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Headline news for 8-6-2011

  • Published in News & Comment
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Titles:

  • British royalty dined on human flesh
  • China threatens to dump the US dollar
  • Clinton and NATO to Plan Libya Post-Qaddafi as Yemen Unravels
  • European powers step up pressure on Syria
  • US officials: Yemen leader heavily burned in blast
  • Iran accuses US of planning to sabotage Pakistan N-facilities
  • India: No 'assurance' on Lagarde IMF bid

 

News Details: 

 

British royalty dined on human flesh
They have long been famed for their love of lavish banquets and rich recipes.  But what is less well known is that the British royals also had a taste for human flesh. A new book on medicinal cannibalism has revealed that possibly as recently as the end of the 18th century British royalty swallowed parts of the human body. The author adds that this was not a practice reserved for monarchs but was widespread among the well-to-do in Europe. Even as they denounced the barbaric cannibals of the New World, they applied, drank, or wore powdered Egyptian mummy, human fat, flesh, bone, blood, brains and skin. Moss taken from the skulls of dead soldiers was even used as a cure for nosebleeds, according to Dr Richard Sugg at Durham University. Dr Sugg said: 'The human body has been widely used as a therapeutic agent with the most popular treatments involving flesh, bone or blood. 'Cannibalism was found not only in the New World, as often believed, but also in Europe. 'One thing we are rarely taught at school yet is evidenced in literary and historic texts of the time is this: James I refused corpse medicine; Charles II made his own corpse medicine; and Charles I was made into corpse medicine.''Along with Charles II, eminent users or prescribers included Francis I, Elizabeth I's surgeon John Banister, Elizabeth Grey, Countess of Kent, Robert Boyle, Thomas Willis, William III, and Queen Mary.'

 

 
China threatens to dump the US dollar
The dollar fell to a one-month low against a basket of currencies on Tuesday and a record low against the Swiss franc after a Chinese official said the greenback would continue to weaken versus other major currencies. The head of the international payment department at the Chinese forex regulator also warned about the risks of excessive holdings of U.S. dollars. The dollar index [.DXY  73.61    0.09  (+0.12%)   ]fell to a low of 73.601, the lowest since May 5, while the greenback fell to 0.8328 Swiss francs on trading platform EBS a record low."China has been growing its share of U.S. securities quite aggressively in the past, and the threat that they will be  selling these holdings has always been there," said Adam Myers, senior forex strategist at Credit Agricole."But this is not a credible threat as a sell-off will lead  to a steepening of the U.S. yield curve which will hurt the U.S. and the Chinese, who are dependent on the U.S. economy. But I do agree that the dollar is headed lower in the long term."

 


Clinton and NATO to Plan Libya Post-Qaddafi as Yemen Unravels
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton heads to Abu Dhabi to discuss with NATO allies the outlook for Libya without Muammar Qaddafi. With North Atlantic Treaty Organization jets stepping up daytime strikes on the Libyan capital of Tripoli, the United Arab Emirates will host Clinton and other members of the 22- nation Libya Contact Group. President Barack Obama renewed his demand that Qaddafi leave as a growing chorus of world leaders predicted the demise of the Libyan dictator, who after a 42-year rule has failed to crush a popular uprising that began mid-February. Qaddafi "must step down and hand power to the Libyan people," Obama said yesterday at a joint news conference with German Chancellor Angela Merkel in Washington. "The pressure will only continue to increase until he does." NATO Secretary-General Anders Fogh Rasmussen said this week Qaddafi is now "part of Libya's past," signaling the time has come to start planning for the aftermath. Qaddafi remains in control of the capital, in the country's west, even though rebels are running most of eastern Libya. In London, U.K. Foreign Secretary William Hague told lawmakers in the House of Commons that the "Qaddafi regime is isolated and on the defensive." Merkel, standing next to Obama, said "Qaddafi needs to step down and he will step down."

 


European powers step up pressure on Syria
European powers are increasing pressure on the UN Security Council to break its silence on events in Syria following a bloody government crackdown on pro-democracy protests in the country. Britain, France, Germany and Portugal have circulated a draft resolution that would condemn the crackdown and demand an immediate end to the violence in Syria. However, the proposal falls short of calling for military action or further UN sanctions against the Syrian government. "The repression is getting worse. The massacres are on the rise. It is inconceivable that the United Nations remains silent on such a matter," Alain Juppe, the French foreign minister, said. "We are working with our UK friends to have as large a majority as possible on the Security Council. I think we have to move to a vote so that everyone can assume their responsibilities." But Russia, citing NATO's inconclusive bombing of the Libyan capital, Tripoli, said it would veto intervention against Syria in the Security Council.

 


US officials: Yemen leader heavily burned in blast
President Ali Abdullah Saleh was burned over 40 percent of his body and suffered bleeding in the brain from last weekend's attack on his palace, U.S. officials said, indicating his wounds were worse than initially reported. The revelation casts doubts on a quick return to Yemen and spells a deepening power vacuum. In the wake of Saleh's evacuation to Saudi Arabia for treatment, Yemen's violence escalated, with government troops battling Islamic militants and opposition tribesmen in two southern cities on Tuesday. The military said it killed 30 militants who were among a group that took over the city of Zinjibar last week amid the country's turmoil. Washington and Saudi Arabia are pushing Yemeni officials to seize the opportunity of Saleh's evacuation to immediately begin a transfer of power and formation of a new government. The U.S. ambassador in Sanaa spoke with Vice President Abed Rabbo Mansour Hadi, who is acting president, to press the American view, State Department spokesman Mark Toner told reporters Tuesday in Washington. Toner said he wasn't sure how long Saleh would undergo treatment in Saudi Arabia, or whether he still planned on returning. But he said Yemen needed to move forward in the meantime. "We need to see all sides moving forward on a constructive basis," he said.

 


Iran accuses US of planning to sabotage Pakistan N-facilities
Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has accused Washington, Tehran's arch-foe, of planning to sabotage Pakistan's nuclear facilities.  "We have precise information that America wants to sabotage the Pakistani nuclear facilities in order to control Pakistan and to weaken the government and people of Pakistan," he said at a press conference here on Tuesday. The United States would then use the UN Security Council "and some other international bodies as levers to prepare the ground for a massive presence (in Pakistan) and weaken the sovereignty of Pakistan," Ahmadinejad added, without elaborating. Pakistan is the only Islamic nation with nuclear weapons, and has close relations with Iran.

 


India: No 'assurance' on Lagarde IMF bid
India's finance minister has said there is "no assurance" the country will support French Finance Minister Christine Lagarde's bid to head the International Monetary Fund (IMF). Pranab Mukherjee's remarks came after a meeting with Ms Lagarde. Ms Lagarde was in Delhi on Tuesday on the latest leg of a world tour aimed at drumming up support for her bid. Emerging economies have voiced their concerns over the continuing hold of European nations over the IMF. Former IMF head Dominique Strauss-Kahn resigned amid US sex assault charges. Ms Lagarde met Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee during her day long visit to India. "There is no assurance [on supporting Christine Lagarde]. We are working on a consensus," Mr Mukherjee was quoted as saying by the state-run Doordarshan News after his meeting with Ms Lagarde. Mr Mukherjee said India "wants election of managing director of IMF to be on the basis of merit and competence and to be held in a transparent manner and not on any particular nationality".

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Hizb ut-Tahrir Wilayah Pakistan Delegation to Syrian Embassy Delivers Letter of Protest

Today a two member delegation of Hizb ut-Tahrir Wilayah Pakistan, led by Imran Yousafzai, deputy spokesman of Hizb ut-Tahrir in Pakistan, visited the Syrian embassy in Islamabad. It requested a meeting with the ambassador to lodge protest against the brutal torture, arrest and massacre of Muslim citizens by the brutal Syrian regime. However, an embassy employee rejected any such possibility

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Russell Trood and Julie Bishop Peddle Lies about Hizb ut Tahrir

Senator Russell Trood alleged last week, during a Senate estimates hearing on legal and constitutional affairs, that Hizb ut Tahrir advocated the use of violence as a legitimate means of political expression. He referred to Hizb ut Tahrir's views as ‘unsavoury' and ‘obnoxious' and alleged that it had called for the destruction of Hindus in Kashmir, Russians in Chechnya and Jews in Israel, and that it ‘incite[s] violence against particular members of the community' (25/05/2011; http://bit.ly/kmG3Hs, p.93).

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Ten Thousand Moslems South Kalimantan Demand The Establishment of The Caliphate

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Banjarmasin - Subhanallah.....Approximately 10.000 Muslims from various circles and regions in South Kalimantan (Tanjung, Amuntai, Barabai, Kandangan, Rantau, Martapura, Pelaihari, Batulicin, Marabahan, Banjarbaru, and Banjarmasin) enthusiastically called for the establishment of the Caliphate. The speakers' speech and the clerics' testimony accompanied by the wasp of the bedug intensified the call for establishing sharia through Islamic Caliphate.
The spirit of the Conference of Rajab 1432 H organized by Hizbut Tahrir South Kalimantan was represented by yells and shouts Allahuakbar! Khilafah "Caliphate"! Khilafah "Caliphate"! Khilafah "Caliphate"!, also the wave of the liwa and the Rayah. That was the atmosphere that occurred from morning until the blazing sun at the Stadium 17 Mei Banjarmasin. That is the spirit of the people who attend in the conference.
The Chairman of Hizbut Tahrir South Kalimantan, Baihaki al-Munawar in opening speech mentioned that Muslims had triumphed and led the world civilization before caliphate abolished by imperialist Britain 28 Rajab 1342 or March 3rd 1924. Quoting Will Durrant in the story of civilization, the chairman reminded that caliphate had been provided security to all human being in the limit of overwhelming. It means that Caliphate system can guarantee its people live in the prosperity. In contrast, the Muslims live now in impoverished and torn apart in 57 countries. In addition of that, The conference themed "Prosperous Living In the shade of caliphate", according the chairman, is inviting the people to unite in the vision, determination, and step for the establishment of Islamic Caliphate.
Accordingly, Harits Abu Ulya, the chairman of Politic department (Lajnah Siyasiyah) HTI who came from Jakarta, in his oration delivered Hizb ut-Tahrir was founded to fight for the establishment of the Khilafah "Caliphate". Hizbut Tahrir Islamic political party regard the absence is the biggest problem for Muslims. It is 90 years (calendar hijriyah - ed) Muslims live without the Caliphate. Meanwhile the caliphate is an obligation.
Harits Abu Ulya stressed the Muslims in wherever he is to take the role for the establishment of the caliphate. Caliphate is the highest deed for every Muslim today. "If not give now when to give the support? "he said.
KH. Abdul Wahab Syahrani, S. Ag, MM Boarding School caretaker Ibnu Mas'ud Putra Jarau South Hulu Sungai, stated about the necessity of the rule of sharia and the caliphate, "what we should do now is fight for it by following the struggle of the Prophet Muhammad. We must not be afraid of the Americans, we only fear God Almighty in this struggle. "
The conference was also enlivened by theatrical performance by the Islamic youth drawing the condition without a caliphate state. An important message conveyed in this theatrical is how important the rule of the caliphate in uniting the whole potential of the Islamic Ummah to achieve glory and prosperity, as well as eliminate colonialism.
This Conference organized by Hizbut Tahrir South Kalimantan is the first of a series of Rajab Conferences organized by Hizbut Tahrir Indonesia during the month of June. The conference, taking the momentum of events that occurred in the month of Rajab will be held in all major cities of Indonesia from tip to tip of eastern, Jayapura and western, Banda Aceh, and its peak on 29 June in Jakarta Stadium Lebak Bulus. [AkhidY)

 

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 Obama and Cameron - hijacking the Arab uprisings

  • Published in Politics
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Another day, another visit by a western politician to Tahrir Square in Cairo, and another announcement from London, Washington, Paris or Brussels about some help for the Arab uprisings - be it help for political, economic, civil society or the furthering of ‘democracy'. As people attempt to dismantle the tyrannical political structures that have ruled Egypt, Tunisia and other countries for over 30 years, the western powers, whose initial response was confusion as they saw their allies under genuine threat from the streets, are now determined to dictate the course and outcome of these ongoing uprisings.
In their joint article in the Times newspaper (23rd May 2011) Barack Obama and David Cameron said "we will stand with those who want to bring light into dark, support those who seek freedom in place of repression, aid those laying the building blocks of democracy". Just as they supported Mubarak, Ben Ali, and Gadaffi only a few months ago, they now see a historic opportunity, not for the people to achieve real change and a genuine liberation from western interference, but to mould the region's future just as they did its recent past. An attempt to mould it for the interests of western governments not the interests of the people of the region.

To achieve this, the model held up to the Arab uprisings is Eastern Europe where American soft power and diplomacy helped to reshape the socio-political scene after communism. Like in Eastern Europe, the West aims to transform the people's revolution into a Western revolution by engineering a new set of domesticated and western-friendly elites. This involves co-opting old friends as well as seeking to contain the new forces produced by the revolution such as some youth movements, as well as some groups which were long marginalised by the West, including some so called ‘Islamists'.
As Obama said recently: "We must ... reach the people who will shape the future - particularly young people ... [and] provide assistance to civil society, including those that may not be officially sanctioned." So he has doubled the budget for "protecting civil society groups" from $1.5m to $3.4m.
The recipients are not only the usual Western friendly elements or secularists, but also activists who spearheaded the protest movements, and mainstream Islamists. Programmes aimed at youth leaders include the Leaders for Democracy Arabic project, sponsored by the US state department's Middle East partnership initiative. A number of Arab activists were invited to an event hosted by the Project on Middle East Democracy in Washington last month - one of many recent seminars. Meetings have taken place recently between high-ranking US officials and the Muslim Brotherhood, while the deputy chairman of Tunisia's Islamist Ennahda party has recently returned from a visit to Washington to "discuss democratic transition".

The UK government is not far behind the US in similar endeavours. Indeed, it has long had more open channels of communication with some Islamist groups in Tunisia, Egypt and across the Muslim world believing that dialogue was essential in order to influence these groups - even during the Mubarak era.
The aim is that these disparate groups are stripped of any of their fixed positions and turned into true pragmatists, integrated into the existing western-led international order. For the Islamists, several think tanks have stressed that engaging them in the parliamentary political game is a good way of containing their influence since that means that they will operate within parameters delineated for them, and compromise on their Islamic stances as a result of the give and take of negotiations in a parliament where they do not enjoy a majority. Even if they enjoy a majority, the constant raising of the threat of "extremism" puts pressure on them to row back from Islamic stances and being seen as "extremists".
In addition to political integration and containment, economic containment is being pursued through free markets and trade partnerships in the name of economic reform. A few days ago in France, G8 leaders promised $20bn of loans and aid to Tunisia and Egypt over the next two years and suggested more will be available if the countries continue on the path to democracy. Plans "to modernise" the Tunisian and Egyptian economies are already being drafted by the World Bank, IMF and European Bank for Reconstruction and Develoipment (EBRD). As usual, investment and aid are conditional on adoption of the neoliberal economic model in the name of liberalisation and on making the regions economies even more dependent on US and European markets rather than being more integrated with others in the region and playing to their own strengths.
These attempts to hijack the uprisings face some obstacles though they may succeed in co-opting some personalities and organisations. Unlike in Eastern Europe where people looked to the West - especially the US - as saviours from communism, people in Tunis, Cairo, and Sana'a see the West as the backers of the oppressive regimes that ruled over them. Whatever Obama and Cameron's rhetoric about human rights and democracy, they see Western countries which are the staunchest allies of Israel, are waging war on Muslims in Iraq and Afghanistan and continue to back the Al-Saud family and other tyrants and despots in the region.
The many dangers to these blessed uprisings are clear as long as people lack a new, distinct and comprehensive political vision that has independence from western economic, political and military control as one of its central pillars. Only the Islamic political vision - the Khilafah "Caliphate" - offers that alternative. Spreading awareness and conviction about it becomes a huge responsibility in order to save these uprisings so they achieve real change for the people of the region.

Taji Mustafa
UK Media Representative of Hizb ut-Tahrir

 

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Hypocrisy of British policy - supporting protestors in Libya, training Saudi troops to crush protestors

London, UK, May 29th 2011 - It was revealed today that Britain is training Saudi Arabia's national guard - the elite security force that was used to crush the anti-regime protests in Bahrain earlier this year resulting in the murder of unarmed protestors and the arrest and torture of political opponents.

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Headline news for 1-6-2011

  • Published in News & Comment
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 Titles:

  • Food prices to double by 2030, Oxfam warns
  • Gaddafi to be told to stand down or face Apache attack
  • British Think-Tank: Saudi, US Blunders Increasing Iran's Might, Clout
  • US put pressure on Saudi Arabia to let women drive, leaked cables reveal
  • Pakistani military 'bows to US pressure' on Taliban

 

News Details: 

 

Food prices to double by 2030, Oxfam warns
The average price of staple foods will more than double in the next 20 years, leading to an unprecedented reversal in human development, Oxfam has warned.The world's poorest people, who spend up to 80% of their income of food, will be hit hardest according to the charity. It said the world is entering an era of permanent food crisis, which is likely to be accompanied by political unrest and will require radical reform of the international food system.Research to be published on Wednesday forecasts international prices of staples such as maize could rise by as much as 180% by 2030, with half of that rise due to the impacts of climate change.After decades of steady decline in the number of hungry people around the world, the numbers are rapidly increasing as demand outpaces food production. The average growth rate in agricultural yields has almost halved since 1990 and is set to decline to a fraction of 1% in the next decade.A devastating combination of factors - climate change, depleting natural resources, a global scramble for land and water, the rush to turn food into biofuels, a growing global population, and changing diets - have created the conditions for an increase in deep poverty."We are sleepwalking towards an age of avoidable crisis," Oxfam's chief executive, Barbara Stocking, said. "One in seven people on the planet go hungry every day despite the fact that the world is capable of feeding everyone. The food system must be overhauled." The Oxfam report followed warnings from the UN last week that food prices are likely to hit new highs in the next few weeks, triggering unrest in developing countries. The average global price of cereals jumped by 71% to a new record in the year to April last month.

 


Gaddafi to be told to stand down or face Apache attack
According to the UK's Guardian newspaper if South African president Jacob Zuma's peace mission fails, Nato will deliver its heaviest blow to Libyan leader's forces. Nato has only one question as it prepares to unleash Apache helicopters against the forces of Muammar Gaddafi this week, and Captain Ali Mohammed, one of the defenders of the besieged rebel city of Misrata, can supply the answer.British Apaches, together with French Tiger attack helicopters, will launch surgical strikes on Gaddafi's forces besieging Misrata. They have the ability to destroy individual gun positions in the town of Zlitan, west of Misrata, with less risk to the civilian population kept there as human shields.But there is a problem. This kind of war takes time, and time is the commodity Nato does not have as critics complain it has extended the original United Nations no-fly zone mandate into what is regime change in all but name.The big question is whether the defenders will crumble under the onslaught, or fight with the same tenacity shown by their rebel enemy in Misrata. "If you use Apaches, it is sure they will run away," said Mohammed. "There is a big difference between Gaddafi's men and ourselves. I am defending my home, my family, my city. But Gaddafi's forces do not believe in what they are doing."Given enough time, the Apaches can take out gun positions one by one, but time is not on Nato's side. Many members, notably Germany and Turkey, were reluctant partners from the start and at the United Nations China and Russia have complained that the western alliance did not consult over the extension of a mandate designed to protect civilians into what is a full-scale war. Nato needs victory quickly by breaking the will of Gaddafi's troops.


 
British Think-Tank: Saudi, US Blunders Increasing Iran's Might, Clout
A well-known British think-tank said the US mistakes in its wars on Iraq and Afghanistan as well as the harsh military approach adopted by the Saudi and Bahraini dictators against peaceful protesters have increased Iran's might and power in the region. The June 2011 analysis written by Shashank Joshi for Chatemhouse noted the ongoing revolutions in the region, and said the current trend of affairs and developments will only serve Iran's interests. It added that the US war on Afghanistan and Iraq as well as the recent Saudi invasion of Bahrain have all failed to materialize the western politicians' premeditated plans and demands. The era of the Persian Gulf's most iconic bête noire, Saudi born and raised Osama bin Laden, has drawn to a close. But outsiders persistently underestimate the degree to which it is a state - the Islamic republic of Iran - rather than a non-state group, al Qaeda, which today captures the strategic attention of those in the corridors of power in Riyadh, Manama, and Amman, the analysis said. Dangling a few hundred kilometers above the Gulf states, like a geopolitical Sword of Damocles, post-revolution Iran has long been the principal strategic concern for the tyrannical sheikdoms and emirates on the other side of the water, it said. And yet, the strenuous efforts to place Iran at the heart of pro-democracy uprisings reveal a more cynical and self-serving effort at threat inflation, distracting attention from the unavoidable reform agenda dodged for so long by the Persian Gulf Arab autocracies, the analysis continued.

 


US put pressure on Saudi Arabia to let women drive, leaked cables reveal
The Obama administration has been quietly putting pressure on Saudi Arabia to allow women to drive, according to leaked US embassy cables. But the jailing of a woman protester, Manal al-Sharif, after she posted online a video of herself at the wheel of a car in Khobar reveals the extent of the US diplomatic failure.The cables, part of the treasure trove allegedly given to WikiLeaks by the US soldier Bradley Manning, reveal previously unreported clashes over women's rights.Dispatches from Riyadh describe Saudi Arabia as "the world's largest women's prison". Those words are a quote from Wajeha al-Huwaider, a female campaigner with whom US diplomats have been in contact. She posted a video on YouTube in 2008 of herself driving. Claiming millions of Saudi women were prisoners in their homes, she challenged male control over work and travel.The billionaire tycoon Prince Waleed, a Saudi royal, assured a visiting Democratic congressman in July 2009 that King Abdullah did support women's rights, the embassy noted optimistically. The driving ban was reportedly about to be overturned.Speaking at his 99-storey Kingdom Tower in Riyadh, Waleed said the ban was merely a "demeaning" tribal custom and that he "relished relating his run-ins with the kingdom's religious conservatives. He was involved with the first public showings of films in the kingdom in many years. His wife has openly requested that women be allowed to drive. He supports French president Sarkozy's campaign against women wearing coverings hiding their faces."

 


Pakistani military 'bows to US pressure' on Taliban
Pakistan's military will launch an offensive in the militant bastion of North Waziristan, a newspaper reported yesterday, days after the US Secretary of State, Hillary Clinton, said Islamabad must tackle sanctuaries for al-Qa'ida and the Taliban on the Afghan border. An understanding for an offensive in North Waziristan, the main sanctuary in Pakistan for militants fighting in Afghanistan, was reached when Ms Clinton and the Chairman of the US Joint Chiefs of Staff, Admiral Mike Mullen, visited Pakistan last week, Pakistan's The News reported.

 

 

 

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