen boats had left Benghazi for Misrata so far, with about two or three going every week depending on the weather. Most were only carrying humanitarian aid like medicine and baby milk, he said.

SELF-PROTECTION

Rebels cheered and waved as one boat pulled out of the harbor on Thursday. The boat's owner, who gave his name as Nagai, said the ship was carrying mostly medicine and food, and that guns and ammunition on board were for self-protection.

"Every time we go to the Misrata port, they (Gaddafi's forces) start to shoot at us, so we try to protect ourselves," he said. "We stay only two or three hours, quickly, and then we escape again."

Like others at the port, Nagai said he was a volunteer. He said his boat, previously used for fishing, encountered rocket fire on previous trips into the city. Rebels in Misrata said an attack with Russian-made Grads killed at least 23 people there on Thursday.

"A lot of these boats are individual efforts," spokesman Gheriani said, noting that many Libyans had armed themselves from abandoned government armories since the uprising began.

An aid committee formed by the national council has been using fishing boats to send humanitarian aid into Misrata, where medicine and food are scarce, and has also evacuated residents.

A rescue ship is on its way to begin evacuating 6,000 migrants stranded in the city, the International Organization for Migration said on Thursday.

Gheriani said rebels needed more help from international groups to provide humanitarian aid in the western city.

"You've seen the size of these boats," he said, referring to the fishing vessels heading to Misrata. "It's not enough."

Source: Reuters.
Link: http://af.reuters.com/article/libyaNews/idAFLDE73D25520110414?sp=true.

Rebels say repel Gaddafi forces in Western Mountain region

CAIRO, April 13 (Reuters) - Rebels have repelled troops loyal to Muammar Gaddafi in Libya's remote Western Mountain region and killed at least seven of them, an insurgent spokesman said on Wednesday.

Adel al-Zintani told Al Jazeera television from the city of Zintan in Western Libya that three rebel fighters were also wounded in the fighting.

"We have the bodies of seven soldiers from Gaddafi's brigades and three wounded who are undergoing medical treatment," Zintani said.

"The fighters in the town of Nalut have repulsed the (Gaddafi) brigades and defeated them," he added.

The Western Mountain region is a sparsely populated area on the border with Tunisia inhabited by ethnic Berbers, many of whom joined an uprising to end his 41-year rule that began in February.

(Writing by Sami Aboudi, editing by Barry Moody)

Source: Reuters.
Link: http://af.reuters.com/article/egyptNews/idAFLDE73C23R20110413.

Libya: RAF Typhoons carry out first attack on Gaddafi forces

13 Apr 2011

RAF Typhoon fighters have carried out their first attack on Muammar Gaddafi's forces in Libya, the Ministry of Defense has confirmed.

A Typhoon, patrolling with a RAF Tornado GR4, hit two Libyan T72 main battle tanks with laser-guided Paveway II bombs near the besieged city of Misurata.

Air Vice Marshal Phil Osborn said that the Tornado attacked a third tank with a Paveway IV bomb - taking to eight the number tanks hit by RAF aircraft yesterday.

It is the first time the Typhoon - formerly known as the Eurofighter - has fired its weapons in anger in the ground attack role since entering service with the RAF.

AVM Osborn rejected reports that the RAF had insufficient Typhoon pilots trained in the ground attack role to mount operations in Libya.

The Typhoon was originally introduced as an air defense fighter and a recent National Audit Office report disclosed that only eight pilots had so far received ground attack operations.

AVM Osborn acknowledged that the full Typhoon ground attack capability would not be available until 2015, but said that they had enough for the current mission in Libya.

''We have sufficient Typhoon aircrew to undertake the task with the appropriate training for the systems and weapons carried by the aircraft, whether air-to-air or air-to-ground munitions,'' he told an MoD press briefing in London.

''We take very seriously what we are asked to do. We wouldn't deploy a capability if we couldn't support it and we weren't able to execute it in the way that you would expect the RAF to execute it, which is in a proportionate, disciplined, reliable way.''

The RAF has designated Typhoons operating from Gioia del Colle in southern Italy for ground attack operations in Libya alongside 12 Tornado GR4s. Together they account for a quarter of the ground attack force available to NATO.

William Hague, the foreign secretary, attending a meeting in Qatar of the international contact group on Libya, has been pressing other NATO members to deploy more aircraft to the operation.

Source: The Telegraph.
Link: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/africaandindianocean/libya/8448292/Libya-RAF-Typhoons-carry-out-first-attack-on-Gaddafi-forces.html.

Western powers pressure Gaddafi departure, support oppositions

DOHA, April 13 (Xinhua) -- Inside a spacious meeting hall in Qatar's capital Doha, Western powers and their Arab allies met representatives of the Libyan opposition Interim Transitional National Council to seek a political way out of the Libyan crisis.

In Libya, the fighting between the rebel forces supported by NATO-led coalition and Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi's army shows no signs of abating.

Wednesday's meeting of the Contact Group on Libya was part of the international mandates for an end of the deteriorating situation in Libya, and came two days after an African Union (AU)- brokered peace deal was denied by the rebels on the ground that the initiative fell short of their expectations for Gaddafi to step down.

NO EASY POLITICAL SOLUTION

UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon was present at the high- profile conference with NATO Secretary-General Anders Fogh Rasmussen and British Foreign Secretary William Hague, as well as senior diplomats from the United States, Arab countries and international organizations.

The participants agreed that a political solution would be the only way to lasting peace in Africa's major oil exporter and they reaffirmed strong commitment to the sovereignty, independence, territorial integrity and national unity of Libya.

German Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle told reporters on the sidelines of the meeting that the international community was looking forward to a speedy end of war in Libya without dividing the country.

However, analysts said it is not easy for a political solution to be born in the international shuttle diplomacy as Gaddafi would not give up power, but rebels hold his departure as the top priority in any political attempt.

That can be proved by the abortion of the AU-brokered road map, which was accepted by Gaddafi who wants to open political dialogue, but rejected by the rebels who said Gaddafi must leave office.

In the past months, Gaddafi was under mounting pressure to step down, but the veteran leader told the Western countries that he would clinch to the power through his sporadic appearance on TV channels, cheering with supporters.

According to the statement issued after the meeting, participants hold that the veteran Libyan leader had lost all legitimacy and must leave power in order to allow the Libyan people to determine their own future.

Rasmussen said Monday that NATO foreign ministers will hold a meeting on Libya later this week in Germany. He said military action alone won't solve the crisis in Libya.

REBELS TRY TO GAIN SUPPORT

The Libyan government did not send representatives to the contact group meeting, which was initiated in a London conference as a mechanism to bring all parties in Libya together for consultations.

The Contact Group said they regarded the Interim Transitional National Council as the legitimate interlocutor, representing the aspirations of the Libyan people.

Libyan rebel forces in the past weeks have engaged in shuttle diplomacy to gain support and recognition.

Mahmud Awad Shamma, a representative of the rebel forces, said a delegation from the Libyan Interim Transitional National Council will go to Washington Wednesday night to meet some congressional leaders to gain more support.

"We want to gain more support to protect civilians and might invite some of them (congressional leaders) to the ground," Mahmud said.

Qatar, the first Arab state to recognize the Libyan rebel authority, said Tuesday it has already exported two shipments of oil from Tobruk, the main oil hub in east Libya.

Source: Xinhua.
Link: http://news.xinhuanet.com/english2010/world/2011-04/14/c_13827671.htm.

Spain to send diplomat to Libya for talks with rebels

13/04/2011

Spain will send a diplomat to Libya's rebel stronghold of Benghazi for talks with the Transitional National Council, the main Libyan opposition group, a Spanish diplomatic source said Wednesday.

Jose Riera, Spanish ambassador for the special mission for Mediterranean affairs, will head to Benghazi "in around two weeks" to "reinforce dialogue" with the council, the source said.

Spanish Foreign Minister Trinidad Jimenez will give more details regarding Riera's mission later on Wednesday at a top-level diplomatic meeting in Doha called to discuss the crisis in Libya.

NATO has led air strikes against Libyan leader Moamer Kadhafi's forces for almost two weeks since taking over from a US-led coalition that began bombing the regime's heavy weaponry on March 19.

Spain has committed four F-18 fighter jets and a refueling aircraft to help enforce a UN-mandated no-fly zone over Libya.

It has also deployed an F-100 frigate, an S-74 submarine and a CN-235 maritime surveillance plane to help enforce an arms embargo on Libya.

© 2011 AFP

Source: Expatica.
Link: http://www.expatica.com/es/news/spanish-news/spain-to-send-diplomat-to-libya-for-talks-with-rebels_142384.html.

Libyan Opposition Envoy To Visit Washington This Week

4/13/2011

(RTTNews) - A envoy of the Libya's Transitional National Council (TNC), an opposition group fighting the regime of authoritarian leader Moammar Qadhafi, is expected to visit Washington later this week to hold talks with senior US administration and defense officials, the State Department announced Wednesday.

According to State Department spokesman Mark Toner, Mahmoud Jibril is visiting the United States in an effort to convince Washington to provide greater support to the rebel movement trying to topple the repressive Qadhafi regime in Libya.

Toner said Jibril is expected to arrive in the United States on Thursday and added that the Libyan would hold talks with senior Pentagon and State Department officials as well as members of Congress in the course of his visit. But Toner did not specify when those talks would take place.

"These meetings will allow us to continue to get a better sense of the opposition and the Transitional National Council and its vision for Libya," Toner said, noting that US envoy Chris Stevens is currently in the eastern Libyan city of Benghazi to get a "firsthand" assessment of the opposition.

Toner said the Obama administration is "also trying to take an approach that allows us to understand both their needs as well as who they are." His remarks came as Washington was undecided on arming the Libyan rebels as demanded by the TNC.

Jibril represents the Transitional National Council, which has been recognized as Libya's legitimate government by countries like France, Italy and Qatar. It currently controls most of eastern Libya and is based in the city of Benghazi.

The 31-member TNC, led by former Justice Minister Mustafa Abdul Jalil, has an executive arm, and maintains an armed force consisting mainly of defected military personnel. It is yet to be recognized by the United States.

Currently, a NATO-led military operation is progressing in Libya to enforce a UN-mandated no-fly zone over the North African country, and to protect the civilians from attack by pro-Qadhafi forces. In addition to its original intentions, the operation has also assisted the TNC forces in their fight against the Qadhafi regime.

The TNC has been urging the NATO to intensify its operations in Libya in wake of the brutal shelling of civilian areas in the cities of Misrata and Ajdabiya by pro-Qadhafi forces. Despite making several cease-fire declarations after the international airstrikes began, pro-Qadhafi forces continue to attack rebel-held cities and towns causing many civilian causalities.

Earlier this week, the TNC had rejected a cease-fire deal proposed by the African Union for ending the eight-week-long violent conflict, insisting that it would only accept a deal that includes the removal of Qadhafi from power. The deal, however, was approved by Qadhafi.

Source: RTT News.
Link: http://www.rttnews.com/Content/GeneralNews.aspx?Id=1597706&SM=1.