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Thursday, October 6, 2011

Iran and Armenia To Join Railway Systems

Monday, 06 June 2011

Hamsayeh.Net - Iran and Armenia have signed an agreement to link their railway systems by constructing a 460 km long route between the two historic neighbors.

Landlocked Armenian Republic will have direct access to the Persian Gulf sea routes as well as untapped southern Persian Gulf markets for transportation of manufactured goods and passengers and Iran will also have access to Northern Caucasus region.

The agreement signed between the officials of Iran and Armenia would make preparations for construction of a 460 km railway connecting the two systems.

The Republic of Armenia -- enjoying one of the highest levels of human development factors in the world -- has many attractions and a favorite destination for thousands of Iranian tourists visiting the ancient country.

Armenia’s Ambassador to Iran Grigor Arakelyan told reporters that construction of the joint railway system would greatly boost ties between the two neighboring countries. Arakelyan also said the Iranian President’s visit to Armenia will further strengthen mutual cooperation.

Iran is due to construct a 60 km line from Jolfa – a town in northern Azerbaijan Province – to its border with Armenia, while Yerevan will undertake the construction of a 400 km long line inside to its border with Iran.

Source: Hamsayeh.Net.
Link: http://hamsayeh.net/world/780-iran-and-armenia-to-join-railway-systems.html.

Russia to pull diplomats out of Yemen

Sun Jun 5, 2011

Amid escalating violence in the chaotic Yemeni capital, Russia is set to evacuate 14 diplomats from Sana'a to Moscow.

"Considering the complex situation in the Republic of Yemen... we will send 14 diplomats by the next plane to Moscow," Reuters quoted a diplomatic source as saying on Saturday.

The source also said Russia was considering the evacuation of all its nationals from Yemen due to the growing turmoil in the volatile state.

About 1,000 people from the former Soviet Union are believed to be in Yemen.

The decision came in the wake of Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov's call on Yemeni President Ali Abdullah Saleh to accept a peace deal brokered by the [Persian] Gulf Cooperation Council.

The Beleaguered Yemeni president has refused to sign the deal, which offered him to step down in return for immunity.

Saleh is currently in Saudi Arabia for medical treatment following a mortar attack on his presidential palace on Friday.

More clashes erupted between Yemeni government troops and opposition tribesmen in Sana'a on Saturday following the shelling of the presidential palace.

Many analysts say it is unlikely that Saleh will return, which means his son Ahmed will try to seize power following his father's three-decade-long rule.

Hundreds of thousands of people have turned out for regular demonstrations in Yemen's major cities since late January, calling for an end to corruption and unemployment and demanding the ouster of Saleh.

Source: PressTV.
Link: http://www.presstv.com/detail/183252.html.

Iraq blocks aid convoy to Bahrain

Mon Jun 6, 2011

Iraqi coast guards have blocked a convoy that was headed to crisis-hit Bahrain carrying humanitarian aid for the anti-regime protesters in the tiny Persian Gulf nation.

Iraq's National Committee for the Support of People in Bahrain organized the dispatch of an aid convoy carrying food and medical aid, but the ship was denied permission to sail through to Bahrain, a Press TV correspondent reported.

Al-Mukhtar vessel, with 80 activists and medical staff aboard, was scheduled to leave the Iraqi port city of Basra on Sunday.

“We intend to send a ship with tens of Iraqi doctors with surgical capability and equipment so that they can quickly set up a field hospital to treat people in Bahrain that are being denied medical attention by the authorities,” said Ahmed Chalabi, an Iraqi politician.

The convoy aimed to show solidarity with physicians, nurses and paramedics that have been detained, suspended, and even tortured for treating individuals injured during popular anti-government demonstrations in Bahrain.

Activists believe that Saudi Arabia and Bahrain have exerted extreme political pressure on Baghdad to stop this aid convoy from reaching Bahrain.

Thousands of anti-government protesters have been staging peaceful demonstrations in Bahrain since mid-February, demanding an end to the longtime despotic rule of the Al Khalifa family.

On March 14, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates deployed troops to the Persian Gulf sheikhdom at Manama's request to help crush the nationwide protests.

According to local sources, scores of people have been killed and hundreds arrested and tortured so far during the brutal crackdown on protesters by Saudi and Bahraini forces.

Source: PressTV.
Link: http://www.presstv.com/detail/183388.html.

British radar getting U.S. subsystems

Chemsford, Mass. (UPI) Jun 3, 2011

Mercury Computer Systems of Massachusetts is supplying Application Ready Subsystems to BAE Systems for ARTISAN 3D Naval Radar.

The Advanced Radar Target Indication Situational Awareness and Navigation radar is replacing existing systems on surface ships of the British navy.

"This win underscores the strength of our 10-plus year relationship with BAE Systems, where Mercury has delivered advanced ARS solutions for critical multifunction radar systems like BAE Systems SAMPSON, a key component of the (British navy's) Type 45 destroyer Sea Viper system," said Didier Thibaud, senior vice president and general manager of Mercury Computer Systems' Advanced Computing Solutions business unit.

"BAE Systems selected Mercury for the ARTISAN program because of our unequaled domain expertise, superior ISR subsystem technology, and ability to design, deliver, and integrate scalable, high-performance computing systems that comprise Mercury and third-party components."

The U.K. Ministry of Defense chose BAE Systems' ARTISAN 3D radar as the next generation of medium-range radars for the majority of the British navy surface fleet and for future aircraft carriers.

ARTISAN 3D radar is a leading-edge, maritime MRR designed to improve the performance of the navy's primary sensing capability, particularly when operating in a complex littoral environment. As a scalable architecture suited for a wide range of platform types and operational requirements, ARTISAN 3D is replacing radar systems on Type 23 frigates and amphibious assault ships as well as two new carriers, HMS Queen Elizabeth and HMS Prince of Wales, for which it will provide Air Traffic Management functionality.

"ARTISAN is designed as a main surveillance and target indication radar for surface vessels, from offshore patrol vessels to major warships. Additionally, it is designed to be future-proof and to meet the same stringent SWaP (size, weight and power) requirements of the system it is replacing," said Chris Jones, ARTISAN Project team leader, BAE Systems Mission Systems.

"It is critical that the signal processing system not only provide enhanced computing performance but also a clear upgrade path for technology insertions."

Mercury said its ARS solutions for the ARTISAN program combine open architecture, high-density VXS processing modules, a Serial Front Panel Data Port sensor interface, and RapidIO-based switch fabric with the MultiCore Plus software suite, the company's comprehensive programming framework for multi-core processing environments.

Mercury's Services and Systems Integration team will provide integration services for third-party components to be used in the radar system, the company said.

Additional details in the Mercury-BAE arrangement for the subsystems weren't disclosed.

Mercury Computer Systems is a provider of open, commercially developed, application-ready, multi-INT subsystems for the intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance market and provides domain expertise in radar, EW/SIGINT, EO/IR, C4I and sonar applications.

Mercury has worked in concert with 26 prime contractors to successfully execute more than 300 deployments on programs such as Aegis, Global Hawk, JCREW, Patriot, Predator and SEWIP.

Source: Space Mart.
Link: http://www.spacemart.com/reports/British_radar_getting_US_subsystems_999.html.

Iraq rights activist criticizes PM on live TV

Baghdad (AFP) June 5, 2011

A leading human rights activist confronted Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki on live television on Sunday over what she said was the insinuation that rights groups were fronts for terrorism.

Maliki delivered a speech at the opening of a conference on Iraq's national rights action plan and referred to last month's arrest of a man security forces said had taken part in the massacre of a wedding party in 2006, but had been posing as an activist since.

"Unfortunately, as you see on TV, there are some human rights organizations working under this name, but are unfortunately practicing killing," Maliki said in his speech.

"As you all saw, the head of a human rights organization killed innocent people with his hands at a wedding, and he filmed the crime," he added.

Maliki was apparently referring to Firas Fleih, who was detained last month after allegedly taking part in the killing of 70 members of a wedding party.

Officials said Fleih had hidden by posing as a prison rights activist.

After Maliki and UN special envoy Ad Melkert finished their speeches, activist Hana Adwar walked to the front of the conference hall, stood in front of Maliki and shouted "Is that reasonable? That we are accused of terrorism?"

She added: "Where is the free opinion? Where is the freedom of peaceful demonstration and civil gathering?" in a reference to the detention last week of four protesters in central Baghdad during a regular weekly rally.

Activists and the four young men's families have said they are being held illegally, though security forces said they were arrested for having false identification papers.

Footage of the confrontation, broadcast live on Iraqiya state television, continued for several minutes, and showed Adwar holding up a poster and eventually being led away. She was not immediately available for comment.

Source: Space War.
Link: http://www.spacewar.com/reports/Iraq_rights_activist_criticises_PM_on_live_TV_999.html.

Hamas suspends work at Rafah crossing

GAZA, June 5 (Xinhua) -- Hamas authorities suspended working at Rafah crossing point Sunday until reaching an agreement with Egypt on resuming the movement of travelers, officials said.

The move was also to protest Egypt's decision to close the crossing on Saturday. Egypt said renovation work was behind the closure of the crossing, a week after the Palestinians praised Egypt for deciding to open the crossing permanently for the first time in years.

Hamas' foreign affairs ministry is holding contacts with Egypt over recent problems that prevented dozens of Palestinians from traveling, said Ayoub Abu Sha'ar, director of the Palestinian side at Rafah crossing.

He added that Hamas suspended the work "because the mechanisms of traveling in the Egyptian side are not clear."

A week ago, Egypt said it opened the crossing, the only gate for Gazans to the world bypassing Israel, permanently and regularly.

Work went fine the first four days after the crossing was opened, but then Hamas said that the movement of travelers was " almost paralyzed," blaming Egypt for the slow work.

Egypt said there were technical problems that delayed the work and that these troubles can be resolved through coordination.

Since Hamas took over Gaza by force in 2007, the crossing had been closed for most of the time. In June 2010, former Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak ordered the crossing to reopen on regular basis, but conditions for travel were still difficult.

Source: Xinhua.
Link: http://news.xinhuanet.com/english2010/world/2011-06/05/c_13912259.htm.

Security sources: Sinai on verge of clan war

Sunday 05/06/2011

EL-ARISH, Egypt (Ma'an) -- Egyptian security sources warned Sunday that a crisis was looming in the Sinai Peninsula as clashes between two families escalated.

Egyptian security forces said they found a decomposed corpse buried in the desert on Sunday. The body was identified as Salam Brake, a member of the Tayaha tribe described by security officials as the "most wanted fugitive" in the Sinai Peninsula.

The victim's relatives accused the Fawakhriyya family from El-Arish of abducting Brake, and kidnapped 10 members of the family in retaliation.

Members of the Fawakhriyya family told a Ma'an correspondent that they were not involved in Brake's abduction. They blocked the main road between cities Rafah and El-Arish in protest over the abduction of their relatives.

The Fawakhriyya family then abducted Brake's brother from a hospital in El-Arish, where he was recovering from a traffic accident. They said they would hold him hostage until their family members were returned.

Egyptian security sources warned that tensions in the Sinai Peninsula were on the verge of erupting into serious clashes.

Source: Ma'an News Agency.
Link: http://www.maannews.net/eng/ViewDetails.aspx?ID=393850.

Syrian opposition ready for bigger meeting after Turkish election

Sunday, June 5, 2011
FULYA ÖZERKAN

The Syrian opposition is planning another meeting in Turkey to follow its conference in Antalya, hoping to receive more open support from Ankara after the June 12 general elections.

“Until the elections we don’t want to put the Turkish government in a tough position,” Khaled Khoja, a Turkish-based member of the Damascus Declaration committee, a Syrian opposition group, told the Hürriyet Daily News over the weekend.

“We haven’t fixed the schedule of the next meeting yet, but we will announce it within a few weeks as we wait for the elections in Turkey to end, so that the Turkish government’s stance could be clearer,” he added.

Members of the Syrian opposition met in Antalya, a Turkish Mediterranean city, last week and in Brussels over the weekend. Organizers hope their next conference in Turkey will be a larger one, representing the opposition within Syria in addition to exiled dissidents, and that Ankara will support their fight against the regime of Bashar al-Assad.

The Syrian opposition has not yet been able to get the support it expected from the Turkish government, but its members believe this is because of the upcoming election in Turkey.

“Turkey is preparing for elections. That’s why we understand the position of the Turkish government, but we hope this attitude will be changing after the elections,” said Khoja.

The Turkish government has thus far refrained from vocal criticism of Syrian President Al-Assad, who is being held responsible for the killing of protesters during the ongoing uprising in his country. Turkey has instead pressed the Syrian leadership for more reforms. During private conversations, however, Ankara has been telling Assad, “Make reforms, otherwise we’ll support the reformists,” Turkish diplomatic sources told the Daily News.

PM pledges more focus on Syria after polls

In a televised interview over the weekend, Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan said his government would place much focus on the developments in the Middle East and North Africa after the elections.

“We cannot repeat our previous performance during the election time. I am actually quite interested in Syria at this time … I talked on the phone with Mr. Bashar al-Assad,” he said.

The Syrian president is misinforming the Turkish government, according to the Syrian opposition.

“Al-Assad is sending some messages to satisfy the Turkish government that he is going on with new reforms but we don’t believe it at all. This is just to satisfy the public opinion in Turkey and in the international community,” Khoja said.

Asked if they had any contacts within the Turkish government, he said: “At the low level we have some contacts but at the high level, no.”

The planned meeting after the Turkish elections will be more important than the Antalya meeting “because a lot of committees from Syria will gather here,” Khoja said.

“Now they are preparing in Syria to send representatives, some of whom are from Damascus. This will represent the real movement in Syria,” he added. “The opposition outside Syria can only support the movement inside Syria but since the movement in Syria will represent itself at that upcoming meeting, it will be more important.”

Khoja said the group chose Turkey as a venue for its meetings “because Turkey is in the middle of the active countries and it’s so easy to gather here without any visas.” Turkey and Syria abolished visa requirements for travel in 2009.

4 Syrians hospitalized in Turkey

Four Syrians who were wounded in the government’s crackdown on anti-regime protesters in Syria were brought to Turkey on Saturday, the Anatolia news agency reported. Two families came to the Syrian-Turkish border and asked for help from Turkish authorities, who called an ambulance and took the four injured Syrians to a hospital.

The Turkish Red Crescent has increased the number of tents set up in the southern province of Hatay anticipating a further influx of people from Syria. An additional 41 Syrians crossed into Turkey through Hatay’s Altinozu town.

Source: Hürriyet.
Link: http://www.hurriyetdailynews.com/n.php?n=syrian-opposition-readying-for-bigger-meeting-after-turkish-polls--2011-06-05.

Egypt's Tahrir youths ask Gül for Turkish university

05 June 2011, Sunday
SEDAT DENLI, İSTANBUL

Representatives of youth groups who took part in the Jan. 25 revolt in Egypt have asked President Abdullah Gül for the establishment of a Turkish university in their country, saying that such a university would serve as a symbol of the rich Turkish culture.

President Gül met with the group from the “January 25 Tahrir Youth Leaders” on Saturday at the presidential Tarabya Kiosk residence, where he told them that there is no place for authoritarianism in the Islamic world. He also urged rulers of Arab countries to make reforms for more freedom.

“Sadly, the battle [for democracy] continues in some countries today. I would like to remind rulers in Muslim Arab countries of the necessity of being realistic, of perceiving the world better and of seeing that there is already no place for authoritarian regimes in the Islamic world,” Gül told the group.

Abdallah Helmy, a founding member of the Revolutionary Youth Union, also delivered a speech on behalf of the visiting group and underlined the presence of strong ties between his country and Egypt. Joining forces and cooperating, these two countries can change many things in the region, Helmy said, while urging Gül to further bolster relations between the people of Egypt and Turkey.

“We request from you an initiative for the establishment of a Turkish university in Egypt. Let this university constitute the symbol of the rich Turkish culture in this way.” Helmy said. “At the same time, I'm calling for the opening of either a department of al-Azhar University [on a campus to be opened] in Turkey,” he said, referring to the centuries-old prestigious university based in Cairo.

The time is ripe for building a strategic partnership between Egypt and Turkey, Helmy argued, stating that it is now time to take steps for the future of the people of the two countries.

In his speech, Gül, meanwhile, stressed that governments which do not allow for full freedom in their countries must lead these kinds of revolutions and reforms. He said such governments will eventually be forced to adopt reforms in the face of strong public resistance against them. Citing bloodshed and casualties in these countries, he said these incidents “indeed deeply sadden us.”

The president said that, in order to end this violence as soon as possible, rulers must first respect their own people and take steps in line with the demands of the people, so their countries come out of this process stronger.

“Everyone is aware that I am speaking about countries such as Syria and Libya,” Gül said, noting that Turkey is closely monitoring developments in Egypt. He stated that Turkish-Egyptian relations will continue to be strong and the two countries will always benefit from each other's experience.

“There will be a multi-party system in Egypt from now on and whoever the nation wants will rule the country,” Gül said. He added that all nations had overcome their fears and were working hard to be ruled by robust and respected administrations.

Source: Today's Zaman.
Link: http://www.todayszaman.com/news-246310-egypts-tahrir-youths-ask-gul-for-turkish-university.html.

Algeria cracks down on luxury car smugglers

Jun 5, 2011

ALGIERS — Algerian authorities have arrested eight people accused of smuggling cars stolen from Europe, following a 16-month investigation, a local daily reported on Sunday.

The Liberte newspaper, quoting Algerian security officials, said 40 vehicles, including Mercedes SUVs, BMWs, VW Golfs and Audis, were confiscated in several Algerian wilayas, or prefectures.

Also seized in the operation that was assisted by Interpol were 238 fake drivers' licenses.

The eight suspected smugglers were detained in Metlili, 640 kilometers (398 miles) from Algiers, awaiting trial, Liberte said.

One car-smuggling baron from the region is already serving a 12-year prison sentence.

The smugglers are suspected of stealing the vehicles from France and Switzerland and moving them across the Algeria-Tunisia border.

Copyright © 2011 AFP. All rights reserved.

Algeria starts to freeze Gaddafi's assets: report

ALGIERS, June 5 (Xinhua) -- Algeria has started to freeze assets of Libyan officials and companies, local daily Echorouk reported on Sunday.

According to the report, Algerian Minister of Finance Karim Djoudi has urged, via a secret instruction, banks, insurance companies and all local and foreign accredited institutions to start to freeze assets belonging to members of the Libyan government.

The report also said the instruction stipulates that all Libyan assets, including real estates, funds and investments in Algeria should be tracked down and frozen.

The minister ordered the concerned institutions to circulate the instruction to all financial agencies in order to guarantee the detection of the whole funds and financial resources belonging to Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi and his family members, the report said.

Source: Xinhua.
Link: http://news.xinhuanet.com/english2010/world/2011-06/06/c_13912535.htm.

Algeria football coach quits after Morocco mauling

By David Legge (AFP) – Jun 5, 2011

JOHANNESBURG — Algeria coach Abdelhak Benchikha resigned Sunday after a 4-0 drubbing by Morocco in a high-profile Africa Cup of Nations qualifier.

Mehdi Benatia and Arsenal striker Marouane Chamakh scored during the first half in Marrakech and Youssouf Hadji and Oussama Assaidi struck within nine minutes after the break to complete an unexpectedly one-sided triumph.

It was sweet revenge for Morocco under Belgian coach Eric Gerets after a 1-0 away loss to their North African neighbors in the qualifying competition three months ago.

Benchikha, who previously coached clubs in his homeland, Qatar and Tunisia and the Algerian Olympic team, survived just three competitive matches after succeeding veteran Rabah Saadane last October.

Saadane quit after a 1-1 home draw with Tanzania in the opening 2012 Cup of Nations qualifier and Benchikha made a disastrous debut as the 'Desert Foxes' crashed 2-0 away to football lightweights Central African Republic.

The home win over Morocco offered hope that Algeria could mount a serious challenge for Group D honors, but the Marrakech mauling leaves them with little hope of reaching Gabon and Equatorial Guinea next year.

Morocco have seven points and Central African Republic, Tanzania and Algeria four each with only the group winners guaranteed a place at the biennial 16-nation African football showcase.

Gerets has vowed to win titles for Morocco, whose only Cup of Nations title came 35 years ago in Ethiopia when just eight teams competed and a mini-league format was used throughout the competition for the only time.

"I won a lot of titles as a footballer and a coach and I want to win titles with the Moroccan team too," the former Belgium international said after his appointment.

He won league titles with Lierse and Club Bruges in Belgium, PSV Eindhoven in the Netherlands and Galatasaray in Turkey and also coached French outfit Marseille before moving to Saudi Arabian side Al-Hilal.

Algeria are not the only 2010 World Cup qualifiers likely to miss out on the next Cup of Nations tournament with four-time champions Cameroon five points adrift of leaders Senegal after they drew 0-0 in Yaounde.

Police used water cannons to disperse angry 'Indomitable Lions' supporters as they tried to prevent the team bus leaving the Amadou Ahidjo stadium after a match in which Samuel Eto'o fired a late penalty against the crossbar.

Cameroon must defeat Mauritius at home and the Democratic Republic of Congo away in their remaining fixtures to have any hope of a ninth consecutive appearance at the tournament.

Copyright © 2011 AFP. All rights reserved.

Yemen's Ahmar group agrees to abide by truce-opposition

SANAA, June 5 | Sun Jun 5, 2011

(Reuters) - The Ahmar group, leader of Yemen's Hashed tribal federation that has been locked in battle against troops loyal to Yemeni President Ali Abdullah Saleh, has agreed to abide by a day-old truce, the opposition said on Sunday.

Acting President Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi, who took over after Saleh was wounded in an attack two days ago, had asked the powerful tribal federation to agree to a ceasefire aimed at stopping deadly street fighting in the capital of Sanaa.

(Reporting by Mohammed Ghobari; writing by Reed Stevenson; Editing by Andrew Hammond)

Source: Reuters.
Link: http://www.reuters.com/article/2011/06/05/yemen-truce-tribe-idUSLDE7540G320110605.

Netanyahu Accuses Syria of Stoking Border Tension to Hide Domestic Turmoil

By Jonathan Ferziger and Calev Ben-David
Jun 6, 2011

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu accused Syria of trying to “heat up the border” by enabling a violent confrontation between Palestinian demonstrators and Israeli troops in the Golan Heights.

Israel will make a formal complaint to the United Nations that may be delivered as early as today in New York, following the clash in which Israeli forces fired on a crowd marking the anniversary of the 1967 Middle East War by trying to cross the frontier with Syria into Israel, according to Yigal Palmor, a Foreign Ministry spokesman.

Syrian state television said 23 people were killed. UN observers are trying to confirm details of the incident, according to a statement from Secretary-General Ban Ki-Moon’s office. The incident occurred as more than two months of protests within Syria against the government of President Bashar al-Assad have left more than 1,100 people dead, human rights groups say.

The Golan confrontation “was no accident,” Netanyahu said after addressing lawmakers from his Likud Party in Jerusalem, according to an e-mailed statement. “There is an attempt to heat up the border, to breach our borders. here is an attempt here to divert international attention away from what is happening within Syria.”

Clashes between protesters and Israeli forces on the frontiers with Syria, Lebanon, the Gaza Strip and West Bank left as many as nine dead on May 15, as Palestinians marked the anniversary of what they call the “Nakba,” Arabic for catastrophe, referring to their displacement in 1948 as a result of the creation of the state of Israel.

The Israeli-Syrian frontier has been largely quiet since the 1973 war, in which Syria tried to recapture the Golan Heights. Israel annexed the Golan in 1982 in a move that hasn’t been internationally recognized.

Source: Bloomberg.
Link: http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2011-06-05/israel-fires-on-protesters-at-while-syria-attacks-villagers.html.

MB in Yemen Calls For Transitional Governing Council

Sunday, June 5, 2011

The Muslim Brotherhood in Yemen issued a statement concerning the current situation in the country, and highlighting that the country is at the threshold of a new phase of its revolution, especially after a split is seen between President Ali Abdullah Saleh and a number of his aids.

According to the statement, all responsible for the killings must be arrested, tried and punished. It stressed that out of patriotic responsibility all the revolutionary forces their components, and patriotic forces both at home and abroad must begin the formation of a transitional civilian council to manage and administrate the state and the country during this transitional period.

Furthermore, the Yemeni MB called for new constitution that defines the principles of a civil state, and the preparations for the upcoming early presidential and parliamentary elections.

The statement ended that the Yemeni MB emphasizes the necessity to form public defense committees and neighborhood watches in all the Yemeni cities, villages and rural areas to protect the public and private properties from the possible attacks of the collapsed regime remnants.

Source: Ikhwanweb.
Link: http://www.ikhwanweb.com/article.php?id=28677.

Rallies highlight 'inalienable right to return'

By Mohammad Ben Hussein

AMMAN - Scores of activists joined residents of Baqaa refugee camp in commemorating the 44th anniversary of the June 1967 war, dubbed Naksa, when Israel occupied the West Bank and Gaza Strip.

Participants in the rally chanted slogans against any possible deals that overlook their right to return to their homeland.

Organized by the Muslim Brotherhood movement, the rally kicked off in the central part of the camp, the largest in the country.

As protesters marched on the roads of the camp, they chanted pro-resistance slogans and denounced any attempts to settle them permanently in host countries.

“This is a day to remember the loss of Palestine, and to stress on our right to return,” said Ali Asmar, an activist from the Palestinian refugee camp.

Asmar called on the government to shoulder its responsibility of “protecting the right of Palestinians to return to their homeland.”

“We are being hosted by Jordan as refugees. Jordanian authorities have the responsibility to raise our case since we have become Jordanian citizens,” he said, expressing fear that a future agreement between the Palestinian Authority and Israel could lead to settling most refugees in host countries.

According to Mohammad Aqel, head of the Islamic Action Front (IAF) branch in Baqaa, the Palestinian Authority has no right to offer any compromise on the right of refugees to decide their destiny.

“People have been leading a difficult life for decades on hopes of returning to their homeland. They have suffered, sacrificed their blood and life for this cause. It is no one’s right to make a decision on their behalf,” he told The Jordan Times on the sideline of the protest.

Several groups in Jordan have joined others across the Arab region to voice concern over the future of refugees scattered in the Middle East.

Jordan hosts the highest number of Palestinian refugees who live in 13 refugee camps as well as in main cities, and the majority of them are Jordanian citizens.

Some 700,000 Palestinians fled or were driven from their homes after Israel was created on their land in 1948. About 4.5 million refugees and their descendants now live in Lebanon, Syria, Jordan, Gaza and the West Bank.

Syria’s Golan Heights and Egypt’s Sinai desert were also occupied during the six-day 1967 war.

The Golan Heights and the West Bank remain under Israeli occupation 44 years later.

Also yesterday, dozens of people reportedly rallied at the village of Karamah in the Jordan Valley, which is near the borders with the occupied Palestinian territories, to commemorate the Naksa.

Participants, who carried Jordanian and Palestinian flags, stressed their right to return to Palestine, rejecting what they called the conspiracy of a substitute homeland, referring to a campaign by Israeli extremist politicians who look at Jordan as the future state of Palestinians.

In a related development, opposition parties in Jordan on Sunday called on the UN to respect the Palestinian people’s right to self-determination, according to the Jordan News Agency, Petra.

In a memorandum handed to the UN office in Amman on the occasion of the Naksa, the parties said Israel has violated all international resolutions and committed war crimes against Palestinian people in the West Bank and Gaza, demanding holding Israeli war “criminals” accountable for the crimes against Palestinians, Petra said.

The opposition parties also called for the immediate release of Jordanian, Palestinian and Arab prisoners of war in Israeli jails.

6 June 2011

Source: The Jordan Times.
Link: http://www.jordantimes.com/index.php?news=38197.

Morals of 'revived' Chechnya: Trade of newborns put on stream

2 June 2011

A woman trying to sell her two babies has been arrested in Chechnya, said in the local infidel-enforcement bodies. The details about the woman and her children are different. It is reported at the same time that the trafficking of children in Chechnya is put on stream - it's a cash business, and demand is always remains.

According to the invaders from the gang of investigations committee, on May 31, 2011 in occupied capital of Jokhar, a 23-year-old native of Dagestan sold for over 200 thousand rubles her newborn twins, a daughter and son, who at that time were 9 days old. The woman was detained after receiving money.

At the same time, ITAR-TASS reports that a 21-year-old woman was arrested in Avtorkhanov (formerly Lenin) district on the street in front of Griboyedov maternity hospital. According to the Russian news service, the 21-year-old mother had hoped to gain 200 thousand rubles for the 9-month-old boy and a girl.

According to media reports, the babies transferred to the maternity ward, "Clinical Center of Mother and Child" and feel good.

The guardianship will look for the subsequent fate of the twins. As explains the woman, she decided to take this step, because she has nothing to feed her two older sons - she brings them without husband, according to Russian television.

Trafficking of children in Chechnya is a long and well established business, a certain native of Chechnya says in the air of Russian News Service radio station.

"Given that it is very important to have a son in a Chechen family, sale of children put on stream", she told listener without giving her name.

"This woman came to Chechnya from Dagestan to do business. She knows that children will be picked up. Buyers are always present", the companion of radio station noted. She said primarily physicians and gynecologists of maternity wards are engaged in that business in Chechnya.

Department of Monitoring
Kavkaz Center

Source: Kavkaz Center.
Link: http://www.kavkaz.org.uk/eng/content/2011/06/02/14437.shtml.

British Apache helicopters strike Gaddafi's forces for first time

Saturday 4 June 2011
Xan Rice in Tripoli

Liam Fox says mission is 'logical extension' of NATO's role as British craft destroy radar station and checkpoint.

British army Apache helicopters have attacked Muammar Gaddafi's troops for the first time, destroying a radar station and a military checkpoint and marking a sharp escalation in NATO Libya campaign.

One of the two Apaches came under fire early on Saturday from forces loyal to the Libyan leader near Brega, a strategic oil city close to the eastern frontline, but both returned successfully to HMS Ocean, stationed off the Libyan coast.

French Tiger helicopters struck separately, hitting 15 military vehicles and five command buildings at an undisclosed location.

The new air operation is expected to strongly boost the morale of the rebels, who have been holding ground in various parts of the country but unable to make strong advances towards Tripoli because better-equipped government forces still hold towns along routes to the capital.

The head of the rebel council, Mustafa Abdel Jalil, said: "We welcome any measures that would expedite the departure of Gaddafi and his regime." Jalil later held talks with the British foreign secretary, William Hague, who flew into Benghazi to further pledge Britain's backing for the anti-Gaddafi National Transitional Council.

"Britain remains a strong and true friend of Libya," Hague said. "We could not and did not turn a blind eye when Gaddafi turned his forces against innocent civilians. For as long as Gaddafi continues to abuse his people, we will continue and intensify our efforts to stop him.

"We are here as part of a coordinated and strategic approach to Libya – ensuring that our military, diplomatic and development actions are aligned."

Before the deployment of the Apaches, NATO had relied on jets flying nearly three miles above the ground to target Gaddafi's military arsenal. But the introduction of combat helicopters, which can fly slower at low altitudes, will give the alliance a key advantage in close quarter fighting, allowing it to pinpoint targets in built-up areas where Gaddafi's troops are dug in and reduce the chance of what the military terms collateral damage.

In a statement, NATO said that the craft would allow it to "track and engage pro-Gaddafi forces who deliberately target civilians and attempt to hide in populated areas".

The defense secretary, Liam Fox, said that the use of the attack helicopters was "a logical extension" of NATO's campaign. "This gives us a chance to target new targets in a way we weren't able to do," he said from Singapore, where he was attending a security conference.

"What it does show is our willing to use the range of assets we have to keep the pressure up. We will continue with the methods we have to degrade his [Gaddafi's] command and control, to degrade his supplies."

NATO said that the targets of Saturday's mission included military vehicles, equipment and forces. Major General Nick Pope, the chief of the defense staff's strategic communications officer, said the Apaches, equipped with thermal imaging capabilities, used Hellfire missiles and 30mm cannon during the attack. At the same time, Tornadoes and Typhoon jets struck another military installation in Brega, and two ammunition bunkers in Waddan, in central Libya. "Our understanding of the detailed disposition of Colonel Gaddafi's forces has been improving in a very satisfactory manner, despite their efforts to conceal themselves," Pope said.

There was no word on casualties. In Tripoli, where jets have been conducting nightly raids on Gaddafi's military infrastructure, the government offered no comment. The use of the low-flying helicopters does raise the possibility of western forces suffering casualties for the first time in the war.

But Lieutenant General Charles Bouchard, commander of NATO's Libyan operation, said the mission was a success and indicated that the helicopters would be used again. "We will continue to use these assets whenever and wherever needed, using the same precision as we do in all of our missions," he said.

Rebels forces are concentrated in three main areas spread across Libya. In the east, where the revolution started in February, the rebels are trying to push towards west from Ajdabiya. Brega is the next town along the highway. Separately, rebels also control Libya's third city, Misrata, 130 miles (210km) from Tripoli, as well as several small towns in the western Nafusa mountains range.

Gaddafi has become increasingly reclusive in Tripoli as the NATO bombing campaign has intensified. While members of his regime continue to defect, and his diplomatic isolation is near complete, he remains defiant, and has refused to entertain suggestions that he leave power or go into exile.

The strikes came after Libyan rebels on Friday won control of four towns in the western Nafusa mountain range, where government forces have besieged and randomly shelled rebel-held areas for months. After weeks of siege, government forces drove about seven tanks and a number of armored vehicles into Yifran in early May and surrounded nearby Galaa, said Col Jumaa Ibrahim of the region's rebel military council.

Source: The Guardian.
Link: http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2011/jun/04/apache-helicopters-strike-libya-targets.

Egypt court sentences former finance minister to 30 years jail

By Patrick Werr
CAIRO | Sat Jun 4, 2011

(Reuters) - An Egyptian court convicted former finance minister Youssef Boutros-Ghali in absentia on Saturday and sentenced him to 30 years in prison for profiteering and abusing state and private assets, a court source said.

Boutros-Ghali, widely viewed in Egypt as a public face of a government that enriched the wealthy at the expense of the poor, quit his post in late January then fled abroad, only days after the eruption of the mass uprising that later ousted Hosni Mubarak.

Boutros-Ghali also resigned in early February as head of the International Monetary Fund's main policy steering panel. Egyptian media reports have said Boutros-Ghali is in the Lebanese capital Beirut.

Many investors and businessmen highly regarded Boutros-Ghali for spearheading free-market reforms that helped boost Egypt's economic growth to around an annual 7 percent in the three years before the 2008 global economic crisis.

Soon after his appointment as finance minister in June 2004 Boutros-Ghali slashed import tariffs, reduced income taxes to a flat 20 percent and helped overhaul the banking system.

The Cairo court ruled that Boutros-Ghali took private vehicles held at the customs authority and allowed others to use them without the permission of their owners.

He took six of the vehicles, including three Mercedes and a BMW, for his private use and delivered another 96 to other parties, the court said. The vehicles had a total value of 35.8 million pounds ($6 million).

The court also ruled that he used a Finance Ministry printing center to produce a large amount of materials for his personal election campaign for a seat in parliament in 2010, the court source said.

He transferred ministry computers and printers for use at his campaign headquarters for more than six months.

The court sentenced Boutros-Ghali to 15 years in jail with hard labor in the vehicles case and another 15 years in the printers case. It also ordered him to return the 35.8 million pounds as the value of the vehicles and to pay a similar amount as a fine, the court source said.

In 2008, he took over the chair of the IMF's International Monetary and Financial Committee (IMFC), comprised of finance ministers and central bankers from 24 countries and the main advisory body to the fund's member countries.

Source: Reuters.
Link: http://www.reuters.com/article/2011/06/04/us-egypt-conviction-idUSTRE75312J20110604.

Jordanian MB Forms Political Alliance to Fight Corruption

Thursday, June 2, 2011

Disregarding ideological differences, Jordan’s Muslim Brotherhood offshoot, the Islamic Action Front, and leftist parties formed a National Reform Front (NRF) to combat corruption.

According to PM Ahmed Obeidat, the coalition was formed to create a national reform strategy. He asserted that the NRF's priority is to put the country on the right democratic track and to fight corruption and tyranny which are Jordan’s main problems. He added that fighting corruption starts with reforming the regime itself.

Mohammad Masri, a researcher at the University of Jordan’s Center for Strategic Studies stated that Jordan’s corruption was similar to the situation in the region, referring to Tunisia, Egypt and Syria, where corruption was a key element responsible for the uprisings.

Since January, Jordan has been facing a protest movement demanding political and economic reforms, and an end to corruption.

Source: Ikhwanweb.
Link: http://www.ikhwanweb.com/article.php?id=28664.

Haneyya: Palestinians on Threshold of Promising Future

Saturday, June 4, 2011

Prime Minister Ismail Haneyya said that Hamas had successfully merged between resistance of the Israeli occupation and governance and stressed that the Palestinians are on the “threshold of a new stage and promising future”.

The PM said so Friday evening to mark the grand opening of the Beisan tourist city in northern Gaza Strip.

“We have been able during the past years to combine between resistance and rule in parallel lines,” Haneyya said.

He pointed out that his government, run by Hamas for five years, has carefully selected its priorities in a way that has served the interests of the Palestinians and countered Israeli occupation policies.

“Priorities have gone parallel,” the Palestinian premier explained. “We gave precedence to the rifle when it had priority, and we gave precedence to liberation and then change. Today we give precedence to reconstruction.”

“This reconstruction [has been taking place] despite a lack of resources and the [Israeli] siege, but it offers a bright image of Islam and our Islamic civilization and government,” Haneyya said.

He also confirmed that the Palestinians are on the “threshold of a new stage and a promising future”, and stated that the recreational and tourist city would help serve the Palestinians.

Beisan is said to have been erected on a waste site that turned into a “green oasis”. It now includes various recreational facilities, such as sports fields, amusement parks, a zoo, beautiful landscape, and agricultural land.

Source: Ikhwanweb.
Link: http://www.ikhwanweb.com/article.php?id=28673.

UN chief calls on Bahrain leaders to uphold rights

Jun 4, 2011

UNITED NATIONS — UN chief Ban Ki-moon called on Bahrain's influential crown prince to uphold international rights norms in dealing with opposition protests, a UN spokesman said Saturday.

Ban met with Prince Salman bin Hamad Al-Khalifa and the Gulf state's foreign minister Sheikh Khaled bin Ahmad Al-Khalifa at the UN headquarters late Friday, two days after the ending of a state of emergency during which protests were violently put down.

Police dispersed a small group of demonstrators in Bahrain on Friday.

"The secretary general reiterated his call on the government and security forces in Bahrain to uphold international human rights norms and standards and welcomed the commitment and assurances made by the crown prince in this regard," said UN spokeswoman Vannina Maestracci.

The prince, head of the Bahrain military is on a tour aiming to ease international fears over Bahrain's harsh action against opposition protests. He is to visit Washington this week.

Bahrain is a key ally of the United States and other western nations and the violent crackdown has embarrassed many western nations as they strongly criticize other Arab leaders.

The UN secretary general welcomed Bahrain's lifting of emergency laws and King Hamad's call for national dialogue, which Ban said must be "genuine, meaningful and inclusive and respond to the legitimate political, economic and social aspirations of all Bahraini people," the spokeswoman added.

The royal family, which dominates Bahrain life, is Sunni Muslim while the protests for political reform have come out of the Shiites who make up 70 percent of Bahrain's population.

Bahraini authorities said 24 people were killed in unrest in the kingdom which erupted in February. Saudi Arabia sent troops to help the Khalifa family put down the protests and some opposition leaders are now in jail.

Copyright © 2011 AFP. All rights reserved.

Somalia's Military Court executes government soldier

Abdi Hajji Hussein
Mogadishu, Somalia
June 4, 2011

The Military Court of the transitional federal government of Somalia early Saturday morning executed a soldier who was found guilty of murder.

The court said Abdi Abdullahi Dhuhul was a member of Somali army, adding five witnesses testified he had intentionally murdered another soldier in April 29 this year.

With the presence of government officials, a firing squad was called upon and immediately after they shot and killed the convicted man.

Scores of local residents packed the square in Mogadishu's Hamar-jajab where a government firing squad carried out the death penalty in public.

“According to the religion of Islam, the court sentenced Dhuhul to death after deliberately killing his companion Abdirizaq Hassan Ali in Mogadishu” Hassan Mohammed Hussein, the judge of the Military Court, said after the shooting.

The judge warned the government soldiers against looting or robbing the properties of civilians during battles against militant group al Shabaab. And he called for Somali army to slay any soldier committed such actions like that at the spot.

It is the fifth time Somalia's Military Court under the transitional federal government has conducted such executions against Somali police and military soldiers stationed in the capital.

In Jan. the Military Court in Somalia executed three soldiers of transitional federal government who were found guilty of murder.

Source: All Headline News (AHN).
Link: http://www.allheadlinenews.com/articles/90050498?Somalia%26%23146%3Bs%20Military%20Court%20executes%20government%20soldier.

Iran protest dispersed by force: witnesses

Jun 4, 2011

TEHRAN — Iranian security forces on Saturday fired in the air to disperse several hundred people protesting against the death at her father's funeral of political and social activist Haleh Sahabi, witnesses said.

The protesters had tried to gather to gather in silent groups outside the Hosseini Ershad mosque in northern Tehran, a traditional site for reformists in the Iranian regime, the witnesses told AFP.

Security forces used batons and fired shots in the air to disperse them, and made around 15 arrests, they said.

AFP was not able to confirm the information directly, as the foreign media are forbidden from covering opposition demonstrations in Iran.

There had been calls on Facebook and several opposition websites for a protest at the mosque against the death of Sahabi, daughter of veteran opposition figure Ezatollah Sahabi.

The Iranian opposition website Kaleme.com reported that the 54-year-old died from cardiac arrest on Wednesday when she was confronted by security forces at her father's funeral.

Washington on Thursday blamed security forces for her death.

"Eyewitness and reliable accounts of Haleh Sahabi's death yesterday at her father's funeral in Iran are making it clear that Ms Sahabi died as a result of reprehensible actions taken by Iranian security forces," said Mark Toner, a State Department spokesman.

Saturday's protest coincided with the 22nd anniversary of the death of revolutionary leader Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, founder of the Islamic republic.

Copyright © 2011 AFP. All rights reserved.