Ukrainian Journalists Protest Decision To Bar 10 From Cabinet Coverage

About 100 journalists have demonstrated in front of the Ukrainian government building, protesting the prime minister’s decision to bar 10 reporters from covering cabinet meetings.

Kyiv-based lawyer Ihor Rozkladay, who represents the journalists, said that depriving the reporters of their accreditations is in violation of Ukraine’s law on media.

Prime Minister Mykola Azarov ordered the withdrawal of the accreditations on May 22 after the journalists stepped in front of television cameras at a cabinet session and turned their backs on the ministers.

The reporters were protesting an earlier attack on two journalists, a husband and wife.

The beating took place on May 18 when supporters and opponents of President Viktor Yanukovych clashed in Kyiv.

The journalists had signs pinned to their backs that read, “Today, it’s a female journalist [beaten up], tomorrow– your wife, sister, daughter. Do something!”

Based on reporting by UNIAN and Interfax

Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty

RFE/RL’s Turkmen Correspondent Released From Custody

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RFE/RL Turkmen Service correspondent Rovshen Yazmuhamedov

Rovshen Yazmuhamedov, RFE/RL’s Turkmen Service correspondent who spent two weeks in police custody in Turkmenabat, was released today under circumstances that have yielded little information about his ordeal.

Acting RFE/RL President and CEO Kevin Klose welcomed Yazmuhamedov’s release, saying, “We’re very happy he’s safe, and I thank the governments, international organizations, media outlets and NGOs that challenged his detention and pressed for his release.” 
 
The EU, Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch and Reporters Without Borders all issued statements on Yazmuhamedov’s behalf.
 
Klose pointed out that RFE/RL had taken the bold step of trying to regularize its relations with the Turkmen government by applying to accredit Yazmuhamedov earlier this year. “We ask the Turkmen government to answer for Rovshen’s detention and treatment, and stop responding to independent expression with intimidation and imprisonment,” Klose added.
 
Yazmuhamedov was originally taken into custody on May 6 to the Interior Ministry’s Department 6, which oversees cases involving organized crime and extremism. He was detained not long after publishing several reports for Radio Azatlyk, as the service is known locally, that generated active discussion on the service’s website.

Tags: Turkmenistan, Journalists In Trouble, Turkmen Service, Radio Azatlyk, Azatlyk Radiosy

Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty

RFE/RL’s Turkmen Correspondent Released From Custody

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RFE/RL Turkmen Service correspondent Rovshen Yazmuhamedov

Rovshen Yazmuhamedov, RFE/RL’s Turkmen Service correspondent who spent two weeks in police custody in Turkmenabat, was released today under circumstances that have yielded little information about his ordeal.

Acting RFE/RL President and CEO Kevin Klose welcomed Yazmuhamedov’s release, saying, “We’re very happy he’s safe, and I thank the governments, international organizations, media outlets and NGOs that challenged his detention and pressed for his release.” 
 
The EU, Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch and Reporters Without Borders all issued statements on Yazmuhamedov’s behalf.
 
Klose pointed out that RFE/RL had taken the bold step of trying to regularize its relations with the Turkmen government by applying to accredit Yazmuhamedov earlier this year. “We ask the Turkmen government to answer for Rovshen’s detention and treatment, and stop responding to independent expression with intimidation and imprisonment,” Klose added.
 
Yazmuhamedov was originally taken into custody on May 6 to the Interior Ministry’s Department 6, which oversees cases involving organized crime and extremism. He was detained not long after publishing several reports for Radio Azatlyk, as the service is known locally, that generated active discussion on the service’s website.

Tags: Turkmenistan, Journalists In Trouble, Turkmen Service, Radio Azatlyk, Azatlyk Radiosy

Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty

Iraq earns USD7.764bn from oil sales in Apr vs USD7.772bn in Mar -oil ministry

5-22-13 Zawya Intel:   AMMAN–Iraq has earned some $ 7.764 billion from oil sales in April, compared with $ 7.772 billion earned the previous month, the Iraqi oil ministry said in a statement Wednesday.

It said that Iraq sold its crude oil in April at an average price of $ 98.705 a barrel, compared with $ 103.765 a barrel in March.

Iraq’s crude oil exports in April were up 8.4% to 2.622 million barrels a day from 2.417 million barrels a day in March, the ministry said.

Despite the increase in Iraq’s crude oil exports in April, revenue was less than the previous month due to a decrease in oil prices.

LINK

Dinar Daddy’s Tidbits

Will the Jordanian Parliament Expel the Israeli Ambassador from Amman?

A resolution to that end may be just sound and fury.

A large majority of Jordanian Members of Parliament (MPs) voted last week to pass a resolution to force the government to expel the Israeli ambassador from Amman over Israeli settlers attacks and attempts to occupy the Islamic holy sit Al Aqasa Mosque in Jerusalem.

The resolution was sponsored by MP Yehiya Al Suad and was passed by a majority of 89 votes , enough to topple the government of Prime Minister Abdullah Nsour from power if he declined to act on it. Although the resolution is not binding, the MPs, however, can force a vote of no confidence against his government and bring it down if the government did not expel the ambassador.

On the surface this sounds like a very serious hard politics and democracy in action by the MPs. But according to many Jordanian analysts and experts I talked to here in Amman, this whole thing was nothing but a show for the cameras and that the Israeli ambassador will not be expelled from Amman and the government will not be brought down. During a visit to the Parliament, where I spent a considerable amount of time this past week speaking to several MPs including Speaker Saad Hayel al Souror, I found no indication that there was any serious attempt or even a hint that the Israeli ambassador will be expelled from Jordan.

MP Mohamad al Hejuj told me that although 89 MPs signed off on the resolution there were no real expectations and even skepticism by MPs about the likelihood of the seriousness of their resolution.

Why then 89 members of Parliament decided to create a false perception of solidarity with the Palestinians and with al Aqsa Mosque in Jerusalem fully knowing that their actions have no real value or even an honest effort.

Representative Mohamad Jamil Thahrawi explained to me that the whole issue was a spontaneous charade that grew out of hand. He said that none of the sponsors of the resolution thought that their resolution was serious enough to threaten the government. But since it garnered 89 votes, it created a constitutional quagmire whereby the government has to act on it and therefore risk a diplomatic battle with Israel and the US or risk losing a vote of confidence.

As a result several representatives who sponsored the resolution held a private session and decided to essentially kill it by allowing every sponsor to withdraw his vote including the main sponsor Yehya al Soud. Although this resolution stands at this point, it is by all accounts a dead on arrival.

Political columnist Osama Rantisis who writes for the daily Al Arab al Youm thinks that this whole thing was a ploy by the Intelligence department who activated its allies in the Parliament to create this whole show. The Jordanian Intelligence department (the Mukhabarat) is accused of running the Parliament in accordance to its own agenda through members it helps “elect” by rigging the Parliamentary elections.

Abdel Rahman Qatarneh, a former candidate for parliament in 1993, told me that he was asked to meet with the head of the intelligence department at that time, Mustfa Qaisy, in order to officially declare him the winner of that seat three days before the elections took place or two other people would be declared the winners. The reason for that, Qatarneh explained, was to have him as the Muhkbarat’s man inside the Parliament. Qatarmeh refused and he lost the elections to the same two people the Mukhabrat told him would win.

Mohamad Khalaf al Hadid, a well-known anti-regime activist, stated that, “The current Parliament is filled with the Mukhabrat’s men who function by remote control from its headquarters in Amman.”

Ali Younes is a writer and analyst based in Washington D.C. He can be reached at: aliyounes98@gmail.com and on Twitter at @clearali.

FPIF Latest Content

Two key candidates barred from Iran election

Iran’s electoral watchdog has barred former President Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani and a close aide to president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad from running in the June 14 presidential election, state media has reported.

Rafsanjani and Esfandiar Rahim Mashaei were disqualified by the Guardian Council which approved a list of eight candidates announced by the interior ministry late on Tuesday, Fars news agency reported.

This means the race for Iran’s next president is now between Saeed Jalili, the country’s chief nuclear negotiator, and other candidates who manage to get support from moderates.

There have been wide speculations that Mashaei would be excluded from the list. But not Rafsanjani, a two-term president and current head of the Expediency Council, a position appointed by Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, the Supreme Leader.

Their exclusion from the June 14 presidential ballot gives establishment-friendly candidates a clear path to succeed Ahmadinejad, who has lost favour with the ruling clerics after years of power struggles.

It also pushes moderate and opposition voices further to the margins as Iran’s leadership faces critical challenges such as international sanctions and talks with world powers over Tehran’s nuclear programme.

Time for appeals

Rafsanjani or Mashaei did not immediately comment on the decision.

The official ballot list, announced on state TV, followed a nearly six-hour delay in which the names were kept under wraps.

That raised speculation that authorities allowed some time for appeals by the blackballed candidates and their backers to Khamenei, who has final say in all matters.

Other candidates who were approved were Hassan Rowhani, a close Rafsanjani ally, and Ali-Akbar Velayati, a former foreign minister.

Mohammad Baqer Ghalibaf, the mayor of Tehran since 2005, is also included in the list, as well as Gholam-Ali Haddad Adel, the speaker of parliament, and Mohsen Rezaei, a former commander of the Iranian Revolutionary Guard, who came third in the 2009 presidential election.

Female candidates excluded

All female candidates were also excluded.

On Thursday last week, Ayatollah Mohammad Yazdi, a member of election watchdog, said women cannot be presidential candidates, effectively killing the largely symbolic bids by about 30 women seeking the presidency.

Yazdi said that the “law does not approve” of a woman in the presidency and a woman on the ballot is “not allowed”.

A total of 686 people had registered to replace Ahmadinejad, who cannot run for a third mandate because of term limits.

Any of the choices would create a possibly seamless front between the ruling clerics and presidency after years of political turmoil under Ahmadinejad, who tried to challenge the theocracy’s vast powers to make all major decisions and set key policies.

Iran’s presidency, meanwhile, is expected to convey the ruling clerics’ views on the world stage and not set its own diplomatic agenda.

While the election is not expected to bring major shifts in Iran’s position on its nuclear programme – which Tehran insists is peaceful despite Western fears it could lead to atomic weapons – it could open opportunities to renew stalled talks with a six-nation group that includes the US.

On Tuesday, Foreign Ministry spokesman Abbas Araqchi said Iran’s nuclear stance will “not change either before or after the election”.

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AL JAZEERA ENGLISH (AJE)

Five Serbs Released From Libya After 21 Months

Officials say five Serbia citizens have returned home after spending 21 months in captivity in Libya.

Deputy Prime Minister Aleksandar Vucic said the men flew back to Serbia on May 21 following months of negotiations.

The five, who said they were working on road construction in Libya, were seized by rebels during the uprising that toppled Muammar Qaddafi.

They were accused of being mercenaries fighting alongside Qaddafi’s forces and were held in detention in the northwestern town of Zintan.

Vucic said securing the men’s release was “difficult.”

Over a year after Qaddafi’s regime was toppled, Libya is plagued by lawlessness and violence.

Based on reporting by AP and AFP

Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty

Reports: Rafsanjani, Mashaie Barred From Iran’s Presidential Election

Iran state TV and the Fars news agency are reporting that former President Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani and Esfandiar Rahim Mashaie, a leading ally of President Mahmud Ahmadinejad, have been barred from running in the June 14 presidential election.

The reports said Rafsanjani and Mashaie were not on the list of candidates vetted by Iran’s Guardians Council.

Earlier media reports had said hard-line lawmakers had petitioned authorities to bar the two from the vote.

The candidacies of Mashaei and Rafsanjani, a moderate conservative backed by reformists, presented a challenge to conservative front-runners loyal to Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.

President Mahmud Ahmadinejad, constitutionally barred from running for office, has backed Mashaei despite disapproval from Khamenei.

Ultraconservatives have denounced Mashaei as part of a “deviant current” opposing Islamic rule.

With reporting by AFP and Reuters

Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty

Attacks Across Iraq Kill 95 in Hints of Sectarian Spillover From Syria

BAGHDAD (AP) — Iraq’s wave of bloodshed sharply escalated Monday with more than a dozen car bombings across the country, part of attacks that killed at least 95 people and brought echoes of past sectarian carnage and fears of a dangerous spillover from Syria’s civil war next door.

The latest spiral of violence — which has claimed more than 240 lives in the past week — carries the hallmarks of the two sides that brought nearly nonstop chaos to Iraq for years: Sunni insurgents, including al-Qaida’s branch in Iraq, and Shiite militias defending their newfound power after Saddam Hussein’s fall.

But the widening shadow and regional brinksmanship from Syria’s conflict now increasingly threaten to feed into Iraq’s sectarian strife, heightening concerns that Iraq could be turning toward civil war.

The Shiite-led government of Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki must balance its close ties with Iran — the main regional ally of Syria’s Bashar Assad — and its position among fellow Arab League members and neighboring Turkey, which strongly back Syria’s mainly Sunni opposition.

Al-Maliki appears determined to boost security crackdowns to keep Iraq’s minority Sunnis from taking a more high-profile role in the anti-Assad forces, which have received pledges of support from the longtime insurgent group al-Qaida in Iraq.

There have been no claims of responsibility for the current flare-up of violence, capped by Monday’s body count that was the highest death toll for a single day in 10 months. Yet some analysts believe it’s difficult to separate Iraq’s deep sectarian suspicions from the Shiite-Sunni split over Assad, which has also led to clashes in Lebanon.

“Iraq now has moved into a bigger circle that covers Syria and Lebanon,” said Baghdad-based political affairs analyst Hadi Jalo.

Al-Maliki is not only worried about his Sunni rivals possibly deepening their involvement in the rebel cause in Syria, said Patrick Clawson, director of research at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy. Al-Maliki’s worries extend to Iraq’s semiautonomous northern Kurdish region, which has close links to Assad foe Turkey.

“Al-Maliki believes this is the time to be tough and show he is in control of the country,” said Clawson. “What we are seeing is the backlash to that.”

The U.S. and its Western allies strongly support Syria’s political opposition, but have been reluctant to significantly boost weapons flow to rebel fighters because of worries over Islamic militants who have joined the anti-Assad brigades. But the deepening refugee crisis in the region, along with concern over spillover violence, is often cited by Arab states and Turkey urging greater Western intervention.

Sectarian tensions have been worsening since Iraq’s minority Sunnis began expanding protests over what they say is mistreatment at the hands of the Shiite-led government. Many Sunnis contend that much of the country’s current turmoil is rooted in the policies of al-Maliki’s government, which they accuse of feeding sectarian tension by becoming more aggressive toward Sunnis after the U.S. military withdrawal in December 2011.

Mass demonstrations by Sunnis, which began in December, have largely been peaceful. However, the number of attacks rose sharply after a deadly security crackdown on a Sunni protest camp in northern Iraq on April 23.

Hours after Monday’s stunning blitz of attacks — stretching from north of Baghdad to the southern city of Basra — al-Maliki accused militant groups of trying to exploit Iraq’s political instability and vowed to resist attempts to “bring back the atmosphere of the sectarian war.”

He also blamed the recent spike in violence on the wider unrest in the region, particularly Syria.

“You cannot remove the Syrian element from what’s happening in Iraq,” said Sami al-Faraj, director of the Kuwait Center for Strategic Studies. “The outcome of the war in Syria has big consequences for both Iraq’s Sunnis and Shiites. What we see now is an extension of that in some respects.”

The worst of Monday’s violence took place in Baghdad, where 10 car bombs ripped through open-air markets and other areas of Shiite neighborhoods, killing at least 48 people and wounding more than 150, police officials said.

In Balad, about 50 miles (80 kilometers) north of Baghdad, a car bomb exploded next to a bus carrying Iranian pilgrims, killing 13 Iranians and one Iraqi, a police officer said, speaking on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to brief the media.

Meanwhile, in the predominantly Shiite city of Basra in southern Iraq, twin car bombings — outside a restaurant and at the city’s main bus station — killed at least 13 people and wounded 40, according to provincial police spokesman Col. Abdul-Karim al-Zaidi and the head of the city’s health directorate, Riadh Abdul-Amir.

“All of a sudden, a thunderous explosion lifted my car and put it back on the ground,” said Sami Saadon, a Basra taxi driver who suffered shrapnel injuries in his chest. “I could barely open the door and I crawled outside the car, where smoke and dust were everywhere.”

A car bomb later struck Shiite worshippers as they were leaving a mosque in the southern city of Hillah, killing nine and wounding 26, police and health officials said.

Monday’s violence also struck Sunni areas.

A car bomb in Samarra, north of Baghdad, went off near a gathering of pro-government Sunni militia waiting outside a military base to receive salaries, killing three and wounding 13. In the western province of Anbar, the hub of Sunni power, gunmen ambushed two police patrols near the town of Haditha, killing eight policemen, officials said.

Also in Anbar, authorities found 13 bodies dumped in a remote desert area. The victims, who included eight policemen kidnapped by gunmen on Friday, had been killed by a gunshot to the head, officials said.

The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to talk to the media.

The surge in bloodshed has exasperated Iraqis, who have lived for years with the fear and uncertainty bred of random violence.

“How long do we have to continue living like this, with all the lies from the government?” asked 23-year-old Baghdad resident Malik Ibrahim. “Whenever they say they have reached a solution, the bombings come back stronger than before.”

Associated Press writers Nabil Al-Jurani in Basra and Brian Murphy in Dubai, United Arab Emirates, contributed to this report.

Assyrian International News Agency

National Conference Aims to Unify Chaldeans From Around the World

WEST BLOOMFIELD — The first ever General Chaldean National Conference hosted its opening session on Wednesday at the Shenandoah Country Club, attracting nearly 450 participants.

The 5-day Conference, which is hosted by the United Chaldean Democratic Forum, hopes to bring Chaldeans together from various political and national groups to discuss the plight of the members of their community in Iraq and around the world.

Chaldeans from across the U.S. and from various countries are expected to travel to Metro Detroit to attend the event, which will end on Sunday, May 19. Metro Detroit was chosen as the ideal location for the conference, as it is home to the largest concentration of Chaldeans outside of the Middle East. An estimated 120,000 reside in the region.

“Through this Conference we hope to gain our national and patriotic rights in our mother country of Iraq. With the unity and diversity of opinions, we advance our request to preserve our culture, traditions and heritage for generations to come,” said Rev. Ibrahim Ibrahim, Bishop of St. Thomas Apostle Chaldean Catholic Diocese-USA.

The Conference will also address the religious and ethnic intimidation that Chaldeans and other Iraqi Christians have faced, following the 2003 U.S. led invasion of Iraq.

To date, an estimated 400,000 Christians remain in Iraq, compared to the more than one million that lived in the country prior to the invasion. Hundreds of thousands of Iraqi Christians faced exile from their homeland and persecution after the war. A moment of silence was given to all the martyrs who have passed on. One sign displayed at the event read, “No Ethnic or National Rights in the Absence of Democracy.”

Chaldean American Yousif Gabrail of Sterling Heights, who has lived in the United States for 19 years, says that he hopes the conference sends a strong message, to both the United States and Iraqi governments, that Christians deserve the same human rights as all people who live in Iraq. Since the invasion, leaders in the Chaldean community have called on the United States government to help put an end to the mass persecution of Christians in Iraq.

“We want to be treated like everybody else, and we need adequate representation in Iraq’s government,” Gabrail said. Most Chaldeans trace their roots to the Iraqi Christian village of Telkaif. Today the village is home to very few of them.

“I feel so horrible, knowing my people have left our village because of discrimination,” United Chaldean Democratic Forum member Najib Jalou said.

The conference is also an effort to get Chaldeans, both nationally and internationally, to put their differences aside and unite as one. While divisions between Chaldeans in different parts of the world don’t seem apparent, they actually do exist. This is due, in part, to the fact that large communities in different areas have not worked closely enough together to address issues that affect the community.

“We need to really focus on putting any divisions behind us, and bring the Chaldean community and the Chaldean nation together to really protect where we all came from: Mesopotamia,” Auday Arabo, AFPD President and CEO said.

San Diego is home to the second largest concentration of Chaldeans, with an estimated 36,000 residing in the region. Chaldean media, religious leaders and members of the community from San Diego were also in attendance at the conference. The interaction may have marked the first time that Chaldeans from both communities have come together in such a way.

Arabo grew up in San Diego, and was born in Baghdad, Iraq. He noted that it remains unfortunate that Chaldeans don’t have representation in Iraq’s government, although they reportedly comprise 85 percent of the country’s Christian population.

Assyrian Bishop Mar Bawi Soro, who is also from San Diego, said that in the next 20 years, the number of Chaldeans living in the United States is expected to double.

Artwork, including cultural paintings and sculptures from the Chaldean American Association of Fine Arts, was on display at the conference, along with literature.

The American, Iraqi and Chaldean national anthems were all sung, and some guests wore traditional Chaldean attire from Iraq. “Our unity will ensure the gain of our national and patriotic rights,” Arabo said. Members of the local Muslim American community, including religious leaders, also attended the conference.

The conference will continue on Friday, May 17, from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. at the Mother of God Chaldean Catholic Church in Southfield, and in the evening at 7 p.m., at St. Joseph Hall; On Saturday, May 18, from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m., members will convene at the Quality Inn in Southfield, and in the evening, at 8 p.m., at the Farmington Hills Manor. The last day, Sunday May 19, will take place at Camp Chaldean in Brighton.

Earlier this week, Chaldean Day was held in Lansing, and members of the community had the opportunity to meet with lawmakers in the State’s capitol to discuss important issues that affect them.

“A vast population of Chaldeans proudly call Michigan home, and we are grateful for their services and contributions to our State’s cultural and economic vitality,” Governor Rick Snyder said in a statement.

By Natasha Dado
http://www.arabamericannews.com

Assyrian International News Agency

Kyrgyz Parliament Bans Zhirinovsky From Entering Country

Kyrgyzstan’s parliament has declared Russian politician Vladimir Zhirinovsky persona non grata and banned him from entering the country.

The parliament passed the measure on May 15 by a majority of 67 deputies in the 120-seat chamber.

The decision to ban Zhirinovsky, who is the leader of the Liberal Democratic Party, comes after he proposed in the Russian state Duma that Bishkek hand over the mountainous lake of Issyk Kul to Russia in exchange for a write-off of Kyrgyzstan’s some $ 500 million in debts to Moscow. 

With reporting by Itar-Tass

Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty

U.S. Test Launches New, Larger Drone From Aircraft Carrier

A drone the size of a fighter jet has taken off from the deck of a U.S. aircraft carrier for the first time.

The X-47B unmanned aircraft was launched from the “U.S.S. George H.W. Bush” near the coast of Virginia for a series of test flights.

Larger, carrier-based drones could be launched from anywhere in the world, eliminating the need for permission from other states to use bases on their territory.

The move comes amid growing criticism of America’s use of drones to carry out lethal attacks against suspected  terrorists.

The U.S. Navy said the X-47B is far larger than its Predator drone, has three times the range, and can be programmed to carry out missions rather than being remotely piloted.

Based on reporting by AP and Reuters

Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty

Teams From U.S., Iran, Russia Back Olympic Wrestling

Wrestlers from the United States, Iran, and Russia have appeared jointly at the United Nations to promote the value of wrestling.

The teams, which are in New York for a wrestling exhibition on May 15 at New York’s Grand Central Station railway terminal, hope to apply pressure on the International Olympic Committee to keep their sport in the Olympics.

The International Olympic Committee’s 15-member executive board sparked outcry in February when it voted to recommend that wrestling be dropped from the 2020 Olympic program.

The committee will make a final decision in Buenos Aires in September on which sport will get the final spot in a revamped lineup for 2020.

Wrestling is battling against baseball and softball, karate, rollersports, wushu martial arts, wakeboarding, squash, and climbing.

Based on reporting by AP and AFP

Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty

Rafsanjani Candidacy Draws Fire From Iran’s Hard-Liners

Influential former President Ali Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani has drawn sharp criticism from Iran’s ruling establishment after he filed a last-minute application for candidacy in the country’s June 14 presidential election.

After months of speculation, Rafsanjani signed up at the end of a five-day registration period on May 11, stunning rivals who had written off the 78-year-old moderate.

Iran’s state-run media and hard-liners close to Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei responded to his potential political comeback with ridicule and a volley of accusations.

Mehdi Taeb, a conservative cleric linked with the powerful Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC), was quoted by the semiofficial Fars news agency as saying, “Hashemi knows he is unpopular, a loser, and is too old.”

Meanwhile, the ultra-hard-line “Kayhan” daily accused Rafsanjani of covertly planning to discredit the Guardians Council, which is responsible for vetting potential candidates, if the body does not allow him to run.

‘Candidate For The Dissatisfied’

Rafsanjani, who is considered a moderate conservative, has earned a reputation as a cunning political survivor. On the one hand, he was one of the founding members of Iran’s clerical regime and retains a top post inside the theocracy. But on the other, he has incurred the wrath of hard-liners by declaring that Iran is in a state of crisis and calling for the immediate release of political prisoners.

Scott Lucas, an Iran-specialist at Birmingham University in the United Kingdom and editor of the EA World View website, says Rafsanjani is trying to cast himself as an experienced political figure that can unify the country and deal with Iran’s immediate problems — including the country’s faltering economy and Western pressure to halt its controversial nuclear program.

“Rafsanjani becomes almost a candidate for the dissatisfied,” Lucas says, “for his own supporters, who are dissatisfied from 2005 [when he lost to President Mahmud Ahmadinejad] but also for a number of moderate conservatives who have been dissatisfied with the Ahmadinejad government and the reformists, and even some from [the opposition] Green Movement who have been dissatisfied with what they have seen as the repression of the system since 2009.”

Lucas says Rafsanjani’s policies — including economic liberalization, better relations with the West, and empowering Iran’s elected bodies — will make him an attractive candidate to many Iranian voters.

In one of his first statements since joining the presidential race, Rafsanjani, who served as president from 1989-97, said on May 12 that he will be seeking a new “economic and political” rebirth in a time of “foreign threats and sanctions.”

Lone Reformist Hope?

Rafsanjani’s calls for change make him a potentially attractive choice for the country’s reformists, who have been increasingly marginalized since Ahmadinejad’s disputed reelection in 2009, which provoked mass popular protests and a harsh government crackdown.

Former reformist President Mohammad Khatami recently called Rafsanjani’s candidacy a “national opportunity” and urged reformists and moderates to unite behind him.

Lucas says Rafsanjani’s candidacy has raised a tough challenge to conservative candidates loyal to the supreme leader who wanted to secure a swift victory and showcase unity.

“The whole argument of the establishment, or at least the supreme leader’s inner circle, was that they wanted a very straight-forward election with a clearly defined candidate who would almost be anointed in June,” Lucas says. “Because they couldn’t find that candidate, that opened up the space for Rafsanjani to put himself forward. At this point, I think he’s the leading candidate in terms of being able to mobilize a popular support. He may be the only candidate that can do that.”

His candidacy punctuates a stunning political turn of events for the septuagenarian Rafsanjani. He has been under fire from hard-liners and the supreme leader ever since 2009, when he denounced the government’s harsh crackdown on protesters.

Rocky Recent Road

In the past four years, Rafsanjani has been banned from leading Tehran’s Friday Prayers, lost his role as the head of the Assembly of Experts, and been physically and verbally assaulted at public events.

Meanwhile, Rafsanjani’s daughter served a six-month sentence in connection with the chaos that ensued after the election, while his son is to stand trial in the coming weeks for his alleged role in the protests.

But Rafsanjani did manage to keep his post as head of the Expediency Council, an advisory body that mediates disputes between the parliament and the Guardians Council.

Despite his return to the political limelight, there is no guarantee Rafsanjani will even make the final candidate shortlist that will be determined by the powerful 12-member Guardians Council. That list, which will include only a handful of candidates, is set to be announced by May 21.

Lucas says the council, which is heavily influenced by the supreme leader, will be making a dangerous mistake if it chooses to deny Rafsanjani the right to run for office.

“The problem is that you almost destroy the image of the legitimacy of the election if you don’t let [Rafsanjani] run,” Lucas says. “Legitimacy is very important here, especially after 2009. Secondly, at this point they don’t have a clear popular alternative to Rafsanjani. So, if you disqualify him, who do you ask people to go to and flock to in terms of an alternative?”

Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty

Australian Coptic Christians Demand Answers From Egypt Ambassador

SYDNEY — The Australian Coptic Christian community has praised member of Parliament Laurie Ferguson for writing to the Australian Coptic Movement Association (ACM) and confirming that Minister of Foreign Affairs Bob Car has called in the Egyptian Ambassador to discuss and give information into what the group said were the “ongoing attacks on Copts in Egypt.”

“I appreciate the seriousness of calling in an Ambassador to indicate Australia’s concerns about particular issues. However, events in Egypt appear to demand such action,” Ferguson wrote to Carr.

“On April 14th I attended a sizeable rally in Sydney’s Martin Place with a significant number of NSW and Commonwealth parliamentarians in the aftermath of violent attacks on mourners at Cairo’s St Mark’s Cathedral.”

The Coptic community in Australia, long a stalwart advocate for Christian rights in Egypt, praised the move and said they welcomed an increasing of pressure on Egypt to treat Christians equally.

“The ACM welcomes Mr Ferguson’s stance and we look forward to a prompt response from the Senator Hon. Bob Carr. We also demand that the Australian Government immediately makes strong representations on this serious issue at the United Nations.

“It is quite clear that The Egyptian government has not only failed to take appropriate action to afford protection to Egypt’s vulnerable Coptic community but also directly participated in the persecution,” they said in a statement.

“We are also deeply concerned over the welfare of 24 year Demiana Nour. She has been held by Egyptian police in Luxor since 8 May 2013 under ‘defamation of religion’ charges. Demiana is a young teacher who was merely undertaking her teaching duties.

We demand that the Egyptian authorities immediately release Demiana and all Copts who have been have been charged under flimsy ‘defamation of religion’ charges,” the ACM added.

http://bikyanews.com

Assyrian International News Agency

Film Screening and Forum: From Cuba to Kuba

photo of Freddy IlangaFrom the Caribbean Island of Cuba to the Kongo Kingdom of Kuba in the heart of Africa. Join us to commemorate (or reflect on) the birth of Cuba’s Internationalism through remembering Che Guevara’s work in the Congo. Motivated by the (CIA-induced) assassination of democratically-elected Congolese Prime Minister Patrice Lumumba in 1961, Che Guevara led a secret Cuban expedition to the Congo in April of 1965 under heavy disguise, to assist in the fight for liberation.

Through art, dance, drumming, documentaries, discussions and recollections, Friends of The Congo with IPS’ Foreign Policy In Focus will recount Cuba’s involvement in the Congo under Che’s leadership, discuss Cuba’s international solidarity efforts with African liberation movements, and explore how to carry Che’s torch in promoting solidarity between Africa and Latin America today.

We will be showing clips from Jihan El-Tahri’s documentary Cuba: An African Odyssey and Freddy Ilunga: Che’s Swahili Translator.  Pan-Latin hors d’oeuvres will be provided by Café Arte followed by a discussion led by Ofunshi Oba Koso, President of MN Yoruba Cuba Association and protégé of the late Freddy Ilanga (Che’s personal interpreter in the Congo) and Kambale Musavuli, Spokesperson of Friends of the Congo. Ofunshi will share his experience of growing up in Cuba as a young Afri-Cuban revolutionary under the tutelage of Freddy Ilunga, Victor Drake (Second-in-Command of Che’s guerilla unit in Congo) and other members of the historical mission.

Read more and get tickets to Conga to Congo Party.

FPIF Latest Content

Syria cut off from global Internet

Internet connections between Syria and the outside world have been cut off, according to data from Google Inc and other global Internet companies.

Tuesday’s shutdown effectively “disconnects Syria from Internet communication with the rest of the world,” according to companies that monitor online traffic around the world.

Google’s Transparency Report pages showed traffic to Google services pages from the country, embroiled in a civil war that has lasted more than two years, suddenly stopping shortly before 1900 GMT. Google traffic reports continued to show no activity there about four hours after the drop-off.

“We’ve seen this twice before,” said Christine Chen, Google’s senior manager for free expression. “This happened in Syria last November and in Egypt during the Arab Spring.”

Cause undetermined

It is virtually impossible to definitely determine the cause of such disruptions unless a party claims responsibility, experts said.

Jim Cowie, chief technology officer at Renesys, a US company that tracks global Internet traffic, said the outage looked similar to the one seen last November.

“We don’t see any effects in neighbouring countries, and we don’t see anything to suggest that the outage was caused by damage to one or another of the several cables that connect Syria with the outside world,” he said.

The vast majority of websites within Syria were rendered unreachable as well, other experts said, as the county appeared to shut itself off.

As during Arab Spring disruptions, Google said its Speak2Tweet service, which broadcasts voice messages, was up and running in Syria for people with access to a phone.

Syrian authorities have cut phone and Internet service in select areas in the past to disrupt rebel communication when regime forces are conducting major operations. 

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North Korea removes missiles from launch site

North Korea has moved two missiles from launch sites on the country’s eastern coast, after weeks of concern that Pyongyang had been poised for a test-launch.

A US defence official said on Monday that Washington did not believe the Musudan missiles had gone to an alternate launch site and that they were now believed to be in a non-operational location.

The move coincided with preparations by US President Barack Obama to meet South Korean President Park Guen-hye at the White House on Tuesday, where they will hold talks and have a working lunch followed by a joint news conference.

Pentagon spokesman George Little noted the change in North Korea’s words, telling reporters on Monday the “provocation pause” was a positive development.

“I wouldn’t again comment on intelligence. But what we have seen recently is a ‘provocation pause.’ And we think that’s obviously beneficial to efforts to ensure we have peace and stability on the Korean peninsula,” Little told reporters.

North Korea’s move meant there was no longer an imminent threat of a launch, and Pyongyang would have to make preparations before returning to a launch-ready status, two other US officials said.

Tension

Amid dire threats and bellicose language from North Korea, two Musudan missiles had been deployed to the east coast, and the United States and its allies Japan and South Korea had braced for a possible test-launch in the run-up to national celebrations on April 15.

US Secretary of State John Kerry warned North Korea last month that it would be a “huge mistake” to launch the medium-range missiles, but the prospects of a test had put Seoul, Washington and Toyko on edge.

Japan and South Korea stepped up its missile defences, while the US military deployed two destroyers equipped with anti-missile weapons and a powerful radar to the area to thwart any possible launch.

Commanders told MPs US forces would be ready to shoot down any missile that threatened allies or US facilities in Guam.

But North Korea never launched a missile and eventually toned down its inflammatory rhetoric, with the crisis appearing to ease in recent days.

A Musudan missile has an estimated range of roughly 3,000 to 3,500km, according to military officers.

North Korea has several hundred short and medium-range missiles available that could reach targets in Japan or South Korea, according to the Pentagon.

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Insurgency In Daghestan Extorts Funding From State Budget, Businessmen

On May 1, an improvised explosive device went off outside a store in Makhachkala, killing two high school students and injuring two other men. Daghestan’s security services believe that the bomb was intended as a warning to the owner of the store, who had refused to pay “zakyat” – the percentage of one’s income that the North Caucasus insurgency seeks to extort to fund its activities.

The leader of the Daghestan insurgency wing, Abu Mukhammad, and his namesake, who is qadi (supreme religious authority) of the Caucasus Emirate proclaimed in the fall of 2007 by Doku Umarov, explained with reference to the Koran why it is incumbent on all Muslims to pay that tax in a video clip posted last fall on insurgency websites. It has since been removed from YouTube.

That businessmen in Daghestan and elsewhere in the North Caucasus pay zakyat to the insurgency is no secret. Former Republic of Daghestan President Magomedsalam Magomedov admitted as much during a meeting in Pyatigorsk in October 2012 chaired by Russian Security Council secretary Nikolai Patrushev. Magomedov told that meeting that extortion from businessmen is the insurgency’s primary source of funding and that the Daghestani authorities are resolutely seeking to curtail it.

Magomedov did not estimate the sums of money involved. But North Caucasus Federal District head Aleksandr Khloponin claimed two years ago that businessmen across the North Caucasus pay the militants billions of rubles.

Then Daghestan Prosecutor-General Andrei Nazarov reported late last year that militants who had been apprehended had identified and provided their interrogators with detailed information about persons engaged in preparing video addresses that are downloaded onto a USB memory stick and sent to businessmen. He said that group alone had extorted more than 7 million rubles ($ 233,715), without specifying the time frame.

In October 2011, Daghestan’s Interior Ministry rounded up one such group numbering more than 30 people that operated in the northwest of the republic. A second group operating in three districts south and west of Makhachkala was broken up a year later.

An analysis last fall quoted a senior Daghestani Interior Ministry official as saying that criminal groups claiming to represent the insurgency have also begun demanding zakyat from entrepreneurs. The report suggested that the volume of cash the insurgency extorts from the business community is one of the primary reasons for Daghestan’s economic stagnation. It also quoted a former manufacturer of furniture in the southern town of Derbent whose workshop was subjected to an arson attack after he ignored a demand from the insurgency for 2 million rubles. He paid off the sum in installments, then sold his business and emigrated to Azerbaijan.

Yet local businessmen are not the insurgency’s only source of ready cash. They also tap into budget funds by threatening government officials with reprisals. Magomedov admitted that the use of budget funds by local councils is carefully monitored in light of suspicions that some of those officials channel money to the insurgency. The analysis cited above named one local council head who was shot dead after refusing to pay zakyat and a second injured in an attack the author believed was similarly motivated.

The independent weekly “Nastoyashchee vremya” was fined 10,000 rubles for reporting last year without revealing its source that Magomedov himself had received a threatening “flashka” from the insurgency. The paper did not speculate whether or how much he had paid them.

Then Daghestan Minister for Nationality Policy Bekmurza Bekmurzayev said a year ago that the insurgency in Daghestan receives 70 percent of its funding from “Daghestanis from whom the bandits extract tribute.” He did not clarify what proportion of those “Daghestanis” are businessmen, not bureaucrats.

Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty

Jumaili warns the Government from storming the sit-in square in Ramadi

Baghdad (NINA) – Motahidoon slate’s official, Salman al-Jumaili, warned the Government from storming the sit-in square in Ramadi, pointing out that such a move would ignite the whole country and slip it into a dangerous and dark situation full of blood.

In a press conference held on Thursday, May 2, Jumaili called on all sides in the Government to work toward realizing the protestors’ demand, instead of threats.

Jumaili said that then the slate’s leadership will support the protestors in Ramadi and throughout Iraq. / End.

LINK

Dinar Daddy’s Tidbits

Moussawi calls on citizens to not to withdraw their assets from local banks

Baghdad (news) .. Member of the Committee called for the economy and investment MP / National Alliance / Salman al-Moussawi, the citizens for not withdrawing their money deposited in the government and private banks, ruling him of the loss of the money deposited in the banks when the deterioration of the security and political situation in the country.

Has announced the government and private banks in the past week to increase the proportion of financial withdraw deposits by citizens because of political problems and security conditions experienced by the country.

Moussawi said (of the Agency news): The increase in financial withdraw deposits from banks would disrupt the banking business and the national economy in full, and the first and last victim is a citizen.

He added: citizens should save their assets in government and private banks because banks are guaranteed by the state and civil guaranteed by the central bank, noting that the political problems will not affect the banking and money in banks.

He pointed out, that most of the countries of the world began to dispense cash transactions and prefer to deal cards ‘Mastercard’ and ‘Visa Card’ through the opening of a current account and a savings account in the bank, so should be encouraged to save for their contribution to the development of the country’s economy.
LINK

Dinar Daddy’s Tidbits

Assyrian Refugees From Syria Expected to Rise in Sweden

Stockholm (AINA) — The number of Assyrians in Sweden is expected to rise as a result of the war in Syria. The municipality of Södertälje, 30 Kilometers south of Stockholm, reports the arrival of 3-5 families each week. This number is expected to because Södertälje has a large Assyrian community, which attracts new arrivals to settle down among friends and relatives.

Fearing this development, local authorities have held talks with the Assyrian Federation of Sweden to try to find ways to help newcomers to settle in other towns.

“We understand the concerns of the authorities and will do what we can to persuade our people to settle in other areas with Assyrian communities,” says Afram Yakoub, chairman of the Assyrian Federation of Sweden. “Södertälje has welcomed many immigrants in the past and it would be better for the newcomers as well to go to other places as job opportunities might be better and social services less strained there.

Recent developments in Syria leads many Assyrians to believe they are going to face a situation similar to the one during the war in Iraq, where their numbers have dwindled. Just like in previous years in Iraq, Assyrians in Syria are experiencing a surge in threats, kidnappings and murders.

Of the nearly 100,000 Assyrians in Sweden, 25,000 live in Södertälje, which has a population of 61,000.

Assyrian International News Agency

S Korea to pull all workers from Kaesong

South Korea has decided to withdraw the roughly 175 of its nationals stationed at Kaesong joint industrial zone after North Korea rejected Seoul’s offer to open formal talks on restarting operations at the complex, according to a senior official.

Seoul said on Friday it was worried about its workers not having access to food and medicine at the factory park that has been closed for nearly a month.

The statement by the country’s Unification Minister Ryoo Kihl-jae raises a major question about the future of the last major symbol of inter-Korean cooperation as tensions remain high in the region.

The jointly run industrial zone located inside North Korea on the border with the South provides jobs to more than 50,000 North Koreans, who withdrew after their government decided to shut operations there.

Pyongyang’s powerful National Defence Commission (NDC) earlier said Seoul’s demand for working-level talks was deceptive and that ongoing US-South Korean military drills and the spreading of anti-North Korea leaflets at the border were proof of Seoul’s insincerity.

Seoul on Thursday had given the North 24 hours to agree to formal negotiations on the Kaesong complex, warning of unspecified “significant measures” if Pyongyang declined.

“If the South Korean puppet force continues to aggravate the situation, it would be up to us to take any final and decisive grave measures,” South’s Yonhap news agency cited the NDC statement as saying.

‘Military’ contingency

Pyongyang suspended operations on April 9 because it was angered by the South’s “military” contingency plan to protect its staff at the site.

The Korean peninsula was already engulfed in a cycle of escalating tensions, triggered by the North’s nuclear test in February that prompted UN sanctions.

Ever since the fresh sanctions, North’s young leader Kim Jong-un has been berating its southern neighbour and threatened its ally, the US, of nuclear attack.

Tensions are still high amid reports that Pyongyang has moved more missile launchers to its east coast.

The latest developments come as two months of joint military exercises between the US and South Korea are starting to wrap up.

The South Korean firms that usually operate at the Kaesong complex, was established in 2004, have vowed to remain and fight to defend their investment whatever Seoul’s decision be.

“We’ve decided to protect Kaesong Industrial Complex no matter what difficulties we may face,” said a spokesman for the South Korean companies, Ok Sung-seok.

But the number of South Korean workers has drastically come down to 176 from about 850.

The North’s decision to suspend operations was unexpected.

Neither of the Koreas has allowed previous crises to significantly affect the complex, which is a valued source of hard currency for the impoverished North and seen as a bellwether of stability on the Korean peninsula.

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PKK sets date for withdrawal from Turkey

The Kurdish rebel group the PKK has announced it will withdraw its thousands of fighters from Turkey starting on May 8.

The rebels from the Kurdistan Worker’s Party (PKK), who have been fighting the Turkish government for the last three decades, will move to northern Iraq after leaving Turkish territory.

During the announcement, the armed group warned Turkey’s powerful military against “provocations” which would result in the end of the pledged withdrawal.

Al Jazeera’s Jane Arraf, reporting from the Qandil mountains where the news conference was held, said the withdrawal would take a phased approach.

The total dismantling of weapons and the disarmament of the guerrillas will come to the agenda when everyone, including our leader Apo, reaches their freedom.

Murat Karayilan, PKK commander.

“It will be a phased withdrawal from Turkey. They won’t put a number on how many fighters are coming but speaking later the PKK officials estimated that it will take several months for them to withdraw,” she said.

“That’s partly because this will be conducted as a guerrilla operation. One of the keys here is that they intend to keep their weapons. There will be no laying down of weapons in Turkey before they withdraw.

“They say they’ll go undercover of night with their weapons and eventually, once they’re all gathered in northern Iraq, they say with the approval of Kurdish authorities here they will discuss disarming.”

The pro-Kurdish Firat news agency says rebel commander Murat Karayilan made the withdrawal announcement on Thursday at a news conference in northern Iraq where the PKK’s leadership is based.

“As part of ongoing preparations, the withdrawal will begin on May 8, 2013,” Karayilan said.

“Our forces will use their right to retaliate in the event of an attack, operation or bombing against our withdrawing guerrilla forces and the withdrawal will immediately stop.” 

New constitution demanded

The announcement comes after the PKK’s jailed leader Abdullah Ocalan ordered on March 21 a historic ceasefire following clandestine negotiations with the Turkish secret service aimed at disarming the rebel group.

Karayilan also outlined “obligations” the Turkish government needs to meet for peace to be achieved, including enacting a new constitution, the dismantling of special security units established to fight the rebels and an amnesty for all imprisoned fighters, including Ocalan.

Karayilan said the PKK’s leader, nicknamed Apo, had “fulfilled all of his responsibilities.”

“The total dismantling of weapons and the disarmament of the guerrillas will come to the agenda when everyone, including our leader Apo, reaches their freedom,” he said.

“Apo has fulfilled all of his responsibilities, now it is the Turkish government and our turn.”

The PKK, blacklisted as a terrorist group by Turkey and much of the international community, started an armed rebellion in the Kurdish-majority southeast in 1984.

The group had originally demanded full independence for a Kurdish state in southeastern Turkey, but has moderated its goals to broader political and cultural autonomy.

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AL JAZEERA ENGLISH (AJE)

Switzerland To Restrict Immigration From All EU Countries

The Swiss government plans to limit immigration from all European Union countries starting next month.

Switzerland, which is not an EU member, already has a quota in place for eight Eastern European countries that joined the 27-nation bloc in 2004, as well as special, stricter regulations for the newest EU members, Bulgaria and Romania.

The government said on April 24 it would now impose quotas on residency permits to citizens from the remaining 17 EU countries to “help make immigration more acceptable to society.”

Right-wing parties claiming that foreigners are taking away Swiss jobs have gained popularity in recent years.

Under an agreement with the EU, Switzerland can limit the number of EU citizens allowed to work in the country if immigration rises above a certain level.

Based on reporting by dpa, AP, and AFP

Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty

Tunisia and the IMF: Ennahda’s Mana From Washington (Part Two)

Despite reservations, both Washington and Paris have decided that, when it comes to Tunisia, the horse they are going to ride is the Ennahda party.

Cross-posted from the Colorado Progressive Jewish News.

Read Part 1.

“I get by with a little help from my friends.”
– Lennon, McCartney

News reports suggest that Tunisia and the International Monetary Fund (IMF) are ‘very close’ to coming to terms over a $ 1.78 billion loan to the North African country to help navigate it through the current stormy economic seas. In the short term, there is no doubt that an accord of such a large amount to such a small country will help the country get through the next few years, and help stabilize what has been an unstable and increasingly unpopular transitional government. But at what price to the country’s medium and long term future? Rosy IMF projections that, with the loan’s help, the Tunisian economy will grow by 4.5% next year are hardly credible.

Tunis Brique, a l'oeuf maker.There seems to be something of a ‘rush to the finish’, an effort on both the IMF’s and Tunisian government’s part to wrap up the negotiations as soon as possible. It is as if they are looking over their shoulders nervous that, as the agreement’s terms get out, opposition could grow among the Tunisian people, thus the mutual effort to get the whole thing over with as soon as possible. There is  mounting concern within Tunisian civil society about the agreement, both in terms of the process which has been typically secretive and the “structural adjustment conditions” that the country will be forced to submit to in order to fulfill the Tunisian part of the deal.

In traditional IMF fashion,  the negotiations were very much ‘under wraps’ with virtually no input from anyone other than one member of the Tunisian Central Bank and another from the finance ministry. But in this post-Ben Ali age of Tunisian freedom of speech, it turned out to be difficult to impossible to hide the agreement terms, which several talented Tunisian researchers have been able to unearth.

The Political Significance of the IMF Loan

It is easy to get lost in the somewhat complex economic details of such agreements (although we will look at them shortly) At the same time, sometimes lost is the political significance of the agreement. It is nothing less than a ‘green light’, ‘a seal of approval’ – for the current direction of the Tunisian political leadership – most specifically, the Ennahda Party (Islamic Party) which dominates the ruling coalition and the political and economic direction of the country. The two other parties represented in Tunisia’s ruling coalition, the Congress for the Republic (President Moncef Marzouki’s party) and Ettakotal (Democratic Forum for Labor and Liberties) are much weaker, and their political will more or less circumscribed by Ennahdha. [i]

News of an impending agreement comes just at the moment when the Ennahda-led coalition government needs it most. In February, a popular opposition leader, Chedli Belaid, was assassinated at his home in Tunis. Belaid has been a critique of Ennahda’s collusion with the country’s Salafist elements, and the drift away from Tunisian democracy which has accelerated under Ennahda. The angry demonstrations that followed, which placed responsibility at the door of Ennahda, charging something between neglect and complicity very nearly brought down the coalition government.

While it survived, former Ennahda Prime Minister Hamadi Jebali, who attempted to broaden the government’s social base, was forced to step down. Jebali was replaced by another Ennahda bureaucrat, Ali Laarayedh, who was moved over from his post as interior minister. Key to forcing Jebali out was Ennahda Party leader Rachid Ghannouchi, who conveniently holds neither formal government nor party post, but is, for all intents and purposes, the gray eminence behind the scenes.

Ennahda survived the crisis, but barely. It managed to scrape by with a little help from its friends…in Washington and Paris. Its popularity tumbling in the polls, the economy stagnant – in worse condition than when Zine Ben Ali fled – Salafist thuggery growing and unimpeded, Ennahda needed something dramatic to reverse or slow its growing unpopularity among the Tunisian populace. Like mana from heaven – or more aptly from Washington – coming just in the nick of time, the IMF delivered the economic and political oxygen Ennahda needed to retain its hold on power.

Ennahda’s Mana From Washington

Whatever their hesitations, both Washington and Paris – which together have considerable influence over IMF decisions – have decided that, when it comes to Tunisia, the horse that they are going to ride is Ennahdha.  This is the central political message of the IMF loan. Washington’s support for Ennahda comes in spite of unimpeded storming and partial trashing of the U.S. embassy in Tunis last September in which the Tunisian Ministry of the Interior was unable to stop the riot, despite prior warning of danger, including a warning from U.S. Ambassador to Tunisia Jacob Welles that went unheeded.[ii]

Although some may wonder why the Obama Administration would support Ennahda, knowing well its working relationship with the country’s radical Islamic militants of Salafist and Wahhabist persuasion, it is not as strange as it might seem at first. When it comes to working in tandem with U.S. regional strategic and economic goals, the Ennahda Party has never wavered. As we say, they know well on what side their bread is buttered. On economic policy, Ennahda continues, and with this IMF loan, even intensifies, Tunisia’s commitment to neo-liberal economic policies – i.e., keeping the Tunisian economy open to global finance and corporate penetration.

Ennahda: Partner of the Obama Administration, Strategically and Economically

While Tunisia’s strategic role in the region remains modest, still it plays an important role. America’s Tunis embassy is a communications center for the Mediterranean and North Africa – a potential ‘lily pad’ from which U.S. military forces could ‘jump’ into sub-Sahara Africa (or elsewhere) if the situation presented itself. More importantly is the embassy’s role collecting intelligence from throughout the region.

In other ways Ennahdha has made it clear ‘which side it is on’. Much of its foreign policy is geared towards cooperation with U.S. strategic goals. The government’s posture towards the crises in Libya and Syria suggest the kind of role Tunisia plays. Two examples:

• Recently there have been a spate of news stories of Tunisian youth dying fighting with Islamist rebels in Syria. Some reports suggest that it entails hundreds of Tunisian youth; at the very least, Ennahda has turned the other way and not interfered with Salafist recruitment, transfer to other places in the Middle East and training of these youth.  There are some allegations that Ennahda’s role is more active. “Three young men from my village (near Sousse) will be buried today,” a Tunisian friend wrote. “They died fighting in Syria,” he went on, noting that a forth villager, a 22-year-old fighting with Islamic rebels, had died a few days prior. “They (the Ennahda-led government) promised us training, work, dignity, – in a word – ‘a future’ but they lied, betrayed us, and trained our youth to become assassins.”

• Under Ennahda pressure, an incident which, among other things, revealed the powerlessness of Tunisian president Moncef Marzouki to protect Khadaffi’s foreign minister, Baghdadi Al Mahmoudi, who had sought political asylum in Tunisia. In a sop to the U.S. and NATO, Ennahda turned Al Mahmoudi over to the Libya’s National Transitional Council. One of Marzouki’s closest advisors, Ayoub Massoudi, resigned over the handover, criticizing the Ennahda government as a ‘theocratic dictatorship.’ As a result, Massoudi was indicted and faces a military trial.

It is true that the new Tunisian government has initiated a new, more hostile posture towards Israel although that seems more for domestic public consumption than a real change in policy, and Israel knows it. Tunisia’s Israel policy parallels that of Turkey, i.e., verbal criticisms but strategic cooperation through U.S. CENTCOM and NATO formations.

If its contribution strategically to Washington is somewhat limited, still, the Ennahda government is falling in line. The same goes for economic policy; actually where it concerns economic integration, Tunisia pre-and post-Ben Ali shows little to no signs of change. The Tunisian economy remains open to foreign corporate and financial penetration. The policies that led to the 2010-11 crisis, the cause of which were, in large measure, economic remain in place and intensify. Tunisia’s continued vulnerability to the labile whims of structural adjustment will continue.

IMF Agreement Ties Tunisia’s Hands Economically to the Neo-Liberal Economic Policies of the Past/La Lutta Continua

The proposed agreement – the details of which I will look at in depth in the third part of this series – essentially commits Tunisia to the neo-liberal economic path it has been on since 1987, when Zine Ben Ali first came to power. Ben Ali might be gone, but a policy of privatization of state resources, open capital markets, de-valued currency, wage repression, lifting of subsidies (already started), and cutting government spending for social programs will continue and with it the continued deepening suffering of the Tunisian people.

The situation I see developing in Tunisia looks something like this: the IMF loan will give Ennahda some ‘living space’ and in the short term they will be able, probably to cling to power. But in the medium and long run, their hold is untenable for their have failed to provide a vision for the country’s future. All the old shortcomings – the economic stagnation, corruption, and not least, repression will once again show their faces and perhaps in an aggravated form.

Unable to deliver economically, but kept in power by the IMF loan in large measure, Ennahda, having all but destroyed the political coalition which came together to drive Ben Ali from power, will find, more and more, that, like Ben Ali, it too will have to resort to heightened repression to keep order; one can see the outlines of their policy –  in part they will continues to use their Salafist allies as brownshirts, to break up possible democratic coalition.

Under the veil of religion, there will be increasingly repressive legislation limiting freedom of speech, action. The labor movement, women’s rights movement, the integrity of the country’s higher education systems – all institutions, social movements that are already under fire – will be further reined in one way or another. All this will be done while Washington sings its song about human rights, but supports those in Tunisia who undermine them.

And as the history of structural adjustment almost always shows, the polarization, class and democratic struggles will intensify. Like my friend Jaco, a Tunisian Jew, said last summer when I asked him how he saw the situation in Tunisia playing out, “Before it gets better, it will get worse…but it will get better.”

La lutta continua.

[i] For example, the position of the Tunisian presidency, held by Marzouki, has lost most of its power in the post Ben Ali era. That power has been transferred largely to the Tunisian prime minister – an Ennahdha member.

[ii] Interview with Abdelfattah Mouru, considered ‘the number two’ man behind Rachid Ghannouchi in the Ennahdha Party structure – in Denver, September 2012.

FPIF Latest Content

Interview: Chinese Activist Says Reform Will Have To Come From The People

Blind civil-rights activist Chen Guangcheng, who gained international recognition for taking on China’s one-child policy and other causes, set off a diplomatic firestorm last year when he escaped house arrest in China and fled to the U.S. Embassy in Beijing.

Following diplomatic intervention by Washington, he was allowed to travel to the United States to study law in New York, where he currently lives with his family.

RFE/RL correspondent Courtney Brooks sat down with Chen to discuss his views on current events in China, as well as his and his family’s experiences since leaving Beijing.

RFE/RL: How has your transition to the United States been?

Chen Guangcheng: As far as cultural conflict is concerned, I haven’t felt much of anything significant. Of course, there are things to acclimatize to, but I can get used to most of it. But the real difficulty has been in dealing with the ongoing effects of my treatment in China. For example, to this day, my bones have not healed in my foot, and psychologically there are things I can’t even mention. It will take a really long time to thoroughly heal from that experience.

RFE/RL: Can you describe what it is like to be a civil rights activist in China?

Chen:  The life of an activist is still pretty brutal because the Communist Party can use any measure at any time to either illegally lock you up at home or put you in jail or break up your family, and it can happen at any time.

There are people such as Hu Jia [a dissident and activist in China who was imprisoned from 2008 to 2011 - Eds.] who gets locked up any time there’s a sensitive day or anniversary. Of course, there’s a lot of support among the Chinese people, but it’s still not quite enough support to overcome government persecution. But I think that, in the future, the public reaction will be increasingly immediate and powerful.

RFE/RL: There has just been a wholesale leadership change in China. Some people suggest there is more openness to reform than in the last government. What is your assessment of the new leadership?

Chen: If they actually do this, of course it’s good. But it’s important that we don’t just listen to whatever they say. We have to watch what they do. It’s been a while, and we’ve not seen any real actions, just a lot of talking. It’s been all talk, too much talking. Just a lot of things people want to hear. But we’ve never seen follow-through on these things.

So, I think that if the government wants to make their actions align with their words, they need to change policies that we can see, that we can touch. First of all, they should not restrict expression. They should not censor the Internet. And they should not restrict freedom of speech. They should immediately begin open investigations into the cases that have gone uninvestigated for so long.

Many of my friends who are working in human rights have been illegally detained at home because of [Secretary of State John] Kerry’s visit to China over the last few days, and these people need to be let free. They have said they will change that, but it has not changed.

RFE/RL: In terms of the ruling Communist Party, do you see any possibility for reform within the party, or do you think there will need to be a revolution in order for real change to occur?

Chen: I have not seen that the Chinese Communist Party has any true desire to reform. They’ve talked about this in every leadership change — from 1997, then in 2002, 2007, and again now. It’s just talk.

But now the Chinese people are waking up. Their awareness is developing very quickly and, because of this, China will not be able to remain unchanged.

This transformation will possibly come from the maturation of the Chinese people and their continual opposition, and perhaps the Chinese Communist Party will make some changes when they have no other option. But as for change resulting from the Party’s own initiative, I have no hope for that.”

RFE/RL: Some observers suggest that there is a growing sense of nationalism in China. Do you agree with this sentiment?

Chen:  First of all, the sense of nationalism in China is indeed quite strong, but I don’t think it’s getting stronger. I think it, in fact, is getting somewhat weaker because an increasing number of citizens are becoming more aware and aren’t just believing the party line.

What we are seeing now, I am sure, is the result of the support of the government. For example, during the recent demonstrations against Japan there were a lot of open protests on the street, and I’m sure that there was a lot of government backing for that. Because, really, the only protests that reach the streets in the open are those that the Communist Party wants to see. Other, more democratic, protests would not be allowed to take place.

RFE/RL: You have called for the documents pertaining to your admission to the United States to be made public. What do you think could be gained by this?

Chen: I, of course, hope to find a solution that is based on the truth. This document was an agreement between the American and Chinese governments, and the people have a right to know. Especially the American people have a right to know, and I also have a right to know.

If an agreement has been made, and it’s not being followed, we should all have the right to oversee these matters and to be a part of the resolution of these matters. If they’re not willing to openly share this document, does that possibly suggest that there’s something that they don’t want people to know about? I don’t believe this is appropriate.”

Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty

Postcard from Mumbai

Photo by Joshua Leon.

Even if you have not been to steamy Mahalaxmi Dhobi Ghat, Mumbai’s well-known outdoor laundry facility, there is a chance that your clothing has. Densely packed against Mumbai’s central rail system, this iconic complex is the largest of many sites that collect, hand wash, dry, and deliver much of the city’s laundry.

It has reportedly done so since the days of the British Raj, but the site also exemplifies an unsettling cosmopolitan modernity. Its thousands of laborers partake actively in globalization, effectively producing for the world. Textile manufacturers contract with the site for first washes. Some washers here specialize in giving denim its “stonewashed” look, so ubiquitous on store shelves. The city’s hotels are the biggest customers, sending out tourists’ laundry as well as their own linens.

A backdrop of modern high rises visible beyond the laundry site symbolizes the city’s jarring transformation since the Indian economy’s neoliberal turn in the early 1990s. Many of the people who work in the 23-acre area, however, live in tenements situated close to its dense maze of cubicles, washing stones, and chemicals. They rent the stones monthly in hopes of sustaining family businesses or even achieving upward mobility in a steeply hierarchical society.

Beyond their tremendous physical output, the workers contribute mightily to the cultural production that is the hallmark of a global city. Unlike other working poor areas in the city, locals tolerate photography, and even charge for tours. The laundry’s central location makes it ideal for tourists sightseeing in a city that is notoriously difficult to get around.

Mahalaxmi Dhobi Ghat symbolizes a degree of authenticity for outsiders because it relies on a traditional form of labor with apparently deep historic roots. It has spurred endless comment on global tourism websites such as Trip Advisor. Its place in popular culture was solidified further by a recent romantic film called Dhobi Ghat, much of which was filmed on site.

In short, Mahalaxmi Dhobi Ghat engenders two forms of production that are both prized by cities under capitalism: the physical kind of production, essential to maintaining the comforts enjoyed by tourists and affluent locals at low cost; and the metaphysical kind of production, which gives the city a resonant place in the popular imagination. Both create immense value in the economies of cities, and are almost always unevenly shared.

Unlike other great cities, Mumbai does not lend itself well to sanitized images. The city’s unflinchingly honest street culture reveals candid truths about the costs of pursuing global influence. While white-collar knowledge sectors are a widely noted component of development in urban India more broadly, Mumbai’s built environment conveys a different story. The city’s class structure rests heavily upon labor-intensive forms of production. Mahalaxmi Dhobi Ghat is one of many reminders that the modern economy has not transcended the realities of undercompensated manual toil. Despite the advent of washing machines and dryers, human hands still provide cheaper labor.

FPIF Latest Content

Chad to pull its troops from war-torn Mali

Chad’s army will be withdrawing from the war in Mali, the country’s president has announced. 

The announcement of Chadian forces’ imminent withdrawal comes three months after the French-led mission to oust al-Qaeda-linked fighters in northern Mali began, and just days after a suicide bombing killed three Chadian soldiers.

Chad’s army has no ability to face the kind of guerrilla fighting that is emerging in northern Mali

Idriss Deby, President of Chad 

“Chad’s army has no ability to face the kind of guerrilla fighting that is emerging in northern Mali. Our soldiers are going to return to Chad. They have accomplished their mission,” Chadian President Idriss Deby said in an interview with French journalists that was posted online on Monday. 

Deby said Chad already has begun pulling out a battalion with the rest of the 2,000 Chadian soldiers to return progressively, according to the joint interview with France’s Le Monde newspaper, TV5 Monde and RFI radio.

France has said it also wants to hand over responsibility for the mission to Malian and other African soldiers.

Chadian forces, trained in desert combat, have backed French forces in some of the heaviest battles during the war in northern Mali. 

The Chadians have been especially instrumental in helping French troops in the mountains of the north Kidal region where elements of al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM) and other rebels are hiding out after being ousted from major towns.

Deadly cost

Their efforts have not come without cost; at least 23 Chadian soldiers were killed in one battle alone in February.

Deby held out the possibility that his country’s troops could take part in an eventual UN force in Mali.

French President Francois Hollande has said that by July, about 2,000 French soldiers would still be in the former French colony, down from 4,000 at the peak deployment, and at the end of the year 1,000 French soldiers will remain.

The once-democratic nation of Mali fell into turmoil last year, following a March 2012 military coup in Bamako, the capital.

Bamako has long struggled to maintain control over the nation’s distant north, an area as large as Afghanistan.

The coup created a power vacuum which allowed fighters loyal to al-Qaeda to invade the north, where they imposed their strict interpretation of Islamic law, carrying out public executions, amputations and whippings.

France launched a military operation on January 11 after being asked to intervene by the country’s interim president.

In the first weeks of the campaign, French and Malian forces easily took back cities in northern Mali, but rebels remain in the desert, from where they have struck back.

434

AL JAZEERA ENGLISH (AJE)

The Christian Exodus From Egypt

Posted GMT 10-12-2012 22:36:10

Visit any Coptic church in the United States and you immediately recognize the newcomers. You see it in their eyes, hear it in their broken English, sense it in how they cling to the church in search of the familiar. They have come here escaping a place they used to call home, where their ancestors had lived for centuries.

Waves of Copts have come here from Egypt before, to escape Gamal Abdel Nasser’s nationalizations or the growing Islamist tide. Their country’s transformation wasn’t sudden, but every year brought more public Islamization. As the veil spread, Coptic women felt increasingly different, alien and marked. Verbal abuse came from schoolteachers, bystanders in the bus station who noticed the cross on a wrist, or commentators on state television.

But life was generally bearable. Hosni Mubarak crushed the Islamist insurgency of the 1980s and ’90s. He was no friend to the Copts, but neither was he foe. His police often turned a blind eye when Coptic homes and shops were attacked by mobs, and the courts never punished the perpetrators–but the president wasn’t an Islamist. He even interfered sometimes to give permission to build a church, or to make Christmas a national holiday.

To be sure, Copts were excluded from high government positions. There were no Coptic governors, intelligence officers, deans of schools, or CEOs of government companies. Until 2005, Copts needed presidential approval to build a new church or even build a bathroom in an existing one. Even with approval, state security often blocked construction, citing security concerns.

Those concerns were often real. Mobs could mobilize against Copts with the slightest incitement–rumor of a romantic relationship between a Christian man and a Muslim woman, a church being built, reports of a Christian having insulted Islam. The details varied but the results didn’t: homes burned, shops destroyed, Christians leaving villages, sometimes dead bodies. The police would arrive late and force a reconciliation session between perpetrators and victims during which everything would be forgiven and no one punished. What pained the Copts most was that the attackers were neighbors, co-workers and childhood friends.

Then came last year’s revolution. Copts were never enthusiastic about it, perhaps because centuries of persecution taught that the persecuting dictator was preferable to the mob. He could be bought off, persuaded to hold back or pressured by outside forces. With the mob you stood no chance. Some younger Copts were lured by the promise of a liberal Egypt, but the older generation knew better.

The collapse of the police liberated the Islamists, who quickly dominated national politics but were even more powerful in the streets and villages. This is where the “Islamization of life” (as Muslim Brotherhood leader Khairat Al Shater called for) was becoming a reality.

The Muslim Brotherhood aimed to assuage Coptic fears while speaking in English to American audiences. The reality was different. When Coptic homes and shops were looted in a village near Alexandria in January, Brotherhood parliamentarians and Salafis organized a reconciliation session that didn’t punish the attackers but ordered the Copts to evacuate the village.

Soon after, the Brotherhood’s Sayed Askar denied that Copts face any problems in building churches, saying they have more churches than they need. Elections featured accusations that Copts backed the old regime. When attempts to build a non-Islamist coalition were led by businessman Naguib Sawiris, a Copt, the Brotherhood’s website accused him and his co-religionists of treason.

Westerners may debate how moderate Egypt’s Islamists are, but for Copts the questioning is futile. Their options are limited. While Copts are the largest Christian community in the Middle East, they’re too small to play a role in deciding the fate of the country. They are not geographically concentrated in one area that could become a safe zone. The only option is to leave, putting an end to 2,000 years of Christianity in Egypt.

The sad truth is that not all will be able to flee. Those with money, English skills and the like will get out. Their poorer brethren will be left behind.

What can be done to save them? Egypt receives $ 1.5 billion in U.S. aid each year, and Washington has various means to make Egypt’s new leaders listen. Islamist attempts to enshrine second-class status for Copts in Egypt’s new constitution should be stopped. Outsiders should also keep an eye on Muslim Brotherhood politicians who are planning to take control of Coptic Church finances. At a minimum, donors should demand that attacks on Copts be met with punishment as well as condemnation.

Yet looking at the faces of the new immigrants in my Fairfax, Va., church, I cannot escape the feeling that it is too late. Perhaps the fate of the Copts was sealed long ago, in the middle of the last century, when the Jews were kicked out of Egypt. In the late 1940s, Brotherhood demonstrators chanted, in reference to the sabbath days of Jews and others: “Today is Saturday, tomorrow will be Sunday, oh Christians.” And so it is.

By Samuel Tadros
Wall Street Journal

Mr. Tadros is a research fellow at the Hudson Institute’s Center for Religious Freed

Assyrian International News Agency

Iraq officially retreats from ambitious oil plans

BAGHDAD – Iraq officially stepped back on Wednesday from its ambitious plans to more than triple its oil production by 2017, but it remains more optimistic than the world’s leading global energy monitor about how fast and how high it can boost output.

Baghdad’s latest targets show that Iraq, which is now pumping some 3.4 million barrels a day, is eager to be a major player on the world energy map despite decades of wars and sanctions. It recently nudged out Iran as OPEC’s second-largest producer, and further production gains would solidify its place behind the bloc’s top producer, Saudi Arabia.

Speaking at a ceremony in Baghdad to mark the release of the International Energy Agency’s less rosy outlook for Iraq’s energy sector, Iraq’s Deputy Prime Minister on energy Hussain al-Shahristani predicted that the country’s oil production will reach 5 million to 6 million barrels per day in 2015. He envisions that rising to 9 million to 10 million barrels per day by 2020, a level that could be sustained for 20 years.

Iraq had previously been targeting production capacity of 12 million barrels per day by 2017. Many experts consider that target unrealistic.

“The conclusion of our studies and those of the independent consultants engaged in the Ministry of Oil are that it is feasible and desirable for Iraq to raise its oil production to about 9 to 10 million barrels per day by 2020,” al-Shahristani added, without giving reasons for adjusting the oil targets.

The Paris-based IEA issued Tuesday a mid-range forecast envisioning oil production of 6.1 million barrels a day by 2020 and 8.3 million barrels a day by 2035.

Encouraged by improvement in the security situation, Iraq started in 2008 to attract international oil companies to develop its vast untapped oil and gas reserves to bring in sorely needed cash for postwar reconstruction. Top among major oil companies are the U.S.’s Exxon Mobil, Anglo-Dutch Royal Dutch Shell, the U.K.’s BP, China’s CNPC and Russia’s Lukoil.

Since then, Iraq has awarded 12 oil deals to develop about 65 percent of its 143.1 billion barrels of proven oil reserves. Three other deals to develop major gas fields were also awarded. As a result, Iraq’s daily production and exports have jumped to levels not seen since the late 1970s or early 1980s.

It is now producing 3.4 million barrels a day, up from nearly 2.4 million a day in 2009, and its daily exports averaged 2.6 million barrels a day last month. Oil revenues make up nearly 95 percent of the budget.

But the IEA said Iraq needed to sort out internal issues in order for its predictions to come true. Among the most troublesome is the lack of oil-related infrastructure like pipeline networks, storages and export terminals. Another is the dispute between Iraq’s central government and the self-ruled northern Kurdish region over rights to develop natural resources.

The IEA report also noted that boosting Iraq’s oil production is crucial for international markets, as Iraq is expected to account for nearly half of the expected growth in global oil output in the current decade. A more pessimistic IEA forecast in the same report sees Iraqi oil output rising to just 4 million barrels a day in 2020 and to 5.3 million barrels in 2035. In its high case, IEA says that oil production could reach 9.2 million barrels in 2020.

The monitor reported that Iraq’s annual revenues from energy exports could double to an average of $ 200 billion annually over the next 20 years. That optimistic scenario would make Iraq’s economy the same size as that of Saudi Arabia now by 2035.

The IEA is a policy adviser to 28 member countries, mostly industrialized oil consumers. The group’s predictions are important because they are seen as key benchmarks for energy markets.

LINK

Dinar Daddy’s Tidbits

Turkey To Respond With ‘Greater Force’ If Shelling From Syria Continues

Turkey’s army says it will respond with “greater force” if shelling from Syria continues to spill over the border.

Turkey’s chief of general staff, General Necdet Ozel, made the comment during a visit on October 10 to a town where shelling from neighboring Syria killed five civilians last week.

The attack has sparked cross-border artillery and mortar exchanges between Turkey and Syria, where President Bashar al-Assad’s forces are fighting against rebels.

Ozel’s comments came one day after NATO Secretary-Greneral Anders Fogh Rasmussen said the military alliance had “all necessary plans in place to protect and defend Turkey if necessary.”

Based on reporting by Reuters and AP

Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty

Bullet removed from Pakistani rights activist

Malala Yusafzai, a 14-year-old education rights activist, has undergone surgery to remove a bullet lodged in her skull after being shot and injured while on her way home from school.

Yusafzai, from Mingora, the main town in the Swat Valley region of northwest Pakistan, is being treated at Peshawar’s Combined Military Hospital. She remains in critical condition, family members told Al Jazeera.

Ahmed Shah Yusafzai, Malala’s uncle, said there was “strict security inside and outside the hospital”, after the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), also known as the Pakistani Taliban, claimed responsibility for the attack.

Pakistan’s national airline has placed an air ambulance on standby to take Yusafzai abroad for treatment if needed, government sources said, but officials are wary of lengthy travel times given her unstable condition.

Yusafzai was with her classmates, taking a school van home following an examination at the Khushal public school, when the incident happened, witnesses told Al Jazeera.

Unidentified men stopped the vehicle, asking if it was the transport from Khushal school. When told that it was, one man asked: “Where is Malala?”

As she was identified, the assailant reportedly drew a pistol and shot Yusafzai in the head and the neck. Another girl on the bus was also wounded.

“The man started firing a handgun [...] then I don’t know what happened to me and found myself in hospital,” said Shazia Ramazan, a friend of Yusafzai who was shot in the hand.

Doctors at the Saidu Sharif Medical Complex in Mingora said the bullet penetrated Yusafzai’s skull but missed her brain, leaving her out of immediate danger.

Pakistani Taliban claim

Ehsanullah Ehsan, a Taliban spokesman, told reporters that the group had repeatedly warned Yusafzai to stop speaking out against them.

IN VIDEO

Witness: A documentary on Malala’s work in Swat

“She is a Western-minded girl. She always speaks against us,” he said by telephone from an undisclosed location.

“We will target anyone who speaks against the Taliban.

“We warned her several times to stop speaking against the Taliban and to stop supporting Western non-governmental organisations, and to come to the path of Islam.”

The Taliban said it was not only “allowed” to target young girls, but it was “obligatory” when such a person “leads a campaign against Islam and Sharia”.

The spokesman also referred to the Quranic story of Hazrat Khizar, who killed a young child, justifying it to Prophet Musa (Moses in other religions), by saying the boy would overburden his pious parents with his disobedience, and that God would “replace” the boy with a more obedient son. 

Ehsan said that the Pakistani Taliban had not banned education for girls, “instead, our crime is that we tried to bring the education system for both boy and girls under Sharia”.

“We are deadly against co-education and secular education systems, and Sharia orders us to be against it,” he said.

The group also criticised media coverage of the shooting, saying: “After this incident, [the] media poured out all of its smelly propaganda against Taliban mujahideen with their poisonous tongues.

“ … will the blind media pay any attention to the hundreds of respectful sisters whom are in the secret detention centres of ISI [Pakistan's spy agency] and suffering by their captivity?

“Would you like to put an eye on more than 3,000 young men killed in secret detention centres, whose bodies are found in different areas of Swat, claimed to be killed in encounters and died by cardiac arrest?”

‘Daughter of Pakistan’

President Asif Ali Zardari strongly condemned the attack, but said it would not shake Pakistan’s resolve to battle fighters or the government’s determination to support women’s education. Prime Minister Raja Pervaiz Ashraf called Yusafzai “a daughter of Pakistan”.

Private schools in the Swat valley shut their doors on Wednesday, in protest at the attack, though government schools are open as per their normal routine.

Further demonstrations against the Taliban are also expected in the Swat district later on Wednesday.

Victoria Nuland, the US State Department spokeswoman, said: “Directing violence at children is barbaric. It’s cowardly. And our hearts go out to her and the others who were wounded, as well as their families.”

The local chapter of the TTP, led by Maulana Fazlullah, controlled much of Swat from 2007 to 2009, but were ousted by an army offensive in July 2009.

Local reports indicate, however, that the group was only driven into the surrounding areas, rather than being wiped out, and it has since staged a resurgence.

Tuesday’s shooting in broad daylight in Mingora, the main town of the valley, raises serious questions about security more than three years after the army claimed to have crushed the local Taliban.

Peace award

Yusafzai rose to international prominence in 2009, after writing a diary – under a pen-name – for BBC Urdu about life under the Taliban.

She had famously stood against the PTT’s attempts to stop girls from going to school, and was awarded the National Peace Award for Youth.

The international children’s advocacy group KidsRights Foundation nominated her for the International Children’s Peace Prize, making her the first Pakistani girl put forward for the award.

Her struggle resonated with tens of thousands of girls who were being denied an education by the Taliban and other armed groups across northwest Pakistan, where the government has been fighting such groups since 2007.

She was 11 years old when she wrote the blog on the BBC Urdu website, which at the time was anonymous. She also featured in two New York Times documentaries.

Diary extract

In a 2011 BBC news report, Yusafzai read out an extract of her diary that gave a sense of the fear she endured under the Taliban.

“I was very much scared because the Taliban announced yesterday that girls should stop going to schools,” she said.

“Today our head teacher told the school assembly that school uniform is no longer compulsory and from tomorrow onwards, girls should come in their normal dresses. Out of 27, only 11 girls attended the school today.”

London-based rights group Amnesty International condemned Tuesday’s “shocking act of violence”.

“This attack highlights the extremely dangerous climate human rights activists face in northwestern Pakistan, where particularly female activists live under constant threats from the Taliban and other militant groups,” it said.

Mian Iftikhar Hussain, Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa’s information minister, said Yusafzai had been targeted as “an icon of peace”, calling for a sweeping military offensive against all anti-state fighters in northwest Pakistan.

Asked if Malala would continue her work if she recovered, Ahmed Shah Yusafzai, her uncle, told Al Jazeera: “Yes, of course.

“She always raises her voice in favour of girl’s education, and she was going to establish a foundation named after her name – Malala Education Foundation - and she wanted to work for those children who are not able to go to the school.”

1181

AL JAZEERA ENGLISH (AJE)

Stem-Cell Pioneers From U.K., Japan Win Nobel Medicine Prize

The 2012 Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine has been awarded jointly to Japan’s Shinya Yamanaka and John Gurdon of Britain “for the discovery that mature cells can be reprogrammed to become pluripotent.”

The prize committee at Stockholm’s Karolinska Institute said on October 8 that the discovery has “revolutionized our understanding of how cells and organisms develop.”

The breakthrough first suggested that specialized cells could be altered into “immature cells capable of developing into all tissues of the body.”

The medicine prize is the first of six Nobel prizes scheduled to be awarded through October 15.

The prestigious prizes, founded by Swedish industrialist Alfred Nobel, were first awarded in 1901.

This year, the Nobel Foundation lowered the prize money 20 percent to $ 1.2 million, citing turmoil on financial markets.

All prizes will be handed out December 10, the anniversary of Nobel’s death in 1896.

Based on reporting by AP

Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty

Deletion of zeros from the currency will strengthen security and absorbs high inflation

michigander0131] Saturday, 6 October 2012 Economic parliamentary: the deletion of zeros from the currency will strengthen security and absorbs high inflation BAGHDAD – babysit – a member of the Economic Committee noted MP Abdul-Hussein Abtan, to the Iraqi market need for the project to delete the zeros from the currency in early 2013 to save the country from high inflation.

Abtan said in a press statement: The local market is an urgent need to delete the zeros from the currency, which works to raise inflation rates and increasing the money supply if left zeros for the year 2014, stressing: that postponing the project would damage the national economy.

[michigander0131] so here they admit that waiting will damage the economy and best time to do it is early 2013

http://translate.google.com/translate?langpair=auto|en&u=http%3A%2F%2Falrayy.com%2F

[michigander0131] Abtan: You must delete the zeros early 2013 and postponed to 2014 is incorrect 2012-10-06 06:05:25 – BAGHDAD (Iba) .. A member of the Economic Committee MP Abdul Hussein Abtan, the Iraqi market needs to project the deletion of zeros from the Iraqi currency early (2013) to save the country from greater economic inflation, stressing: that the postponement of the project (2014) will hurt the country’s economy. LINK

michigander0131] heres another one same thing do it now// don’t wait

[michigander0131] Date: 06/10/2012 13:46:16 Saturday Baghdad (news) .. Male member of the Finance Committee MP / National Alliance / Abdul Hussein al-Yasiri, that the actions of the central bank to increase the width of the dollar led to balance the dinar exchange rate against the dollar, but it was not balanced the required level.

Yasiri said (of the Agency news sons) on Saturday: The low exchange rate of the dollar against the dinar a result of actions of the Central Bank is not the level of ambition, stressing that the Finance Committee and in coordination with the Central Bank will develop new procedures to make the dollar worth of the dinar.

He added: that the currency’s strength comes from the strength of the country’s economy, adding that the new measures to be taken summed up the sale of hard currency by the Central Bank for banks and banking companies. / End / 21. D. Q /

http://translate.google.com/translate?langpair=auto|en&u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.ikhnews.com%2F

LINK

[michigander0131] this one is another article stating that they want the dinar to be equal with the dollar

Dinar Daddy’s Tidbits

Hamoudi: Iraq adheres to imposed measures to be relieved from UN 7th Chapter

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Baghdad (IraqiNews.com) -The head of the Parliamentary Foreign Relations Committee, Humam Hamoudi, confirmed that “Iraq has adhered to measures imposed to get rid of the 7th Chapter of UN Charter.”

Speaking to Iraqi News (IraqiNews.com), he said “It is not an easy task to relieve Iraq from the 7th Chapter where there are complicated procedures to be taken by Iraq and now it is the turn of the Kuwaiti side to respond to the peace.”

“The Amir of Kuwait promised to visit Iraq since a long time but the visit postponed,” he added, stressing that “We wish him to come to solve the issue of the 7th Chapter especially under the witnessed development of the mutual Iraqi-Kuwaiti relations.”

Iraq is subject to the UN 7th Chapter since the invasion of Kuwait in 1990.

LINK

Dinar Daddy’s Tidbits

Kartani warns from future debts result from Infrastructure Law

Baghdad (IraqiNews.com) -MP, Hamza al-Kartani, of the Iraqiya Slate warned from the negative consequences of the Infrastructure Law.

Speaking to Iraqi News (IraqiNews.com), he said “We can not create new debts on Iraq due to the unstable oil prices under the unpredictable changes that may take place in Iraq and the world.”

“The IS supports rebuilding the infrastructure but there should be guarantees over identified and limited debts to establish these projects according to a time limit,” he added.

The parliament postponed its last Monday session to next Tuesday due to disputes over the Infrastructure Law which was objected by the Iraqiya Slate and the Kurdistani Alliance.

LINK

Dinar Daddy’s Tidbits

From Georgian Dream To Georgian Reality

TBILISI — The confetti has been swept up following Georgia’s surprising October 1 legislative election. And now comes the hard part.

The victorious Georgian Dream coalition faces the perilous task of forming a government and articulating a program that is more nuanced than mere opposition to President Mikheil Saakashvili.

The vote count is still under way and election officials are yet to issue preliminary results indicating exactly how many seats in parliament each party will get under the country’s complicated allocation system.

Nonetheless, initial estimates project that Georgian Dream will have around 82 deputies, while Saakashvili’s now-opposition United National Movement (UNM) will have about 68.

Georgian Dream faces two immediate challenges.

First, the coalition of nine disparate parties must demonstrate sufficient unity to nominate a parliament speaker and a government. The movement has already said that billionaire leader Bidzina Ivanishvili will be named prime minister, but the rest of the cabinet is up for grabs.

Second, Georgian Dream must find a way to coexist with Saakashvili and the UNM, which still have considerable public support. More support, in fact, than any single party within Georgian Dream.

Georgian Dream has formed a working group — comprising former Georgian UN Ambassador Irakli Alasania, Republican Party leader Davit Usupashvili, and Georgian Dream Party official Irakli Gharibashvili — to begin the process of pulling the coalition together.

According to Georgian Dream spokeswoman Maia Panjikidze, the process is already under way.

“Certainly, our foremost task is to name a speaker of parliament,” she says. “Of course, we in our coalition already have a certain vision in this regard. And then we will name the prime minister and his cabinet. You know the name of the future prime minister, but as to who will be in his cabinet, we will announce that later. It is still a matter of consultations.”

United By Antipathy

Georgian Dream has not set a deadline for these talks, and the outgoing Georgian government of lame-duck Prime Minister Vano Merabishvili continues to work until a new one is approved.

However, coalition members range from nationalists, to liberals, to market-oriented industrialists. Until now, they have been united exclusively by their antipathy toward Saakashvili and their desire to derive political advantage from Ivanishvili’s vast wealth.

In particular, the fourth most-powerful party in the bloc is the rightwing nationalist People’s Front, which will have a hard time finding a common language with Alasania’s liberal Free Democrats or left-leaning partners such as the Green Party and the Women’s Party.

Ghia Nodia, professor of politics at Ilia State University, notes that the opposition coalesced around the largely unknown political neophyte Ivanishvili.

“The mobilization of public discontent was only possible because of the financial resources of one man, whose political abilities and motives raise profound doubts,” he says.

In the waning days of the hard-fought campaign, the UNM released an audio recording of a top Ivanishvili deputy disparaging a Georgian Dream candidate using the most brutal language.

Ivanishvili was compelled to issue a statement saying that the two are actually “close friends” and that in general members of Georgian Dream are “like friends.”

Moreover, Ivanishvil still needs to resolve ongoing issues related to his citizenship.

Days after he launched Georgian Dream, in a move widely seen as politically motivated, a court stripped him of his Georgian citizenship on the grounds that he also held French and Russian passports.

Ivanishvili has since renounced his Russian citizenship, and has said he will also give up his French passport as soon as his Georgian citizenship is restored. After the election, Ivanishvili said he expected this to happen.

Unique Political Landscape

In addition, Georgian Dream must contend with a still-powerful UNM and with Saakashvili. The postelection political landscape is unique in Georgian history, in that for the first time there is no dominant ruling party capable of passing legislation and even amending the constitution without regard for the opposition.

Constitutional amendments passed by the UNM in 2010 that will transfer much of the presidency’s power to the parliament and government won’t come into force until January 2013. Georgia will hold a presidential election in October 2013, and Saakashvili is barred from running for a third consecutive term.

Before those amendments take effect, Saakashvili technically has the right to nominate a prime minister and several key power ministers. But in a conciliatory gesture, he has said he will not use those powers and will accept any nominations endorsed by parliament.

Bakur Kvashilava, dean of the Georgian Institute of Public Affairs (GIPA), suggests this is a savvy political move.

“This is the right decision politically because when the people have told you that they want a different government, you shouldn’t be pouring oil on the fire by preventing the winner from building a government simply because the constitution that you tailored allows you to do so,” he says. “It was the right decision morally and politically.”

Georgian Dream has also tried to reduce tensions with the UNM following the election.

Although Ivanishvili said on October 2 it would be best if Saakashvili resigned and called an early presidential election, he clarified his position the next day by stating explicitly that the movement is prepared to work with the president in any case.

Avoiding Gridlock

Georgian Dream spokeswoman Panjikidze has emphasized that the movement has no desire to create political gridlock.

“The most important thing at this stage is not to hamper Georgia’s constitutional order and the work of the government bodies,” she says. “So, this way or another, we will have to talk to the president, who will now represent the opposition forces. In order for everything to happen seamlessly and in order for the transfer of power to take place, we have formed a working group that will work along with the relevant group sent by the current government and go through all constitutional steps.”

Levan Tsutskiridze, president of the Association for Foreign Affairs, maintains that Georgia’s increasingly mature and professional civil service should be a stabilizing factor as the transition unfolds:

“Also very important is that even though we know that a lot of political appointees will be losing their jobs, which is normal, in Georgia we have already quite a large number of professional bureaucrats in the civil service who will maintain their positions, and this is important both politically and pragmatically for the good of the state,” he says.

Looking forward, Georgian Dream and the new government face considerable policy challenges.

Perhaps most importantly, it must decide on the approach it takes toward neighboring Russia, with whom the country remains in a state of war since the five-day conflict in August 2008.

Ivanishvili has said he remains committed to Georgian European integration and eventual NATO membership, but believes he can achieve these ends without antagonizing Moscow.

The key issue separating Moscow and Tbilisi — Moscow’s recognition of the breakaway Georgian regions of South Ossetia and Abkhazia, which Georgia considers to be occupied by Russia — is an emotionally volatile one in Georgia that seems to offer little room for compromise.

Written in Prague by Robert Coalson based on reporting in Tbilisi by Nino Gelashvili of RFE/RL’s Georgian Service

Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty

From Pacific Pivot to Green Revolution

desertification-china-pacific-pivot

This article is part of a weekly FPIF series on the Obama administration’s “Pacific Pivot,” which examines the implications of the U.S. military buildup in the Asia-Pacific—both for regional politics and for the so-called “host” communities. You can read Joseph Gerson’s introduction to the series here.

The low rolling hills of the Dalateqi region of Inner Mongolia spread out gently behind a delightful painted farmhouse. Goats and cows graze peacefully on the surrounding fields. But walk due west just 100 meters from the farmhouse and you’ll confront a far less pastoral reality: endless waves of sand, absent any sign of life, that stretch as far as the eye can see.

This is the Kubuchi desert, a monster born of climate change that is slouching inexorably east toward Beijing, 800 kilometers away. Unchecked, it will engulf China’s capital in the not-so-distant future. This beast might not be visible yet in Washington, but strong winds carry its sand to Beijing and Seoul, and some makes it all the way to the east coast of the United States.

Desertification is a major threat to human life. Deserts are spreading with increasing speed on every continent. The United States suffered a huge loss of life and livelihood during the Dust Bowl of the American Great Plains in the 1920s, as did the Sahel region of West Africa in the early 1970s. But climate change is taking desertification to a new level, threatening to create millions, eventually billions, of human environmental refugees throughout Asia, Africa, Australia, and the Americas. One-sixth of the population of Mali and Burkina Faso has already become refugees because of spreading deserts. The effects of all this creeping sand cost the world $ 42 billion a year, according to the UN Environmental Program.

Spreading deserts, combined with the drying of seas, the melting of polar ice caps, and the degradation of plant and animal life on earth, are rendering our world unrecognizable. The images of barren landscapes that NASA’s Curiosity Rover has sent back from Mars may be snapshots of our tragic future.  

But you wouldn’t know that desertification is the harbinger of the apocalypse if you looked at the websites of Washington think tanks. A search on the website of the Brookings Institution for the word “missile” generated 1,380 entries, but “desertification” yielded a paltry 24. A similar search on the website of the Heritage Foundation produced 2,966 entries for “missile” and only three for “desertification.” Although threats like desertification are already killing people—and will kill many more in the decades ahead—they don’t receive nearly as much attention, or resources, as such traditional security threats as terrorism or missile attacks, which kill so few.

Desertification is only one of dozens of environmental threats—from food shortages and new diseases to the extinction of plants and animals critical to the biosphere—that threaten the extermination of our species. Yet we have not even started to develop the technologies, the strategies, and the long-term vision necessary to face this security threat head-on. Our aircraft carriers, guided missiles, and cyber warfare are as useless against this threat as sticks and stones are against tanks and helicopters.

If we are to survive beyond this century, we must fundamentally alter our understanding of security. Those who serve in the military must embrace a completely new vision for our armed forces. Starting with the United States, the world’s militaries must devote at least 50 percent of their budgets to developing and implementing technologies to stop the spread of deserts, to revive oceans, and to transform completely the destructive industrial systems of today into a new economy that is sustainable in the true sense of the word. 

The best place to begin is in East Asia, the focus of the Obama administration’s much-vaunted “Pacific pivot.” If we don’t execute a very different kind of pivot in that part of the world, and soon, the desert sands and the rising waters will engulf us all.

Asia’s Environmental Imperative 

East Asia increasingly serves as the engine driving the world economy, and its regional policies set the standards for the world. China, South Korea, Japan, and increasingly Eastern Russia are ramping up their global leadership in research, cultural production, and the establishment of norms for governance and administration. It is an exciting age for East Asia that promises tremendous opportunities. 

But two disturbing trends threaten to undo this Pacific Century. On the one hand, rapid economic development and an emphasis on immediate economic output —as opposed to sustainable growth—have contributed to the spread of deserts, the decline of fresh water supplies, and a consumer culture that encourages disposable goods and blind consumption at the expense of the environment.

On the other hand, the relentless increase of military spending in the region threatens to undermine the region’s promise. In 2012, China increased its military spending by 11 percent, passing the $ 100-billion mark for the first time. Such double-digit increases have helped push China’s neighbors to increase their military budgets as well. South Korea has been steadily increasing its spending on the military, with a projected 5-percent increase for 2012. Although Japan has kept its military spending to 1 percent of its GDP, it nevertheless registers as the sixth biggest spender in the world, according to the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute. This spending has stimulated an arms race that is already spreading perforce to Southeast Asia, South Asia, and Central Asia.

All this spending is linked to the colossal military expenditures in the United States, the prime moverfor global militarization. Congress is currently considering a $ 607-billion Pentagon budget, which is $ 3 billion more than what the president requested. The United States has created a vicious circle of influence in the military realm. The Pentagon encourages its allied counterparts to boost their spending in order to buy U.S. weapons and maintain the interoperability of systems. But even as the United States considers Pentagon cuts as part of a debt reduction deal, it asks its allies to shoulder more of the burden. Either way, Washington pushes its allies to devote more resources to the military, which only further strengthens the arms race dynamic in the region. 

European politicians dreamed of a peaceful integrated continent one 100 years ago. But unresolved disputes over land, resources, and historical issues, combined with increased military spending, precipitated two devastating world wars. If Asian leaders don’t rein in their current arms race, they risk a similar outcome, regardless of their rhetoric about peaceful coexistence.   

A Green Pivot 

Environmental threats and runaway military spending are the Scylla and Charybdis around which East Asia and the world must navigate. But perhaps these monsters can be turned against one another. If all the stakeholders in an integrated East Asia redefine “security” collectively to refer primarily to environmental threats, cooperation among the respective militaries to address environmental challenges could serve as a catalyst to produce a new paradigm for coexistence.

All the countries have been gradually increasing their spending on environmental issues – China’s famous 863 program, the green stimulus package of the Obama administration, Lee Myung-bak’s green investments in South Korea. But this is not enough. It must be accompanied by serious reductions in the conventional military. Over the next decade China, Japan, Korea, the United States and other nations of Asia must redirect their military spending to address environmental security. The mission for every division of the military in each of these countries must be fundamentally redefined, and generals who once planned for land wars and missile attacks must retrain to face this new threat in close cooperation with each other.

America’s Civilian Conservation Corps, which used a military regimen as part of a campaign to address environmental problems in the United States during the 1930s, can serve as a model for the new cooperation in East Asia. Already the international NGO Future Forest brings Korean and Chinese youth together to work as a team planting trees for its “Great Green Wall” to contain the Kubuchi Desert. Under the leadership of former South Korean ambassador to China Kwon Byung Hyun, Future Forest has joined with local people to plant trees and secure the soil.

The first step would be for the countries to convene a Green Pivot Forum that outlines the chief environmental threats, the resources needed to combat the problems, and the transparency in military spending needed to ensure that all countries agree about the base-line figures.

The next step will be more challenging: to adopt a systematic formula for the reassignment of every part of the current military system. Perhaps the navy would deal primarily with protecting and restoring the oceans, the air force would take responsibility for the atmosphere and emissions, the army would take care of land use and forests, the marines would handle complex environmental issues, and intelligence would handle the systematic monitoring of the state of the global environment. Within a decade, more than 50 percent of the military budgets for China, Japan, Korea, and the United States—as well as other nations—would be dedicated to environmental protection and ecosystem restoration.   

Once the focus of military planning and research is transformed, cooperation will become possible on a scale that was previously only dreamed of. If the enemy is climate change, close collaboration between the United States, China, Japan, and the Republic of Korea is not only possible, it is absolutely critical.

As individual countries and as an international community, we have a choice: We can continue on a self-defeating chase after security through military might. Or we can choose to address the most pressing problems facing us: the global economic crisis, climate change, and nuclear proliferation.

The enemy is at the gates. Will we heed this clarion call to service, or will we simply bury our heads in the sands?  

FPIF Latest Content

Eyewitnesses Report From Tehran Currency Clashes

Clashes have taken place in Tehran between riot police and a number of protesters including currency traders, who were venting their anger over the collapse of the rial, which some blamed on poor economic policies and also economic sanctions.

Eyewitnesses say that police used tear gas and batons against the protesters. A number of people were arrested, according to reports by Iran’s official news agencies.

The protest marks the first instance of unrest over the plunging value of Iran’s currency, the rial, which has reached a record low, losing about one-third of its value since last week.

Several amateur videos, said to be from the protest in Tehran, show hundreds of people walking in the city center. RFE/RL is not able to fully confirm the authenticity of the videos.

In this video recorded with a cell phone, protesters are apparently expressing anger over Iran’s support for the Syrian regime.

“Leave Syria alone, think about us,” they chant.

In this video, protesters call on Tehran’s bazaar merchants to support them: “Dear prideful bazaaris, support, support.”

They also demand the closure of the shops and businesses: “Close down, close down.”

The opposition Kalame website reports that “Death to Syria,” “Death to the dictator,” “Allah Akbar,” and “The dollar should be halved” were among other slogans that were chanted in the Iranian capital on October 3.

Some chants also reportedly targeted President Mahmud Ahmadinejad, who has been accused of massive economic mismanagement and inefficiency in dealing with the current crisis.  Ahmadinejad said on October 2 that the devaluation of the rial was in part caused by the sanctions Iran is facing over its sensitive nuclear work.

The plunge of the rial is causing anxiety and pain among many Iranians.

A merchant in Tehran told RFE/RL that many people are scared about the future.

“Everyone is very concerned and frightened. I can say that everyone is very confused. Of course, this general atmosphere has cast a shadow over Iran for a long time,” he said.

“Nobody knows what’s going to happen to them next week. The situation is getting very bad. You never see a smile on anybody’s face anymore.”

– Golnaz Esfandiari

Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty

Egypt Christian Boys, 9 and 10, Taken From Parents, Arrested After Accused of Desecrating Koran

Egypt Christian Boys, 9 and 10, Taken From Parents, Arrested After Accused of Desecrating Koran

Posted GMT 10-3-2012 14:43:37

CAIRO — Two Egyptian Christian children, Nabil Rizk, 10, and Mina al-Farag, 9, have been taken from their parents and arrested after a Muslim man accused the two youngsters of desecrating the holy Qur’an in a small village in Bani Sweif in the Nile Delta region.

They will face the public prosecutor on Sunday as the investigation begins.

According to reports, confirmed by local media, both secular and religious, the children are now facing an investigation for allegedly urinating on the holy book and putting it next to a mosque, al-Shorouk newspaper reported.

Rizk’s father, Nabil, said his child cannot read and write and had been looking in the trash “for anything useful” when he found a small bag with pages from the Qur’an so he took them and placed it next to a mosque as he did not know what to do with it.

A meeting had taken place in the village in an effort to solve the crisis after the children were accused, but to the surprise of the villagers, children have been transferred to the junior holding facility pending investigation.

Heavy security has taken over the small Nile Delta village, which is home to 157 Christian families after fears of a confrontation between the residents arose.

According to Copts United, a Christian news organization and website, the families of the two boys are urging rights groups and organizations to help them free the children and to “have mercy” on them.

By Joseph Mayton
www.bikyamasr.com

Assyrian International News Agency

Young Voices and New Visions from Africa

Please join IPS Associate Fellow and American University Professor Carl LeVan for a roundtable discussion on diaspora democracy. Is the real significance of the so-called ‘youth bulge’ an emerging generation gap between citizens and leaders? How do young people confront negative stereotypes of Africa in the US, while also challenging hard political realities back home?

The dialogue will include Jumoke Balogun, a Nigerian-American blogger and public relations expert in the labor movement, Mame-Khady Diouf, a Senegalese intellectual from the Woodrow Wilson Center, Kizito Byenkya from the Open Society Institute and co-publisher of Compareafrique.com, Michael Appau, a Ghanaian student at Georgetown University, and Estelle Bounga Fomeju, a Cameroonian student at Sciences Po in Paris.

FPIF Latest Content

Tehran Condemns U.S. For Removing MKO From Terror List

Iran has condemned the U.S. administration for removing the Iranian exile group Mujahedeen-e-Khalq (MKO) from its list of foreign terrorist organizations.

Iran’s Foreign Ministry described the decision, effective September 28, as “a violation of America’s legal and international obligations” that could threaten U.S. interests.

The statement added that the move “will bring U.S. responsibility for past, present, and future terrorist operations” by the group.

MKO, or the People’s Mujahedeen of Iran, is opposed to Iran’s clerical regime.

Its members fought alongside former Iraqi ruler Saddam Hussein’s forces in the 1980-1988 Iran-Iraq war.

The group had been on the U.S. blacklist since 1997.

Based on reporting by AFP and AP

Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty

Weapons deal with Russia to keep US pressures away from Iraq

Baghdad (IraqiNews.com) -The spokesperson of the White bloc, MP Kadhim al-Shimmari, stated “The weapons deal with Russia to keep the US pressures away from Iraq.

In a press statement received by IraqiNews.com, he said “There are two deals to purchase aircrafts comprising (30) NA MI 28 helicopters, are supposed to be signed by the Premier, Nouri al-Maliki.”

“There is another deal that is about purchasing Pantsir-SI anti-aircraft artillery weapon then another deal about MiG-29M/M2 aircrafts in addition to the some other weapons,” he added.

“In spite of arming the Iraqi Army with the Russian weapon in the last period of time, but these deals give Iraq the freedom to take a national decision away from the US pressures,” he concluded.

LINK

Dinar Daddy’s Tidbits

Economic demands parliamentary changing central bank policy to save the national currency from degradation

BAGHDAD – babysit – a student member of the Committee on Economy and Investment deputy Aziz al-Mayahi, a new monetary policy keep pace with advances in the field of financial and banking sector in the world and change the current policy pursued by the central bank as threatening the local currency to deteriorate.

Mayahi said in a press statement that “there are a lot of negative indicators monitored in the work of the Central Bank, particularly the recent violations that occurred in the process of buying and selling the dollar in the auction and allow brokers to manipulate the exchange rate of the Iraqi dinar against the dollar.”

He added: that the committee formed in the House of Representatives with respect to audit and monitor the work of the central bank auction will submit its report to the Council in the next few days, which initially indicate the presence of errors and significant violations occurred where the central bank.

He explained: that monetary policy in the country must cope with the evolution in the world, particularly in the financial and banking, in addition to the current policy pursued by the central bank proved its failure must be change current policy and the adoption of a new monetary policy to support the local currency and save it from degradation .. . p / i

LINK

Dinar Daddy’s Tidbits

Washington Drops Iranian MEK Group From Terror List

The United States has removed the Iranian exile group Mujahedeen-e-Khalq (MEK) from its list of foreign terrorist organizations.

The State Department said Secretary of State Hillary Clinton took the decision, effective as of September 28, in view of the MEK’s public renunciation of violence, the absence of confirmed acts of terrorism by the MEK for more than a decade, and their cooperation in the closure of their paramilitary base in Iraq.

The State Department added that it still has “serious concerns” about the group, “particularly with regard to allegations of abuse committed against its own members.”

MEK, or the People’s Mujahedeen of Iran, is opposed to Iran’s clerical regime.

Its members fought alongside former Iraqi ruler Saddam Hussein’s forces in the 1980-1988 Iran-Iraq war.

The group has been on the U.S. blacklist since 1997.

With reporting by AFP and Reuters

Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty

There’s supposed to be an important announcement Friday from the UNSC

9-27-2012 Mountainman: There’s supposed to be an important announcement Friday from the UNSC regarding Iraq’s Chapter 7 status. Iraq has received pledges from a number of influential countries and it’s my opinion that either they will be released or they will be given a clear path to achieve it, which may include first announcing a power sharing government and economic reforms. I think Iraq is ready on both fronts actually. So, just maybe this it. We’ll know soon.

Dinar Daddy’s Tidbits