BBC NEWS | Europe | German on trial for Muslim murderGerman on trial for Muslim murder
Alex W is led into court - his full name has not been released for fear of vigilante attacks
The husband of a pregnant Egyptian woman killed in a German courtroom has described how her alleged attacker stabbed her to death in front of him.
He testified as the trial of Alex W, a 29-year-old Russian-born German, opened in Dresden, in the same courtroom where Marwa Sherbini was killed in July.
The defendant had been there to appeal against a fine for calling Ms Sherbini a "terrorist" and an "Islamist".
Husband Elwy Ali Okaz said he had tried to shield his wife as the attack began.
Her alleged attacker had "continued to stab her when she was already lying on the floor", Mr Okaz said.
Elwy Ali Okaz tried to protect his pregnant wife from her attacker
Mr Okaz, who identified Alex W to the court as the killer, was himself stabbed as he tried to protect his wife and also accidentally shot in the leg by a security guard who initially believed him to be the attacker.
He arrived at court on crutches, wearing a badge showing his wife's face.
The attack caused outrage in the Muslim world, with many Muslim leaders accusing Germany of Islamophobia following the killing.
They said the country, which has the second-biggest Muslim population in Western Europe, had been too slow to condemn it.
Protection
BBC Berlin correspondent Steve Rosenberg says 200 police officers were deployed at the Dresden courthouse as the trial opened, to protect the defendant.
Alex W, who is charged with murder, attempted murder and dangerous bodily harm, has been the subject of death threats.
Anyone attending the hearing had to pass through airport-style scanners, and a bullet-proof glass screen was installed in the dock, our correspondent says.
Photographers crowded round as the alleged attacker was led into the courtroom in handcuffs - his face covered by a hood, a hat, sunglasses and a scarf, our correspondent adds.
He was then fined 50 euros ($75; £46) by the judge, Birgit Wiegand, for refusing to remove his sunglasses, although he did uncover the rest of his head.
Judge Wiegand told the court that the trial would try to get "to the bottom of the circumstances" surrounding Ms Sherbini's death.
Prosecutors say the defendant - an unemployed Russian-born German national - was motivated by a "hatred of non-Europeans and Muslims".
He reportedly suffers from depression. However, court-appointed psychiatric experts said they had not found any evidence of diminished responsibility.
'Hatred'
The case began with an argument in a playground in 2008.
Ms Sherbini, a pharmacist, is said to have asked the defendant to let her child use a playground swing he was sitting on. He allegedly refused and instead called her abusive names.
Egyptians want the maximum possible sentence for the alleged killer
She later took the defendant to court and he was fined 780 euros ($1,170; £718) for defamation.
But when he returned to the courtroom for the appeal on 1 July this year, prosecutors say he smuggled in an 18cm (7in) kitchen knife and stabbed Ms Sherbini at least 16 times with it.
The 31-year-old, who was three-months pregnant with her second child, bled to death in full view of her husband and their three-year-old son.
The trial is expected to conclude by 11 November.
Axel Koehler, president of the German Central Council of Muslims, said his community expected a "strong conviction".
"We're following the trial with great interest, in particular because our women and girls are afraid and already feel discriminated against," he said.
Ms Sherbini, who wore a headscarf, was dubbed "the martyr of the Hijab". Thousands attended her funeral in Egypt, some chanting "Death to Germany", and there were also mass protests in Iran.
Egypt's ambassador to Germany, Ramzi Izz al-Din Ramzi, who was at the opening of the trial, called for a "speedy sentence, a just sentence commensurate with this heinous crime".
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Video Report from Afghanistan: How the U.S. Counterinsurgency Campaign Is Failing
At a conference in Portugal over the weekend, NATO countries agreed to hand over responsibility for Afghanistan’s security to Afghan forces by the end of 2014. In his speech, President Obama claimed there has been significant progress in the fight against the Taliban. But reports from the ground in Afghanistan question these upbeat claims about the ongoing NATO operation. Last spring, NATO launched a major operation in the Taliban-held town of Marjah. The offensive was supposed to showcase America’s new counterinsurgency campaign and demonstrate that victory is still possible. Independent filmmaker Rick Rowley of Big Noise Films recently traveled to Marjah and discovered the counterinsurgency campaign in crisis. [includes rush transcript]
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Wednesday, October 28, 2009
BBC NEWS | Europe | German on trial for Muslim murder
BBC NEWS | Middle East | Israel mulls Gaza probes review
BBC NEWS | Middle East | Israel mulls Gaza probes reviewIsrael mulls Gaza probes review
Mr Netanyahu is said to hope the review will divert pressure on Israel
Israel is considering a review of its internal military inquiries which cleared troops of alleged war crimes in last winter's offensive in Gaza.
Deputy Foreign Minister Danny Ayalon told the BBC another investigation could be conducted if "it was necessary to prove... there were no wrongdoings".
A recent UN report said Israel and Hamas should probe alleged war crimes or face international prosecutions.
Israel refused to co-operate with the UN team and has rejected its findings.
Mr Ayalon insisted Israeli army probes by military investigators were already "completely independent... but we are looking into further reviews as we will see fit".
Israel has been under pressure to set up an independent investigation into war-crimes allegations raised by the fact-finding mission led by South African judge Richard Goldstone for the UN Human Rights Council.
Critics have accused the military inquiries of attempting to whitewash the army's conduct.
Insufficient
Numerous human rights investigations, in addition to Goldstone, have accused Israel of breaking the laws of war in Gaza, principally by failing to distinguish between military and civilian targets.
UN condemns 'war crimes' in Gaza
Israel condemns UN's Gaza report
Full UN report on Gaza war
The Goldstone report accuses Hamas militants in Gaza of firing indiscriminately at Israeli civilian centres, which is also a war crime.
On Sunday, an Israeli government source was quoted saying Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Defence Minister Ehud Barak "hope" that holding a review of the military investigations "will put this issue to rest".
Israel has lobbied hard against the Goldstone report saying it impairs its right to self-defence and harms prospects of reviving peace negotiations with the Palestinians.
The military has opened about 100 investigations into wrongdoing in Gaza, of which about 20 are criminal.
Mr Goldstone has said he will be satisfied if Israel sets up an independent commission of inquiry, but it is insufficient for the military to investigate itself.
Last week, Israel's Intelligence Minister and deputy Prime Minister Dan Meridor joined a growing list of politicians calling for such an inquiry. Correspondents say pressure is also coming from the justice and foreign ministries.
BBC NEWS | Middle East | Iran 'to accept UN nuclear deal'
BBC NEWS | Middle East | Iran 'to accept UN nuclear deal'Iran 'to accept UN nuclear deal'
Russia and France would process uranium for Iran under the deal
Iran will accept a UN deal on its nuclear programme, but only if "very important changes" are made, Iranian state media have reported.
Al Alam TV quoted "informed" sources as saying Tehran would respond to the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) deal within 48 hours.
Under the draft proposal, Iran would send its enriched uranium to Russia and France to be turned into fuel.
Iran missed a Friday deadline for responding to the IAEA's proposal.
All the other parties have confirmed their support for the deal, which is seen as a way for Tehran to get the fuel it needs for an existing reactor, while giving guarantees to the West that its enriched uranium will not be used for nuclear weapons.
We will wait until we decide that enough is enough and that the process is exhausted
Bernard Kouchner
French foreign minister
Al Alam said Iran would "accept the broad framework of the deal, but wants very important changes in it".
The station gave no further details on the changes Iran was reported to have requested be made to the draft.
On Monday, Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki said Iran was considering whether to send some of its uranium stock to other countries for enriching or to buy already enriched uranium.
Mr Mottaki said the decision would be announced within days.
ANALYSIS
Jon Leyne, BBC News Tehran correspondent
The latest hint from Al Alam TV suggests that Iran will accept a deal to supply fuel for its Tehran research reactor. But those countries dealing with Iran will wonder what "important changes" Tehran wants in response.
In particular, is Iran willing to ship its own enriched uranium out of the country? On Monday the Iranian foreign minister said maybe Iran would agree, maybe it would not.
The other question observers are asking is how much this is a case of genuine indecision by Iran, and to what extent is it just playing for time?
The answer could be that those in power are quite content to let a genuine debate rumble on, knowing that it also buys time, staving off new sanctions, while Iran presses ahead with its nuclear programme.
French Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner said that all the other parties in the talks had shown "a great deal of patience", and he accused Tehran of wasting time.
The AFP news agency quoted Mr Kouchner as saying that Mr Mottaki "makes declarations and more declarations" which "rarely provoke enthusiasm" and are "rarely very positive".
"We have been waiting for light at the end of the tunnel for almost three years. We will wait until we decide that enough is enough and that the process is exhausted," said Mr Kouchner.
"One day it will be too late."
EU foreign ministers had hoped to have a reply from Iran by Tuesday, in time for high-level meetings in Luxembourg.
The EU's Foreign Policy Chief Javier Solana said the UN had offered "a good deal" and did not require "fundamental changes", Reuters reports.
Inspection
Opposition inside Iran to the agreement is said to be growing. The BBC's Tehran correspondent, Jon Leyne, says that if it is approves, it would offer some evidence that negotiations with Iran can bear fruit.
But if Tehran rejects it, the wider talks process would face a bleak future and new sanctions would once again be on the agenda, he adds.
NUCLEAR FUEL CYCLE
Mined uranium ore is purified and reconstituted into solid form known as yellowcake
Yellowcake is converted into a gas by heating it to about 64C (147F)
Gas is fed through centrifuges, where its isotopes separate and the process is repeated until uranium is enriched
Low-level enriched uranium is used for nuclear fuel
Highly enriched uranium can be used in nuclear weapons
On Sunday, a team from the UN watchdog, the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) began an inspection of an Iranian uranium plant.
The Fordo plant, built into a mountainside near the city of Qom, was previously secret.
Its existence was announced by the Iranian authorities last month, apparently because Western intelligence agencies had already discovered it, says our correspondent.
Iran agreed to open the site to monitoring at talks with the five permanent members of the UN Security Council plus Germany in Geneva on 1 October.
The inspectors are not expected to report until they leave Iran, but some Iranian officials have already said the inspection shows their country's nuclear activities are both transparent and peaceful.
Iran says its nuclear programme is for purely peaceful purposes, but the revelation of the existence of the new plant increased fears in the West about Tehran's intentions.
BBC NEWS | Middle East | Lebanon stops fresh rocket attack
BBC NEWS | Middle East | Lebanon stops fresh rocket attackLebanon stops fresh rocket attack
Lebanese troops have deactivated four rockets ready to be fired at Israel, a day after a rocket attack causing Israel to respond with artillery fire.
The Lebanese military said the rockets were set with timers and placed in a half-built house in Hula village, where Tuesday's attack was launched.
There were no casualties in the earlier exchange but it sharply raised tension on the volatile Israel-Lebanon border.
It was the fourth time rockets have been fired over the border this year.
Saturday, October 24, 2009
Top Things You Think You Know About Iran That Are Not True « Patrick J. Buchanan
Top Things You Think You Know About Iran That Are Not True « Patrick J. Buchanan
Top Things You Think You Know About Iran That Are Not True
Juan Cole — Informed Comment
Thursday is a fateful day for the world, as the US, other members of the United Nations Security Council, and Germany meet in Geneva with Iran in a bid to resolve outstanding issues. Although Iranian president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad had earlier attempted to put the nuclear issue off the bargaining table, this rhetorical flourish was a mere opening gambit and nuclear issues will certainly dominate the talks. As Henry Kissinger pointed out, these talks are just beginning and there are highly unlikely to be any breakthroughs for a very long time. Diplomacy is a marathon, not a sprint.
But on this occasion, I thought I’d take the opportunity to list some things that people tend to think they know about Iran, but for which the evidence is shaky.
Top Things You Think You Know About Iran That Are Not True « Patrick J. Buchanan
Sunday, October 18, 2009
DAWN.COM | World | India’s stubbornness
India’s stubbornnessDAWN.COM | World | India’s stubbornness
Dawn Editorial
Sunday, 13 Sep, 2009
Mumbai or no Mumbai – India and Pakistan cannot ignore each other. —AFP/File Photo
World
Pakistan voices concern over S Asia’s strategic imbalance
Pakistan voices concern over S Asia’s strategic imbalance
THE state of Pak-India relations is vexing to the uninitiated at the best of times, mutual acrimony and a befuddling ‘action-reaction syndrome’ rendering true peace a frustrating mirage. Blame for that must, and has, been laid on the governments of both countries over the decades. But setting aside nationalist impulses, the present post-Mumbai impasse has now dragged on for so long, with no end in sight, that it is difficult to avoid the conclusion that it is the Indian side which has once again reverted to being obstinate and unyielding.
The terrorist attacks in Mumbai last November were abominable and India was right to demand that its architects be punished for their crimes. Yet, there are two facts that the Indian political and foreign policy establishments seem unwilling to acknowledge. One, Pakistan has demonstrated its bona fides in trying to bring to justice those inside this country who were involved in the attacks. The Indians, however, appear to have hinged everything on the prosecution of Hafiz Saeed, leader of the Jamaatud Dawa. At the same time though, India seems unwilling to either provide conclusive evidence that will stand up in a court of law against Mr Saeed or accept that Pakistan does not have the requisite evidence in its possession.
Two, and this is the larger point, India seems unwilling to acknowledge that relations between the two countries go beyond and are bigger than just the attacks of last November. Mumbai or no Mumbai – and this is in no way to try to play down the trauma of those events – India and Pakistan cannot ignore each other.
White House Denies BBC Afghan Surge Report - World Watch - CBS News
October 15, 2009 3:46 AMWhite House Denies BBC Afghan Surge Report - World Watch - CBS News
White House Denies BBC Afghan Surge Report
- Posted by Tucker Reals
(White House )
The White House has dismissed a report by the British Broadcasting Corporation that President Obama might announce an additional surge of troops — likely between 40,000 and 45,000 as early as next week.
The BBC's "Newsnight" program reported Wednesday night that Mr. Obama has already made his decision, informed the British government that a significant troop increase was coming, and that he may seek to make the announcement publically ahead of a NATO defense ministers' meeting in Slovakia next week.
DAWN.COM | World | Pakistan voices concern over S Asia’s strategic imbalance
Pakistan voices concern over S Asia’s strategic imbalanceDAWN.COM | World | Pakistan voices concern over S Asia’s strategic imbalance
Tuesday, 13 Oct, 2009
A US Army soldier in the 3/509 of the 25th Infantry Division patrols at sunrise October 8, 2009 in Dabay, Afghanistan. — Photo by AFP
World
‘Pakistan-India ties should not be hostage to one issue’
‘Pakistan-India ties should not be hostage to one issue’
UNITED NATIONS: Reaffirming its desire for a peaceful and stable South Asia, Pakistan has expressed concern over the growing strategic imbalance in the region that included the recent introduction of nuclear submarines and submarine-launched ballistic missiles (SLBMs).
‘We expect extra-regional powers to adopt even-handed policies in South Asia and avoid steps that undermine the regional strategic balance,’ Ambassador Zamir Akram, the Pakistani delegate, told the General Assembly's First Committee, which deals with disarmament and security issues.
‘Our vision for South Asia is anchored in a security architecture based on preventive diplomacy, confidence building and conflict resolution,’ said Akram, who is Pakistan's permanent representative to the UN's European offices in Geneva.
As a responsible nuclear-weapon state, he added, Pakistan was pursuing a policy of credible minimum deterrence. Its proposals for a strategic restraint regime had three interlocking elements of conflict resolution, nuclear and missile restraint and conventional balance. That warranted serious consideration and the support of the international community.
Dangerous Crossroads: U.S. Expands Asian NATO Against China, Russia
Dangerous Crossroads: U.S. Expands Asian NATO Against China, RussiaDangerous Crossroads: U.S. Expands Asian NATO Against China, Russia
by Rick Rozoff
by Rick Rozoff
.
Global Research, October 17, 2009
Stop NATO
On October 12 the United States and India launched an eighteen-day military exercise codenamed Yudh Abhyas (war study) in the Indian state of Uttar Pradesh. Described as "one of their largest-ever ground combat joint exercises," [1], the war games "involve the Indian Army Motorized Infantry Battalion and the 2nd Squadron of 14 CAV of 25 Stryker Brigade Combat Team, comprising some 320 U.S. servicemen." [2]
The deployment of Stryker armored combat vehicles for the drills marks the first time they have been used overseas since being introduced in Iraq in 2003 and sent to Afghanistan earlier this year. A week before the exercise began the Pentagon reported that "The Army plans to deploy 17 of its Stryker combat vehicles this month to India for the first exercise of its kind in the country.
"This is also the largest deployment of the Strykers outside of those sent to Iraq and Afghanistan." [3]
AFP: Mideast oil exporters' foreign reserves to rise: IMF
Mideast oil exporters' foreign reserves to rise: IMFAFP: Mideast oil exporters' foreign reserves to rise: IMF
By Ola Galal (AFP) – 6 days ago
DUBAI — Oil exporters in the Middle East and North Africa region are expected to increase their international reserves by over 100 billion dollars in 2010 as oil prices rebound, the IMF said on Sunday.
The rebuilding of reserves will help governments of the region maintain public spending, which has mitigated the impact of the global financial turmoil on their economies, the International Monetary Fund said in report released in Dubai.
"With higher oil prices and the anticipated re-emergence of global demand, oil revenues are expected to increase, allowing oil exporters to rebuild their international reserve positions by over 100 billion dollars in 2010," the Middle East and Central Asia Regional Economic Outlook said.
Saturday, October 17, 2009
Pakistan prepares for South Waziristan offensive against Taliban - Telegraph
Pakistan prepares for South Waziristan offensive against Taliban - TelegraphPakistan prepares for South Waziristan offensive against Taliban
Pakistan's armed forces are preparing to launch an all-out offensive against the Taliban's tribal stronghold in South Waziristan after almost 170 people were killed in terror attacks in the country in just 11 days.
By Dean Nelson in New Delhi, Javed Siddiq in Islamabad and Emal Khan in Peshawar.
Published: 5:44PM BST 16 Oct 2009
Police officers rush a person injured by a car bombing to a hospital in Peshawar, Pakistan Photo: AP
Gen Ashfaq Kiyani, head of the army, called a meeting with senior politicians hours after suicide bombers killed 12 people in an attack on Peshawar's police intelligence headquarters early on Friday.
The raid by three suicide bombers, including a woman, was the eighth Taliban attack in the last ten days, and brought the death toll to 168.
BBC NEWS | South Asia | Karzai 'faces West poll pressure'
BBC NEWS | South Asia | Karzai 'faces West poll pressure'
Karzai 'faces West poll pressure'
President Hamid Karzai may hear he is being stripped of some of his votes
There has been a flurry of diplomatic activity in the Afghan capital ahead of the announcement of the results of the presidential poll, the BBC has learned.
Senior sources say top international figures have been working to persuade President Hamid Karzai that he may have to face a second round of voting.
A fraud investigation is expected to bring Mr Karzai's vote tally below the 50% needed to avoid a run-off.
Officials say Mr Karzai is furious over the prospect of facing a second round.
The fraud allegations which have surfaced in the two months since the 20 August poll have generated huge political uncertainty, reports the BBC's Martin Patience in Kabul.
It comes at a time when Washington is debating whether to send more troops.
Pakistan fights 'mother of all battles' with the Taliban - Telegraph
Pakistan fights 'mother of all battles' with the Taliban - TelegraphPakistan fights 'mother of all battles' with the Taliban
The tanks, armoured columns and helicopter gunships of Pakistan's army stormed into South Waziristan, the global headquarters of al-Qaeda and its Taliban allies.
By Saeed Shah in Lahore, Emal Khan in Peshawar and Dean Nelson
Published: 5:19PM BST 17 Oct 2009
Pakistan Army troops head for Bannu, a town on the edge of Waziristan Photo: AP
Within hours of leaving their camps early on Saturday morning to fight what is being hailed as the decisive battle in the war against terror, 12 soldiers had been killed in the first ferocious gunfights.
Pakistan's generals have called the offensive the "mother of all battles" for the survival of a country under siege.
Related Articles
There were reports of Taliban compounds coming under aerial bombardment from Pakistan gunships as troops moved out in three columns from Razmak to the north, Jandola to the east and Shakai in the west, and advanced on notorious Taliban target towns like Makeen and Ladha.
Analysis: no end in sight for Pakistan's struggle
Pakistan army begins assault on Taliban
Pakistan prepares to take South Waziristan from Taliban
Pakistan offensive: troops meet heavy resistance
Analysis: Barack Obama's moment of truth in Afghanistan
Taliban in Pakistan set fire to 100 Nato lorries bound for Afghanistan
Foreign Policy In Focus | Detaining the United Nations
Foreign Policy In Focus | Detaining the United Nations
Detaining the United Nations
Phyllis Bennis | December 22, 2008
Editor: Emily Schwartz Greco
Foreign Policy In Focus
Richard Falk was detained at the airport and denied entry to Israel on December 13, when he arrived in Tel Aviv. The American professor of international law was traveling to the West Bank and Gaza, to fulfill his mandate as the United Nations Special Rapporteur for Human Rights in the Occupied Territories to investigate the human rights conditions affecting the civilian population. His most urgent task includes monitoring the rising humanitarian crisis facing the 1.5 million Palestinians, of whom half are children, living in the besieged Gaza Strip.
The decision to keep Falk out fits a pattern of Israeli efforts to hide the human consequences of the siege of Gaza and of the escalating settlement expansion in the West Bank. Denying entry to the UN Special Rapporteur for Human Rights is part of the same occupation playbook as keeping Palestinian human rights defenders such as Raji Sourani, director of the Palestine Center for Human Rights, locked up in Gaza and denied the right to leave to speak to the outside world. It's at one with the Israeli policy of blocking international journalists who might report on the spiraling humanitarian crisis (especially in Gaza). The same goal is evident in the beating and effort to intimidate the few Palestinian journalists who do manage the rare opportunity to get out and tell the world, such as Mohamed Omer, the young Gazan winner of the prestigious Martha Gellhorn Prize in Britain.
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