2013/01/30

Drug-Smuggling Colombian Cleric Arrested in Moscow

Source : RIA Novosti

MOSCOW, January 30 (RIA Novosti) – Russian police detained a Colombian clergyman for attempting to smuggle cocaine through a Moscow airport, the Federal Drug Control Service reported on Wednesday.

The cleric, identified as Fabio Ricardo Rodriguez, attracted the suspicion of the law enforcement officials at Sheremetyevo airport because he seemed sick and nervous.

“He was detained and delivered to a Moscow hospital, where some 13 containers with cocaine were discovered in the man’s digestive tract,” officials said in a statement, but did not say when the arrest took place. “Five more containers with drugs were found in his luggage,” they said.

Rossiya 24 state television showed a bowl full of condoms reportedly filled with drugs, and Rodriguez behind bars dressed in long dark clothes and wearing a crucifix. He claimed in an interview he was forced to smuggle by the Colombian mafia.

Rodriguez served a parish in the Colombian capital Bogota, officials said. He is a member of a breakaway Anglican group in South America, which lists him is a "missionary reverend" on its website.

He faces up to 15 years in jail if convicted.

Thailand detains 200 Rohingya boat people fleeing from Myanmar

Source : Islamic Invitation Turkey

Thailand says it has intercepted a boat carrying 200 Myanmarese Rohingyas near the southwestern island of Phuket and has detained the refugees.

The Rohingya refugees were spotted off Racha Noi Island in Phuket’s Muang district on Tuesday.

The Thai Naval Force said the refugees were provided with food and water.

On Monday, Thai National Security Council Secretary General Paradorn Pattanathabutr stated tha Thailand would no longer allow Rohingya boat people fleeing ethnic violence in Myanmar to enter the country.

“The Thai navy from now on will be stricter with them and will no longer allow them to land,” AFP quoted Pattanathabutr as saying.

In recent months, a large number of Rohingya Muslim refugees have fled to Thailand.

Some 800,000 Rohingyas are deprived of citizenship rights due to the policy of discrimination that ha denied them the right of citizenship and made them vulnerable to acts of violence and persecution expulsion, and displacement.

The Myanmar government has so far refused to extricate the stateless Rohingyas in the western state o Rakhine from their citizenship limbo, despite international pressure to give them a legal status.

Rohingya Muslims have faced torture, neglect, and repression in Myanmar for many years.

Hundreds of Rohingyas are believed to have been killed and thousands displaced in recent attacks by extremists who call themselves Buddhists.

The extremists frequently attack Rohingyas and have set fire to their homes in several villages in Rakhine Myanmar Army forces allegedly provided the fanatics containers of petrol for torching the houses o Muslim villagers, who are then forced to flee.

Myanmar’s government has been accused of failing to protect the Muslim minority.

Myanmar opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi has also come under fire for her stance on the violence The Nobel Peace laureate has refused to censure the Myanmarese military for its persecution of the Rohingyas.

Rohingyas are said to be Muslim descendants of Persian, Turkish, Bengali, and Pathan origin, who migrated to Myanmar as early as the 8th century.

Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch have issued separate statements, calling on Myanmar to take action to protect the Rohingya Muslim population against extremists.

2013/01/29

Indonesian parliament supports tough measures against hackers of govt websites

Source :  Globaltimes.cn

Indonesian parliament pledged support on the police's recent move in arresting an alleged hacker of the government's websites, saying that the hacker's deeds may disrupt the country's sovereignty, local media reported on Wednesday.

"The hacking on government's websites may disrupt the country' s dignity and sovereignty So we must not lose in this cyber war," Agus Gumiwang, Deputy Chairman of Commission I in the parliament that oversees government's defense, intelligence, foreign affairs, communications and telecommunications affairs said here.

Agus said that the police should not pay attention on requests to release the arrested hacker and presses ahead with legal proceeding against the alleged hacker.

He said that the government must continue tracing those involved in the hacking of government's websites.

The Indonesian police recently arrested a 22 year-old man in Jember, East Java for allegedly hacked Indonesian president's official website since January 9.

The arrest against the alleged hacker incited more actions from hackers, they intruded and hacked websites ran by Indonesian ministries and agencies in the last two days, the Antara news agency reported.

Indonesian Communications and Telecommunications (Kominfo) Minister Tifatal Sembiring pointed out that legal action must be applied against those involved in the hacking of the government's website.

He said that legal proceeding against the hackers would be very much depended on the process in police office and how the police handle the case in the first place.

"We had arrested many hackers, but they were only warned and guided to spend their internet skills to positive ways," the minister said.

S. Korea to fire Naro space rocket at 4 p.m. local time

Source : Xinhua

SEOUL, Jan. 30 (Xinhua) -- South Korea is set to launch its Korea Space Launch Vehicle-1 (KSVL-1), also known as Naro, at 4 p. m. local time from the Naro Space Center, located 480 kilometers south of Seoul, the Ministry of Education, Science and Technology told a press briefing Wednesday.

The rocket, with a Russian-built first stage and a South Korean- developed second stage, failed in its first two launch attempts in 2009 and 2010, and the most recent launch attempt has been delayed since last October because of technical reasons.

Azerbaijani and Armenian delegations to PACE to meet in Strasbourg in April

Source : Trend.Az

The Azerbaijani and Armenian delegations to the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe (PACE) will meet during the spring session of the organization in Strasbourg, member of the Azerbaijani delegation to the PACE, deputy chairperson of the Parliamentary Committee on Foreign and Inter-Parliamentary Relations Sevinj Fataliyeva told Trend today.

She said the meeting will take place during a meeting of the PACE subcommittee on Nagorno -Karabakh. Fataliyeva expressed hope that Armenia will take a constructive position at the meeting.

The session will take place in Strasbourg on April 20 - 22, she said.

PACE chairman Jean-Claude Mignon met with heads of the Armenian and Azerbaijani delegations to PACE within PACE winter session. The importance of holding the negotiations for peaceful settlement of the Armenian-Azerbaijani Nagorno-Karabakh conflict was stressed at the meeting.

The conflict between the two South Caucasus countries began in 1988 when Armenia made territorial claims against Azerbaijan. Armenian armed forces have occupied 20% of Azerbaijan since 1992, including the Nagorno-Karabakh region and seven surrounding districts.

Azerbaijan and Armenia signed a ceasefire agreement in 1994. The co-chairs of the OSCE Minsk Group - Russia, France and the U.S. - are currently holding peace negotiations.

Armenia has not yet implemented the U.N. Security Council's four resolutions on the liberation of the Nagorno-Karabakh and the surrounding regions.

Niger gives green light to U.S. drone deployment: source

Source : Yahoo!

NIAMEY (Reuters) - Niger has given permission for U.S. surveillance drones to be stationed on its territory to improve intelligence on al Qaeda-linked Islamist fighters in northern Mali and the wider Sahara, a senior government source said.

The U.S. ambassador to Niger, Bisa Williams, made the request at a meeting on Monday with President Mahamadou Issoufou, who immediately accepted it, the source said.

"Niger has given the green light to accepting American surveillance drones on its soil to improve the collection of intelligence on Islamist movements," said the source, who asked not to be identified.

The drones could be stationed in Niger's northern desert region of Agadez, which borders Mali, Algeria and Libya, the source said.

A spokesperson for the United States' African Command (AFRICOM) declined to comment.

The United States already has drones and surveillance aircraft stationed at several points around Africa. Its only permanent military base is in the small country of Djibouti in the Horn of Africa, more than 3,000 miles from Mali.

After her talks with Issoufou, Williams told reporters they had discussed economic and military cooperation and development issues. She also expressed Washington's appreciation for the French-led military mission to expel an alliance of al Qaeda- linked fighters from northern Mali.

French and Malian troops retook control of the ancient trading town of Timbuktu on Monday, as they drove deep into the heart of the desert region the size of Texas seized by Islamist fighters last year.

Washington has provided military transport planes to airlift men and equipment into Mali but said it will not send combat troops.

The head of the U.S. Africa Command, General Carter Ham, visited Niger last month. The poor, landlocked West Africa state has said it wants to have closer security cooperation with Washington.

History, culture, humor on new UK citizenship test

Source : Shanghai Daily

WHAT does it mean to be British? Monarchs, Margaret Thatcher and Monty Python are all important parts of the nation's heritage, according to a new guide for immigrants introduced yesterday.

The government is revising the "Life in the U.K." handbook and test taken by those seeking to become British citizens or settle down in the kingdom permanently.

While the previous version, created under the former Labour government, included some practical questions about daily life, the emphasis is now firmly on British history and culture. There are questions on sports, music and historical figures from William Shakespeare to Winston Churchill.

The Conservative-led government says the new handbook also features "an exploration of Britons' unique sense of humor and satire," alongside an explanation of aspects of cultural life including the national love of gardening, the novels of Jane Austen and the musicals of Andrew Lloyd Webber.

Immigration Minister Mark Harper said the book "focuses on values and principles at the heart of being British." But Don Flynn, director of the Migrants' Rights Network, likened it to a private school entry exam, "which requires complete identification with elite views of British history and culture."

The handbook asks migrants to learn a potted history of Britain from the Stone Age to the present day. Among its facts:

- Britain has been an island nation for some 10,000 years, since the last ice age ended and left a watery English Channel between England and the European mainland.

- Despite its name, the Hundred Years War against France lasted 116 years.

- King Henry VIII "was most famous for breaking away from the Church of Rome and marrying six times."

- No monarch has set foot in the House of Commons since 1642, when Charles I tried unsuccessfully to arrest five lawmakers. After a civil war, he was beheaded.

- Britain's first coffee house was the Hindoostane Coffee House in London.

Putin orders Russia's intelligence service to expand cyber protection

Source : Atlantic Council

From Andrei Soldatov, Moscow Times: President Vladimir Putin recently ordered the Federal Security Service to create a system to allow the state to detect, prevent and disable cyberattacks in Russia and at diplomatic stations abroad. It is an ambitious goal and one that the FSB is well-equipped to tackle with the help of its Information Security Center and Communications Security Center. . . .

But the new structure operating under the auspices of the FSB is unable to take on the function of a national CERT agency. It was founded by the FSB center to protect government websites from attacks, not the entire Russian cyberspace.

In a Jan. 15 decree, Putin ordered the FSB to create a system that would protect not only state information resources but also "other information systems." In addition, the FSB was instructed to establish an exchange of information with "authorized agencies of foreign states and international organizations." This apparently means that it should collaborate with the CERTs in other countries. . . .

A national CERT would give Russia access to the exchange of information about hackin attacks that analogous centers in the West have been collecting since the first CERT wa founded at Carnegie Mellon University in 1988. In practice, this would provide the FSB with information about computer incidents that have occurred all over the world.

Andrei Soldatov is an intelligence analyst at Agentura.ru and co-author of "The New Nobility: The Restoration of Russia's Security State and the Enduring Legacy of the KGB.

2013/01/28

S. Korean leaders meet with Aung San Suu Kyi

Source :  Xinhua

SEOUL, Jan. 29 (Xinhua) -- South Korean President Lee Myung-bak and his successor Park Geun-hye met Tuesday with Myanmar's opposition leader and parliamentarian Aung San Suu Kyi, their aides said.

Su Kyi arrived in Seoul a day ago for a five-day trip, during which she is scheduled to receive the Gwangju Prize for Human Rights and attend the opening ceremony of the Special Olympics World Winter Games in PyeongChang.

"Economic development and democratization should go hand in hand," Lee told the pro-democracy icon in their meeting focused on economic and educational exchanges between the two countries, according to his spokesman Lee Mi-yon.

Park, who replaces Lee next month, also met with Su Kyi and voiced hope the two countries will make joint efforts for greater freedom and peace in the region, according to her aides.

The Nobel Peace laureate and leader of the National League for Democracy was released from house arrest in 2010 and became a parliamentarian in the by-election in April 2012.

2013/01/27

North Korean leader vows strong action

Source : TimesRepublican.com

SEOUL, South Korea (AP) — North Korean leader Kim Jong Un convened top security and foreign affairs officials and ordered them to take "substantial and high-profile important state measures," state media said Sunday, indicating that he plans to push forward with a threat to explode a nuclear device in defiance of the United Nations.

The meeting of top officials led by Kim makes clear that he backs Pyongyang's defiant stance in protest of U.N. Security Council punishment for a December rocket launch. The dispatch in the official Korean Central News Agency did not say when the meeting took place.

Last week, the Security Council condemned North Korea's Dec. 12 launch of a long-range rocket as a violation of a ban against nuclear and missile activity. The council, including North Korea ally China, punished Pyongyang with more sanctions and ordered the regime to refrain from a nuclear test — or face "significant action."

North Korea responded by rejecting the resolution and maintaining its right to launch a satellite into orbit as part of a peaceful civilian space program.

It also warned that it would keep developing rockets and testing nuclear devices to counter what it sees as U.S. hostility. A rare statement was issued Thursday by the powerful National Defense Commission, the top governing body led by Kim.

North Korea cites a U.S. military threat in the region as a key reason behind its drive to build nuclear weapons. The two countries fought on opposite sides of the Korean War, which ended after three years in 1953 with an armistice, not a peace treaty. The U.S.-led U.N. Command mans the Demilitarized Zone dividing the two Koreas, and Washington stations more than 28,000 troops in South Korea to protect its ally.

North Korea is estimated to have enough weaponized plutonium for four to eight bombs, according to American nuclear scientist Siegfried Hecker, who visited the country's nuclear complex northwest of Pyongyang in November 2010.

However, it is not known whether North Korean scientists have found a way to build nuclear warheads small enough to mount on a long-range missile.

Experts say regular tests are needed to perfect the technique, and another atomic test could take the country closer to its goal of building a warhead that can be mounted on a missile designed to strike the United States. North Korea has carried out two nuclear tests, in 2006 and 2009.

South Korean defense officials say North Korea is technically ready to conduct a nuclear test in a matter of days.

Satellite photos taken Wednesday show that over the past month, roads have been kept clear of snow and that North Koreans may have been sealing the tunnel into a mountainside where a nuclear device would be detonated.

Analysis of the images of the Punggye-ri site was provided Friday to The Associated Press by 38 North, the website of the U.S.-Korea Institute at Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies.

The U.S., South Korea and other countries have warned North Korea not to go ahead with a nuclear test, saying that would only deepen the country's international isolation.

After meeting with Chinese officials Friday, U.S. envoy for North Korea Glyn Davies said a nuclear test would set back efforts to restart regional talks on the North's nuclear disarmament.

2013/01/25

Kremlin sees Assad's plan as viable ground for Syrian settlement

Source : Xinhua | English.news.cn

MOSCOW, Jan. 25 (Xinhua) -- Russia sees Syrian President Bashar al-Assad's recently proposed plan as viable ground for settling his country's crisis, a Kremlin spokesman said Friday.

"Lots of countries give different kinds of support to the opposition, which definitely do not support a viable or sustainable solution to the Syrian crisis," Dmitry Peskov told U.S. magazine The National Interest.

Moscow supports the idea that the future of Syria is subject to decisions taken by all sides of the Syrian conflict, "including those who are being named as opposition," Peskov said.

"We sincerely believe the plan suggested by President Assad is a kind of continuation of the Geneva talks and could constitute a very good basis for further attempts to settle the problem," said the spokesman.

The Syrian president proposed in early January a three-point vision for a political solution to the Syria crisis: a cease-fire, followed by a comprehensive national dialogue and the establishment of a broad-based government and parliament.

The proposal was rejected by the opposition, who said he had sidestepped a point the opposition deemed crucial: to relinquish power.

Also, the United States and its allies dismissed the speech as "disconnected from reality."

Turkey eyes role in Iraq’s oil and gas shares

Source : Vesti Kavkaza

Turkey should secure a place for itself in both the northern and southern oil and gas fields of Iraq since its energy future is inextricably linked with its southern neighbor, despite frequent recent friction, sector representatives have said, Hurriyet Daily News reports.

“If there is energy somewhere, then it has to flow somewhere else. You can’t escape that fate,” said Mehmet Öğütçü, the head of Global Resources Corporation, implying that fuel drilled in Iraq would be transported outside the country regardless of political or economic obstacles.

Speakers at yesterday’s “Natural Gas as the Game Changer” roundtable meeting organized by the Marmara Group Foundation predicted that Iraq would have a significant place in the natural gas bus sector in the coming years.

“Iraq will be producing around 19 billion cubic meters of natural gas by 2035, which means it will become the fifth or sixth biggest producer in the world,” said Tahir Uysal, a partner at Silso Oil.

US Bars Afghan Airline on Suspicion of Drug Trafficking

  RIA Novosti

MOSCOW, January 25 (RIA Novosti) – The US military has barred Afghanistan’s biggest private airline from its list of potential contractors after accusing it of smuggling large amounts of opium into Tajikistan, a major transit route for drugs from the region, the Wall Street Journal reported Friday.

The allegations state that Kam Air ferried “bulk” quantities of opium – the key ingredient in heroin – on civilian flights, the paper said, citing US military officials.

“The US will not do business with those who fund and support illicit activities,” US Army Maj. Gen. Richard Longo, commander of the Task Force 2010 anticorruption unit, told the Journal. “Kam Air is too large of a company not to know what has been going on within its organization.”

Kam Air denied the allegations, with the company’s president and founder, Zamari Kamgar, telling the newspaper it would be impossible to ferry drugs out of Afghanistan given security restrictions at airports. The airline's only passenger flight to Central Asia services the Tajik capital of Dushanbe.

The ban against the airline highlights growing concerns on the part of the US and its allies over the bustling heroin trade in Afghanistan as they prepare to draw down their anti-insurgent operations there.

It also casts fresh light on the role played by ex-Soviet Central Asian countries -- particularly Tajikistan, which shares a porous border with Afghanistan of some 800 miles -- in the massive global drug trade.

The United Nations estimates that Afghanistan supplies some 90% of illegal opiates in the world and that, in 2009, it supplied 84% of the heroin consumed worldwide.

In 2010, almost a quarter of the heroin produced in Afghanistan – some 90 tons out of 380 – passed through Central Asia, about 85 percent of it through Tajikistan, according to a 2012 report by the UN Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC).

More than 75 percent of this was “destined for the Russia market,” the report said, while a small portion continues on to Europe. Russian drug officials have estimated that their country consumes about 21 percent of the world’s heroin.

According to Kam Air’s website, the airline is planning a direct route from Kabul to Moscow.

The classified US military investigation into Kam Air, which has a fleet of about 16 planes, was launched late last year after the airline bid for an international contract, the Journal said citing Longo, the anticorruption task force commander.

KAM Air operates Boeing 747 and 767 airliners and provides both passenger and cargo services.

2013/01/21

Interview: S. African land policies, labor conflicts to cause uncertainty to farming sector: expert

Source : Xinhua | English.news.cn

JOHANNESBURG, Jan. 21 (Xinhua) -- South African agriculture production conditions will meet growing food demand this year, but land policies and labor conflicts will cause "considerable uncertainty" to the sector, the Agricultural Business Chamber of South Africa (ABCSA) said Monday.

In an interview with Xinhua in Johannesburg, ABCSA Chief Executive Officer John Purchase said policy issues and current labor protests will "impact negatively" on the South African farming industry.

"The chamber predicts that production conditions will generally be favorable and will meet a growing demand effectively," Purchase said. "But it also predicts that policy issues around land reform and labor unrest will cause considerable uncertainty and impact negatively on the South African Agriculture industry," he said.

South Africa farming industry has been hollowed in deep problems since last year following labor protest that sparked in the Wastern Cape Province.

Early this month, the protest resumed and was marred by violence. Although farmworkers suspended the protest, but sporadic events of protest continued as government-mediated wage negotiations.

Purchase said ABCSA believes that the strike action is not perpetrated by real farmworkers but is primarily pushed by seasonal workers (fruit pickers) that are "generally only employed for three months of the year."

"There are a number of unemployed involved, and even a criminal or anarchist element following their agenda. While there certainly is a political element to this strike and this was even exploited as such by certain elements."

"ABCSA believes the strike is more about poor living conditions, poor service delivery in informal settlements, limited employment conditions outside of the fruit picking season."

Farmworkers are demanding a daily wage of 18 U.S. dollars (R150) from 7 U.S. dollars (R69) and improved living conditions, but very few farmers have since agreed to increase the daily wage to 12 U.S. dollars (R105).

Purchase said ABCSA believes that the minimum wage will be reviewed by government and increased significantly by 20 percent, but this will lead to retrenchments and greater mechanization by farmers as they will need to restructure.

South Africa agriculture has been shedding jobs significantly and continuously over the past couple of years and this trend is now expected to continue, despite various policy efforts to achieve sustainable employment growth in the sector, Purchase said.

ABCSA said the government, farmers and workers are "all three big losers" under the current ongoing strike action. The chamber is calling on all parties to engage constructively and to resolve the disputes.

"This will demand leadership. Strong leadership from all parties is what is required now," Purchase told Xinhua. He said investor confidence in the South African agriculture sector "was most definitely" affected by the strike action.

2013/01/18

Police Make 90 Kilo Heroin Bust in Moscow

Source :  RIA Novosti

MOSCOW, January 18 (RIA Novosti) – Narcotics police have recently seized more than 90 kilograms of Afghan heroin in the Moscow Region, Russian drug czar Viktor Ivanov said Friday.

In one major bust, the police discovered a cache of drugs in the apartment of “a citizen of one of the Central Asian countries,” as part of a special operation conducted in the southeastern Moscow Region, he said. Police found 53 different packages holding at least one kilogram each of highly concentrated heroin.

As part of the same operation, narcotics officers uncovered a hideout in the Ramenskoe region in Moscow, where they arrested a courier and found more than 30 kilograms of heroin.

Ivanov did not clarify exactly when the operation, dubbed “Network,” took place.

He added that police also arrested a dealer on the M-4 highway late on January 14 and seized more than six kilograms of heroin.

According to official estimates, Afghanistan supplies about 90 percent of the world’s heroin, with Russia consuming about 21 percent of the global share. Drug traffickers have long since established routes from Afghanistan and neighboring Tajikistan, through Central Asia, and into Europe and Russia.

Up to 40,000 people die each year in Russia from illegal drugs, officials said, while Russians typically consume up to 80 tons of heroin per year

US Navy ship stuck on coral reef in Philippines

Source : APA

Baku-APA. A U.S. Navy minesweeper was stuck on a coral reef in the Philippines for a second day Friday, as the crew struggled to extract the ship and Philippine authorities tried to evaluate damage to a protected marine park, APA reports quoting Associated Press. The Navy's 7th Fleet said in a statement that the crew of the USS Guardian was working to find out the best method of safely extracting the ship. Winds and waves were stronger Friday and may make it more difficult to free the ship, Philippine officials said.

It had just completed a port call in Subic Bay, a former American naval base west of the Philippine capital, when it hit the reef Thursday in the Tubbataha National Marine Park, a World Heritage Site in the Sulu Sea, 640 kilometers (400 miles) southwest of Manila. The ship was not listing or leaking oil but its bow struck the reef, said Angelique Songco, head of the government's Protected Area Management Board, after flying over the ship in a Philippine Air Force plane. "(The ship) does not appear to be damaged." She said it was unclear how much of the reef was damaged. She said the government imposes a fine of about $300 per square meter (yard) of damaged coral. In 2005, the environmental group Greenpeace was fined almost $7,000 after its flagship struck a reef in the same area.

The World Wide Fund for Nature Philippines said in a statement that according to an initial ocular inspection, the 68-meter (74-yard) long, 1,300-ton Guardian damaged at least 10 meters (yards) of the reef.

Songco said that park rangers were not allowed to board the ship for inspection and were told to contact the U.S. Embassy in Manila. Their radio calls to the ship were ignored, she said. The Tubbataha Reef is one of the most biologically diverse areas in the Coral Triangle, the world's cradle of marine life. It is off-limits to fishing and the collection of corals, wildlife and any marine life is prohibited. In 1992, UNESCO designated the reef as a World Heritage Site. U.S. Navy ships have stepped up visits to Philippine ports for refueling, rest and recreation, and joint military exercises as a result of a redeployment of U.S. forces in the Asia-Pacific region. The Philippines, a U.S. defense treaty ally, has been entangled in a territorial dispute with China in the South China Sea.

2013/01/17

Australian outlaw to be laid to rest, 132 years later

Source : Shanghai Daily

The remains of Australia's most famous outlaw, Ned Kelly, are finally to be laid to rest, 132 years after he was hanged for murder.

Kelly's descendants, who received the bushranger's remains after they were exhumed from a mass prison grave, said yesterday they will hold a private church memorial service tomorrow before the burial in an unmarked grave on Sunday.

The homemade armor and helmet Kelly wore during his last violent shootout with police and his reported final words before he was hanged at Melbourne Gaol on November 11, 1880 - "Such is life" - helped make him an iconic figure in Australian history.

His family, the Kelly Gang, became a symbol for social tensions between poor Irish settlers and the wealthy establishment at the time, and Kelly himself became a folk hero to many for standing up to the Anglo-Australian ruling class.

Kelly's descendants said the private farewells were in keeping with the outlaw's requests.

"The descendants of the Kelly family wish to give effect to Ned Kelly's last wish and that he now be buried in consecrated ground with only his family in attendance in order to ensure a private, respectful and dignified funeral," the family said in a statement.

Kelly's remains have made a circuitous journey to their final resting place. They were first buried in a mass grave at Melbourne Gaol. When that closed in 1929, Kelly's bones were exhumed and reburied in another mass grave at the newer Pentridge Prison.

All the bones buried in Pentridge yard were exhumed in 2009 and Kelly's skeleton was positively identified in 2011 by scientists after DNA tests against a descendant. His skull remains missing.

His life story inspired the novel "True History of the Kelly Gang" by author Peter Carey, which won the 2001 Booker Prize, and the late actor Heath Ledger played him in a 2003 movie

German Court Fines British Bishop for Holocaust Denial

Via : Naharnet

Source Agence France Presse German court on Wednesday fined a renegade British bishop 1,800 euros ($2,400) for denying key facts about the Holocaust.

The district court in the southern city of Regensburg convicted Bishop Richard Williamson of incitement to hatred after he gave an interview to Swedish television disputing the existence of Nazi gas chambers to kill Jews.

The 72-year-old also said in the 2008 interview that "200,000 to 300,000 Jews perished in Nazi concentration camps."

The prosecution had demanded a higher fine of 6,500 euros for Williamson, who was not present at the hearing, but the court lowered the amount, as it judged he had no income at present.

Williamson's lawyer argued the conviction should be quashed as the bishop had expected the interview to be aired only in Sweden, where denying the Holocaust is not a crime.

But the actual interview took place in the German city of Regensburg, where it is illegal to deny the Nazis murdered six million Jews during World War II.

A previous fine of 6,500 euros handed down in July 2011 was quashed in February 2012 due to "irremediable procedural problems" in the case.

Williamson was expected to appeal the verdict.

While still a member of the breakaway ultra-conservative Catholic fraternity, the Society of Saint Pius X Society, Williamson also hit the headlines in 2009 when Pope Benedict XVI reversed his excommunication in a bid to bridge a rift with the organisation.

Benedict later said he would not have made such a move if he had known about Williamson's views on the Holocaust.

Williamson was expelled from the fraternity of traditionalists last year after it said he had disobeyed and disrespected his superiors for several years.

Air India grounds Boeing Dreamliners

Source : Voice of Russia

Air India has grounded all its Boeing 787 Dreamliner aircraft for safety concerns following an emergency landing of a Boeing 787 plane in western Japan earlier this week caused by a battery fire risk.

Air India has ordered a total of 27 Dreamliners.

The airliner's spokesman K. Swaminathan said that India's aviation authority directed the state airline to stop flying the Boeing planes Thursday morning as it waits for an investigation by Indian regulators to take place.

The 787, known as the Dreamliner, is Boeing's newest jet, and the company is counting heavily on its success.

Since its launch after delays of more than three years, the plane has been plagued by a series of problems including a battery fire and fuel leaks.

Voice of Russia, AP

2013/01/16

US surprised by ‘Iranian evasion technique’

Source : Islamic Invitation Turkey

US surprised by ‘Iranian evasion technique’

As sanctions mount against Iran, reports have gave an account of how surprised some US authorities are by Iran’s methods of bypassing the sanctions. “Despite onerous sanctions that have basically shut Iran out of the global financial system, the country is still finding some ways to bypass them, the Treasury Department said Thursday, describing what it called a small but “emerging threat” to the effectiveness of the sanctions effort,” NY Times said in an article January 10.

“Adam Szubin, director of the Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control, which supervises American enforcement of the sanctions, said the Iranians were using private exchange houses and trading companies in other countries, masking transactions with fake identities and relying on the paperless practice known as hawala, common in parts of the Middle East and Asia, in which money is transferred informally and often illegally through trustworthy couriers,” NY Times continued.

The report says that with only 300,000 barrels deficit in oil export (as opposed to the alleged one million barrel deficit), Iran is bypassing sanctions.

The report goes on to say that in 2011 the growth rate was 1.7 per cent, to slip down to -1 percent in 2012.

World Bank expects Iranian economy to come clean of the slump with a 0.6 per cent growth rate in 2013. A previous report had predicted the growth rate at -0.7

Based on the report it is expected that Iran’s current account balance will remain positive and the country’s GDP growth would be 7.6 per cent.

Mafia Boss Gunned Down in Moscow

Source :  RIA Novosti


MOSCOW, January 16 (RIA Novosti) - A reputed top criminal kingpin was killed in a contract hit in Moscow on Wednesday, police said.

Aslan Usoyan, also known as Granddad Khassan, was fatally wounded by a sniper in central Moscow and died in hospital soon afterward.

The sniper fired a total of six shots from a nearby building as Usoyan, 75, walked out of a restaurant. Only one bullet hit him while two others seriously injured a woman passerby, who was put into intensive care.

The assailant escaped.

Granddad Khassan survived at least two previous attempts on his life, one in 1998 and the other in 2010.

Police have linked the attack to an ongoing turf war.

Usoyan, “in the business” since the 1960s, has worked his way up in the Soviet and post-Soviet underworld.

He controlled a large number of organized crime groups in the Caucasus, the Urals region and central Russia, especially in Moscow and St. Petersburg, as well as abroad. He has engaged in gambling, drug trafficking, illegal arms sales and extraction of mineral resources.

2013/01/15

Mechel Buys Russian Pacific Port | Business

Source : RIA Novosti

MOSCOW, January 15 (RIA Novosti) – Russian metals and mining giant Mechel has closed a $508 million deal to buy the port of Vanino on the Russian Pacific coast, the company said late on Monday.

“Mechel reports acquiring 55 percent (73.33 percent of common shares) of Vanino Sea Trade Port. The acquisition was made in line with the company’s strategy of developing its mining division in a bid to expand its export capacities and reduce transport costs in line with planned increases in coal mining volumes,” the company said in a statement.

Mechel won the tender for the Vanino port in early December, offering 15.5 billion rubles ($508 million) for the state package compared with the starting price of 1.5 billion rubles.

Mechel CEO Yevgeny Mikhel later said the company had set up a consortium of Russian and foreign companies to participate in the tender but declined to specify the firms.

Port Vanino is located in the Strait of Tartary, between the Pacific Ocean’s Sea of Okhotsk and Sea of Japan. Vanino is the largest transport hub in the Khabarovsk Region and one of Russia’s ten largest ports. It handled some 6 million tons of cargo in 2012.

Vanino handles cargo bound for Russia’s north-east, Japan, South Korea, China, Australia, the United States and other Pacific countries. Navigation at the port is open all year round.

“Vanino is a universal port that fits ideally into the logistics of Mechel’s deliveries to Asia-Pacific. Using its capacities will enable the company to consolidate its position as one of the world’s largest producers of metallurgical coals and significantly expand its customer base,” Mechel said.

China says 4 workers kidnapped by militants in Sudan's North Darfur

Source : Fox News

KHARTOUM, SUDAN – China's Foreign Ministry says four Chinese workers have been abducted in Sudan's North Darfur region by unidentified gunmen.

Monday's statement says the men are employees of the China Railway 18th Bureau Group who were building a road in North Darfur just outside the regional capital of El-Fasher.

Sudan's state news agency SUNA has blamed the abduction on a Darfur rebel movement, but it stopped short of naming which group.

The news agency has reported that five Sudanese were also abducted along with the four Chinese workers, among them drivers and engineers.

The government says it dispatched 18 military vehicles to pursue the abductors.

China is a major oil buyer from Sudan and invests heavily there.

2013/01/14

North Korea says it is bolstering its war defenses

Source : Fox News

PYONGYANG, NORTH KOREA – North Korea vowed Monday to strengthen its defenses amid concerns the country may conduct a nuclear test as a follow-up to last month's long-range rocket launch.

Citing U.S. hostility, Pyongyang's Foreign Ministry said in a memorandum that North Korea will "continue to strengthen its deterrence against all forms of war."

The memorandum carried by state media did not say what action North Korea would take to defend itself. However, North Korea has claimed the right to build atomic weapons to protect itself from the United States, which stations more than 28,000 troops in South Korea.

North Korea sent a satellite into space on Dec. 12 aboard a long-range rocket, a launch that the U.S. and its allies have criticized as a test of banned ballistic missile technology.

In 2006 and 2009, Pyongyang conducted atomic tests after being slapped with U.N. Security Council condemnation and sanctions for similar launches of long-range rockets.

North Korea's Foreign Ministry urged the Washington to dismantle the U.S.-led U.N. Command, which oversees an armistice signed at the close of the Korean War in 1953. It accused the U.S. of trying to turn the U.N. Command into a NATO-like regional military bloc.

"Whether the U.S. immediately dismantles the U.N. Command or not will serve as the acid stone in deciding whether the U.S. will maintain or not its anti-(North Korea) hostile policy," said the memorandum, which was carried by the official Korean Central News Agency.

The Korean War armistice was never replaced with a peace treaty, leaving the Korean Peninsula in a technical state of war 60 years later

6 arrested in another bus passenger rape in India

Source :  Tehran Times

NEW DELHI (AP) — Police said Sunday they have arrested six suspects in another gang rape of a bus passenger in India, four weeks after a brutal attack on a student on a moving bus in the capital outraged Indians and led to calls for tougher rape laws.

Police officer Raj Jeet Singh said a 29-year-old woman was the only passenger on a bus as she was traveling to her village in northern Punjab state on Friday night. The driver refused to stop at her village despite her repeated pleas and drove her to a desolate location, he said.

There, the driver and the conductor took her to a building where they were joined by five friends and took turns raping her throughout the night, Singh said. The driver dropped the woman off at her village early Saturday, he said. Singh said police arrested six suspects on Saturday and were searching for another.

Gurmej Singh, deputy superintendent of police, said all six admitted involvement in the rape. He said the victim was recovering at home.

Also on Saturday, police arrested a 32-year-old man for allegedly raping and killing a 9-year-old girl two weeks ago in Ahmednagar district in western India, the Press Trust of India news agency reported. Her decomposed body was found Friday.

Police officer Sunita Thakare said the suspect committed the crime seven months after his release from prison after serving nine years for raping and murdering a girl in 2003, PTI reported Sunday.

The deadly rape of a 23-year-old student on a New Delhi bus in December led to the woman's death and set off an impassioned debate about what India needs to do to prevent such tragedies. Protesters and politicians have called for tougher rape laws, police reforms and a transformation in the way the country treats women.

"It's a very deep malaise. This aspect of gender justice hasn't been dealt with in our nation-building task," Seema Mustafa, a writer on social issues who heads the Center for Policy Analysis think tank, said Sunday.

"Police haven't dealt with the issue severely in the past. The message that goes out is that the punishment doesn't match the crime. Criminals think they can get away it," she said.

In her first published comments, the mother of the deceased student in the New Delhi attack said Sunday that all six suspects in that case, including one believed to be a juvenile, deserve to die.

She was quoted by The Times of India newspaper as saying that her daughter, who died from massive internal injuries two weeks after the attack, told her that the youngest suspect had participated in the most brutal aspects of the rape. Five men have been charged with the physiotherapy student's rape and murder and face a possible death penalty if convicted. The sixth suspect, who says he is 17 years old, is likely to be tried in a juvenile court if medical tests confirm he is a minor. His maximum sentence would be three years in a reform facility.

"Now the only thing that will satisfy us is to see them punished. For what they did to her, they deserve to die," the newspaper quoted the mother as saying. Some activists have demanded a change in Indian laws so that juveniles committing heinous crimes can face the death penalty.

The names of the victim of the Dec. 16 attack and her family have not been released.

Greek political parties condemn gunfire attack on ruling party headquarters

Source : Xinhua

ATHENS, Jan. 14 (Xinhua) -- Greek political parties strongly condemned on Monday a gunfire attack on the conservative ruling party headquarters in Athens, which ended with no injuries.

Two unknown assailants fired at least nine shots with kalashnikov AK 47 riffles at the building located in a central Athens district in the early hours of Monday, while it was empty.

A bullet has hit the office of Prime Minister Antonis Samaras, head of the party, on the second floor, Greek government spokesman Simos Kedikoglou said citing preliminary reports by police and counter-terrorism squads.

Within hours police found a burnt out car which is believed could be used for the attack, a few kilometers away.

Kedikoglou strongly condemned the "fresh attack against our democracy in the context of efforts to spread terror in our society ," reiterating calls for a clear denouncement of violence from all political parties.

Since last Friday Greece has witnessed a string of attacks with homemade petrol bombs against a dozen offices of political parties, such as New Democracy, co-ruling socialist PASOK party as well as main opposition Radical Left SYRIZA, and an attack at the home of the spokesman's brother, George Kedikoglou while he was inside with his spouse and a three-year old child.

An anarchist group claimed responsibility for the first string of minor attacks with gas canisters at the homes of five Greek journalists, accusing media that "they represent a corrupted political and financial system which has led to the current debt crisis." No group has claimed responsibility for the latest attacks.

The three-party coalition government of conservatives and center-Left has strongly condemned the attacks, stressing that "democracy cannot be terrorized."

Amid the series of attacks, a dispute has erupted between the government and SYRIZA over the party's position over violence stemming from extreme Left groups. New Democracy criticizes SYRIZA for a "lenient and mild" approach on the matter, an allegation the party categorically denies.

"Democracy is targeted," SYRIZA spokesman Panos Skourletis said, underlining that they condemn all forms of political violence, adding that the attacks shift the focus from the major problems debt-ridden Greece faces at the moment.

Britain's Cameron plays down prospect of in-out EU referendum

Source : LBCI News

British Prime Minister David Cameron on Monday played down the prospect of a near- term referendum on Britain's membership of the European Union, ahead of a long- awaited speech on the issue he is expected to deliver next week.

Cameron told BBC radio an in-out referendum soon would be a "false choice", and made clear that although he did not think Britain would "collapse" if it left the EU, it was in Britain's interests to stay in the 27-member bloc.

Cameron says he plans to renegotiate Britain's ties with the EU and seek the public's fresh consent for the new deal. He told the BBC he believes he has allies in his efforts to repatriate more powers from Brussels.

Malian PM arrives in Algeria following its support initiative

Source : Alarabiya.net

Malian Prime Minister Diango Cissoko visited Algeria on Sunday a day after Algiers proclaimed “unequivocal” support for its neighbor, where France is helping battle an Islamist insurgency.

The visit came as French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius said on Sunday that Algeria has allowed France full use of its air space in its military intervention against Islamist rebels in Mali and is ready to seal its border if the conflict moves north, reported Reuters.

The delegation, consisting of Cissoko and his defense minister Diaran Kone, are scheduled to meet Algerian FM Abdelmalek Sellal ahead of a meeting Monday with Algerian President Abdelaziz Bouteflika, AFP quoted Malian sources as saying.

Algerian officials said the talks will focus on bolstering cooperation between the two countries and with partners outside the region to eradicate terrorism and organized crime, which threaten stability in the Sahel region.

Foreign ministry spokesman Amar Belani said in a statement on Saturday that Algeria expresses its “unequivocal support for the Malian transitional authorities, with whom it maintains multifaceted relations, including in the military sphere”.

“It should be noted that Mali has asked, in line with its sovereignty, for friendly powers to reinforce its national capacities to fight terrorism,” Belani said, as quoted by AFP.

In the same vain, French FM Fabius said he was in regular contact with the government in Algeria, which had pushed for a political solution to the crisis in Mali over a military intervention, and was grateful it was being supportive of the operation.

“Algeria has authorized unlimited access to fly over its territory, something I thank the Algerian authorities for,” Fabius told LCI television, as Rafale jets deployed from France pounded rebel strongholds in northern Mali according to Reuters.

Algeria has long defended the principle of non-interference, but did not oppose a UN resolution authorizing the intervention of an African military force in Mali if dialogue failed.

France has intervened in Mali at Bamako's request following a new offensive toward the south by the Islamists, who seized control of the country's north in June.

Benin on Sunday pledged roughly 300 troops to take part in an African force aimed at helping Mali battle the Islamists, after Burkina Faso, Niger and Senegal had each pledged 500 troops the previous day.

The U.N. Security Council has approved a 3,300-strong force to help Mali win back its north. The force is to be commanded by a Nigerian, with Nigeria pledging the largest contribution so far at 600 troops.

French Mirage fighter jets on Sunday pounded Mali for a third straight day and a top Islamist leader was reported killed.

2013/01/13

Topless Femen Activists Detained at Vatican Gay Protest

Source :  RIA Novosti

ROME, January 13 (RIA Novosti) – Four activists of Ukrainian feminist group Femen staged a topless protest for gay rights at the Vatican on Sunday as Pope Benedict XVI was reciting his prayer, local media said.

The activists with slogans "In Gay We Trust" painted on their backs, staged the protest by the Christmas tree in the center of St. Peter's Square.

The women were briefly detained by Vatican police, Agi news agency said.

Ukraine's radical feminist movement Femen was established in 2008 and devoted mainly to protests on women’s issues. Later the group made headlines for pro-democracy and anti-corruption protests in Russia, Ukraine and London.

Top Japan General Calls for Beefed-Up Defenses

Source :  WSJ.com

TOKYO—When a Japanese coast guard cutter spotted a small Chinese aircraft flying above disputed East China Sea islands in December, Japan's air force scrambled eight F-15 fighter jets, but they reached the scene only after the intruder had left. Japan's radar or surveillance planes had missed the low-flying aircraft entering what the nation considers its airspace, causing a delay in scrambling.

The embarrassing incident underscores the need for Japan to beef up the defense of air, sea and land in its southwest, said Gen. Shigeru Iwasaki, the top uniformed official of Japan's military, known as the Self-Defense Forces. He said ..

Cuban leader meets Chavez's successor

Source :  Xinhua

HAVANA, Jan. 12 (Xinhua) -- Cuban top leader Raul Castro held talks Friday with visiting Venezuelan Vice President Nicolas Maduro, who was here to visit ailing Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez, official media reported Saturday.

Castro and Maduro shared their satisfaction with the rallies held Thursday in Caracas in support of Chavez, according to Granma, the official newspaper of the Cuban Communist Party.

Castro reiterated the Cuban people's solidarity with the Bolivarian Revolution and its leader and expressed confidence in the ability of the Venezuelan people and their institutions to meet any challenges, said the paper.

Before arriving in Havana, Maduro said earlier Friday in Caracas that the purpose of his trip was to visit Chavez and report to him on the progress of the Venezuelan government in his absence.

Chavez, 58, underwent a fourth operation on Dec. 11, but then contracted a lung infection that has complicated his recovery.

He was re-elected in October last year to another six-year term, but was too ill to attend the swearing-in ceremony scheduled for Thursday.

Maduro was chosen by Chavez as his successor in case he could not finish his new term of office.

Also on Friday, Castro held talks with Argentine President Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner, who landed in Havana on Friday to show support for Chavez.

Upon her arrival, Fernandez said she would meet Chavez and his family members here before her Asia trip to the United Arab Emirates, Indonesia and Vietnam.

Leather Torah captured after thrilling police operation

Source : www.hurriyetdailynews.com

Police carefully planned and carried out a special operation Dec. 25 to capture a 1,900-year-old Torah from alleged smugglers before it was sold in the Mediterranean province of Adana.

Police apprehended four people in Adana who were attempting to sell an incredibly old leather Torah. Four suspects were released by a local court pending trial and the leather Torah was sent to Ankara for analysis following the operation.

After receiving information regarding the entrance of an artifact to Adana through illegal means from Syria amid the nation’s civil war, police discovered through additional research that an attempt would be made to sell a 2- millennia-old leather Torah for $30 million.

A geography teacher, T.N., searched for a buyer for the 8.78 meter-long and 44 centimeters-wide leather Torah by describing it as the "only original text of the Torah in the world."

Police infiltrated the hotel to catch the alleged smugglers in the act disguised in the uniforms of waiters and valets after learning the location of the sale.

When T.N. entered to the hotel, he was arrested by a police officer in a waiter’s uniform in silence.

Suspects, Ş.C, Y.Ş. and S.C.D were also arrested while waiting in front of the hotel.

The leather Torah was found during a search of the suspects' car.

"We bought it from an antique store and brought it to a geography teacher to ask what was written on it," one of the suspects told police.

"One of my friends called me to meet and he asked me to analyze a leather scripture they had", T.N. has said in defense of himself.

The historical Torah is believed to have been taken first to Palestine and then later to Syria.

There are suggestions that the Torah may have been taken to Turkey by Syrian refugees.

France not to give in to blackmail after failed Somalia hostage rescue operation

Source :  Xinhua

PARIS, Jan. 12 (Xinhua) -- French president on Saturday expressed great distress over the French victims killed in the hostage rescue operation in Somalia, but vowed not to give up to terrorists' blackmail.

In the weekend televised address, President Francois Hollande confirmed that "this operation could not be completed despite the sacrifice of our two soldiers and probably the murder of our hostage."

Hollande said the decision to "free one of our agents detained for more than three and a half years in harsh conditions" had been made for several days.

The French head of state said he shared the pain of their families and presented to them "the condolences of the nation," stressing that "this operation confirms France's determination not to give in to blackmail by terrorists."

France launched a hostage rescue operation on early Saturday morning, trying to free Denis Allex, a secret agent abducted in Somalia since 2009.

"Last night, the commando of the DGSE ... faced strong resistance. Fights of great violence took place during which, evidence suggests that Denis Allex was killed by his captors," Defense Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian told a press briefing.

Two French soldiers and 17 militants from al-Qaeda linked al-Shabab group were also reportedly killed in the raid.

However, the Islamist group denied Alex's death and to judge him in the coming two days, adding they detained an injured French soldier.

Abducted in 2009 by al-Shabab insurgents in Mogadishu, Allex was alleged to have helped train Somalia's police and presidential guards along with another agent who succeeded to escape a month later.

France's hostage rescue operation came just a day after France sent its forces to help Malian authorities push back the Islamist rebels' offensive and movement toward the capital of Bamako.

"There is new situation with a break in the process and the advance of Islamist forces to the south of Mali will reinforce the weight of these movements and directly harm the hostages' lives," the minister noted.

In September, AQIM menaced in an online message to kill the remained four French workers of Areva kidnapped in 2010, if Paris would prepare a military intervention alongside African forces to oust Islamist insurgents from northern areas of Mali.

Le Drian stressed that French hostage taking will not constitute a pressure on Paris "to fight against terrorism where it is."

"Our commitment to fight against the terrorists and who threat to set a terrorist state in Mali will continue. We are determined to set up the conditions allowing the establishment of the Security Council strategy," the French official said.

"We will continue our efforts to obtain the release of all hostages," he added.

Meanwhile, Jihadists warned that France's military intervention against them in northern Mali will put "not only for French hostages, but also for all French citizens wherever they find themselves in the Muslim world" at risk, as French forces carried out air strikes for the second day on Saturday against Islamist rebels in Mali.

In the evening, President Hollande announced in a television address after a defense council meeting that France will raise anti-terror alert level to the highest level on fears of post-Mali operation reprisals.

In accordance with the president's instructions, French Prime Minister Jean-Marc Ayrault announced that the terror alert Vigipirate plan was reinforced "immediately" for public transport, rallies and public buildings.

"The government is mobilized and remains attentive to the evolution of the situation. (It) shall take all necessary decisions to ensure national security," said the PM office.

The Vigipirate plan was implemented in Match 2003. The alert "scarlet" was briefly imposed in March 2012 in France's Midi-Pyrenees region at the time of the killings by Mohamed Merah in Toulouse and Montauban.

Eight French nationals are still being held hostage by Islamist groups in the Sahel region.


2013/01/12

Plane with Over 500 Kg of Cocaine Seized in Venezuela

Source : RIA Novosti

MEXICO, January 13 (RIA Novosti) – Venezuelan law-enforcers have seized a light plane transporting 530 kg of cocaine on Saturday, local media reported.

The seizure was made in the western state of Apure on the border with Colombia. The plane's crew managed to escape.

The operation was carried out by the Venezuelan National Guard in cooperation with Colombian law-enforcers.

Venezuelan security forces have confiscated a total of more than 45 metric tons of drugs last year, including 27 metric tons of cocaine, up 3 metric tons since 2011 and about twice the amount seized in 1999.

President Hugo Chavez suspended cooperation with the US Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) in 2005. The US government regularly accuses Venezuelan authorities of not cooperating in the fight against drug trafficking.

The Motivation Behind US Military Expansion in Africa

Source : www.uruknet.info

The U.S. plans to deploy 3,500 troops in Africa in 2013, to be divided and stationed throughout 35 African countries, NBC disclosed recently. Although the U.S. has repeatedly emphasized that the primary purpose of this deployment is anti-terrorism training, not military combat, the news still caused an international uproar in public opinion. Some media sources state that U.S. military involvement in Africa has entered a defining stage.

However, for those who have been watching Africa for a long time, U.S. military expansion on the continent is nothing new. The U.S. had already established headquarters in Africa as early as 2007. Despite opposition from African countries, the U.S. military advanced actively, silently and stealthily. In 2012 alone, the U.S. initiated more than ten military operations in Africa. They have already signed military agreements with over 20 African countries regarding the use of airports and ports during wartime, and they have set up drone bases in many countries.

While the U.S. is once again resorting to waving the anti-terrorism flag to "legitimize" its expanding military presence in Africa, it is finding it difficult to dispel doubts about its motivation from outside parties. Why did the U.S. "withdraw" from Africa in the 1990s, when Africa was at its most turbulent and in need of external support, and "return" to Africa now during a rare period of stability? Some regions and countries in Africa are indeed facing the threat of terrorism. In fact, the threat seems to increase with the expansion of the U.S. war on terror and the shift of its counter-terrorism strategy toward Africa. This is a something worth thinking about.

After all, the true purpose of the U.S. military’s "return" to Africa is not to fight terrorism, no more than it is to safeguard the interests of Africa. Rather it is to maintain its hegemony. South African media bluntly pointed out that the majority of extremist organizations in Africa only have local demands; they do not have a global target that would constitute a direct threat to the interests of the U.S. The U.S. is deliberately exaggerating the danger of terrorism in Africa, magnifying and aggravating indigenous problems in order to increase its control over the continent while using terrorism as an excuse.

African media also reported that recent U.S. military operations on the continent were mainly focused on the origin and expansion of supply lines for energy resources. The U.S. does not seem to be concerned about regions that are not relevant to its economic and strategic interests. The U.S. military’s "anti-terrorist" actions in Africa are selective. They only oppose "terrorism" that threatens U.S. interests; in regards to "terrorism" that is unrelated to U.S. interests, they will probably choose to be "selectively blind," even when it results in turmoil.

In addition, the increasing influence of "emerging powers" in Africa is a major fear of the U.S. The U.S. hates and envies the flourishing development of cooperation between Africa and these emerging nations. Because it is trapped in a financial crisis, the U.S. cannot compete by increasing investment in Africa. Thus it is forced to respond to the rising influence of emerging countries in Africa with unorthodox methods. Increasing control over Africa via the military became its "trump card."

An old Chinese proverb says, "The fear of theft is worse than the theft itself." The evolution of the international situation in the last two years has made clear that whenever the U.S. shifts its strategic focus to a new region, restlessness follows. Whether the expanding U.S. military presence in Africa is a blessing or a curse speaks for itself.

Russian Space Industry to Double Output by 2020 – Program

Source : RIA Novosti

MOSCOW, January 12 (RIA Novosti) – An ongoing reform of Russia’s ailing space industry should double its output by 2020, according to a new state program published on Saturday.

The increase should give Russia a 16-percent share in the space technology market by 2020, up from the current 10.7 percent, said the program, available on the website of Russia’s Federal Space Agency.

Goals outlined in the program also include creation of the new Angara launch vehicle, development of the Vostochny space port in the Russian Far East and improvements to the Glonass satellite navigation system.

Space industry development is named the top priority in the document, followed by scientific research. Manned spaceflight has only the third-highest priority, though the program says that it would change after 2020, when the International Space Station is expected to end its mission.

The program reiterates a plan voiced late last year to unite dozens of Russian space industry enterprises into five to seven major holdings and to attract private investors.

The program’s price tag is put at 2.1 trillion rubles ($69 billion), including private investment, which is virtually nonexistent at the present.

The program was passed by the government in late December, but was not published before. It also reportedly contains a classified section, which was not made public.

Russia’s space program saw a slew of setbacks in recent years, most of them blamed on faulty hardware. The most recent mishap took place in December, when a botched launch of the Yamal-402 telecoms satellite led to depletion of its fuel supply, shortening its orbit lifetime.

The setbacks resulted in reshuffle at the Federal Space Agency in 2011. Deputy Prime Minister Dmitry Rogozin, who oversees defense and space industries, announced late last year a switch to a holding-based model of the industry, which he said would be implemented by next March.

West Africa's ECOWAS to send troops to retake north Mali

Source : Egypt Independent

ABIDJAN –– West African regional bloc ECOWAS will begin sending soldiers to Mali by Monday as part of a mission to drive Al-Qaeda-linked fighters from the country's north, an Ivory Coast government official said on Saturday.

Malian soldiers retook a strategic central town on Friday after France intervened with air strikes to halt a southward advance by Islamist insurgents.

"The mandate for the deployment was signed by the president yesterday ... Monday by the latest, the troops will be there or will have started to arrive," said Ali Coulibaly, Ivory Coast's African Integration Minister.

Ivory Coast's President Alassane Ouattara currently holds the rotating chairmanship of ECOWAS.

ECOWAS has for months lobbied the international community to support its plan for a regional military force to end the nine-month occupation of Mali's north by Islamist groups Ansar Dine, MUJWA, and AQIM, Al-Qaeda's North African affiliate.

Potential international partners in the operation had balked at fully backing the mission amid doubts about financing and disagreements over the force's mandate.

However an offensive this week by the Islamist coalition that threatened to seize the town of Sevare, home to a military base and a gateway towards the capital Bamako around 500 km (300 miles) to the south, forced the French intervention.

"Things are accelerating ... this is not a mission to simply protect Sevare. We need to retake the northern part [of Mali] from the jihadis," Coulibaly said. "The reconquest of the north has already begun."

France on Friday said it launched a military operation in Mali to help the government there stem a push southwards by Islamist rebels who control much of the north, in a turnaround from its earlier stance against intervention by its forces.

Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius said on Friday he would not reveal strategic details of the intervention –– such as whether French troops were on the ground –– while it was ongoing so as to limit the rebels' knowledge of the operation but he confirmed that French forces

Malaysia opposition holds mass election rally

Source : Al Jazeera English

At least 45,000 people have joined a massive opposition rally in Malaysia's largest city in a show of force ahead of key general elections due in months.

Police sealed off main roads in downtown Kuala Lumpur on Saturday, allowing protesters to march peacefully to a nearby stadium for the rally by opposition leader Anwar Ibrahim's three-party alliance.

The rally focused on demanding further transparency in elections that must be held by June. The polls are seen a major test for Prime Minister Najib Razak's ruling coalition after its dismal performance in 2008 elections.

The National Front coalition, which has governed Malaysia since independence from Britain in 1957, lost more than a third of its seats in parliament to a resurgent opposition in 2008 amid public discontent over problems such as corruption and racial discrimination.

Anwar on Saturday appealed to the public to oust the National Front and vote in his opposition alliance in this year's elections.

"We ask for a chance so that the people's voice will become the sacred voice in ruling this country," he told the crowd.

"Our government is so corrupt. The government should listen to us. They need to reform. For more than 50 years they have ruled Malaysia," said Azlan Abu Bakar, 29, a rally participant who travelled from the eastern state of Terengganu for the gathering.

Peaceful gathering

The rally tested Najib's tolerance for public dissent after police used tear gas to quell two similar protests over the past year.

The protests have helped pressure the government to agree to new regulations to prevent people from voting multiple times and ensure fairer elections, but activists insist voter registration lists remain tainted.

Police estimated Saturday's crowd at around 45,000, but organisers said more than 100,000 people showed up. The rally ended peacefully after more than three hours.

Deputy Prime Minister Muhyiddin Yassin reacted to the rally by saying the ruling coalition has brought peace and prosperity for all Malaysians.

"We have a good government and a good economy, so why do we need a change?" he was quoted as saying by the national Bernama news agency.

In a statement, the government said that it was "pleased" that the rally passed off peacefully.

"Today’s events underline the government’s commitment to freedom of assembly, and the strength of Malaysia’s democracy. The rally was facilitated by the Prime Minister’s political reforms, including the introduction of the Peaceful Assembly Act," the statement said.

The government has intensified efforts to win back support over the past year with measures such as channeling more funds to the poor and abolishing security laws that were widely considered repressive. But the opposition insists that only a change of government will resolve problems such as corruption and racial discrimination.

 

EU must change to keep Britain: British FinMin

Source : Xinhua

BERLIN, Jan.12 (Xinhua) -- British Chancellor of the Exchequer George Osborne told German media on Friday that the European Union must change for more protection of non-eurozone members' rights in order to keep Britain in the EU.

"We welcome the euro being strengthened but we also want the rights of countries that are not in the eurozone to be protected", Osborne told German newspaper Die Welt, adding that the EU must change for Britain to stay in the bloc.

Also on Friday, German Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle told local media that Germany desires a Britian that will remain "a constructive and active partner in the EU", adding that Germany wants a deeper and better EU of 27 members, including Britain.

British Prime Minister David Cameron said last Sunday that the country will be offered a "real choice" on its relationship with Europe at the next election. Cameron faces increasing pressure from his own party to claw back more powers from Brussels.

In an interview with local media last month, German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble warned Britain against "blackmailing" its EU partners to bring more powers back from EU, adding that Germany wants to keep Britain in the EU.

Aboriginals stage protests across Canada

Source : thestar.com

VANCOUVER—With rallies at city halls, teach-ins and panel discussions on campuses, and blockades along Canada’s transportation routes, First Nations activists and their supporters gathered across the country Friday to signal their ongoing push for better relations with the federal government.

While some saw the day as hopeful and important historically, others viewed the meeting in Ottawa between Prime Minister Stephen Harper and native leaders as insignificant and unproductive.

“Is it a good day for us? Many of us are here because we hope it will change what has happened in the past and make our future better,” said Chris Small, a member of the Cree Nation from Alberta who was part of a 400-person rally Friday at Vancouver City Hall.

“When I see how many people are out here I feel like it’s going to make a difference, but tomorrow I think I’ll feel differently.”

Passengers travelling between Halifax and Truro, N.S., on board the CN Rail Line had to be bused to their destinations after protesters blocked the track. In Alberta, about 70 Sturgeon Lake First Nation residents halted traffic for about an hour in both directions on Highway 43 near Edmonton as they marched along the shoulder of the highway.

But major blockades that had been threatened, including Highway 63 — the key route in Alberta for oilsands operations — and the Port of Vancouver, which is the entry and exit point for imports and exports from Asia, didn’t materialize.

In Wolfville, N.S., rally organizer Marke Slipp said the police were helpful in a march involving 60 to 70 people. Slip said First Nations members from the Annapolis Valley reserve were joined on the march by university students and the province’s activist population.

“The mood was very sober with a certain amount of joy, too,” Slipp said. “Natives have been treated very poorly by the crown and by the government for hundreds of years and for the past 140 years by the Canadian government. It’s time to change that.”

Panel discussions at the University of Winnipeg on a cold and wintry Friday drew dozens of supporters and students to the campus event.

“There’s a lot of anxiety about what is happening with the meeting in Ottawa. Is it the start of something that will grow or is it the end of the discussion with the Canadian government?” said Rodi Fong, office assistant with the Wii Chiiwaakanak Learning Centre on campus.

Rally slams BBC news blackout

Source : www.islamicinvitationturkey

British campaigners have held a protest rally outside the BBC headquarters in London to voice outrage over the state broadcaster’s news blackout on Palestinian prisoners’ hunger strikes over the past six months.

Two Palestinian political prisoners named Samer Al-Issawi, and Ayman Sharawna have been refusing food for almost six months to gain release from Israeli regime’s detention centers.

According to the London-based Islamic Human Rights Council (IHRC), Google returns over 21 million articles from the BBC website but none of them mentions Samer Issawi or Ayman Sharawna.

This is while, the BBC describes its mission as one to “inform” and “educate”, claiming to provide “trusted World and UK news.”

Protesters from the Palestinian Prisoners Campaign, which organized the Friday rally outside the BBC headquarters, called on the corporation to end its biased approach and cover the hunger strikes in a letter addressed to the BBC director general Tim Davie.

The demonstrators also carried placards reading “Free Samer Issawi” and “Free Ayman Sharawna”, who were identified as detainees “imprisoned indefinitely without charge, without trial”, and waived Palestinian flags outside the BBC building.

Al-Issawi and Sharawna were supposed to be discharged from the Israeli regime’s prisons in October 2011, based on a prisoner exchange deal with the Palestinian resistance movement Hamas.

Hamas released Israeli trooper Gilad Shalit in exchange for the two but the Israeli forces re-arrested Al-Issawi and Sharawna after Shalit’s release was secured.

2013/01/11

Two Russian climbers found dead in avalanche

Source Xinhua

BILISI, Jan. 11 (Xinhua) -- Two of the three missing Russian climbers in an avalanche in northern Georgia have been found dead, according to the local Rustavi2 television.

Quoting local authorities, the television reported that Georgian rescuers had resumed search for the three missing Russian climbers who were trapped by an avalanche on Jan. 7 after poor visibility had hampered the rescue efforts.

Another Russian climber, identified as 19-year-old Maxim Stepanin, has been brought to a local clinic in good condition on Wednesday while the Georgian rescuers, to be soon joined by professional climbers from other countries, are still searching for the third one missing from the avalanche.

The Russian Federation is reportedly to offer its assistance in the search.

The Russian climbers from Moscow have been in the Kazbegi mountain area since Jan. 2.

The third highest mountain in Georgia, Mount Kazbegi or Mount Kazbek is a dormant strato-volcano. It is 5,033 meters above sea level.

Mount Kazbegi has been a tourist attraction as it is the most prominent geographic feature of the Caucasian area.

Russian Communists Invite Depardieu to Join Party

Source : RIA Novosti

MOSCOW, January 11 (RIA Novosti) - Russia's Communist Party (KPRF) has invited French actor and tax exile Gerard Depardieu to join its ranks, following his receipt of Russian citizenship earlier this month, party First Secretary Valery Rashkin said Friday.

"Yes, today I wrote an official letter to Depardieu in France inviting him to join the KPRF. ... I think he has great respect for his father, who was a member of the Communist Party, and would share his position," Rashkin said, in apparent indifference to Depardieu's resentment of wealth-redistribution policies in his native land.

"We are now waiting for his decision," added Rashkin, who also said Depardieu had not previously discussed the issue with the party.

Depardieu has so far shown little overt sympathy for the ideals of the Russian Communist Party, which remains notionally committed to its Marxist ideology and has declined to reinvent itself as a democratic- left movement like some of its contemporaries in Europe.

Depardieu has said his reason for leaving France was to protest the imposition by its Socialist President Francois Hollande of a 75 percent tax on the wealthiest earners. Russia has a flat 13 percent tax on income.

French Prime Minister Jean-Marc Ayrault branded Depardieu as "pathetic" last year, prompting the actor to write a defiant open letter in his defense.

Depardieu received Russian citizenship on January 6 after President Vladimir Putin used his personal authority to award it to him. Normally, getting Russian citizenship takes years in a convoluted bureaucratic process involving language tests and medical checks.

The actor said he was unlikely to use his new citizenship to live in a major city and would possibly like to live in the provinces. He travelled to the remote Mordovia region shortly after receiving his new passport, where the local governor offered him an apartment.

He has also said he is seeking Belgian residency, after buying a house in Belgium last year, and denied his motives were financial.

"I have a Russian passport, but I remain French and I will probably have dual Belgian nationality," he told the L'Equipe21 sports channel. "But if I'd wanted to escape the taxman, as the French press says, I would have done it a long time ago."

France had a strong Communist Party of its own in the mid-20th century, which often gained up to 25 percent of the vote in the post-war period, but later reinvented itself as the Socialist Party (PS) in a bid to reverse falling electoral popularity.

China sends troops to border with conflict-torn Myanmar

Source : media  Reuters

(Reuters) - China has sent soldiers to its border with Myanmar amid concern that escalating violence between the Southeast Asian country's government and ethnic separatists is spilling over, an official Chinese newspaper reported on Friday.

The Global Times said that troops were sent to the border between China's Yunnan Province and Myanmar's northern Kachin State "to understand the situation". It did not give any details on the number or type of soldiers.

"On the night of the 9th, there was shelling in Kachin, and residents of the unstable area quickly ran inside the Chinese border to pass the night in peace," the report said. Yunnan is home to an ethnic Kachin population.

The Communist Party's official newspaper, the People's Daily, carried an article on its website from the Changjiang Daily newspaper describing artillery shells exploding on a mountain in Yingjiang County, which borders Myanmar.

Officials in the Dehong prefecture government, in which the county is located, declined to comment on Friday.

The intensification of the conflict has cast doubt on the intentions of Myanmar's government, which is led by former generals who have been praised for reforms in other areas including elections, media and civil society.

Kachin rebel sources have reported aerial bombings, shelling and even the use of chemical weapons since December 28. Myanmar's government said there w airstrikes, but that K-8 trainer jets had provided cover fire to protect ground troops fr attacks.

The 18-month conflict in Kachin state is one of the biggest tests for Myanmar's new c government's reform effort and the use of aircraft has raised doubts about whether t generals in the government have really changed their harsh old ways.

While China has strong business and trade ties with Myanmar, it has long looked with at its poor and unstable southern neighbor and has repeatedly called on the country stability along the vast and remote border.

China had forcibly returned scores of ethnic Kachins who have fled Myanmar, a huma group said last year. (Reporting By Beijing Newsroom; editing by Jonathan Standin

EUROPE - Greek neo-Nazis attack Turkish diplomat’s car

Source : www.hurriyetdailynews.com

Members of the fascist Greek party Golden Dawn attacked the car of the Turkish consul general to Komotini, İlhan Şener, yesterday in Kavala, according to reports.

Holding Greek flags, a group of nearly 30 protestors from Golden Dawn chanted slogans against Turkey outside Kavala Municipality and attacked Şener’s car while he was meeting with Kavala Mayor Kostas Simichis.

Şener and his accompanying delegation had to stay within the building for more than an hour due to the incident. Later, the group left the municipality under a police escort.

Greece has seen a surge in neo-Nazi activity, with Golden Dawn winning an unprecedented 18 seats with 7 percent of the vote in June 2012 parliamentary elections.

Hawaii-based US Navy sub damaged in Persian Gulf

Source :  Times Republican

HONOLULU (AP) — A Pearl Harbor-based submarine was damaged early Thursday when one of its periscopes struck an unidentified vessel in the Persian Gulf, the U.S. Navy said Thursday.

U.S. Naval Forces Central Command said in a statement that no one was hurt in the pre-dawn incident Thursday involving the nuclear-powered USS Jacksonville.

The submarine surfaced from periscope depth to see if the collision damaged the vessel, but the ship continued "on a consistent course" offering no indication of distress or acknowledgement of a collision.

According to a U.S. Navy official, the submarine was submerged when there was a "thump." When submariners tried to see what happened, they were unable to raise the periscope. When they raised the other periscope, they realized the first one had been sheared off and that a vessel — believed to be a fishing trawler — was motoring away and appeared to be operating normally, the official said.

The official, who was not authorized to discuss an ongoing investigation and spoke on condition of anonymity, said the vessel did not appear to be in any distress. The Navy tried to contact the vessel and determine what it was and what country it belonged to, but was unable to do so. The Navy also reviewed surveillance of the area later and found no vessels in distress, he official said.

The Navy said in its statement that one of the Jacksonville's two periscopes was damaged. A P-3 Orion aircraft searched the area but saw no debris in the water or vessels in distress, officials said.

The Jacksonville is currently deployed to the Middle East, conducting normal patrol operations in the gulf.

Israeli tourist caught after defrauding Jewish women out of thousands

Source : thestar.com

A Israeli tourist alleged to have stolen thousands of dollars from women in Toronto's Jewish community was caught in the act Wednesday, police say.

Israel Aharonovitz, 63, is charged with four counts of fraud under $5,000 and police suspect he may have victimized people worldwide in the past year.

Going as far back as November 2011, Aharonovitz would ride the Spadina-University subway line and would befriend women whom he would ask for money, police said.

Under a false name, Aharonovitz would spin a yarn about sick relatives needing expensive treatments and other money woes.

He would promise to repay them upon his return to Israel, even offering a fake telephone number, police said.

Some victims would hand over the cash but often times they would go to a nearby ATM.

Sometimes he was able to acquire as much as $1,000, other times as little as $125. On average, police said he collected about $400.

“Four hundred appears to be the sweet spot,” said Det. James Turnbull.

He acted under cover of religiosity: Aharonovitz would tell his victims that giving him money would be a mitzvah.

In the Jewish tradition, a mitzvah is a charitable, beneficial act, for which the giver will be spiritually rewarded.

“They’re asking for a favour but under their religious laws it’s almost like a commandment,” said Turnbull. “It adds that element of guilt,” said Turnbull.

Aharonovitz was arrested yesterday after undercover police detective spotted him attempting to solicit money from a woman on the platform of Glencairn station just after 11 a.m. Police said he had a small amount of cash on him.

Aharonovitz is known to have worked this scam across the Atlantic.

Dubbed the “Tube Shekel Scammer” by the U.K. press, Aharonovitz was convicted twice for pulling a similar scheme on the London subway and served more than two years in a British prison.

Since issuing a public alert Tuesday, Toronto police have been flooded with calls, including some from New York City, from people claiming to have also fallen prey to the scheme.

According to his passport, in 2012 he travelled to Australia and the United States. Police are surprised that he was able to travel in spite of his British conviction.

“Your guess is as good as mine,” said Turnbull. “Hopefully with a little publicity, we should help prevent that.”

One-Child Policy Makes Chinese Risk-Averse

Source : Naharnet

China's one-child policy has created a generation that is less trusting, more risk-averse and perhaps less likely to become entrepreneurs, according to new Australian research released Friday.

Published in the journal Science, the study of more than 400 Beijing residents who were born around the time the controversial population policy was first introduced could have implications for China's economy, researchers say.

"We found that individuals who grew up as single children as a result of China's one-child policy are significantly less trusting, less trustworthy, more risk-averse, less competitive, more pessimistic, and less conscientious," said University of Melbourne researcher Nisvan Erkal.

China introduced the policy in 1979 to combat population growth and family planning officials in Beijing have defended it in the past, saying China's population -- currently 1.3 billion -- would have hit 1.7 billion without it.

The new study, "Little Emperors: Behavioral Impacts of China's One-Child Policy", based on research by Erkal, Monash University and Australian National University academics, found the group displayed distinct behavior.

The scholars used a series of "economic games" -- in which the 421 subjects born between 1975 and 1983 exchanged or invested small amounts of money, or made other economic decisions -- to measure their levels of trust, risk-taking and competitiveness.

In one game, participants born under the One-Child Policy (OCP) were on average found to be less trusting than those born before, sharing less of an endowment with another player (46.1 percent compared to 50.6 percent).

They also returned less than those not born under the policy (30.4 percent versus 35.4 percent). The researchers said both of these differences were statistically significant.

The study found the differences persisted, even after the impact of demography and family background were controlled.

"We found that being born before or after the one-child policy best explains our observations," Erkal, an associate professor, said.

In addition to the experiments, researchers also conducted personality surveys that they said revealed those born under the OCP were also "substantially more pessimistic, less conscientious, and possibly more neurotic".

"The OCP can be thought of as a natural experiment which enables us to separate out the effect of being an only child from the effect of family background," they wrote.

Fellow researcher Lisa Cameron from Monash said the effect could have economic implications.

"Our data shows that people born under the one-child policy were less likely to be in more risky occupations like self-employment," she said.

"Thus there may be implications for China in terms of a decline in entrepreneurial ability."

Cameron said researchers observed the negative effects of being an only child in China even if there was significant social contact with other children while growing up.

"We found that greater exposure to other children in childhood -- for example, frequent interactions with cousins and/or attending childcare -- was not a substitute for having siblings," she said.

The one-child policy in fact permits some families to have several children. Parents in the countryside can have two children if their firstborn is a girl, while ethnic minority families are often exempt from birth restrictions.

Talk of phasing out the unpopular one-child policy has been mounting, with an influential think-tank with close links to the government recently proposing families be allowed to have two children by 2015.

The China Development Research Foundation (CDRF) called for a relaxation of the policy in October, saying the country had paid "a huge political and social cost" for the measure, which has been blamed for creating a demographic time-bomb.

EU's Rehn rules out debt haircut for Cyprus

Source : Reuters

BERLIN (Reuters) - The European Union's top economic official Olli Rehn was quoted on Friday as ruling out a debt restructuring for euro zone member Cyprus, currently in talks with the EU and the IMF on a financial rescue package.

"A haircut is not an option for us," Rehn, the European Economic and Monetary Affairs Commissioner, told the German business daily Handelsblatt in an interview.

Ratings agency Moody's slashed Cyprus's credit rating three notches late on Thursday on an expected rise in the Mediterranean island's debt burden. Cyprus applied for a financial rescue last June after its banks suffered huge losses on the EU-approved writedown on Greece's debt.

2013/01/10

Archaeolgists outraged by 'derogatory' statue at College de France Egypt

Source :  Egypt Independent

Archaeologists issued a statement slamming a statue in the courtyard of the College de France showing the French Egyptologist Jean Francois Champollion standing with his foot on the head of a Pharaoh, saying it is derogatory toward Egyptian civilization.

“The Foreign Ministry did nothing about it,” said Omar al-Hadary, chairman of the Tourism and Antiquities Committee of the Revolutionary Youth Federation on Thursday. “The West will repeat such things if there is no firm reply.”

“This will make us hate the West more,” he continued. “The French learned a hard lesson during their campaign that Egypt gained independence with the blood and lives of its sons.”

“The French government must remove this shameful statue or we will make thousands of insulting statues to put in all squares of Egypt and outside the French Embassy,” Hadary added.

The chairman asked the Ministry of Antiquities to stop all French archaeological missions working in Egypt until a formal apology is issued and the statue is removed. He also requested that all streets named after the Frenchman be renamed.

Champollion famously deciphered the ancient Egyptian hieroglyphics on the Rosetta Stone that was discovered by the French colonial campaign in the beginning of the nineteenth century.