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Saturday, April 23, 2011

Iran, Iraq must seek strategic cooperation: Salehi

Tuesday, April 19, 2011

TEHRAN -- Iranian Foreign Minister Ali Akbar Salehi has said Iran and Iraq must set a strategic framework for cooperation in various areas.

Salehi made the remarks during a meeting with Ibrahim Al-Jaafari, the leader of the Iraqi Shiite coalition, in Tehran on Monday.

During the meeting, Salehi congratulated Jafari on the formation of the Iraqi government, saying that the two countries must utilize their untapped potential to increase cooperation.

He also expressed hope that Iraq will soon gain a status it deserves and prosper day by day.

Salehi also said the volume of trade between Tehran and Baghdad is currently $7 billion and the two countries should take measures to increase the volume of trade exchanges.

Jafari, a former Iraqi prime minister, said although Iraq enjoys great potential, it needs the support of the neighboring countries, particularly the Islamic Republic of Iran to resolve the problems facing the country.

He also thanked Iran for the position it adopted toward the formation of government in Iraq.

Jalili says Bahrain crisis is an ignominy for U.S.

Jafari also met with Iran’s Supreme National Security Council Secretary Saeed Jalili on Monday. In the meeting, Jalili stated that the crisis unfolding in Bahrain is an ignominy for the United States.

He criticized the U.S. for adopting a double standard approach toward the issues, saying Washington’s support for the crackdown on the Bahraini protesters is a clear evidence of its deceitful policies.

Jalili also warned the Arab dictators that “if they rely on the United States instead of listening to the voice of their people, they will not have a better fate than (former Egyptian president) Hosni Mubarak and (former Tunisian president Zine El Abidine) Ben Ali.”

On Monday, Jalili also held separate talks with Head of the Iraqi National Congress Ahmed Abdel Hadi Chalabi and Iraqi Vice President Adel Abdul-Mahdi, who are accompanying Jafari in his visit to Tehran.

In addition, Jafari met with Iranian Majlis Speaker Ali Larijani on Monday.

Source: Tehran Times.
Link: http://www.tehrantimes.com/Index_view.asp?code=238960.

'Iran appoints first ambassador to Egypt in 30 years'

04/19/2011

Report: Appointment of new ambassador in Cairo comes after negotiations between Iranian, Egyptian foreign ministers.

Iran appointed its first ambassador to Egypt in over thirty years, Iranian TV network PressTV reported Monday. According to the report, the appointment comes amid a thawing of relations between the two countries, which were strained since just after the Iranian revolution in 1979.

The new ambassador's appointment reportedly came after negotiations between Iranian Foreign Minister Ali Akbar Salehi and his Egyptian counterpart Nabil al-Arabi.

Relations between the two countries became strained after the 1979 Islamic Revolution in Iran when Iran cut ties with Egypt. Iran's move at the time was based on Egypt's participation in the 1978 Camp David Accords, and remained cold throughout the 1980s due to Egyptian support for Iraq in the Iran-Iraq War.

Relations stayed strained throughout much of former Egyptian president Hosni Mubarak's nearly 30-year rule. The Iranian government dedicated a street in Tehran to Khaled al-Islambouli, the man who assassinated Egyptian president Anwar Sadat. In 2001, BBC reported that Iran had for the second time honored Islambouli in a large mural with the words "I killed Egypt's Pharaoh." These public dedications of Sadat's assassin were reportedly why Mubarak had refused a 2004 invitation to Tehran.

February 2011, however, saw Mubarak ousted following a wave of protests across Egypt. Since then, relations between the two countries have begun to warm. Iran's top leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, said soon after the uprisings in Egypt saw Mubarak deposed that protests there and in Tunisia are a sign of "Islamic awareness" across the region.

In late February, Egypt allowed two Iranian naval vessels to pass through the Suez Canal en route to Syria which, according to Egyptian newspaper Al-Ahram, was the first time Iran had requested such passage in 30 years.

Egyptian Foreign Minister Nabil el-Arabi has stated publicly his desire to improve the two countries' ties, stating in his first new conference following his appointment that Egypt was willing to resume relations with Tehran, no longer viewed as an enemy state, Al-Ahram reported. Arabi said that "Iran is an important country and we are bound by historic ties with it."

Reuters contributed to this report.

Source: The Jerusalem Post.
Link: http://www.jpost.com/MiddleEast/Article.aspx?id=217124.

Iran marks national Army Day, hails achievements

TEHRAN, April 18 (Xinhua) -- Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad hailed the performance and achievements of the country 's army in the past years as the country celebrated the national Army Day on Monday.

Ahmadinejad praised the achievements of the Iranian military and referred to the Iranian army as the most "powerful in the world" and "undefeatable."

Ahmadinejad also criticized the Western powers for what he called an interference in the domestic affairs of the regional countries, adding the countries should be vigilant not to be trapped in the plots of the non-regional powers which aim at stirring Iran-Arab or Shiite-Sunni strife.

Different units of Iranian Army staged parade on Monday and displayed the latest Iranian military achievements especially those in missile technology in the presence of the president and a number of Iranian high ranking military officials.

Iranian Defense Minister Ahmad Vahidi who also participated in the ceremony of the Army Day told the official IRNA news agency that "the Army has made good progress in all its forces ... and air defense has succeeded in making outstanding achievements in enhancing capabilities."

Meanwhile, the Army Ground Force has achieved a "very great level of readiness" and the navy force has demonstrated its capabilities at the "global" level, Vahidi was quoted as saying.

Commander of the Khatam al-Anbiya Air Defense Base Farzad Esmaili said Iran has successfully test-fired a new domestically- made air defense system, named Mersad, the local satellite Press TV reported on Monday.

Esmaili said the Mersad air defense system, which was test- fired in an air defense base in the northern province of Semnan on Sunday, is capable of hitting targets up to 150 km away, said Press TV without further details.

On Saturday, Iran announced that it has successfully test-fired another air-defense missile system dubbed Sayyad-2.

Its previous version Sayyad-1, which Iran had unveiled earlier, is a two-stage surface-to-air missile. Equipped with a 200 kg warhead and with a speed of 1,200 meters per second, it can not only be deployed to destroy the targets with low Radar Cross Section (RCS) at low and medium altitudes, but also be used in electronic warfare, local semi-official Fars news agency reported.

Sayyad-2 is an upgraded version and enjoys higher precision, range and destruction power than its previous version, said Fars.

Also, Vahidi announced on Monday that the country has successfully test-fired the home-made Zafar missile, and pointed out that Iran's military units will soon be equipped with Zafar missiles which are "the fastest cruise missiles in the world," said Fars without further details.

"These missiles together with our other systems can remarkably promote the country's air defense power," he said.

Iranian Army Commander-in-Chief Ataollah Salehi said Monday that Iran's army support all regional countries and it is a deterrent to the world's bullying powers, the IRNA reported.

Some non-regional forces try to occupy the regional countries and the occupiers term the Islamic Republic as an aggressive country, but the Islamic Republic is ready to help its regional friends, Salehi told IRNA on the sidelines of a ceremony held in Tehran to mark the national Army Day.

No country has ever seen an act of aggression by Iran, he added.

Source: Xinhua.
Link: http://news.xinhuanet.com/english2010/world/2011-04/18/c_13834689.htm.

Armed Forces to host Afghan imams

WARNING: Article contains propaganda!

* * * * *

Amman, April 21 (petra)--The Jordan Armed Forces will host a group of Afghan Imams during April 18-24 to acquaint them with the cultural, social and religious aspects in Jordan and encourage them to spread the message of religious tolerance and moderation in their local communities. The step comes within Jordan's policy to spread the message of religious tolerance and moderation as well as interfaith dialogue and highlight Jordan's vital role in the Middle East The program includes a number of lectures on moderation in Islam, cooperation among followers of religions, the right of women in Islam, the Amman Message, as well as cooperation in spreading the message of peace around the world. The delegation will also visit a number of archaeological, religious and educational sites in the Kingdom.

21/04/2011

Source: Petra.
Link: http://www.petranews.gov.jo/nepras/2011/Apr/21/3000.htm.

Jordan backs Qatar efforts in Libya

Wednesday, 20 April 2011

DOHA: King Abdullah of Jordan has said that his country was working in collaboration with Qatar to provide humanitarian aid to the people of Libya.

King Abdullah who was on a brief visit to Qatar yesterday held talks with the Emir H H Sheikh Hamad bin Khalifa Al Thani. The talks focused on regional and international issues and ways to bolster bilateral relations.

The session was attended by the Heir Apparent H H Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani.

On the Jordanian side, it was attended by Prince Ali bin Al Hussein and Chief of Royal Hashemite Court Dr Khaled Karaki and Jordanian Ambassador to Qatar Ahmed Jalal Al Mefleh.

The Emir and H H Sheikha Moza bint Nasser hosted a luncheon banquet at Al Wajba Palace in honor of King Abdullah and Queen Rania.

The luncheon banquet was also attended by the Heir Apparent.

King Abdullah, in remarks to Al Sharq before his arrival in Qatar said that his talks with the Emir would focus on Arab issues in the context of the current challenges and protests in the Arab world. He also underlined the need for more coordinated efforts to address the challenges.

Asked about relations with Qatar, King Abdullah said, “Surely we will concentrate on ways to strengthen relations with Qatar and other GCC countries for the benefit of our people.”

Commenting on the role of Qatar in Libya, King Abdullah said, “I am following all the developments in Libya and I am interested in the unity of Libya and the safety of its people. What is happening there would have a negative impact on the people, who are in need of help from their Arab brothers.”

“We are aware that Qatar is playing a crucial role since the beginning of the protests to alleviate the suffering of the Libyan people. Our policy is to support Qatar in seeking the unity of Libyans. We will carry out our duty to provide more medical and humanitarian aid to the people in Libya,” he added.

“Currently we are providing humanitarian aid through out royal air force in line with the decision of the Arab League and the international community. We will coordinate with Qatar to establish mobile hospitals in Libya equipped with qualified medical staff,” said King Abdullah.

On the stalled peace process, King Abdullah said the developments in the region should not force the Arabs to stop supporting the peace process.

Source: The Peninsula.
Link: http://www.thepeninsulaqatar.com/qatar/149570-jordan-backs-qatar-efforts-in-libya.html.

Jordan official: Protester who set himself ablaze outside PM office last week dies of wounds

By Jamal Halaby, The Associated Press

AMMAN, Jordan — A Jordanian forensics official says a protester who set himself on fire outside the prime minister's office last week has died of his wounds.

Mohammad Abdul-Karim's case was the first self-immolation since political unrest hit Jordan in January.

The forensics official says the 45-year-old man died in a hospital of first, second and third degree wounds to his face and much of his body.

Similar acts of self-immolation have occurred in other Muslim countries — some of them fatal — to protest repressive governments.

In Jordan, the protests calling for political reform have generally been smaller and more peaceful, although there were incidents of violent clashes.

The official spoke Wednesday on condition of anonymity because he is not allowed to talk to the media.

Copyright © 2011 The Canadian Press. All rights reserved.

Jordan's Islamists Take the Reins of the Protests

By Karen Leigh
Monday, Apr. 18, 2011

After sitting out a three-month long wave of protests, Jordan's Islamists have finally taken to the streets. On Friday, the Islamic Action Front (IAF), Jordan's main opposition party and a branch o the Muslim Brotherhood, virtually took over the protest movement by rallying supporters in the capital Amman, turning out more than 1,000 marchers in the city. Though sometimes seen as a loyal opposition, the movement had been mostly dormant since boycotting the country's 2007 elections, claiming the polls had been rigged to subvert the Islamists' power. "It's a surprise that they suddenly came out today," says Chris Phillips, Jordan country specialist at the Economist Intelligence Unit.

Until Friday, anti-regime sentiment had been marshaled by an inexperienced group of young Jordanians who dubbed themselves the March 24 movement and modeled their actions on Egypt's activists. They had been stymied after police hit their protests with rocks, sticks and water hoses on March 25. Fewer than 400 demonstrators came out in Amman the week after that incident. Most civilians believed the movement was dead in the water. Getting young people involved in politics "is like pulling teeth," says Naseem Tarawnah, the CEO of 7iber, an Amman platform for citizen-generated media. "It's unrealistic to think that it's going to become the vanguard of the anti-government movement," adds Shadi Hamid, director of research at the Brookings Doha Institute. "No one should expect them to play that role. It's going to take a longer time for them to develop a larger constituency."

Since Friday, the IAF's leader, Hamzah al-Mansur, has been ubiquitous on television and in print media, a prominent spokesperson for a protest movement his organization did very little to encourage. Indeed, the demonstrations seem to be more sharply focused. Spurred by the IAF, not only did more than 1,000 paraded from Amman's central Al-Husseini mosque to City Hall, it very clearly called for reforms including the dissolution of Parliament and the toppling of Prime Minister Maaruf Bakhit.

Those demands seem to dovetail with what appear to be the sentiments of King Abdullah, who has publicly urged reform his new government, which was installed in January. "When the protests first came about and the King fired the government, there was a general sense across the population of 'give them a go, let's see what they can do before with criticize them,'" Phillips says. "In the last two weeks in particular, there's an increased sense that the government isn't going to do anything. If the IAF have mobilized people, it will be to try and regain the momentum in what was seen as a flagging protest movement and push forth reforms that had been failing to materialize."

The concern, however, is that the IAF may not speak for all Islamists. At the same time as hundreds were marching in the capital, a significant showing was being made in Zarqa, a religiously conservative village a half-hour drive from Amman. There, 350-to-400 Islamic hardliners clashed with police. A Jordanian officer, Lieutenant General Hussein Majali, told reporters that "it was clear that the demonstrators [in Zarqa] had plans to clash with police. They carried swords and daggers and were provocative, seeking to drag police into a bloody confrontation." More than 50 police were injured; with a reported 120 Salafists reportedly detained and 50 later released.

Zarqa is not unknown to the rest of the world. It was the hometown of Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, the much-feared head of Al-Qaeda in Iraq who was killed in 2006. But it exposes an internal division at the heart of the IAF. It remains unclear how much influence is wielded by the Salafists, a smaller extremist wing of the IAF, which is still dominated by moderates who are not calling for the overthrow of the monarchy. Salafists have been agitating for weeks for the release of 90 Islamist prisoners, including Mohammad Shalabi, convicted in 2002 of terrorism following riots in the southern city of Maan, and former Zarqawi mentor Abu Mohammed al-Maqdessi.

The internal debate between moderates and hardliners contributed to the IAF's weakness over the last couple of years. "There has been talk that they might split as an organization, or at least be internally split for a long time, preventing them from being a political force," Phillips says. But now it seems both sides have acted in concert, at least staging demonstrations on the same day. Whether Salafists and moderates can work together going forward remains to be seen.

Source: TIME.
Link: http://www.time.com/time/world/article/0,8599,2065874,00.html.

In Turkey, surveyors map a WWI battlefield

By CHRISTOPHER TORCHIA, Associated Press – Sat Apr 23

ISTANBUL – The World War I battlefield of the Gallipoli campaign, where throngs gather each April to remember the fallen, is a place of lore, an echo of ancient warfare that took place on the same soil. Now researchers are mapping dugouts, trenches and tunnels in the most extensive archaeological survey of a site whose slaughter helped forge the identity of young nations.

Armed with old maps and GPS technology, the experts from Turkey, Australia and New Zealand have so far discovered rusted food cans, unused bullets and their shell casings, and fragments of shrapnel, Ottoman-era bricks with Greek lettering, ceramic rum flagons of Allied soldiers and glass shards of beer bottles on the Turkish side. They announced early findings ahead of annual commemorations on the rugged peninsula on Sunday and Monday.

The chief aim is to gain a detailed layout of a battlefield whose desperate trench warfare, with enemy lines just a few dozen meters (yards) apart in some places, has been recounted in films, books and ballads, acquiring a legendary aura in the culture of its combatants.

"It will hasten a broader understanding of what went on at Gallipoli," Richard Reid, a researcher and author of the book "Gallipoli 1915" said of the government-funded investigation. "It will help us as nations that are always interested in trying to preserve what heritage we have."

There is heightened interest in the battle, especially among Turks who are showing more pride in their past, buoyed by economic and diplomatic advances after decades of internal strife. Australia and New Zealand mark the occasion with a national holiday on Monday, holding dawn services and closing off downtown areas for marches of veterans of all conflicts.

Before dawn on April 25, 1915, an Allied expedition under British command landed at Gallipoli on the Aegean Sea in a bid to reach Istanbul and open a sea route to Russia, an ally whose troops were wilting on the eastern front. But Ottoman armies, allied with Germany, dug in and forced their adversaries to withdraw after a nine-month campaign.

About 44,000 Allied soldiers died, and at least twice as many perished on the Turkish side. Hundreds of thousands more were wounded or suffered debilitating fever, diarrhea and dysentery.

For Turkey, the terrible losses are central to the staunch nationalism that underpins its regional ambitions today, and the battle made a hero out of an Ottoman army officer who led Turkey to independence in 1923. Mustafa Kemal Ataturk imposed a secular vision that gave the state authority over Islam, a legacy that dominates the divisive politics of modern Turkey.

"I am not ordering you to attack. I am ordering you to die," the steely commander is said to have told a regiment that was eventually wiped out. "In the time which passes until we die, other troops and commanders can take our place."

During the battle one night, local lore says, the light of a star and the crescent moon shone on the blood-soaked ground, forming the design of what became Turkey's red and white national flag.

In recent years, some of Turkey's founding "myths" have been undercut, among them the idea of a tight-knit Turkish identity that ignored the existence of ethnic Kurds and other minorities, said Kerem Oktem, author of "Angry Nation: Turkey since 1989," a book about the country's erratic transition from military to democratic rule.

"Gallipoli remains "one of the important, overarching, big, symbolic moments," he said.

For that reason, Oktem said, neither the current Islam-based government nor secular nationalists who oppose it want to "devalue or challenge" the idea that Gallipoli was a glorious victory, despite debate about its military significance.

Australia and New Zealand regard Gallipoli with equal reverence, noting the bravery and loyalty of soldiers whose British commanders considered troops from the former colonies to be untested and of poorer quality. It forged a self-image of determination, irreverence and "mateship" that is referred to as the Anzac spirit, after the Australia and New Zealand Army Corps.

The fighting happened near the mouth of the Dardanelles strait, part of a conduit between the Mediterranean Sea and the Black Sea. The Turkish military occupied the strategic site until 1973, when it became a national park. Memorials and cemeteries at the site discouraged thoughts of potentially disruptive fieldwork.

The new study does not involve excavation, instead using satellite-based technology to map battle positions over gullies, dense vegetation and limestone cliffs.

"Forestation had changed the natural geography of the battlefield, even of trenches and pits," said Mithat Atabay, a history professor at Canakkale Onsekiz Mart University and one of five Turks on the 14-member team. In 1994, he said, "a huge part of the forest burnt down, and the zone suffered further damage."

In October, the researchers mapped four kilometers (2.5 miles) of trenches, many of them barely visible, at locations including Johnston's Jolly and Quinn's Post, names bestowed by Allied troops. They inspected Turkish positions known as Kirmizi Sirt, or Red Ridge.

"The war on the surface was only one element of the struggle," the team said in a report. "A constant underground battle developed; tunneling became a major preoccupation on both sides of the line, for both offensive and defensive reasons."

Mapping data is entered in a digital database that can be compared with information from other sources, including maps used in the 1915 landings and Ottoman-era documents. Fieldwork resumes in September, and is expected to continue, with the help of ground-penetrating radar and aerial photographs, until the campaign centenary in 2015.

Charles Bean, an Australian journalist who covered the conflict and surveyed the battlefield just after the war, wrote about the grudging respect that was said to have developed between the underdog enemies. In an early 1916 dispatch, he recalled a memorial built by an Australian.

It was, he wrote, "a little wooden cross found in the scrub, just two splinters of biscuit box tacked together, with the inscription 'Here lies a Turk.' The poor soul would probably turn in his grave if his ghost could see that rough cross above him. But he need not worry. It was put there in all sincerity."

The remains of the ancient city of Troy lie near the Gallipoli peninsula. Alexander the Great led an army through the region. So did Persian emperor Xerxes I. The Greek historian Herodotus referred to the place in his chronicles.

"The Allies were really the last, I suppose, military expedition to try to take this particular strip of land," said Chris Mackie, a classics professor at La Trobe University in Melbourne, Australia, and one of the Gallipoli surveyors. "But there were plenty before them."

Six killed in pro-democracy protests in Syria

By Khaled Yacoub Oweis and Suleiman al-Khalidi
Sat Apr 23, 2011

(Reuters) - Syrian forces killed at least six people on Saturday when they fired on mourners calling for the end of President Bashar al-Assad's rule at mass funerals of pro-democracy protesters shot a day earlier.

Witnesses and rights campaigners said security forces killed three people in Damascus's Barzah district and a further three when they fired at mourners trying to join funerals near Izra'a in southern Syria, where at least 12 burials were taking place.

The mourners were chanting "Bashar al-Assad, you traitor! Long live Syria, down with Bashar!"

"There was a heavy volley of gunfire in our direction as we approached Izra'a to join the funerals of martyrs," a witness from the southern city of Deraa who came to join the burials told Reuters.

Security forces also opened fire at a funeral in Damascus's Douma suburb, wounding three people, witnesses there said.

Mourners in Harasta, a town near Damascus, also came under fire from security forces, before staging a sit-in to demand the release of detainees arrested in the last few weeks.

Protesters staged another sit-in after a funeral for four people from Irbeen, near Damascus. "We are not leaving until the political prisoners are released," one protester told Reuters by phone.

Friday was by far the bloodiest day in over a month of demonstrations to demand political freedoms and an end to corruption, with at least 100 people killed, said two activists.

Friday's violence, in areas stretching from the port city of Latakia to Homs, Hama, Damascus and the southern village of Izra'a, brings the death toll to more than 300, according to activists, since unrest broke out on March 18 in Deraa.

Damascus remained tense on Saturday and many people stayed indoors, one activist told Reuters from the capital.

"This is becoming like a snowball and getting bigger and bigger every week. Anger is rising, the street is boiling," he said.

Two Syrian lawmakers, both from Deraa, told al-Jazeera television they were resigning from parliament in protest at the killing of demonstrators. Theirs were the first resignations from within Assad's autocratic regime.

"Security solutions do not work," said one of the lawmakers, Khalil al-Rifaei.

Syrian parliament is effectively appointed by the authorities. Resignations were unheard of before the protests.

CRACKDOWN CONDEMNED

U.S. President Barack Obama condemned Friday's violence and accused Assad of seeking help from Iran. A Syrian government source said in a statement published on official state media Obama's statement "was not based on objective vision."

"This outrageous use of violence to quell protests must come to an end now," Obama said in a statement. "Instead of listening to their own people, President Assad is blaming outsiders while seeking Iranian assistance in repressing Syria's citizens."

France's Foreign Ministry said Paris was "deeply concerned."

"Syrian authorities must give up the use of violence against their citizens. We again call on them to commit without delay to an inclusive political dialogue and to achieve the reforms legitimately demanded by the Syrian people," it said.

Friday's protests went ahead despite Assad's decision this week to lift the country's hated emergency law, in place since his Baath Party seized power 48 years ago.

A statement by the Local Coordination Committees, a grouping of activists coordinating protests, said the end of emergency law was futile without the release of thousands of political prisoners -- most held without trial -- and the dismantling of the security apparatus.

In their first joint statement since the protests erupted last month, activists said the abolition of the Baath Party's monopoly on power and the establishment of a democratic political system was central to ending repression in Syria.

Aided by his family and a pervasive security apparatus, Assad, 45, has absolute power, having ignored demands to transform the anachronistic autocratic system he inherited when he succeeded his late father, president Hafez al-Assad, in 2000.

Amnesty International said Syrian authorities "have again responded to peaceful calls for change with bullets and batons."

"They must immediately halt their attacks on peaceful protesters and instead allow Syrians to gather freely as international law demands," said Malcolm Smart, Amnesty International's Middle East and North Africa director.

(Additional reporting by Mariam Karouny in Beirut; Editing by Sophie Hares)

Source: Reuters.
Link: http://www.reuters.com/article/2011/04/23/us-syria-protests-idUSTRE73L1SJ20110423.

Iraqis defy ban, rally in Baghdad square

BAGHDAD, April 22 (UPI) -- Hundreds of Iraqis, defying a government ban, rallied Friday in Baghdad's Tahrir Square against corruption and the U.S. occupation.

Authorities had forbidden rallies in Tahrir and Firdous squares, the Kuwaiti news agency KUNA reported.

The demonstrators demanded the ouster of three city officials, the release of prisoners held without charge, the withdrawal of American forces and no permanent U.S. bases.

The crowd included women and elderly people seeking answers on the fate of missing loved ones. A ministerial commission is to meet on the prisoner issue Sunday.

Source: United Press International (UPI).
Link: http://www.upi.com/Top_News/World-News/2011/04/22/Iraqis-defy-ban-rally-in-Baghdad-square/UPI-68591303479943/.

Gaddafi regime 'to use tribes in Misrata battle'

By Richard Hall
Saturday, 23 April 2011

A senior Libyan government official said the Libyan army will pull out of the besieged, rebel-held city of Misrata and be replaced by armed tribesmen.

Deputy Foreign Minister Khaled Kaim told journalists late yesterday that "we will leave it for the tribes around Misrata and the Misrata people to deal with the situation in Misrata".

Mr Khaim cited NATO airstrikes as the reason for the army withdrawing from the city. "The tactic of the army is to have a surgical solution but with the airstrikes it doesn't work."

The announcement may come as a surprise to US military officials, who earlier expressed fears of a "stalemate" in the conflict, and confessed that allied air-strikes have so far failed to deal a decisive blow to Muammar Gaddafi. Admiral Mike Mullen told a news conference that although the bombardment has stemmed the advance of government troops, it has not allowed rebel fighters to launch significant counter-attacks.

Conflict in Misrata, the only rebel stronghold in the west of Libya, is largely street fighting. The US deployed two unmanned aircraft piloted from the US on Thursday, but poor weather forced both to turn back.

Source: The Independent.
Link: http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/africa/gaddafi-regime-to-use-tribes-in-misrata-battle-2273754.html.

Popular committees convene in Tahrir

Popular Committees for the Defense of the Revolution held their first conference in Tahrir today in the country's first attempt at creating a local base for political action.

Yassin Gaber, Friday 22 Apr 2011

The Popular Committees for the Defense of the Revolution (PCDR) began their first general conference in Tahrir Square at 1:00pm after Friday prayer. The conference was announced weeks ago “to announce the political orientation [of the PCDR] during the next phase [of the revolution] and to expand the techniques of joint action, cooperation with other committees and the introduction of other initiatives.”

A stage was erected on the eastern side of the square close to Mohamed Mahmoud Street. Hundreds gathered around the stage which was surrounded by signs identifying the different committees from Kafr Shukr, Boulaq, Giza, Alexandria, Imbaba and Al-Omraniya among others.

Members of the Egyptian Public Security Forces (EPSF) were present in the square, wearing arm bands to distinguish themselves. The EPSF have been continuing in their role as protectors of the streets in the absence of security. Bystanders, upon discovering the cause of the gathering, began to question the need for such committees, arguing that the military and the police together have ensured the country’s security.

Members of these committees have been gathering every Monday at the Center for Socialist Studies in Giza as part of the PCDR’s central committee for organization. They’ve had heated debates for the past two weeks on the group’s political focus, the recruitment of new members, the venue of their conference and even the creation of banners and signs. They’ve leafleted many cities across the country.

The stage was host to musicians, poets and political speakers trying to reignite the spark that was Tahrir. Though the crowds energy was strong at times, particularly during the musical performances, the conference’s message seemed to fall on deaf ears. Many members of the crowd were not aware of the gathering’s purpose.

A committee member from Giza explained that it was the Muslim Brotherhood who had pulled out of the protest arena in order to paint protesters as outlaws, nevertheless he believed that people wouldn’t have come to Tahrir had they been satisfied with the progress thus far.

Committee members handed out leaflets which outlined their founding principles which focused on the trial of the corrupt, the return of illegally appropriated funds to the people, the dismantling of local councils, the election of governors and all local officials, an end to military trials and the dismantling of the new National Security apparatus, intended to replace the reviled State Security apparatus.

The founding principles highlighted the PCDR’s main roles in the coming interim period: namely, to educate and spread the principles of democracy to the people, to facilitate the “supervision and the participation by the people in societal affairs” and involvement of the Egyptian people in the nation building process.

Within an hour of the conference’s commencement, people began chanting against def-facto leader Field Marshall Tantawi and corruption as the conference seemed to fizzle out.

Source: Ahram.
Link: http://english.ahram.org.eg/News/10595.aspx.

Egyptian government to ease siege on Gaza

23/04/2011

CAIRO (Ma'an) -- The Egyptian government will apply new procedures at the Rafah crossing on the Egypt-Gaza border to ease travel for residents of the besieged coastal enclave, officials said Thursday.

During a meeting in Cairo, Baha Ad-Dusuqi, head of Palestinian affairs in the Egypt's Ministry of Foreign Affairs, informed Gaza government spokesman Taher An-Nunu that new measures would be in place at the terminal soon.

An-Nunu appealed to the Egyptian government to open the Rafah crossing swiftly.

Since Israel imposed an illegal blockade on the Gaza Strip, the Rafah crossing is the only gateway to the rest of the world for Gaza residents.

The officials also discussed internal Palestinian reconciliation, and the need to restore national unity between the Hamas-run government in Gaza and the Fatah-led Palestinian Authority in the West Bank.

An-Nunu said the Gaza government was confident in Egypt's ability to mediate an end to the division, and said national unity would empower Palestinians to deal with Israel's occupation.

Ad-Dusuqi said Egypt was keen to help unity efforts. The new Egyptian government, in place since the ouster of President Hosni Mubarak in February, sought strong relations with Palestinians, the official added.

Egypt would not hesitate to support Palestinians' rights in all areas, Ad-Dusuqi said.

An-Nunu said the Gaza government would support Egypt's new leadership as it transitioned to full stability.

Source: Ma'an News Agency.
Link: http://www.maannews.net/eng/ViewDetails.aspx?ID=381040.