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Sunday, February 21, 2010

Algerian teachers to receive pay hike, retroactive benefits

2010-02-21

Algerian teachers will see a nearly three per cent increase in wages and benefits starting next month, the Algerian Education Ministry announced in a statement on Saturday (February 20th). Guidance councilors, nutrition educators and other professionals in the sector will also receive monthly net increases from 7,013 dinars to 10,289 dinars, El Moudjahid reported. The teachers will also receive retroactive benefits.

Source: Magharebia.com.
Link: http://magharebia.com/en_GB/articles/awi/newsbriefs/general/2010/02/21/newsbrief-04.

Twin bombs detonate near Algerian football pitch

2010-02-21

Simultaneous bomb blasts in Boumerdes on Saturday (February 20th) killed one Algerian soldier and injured five others El Watan reported. Security sources said the bombs, buried near a football pitch in Afire, near Dellys, were detonated remotely. The five wounded soldiers were not in uniform, suggesting that they had probably been playing football when the explosions occurred.

Source: Magharebia.com
Link: http://magharebia.com/en_GB/articles/awi/newsbriefs/general/2010/02/21/newsbrief-03.

No room for Honduras in Latin American Summit

Honduran President Porfirio Lobo, who assumed power through an election in the coup-hit country, is not invited to the second Summit of Latin America and the Caribbean, says Mexico, the summit organizer.

Mexico, which will host the event on February 22-23, said the Honduran government would not attend the summit as it should first be recognized by the Organization of the American States (OAS).

Lobo seized power in a presidential poll, organized to end a crisis in Honduras emanating from a military coup that removed the constitutional President Manuel Zelaya.

Many countries across the continent rejected Zelaya's ouster and the election that was meant to find a substitute for him.

The second Summit of Latin America and the Caribbean, which will begin in the Mexican city of Cancun on Monday, is going to bring together heads of states and governments of more than 24 countries of the region.

It will focus on achieving a common stance on the main international problems and the issues of economic integration of Latin American and Caribbean nations.

The Summit will also have in its main sphere of attention the crisis in Haiti, tension in the Malvinas (Falkland) Islands and the aftermath of the coup in Honduras.

Source: PressTV.
Link: http://www.presstv.ir/detail.aspx?id=119166§ionid=351020705.

Ahmadinejad blames powers for spreading insecurity

Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad blames world powers for spreading insecurity and instability in the Middle East.

"The so-called powerful countries are merely after their own interests. They are willing go so far as to sacrifice other countries and nations for their interests," Ahmadinejad said in a meeting with Azerbaijan's Parliament Speaker Ogtay Asadov in Tehran on Sunday.

"These countries have always sought to cause insecurity in the region (Middle East)," he added.

The Iranian president stressed the importance of bolstering cooperation among regional countries to "counter the hegemonic system" overshadowing the world.

"The weakening of the so-called powerful countries will completely change the state of affairs on the regional and international scale," Ahmadinejad said.

He urged regional countries to use a common currency other than the dollar in their trade and economic exchanges.

Asadov said world powers have never been willing to meet the interests of regional countries.

He called on the Caspian Sea littoral states to strengthen cooperation with the purpose of serving their common interests.

Source: PressTV.
Link: http://www.presstv.ir/detail.aspx?id=119165§ionid=351020101.

Saudi student: Clinton ducked my question

Saudi 12th grader blasts Clinton for not giving 'straight answer' on Israeli nuclear weapons.

RIYADH - A Saudi student on Sunday blasted US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton for skirting her question on Israel's nuclear arsenal during a "town hall" meeting at a Jeddah college.

"I did not get a straight answer," Mariyam Alavi said in a letter published in Arab News on her question to the top US diplomat last Tuesday.

"My question was simple and direct enough," she wrote, but Clinton's response "was very unsatisfying."

Alavi, a 12th grader at the International Indian School in Jeddah, attended the meeting at the elite Dar al-Hekma College with six classmates. She had asked Clinton about Washington's stance on the existence of nuclear weapons in the Middle East.

If the Americans "so vehemently oppose Iran's nuclear program," she had asked, "then why isn't the US asking Israel to give up their nuclear weapons?"

Clinton gave a lengthy answer detailing the US case against Iran, but did not mention Israel. She did, however, say that "we want not only a world free of nuclear weapons, we want a Middle East free of nuclear weapons, including everyone."

Alavi's Arab News letter assailed US "hypocrisy" over the issue, reflecting a widely held sentiment in the region.

"Clinton said that the United States, under the able leadership of President Barack Obama, was trying to repair and strengthen its ties with the Muslim world.

"It is high time she realized it couldn't be done without answering the questions uppermost in the minds of the Middle East people."

Contacted by AFP, Alavi said she had been nervous about asking such a "politically provocative question" but was then encouraged by strong applause from the audience when she addressed Clinton.

Clinton had been on a three-day trip to Qatar and Saudi Arabia to discuss, among other things, Iran's nuclear program.

Source: Middle East Online.
Link: http://www.middle-east-online.com/english/?id=37377.

Iranian Nobel laureate sues top daily

Iran's leading conservative newspaper faces fine or suspension if found guilty by Tehran court.

TEHRAN - Iran's leading conservative newspaper, Kayhan, was in court to face defamation charges on Sunday from a number of plaintiffs, including Nobel Peace Prize laureate and human rights campaigner Shirin Ebadi.

A close aide to President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, Esfandiar Rahim Mashaie, was among the plaintiffs, complaining that the paper had accused him of an "anti-national act."

Ebadi has accused Kayhan of "defamation" and "spreading lies" over its description of her as a "Shiite but Bahai supporter," ISNA news agency reported.

Two other human rights activists, jailed journalist Emadeddin Baghi and lawyer Shadi Sadr, pressed similar charges.

In the trial which opened on Sunday, the paper can face a fine or suspension if found guilty.

Kayhan is one of the main backers of the government and its editor, Hossein Shariatmadari, is an influential hawk appointed by Iran's supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.

Iranian reformists and dissidents have long been the target of vitriolic attacks by Kayhan, which accuses them of being foreign stooges.

Several reformist journals critical of the government have been hit by frequent closures under Ahmadinejad, especially after his disputed re-election in June.

Source: Middle East online.
Link: http://www.middle-east-online.com/english/?id=37372.

Saudi could allow women lawyers in court

Saudi Justice Minister drafting new rules to permit female lawyers to argue family cases.

RIYADH - Saudi Arabia could soon allow women lawyers to appear in court, though apparently only representing other women, the country's justice minister said in comments published on Sunday.

Justice Minister Mohammed al-Issa said the ministry is drafting new rules to permit female lawyers to argue family cases, which could be passed soon, Saudi newspapers reported.

The women would be able to represent women in marriage, divorce, custody and other family cases, the newspapers said.

Female lawyers in the kingdom can currently work only inside the women's sections of law and government offices, where they do not come into contact with men.

All judges in the kingdom are male clerics.

As part of ongoing judicial reforms, the Saudi government is developing a network of specialized courts, including "personal status" or family courts, where the women lawyers would be allowed to practice.

Source: Middle East Online.
Link: http://www.middle-east-online.com/english/?id=37367.

Turkish democracy challenges army influence

Popularity of Turkish government leaves little room for interference by army in politics.

ANKARA - Turkey's army is in danger of losing its prestige according to analysts, after charges of conspiring against the democratically elected government.

"Times change", journalist Mehmet Ali Birand said, arguing that the army occupies a less central position in Turkey today.

Since the so-called Ergenekon trial began in 2007 over a suspected major plot against the government involving many officers, the press and lawmakers have disclosed a dozen other alleged attempts to destabilize Recep Tayyip Erdogan's government.

The unease in the military is so strong that the chief of the Turkish general staff, General Ilker Basbug, said at the end of January that coups d'etat, carried out four times by the army in 50 years, "belong to the past".

Writing in the liberal newspaper Hurriyet, Birand said "losing prestige in the public's eye may cause cracks in the military".

The military will have to change, he argued, it will have to "get used to criticism" and "get used to not engineering politics".

The media for its part, "will have to get used to stop provoking the military", he added.

As well as the lengthy Ergenekon trial, the Turkish courts announced at the start of February that 19 people including nine naval officers, would be on trial in May accused of "belonging to an armed terrorist organization".

They are accused of planning assassinations to provoke chaos in the country.

Fifteen more navy officers and two retired soldiers will go on trial accused of planning attacks in April.

In an unprecedented move in January, police investigating a suspected assassination plot against vice-prime minister Bulent Arinc searched a special forces barracks in the capital Ankara, where secret archives were held.

"This ultimate audacity shows that no military man, however high-ranking, is protected from arrest or at least receiving a humiliating summons", academic Jean Marcou, head of a think tank on Turkey, said on his blog.

Erdogan's government is pursuing very active "zero-sum game" diplomacy with all of Turkey's neighbors.

The so-called "two and a half wars" in the nineties, with Turkey's main threats coming from Syria, Greece and the Kurdish uprising, have lost their pertinence.

Relations with Athens and Damascus have notably improved while the Kurdish conflict has become less intense.

"The army will rediscover its prestige and role as referee if Turkey falls back into an unstable coalition regime", says Birand, but this is not the case at the moment, with Erdogan holding a comfortable majority in parliament.

Source: Middle East Online.
Link: http://www.middle-east-online.com/english/?id=37379.

Australia threatens to sue Japan over whaling

Japan has described Australia's threat of taking a legal action against its whaling program as 'unfortunate.'

Japan's Foreign Minister Katsuya Okada said that Tokyo will prove its activities are legal and according to regulations set forth by the International Whaling Commission (IWC).

Though Japan abandoned commercial whaling in 1986 after agreeing to a global moratorium, international rules, however, allowed it to continue whaling under the protection of a research program.

After a two- day negotiation with Australia, Japan's foreign minister asserted, "It's very unfortunate the Australian side has indicated it will take action in an international court."

"Should action become a reality,” he added, “Japan will seek to represent its case with the IWC that its activities are legal."

On Friday, Australian Prime Minister Kevin Rudd gave Japan only until November to stop whale hunting. Australia has consistently expressed its opposition to Japan's extensive whale-hunting over the years.

Conservationists have said that whaling is a cover for the sale and consumption of whale meat.

Source: PressTV.
Link: http://www.presstv.ir/detail.aspx?id=119157§ionid=351020406.

Turkish film tops the 60th Berlinale

A film from Turkey has scooped the Golden Bear award for Best Film of the 60th edition of the Berlin International Film Festival.

Honey, the third part of Turkish filmmaker Semih Kaplanoglu's reverse-order trilogy, competed with 20 films at the 2010 Berlinale.

The film recounts the story of a six-year-old boy who goes in search of his bee-keeper father, who has gone missing.

This year's best director title went to Polish filmmaker Roman Polanski for his political thriller The Ghost Writer.

The Silver Bear award was received by The Ghost Writer producer Alan Sarde, as the 76-year-old Oscar-winning director is under house arrest for sexual charges.

Polanski completed the film while in jail and under house arrest.

The complete list of the 60th Berlinale winners, announced on February 20, is as follows.

Golden Bear for Best Film:
Bal (Honey), Semih Kaplanoglu, Turkey

Silver Bear - The Jury Grand Prix:
If I Want To Whistle, I Whistle, Florin Serban, Romania

Silver Bear - Best Director:
Roman Polanski for The Ghost Writer

Silver Bear - Best Actress:
Shinobu Terajima in Caterpillar, Koji Wakamatsu, Japan

Silver Bear - Best Actor:
Grigori Dobrygin for How I Ended This Summer, Alexei Popogrebsky, Russia
and
Sergei Puskepalis for How I Ended This Summer, Alexei Popogrebsky, Russia

Silver Bear - Outstanding Artistic Achievement in the Category Camera:
Pavel Kostomarov for How I Ended This Summer, Alexei Popogrebsky, Russia

Silver Bear - Best Script:
Wang Quan'an and Na Jin for Apart Together by Wang Quan'an, China

Alfred Bauer Prize:
Awarded in memory of the Festival founder for a work of particular innovation.

If I Want To Whistle, I Whistle, Florin Serban, Romania

Source: PressTV.
Link: http://www.presstv.ir/detail.aspx?id=119155§ionid=3510212.

Afghanistan calls for investements by Iranian firms

Afghanistan invites Iranian firms to help develop economic cooperation between the two countries by investing in different fields in the country.

“Afghanistan imports goods worth $5 billion per year but the country would be able to produce half of the goods inside the country through a cooperation with Iranian investor companies,” said Noorullah Delawari, Afghan State Minister and President of Afghanistan Investment Support Agency on Saturday, during a visit to Iran Foreign Investment Company.

He mentioned vast mineral resources in Afghanistan as one of the grounds that could attract Iranian companies.

Delawari invited Iranian companies to invest in fields such as power plants, cement factories, metal industries and construction materials such as building stones.

”Afghanistan has been able to attract investments worth $8bn despite security problems,” he said.

Source: PressTV.
Link: http://www.presstv.ir/detail.aspx?id=119154§ionid=351020403.

Iran Parliament introduces bill to review UK ties

The Iranian Parliament (Majlis) is working on a bill that calls on the government to reconsider Iran's relations with Britain, says a top Iranian lawmaker.

"There is a serious demand in Iran to downgrade ties with the British government. Parliamentarians have now proposed a bill regarding the issue," said Kazem Jalali, the rapporteur of the Foreign Relations and National Security Commission of the Iranian Parliament, on Sunday.

Remarks made by British officials after the Iranian presidential election on June 12 drew sharp criticism from the Tehran government, prompting the Iranian Parliament to introduce a resolution to reconsider ties with Britain. The bill has received widespread support in the country.

However, Jalali added that ending all relations with London would not necessarily resolve the issues between the two governments, stressing that better management of ties with Britain would be a more effective solution.

The Iranian government has repeatedly accused Britain and a number of other Western states of inciting the post-election unrest in the country.

Earlier in January, Iranian Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki said Tehran would consider limiting relations with London in various fields.

The idea gained momentum after President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad pledged to give the move 'some serious thought,' saying the bossy and intrusive attitude of British officials in the wake of the June presidential election had left Tehran no choice but to limit the level of its relations with London.

Diplomatic relations between Iran and Britain was severed in the years following the 1979 Islamic Revolution.

However, in September 1990, Iran and Britain resumed ties at a lower level, which was gradually increased to an ambassadorial level in the ensuing years. The two countries eventually restored full diplomatic relations after a visit by Jack Straw, the then British foreign secretary, to Iran in 2001.

Source: PressTV.
Link: http://www.presstv.ir/detail.aspx?id=119153§ionid=351020101.

More countries demanding Iranian electricity

Iran's Energy Minister Majid Namjou says seven new countries have joined the list of states that have requested to buy electricity from Iran.

Namjou declared that Russia, India, Qatar, the UAE, Jordan, Syria and Oman are the new countries that have asked Iran for electricity.

He added that Iran has the capability to turn into a regional electricity hub.

"Iran exchanges electricity with most of its neighbors and many of them are interested in increasing their electricity exchange with Iran," Mehr news agency quoted Namjou as saying on Sunday.

"There are also trilateral talks with Iran, Azerbaijan and Russia underway, that aim to connect Iran's electricity network to Europe," he added.

Source: PressTV.
Link: http://www.presstv.ir/detail.aspx?id=119151§ionid=351020103.

Hariri vows to follow in his father's footsteps

‘We must consecrate national unity’
By Nafez Kawas
Daily Star correspondent
Saturday, February 13, 2010

BEIRUT: Prime Minister Saad Hariri vowed on Friday to follow in the footsteps of his father, assassinated former Prime Minister Rafik Hariri.

“Rafik Hariri opted for the path of coexistence between the Lebanese and was keen on preserving the unity, stability and development [of the country],” he told visitors on Friday.

“We must consecrate national unity,” the premier added. “We have fought for the last four years to build a nation for all the Lebanese.”

Urging supporters to participate in the downtown Beirut rally on February 14 to mark five years since the assassination of his father, he said Sunday’s rally “will show that we are keen on continuing Rafik Hariri’s path.”

In an interview Friday evening broadcasted live of MTV and Future TV, Hariri stressed that “only death” would separate him from his allies in the March 14 Forces.

Hariri said Progressive Socialist Party leader MP Walid Jumblatt remained a “main ally” to the Future Movement, adding it was his “democratic right” to hold a different political opinion.

Jumblatt said on Wednesday he would attend the commemoration of Hariri but would not make a speech. Following last year’s parliamentary polls, Jumblatt broke with the March 14 alliance saying the circumstances which tied him to the group were no longer applicable.

Also on Wednesday, Jumblatt said during an interview with As-Safir newspaper that he had never asked the US to invade Syria like it did in Iraq.

Hariri said on Friday that he had turned the page with Syria, adding that the two neighboring countries ought to build “mutual trust.” The premier said talks were ongoing with Syrian President Bashar Assad.

Hariri said he and Assad had “frankly tackled” pending issues and discussed “how we can build for the future.”

“Assad was clear that he wants to build state-to-state relations with Lebanon,” he said.

Hariri praised the initiative by Saudi King Abdullah to mend Arab divisions, adding that if tensions had persisted between Saudi Arabia and Syria, the situation in Lebanon would have been critical.

Rafik Hariri’s death in a massive bomb blast on Beirut seafront in February 2005 was widely blamed on Syria although Damascus has denied any involvement. An international tribunal based in The Hague was set up by a UN Security Council Resolution in 2007 to try suspects in the murder.

Saad Hariri said he would respect any findings made by the Special Tribunal for Lebanon (STL) concerning his father’s assassination.

United Nations chief Ban Ki-Moon’s spokesman said Friday that the UN remains committed to legal efforts to uncover the truth about the slaying of Hariri five years ago.

“The secretary general reaffirms the commitment of the UN to the efforts of the STL to uncover the truth, so as to bring those responsible to justice and end impunity in Lebanon,” Martin Nesirky said in a statement.

Tackling recent threats made by Israel against Lebanon, Hariri said he was leading contacts to raise the awareness of the international community about the dangers of such threats.

Hariri also renewed Lebanon’s commitment to the implementation of UN Security Council Resolution 1701, which put and end to the summer 2006 war with Israel. Concerning Hizbullah’s arsenal, Hariri said the issue was “problematic” and ought to be tackled during National Dialogue sessions

On Friday, the March 14 Forces laid the final touches on preparations for the February 14 rally to mark the fifth anniversary of former Premier Rafik Hariri’s assassination,

The Central News Agency reported that a delegation from the Development and Liberation bloc – representing Speaker Nabih Berri – would visit former Premier Rafik Hariri’s memorial in downtown Beirut on the eve of February 14.

The agency added that other figures within the March 8 coalition would also visit the memorial. However, they would not participate in the commemoration.

On Friday, Russian Ambassador Sergei Boukine laid a wreath on Hariri’s memorial. Boukine praised the late premiere’s struggle for the impendence of Lebanon.

Source: The Daily Star.
Link: http://www.dailystar.com.lb/article.asp?edition_id=1&categ_id=2&article_id=111734.

Lebanese, UN officials honor fallen comrades in Haiti

By Dalila Mahdawi
Daily Star staff
Friday, January 22, 2010

BEIRUT: Lebanese and UN officials gathered Thursday to honor the victims of last week’s Haiti earthquake, just hours after a Middle East Airlines aid plane returned to Beirut.

“Not in war, but in a tragic natural disaster the UN has suffered its single largest calamity,” UN special coordinator for Lebanon, Michael Williams, told a crowd of colleagues and Lebanese parliamentarians at the UN Economic and Social Commission for Western Asia (ESCWA) headquarters in Downtown Beirut.

The January 12 earthquake killed up to 200,000 people, according to Haitian government estimates quoted by the European Commission, though thousands are still missing under the rubble. The commission has said 2 million Haitians are now homeless, with 250,000 in need of urgent aid. The UN has so far confirmed 20 fatalities among its staff members, including special representative of the secretary general and head of mission, Tunisian national Hedi Annabi, and his deputy, Brazilian national Luiz Carlos da Costa.

“Perhaps the best way to honor our fallen is to reflect on the fact that they lost their lives in the service [of] others,” Williams said. “In the midst of the pain and the shock that we feel, we realize that living up to the memories of our loved colleagues means continuing with even more determination and commitment the work to help the devastated people of Haiti and others around the world,” he said, adding the UN was grateful for Lebanon’s assistance to Haiti.

UNIFIL’s deputy commander Brigadier General Apurba Kumar Bardalai meanwhile paid tribute to fallen peacekeepers from the UN Stabilization Mission in Haiti.

“Being away from our families, we develop strong ties of friendship with our colleagues, who become our family away from the family,” he said. “The death of so many colleagues in Haiti has thus been a very personal loss for many of us, [and] also a professional loss for the United Nations and the international community at large.”

Bardalai said that out of respect for their fallen colleagues, UNIFIL personnel had renewed their determination to continue toward achieving peace and stability in southern Lebanon. “It is at times like these that we are reminded of the risks taken and sacrifices made by the peacekeepers working under the UN umbrella,” he added.

ESCWA Executive Secretary Bader Omar AlDafa also paid his respects to what he called the “courage” of the UN’s Haiti personnel.

The memorial ceremony came as an official Lebanese delegation carrying aid to the Lebanese diaspora in Haiti touched down at Rafik Hariri International Airport, bringing back Lebanese national Nancy Jarjoura Hayar, eight Syrians and two Palestinians who were injured in the disastrous tremor. Lebanon’s Foreign Ministry said one Lebanese national died in the earthquake.

One of the Palestinians, Najib Tarazi, sustained broken bones while working at a supermarket in the Haitan capital, Port-au-Prince, and was taken by ambulance to a hospital upon arrival. “The roof fell on me,” AP quoted Tarazi as saying. “I stayed in the rubble for seven hours until they found me.”

The agency also quoted Lebanese citizen Nancy Yahya as saying she was at home with her children in Haiti when the house started shaking. “I said, ‘It’s over. We are dead,’” Yahya said. “I thank God that we survived.” Rasha Hashem, a Syrian woman who said three of her relatives killed in the earthquake were still buried under the rubble, was meanwhile seen burying her face in her hands and crying as relatives tried to comfort her. Syrian Ambassador to Lebanon Ali Abdel-Karim Ali has said that two Syrian citizens, a couple, were killed in Haiti.

At a meeting on Monday ahead of the plane’s departure, officials said that several “logistical and technical problems faced the preparations,” especially because transportation had become so difficult within the destroyed capital city.

The plane departed on Tuesday, carrying 35 tons of non-monetary aid.

Also on Thursday, the Lebanese Red Cross said that it had opened a bank account for donations for Haiti. Anyone wishing to donate can pay in money to Fransabank account number 21.10.935605.01

Source: The Daily Star.
Link: http://www.dailystar.com.lb/article.asp?edition_id=1&categ_id=1&article_id=110954.

Tehran to establish new limits on cash withdrawals

Friday, January 22, 2010

TEHRAN: Iran will begin Thursday limiting the amount of money individuals can withdraw daily in what officials say is a measure to battle money laundering but analysts see as an attempt to curb inflation by slowing the flow of money.

Deputy Finance Minister Asghar Abolhasani said withdrawals of more than 150 million rials (roughly $15,000) per day would be banned “to combat money-laundering,” state radio reported.

The decision means an account holder cannot withdraw per day more than that amount in cash, but can still write checks for larger amounts.

Finance Minister Shamsoddin Hosseini told a conference Wednesday that “controlling the cash” would serve to battle money-laundering and financial terrorism.

But analysts said the restriction was apparently aimed more at combating double-digit inflation in a country where the economy is largely in shambles in part from sanctions and what critics contend are President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s free-spending populist policies.

“It’s a measure to try to contain prices rises, or inflation, and we have to wait and see if this, with additional measures, will contain price pressures in Iran,” said John Sfakianakis, chief economist with Banque Saudi Fransi-Credit Agricole Group in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.

Ahmadinejad said Tuesday his government plans to lop off zeros from the country’s currency, arguing that the value of the rial was grossly undervalued.

That change was also seen as an attempt to rein in inflation, which some analysts say is at least twice as high as what the government official reported at 13.6 percent annually in December. Inflation had peaked at around 30 percent in 2008, but the government claims it has since steadily fallen.

Inflation remains a pressing issue in the country where political tensions are running high over the disputed June presidential election that gave Ahmadinejad a second term.

In November, state-run Press TV’s website quoted a top central bank official as saying liquidity rose sharply during the first half of the Iranian calendar year and the bank had taken steps to slow the growth rate.

Iran’s Parliament and the country’s constitutional watchdog, the Council of Guardians, recently signed off on Ahmadinejad’s plan to cut fuel and food subsidies, with the money instead to be channeled directly to the poor.

Concerns are rife that the move will spark further unrest in the country and fuel inflation. Experts have warned cutting subsidies on fuel and food would lead to 60 percent inflation in April, the month when the cuts are slated to go into effect.

As part of the new restrictions on cash withdrawals, the government ordered banks and currency exchange offices to report all their hard-currency transactions.

Officials say the move is part of an effort to crack down on money laundering and other shady currency deals, as well as boost financial transparency in the country.

Source: The Daily Star.
Link: http://www.dailystar.com.lb/article.asp?edition_id=10&categ_id=3&article_id=110938.

Fatah al-Islam 'plotting attack' against judges

By Youssef Diab
Daily Star staff
Friday, January 22, 2010

BEIRUT: Judicial authorities have been warned of a possible attack by the Fatah al-Islam militant group against one of the judges trying its members, sources revealed Thursday.

The authorities received a security report saying the group aimed to stage an attack against one of the judges involved in trying members of Fatah al-Islam, according to the sources.

A source said the report was based on evidence and information gathered by security forces from calls made by a number of “suspect elements.” The information revealed that the militant group was plotting an attack on one of the judges currently assigned to try Fatah al-Islam members. The source also hinted that the attack would probably be launched from the Palestinian refugee camp of Ain al-Hilweh in south Lebanon.

The report also asked military and security authorities to reinforce surveillance around Ain al-Hilweh, to observe the moves of suspected individuals and to check the identities of everyone going in and out of the camp. It also demanded that security be tightened at justice palaces and courts throughout the country, and that judges who are investigating cases involving Fatah al-Islam members be escorted by security personnel.

Fatah al-Islam first emerged in 2006 after it split from the Palestinian group Fatah al-Intifada. It comprised a few hundred fighters and was based in the Nahr al-Bared Palestinian refugee camp in north Lebanon.

Fierce battles between Fatah al-Islam and the Lebanese Army broke out at Nahr al-Bared in 2007, killing 400 people, including 168 soldiers, and displacing some 30,000 refugees from the camp. Fatah al-Islam has also been linked to deadly bombings targeting UN peacekeepers in the south and civilian buses.

Members of the group have been arrested in recent years and sentenced to imprisonment, hard labor or death.

The Beirut Criminal Court and the Military Tribunal have on several occasions tried members of the group on various charges, including conducting or organizing terrorist acts.

Source: The Daily Star.
Link: http://www.dailystar.com.lb/article.asp?edition_id=1&categ_id=2&article_id=110964.

Germany orders tighter security as passenger flees after 'explosive' alert

By Agence France Presse (AFP)
Friday, January 22, 2010

BERLIN: Germany’s interior minister called Thursday for a full inquiry into a major alert at Munich airport when a man fled security personnel after his laptop tested positive for possible explosives.

“I have ordered every single circumstance surrounding this incident to be looked at with all those involved,” Thomas de Maiziere said on Deutschlandfunk radio, adding that he was taking it “very seriously.”

“If necessary, then consequences must be taken at Munich airport,” he said, as well as other airports in Germany if problems “of a structural nature” are detected, he said.

Police said after the incident, which involved parts of Munich airport being sealed off, the traveler was most likely a businessman in a hurry to catch his flight, unaware that security personnel wanted to check his laptop.

“I find it unfathomable that someone can simply disappear with his laptop after security checks,” Harald Schneider from the Bavarian police union said. “Therefore it is necessary that there are more security personnel and police.”

“If you check someone, you should be able to stop him,” German police union chief Josef Scheuring told the Sueddeutsche Zeitung daily.

He also said that the situation was not helped by airport security firms employing poorly paid and unmotivated staff.

Airports around the world have been on high alert since a Nigerian man allegedly tried to blow up an airliner over the US on December 25 with explosives concealed in his underwear.

US Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano was to press European Union interior ministers at a meeting in Toledo, Spain, on Thursday to install body scanners at airports in the 27-nation bloc.

De Maiziere said that tests in Germany on body scanners were “very promising” and that the government would make a decision on whether to introduce them later this year.

“Perhaps we could offer them to passengers in order to gain people’s trust, saying in one channel there is a body scanner, which is quick, and that in the other a body search, which takes a bit longer. Then we can see how high the acceptance is,” he said.

Source: The Daily Star.
Link: http://www.dailystar.com.lb/article.asp?edition_id=10&categ_id=2&article_id=110936.

US arms to Somalia could be used in abuses: Amnesty International

By Agence France Presse (AFP)
Friday, January 22, 2010

LONDON: The US is sending shipments of arms to war-ravaged Somalia which could be used to commit “gross and widespread abuses,” Amnesty International warned Thursday.

In a report on the unstable Horn of Africa nation, the London-based rights group detailed shipments of weapons from the US to the internationally backed Somali transitional government.

The deliveries – which included mortars, ammunition and cash for buying arms – were to bolster the administration as it tries to defend the small area it still controls from fierce attacks by Islamist rebels, Amnesty said.

But the rights group raised fears the weapons could be used by government forces in “indiscriminate attacks,” or could fall into the hands of armed groups opposed to the government who were frequently responsible for abuses.

Fighting in Somalia killed thousands of civilians last year and displaced hundreds of the thousands more, it said.

Amnesty said the transfers took place “despite substantial risks that such types of weapons could be used in indiscriminate attacks by [transitional government] forces.”

Arms could further be “diverted to armed groups opposed to the [transitional government], which also commit gross and widespread abuses,” the Amnesty statement said.

“Amnesty International has called for arms transfers to the Somali government to be suspended until there are adequate safeguards to prevent arms from being used to commit war crimes and rights abuses.”

Somalia has been without an effective government since 1991 and the transitional government controls only a small part of the capital Mogadishu, according to Amnesty.

Forces backing the weak administration are battling an Al-Qaeda-inspired Islamist group called Al-Shabaab.

Source: The Daily Star.
Link: http://www.dailystar.com.lb/article.asp?edition_id=10&categ_id=2&article_id=110944.

Demolitions in occupied East Jerusalem halted to save settler home

By The Daily Star and Agence France Presse (AFP)
Friday, January 22, 2010

OCCUPIED JERUSALEM: Plans to raze illegally built houses in mainly Arab occupied East Jerusalem have been halted to avoid having to tear down a building occupied by Jewish settlers, Israeli Army Radio said on Thursday.

Rightwing Deputy Mayor David Hadari said he had frozen the transfer of funds to be used for house demolitions.

“Before I unblock the funds, I want the priorities to be determined. One cannot demolish everything in one day or even one year, and there is no reason to start with a house inhabited by Jews. It is better to start with buildings that are a bigger nuisance,” he said.

In 2007 Jewish settlers were ordered to evacuate an illegally built seven-storey building in the heart of the Palestinian neighborhood of Silwan, but the eviction order, which is opposed by Mayor Nir Barkat and most of the municipal council, has not been enforced.

Hadari said that among the 117 buildings in occupied Jerusalem under demolition orders it is the only one in which Jews reside.

Municipal councilor Meir Margalit hailed the decision, saying “one can only welcome a measure that postpones the demolition of Arab homes.”

Many Palestinians in occupied East Jerusalem risk having their homes razed because Israel, which is illegally occupying the territory, says the homes were built or expanded without the necessary permits, which are nearly impossible to obtain from Israeli authorities.

Several Western countries including the United States and Britain have urged Israel to refrain from such demolitions, to avoid further harming the already hobbled Middle East peace process.

Israel captured East Jerusalem with the rest of the West Bank in the 1967 war and began occupying both Palestinian territories thereafter.

Source: The Daily Star.
Link: http://www.dailystar.com.lb/article.asp?edition_id=10&categ_id=2&article_id=110949.

Libya tightens visa rules for Europeans amid fallout over Hannibal detention

By Agence France Presse (AFP)
Friday, January 22, 2010

TRIPOLI: Libya plans to tighten its visa rules for citizens of some European countries in retaliation for its own citizens being denied European visas, a senior official said on Thursday.

The move – which he said would come into force “in a few days” – comes amid continued fallout after Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi’s son and wife were arrested in Switzerland in 2008.

The official said the stricter rules would apply to citizens of European countries that are part of the Schengen pact, which allows travelers to obtain a single visa that is good for travel to 24 European states.

Tripoli “will harden conditions for granting visas to businessmen, the executives of European companies operating in Libya and citizens of certain other nations,” the official told Agence France Presse on condition of anonymity.

He said that the measures were being taken because most of all Libyan applications for visas to Schengen area states are turned down.

In November, Deputy Foreign Minister Khaled Kaim noted that most Libyan applications for Schengen visas were rejected, and threatened similar action against citizens of some Schengen states.

The visa wars began after Hannibal Gadhafi and his pregnant wife Aline were arrested at a luxury Geneva hotel in early July 2008.

They were detained after complaints from two servants, a Moroccan and a Tunisian, who alleged they had been mistreated by the couple.

The Gadhafis were freed on bail after two days in custody, and the complaint filed against them was dropped after a lawyer said the servants had received compensation.

But the incident sparked outrage from the Gadhafi family. It led to a freeze on Swiss business, the withdrawal of Libyan assets from Swiss banks and disruption to oil deliveries.

In turn, Bern adopted a restrictive policy of Schengen visas to Libyan officials.

Two Swiss businessmen were also prevented from leaving Libya. Currently holed up at the Swiss Embassy, they are accused of illegal business activities, having been caught up in the diplomatic row.

Source: The Daily Star.
Link: http://www.dailystar.com.lb/article.asp?edition_id=10&categ_id=2&article_id=110950.

Iraqi presidency seeks court decision on Baath ban

Friday, January 22, 2010

Waleed Ibrahim
Reuters

BAGHDAD: Iraq’s presidency council has asked a court to rule on the legitimacy of a panel that banned scores of candidates from the March election because of links to Saddam Hussein’s Baath party, the president said on Thursday.

President Jalal Talabani, a Kurd, played down the significance of the move by a Shiite-led independent committee, saying the resulting furor, including alarm among minority Sunnis who dominated Iraq under Saddam, was overblown.

“It is not a major political crisis … it will not be. It is a little bit exaggerated,” Talabani said.

Angry fallout among Sunnis had threatened to reopen sectarian wounds just as the slaughter between Sunnis and Shiites triggered by the 3002 US invasion begins to recede.

US officials have lobbied for a resolution, perhaps fearing that plans for US troops to end combat operations in August ahead of a full withdrawal by end-2011 could be derailed. Vice President Joe Biden was expected to visit, Talabani said.

The Justice and Accountability Commission, a body that replaced a “de-Baathification” committee established by US administrators after the invasion to root out Saddam loyalists, has barred 115 candidates from the March 7 parliamentary vote.

The list included prominent Sunni leader Saleh al-Mutlaq, generating widespread protests from Sunnis that Iraq’s majority Shiites were trying to sideline them. Two thirds of those on the list when it was filtered out on Wednesday turned out to be Shiite, potentially defusing the row.

“We have asked our brother Medhat al-Mahmoud [head of the Iraqi Supreme Judicial Council] whether the commission called justice and accountability really exists. As we know, parliament has not voted it into existence yet,” Talabani said.

The March 7 election is a pivotal moment for Iraq as it emerges from all-out war. The country has also started to seal multibillion-dollar deals with global oil firms that could catapult it into the big leagues of oil producers and give it the billions it needs to rebuild. That could be threatened by growing instability.

The panel that banned the candidates is staffed by former members of the US-created de-Baathification committee because Parliament has failed to agree on their replacements.

Its leaders are associated with an electoral alliance led by the Supreme Islamic Iraqi Council, a powerful Shiite political movement that was formed in Iran.

Analysts say the composition of the list of banned candidates suggests it could be aimed at reducing the electoral threat posed by secular groups to the Islamist parties that have dominated Iraq since the invasion, and not at Sunnis.

The Baath party under Saddam ruled Iraq with an iron fist for more than two decades, brutally repressing any opposition from Shiites and Kurds. Many Iraqis, whether Sunni or Shiite, joined because it was the only way to get a good job.

At a news conference, Iyad Jamal al-Deen, a secular Shiite who wears religious clothing and heads the small Ahrar coalition of Shiite and Sunni parties, said 20 of his 200 candidates were on the list and called the ban an attempt at “disenfranchisement and marginalization.”

“The measures of the Justice and Accountability committee should be halted,” Deen said, adding, “The US has to intervene to rectify the course of the democratic process in Iraq.”

In heavily Shi’ite southern Iraq on Thursday, crowds hundreds strong demonstrated to call for the full implementation of laws banning the Baath party. Iraqi elections officials barred another 57 candidates from the vote; not for Baathist ties, but because of misrepresentations in their educational qualifications.

Source: The Daily Star.
Link: http://www.dailystar.com.lb/article.asp?edition_id=10&categ_id=2&article_id=110961.

Spain to fund Philippines' counter-insurgency projects

Manila - Spain has approved a grant of 20 million pesos (500,000 dollars) to support counter-insurgency projects in an eastern Philippine province, a government statement said Sunday. The money would be used for small-scale infrastructure projects in Sorsogon province, 500 kilometres south-east of Manila, according to the Office of the Presidential Adviser on the Peace Process.

The projects include a village road in Gubat town, rehabilitation of a communal irrigation system and the repair of a public school, it said.

Ambassador to the Philippines Luis Arias-Romero said Spain was committed to peaceful resolution of the long armed conflict in the Philippines.

"Without peace and stability there are no possibilities for development in any region," he said.

Communist rebels have been fighting the government since the late 1960s, making the movement one of the longest-running leftist insurgencies in Asia.

The guerrillas withdrew from peace talks in 2005 after they accused the government of having a hand in the inclusion of the Communist Party of the Philippines on lists of foreign terrorist organizations of several countries, including the United States, Canada and the European Union.

Source: Earth Times.
Link: http://www.earthtimes.org/articles/show/310407,spain-to-fund-philippines-counter-insurgency-projects.html.

Dutch Freedom Party ready to govern, claims Wilders

Amsterdam - The hard-right Dutch Freedom Party is ready to govern the Netherlands, party leader Geert Wilders said Sunday, in the wake of the collapse of the country's coalition government. Wilders, speaking to local media, welcomed the fall of Jan Peter Balkenende's government.

"I had hoped for this day for a long time and it arrived after all. We can now wave the flags to celebrate. The worst Dutch government ever did not deserve to govern one more day," Wilders said.

The leader of the Freedom Party, known for its harsh stance on Islam and migrants, said the outgoing government had excelled only in "breaking mass immigration records."

"This government damaged the economy, raised taxes and supported Islam. Cabinet members fought openly with each other on the street," Wilders said...

Source: Earth Times.
Link: http://www.earthtimes.org/articles/show/310422,dutch-freedom-party-ready-to-govern-claims-wilders.html.

Iran says terror team in northwest disbanded

Iranian security forces disbanded an armed terrorist group on Sunday in West Azerbaijan province, the Intelligence Ministry said.

The ministry said in a statement that the team consisted of four members, who were associated with the Komole terrorist group.

"They were ambushed and killed Sunday morning in an area near the town of Sardasht," read the statement.

The team is responsible for the death of 3 security forces on Mahabad-Miyandoab road.

According to the statement, several weapons, grenades and ammunition were seized during the raid.

Source: PressTV.
Link: http://www.presstv.ir/detail.aspx?id=119148§ionid=351020101.

'Netanyahu authorized Dubai assassination'

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has reportedly authorized the assassination of senior Hamas official Mahmoud al-Mabhouh early January in Tel Aviv.

According to a report published by Times Online Netanyahu held a meeting with Mossad chief Meir Dagan in early January inside the briefing room of the headquarters of the spy agency where "some members of a hit squad" were also present.

Citing Mossad sources, the report said "as the man who gives final authorization for such operations, Netanyahu was briefed on plans to kill Mahmoud al-Mabhouh."

Sources said Mossad had received intelligence that the Hamas commander was planning a Dubai trip and they started preparing for an operation to assassinate him.

"The team had already rehearsed, using a hotel in Tel Aviv as a training ground without alerting its owners," according to the report.

Thanks to Dubai's extensive system of CCTV cameras, the work of the assassination team was revealed.

Dubai police released the identities of 11 people carrying European passports, including six Britons, three Irish and two French and German, who allegedly were Mossad agents carrying fake European documents.

Interpol has issued "red notices" for the 11 suspects to help find and arrest them anywhere in its 188 member countries.

Dubai police also threatened earlier to arrest Netanyahu, if it determined that Mossad was behind the assassination.

Source: PressTV.
Link: http://www.presstv.ir/detail.aspx?id=119118§ionid=351020202.

Israel plans emergency trip to China over Iran

A delegation of Israeli officials will visit China later this month reportedly to persuade Beijing officials to switch sides and support a new round of sanctions against Iran.

Headed by Strategic Affairs Minister Moshe Ya'alon, the delegation will meet senior Chinese officials to discuss Iran's nuclear program and the Israeli campaign for fresh sanctions on the country.

China, one of the five veto-wielding members of the UN Security Council, has taken a stand against Washington's push for 'paralyzing' sanctions on Iran.

This has largely ruined Western hopes for more sanctions on Iran. The west has been struggling to force Iranians into giving up their enrichment program by subjecting them to high political and economic pressure.

The trip has come as a surprise because the political wheeling and dealing of Tel Aviv officials does not normally involve China.

Neither Israeli Premier Benjamin Netanyahu nor Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman have visited China or held significant talks with Chinese officials on important issues.

However, the visit is seen as last-minute efforts by Israel to make up for the opportunity it lost with China when it focused all its diplomacy on the United States, Russia, France, the United Kingdom and Germany.

This comes as the UN nuclear watchdog released a new report on Tehran's enrichment program, criticizing Iran for a range of issues, but verifying the non-diversion of declared nuclear material in the country at the same time.

The two-sided report, which struck a harsher tone comparing to the previous ones, has won plaudits from Israeli officials, who have an arsenal of 200 atomic warheads, but nevertheless accuse Iran of developing nuclear weapons.

Iran says that it is a member of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty and unlike Israel, it 'neither believes in atomic bombs nor is it seeking to develop such weapons.'

Source: PressTV.
Link: http://www.presstv.ir/detail.aspx?id=119142§ionid=351020104.

Lebanon wants answers from Libya on Sadr

Sun Feb 21, 2010

Lebanese President Michel Suleiman has demanded an explanation from Libya regarding the fate of spiritual and political leader Imam Moussa Sadr.

"Where are Imam Moussa al-Sadr and his companions? We need to answer this question," Suleiman said on Saturday.

It is widely believed in Lebanon that the founder of the Amal movement was kidnapped and killed on the orders of senior Libyan officials, as he went missing during an official trip to Libya in 1978.

Accompanied by two of his companions, Mohammed Yaqoub and Abbas Badreddin, Sadr was scheduled to meet with officials from the government of the Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi.

Libya has always denied involvement, saying that the three men left for Italy on August 31, 1978 after their stay in Tripoli and that it has no idea what became of them afterwards.

During an interview, Lebanon's president said his country wishes to strengthen its ties with Tripoli but is also "determined to learn the fate" of Sadr and his companions.

Gaddafi has so far managed to ignore Lebanese calls for more information on the case, never officially visiting Lebanon since the cleric's disappearance.

The president's comments come ahead of next month's Arab League summit in Libya.

Several political figures, including parliament speaker Nabih Berri, have called on the government to boycott the summit over the Sadr case.

The vice president of the Higher Shia Council has called Lebanon's probable participation in the 22 member strong summit a "catastrophe."

"Lebanon's only condition for participating in the summit, irrespective of the level of representation, is that the issue of Sadr be discussed publicly in the opening session and before the media," Sheikh Abdel-Amir Qabalan said on Friday.

Source: PressTV.
Link: http://edition.presstv.ir/detail/119138.html.

Iran expels foreign steward over Persian Gulf row

A Greek steward working for an Iranian airliner has been dismissed over insistence on the use of a forged term instead of Persian Gulf and threatening passengers during a flight.

The steward working for Kish Air had reportedly threatened to arrest passengers who complained against the use of the forged term 'Arabian Gulf' on the plane's in-flight monitors instead of the internationally-recognized term 'Persian Gulf.'

Iran's Minister of Roads and Transportation Hamid Behbahani warned on Sunday that any foreign airline that uses the forged term will be barred from Iran's airspace, Mehr news agency reported.

He has also ordered Iran's civil aviation authority to reprimand the Kish Air officials.

Gholam-Reza Rezayian, the head of Iran's Immigration and Foreign Nationals Police, said the Greek steward was summoned to the Kish police on Saturday night and his residency permit was canceled "due to his inappropriate and irresponsible behavior."

When the foreign steward used the forged term, Iranian passengers protested but he insulted the passengers.

The Greek attendant had even claimed that he has the authority to arrest the Iranian passengers who had protested against his misbehavior, Rezayian added.

Source: PressTV.
Link: http://www.presstv.ir/detail.aspx?id=119137§ionid=351020101.

'Anti-Semitic' - the Label that Stops Criticism

Dr. Paul Balles

February 11, 2010

When you can’t criticize a propaganda machine for its promotions, both free speech and democracy are dead.

(WASHINGTON, D.C.) - If you indulge in ad hominem attacks (attacking the person rather than the issue), you can expect the same in return. The issues related to the anti-Semitic label are many.

First, the expression "anti-Semitic" is a misnomer. It’s defined as "hating Jews or Judeophobia." The label "anti-Semitism" is wrong because not all Jews are Semites, and many Arabs are.

In 2004, the US Congress passed the Global Anti-Semitism Review Act. The Act defines a person as being anti-Semitic for holding any of a number of beliefs. My comments follow each of the 14 items supposedly revealing anti-Semitism.

1. Any assertion, "that the Jewish community controls government, the media, international business and the financial world."

According to this, it doesn’t matter whether the assertion is true or not. Truth is not an issue. Simply making such a statement violates the Act. In itself, that fact provides strong evidence of control of the US government.

2. The expression of "Strong anti-Israel sentiment."

Any criticism of Israel can thus be considered anti-Semitic. Israel can mangle Gaza and get away with it.

3. Expressing "Virulent criticism" of Israel’s leaders, past or present.

Menachem Begin may have led the Irgun in the slaughter and dispossession of thousands of Palestinians, but it’s anti-Semitic to say so.

4. Any criticism of the Jewish religion or its religious leaders with its emphasis on the Talmud and Kabbala.

It’s perfectly acceptable, as free speech, to vilify Islam, but any criticism of Judaism violates the Act.

5. Any criticism of the United States Government and Congress for being under the undue influence by the Jewish-Zionist community, which would include Jewish organizations such as AIPAC.

Truth matters not to the ridiculous legislators who passed this ludicrous act.

6. Any criticism of the Jewish-Zionist community for promoting globalism or what some call the "New World Order."

When you can’t criticize a propaganda machine for its promotions, both free speech and democracy are dead.

7. Placing any blame on Jewish leaders and their followers for inciting the Roman crucifixion of Christ.

In order to accommodate the anti-Semitism label, simply rewrite history.

8. Citing any facts that could in any way diminish the "six million" figure of Jewish holocaust victims.

I violate the act simply by citing the fact that five million non-Jews died at the hands of the Nazis. This goes beyond stifling free speech.

9. Claiming that Israel is a racist state.

That’s not a claim. It’s a fact. Israel is full of racist laws. It insists on preserving its racist character and its right to impose apartheid in the West Bank and Gaza.

10. Making any claim that there is a "Zionist Conspiracy."

A rational provision for such a claim would insist on evidence as proof of its validity. To disallow making such a claim is existentially (Israelis love that word) dictatorial.

11. Offering proof that Jews and their leaders created Communism and the Bolshevik revolution in Russia.

It just became illegal to offer proof. Minds are made up. Don’t confuse them with the facts.

12. Making derogatory statements about Jewish persons.

Why limit it to Jewish persons?

13. Asserting that spiritually disobedient Jews do not have the Biblical right to re-occupy Palestine.

Why limit it to the spiritually disobedient?

14. Making any allegations of Mossad involvement in the 9/11 attack.

I just did in a column published a week ago.

The Act passed by the US Congress makes me anti-Semitic. It’s an unconstitutional violation of the First Amendment to the Constitution. I’m a critic of Israel when they commit wrongs and a critic of America when it does wrong. Despite Congress, that’s not anti-Semitic.

Source: Uruknet.
Link: http://www.uruknet.de/?s1=1&p=63188&s2=12.

Somalia: How Colonial Powers drove a Country into Chaos

Interview of Mohamed Hassan
by Grégoire Lalieu and Michel Colon

Investig'Action , February 10, 2010

Somalia had every reason to succeed: an advantageous geographical situation, oil, ores and only one religion and one language for the whole territory; a rare phenomenon in Africa. Somalia could have been a great power in the region. But the reality is completely different: famine, wars, lootings, piracy, bomb attacks. How did this country sink? Why has there been no Somali government for approximately twenty years? Which scandals stand behind those pirates who hijack our ships? In this new chapter of our series "Understanding the Muslim World", Mohamed Hassan explains for us why and how imperialist forces have applied in Somalia a chaos theory.

How did piracy develop in Somalia? Who are those pirates?

Since 1990, there has been no government in Somalia. The country is in the hands of warlords. European and Asiatic ships took advantage of this chaotic situation and fished along the Somali coast without a license or respect for elementary rules. They did not observe the quotas in force in their own country to protect the species and they used fishing techniques –even bombs!- that created huge damages to the wealth of the Somali seas.

That’s not all! Taking also advantage of this lack of any political authority, European companies, with the help of the mafia, dumped nuclear wastes offshore Somali coasts. Europe knew of this but turned a blind eye as that solution presented a practical and economical advantage for the nuclear waste management. Yet, the 2005 Tsunami brought a big part of these wastes into the Somali lands. Unfamiliar diseases appeared for the first time among the population. This is the context in which the piracy mainly developed. Somali fishermen, who had primitive fishing techniques, were no more able to work. So they decided to protect themselves and their seas. This is exactly what the United States did during the civilian war against the British (1756-1763): with no naval forces, President George Washington made a deal with pirates to protect the wealth of the American seas.

No Somali state for almost twenty years! How is that possible?

This is the result of an American strategy. In 1990, the country was bruised by conflicts, famine and lootings; the state collapsed. Facing this situation, the United States, who discovered oil in Somalia a few years ago, launched Operation Restore Hope in 1992. For the first time, US marines intervened in Africa to take control of a country. It was also the first time that a military invasion was launched in the name of humanitarian interference.

The famous rice bag exhibited on a Somali beach by Bernard Kouchner?

Yes, everybody remembers those pictures carefully showcased. But the real reasons were strategic. An US State Department report recommended indeed that the United States must stay the lonely global superpower after the Soviet Bloc collapse. To reach that goal, the report advocated to occupy a hegemonic position in Africa, which enjoys a vast amount of raw materials.

However, Restore Hope will be a failure. There was even that Hollywood movie "Black Hawk Down", with those poor G.I.’s "attacked by the bad Somali rebels"…

US soldiers were indeed defeated by a Somali nationalist resistance. Since then, American policy was to keep Somalia without any real government, even to balkanize it. This is the old British strategy, already applied in many places: setting weak and divided states in order to better rule them. That is why there has been no Somali state for almost twenty years. The United States has implemented a chaos theory in order to stop any Somali reconciliation and keep the country divided.

In Sudan, due to the civilian war, Exxon has had to leave the country after having discovered oil. So isn’t letting Somalia plunge into chaos contrary to American interests, which cannot exploit the discovered oil?

Oil exploitation is not their priority. The United States know that the reserves are there but doesn’t need it immediately. Two elements are much more important in its strategy. First, prevent the competitors from negotiating with a rich and powerful Somali state. If you consider Sudan, the comparison is interesting. The oil that the American companies discovered there thirty years ago, Sudan is selling it today to China. The same thing could happen in Somalia. When he was president of the transition government, Abdullah Yusuf went to China although he was supported by the United States. US mass media had strongly criticized that visit. The fact is that United States have no guarantee on that point: if a Somali government is established tomorrow, whatever is its political color, it could probably adopt a strategy independent of United States and trade with China. Western imperialists do not want a strong and unified Somali state. The second goal pursued by this chaos theory is linked to the geographical location of Somalia, which is strategic for both European and American imperialists.

Why is it strategic?

The issue is the control of the Indian Ocean. Look at the map. As mentioned, western powers have an important share of the responsibility in the Somali piracy development. But instead of telling the truth and paying compensation for what they did, those powers criminalize the phenomena in order to justify their position in the region. Under the pretext of fighting the piracy, NATO is positioning its navy in the Indian Ocean.

What is the real goal?

To control the economic development of the emerging powers, mainly India and China. Half of the world’s container traffic and 70% of the total traffic of petroleum products passes through the Indian Ocean. From that strategic point of view, Somalia is a very important place: the country has the longest coast of Africa (3.300 km) and faces the Arabian Gulf and the Straight of Hormuz, two key points of the region economy. Moreover, if a pacific response is brought to the Somali problem, relations between African in one hand, and India and China on the other hand, could develop through the Indian Ocean. Those American competitors could then have influence in that African area. Mozambique, Kenya, Madagascar, Tanzania, Zanzibar, South Africa etc. All those countries connected to the Indian Ocean could gain easy access to the Asian market and develop fruitful economic relationship. Nelson Mandela, when he was president of South Africa, had mentioned the need of an Indian Ocean revolution, with new economic relationships. The United States and Europe do not want this project. That is why they prefer to keep Somalia unstable..

You say that the United States does not want Somali reconciliation. But what are the roots of the Somali divisions?

In order to understand this chaotic situation, we must delve into Somali history. This country had been divided by colonial powers. In 1959, Somalia gained independence through the fusion of the Italian colony in the South, and the British colony in the North. But Somalis were also living in some parts of Kenya, Ethiopia and Djibouti. The new Somali state adopted a star on its flag, each branch representing one part of the historical Somalia. The message behind that symbol: "Two Somalias have been united, but three are still colonized".

Facing the legitimacy of those claims, the British – who controlled Kenya-, organized a referendum in the Kenyan area claimed by Somalia. 87% of the population, composed mainly of Somali ethnics, voted for the Somali unity. When the results were published, Jomo Kenyatta, a Kenyan nationalist leader, threatened the British to throw the colonists out if they gave a part of the territory up to Somalia. So Great Britain decided not to take the referendum into account, and today an important Somali community is still living in Kenya. You must understand that those colonial borders were a real disaster in the Somali case. The border issue was besides the object of an important debate among the African continent.

What was the issue of that debate?

In the sixties, as many African countries became independent, there was a debate between what we called the Monrovia and the Casablanca groups. This later, including among others Morocco and Somalia, resolved that the borders inherited from colonialism be discussed. For them, those boundaries had no legitimacy. But most of the African countries and their borders are colonialism products. Finally, the Organization of African Unity (OAU), the ancestor of the current African Union, closed the debate by decreeing that the borders were indisputable: going back over those boundaries would provoke civilian wars everywhere on the continent. Later, one of the OAU architects, the Tanzanian Julius Nyerere, confessed that this decision was the best but that he regretted the Somali outcome.

What will be the impact of the colonial divisions on Somalia?

They will create strains with neighboring countries. During those years when Somalia advocated for revising the borders, Ethiopia became a US imperialism bastion. The United States had also military bases in Kenya and Eritrea. At this moment, Somalia, a young pastoral democracy, wished to build its own army. The goal was to not appear weak in front of the armed neighbors, to support Somali movements in Ethiopia and even to regain by force, if necessary, some territories. But the western forces were opposed to the creation of a Somali army.

So Somalia had tense relations with its neighbors. Was it not reasonable to be opposed to this Somali army project? It would have provoked wars, wouldn’t it?

The West did not care about conflicts between Africans but its own interests. The United States and Great Britain were providing and training militaries in Ethiopia, Kenya and Eritrea. Those countries were still under the yoke of very repressive feudal systems. But they were also neocolonial regimes devoted to Western interests. On the other hand, the power in place in Somalia was more democratic and independent. So the West had no interest in providing for a country that could escape its control.

As a consequence, Somalia decided to turn to the Soviet Union. This frightened the Western forces that feared Soviet influence stretching in to Africa. Those fears became more important with the 1969 putsch.

What do you mean?

Socialist ideas were spread in the country. An important Somali community was indeed living in Aden in South Yemen. However, this is where Britain used to exile persons it considered dangerous in India: communists, nationalists and so on. They used to be arrested and sent to Aden where nationalist and revolutionary ideas quickly developed and affected later both Yemenites and Somalis. Under the influence of civilians with Marxist ideas, a coup d’état was led by officers in 1969 and Siad Barre took power in Somalia.

What were the reasons of that coup d’état?

The Somali government was corrupted. He had however the cards in hand to erect the country to the great regional power rank: a strategic position, only one language, one religion and many common cultural elements. This is fairly rare in Africa. But, by missing the economical development of the country, this government has created a context favorable to divisions among clans. Under the pretext of doing politics, Somali elites become divided. Everyone created his own political party, without any real program, and recruited voters among the existing clans. This increased the divisions and turned out to be totally useless. A democracy in a liberal type was in fact unsuitable for Somalia: there were at once 63 political parties for a three million population country! And the government was even not able to adopt an official script, which was creating serious troubles in the administration. Education was weak. Bureaucracy, police and army were, however, established. This later will play a key role in the progressive coup d’état.

"Progressive"! With the army?

The army was the only organized institution in Somalia. As a repressive apparatus, it was supposed to protect the so-called civilian government and the elite. But for many Somalis coming from different families and areas, the army was also an exchange place where there were no borders, no tribalism, no clan divisions. This is how Marxist ideas from Aden circulated among the army. So the coup d’état was led by officers who were most of all nationalist. They did not have a good knowledge of socialism but they had sympathy for those ideas. Moreover, they knew what was happening in Vietnam, and that fed anti-imperialist feelings. The civilians, who knew Marx and Lenin’s teachings lacked a mass political party, supported the coup d’état and become the advisers of the officers who took power.

What changes did the Somali coup d’état bring about?

One important positive aspect: the new government quickly adopted an official script. Likewise, the Soviet Union and China were helping Somalia. The students and the population mobilized themselves. Education and social conditions were enhanced. The years that followed the coup d’état were in fact the best ones that Somalia never knew. That is, until 1977.

What happened?

Somalia, which has been divided by colonial forces, attacked Ethiopia to get the territory of Ogaden back. Ogaden was mainly populated by Somalis. At this time however, Ethiopia was itself a socialist state supported by the Soviets. This country had been led for a long time by Emperor Selassie. But in the seventies, there was an important mobilization to overthrow him. The students’ movement, in which I personally participated, made four major demands. First, to nonviolently and democratically resolve tensions with Eritrea. Secondly, to establish a land reform that would distribute the lands to the peasants. Thirdly, to establish the principle of equality among the nationalities; Ethiopia was a multinational country led by elite who did not represent the diversity. Fourthly, to abolish the feudal system and to establish a democratic state. As in Somalia, the army was the only organized institution in Ethiopia and the civilians joined the officers to overthrow Selassie in 1974.

How did two socialist states, each supported by the Soviet Union, enter conflict?

After the Ethiopian revolution, a delegation including Soviet Union, Cuba and South Yemen organized a round table with Ethiopia and Somalia in order to resolve their contradiction. Castro went to Addis Abeba and Mogadishu. To him, Somali claims were justified. Finally, the Ethiopian delegation agreed to seriously seriously its Somali neighbor’s demands. The two countries made an agreement stipulating that no provocation should happen as long as no decision has been taken. Things seemed to start well but Somalia did not honor the agreement…

Two days after the Ethiopian delegation returned to its country, Henry Kissinger, a former Nixon Secretary of State, turned up to Mogadishu. Kissinger was representing an unofficial organization: the Safari Club that was among others including Shah’s Iran, Mobutu’s Congo, Saudi Arabia, Morocco and French and Pakistani intelligence services. The objective of that organization was to fight against the Soviet infiltration in the Gulf and in Africa. Under the Safari Club pressures and help promises, Siad Barre committed a disastrous strategic mistake of attacking Ethiopia.

What were the consequences of that war?

Soviets left the region. Somalia, still led by Siad Barre, integrated the neocolonial network of the imperialist forces. The country had been seriously damaged by the conflict and the World Bank and the IFM were in charge of "rebuilding" it. This has aggravated infighting among Somali bourgeoisie. Each regional elite wanted to have its own market. They made the divisions among the clans’ worst and contributed to the progressive dislocation of their country up to Siad Barre’s fall in 1990. Since that, any head of state succeeded to him.

But, thirty years after the Ogaden war, the opposite scenario happened: Ethiopia was supported by the United States to attack Somalia…

Yes, as I said, since the Restore Hope failure, United States has preferred to keep Somalia in chaos. However, in 2006, a spontaneous movement developed under the Islamic courts to fight against the local warlords and bring unity to the country. It was a kind of Intifada. In order to stop this movement from rebuilding Somalia, United States decided suddenly to support the Transitional Federal Government (TFG) after having refused to recognize it before. In fact, they realized that their project of a Somalia without effective state was no more possible: a movement – furthermore Islamic!- was about to lead to a national reconciliation. In order to sabotage the Somali unity, United States decided to support the TFG. But this later was lacking any social basis and an army. So the Ethiopian troops, commanded by Washington, attacked Mogadishu to overthrow the Islamic courts.

Did it work?

No, the Ethiopian army was defeated and had to leave Somalia. On their side, the Islamic courts were dispersed in several movements that still control a big part of the country today. As for Abdulla Yusuf’s transitional government, he collapsed and United States replaced it by Sheik Sharif, the former Islamic Court spokesman.

So Sheik Sharif has passed to "the other camp"?

He used to be the Islamic courts spokesman because he is a good orator. But he has no political knowledge. He has no idea what imperialism or nationalism are. That is why western powers took him back. He was the Islamic court’s weak link. Today he chairs a fake government, created in Djibouti. This government has no social base or authority in Somalia. It only exists on the international level because the imperialist forces support it.

In Afghanistan, the United States said they were ready to negotiate with Taliban. Why don’t they look for discussing with the Islamic groups in Somalia?

Because those groups want to take the foreign occupier over and to allow a national reconciliation for the Somali people. As a result, the United States wants to break those groups: a reconciliation, through the Islamic movement or through the TFG, is not in the interests of the imperialist forces. They just want chaos. The problem is that today, this chaos reached Ethiopia too, which is very weak since the 2007 aggression. A nationalist resistance movement came to the light over there to fight against the pro-imperialist government of Addis Ababa. With their chaos theory, United States had in fact created troubles in the whole region. And now, they took it out on Eritrea.

Why?

This little country leads an independent national policy. Eritrea also has a vision for the whole region: the Horn of Africa (Somalia, Djibouti, Eritrea, Ethiopia) do not need foreign powers’ interference; its wealth should allow it to establish new economical relationship on the basis of mutual respect. According to Eritrea, the region must get it together and its members must be able to discuss about their problems. Of course, this policy frightens United States that fears that other countries follow that example. So they accuse Eritrea of sending weapons to Somalia and instigating troubles in Ethiopia.

Isn’t Eritrea sending weapons in Somalia?

Not even a bullet! This is a pure propaganda as they did against Syria about the Iraqi resistance. Eritrea’s vision catches up with the project of Indian Ocean revolution that we spoke about before. The western powers do not want of that and wish to bring Eritrea back to the circle of the neocolonial states under control, such as Kenya, Ethiopia or Uganda.

Are there no terrorist in Somalia?

Imperialist powers have always labeled as terrorists the people who fight for their right. Irishmen were terrorists until they signed an agreement. Abbas was a terrorist. Now, he is a friend.

But we heard about Al Qaeda in Somalia?

Al Qaeda is everywhere, from Belgium to Australia! That invisible Al Qaeda is a logo designed to justify to the public opinion military operations. If United States say to their citizens and soldiers: "We are going to send our troops into the Indian Ocean in order to probably fight against China", people would be afraid of course. But if you tell them that it is just about fighting piracy and Al Qaeda, it won’t be a problem. The real goal is however different. It consists in setting forces in the Indian Ocean region that will be the theater of major conflicts in the coming years. This is what we will analyze in the next chapter…

Source: Uruknet.
Link: http://www.uruknet.de/?s1=1&p=63161&s2=11.

Women For Sale in Afghanistan

Heidi Kingstone

February 3, 2010

A few major themes emerged from the Afghan conference today in London. One is that it's time to talk to the Taliban. Another is that the Afghan security forces need further empowerment both for future peace and stability, a process that must be Afghan-led in its entirety.

Behind the rhetoric, the fancy words and high-profile delegates, here's the reality.
In Shinwar, a district of Nangarhar province, there are two markets, one called Shadal and the other, Pikheh. Nothing unusual about that, the country is full of markets. But these markets have one main commodity. And that commodity is women. In Nangarhar markets exist where women are sold.

"Big chadors cover their heads and just the women's hands show. Like animals they are bought and sold." This information comes from a recent discussion with staff of the Afghanistan Independent Human Rights Commission.

Cases have been reported where a woman was sold with her five children. Another woman was sold to five different people and returned back to the original man who sold her, then killed her.

What happens is that these women get sold multiple times. They are kept in rooms, repeatedly raped, and then returned. They are then trafficked on from Kunduz to Herat, Jalalabad to Kabul, and to other points around the country."

These same Shinwari tribesmen are the apparent saviours with whom the government will negotiate. According to a recent article titled, "Afghan Tribe, Vowing to Fight Taliban, to Get U.S. Aid in Return" in the New York Times:

The leaders of one of the largest Pashtun tribes in a Taliban stronghold said Wednesday that they had agreed to support the American-backed government, battle insurgents and burn down the home of any Afghan who harbored Taliban guerrillas. Elders from the Shinwari tribe, which represents about 400,000 people in eastern Afghanistan, also pledged to send at least one military-age male in each family to the Afghan Army or the police in the event of a Taliban attack. In exchange for their support, American commanders agreed to channel $1 million in development projects directly to the tribal leaders and bypass the local Afghan government, which is widely seen as corrupt. 'The Taliban have been trying to destroy our tribe, and they are taking money from us, and they are taking our sons to fight,' said Malik Niaz, a Shinwari elder. 'If they defy us now, we will defeat them.' The pact appears to be the first in which an entire Pashtun tribe has declared war on Taliban insurgents.

Admittedly not all Shinwari are guilty but it begs the question -- who exactly are we doing deals with?

Before he left the conference, I caught a quick word with Kai Eide, the outgoing UN representative in Kabul. "There are clear red lines that we cannot cross," he tells me in reference to ensure women are protected and that the situation does not move any further backward. "Human rights," he continues, "are enshrined in the constitution, and it is not only a theoretical concept."

But what does Afghanization, the hot bottom phrase, then mean? What exactly is the Afghan government bringing to the table? Eight years on there is still no real police force, the country is still 'underdeveloped' and poor, and women's lives are beyond miserable. We've been giving money to a bunch of corrupt Afghans and it doesn't work.

Will all of this be fixed with an army, the panacea plea of the international community? What if the army is dismembered and used by warlords for another civil war? This time they will be better armed and better trained.

Now we're trying to add the Taliban to the mix as the surprise magic ingredient. We are trying to dress it up as a success but then there are the questions: Did the internationals and Afghans who put together the guest list at the Bonn Conference, the Loya Jirga, the Interim government and so on, overlook the fact that we should have had the Taliban in from the start? Was this due to simple forgetfulness, stupidity, or deceit? Or are we desperate and clutching at straws?

Source: Uruknet.
Link: http://www.uruknet.de/?s1=1&p=62894&s2=04.

Palestinian red crescent society (PRCS): We were the target of 455 Israeli attacks in 2009

February 3, 2010

EL-BIREH, (PIC) -- The Palestinian red crescent society (PRCS) announced on Tuesday that its medical teams were the targets of 455 Israeli attacks in 2009 including shooting and physical assaults.

A PRCS report said that the Israeli occupation forces (IOF) fired 15 times at its ambulance vehicles in the West Bank and Gaza Strip killing one of the volunteers in Gaza and wounding ten others in addition to damaging 22 ambulance vehicles.

It added that the IOF troops obstructed its teams on 440 occasions while carrying casualties and patients to hospitals and clinics.

The PRCS said that the IOF troops fired phosphorous bombs at its Nour society in downtown Gaza city inflicting severe material damage during the war on Gaza.

The society said that the IOF practices are in blatant violation of the international laws topped by the fourth Geneva Convention.

Source: Uruknet.
Link: http://www.uruknet.de/?s1=1&p=62880&s2=04.

Mustafa Barghouthi nominated for 2010 Nobel Peace Prize

February 3, 2010

Bethlehem - Ma'an - Founder of the political party the Palestinian National Initiative Mustafa Barghouthi was nominated for the 2010 Nobel Peace Prize by Mairead Maguire, Nobel Peace Laureate and co-founder of Peace People in Northern Ireland.

The nomination was submitted on 15 January. In her letter Maguire cited Barghouthi's "commitment to nonviolence in his personal and public life" as an effort that "is truly in the Ghandian spirit."

Recognition for Barghouthi, she said, would "be a recognition of not only his great spirit of peace and nonviolence but also of the Palestinian nonviolent movement, which gives us all hope for the future of Palestine, Israel and the Middle East community."

Barghouthi was a presidential candidate in Palestine in 2005, was elected to the Palestinian parliament in 2006, appointed Minister of Information under the 2007 national unity government, and regularly participates in the campaigns of village Popular Committees' anti-wall protests.

In her letter of nomination, Maguire noted "Barghouthi has made an extraordinary contribution to initiatives to peacefully challenge the ongoing Israeli occupation of Palestine and bring it to an end, as well as to efforts to build the institutional framework of the Palestinian civil society and to promote the principles of internal democracy and good governance."

Source: Uruknet.
Link: http://www.uruknet.de/?s1=1&p=62886&s2=04.

Yes...I am Suicidal

"Nadia...the Martyr...the Mujahida..."
Hiba Al Shamaree, translation by Hussein Anwar

February 3, 2010

Taken and translated from Comrade Hiba Al Shamaree's Blog.

You may have forgotten Nadia, the girl who was raped by the dogs of the occupation in the notorious prison Abu Ghraib, and to revive your memory, this is her story which she revealed; she did not throw herself in the arms of her family, like any aggrieved, oppressed prisoner would do, a prisoner with a fire inside longing for his family.

Nadia ran away the moment she was released from prison, not because of the shame that will follow her, but because of what has happened to Iraqi female prisoners that were abused, raped and tortured at the hands of American mercenaries in Abu Ghraib prison, where the walls of the prison speak the sad and horrifying stories of the prisoners, but what Nadia tells us is not a "Story"…it is the "Truth".

Nadia began her story according to Al-Wassat new paper "as I was visiting a relative of mine we were surprised that the American Occupying forces raided the house searching it to find a quantity of light weapons and because of that they arrested everyone in the house including me.

And vainly I tried to persuade the translator who was accompanying the American patrol that I am just a guest, but my attempts failed. I cried and begged and I fainted from the intensity of fear during the road to Abu Ghraib prison.

Nadia says "They put me in a dirty cell, dark and lonely and I expected them to set me free after the investigation proved that I had not committed a crime.

She adds, tears spilling down her cheeks a sign of her sincerity and an expression of the horror she have suffered: "The first day was heavy and I was not used to smell the unpleasant odor as the cell was damp and dark and more from the fear that has been growing on me quickly. The laughter of the soldiers outside the cell made me feel more afraid, and I was terrified of what awaited me, for the first time I felt I was in a very difficult trouble entering a world of unknown parameters I will not get out of it as it entered.

In the midst of this dilemma of different feelings I heard a female voice with an Arabic accent, a soldier in the American occupation army Immediately she said: "I did not think that arms dealers in Iraq are from women."

Once I spoke to explain to her the circumstances of the incident she started beating me so harshly, I cried and screamed "God...I am Innocent...Innocent" Then the soldier began cursing and swearing at me, words I never expected to be heard under any circumstances, and then she started mocking me, telling me she watching me by satellite all throughout the day, and American technology that can track their enemies even inside their bedrooms.

and then she laughed saying "I was watching you even when you were having sex with your husband."

I said to her with a confused voice: I'm not married. she beat me for over an hour and forced me to drink a glass of water I learned later that it was mixed with a heavily sedated substance and I had not woken up only after two days to find myself naked, I knew immediately that I have lost something that nothing on earth would with all the laws of the land return to me, I've been raped.

I became hysteria, hitting my head against the wall firmly, then five soldiers entered led by her, they started beating me and raping me, laughing amid loud music. As days passed, a repetition of the raped almost daily happened and every time they invent new ways that were more more brutal than its predecessor.

she adds to describe the horror of the actions of the American criminals: "After almost a month a negro soldier entered the cell throwing me two pieces of US Army outfits and said in a broken Arab accent to wear them. after putting a bag in my head he took me to the bathrooms where there were pipes of cold water and hot and asked me to shower, he closed the door and went away.

In spite of all that I felt the fatigue and pain, despite the large number of bruises scattered in different parts of my body but I've poured some water on my body, and before the end came the Nigger entered the shower room as i was showering, I felt scared and hit him with the bowl on his face, his reply was harsh...He raped me cruelly and spit in my face and came back, accompanied by two others to drag me back to the cell. they continued treating me this way...raping me tens of times a day which affected my health.

Nadia says, revealing the atrocities against Iraqi women in prison"After more than four months, I received a female soldier, I knew her from the rest of the soldiers that her name was Mary, and she told me that you are now in front of a golden opportunity today...high-ranking officers will visit us, and if you deal with them positively...they may release you, especially we are sure of your innocence.

I said to her: "If you're sure of my innocence, why do you not release me and set me free?".

She shouted at me nervously: "The only way to ensure that you get out is to be cooperative with them."

She took me to the bathrooms and oversaw my bathing holding a heavy stick in her hand hitting me whenever i refused to comply with her orders and then gave me a box of cosmetics and cautioned me from crying so as not to spoil makeup. she took me to a small room empty except for a bed to the ground and returned an hour later, along with four soldiers carrying cameras. she forcibly took off my clothes, she started attacking me as if she was a man, i heard the laughter of soldiers and the load music.

The four soldiers took pictures of all the conditions she had with me and focused on my face asking me to smile or else she would kill me. she took a gun from one of the four soldiers and fired four bullets near my head and swore to settle the fifth bullet in my head after the the four soldiers raped me, which made me unconscious and i woke up to find myself in the cell with all the effects of nails, teeth and stings of cigars everywhere on my body.

Nadia stops from continuing her story to give the freedom to her tears to pour from her eyes, she says "a day after Mary came to tell me that I was cooperative and that they will release me out of prison, but after watching the tape she recorded.

She adds: "I watched the tape in a pain, and she telling me (God created you for our entertainment) Here I experienced the anger and attack her, despite my fear if it wasn't for the soldiers who interfered; i would of killed her, the they all began beating me. after that for a month none of them approached me, i spent the rest of my days in prison praying to God to save me from this place.

Then Mary came with a number of soldiers and gave me the clothes i was wearing when they arrested me, they put me in a hummer and threw me on the highway of the city of Abu Ghraib giving me thousand dinars (equal to 5 dollars). I did not return home, I went to a house very near tot he place where they arrested me, I was afraid of the reaction of my family, I chose to visit a relative of mine to know what happened at home during my absence and I discovered that my brother set up a funeral for me more than four months, and he considered me dead, I understood that the knife of honor was waiting for me. I went to Baghdad and a good family took me in their house, I worked for them as a maid an a babysitter for their children.

Nadia wonders and asks in pain and grief and bitterness: "who will heal and turn of the fire in my chest? who will return to me my virginity? And what was my fault in all of what happened? and what is the fault of my family and tribe? and in my belly a baby i do not know who his father is...

Now you have the right to know where she is, my answer is...she chose to be one of the Mujahidat...as a suicide bombers who blew herself up on a U.S. patrol in Abu Ghraib where they raped her. May God have peace upon her soul and place her in his vast Paradise.

Source: Uruknet.
Link: http://www.uruknet.de/?s1=1&p=62878&s2=04.