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Thursday, August 9, 2012

Ankara bombing mars Gul's Germany visit

Sep 20, 2011

Berlin - A visit by Turkish President Abdullah Gul to Germany to seek support for his country's admission into the European Union was marred by a bomb attack back home in Ankara on Tuesday.

Gul had already met with Chancellor Angela Merkel, an opponent on Turkish entry, in Berlin and had continued to the city of Osnabrueck when news of the violence reached him. He condemned the blast as a terrorist attack. It killed three, Ankara police said.

Merkel meanwhile voiced concern to Gul about the recent flare-up in tension between Turkey and Israel, German government sources said.

Berlin has been dismayed that Turkey and Israel, both of them nations where Germany has key interests, are at odds with one another over the killings of nine Turkish activists during Israel's May 31, 2010 boarding of blockade-buster ships bound for the Gaza Strip.

The sources said Gul and Merkel set out their views on whether Turkey should be allowed to join the EU - without any changing of minds. Gul had repeated Monday at his public appearances that Turkey continued to seek full membership.

Officially, Germany is open to this, but Merkel's political party is only willing to grant Turkey a lesser form of association.

The two leaders discussed the full range of Turkish-German issues as well the Arab Spring revolts, the sources added.

Gul's Berlin visit was disrupted by a bomb scare Monday evening. Police cleared a university lecture hall where Gul was to speak. Gul gave his planned lecture to a much smaller audience in a smaller room an hour late.

In Osnabrueck, the home town of German President Christian Wulff, a crowd, most of who had not yet heard of the Ankara violence, waved Turkish and German flags and cheered Gul when he arrived Tuesday, drowning out jeers from a small group of Kurdish protesters.

Germany is home to 3.5 million people of Turkish origin. They are the country's most visible ethnic minority.

The visit to Osnabrueck was a return for the courtesy of Wulff's visit last year to Kayseri, Gul's hometown.

Gul arrived in Germany Sunday and remains until Wednesday.

Source: Monsters and Critics.
Link: http://news.monstersandcritics.com/europe/news/article_1664071.php/Ankara-bombing-mars-Gul-s-Germany-visit.

Three killed in Ankara car bomb attack

Sep 20, 2011

Istanbul - A car bomb in the Turkish capital Ankara killed three people and injured 15 more, state TRT Haber TV news channel reported Tuesday.

TRT cited a state prosecutor as confirming that the explosion had been caused by a bomb and had launched an investigation.

Other reports claimed that a woman was arrested close to the scene of the explosion.
Footage showed smashed shop windows and a group of parked cars burning as well as a number of injured people being evacuated by ambulance.

Turkish President Abdullah Gul, who was visiting Osnabrueck on an official state visit to Germany, described the explosion as a 'terrorist attack' and said, 'I utterly condemn this.' He expressed his condolences to the victims.

No group has claimed responsibility for the attack.

Turkey has previously experienced bomb attacks by Kurdish separatist groups, left wing groups and Islamic extremist groups.

However responsibility for most recent incidents has been claimed by the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) a Marxist separatist group which has for the past 30 years been conducting a violent insurrection in south east Turkey aimed at establishing a separate Kurdish state.

Turkish war planes last month bombed PKK bases in northern Iraq following a number of clashes which left more than 20 Turkish soldiers dead.

Source: Monsters and Critics.
Link: http://news.monstersandcritics.com/europe/news/article_1664027.php/Three-killed-in-Ankara-car-bomb-attack.

Arab Parliament recommends freezing Syrian, Yemeni memberships

Sep 20, 2011

Cairo - Members of the Arab Parliament, which is made up of 88 members from different Arab countries, recommended on Tuesday freezing Syrian and Yemeni memberships until bloodshed ends in the two countries.

The parliament recommended freezing the Syrian membership and halting work at the body's headquarters in Damascus if authorities do not implement swift reforms and release all political prisoners.

Members of the parliament called on the Syrian government to withdraw the army from all cities, end bloodshed, form a national unity government and allow media and international delegations to enter the country.

At least 2,700 people have been killed in government crackdown on anti-Bashar al-Assad protesters in Syria, according to the UN's human rights organization.

The parliament also called for suspending the Yemeni membership until stability returns to the country. More than 70 people have been killed there since Sunday, with government forces opening fire on protesters calling on President Ali Abdullah Saleh to step down.

It called on the Arab League to suspend Yemen's participation and take a firm stance from those who reject the Gulf-brokered deal, which aims at ending the crisis in the country.

In 2004, the 22 members of the Arab League agreed to send four representatives each to take part in the Arab Parliament.

Source: Monsters and Critics.
Link: http://news.monstersandcritics.com/middleeast/news/article_1664044.php/Arab-Parliament-recommends-freezing-Syrian-Yemeni-memberships.

Lebanon to hold conference to encourage investment in Libya

Sep 21, 2011

Beirut - Lebanon said Wednesday it would host a conference in November to encourage investment in Libya, news reports said.

The meeting would 'promote investments in Libya and to stress the importance of joint cooperation to build a better future,' Lebanese President Suleiman said.

'In the short term, (Libyans) expect us to continue protecting civilians, helping them maintain security and facilitating the transfer of humanitarian aid,' he said.

In 2003, Libyan leader Moamer Gaddafi cut off diplomatic relations with Lebanon over the disappearance of a Lebanese Shiite cleric 25 years ago in Tripoli.

Lebanese officials believe that Musa al-Sadr disappeared in Libya after an argument with Gaddafi. Libya insists that al-Sadr and his two aides left on a flight to Rome at the end of their August 1978 visit, but Italy denies that he arrived.

Suleiman arrived in New York Tuesday to attend the annual session of the UN General Assembly. Lebanon holds the rotating presidency of the UN Security Council until the end of the month.
The council last week deployed a UN mission to support Libya's transitional authorities and unfroze assets to fund reconstruction and development.

Source: Monsters and Critics.
Link: http://news.monstersandcritics.com/middleeast/news/article_1664164.php/Lebanon-to-hold-conference-to-encourage-investment-in-Libya.

Israel's Labor Party begins run-off election to elect new leader

Sep 21, 2011

Tel Aviv - Polls opened in Israel Wednesday as the 66,310 members of the Israel Labor Party prepared to vote in a run-off election for a new leader to replace Ehud Barak, who plunged the party into crisis when he left in January to form a new faction.

Outspoken former journalist and front-bench legislator Shelly Yechimovich is taking on Amir Peretz, a one-time trade union head who led the party between 2005 to 2007.

The two used to be close political allies, but relations between them have soured dramatically in recent months. They scored the most votes in the election last week, defeating two other candidates but were unable to pass the 40 per cent needed to avoid the run-off.

The winner will be the party's seventh leader in the past decade, but it is thought unlikely that the new head will be able to lead Labor back to power in the next elections.

Nonetheless, the run-off could have a bearing on which party will form the governing coalition after the next Israeli elections, due in 2013.

Both candidates seek to take advantage of the current socio-economic discontent sweeping the country as Israelis demonstrate against the high cost of living.

Analysts say Peretz can attract voters from Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's Likud Party, many of whom, like the former trade unionist, come from a similar blue-collar, working class background.

Yechimovich, on the other hand, could attract middle-class voters who support the opposition Kadima party, and pull enough votes from the centrist party to make the Likud the largest party after the election, and thus tasked with forming the new coalition.

In its many previous incarnations Labor was once Israel's natural party of government, but has in recent elections gradually lost ground, scoring its lowest-ever results in February 2009 - 13 of the 120 seats in parliament.

Barak and four others stormed out of the party in January this year to form a new faction, leaving Labor with a mere eight parliamentary seats.

The 171 polling stations used in the run-off close at 10 pm local time (1900 GMT.) Results are not expected until late Wednesday night or early Thursday morning.

Source: Monsters and Critics.
Link: http://news.monstersandcritics.com/middleeast/news/article_1664178.php/Israel-s-Labour-Party-begins-run-off-election-to-elect-new-leader.

Jordan woos Gulf tourists

By ARIEH O’SULLIVAN / THE MEDIA LINE
09/20/2011

Europeans, Americans stay away amid unrest, prompting search for replacement; tourism from Gulf Cooperation Council grows.

A promotional campaign urging visitors from the Gulf to visit Jordan appears to be paying off for the Hashemite Kingdom, whose hotels and attractions have been struggling with a drop in tourism from Europe and America.

Although Jordan has been relatively quiet, unrest elsewhere in the Middle East has frightened travelers and caused tourist arrivals from Europe to the Hashemite Kingdom to drop by over 17% in the first eight months of this year to 400,000 from 483,000 in 2010. The number of visitors from North and South America declined by 13% to just 125,000.

But, according to data obtained by The Media Line, at least 26% more visitors from the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC), which includes oil-rich countries like Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, and Kuwait, states came to Jordan in the first eight months of 2011, compared with the same period last year.

With its economy rattled by unrest, a growing import bill and interruptions in the supply of natural gas imported from Egypt, Jordan needs tourism earnings more than ever. The International Monetary Fund cut its forecast on Tuesday for the country’s economic growth to 2.5% this year from a previous 3.3%.

Foreseeing that the tumult of the Arab Spring would likely deter Western visitors, Jordan’s Tourism Ministry moved to compensate by encouraging more Arabs to visit, especially from the GCC.

Jordan’s top attractions include the ruins of the ancient city of Petra and the Red Sea resort of Aqaba, which was named Arab Tourism Capital of 2011 by the Arab Tourism Ministers Council. The designation has helped it draw some of the tourism away from the volatile, shark-invested resorts in the Egyptian Sinai coast. It has fewer strictures on liquor and the intermingling of the sexes than many of the conservative Gulf kingdoms.

According to a report from the Jordanian Ministry of Tourism, some 827,132 tourists from the Gulf visited between January and August this year and spent more than one night in the country. In contrast, just 658,197 came in the same period last year. Nearly seven out of eight of the Gulf country visitors came from Saudi Arabia (718,000), which was almost twice as much as the previous year.

Just over half of the GCC visitors arriving in Jordan last year were “transit tourists,” who spent no more than a few hours in the country on their way to Syria or Lebanon. The Tourism Promotion Authority launched “vigorous efforts” to entice these kinds of travelers to stay for a real vacation. Jordan has been hoping to capitalize on its image of a relatively calm country amidst turbulent unrest to draw visitors.

The number of tourists from African countries also grew, with 17% more arriving in the first eight months over the 8,786 in the same period last year. The Tourism Ministry data also showed an 8% increase in tourists from Asia and the Pacific, with 189,327 arriving so far this year.

The report cited the decline from the West as “not significant under the circumstances” and could be adjusted quickly when stable conditions return to the region.

Anti-government protests have largely subsided in Jordan. Over the weekend, a million-man march was called in Amman to protest in front of the Israeli Embassy amid a rising tide of anti-Israeli demonstrations in the Middle East. While only 300 showed up, Israel chose to evacuate its embassy.

Weekly demonstrations demanding political reform erupted in Jordan earlier this year, but were milder that protest movements elsewhere in the Arab world. Key drivers of unrest have included unemployment, high living costs and corruption, but a consensus has emerged in demands for political reforms. King Abdullah, a key US ally in the region, has promised reforms and amendments to the constitution in a bid to snuff out protests.

Tourism to Jordan surged last year, according to official figures released in January, with overnight visits up to 4.55 million from 3.78 million in 2009 and visitors spending a 2.42 billion Jordanian dinars ($3.4 billion) in the process. But according to the United Nations’ World Tourism Organization (UNWTO), Jordan saw a dramatic 27% drop in visitors in May preceded by a 20.5 % drop in April.

That stands in contrast to global trends: Worldwide international tourism rose 4.5% in the first half of this year to 440 million, 19 million more than the same period last year, according to the latest update of the UNWTO World Tourism Barometer. Tourism to the Middle East was down 10.8%.

Alternatively, the recently released Maplecraft Terrorism Risk Index showed that travel to Jordan is not without its risks. But it noted that the protests have been “scattered and small in size.”

“Jordan is one of the top-10 most water scarce countries in the world. This condition is exacerbated by an increasing population and water intensive sectors such as agriculture and industry. Furthermore, climate change is expected to result in higher temperatures and less rainfall, making water scarcity an important issue to consider in the future,” the report said.

“It was clear that this was the tourism capital of Jordan. There were lots of Saudis and their families there,” Gary Bregman, a tourist from a Western country who had recently visited Aqaba, told The Media Line. “The cafes were packed. They had real liquor stores, nicer than any I’d seen in the rest of the world, and massage parlors. It was clear you could do things in Aqaba you couldn’t do in other cities in Jordan.

“There were lots of Arabs vacationing and there was no reason not to. It is nearby, easy to get to and there is something interesting for them to do,” he added.

Source: The Jerusalem Post.
Link: http://www.jpost.com/MiddleEast/Article.aspx?id=238745.

Street Clashes Resume in Yemeni Capital

DOHA, Qatar, Sep 19 2011 (Al Jazeera) - At least 21 people have been killed and over 100 injured in fresh clashes on the streets of the Yemeni capital, Sanaa, a day after 26 anti-government protesters were shot dead and hundreds wounded by troops and gunmen loyal to President Ali Abdullah Saleh.

According to reports, Monday’s deaths occurred as snipers fired upon passers-by and peaceful protesters demonstrating at Change Square.

“Help me, oh my God look at his slaughter!” said the father of a boy who died from a gunshot wound to the head.

“We were just in the car on Hayel Street (near the fighting). I stepped out to get some food and left my two boys in the car and I heard the older one scream. The little one was shot straight through the head.”

The clashes came as protesters tried to push further into territory held by government forces after extending their camp overnight.

The opposition had earlier vowed to press ahead with demonstrations despite Sunday’s crackdown.

A freelance journalist stationed in Yemen told Al Jazeera, “Everything points to more protest.”
Meanwhile, Abdu al-Janadi, Yemen’s deputy information minister, rejected accusations that the regime had planned attacks on the protesters and accused what he described as “unknown assailants” of carrying out the acts.

“This attack was prepared so as to kill as many people as they could. … This is a plot against all the Yemeni people,” al-Janadi told a British television station.

Also on Monday, two people were killed and 10 injured when security forces loyal to the president opened fire on protesters in the city of Taiz.

Sanaa in ‘darkness’

Tens of thousands of protesters calling for an end to president Saleh’s 33-year rule took to the streets of the capital on Sunday.

Mohammad al-Qadhi, a Yemeni journalist, said government snipers had fired on demonstrators from rooftops.

“I talked to one of the protesters. He told me shots were fired on chests, legs, and other parts of the body,” he said.

Witnesses said security forces and armed civilians opened fire on protesters who left Change Square, where they had camped since February demanding regime change, and marched towards the city centre.

“I spoke to a doctor yesterday who said that one of the wounds he’d seen in someone’s back was far bigger than could have been a rifle,” said a freelance journalist. “It was a big circle in the man’s back suggesting it was, you know, it was either anti-aircraft or RPG that was used.”

The journalist said he counted at least 16 bodies piled up in a mosque and most of them were shot in the head.

“Most of them are under 22. I saw one that was 16 years old,” he said.

“There are three hospitals in Sanaa filled to the brim with the injured. One doctor said he expects the death toll to rise over to 50 by tomorrow morning.”

Munir al Mawri, a Yemeni analyst, said the U.S. was making a big mistake by taking a neutral stance and dealing with the crackdown as if it were a political crisis that could be solved by the opposition and the government.

Power transfer

The renewed crackdown on protesters came amid reports that Abdrabuh Mansur Hadi, Yemen’s vice-president, would sign a Gulf Arab initiative to arrange for a transfer of power in Yemen “within a week”.

“Within a week, the vice-president will sign the Gulf Initiative in the name of the president,” a high-ranking Saudi official, who requested anonymity, told reporters.

Last week, Saleh authorized Hadi to negotiate a power transfer with the opposition.

The initiative was proposed by the six-nation Gulf Co-operation Council and sets the path for a peaceful transition of power from Saleh, who has ruled Yemen since 1978.

According to the Saudi official, “among the guarantees demanded by Saleh are that his son be kept in the next government”.

Saleh left the country three months ago for Saudi Arabia where he has been recovering from a Jun. 3 attack on his presidential compound.

The president has since January faced protests over nepotism and corruption from reform activists inspired by the Arab Spring.

Source: Inter-Press Service (IPS).
Link: http://www.ipsnews.net/2011/09/street-clashes-resume-in-yemeni-capital/.

Afghanistan Drought Will Become Disaster Without Aid, Oxfam Says

By Jack Phillips
September 20, 2011

Parts of Afghanistan are facing severe food shortages due to drought in several provinces, the aid organization Oxfam said Tuesday, calling on governments and aid donors to help remedy the situation before it becomes a disaster.

Nearly three million people in 14 of Afghanistan’s 34 provinces are affected by the drought, the international umbrella aid agency said. The provinces affected are in the north, west, and north-east parts of the country; nearly three quarters of affected people say they will run out of food in under two months.

Pastures in the regions have been destroyed due to the drought, and overall 80 percent of non-irrigated wheat crops in those places have been lost.

“Delays will just make things harder for families already struggling to cope. The drought has completely destroyed the wheat crop in some areas,” Asuntha Charles, head of Oxfam in Afghanistan, said in a statement.

With the drought and famine persisting in Somalia, Charles said that donors need to act quickly on Afghanistan to mitigate the loss of life.

The aid group said a lack of water in drought-affected areas is forcing people to share water sources with animals, which increases the risk of waterborne diseases.

During the winter, the situation in Afghanistan will likely become worse as many of those places are cut off due to poor weather conditions.

“There have been reports of people trekking nine hours to get clean water and going into debt to ensure their children have food,” said Charles, adding that such “warning signs” should be paid attention to by donors.

Source: The Epoch Times.
Link: http://www.theepochtimes.com/n2/world/afghanistan-drought-will-become-disaster-without-aid-oxfam-says-61832.html.

Venezuela Nationalizes Gold

By Jack Phillips
September 20, 2011

New law says mining companies must sell all gold to government

A law that forces mining companies to sell all gold extracted in Venezuela to the government went into effect on Monday, according to media reports.

The law, signed by President Hugo Chavez last month, will allow private companies to mine in the country with the government owning over a 55 percent stake in their ventures. Under the new law, companies will have to turn over 13 percent of their profits to the state.

The law was recorded in the state’s Official Gazette, Friday. “The gold found on national land belongs to the Republic, and is public domain,” the law said.

Also private companies cannot export gold outside Venezuela and must contact the government and agree to the joint venture within the next three months, according to The Associated Press.

For any legal problems, the law states that companies, international or domestic, must settle them in Venezuela and cannot seek international arbitration, said the report.

Chavez said that under the law, Venezuela will be able to acquire around $11 billion for Venezuela’s gold reserves.

Venezuela only mines around six tons worth of gold per year but there are large gold deposits under the jungles near the Orinoco River.

Source: The Epoch Times.
Link: http://www.theepochtimes.com/n2/world/venezuela-nationalizes-gold-61834.html.

S&P downgrades Italy's credit rating

Tue Sep 20, 2011

The high-profile Standard & Poor's credit assessment agency (S&P) says it has lowered Italy's sovereign debt rating due to its fiscal and political problems.

S&P announced on Monday that it had cut down the Italian debt rating from "A+/A-1+" to "A/A-1" due to bleak economic prospects of the European country, AFP reported.

"We believe the reduced pace of Italy's economic activity to date will make the government's revised fiscal targets difficult to achieve," the agency said in a statement, adding that the country's fragile ruling coalition "limit the government's ability to respond decisively" to problems.

A diminished labor market, inefficient public services, and limited foreign investment in the country have been designated as the major hurdles to Italy's economic growth.

Another prominent credit assessment agency, Moody's Investors Service, has also suggested that it may reconsider Rome's credit rating which currently stands at Aa2, two notches below the agency's top triple-A rating.

According to data released by the Bank of Italy last week, the country's public debt climbed to 1.911 trillion euros ($2.6 trillion) in July, which is around double its GDP.

Rome has Europe's second-largest debt level, the cost of which has been rising in recent weeks and is likely to further soar in the wake of the downgrade.

Italy follows eurozone countries, Spain, Ireland, Greece, Portugal and Cyprus in having its credit rating reduced this year.

Source: PressTV.
Link: http://www.presstv.com/detail/200147.html.

Spaniards rap cuts in education sector

Tue Sep 20, 2011

Thousands of schoolchildren, parents, and teachers hold fresh protests in the Spanish capital against the regional government in Madrid's plans to enforce spending cuts on the education sector.

The Tuesday rallies saw the public voicing outrage at the decision planned to take effect on October 22 to increase weekly teaching hours, while cutting class preparation time, the Spanish news agency Buenos Aires Herald reported.

Rallying under the banner 'money that goes into education is not expenditure; it is investment,' the protesters said the measure would damage the quality of secondary education and mean less work for support teachers.

“There are other things that can be cut, where money can be saved. Education is an investment in our future,” Miguel Angel Nieto, a teacher at Juan de la Cierva high school in Madrid, told reporters.

Protesters held placards reading “Remember London: fewer teachers today means more police tomorrow.”

Spain has one of Europe's highest number of school dropouts nearly 30 percent of whom are students under the age of 16.

Officials, however, say the cuts are necessary to prevent the country from sliding deeper into the economic crisis -- a misfortune, which would in turn compound the eurozone debt crisis.

The budget cuts are expected to attract more protests.

Source: PressTV.
Link: http://www.presstv.com/detail/200284.html.

African Union recognizes Libya's NTC

Tue Sep 20, 2011

The African Union (AU) says that it has recognized Libya's National Transitional Council (NTC) as the government of the North African country.

The AU said in a statement that it was ready to support the NTC in its efforts to build an inclusive government, Reuters reported.

"The African Union stands ready to support the Libyan people... as they rebuild their country towards a united, democratic, peaceful and prosperous Libya," the statement said.

Equatorial Guinea's President Teodoro Obiang Nguema, who holds the African Union's rotating chair, made the announcement on Tuesday.

Most European countries, the US and Nigeria had recognized the NTC.

Meanwhile, Libya's NTC fighters are still fighting with troops loyal to fugitive ruler Muammar Gaddafi to capture their last strongholds, Sirte and Bani Walid.

The Libyan dictator is believed hiding in the country, although members of his family fled to Algeria and Niger after revolutionary forces overran the capital Tripoli last month.

In a new message broadcast on Tuesday, Gaddafi called his opponents' takeover of the country a charade.

"What is happening in Libya is a charade which will not last forever," he said in the message on Syrian-based satellite station al-Rai TV.

Source: PressTV.
Link: http://www.presstv.com/detail/200229.html.

Iran to launch Russian TV channel

Sat Sep 17, 2011

Head of the Islamic Republic of Iran Broadcasting (IRIB) Ezzatollah Zarghami has announced Tehran's willingness to launch a satellite channel for audiences in Russian-speaking countries.

Launching a Russian-language television network is a top priority for the IRIB, Zarghami said upon returning from a visit to Ukraine.

The senior Iranian official referred to his meetings with the Ukrainian media, cultural and academic figures, and noted that Iranian-made TV productions have been well received in Ukraine, IRIB reported on Friday.

The IRIB chief pointed out that a number of movies, TV series and cartoons produced by the Islamic Republic of Iran Broadcasting and subtitled in Russian have been delivered to Ukraine.

Zarghami also said the Russian-language channel will find its audience like other Iranian television networks.

The channel will be broadcasted from the IRIB studios in Tehran and its distribution will soon be secured on satellites beaming to Europe. It will also be streamed online as part of a multiplatform plan.

IRIB's Russian TV will be the fourth specialized channel to be launched by the Islamic Republic of Iran Broadcasting, following the appearance of the Arabic language Al-Alam television network, round-the-clock English language Press TV and Spanish-language Hispan TV.

The Islamic Republic of Iran seeks to reach out to Latin America with Spanish-language Hispan TV to explain its "ideological legitimacy."

As a large part of the world's population speaks Spanish, we will start a network (in Spanish) within the next few months, Zarghami announced in the Iranian capital of Tehran in September 2010.

"This new Spanish network will have a major role in reflecting the ideological legitimacy of our system to the world," he noted.

Source: PressTV.
Link: http://www.presstv.com/detail/199594.html.

Somalis grateful for Iran aid convoys

Mon Sep 19, 2011

Somali Minister for Women and Family Affairs says the people of her country are grateful for the humanitarian aid sent by the Iranian government.

“You gave us a feeling of security and the hope that we will be helped and supported in case any other disaster happens in our country,” said Maryam Aweys Juma during her visit to the office of Iran's Red Crescent Society.

Aweys Juma also said that her people are living in good conditions in camps set up by the Red Crescent in the capital Mogadishu and that they're pleased with receiving such aid.

Somali Charge d'Affaires Khalifa Kanye Moosa who also visited Iranian officials asked Iran for more help in order to save the lives of children, Red Crescent Society (IRCS) said in a statement.

Iran has sent fourteen convoys of food, medicine and hygiene products to Somalia where more than 10-million people are suffering from a prolonged drought, famine and civil war.

Source: PressTV.
Link: http://www.presstv.com/detail/200040.html.

Iran sends 15th aid convoy to Somalia

Tue Sep 20, 2011

The Iranian Red Crescent Society (IRCS) has dispatched its 15th aid convoy to the famine-stricken and underprivileged people of Somalia in line with the Islamic Republic's humanitarian measures.

The consignment which included 30 tons of relief aid, including flour, rice and tents, was sent via Tehran's Imam Khomeini International Airport to Somalia's capital of Mogadishu Tuesday morning, IRNA reported.

The IRCS has so far sent more than 500 tons of humanitarian aid to famine-hit Somalia as part of an initiative to support the war-torn country that is battling with starvation and shortage of food.

The society plans to dispatch its major humanitarian shipment, including 5,000 tons of relief aid, to Somalia in the near future.

Reports say that aid agencies can take food supplies to only a limited number of people affected by the disaster since insecurity hinders efforts in much of the country's south.

Somalia has not had a functioning government since 1991, when warlords overthrew the country's former dictator Mohamed Siad Barre.

Source: PressTV.
Link: http://www.presstv.com/detail/200167.html.

Bahrain activists call for mass protest amid warning

Sep 21, 2011

Cairo - An opposition group has called for a mass protest on Wednesday in the centre of the capital Manama amid a stern warning from the authorities.

Activists of the February 14 Youth Coalition, named after a day when pro-democracy demonstrations started in the small Gulf kingdom, plan to bring the traffic in central Manama to a standstill by parking thousands of cars in major streets in the capital, according to broadcaster Al Jazeera.

The organizers said the protest was aimed at pressuring the government into halting what they described as daily oppression of demonstrations and reinstate employees reportedly sacked for joining in pro-democracy protests, according to the television report.

The protest comes days before partial parliamentary elections due to be held in Bahrain on September 24.

The Interior Ministry has warned it will not tolerate Wednesday's protest.
'The authorities will take legal measures against anyone found violating the traffic rules,' said the ministry in a statement. 'Violators risk penalties of jailing and fines.'

Sunni-ruled Bahrain has accused Shiite-led Iran of meddling in its internal affairs and inciting the unrest. Both the opposition and Iran have denied the accusation.

Source: Monsters and Critics.
Link: http://news.monstersandcritics.com/middleeast/news/article_1664173.php/Bahrain-activists-call-for-mass-protest-amid-warning.

Prospect of civil war draws closer in Yemen

AHMED AL-HAJ | AP
Wednesday 21 September 2011

SANAA: The grim prospect of civil war in Yemen has drawn closer as mutinous soldiers have become more deeply involved in a rapidly spreading battle against regime forces for control of the capital.

A negotiated cease-fire Tuesday halted three days of fighting that killed dozens of people, but it will not hold without a quick resolution of the key dispute: Who will lead the nation.

A peaceful way out of Yemen’s seven-month crisis may not come easily, if at all, making it more likely to be settled in large-scale and ruinous street battles pitting renegade army soldiers and their allied tribal fighters against US-trained forces loyal to embattled President Ali Abdullah Saleh and led by his son and one-time heir apparent, Ahmed.

Already, pro-regime forces reinforced their positions in their strongholds in the south of the capital, apparently in anticipation of renewed fighting. The potential for bloody strife has been shown in Yemen since the uprising against Saleh’s regime began in February, with hundreds of protesters killed and thousands wounded at the hands of security forces.

In the past three days, pro-regime forces killed more than 70 people, mostly protesters, using anti-aircraft guns, rocket-propelled grenades and mortars. At least 23 people were killed in Sanaa on Tuesday as the fighting intensified and spread to sensitive areas of the capital before the cease-fire took hold after nightfall.

In one incident, 13 followers of a tribal leader who changed sides and joined the opposition in March were killed when mortar shells fired by pro-government forces rained down on the upscale Hedah area of southern Sanaa, also home to top regime figures.

“It’s a war zone,” said Sanaa activist Hakim Al-Masmari. “We can’t even sit near windows because we could be killed.”

Thousands have been forced to flee Sanaa for the relative safety of rural areas. Scores of pickup trucks and cars loaded with families and their belongings were seen early Tuesday heading out of the city, repeatedly shaken by loud explosions overnight.

The United States condemned the violence and called on all parties to exercise restraint. “We urge a prompt, impartial investigation into the events that led to the recent violence,” Victoria Nuland, the State Department’s spokeswoman, said in a statement Tuesday.

Saleh, Yemen’s president for 33 years and a staunch US ally, has clung to power despite tens of thousands taking to the streets nearly daily since February to demand his ouster. At least three times he has backed away at the last minute from endorsing a resignation plan offered by his Gulf Arab neighbors and supported by the United States — handing over power in return for immunity.

He left Yemen in June for neighboring Saudi Arabia to be treated for serious wounds suffered in an attack on his compound. He has not returned to Yemen since, but the presence in Sanaa of his son, Ahmed, and other loyal family members meant the regime continued to fight for its survival.

Much is at stake in Yemen for the United States, its Gulf Arab allies, particularly Saudi Arabia, and the West. Yemen overlooks key shipping lanes in the Red and Arabian seas and is home to one of the world’s most dangerous Al-Qaeda branches, whose militants have staged or inspired a series of attacks on US territory. Already, the chaos has allowed Al-Qaeda militants to capture and hold a string of towns in nearly lawless southern Yemen.

With the prospect of a peaceful settlement remote, civil war becomes a realistic possibility, given that Yemen is a nation with deep tribal and regional divides, a checkered history of civil strife, and a chronically weak central government.

The nation’s north and the once-independent south fought it out in 1994. Another civil war would pit the renegade soldiers of the 1st Armored Division, perhaps the nation’s most combat-tested unit, against the Republican Guards led by Ahmed to decide the leadership question.

The 1st Armored Division claims about 20,000 fighters in Sanaa, and, according to security officials, has been training its men in urban warfare for most of the six months since it defected along with its commander, Maj. Gen. Ali Mohsen Al-Ahmar, and joined the anti-Saleh protesters. The division has tanks and armored personnel carriers but they have been hidden across the city to avoid being picked off by regime warplanes.

The Republican Guards boast much more armor, a large arsenal of rockets and about the same number of troops. As a backup, it can draw on the support of the US-trained and equipped Special Forces, another elite unit also led by Saleh’s son, and the Presidential Guards, led by Saleh’s nephew, Tariq, a commander notorious for brutality.

“The Republican Guards are the superior force on paper,” said military expert Hussein Mansour, a retired army brigadier. “But that makes little difference on the ground. It is all about street warfare and combat expertise.”

The division, which took part in every war fought in Yemen in the past three decades, also has Al-Ahmar for a seasoned commander whose combat experience is complemented by years as Saleh’s point man on the country’s complex tribal politics.

Ahmed, by contrast, has little combat experience and support outside segments of the military and several small tribes still loyal to him and his father.

The 1st Armored Division has endeared itself to the thousands of protesters camped in Sanaa’s central Change Square since its mutiny in March, pledging to protect them from by pro-regime forces.

The protesters have given the division weapons seized this week from a Republican Guards’ camp in the city and government buildings as part of a stepped-up campaign against the regime.

Unarmed, they also acted as human shields for the soldiers, providing them with cover until new positions in the capital were built and fortified.

Source: Arab News.
Link: http://www.arabnews.com/node/391825.

Security forces storm schools in Syria

Wednesday 21 September 2011

BEIRUT: Syrian security forces moved against several schools around the country Wednesday and detained students who demonstrated against President Bashar Assad’s regime, while troops shot dead at least four people in central Syria, activists said.

The Local Coordination Committees, an activist network, said dozens of students were detained in the southern village of Jassem. Also, security forces surrounded several schools in the Damascus suburbs of Harasta, Arbeen and Zamalka.

Students have been demonstrating against Assad’s regime since Sunday, the first day of the school year.

The London-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said security forces killed three civilians in the central city of Homs and one in the nearby town of Rastan.

It reported that the bodies of three other people who disappeared last week were also either found or handed to their families by authorities in the northern province of Idlib and the central region of Hama.

President Barack Obama called on the UN Security Council to impose sanctions on Syria because of the deadly crackdown. He told the UN General Assembly Wednesday, “There is no excuse for inaction.”

Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan said his country is considering sanctions and is coordinating its policy with the US Turkey neighbors Syria and is a key trading partner.

Turkey’s state-run Anatolia news agency quoted Erdogan as saying. “We never wanted things to arrive at this point, but unfortunately, the Syrian administration has forced us to take such a decision.”

The Syrian uprising began in mid-March, during the wave of protests in the Arab world that toppled autocrats in Tunisia, Egypt and Libya. President Bashar Assad has responded with a brutal crackdown that the UN estimates has killed some 2,600 people.

An amateur video posted online showed people running away in a street in the town of Qusair near the border with Lebanon as cracks of gunfire could be heard. A man could be heard shouting “they are shooting at students in the city of Qusair.”

Another video showed the funeral of a school teacher identified as Jihad Haji who was said to have been shot by security forces. Young mourners could be heard chanting “there is no God but God, Assad is the enemy of God” as they carried his coffin in the areas of Waer near the central city of Homs.

The Associated Press could not independently verify the videos or the accounts of violence. Syria has banned most foreign journalists and restricted local media during the revolt.

Source: Arab News.
Link: http://www.arabnews.com/node/391824.

U.N., Ivorian troops at Liberian border

Sept. 20, 2011

ABIDJAN, Ivory Coast, Sept. 20 (UPI) -- Ivorian forces are getting help from the United Nations to restore security along the Liberian border following attacks last week, an official said.

At least 13 civilians and one Ivorian soldier were among those killed last week along the border with Liberia. The death toll was raised to 15 during the weekend with the blame laid on "Liberian mercenaries," CNN reports.

Paul Koffi Koffi, the deputy minister of defense for the Ivorian government, confirmed that U.N. forces were helping Ivorian troops stationed along the border, the broadcaster adds.

Liberian mercenaries fighting in support of former president Laurent Gbagbo were blamed for some of the atrocities committed in Ivory Coast during the political conflict that gripped the West African country early this year.

The international community recognized Alassane Ouattara as the winner of a November presidential election. Gbagbo refused to stand down, however, and ensuing conflict left thousands dead and many more displaced.

Ouattara, alongside his Liberian counterpart Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, and other regional leaders called on the United Nations to offer for more monitoring along the Liberian border in a Sept. 10 appeal.

Source: United Press International (UPI).
Link: http://www.upi.com/Top_News/Special/2011/09/20/UN-Ivorian-troops-at-Liberian-border/UPI-33861316541051/.

French military medics head to Syrian border

August 09, 2012

PARIS (AP) — A team of French military doctors headed to the Syria-Jordan border on Thursday to set up a mobile hospital to treat refugees fleeing Syrian violence by the thousands.

The medics aim to be operative by the end of the week and to perform up to 10 surgeries a day on those wounded in fighting, said Col. Gerard Dosseh before boarding a flight at Paris' Charles de Gaulle airport.

He was among some 25 medical personnel on the team, which is bringing about 20 tons of medical equipment to Amman, Jordan, and then to a site a few dozen kilometers from the border. France, Syria's onetime colonial ruler, has been in the forefront of diplomatic efforts to end fighting in Syria, which has sent some 250,000 refugees fleeing to neighboring countries, and to press for a democratic transition. But as fighting intensifies, concern is focusing on the growing refugee crisis as Syrians spill out of their homeland.

"There will be many wounded who have crossed the Jordanian-Syrian border, those wounded by gunfire who will need surgery," Dosseh told AP Television News. The Italians have also set up a field hospital in northern Jordan near the Syrian border that started operating in early July.

The French move comes as diplomatic efforts to halt the war in Syria remain stymied, with Russia and China using their veto power to block U.N. Security Council resolutions that would increase pressure on President Bashar Assad.

France, presiding over the Security Council this month, is hoping for a diplomatic breakthrough. Paris has called for a ministerial meeting Aug. 30 in New York to be devoted mainly to the humanitarian situation but also meant to show support for Syrians and concern for regional stability, the Foreign Ministry said this week. Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius, who will lead the session, is traveling to Jordan, Lebanon and Turkey starting Aug. 15.

These soft steps aren't enough for former French President Nicolas Sarkozy, who interjected himself this week into the Syrian crisis with a call for France to take action as it did in Libya, where he triggered the momentum for an international coalition to back rebel fighters who ultimately killed dictator Moammar Gadhafi.

Sarkozy spoke this week with the president of the opposition Syrian National Council, Abdelbaset Sieda, and called for "rapid action" on Syria, according to French media reports. It amounted to a dig at Socialist President Francois Hollande's handling of the Syrian crisis. French Defense Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian told RFI radio that such quick moves are "easy to say, very dangerous to do."

Egyptian capital hit by massive power cut

August 09, 2012

CAIRO (AP) — A massive power cut has hit large parts of the Egyptian capital, halting much of its crowded metro service and delaying the start of trading on the stock exchange.

Egypt has been beset by frequent power cuts since the hot summer months began. The outages, together with water cuts, have enraged Egyptians, sending many to the streets to protest. The cuts have been particularly hard since the July 20 start of the holy month of Ramadan, when devout Muslims fast dawn-to-dusk while coping with soaring temperatures. The power outages have also led to criticism of the country's new President Mohammed Morsi.

The government says excessive consumption due to the summer heat is behind the cuts. Thursday's outage affected large parts of Cairo, which is home to some 18 million people.

Tibetan expedition ends with prehistoric find

Tallahassee FL (SPX)
Sep 21, 2011

Yang Wang is known for conducting complex research using highly sophisticated equipment. Yet the Florida State University geochemist also has spent days hiking through the remote outback of Tibet and camping in the foothills of the Himalayas - all in the name of scientific discovery.

Because of that unique mix of skills, Wang was chosen to take part in a team of researchers that uncovered the oldest prehistoric woolly rhino ever found.

Wang and an international group of paleontologists set out in 2007 to explore one of the most isolated places on earth: the Zanda (ZAH-dah) Basin in Tibet, located at the feet of the Himalaya Mountains. The words majestic, wild and awesome all apply, yet fail to capture the landscape's natural wonder.

What drew the researchers to the basin wasn't its raw beauty, however. They came to explore its buried treasures. The largely untouched Zanda Basin is a fossil hunter's paradise, and the team was determined to make scientific breakthroughs.

They did just that, finding the complete skull and lower jaw of a previously unknown and long-extinct animal. They christened it the Tibetan woolly rhino (Coelodonta thibetana).

"This is the oldest, most primitive woolly rhino every found," Wang said of the team's discovery.

The ancient beast stood perhaps 6 feet tall and 12 to 14 feet long. It bore two great horns. One grew from the tip of its nose and was about 3 feet long. A much smaller horn arose from between its eyes. The Tibetan woolly rhino was stocky like today's rhino but had long, thick hair. It is often mentioned in the same breath with woolly mammoths, giant sloths and sabertooth cats, all giant mammals of the period that became extinct.

Prior to the team's discovery, the oldest woolly rhino ever found was 2.6 million years old, making it an inhabitant of the Pleistocene era (2.6 million years ago to 11,700 years ago). But the Tibetan woolly rhino found by the team is 3.7 million years old. That means it lived during the Pliocene epoch (5.3 million to 2.6 million years ago).

The new time frame also indicates that the Tibetan woolly rhino was alive before the last Ice Age. Wang examined the chemistry of the rhino's fossilized teeth using a special instrument, a mass spectrometer, at the National High Magnetic Field Laboratory at Florida State.

"We look at the chemistry of the teeth and bones, to see what the animals ate and what kind of environment they lived in," said Wang, a professor in the university's Department of Earth, Ocean and Atmospheric Science.

Her detailed analysis revealed that the creature ate grasses that grew at high altitudes. That suggests, Wang said, that when the Ice Age arrived, the Tibetan woolly rhino adapted by moving from the mountains to lower altitudes.

The expedition team also found horse, elephant and deer fossils. Most of the fossils, including the Tibetan woolly rhino's complete skull, are being kept at the Chinese Academy of Sciences in Beijing, at its Institute of Vertebrate Paleontology and Paleoanthropology.

Wang and other members of the team, led by Xiaoming Wang, curator of the Natural History Museum of Los Angeles, plan to return to the basin again in the summer of 2012.

"Cold places, such as Tibet, the Arctic and the Antarctic, are where the most unexpected discoveries will be made in the future - these are the remaining frontiers that are still largely unexplored," said Xiaoming Wang.

Source: Terra Daily.
Link: http://www.terradaily.com/reports/Tibetan_expedition_ends_with_prehistoric_find_999.html.

Plants create a water reserve in the soil

Munich, Germany (SPX)
Sep 21, 2011

Experiments performed at the Paul Scherrer Institute (PSI) reveal that a zone of higher water concentration exists around the roots of a plant. It has long been known that roots alter the soil in their immediate vicinity, where other microorganisms live and the chemical composition is altered compared to that further away from the roots.

An international research team has now demonstrated in experiments at the Paul Scherrer Institute that the soil in the vicinity of roots also contains more water - contrary to the earlier belief that there must be less water in this region, as the plant takes up water from the soil. Apparently, however, plants create a small water reserve that helps to tide them over through short periods of drought.

These findings could help, in the long term, in the breeding of plants to cope better during periods of drought or in support of the development of efficient irrigation systems.

These results were obtained from experiments carried out with the benefit of neutron tomography at the Paul Scherrer Institute, using a method that makes it possible to exactly show the distribution of water to a fraction of a millimetre, without having to remove a plant from the soil. The researchers have published their results in the prestigious journal New Phytologist.

"The question of how plants take up water is not only relevant to the development of new, water-efficient strains of plants, but also for improving climate models", explains Sascha Oswald, from the Institute of Earth and Environmental Science at the University of Potsdam, "because typically more than half of all the water that falls onto the earth's surface as rain in a humid climate is taken up by plants and then passes back to the atmosphere through the plants."

A research project at the Helmholtz-Centre for Environmental Research - UFZ where he worked with a number of colleagues had the goal of showing what exactly happens at the place where a plant takes up water through its roots.

"Plants take water up from the ground by means of fine roots, a few millimetres in diameter. Their thicker roots serve more as pipelines, to relay the water. We want to understand the water distribution around these roots", explains Ahmad Moradi, from the University of California Davis.

Neutrons reveal water content without damaging plants

"The decisive processes occur here at a scale of a few millimetres. In order not to miss these processes, we need a procedure that shows details that are smaller than a millimetre and that can be applied without needing to remove the plant from the soil", says Moradi of the technical challenge.

The researchers found the appropriate method at the Paul Scherrer Institute in the form of neutron tomography. Here, they were able to send neutrons through plants, together with the soil around their roots. Using these particles, it is possible to see inside different objects, in a similar manner to using X-rays but making different internal components visible. Specifically, neutrons are particularly attenuated and scattered away by water, whereas metal or sand are essentially invisible to them.

"Roots consist to almost 90% of water. When one wants to examine them, or the movement of water in the soil, then neutrons are far better tools than X-rays", explains Moradi.

The researchers were thus able to create an exact three-dimensional image of the water distribution around the roots and determine how much water was present at different positions in the soil. "The microscope option of the facility was used for this measurement, so that images with a resolution of 20 pixels per millimetre could be generated. In this way, it was possible to make the water visible to the required accuracy", explains Eberhard Lehmann, whose group operates the facilities at PSI.

"We have three measurement stations at which we can create images with neutrons - each with its own characteristics. Thus we were able to try out different options for the experiment. A great advantage of the PSI facility is also that it is in operation 24 hours a day, and thus plants could be observed over a complete day-night cycle." PSI is the only centre in Switzerland at which neutrons are available for research.

More water at the roots

The result obtained from this study is that the soil in a region within a few millimetres from roots contains about 30% more water than the rest of the soil. It has long been known that roots significantly alter their immediate environment. In this so-called rhizosphere a much higher number of different microorganisms than elsewhere can be found. They profit from organic root excudates.

"Because of the water uptake by roots it has been assumed as a matter of course that the water content close to the roots is decreased and that water is flowing along a gradient towards the roots", explains Hans-Jorg Vogel from the Department of Soil Physics at UFZ. The experiments contradicted this belief, for all three types of plants tested - maize, lupines and chick peas.

Water reserve for bad times

"We can now only speculate about the question as to how the water concentration around the roots becomes higher. It is probable that a gel-like substance that the roots exude is responsible.

This substance can absorb 10,000 times its own dry weight of water. In this way, plants could create an emergency supply for short periods of drought", explains the soil physicist Andrea Carminati, from the University of Gottingen. Even if this emergency supply does not suffice for longer periods of drought, it can help cover periods of up to 12 hours in which the plant would otherwise be cut off from a supply of water.

"If one thinks about the practical applications of these results, then they can help in the breeding of plants which can survive dry periods better. One could also learn exactly how much to water plants, so that they do not come to long-lasting harm through drying out", adds Sascha Oswald.

Source: Terra Daily.
Link: http://www.terradaily.com/reports/Plants_create_a_water_reserve_in_the_soil_999.html.

New frog species found in India

Mon Sep 19, 2011

Indian scientists from Delhi University have discovered about 12 new frog species settling under the rocks of tropical mountain forests.

Many of the newly found frogs are rare and living in a single area with a particular habitat, the MSNBC reported.

The new species include the meowing night frog, whose croak sounds more like a cat's call, the jog night frog, unique in that both the males and females watch over the eggs, and the Wayanad night frog, explained biologist and the project's lead scientist, Sathyabhama Das Biju.

Wayanad night frog grows to about the size of a baseball or cricket ball. It almost seems like a monster in the forest floor, a huge size for a frog, jumping up and down, Biju added.

According to the Global Wildlife Conservation group, around 32 percent of the world's known amphibian species are threatened with extinction, mainly due to the habitat loss or pollution.

"Frogs are extremely important indicators not just of climate change, but also pollutants in the environment," said Biju.

"We first have to find the species, know them and protect them, so that we can study them for their clinical importance," he continued.

The team hopes the new discovery will attract attention to India's amphibians and their role in studying the environment health.

Source: PressTV.
Link: http://www.presstv.com/detail/200053.html.

Iran unveils new Persian computer game

Sun Sep 18, 2011

Iran's National Foundation for Computer Games has unveiled the country's latest computer game Tag and Vee in Mithra Planet during a ceremony in Tehran.

Iran's computer game productions have been warmly received by many European, American and East Asian countries, ISNA quoted the foundation's director Behrouz Minai as saying during the ceremony which he attended along with a number of experts on September 18, 2011.

Iran's computer games participated in the 2011 edition of the biggest European game industry fair, Gamescom and gained great acclaim from the European, Russian and American experts and distributors.

According to Minai, India has requested Persian computer games and five Iranian productions will enter the Indian market after negotiations are over.

Turkey has also asked for Iranian computer games for its home media networks, he added.

To meet international demands, the games will be dubbed into English, French, German, Russian and Spanish.

The Garshasp computer game will also be dubbed into English, Arabic, Turkish and Azeri to enter regional markets, Minai explained.

Mir Mohanna, Hidden Treasure, Mountaineer, Black Gold, The story of the Island, The Heart of Simorgh and Dream Farm are some of the Iranian computer game productions.

Ancient Persian tales and characters have inspired most of the games, while traditional Persian music and modern motion capture techniques have provided them with more natural scenes.

Source: PressTV.
Link: http://www.presstv.com/detail/199824.html.

Qatari royal appointed head of Al Jazeera

Wed Sep 21, 2011

Qatar appoints a member of the royal family to the head of the Al Jazeera television network following unexpected resignation by the Doha-based satellite broadcaster's former director general.

The replacement is named as Sheikh Ahmed bin Jassim Al Thani, who is also an executive at Qatargas, the world's largest liquefied natural gas company, British newspaper The Guardian reported on Tuesday.

His predecessor Wadah Khanfar, a Palestinian-born journalist, who was credited with revolutionizing the Arab media landscape with daring news broadcasting, announced on Tuesday that he was stepping down after eight years in office.

In his resignation letter, he wrote his goal he had set himself was "to establish Al Jazeera as a global media leader" and that "this target has been met.”

It remained a mystery why he had resigned.

A diplomatic cable released last month by the whistleblower website the WikiLeaks had alleged that the US administration was once upset with the 'disturbing website content' published on Al Jazeera's website, obliging him to remove the material.

Despite the satellite network's being hailed as an outspoken one against many Arab regimes, some analysts say it has been mostly lenient, when it came to the ruling structures in Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, the UAE, and Qatar itself.

WikiLeaks has also exposed Doha's efforts to use Al Jazeera as a foreign policy tool.

Source: PressTV.
Link: http://www.presstv.com/detail/200287.html.

Iraqi Shiites threaten departing U.S. army

Baghdad (UPI)
Sep 20, 2011

U.S. troops preparing to pull out of Iraq face a growing threat from a Shiite militia known as Asaib Ahl al-Haq, founded and led by veteran insurgent Qais al-Khazali.

U.S. commanders say AAH is one of the most dangerous groups in Iraq and, along with other Shiite militant groups like the Promised Day Brigades and the Hezbollah Brigades, is backed and armed by Iran.

The group claims it is funded by sympathetic Iraqis but these are believed to include backers of the Mehdi Movement led by Iranian-backed cleric Moqtada Sadr who fought the Americans in 2004-07.

Khazali was once spokesman for al-Sadr's Mehdi Army militia. That organization has officially been disbanded but most of its hard-liners have re-emerged with other militant groups such as AAH.

Asaid Ahl al-Haqm, whose name means "League of the Righteous," maintains an office in Beirut, where it liaises with Hezbollah, Iran's longtime proxy in the Levant and the Tehran regime's strike arm against Israel.

AAH is also understood to have financial assets in the Lebanese capital, a major Middle Eastern banking hub that maintains tight secrecy about foreign assets held there.

U.S. intelligence sources say that Hezbollah, which was formed by Iran after the Israelis invaded Lebanon in June 1982, was instrumental in organizing and training AAH, and other "special groups" of Iraqi Shiite militants set up by Iran following the U.S. invasion of March 2003.

One of the key Hezbollah operatives who worked with the elite al-Quds Force, the covert action arm of Iran's Revolutionary Guards Corps, to establish these groups was Ali Mussa Daqduq. He was captured by coalition forces March 20, 2007, along with Qais al-Khazali, and his brother Laith.

These three headed a Shiite group that kidnapped and killed five U.S. soldiers outside Karbala, a Shiite holy city south of Baghdad, Jan. 20, 2007.

The Khazalis were released in a 2009 prisoner exchange with Iran. Daqduq, who was sent to Iraq in 2005 to build a local version of Hezbollah, was a lieutenant of the Lebanese group's iconic operations chief, Imad Mughniyeh, assassinated in Damascus Feb. 12, 2008.

Daqduq remains in U.S. custody in Iraq and this poses a dilemma for the Americans: If they hand him over to the Shiite-dominated Baghdad government when the U.S. military withdrawal is scheduled to be completed Dec. 31, Daqduq would almost certainly be delivered to the Iranians and freed or "allowed to escape" as other high-value prisoners have done in recent months.

But if the Americans hold onto him, they would either have to send him to Guantanamo Bay or put him on trial, neither of which is considered a viable option.

There was a plan to quietly hand him over to Iraqi authorities in July. But word leaked out and senior members of the U.S. Congress were outraged that "the highest ranking Hezbollah operative currently in our custody" should be released "to kill more American servicemen and women."

The plan was dropped. But if the Americans take him with them when they depart that will leave them with the thorny legal question of how to prosecute him.

Asaib Ahl al-Haq is believed to have several thousand operatives, highly trained by al-Quds Force and its Hezbollah allies, and primed to go on the attack to speed the Americans on their way or to mount a full-scale offensive against them if Baghdad extends a U.S. military presence in Iraq, as the U.S. administration and Republicans in Congress want.

There are indications the "special groups" are flexing their muscles. AAH sent a warning July 4 by rocketing Baghdad's heavily protected Green Zone.

"Like its predecessor, Jaish al-Mahdi (al-Sadr's Mehdi Army), AAH is becoming a catch-all for a wide range of militants who seek to engage in violence for a host of ideological, sectarian or purely commercial motives," observed Michael Knights, an expert on Iraq currently with the Washington Institute for Near East Policy.

Iran, determined to stamp its authority over its oil-rich neighbor and traditional foe once the Americans go, can unleash these "special groups" any time it wants to.

One ominous sign is the recent return to Iraq from Iran of two other notorious group commanders, Sadrist breakaway Abu Mustapha al-Sheibani and Ismail al-Lami, aka Abu Deraa, one of the most bloodthirsty of the Shiite warlords.

Source: Space War.
Link: http://www.spacewar.com/reports/Iraqi_Shiites_threaten_departing_US_army_999.html.

European special forces fought in Libya: Iraq FM

New York (AFP)
Sept 20, 2011

European special forces fought alongside Libyan rebels to oust the country's strongman Moamer Kadhafi, Iraqi Foreign Minister Hoshyar Zebari said on Tuesday.

"Not only have been there been air attacks on Tripoli and other places, I can tell you there have been special forces, European forces fighting on the ground to defeat Kadhafi," Zebari said.

Media reports have said that British and French special forces took part in the fighting, in addition to the NATO air campaign, but London and Paris have not officially confirmed the reports.

Zebari, who was addressing the Council on Foreign Relations in New York, did not give any further details.

His comments came the same day that the United Nations welcomed Libya's new leaders, who have secured most of the North African country after capturing Tripoli in August and forcing Kadhafi into hiding.

Assisted by NATO airstrikes, the rebels fought a six-month conflict with Kadhafi's forces that killed 25,000 people, according to Libya's new transitional leader, Mustafa Abdel Jalil.

Zebari added that the uprisings in Libya and other Arab countries had been inspired by Iraq's example.

"We've been approached by the Libyans, by the Tunisians, by the Egyptians to see how we did it," the Iraqi foreign minister said.

Eight years after a US invasion led to the downfall of Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein, Iraq remains a struggling democracy propped up by US forces and shaken by frequent insurgent attacks.

Source: Space War.
Link: http://www.spacewar.com/reports/European_special_forces_fought_in_Libya_Iraq_FM_999.html.

Cairo not serious about reform, groups say

Sept. 20, 2011

CAIRO, Sept. 20 (UPI) -- The military council in Cairo has introduced only "cosmetic changes" since a revolution ended Hosni Mubarak's reign, Egyptian human rights groups said.

A group of 22 Egyptian human rights organizations accused Egypt's ruling Supreme Council of the Armed Forces of keeping much of the previous regime's policies in place, the regional Gulf News reports.

"Those steering the helm of the country tend to keep the basic policy of the ousted president regime and be complacent about introducing cosmetic changes," the groups were quoted as stating.

SCAF has faced mounting protests over what's perceived as a slow pace of reform in the country. The ruling military council was rapped recently for extending an emergency law amid renewed tensions with Israel.

The rights groups' complaint follows a decision to let a former official in Mubarak's disbanded National Democracy Party form a new party to take part in elections this year and in 2012.

Hossam Badrawy, the former secretary-general of the disbanded NDP, will lead the new Union Party.

A petition by Islamic group Jama'a al-Islamiya to form the Construction and Development Party was rejected, however, because its platform was seen as "purely religious."

Source: United Press International (UPI).
Link: http://www.upi.com/Top_News/Special/2011/09/20/Cairo-not-serious-about-reform-groups-say/UPI-94411316525247/.

Tunisian parties sign transition roadmap

A new document aims to assuage public fears about the powers of Tunisia's soon-to-be-elected constituent assembly.

By Houda Trabelsi for Magharebia in Tunis – 20/09/11

Twelve Tunisian political parties last week agreed to a document that outlines their moral obligation to ensure the success of Tunisia's democratic transition.

The main goal of the Declaration of Transition Process, adopted on Thursday (September 15th), is to protect the Constituent Assembly election date against "political maneuvering", High Commission for the Realization of Revolutionary Goals chief Iadh Ben Achour said.

"This initiative is also aimed at reassuring the public opinion and putting an end to confusions and fears in the Tunisian society about the powers of the Constituent Assembly and its tenure," he added. "This is in addition to calming the political atmosphere in the country."

The signees include the parties represented in Ben Achour's commission, since it is "impossible to bring all the parties that are currently operating in the scene together", he said. By signing this declaration, the parties unify "their visions to make the democratic process in the country a success", according to the reform panel chief.

Other parties and independents can still join the charter, but its content is only binding to those who sign it. "It is not aimed at bringing back the parties that withdrew from the initiative," he added.

"The transitional period is one of the most difficult stages that countries can go through," Ben Achour said. "Concord is the only option for Tunisia for the time being to successfully pass all the next elections until a new constitution has been drafted to be the main foundation of legitimacy in the country."

"The document is a message that is sure to reach the Tunisian people, to the effect that we differ but then agree, and that it's our responsibility before the people to abide by a roadmap that would reassure everyone," Progressive Democratic Party (PDP) Secretary-General Maya Jribi said.

According to Arab Democratic Avant-Garde Party chief Kheireddine Souabni, "The initiative has answered several questions that were worrying the political class and average citizens in Tunisia".

"This document has also brought the opinions of parties closer and has given us a chance for fair competition," he added.

The initiative shows that "the political scene in the country can produce agreements when needed or in times of tension", according to rights activist Ghazi Ghrairi. "This is encouraging and reassuring for everyone," he said.

However, there were voices of opposition as well. Some see the move as a breach of the principles of the Tunisian revolution.

The document aims to stifle "the political transition process in Tunisia for the longest period possible period", argued journalist and rights defender Chawki Ben Salem.

"Tunisians under Ben Ali's rule are different from today's Tunisians," he added. "What is happening right now is just an attempt to perpetuate the period of vacuum and nothing else."

The signees vowed to uphold the code of ethics issued by the Independent High Electoral Commission (ISIE) to ensure mutual respect in electoral campaigns and agreed on the need to limit the tenure of the Constituent Assembly to one year. According to the declaration, the current interim president and government will proceed with their duties pending the October 23rd vote, the election of a new president and the formation of a new government.

Source: Magharebia.
Link: http://www.magharebia.com/cocoon/awi/xhtml1/en_GB/features/awi/features/2011/09/20/feature-01.

Countdown to first Soyuz launch at Kourou under way

Kourou, French Guiana (ESA)
Sep 21, 2011

The clock is ticking for the first Soyuz flight from Europe's Spaceport in French Guiana. The rocket, which will carry the first two satellites of Europe's Galileo navigation system into orbit, is being prepared for launch on 20 October.

Final assembly began on 12 September of the three-stage Soyuz ST-B, consisting of four first-stage boosters clustered around the core second stage, topped off by the third stage. The Launcher Flight Readiness Review in July gave the green light to begin assembling the rocket.

The campaign began on 16 August in the assembly and testing building - known by its original 'MIK' Russian acronym - with electrical and mechanical tests of the upgraded, reignitable Fregat-MT upper stage. It will carry an additional 900 kg of propellants for its double-satellite load.

Fregat was then moved to the Payload Preparation Building S3B to fill its four spherical propellant tanks.

Soyuz will be rolled out horizontally to the launch pad on 14 October and raised into its vertical launch position.

A new 45 m-tall mobile gantry was built specifically for Soyuz operations in French Guiana. It protects the satellites and the launcher from the humid tropical environment and provides access to the Soyuz at various levels for checkout activities.

The upper composite, comprising the Fregat upper stage, payload and fairing, is then hoisted on top of Soyuz.

October's launch will be doubly historic: the first Soyuz from a spaceport outside of Baikonur in Kazakhstan or Plesetsk in Russia and the start of building Europe's Galileo satnav constellation.

The two Galileo satellites have arrived from the Rome facility of Thales Alenia Space Italy - the first on 7 September, the second on 14 September - and are undergoing initial preparations.

The next step will be to attach the satellites to Fregat, followed by the fairing.

Next year, the second pair of satellites will join them in orbit, proving the design of the Galileo system in advance of the other 26 satellites.

These first four satellites, built by a consortium led by EADS Astrium Germany, will form the operational nucleus of the full Galileo satnav constellation.

They combine the best atomic clock ever flown for navigation - accurate to one second in three million years - with a powerful transmitter to broadcast precise navigation data worldwide.

Source: Space-Travel.
Link: http://www.space-travel.com/reports/Countdown_to_first_Soyuz_launch_at_Kourou_under_way_999.html.

The US will conquer deep space with Russian engines

by Konstantin Bogdanov for RIA Novosti
Moscow (RIA Novosti)
Sep 21, 2011

The United States has announced it is developing a heavy rocket for deep space expeditions. It might use Russian-made engines which is the result of house-cleaning in the U.S. space industry.

On Wednesday, NASA reported that it had chosen a design for a new carrier rocket called the Space Launch System (SLS), which will send future American spacecraft on missions to explore the solar system.

"This launch system will ... ensure continued U.S. leadership in space, and inspire millions around the world," said NASA Administrator Charles Bolden as he made a public presentation of the project. So, with the Shuttles retired in the summer of 2011, the Americans are lining up something new.

Source: Space-Travel.
Link: http://www.space-travel.com/reports/The_US_will_conquer_deep_space_with_Russian_engines_999.html.

AU Recognizes NTC in Libya

20 SEPTEMBER 2011

Pretoria — The African Union (AU) has officially recognized the National Transitional Council (NTC) as the representative of the Libyan people as they form an all-inclusive transitional government that will occupy the Libyan seat at the AU.

"The AU stands ready to support the Libyan people, on the basis of the AU Roadmap and working together with the international community, as they rebuild their country towards a united, democratic, peaceful and prosperous Libya," read a statement issued by the office of the Chairperson of the African Union, Teodoro Obiang Nguema Mbasogo, who is also the President of Equatorial Guinea.

On Tuesday, Mbasogo received a briefing from the Ad Hoc Committee of the AU Peace and Security Council regarding the developments in Libya, on the eve of the 66th Session of the United Nations General Assembly in New York.

The briefing was based on the outcomes of the meeting of the AU Peace and Security Council held in Addis Ababa on 26 August and the meeting of the Ad Hoc Committee on Libya held on 14 September in Pretoria.

At both meetings, the AU encouraged the Libyan stakeholders to form an all-inclusive transitional government that would work towards the promotion of national unity, reconciliation and democracy and urged the National Transitional Council (NTC) to protect all foreign workers, including African migrant workers.

The leadership of the National Transitional Council, in its letter to the Chairperson of the AU Commission on 5 September, provided assurances stressing their commitment to:

* the African continent;

* give priority to national unity and to bring together all Libyan stakeholders, without any exception, to rebuild the country; and to

* protect all foreign workers within Libya, including the African migrant workers.

These commitments were in line with the provisions of the AU Roadmap.

Source: allAfrica.
Link: http://allafrica.com/stories/201109201513.html.