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Today: 76 articles and 181 comments as of 16:16.
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Assad's family caught trying to escape the country, returned to Damascus
Today's Headlines
Headline Comments [Views]
Page 2: WoT Background
1 12:02 chris [10]
Page 3: Non-WoT
0 [10]
8 20:17 JosephMendiola [21]
Page 4: Opinion
1 03:33 European Conservative [10]
Europe
Two found guilty in Norway over Muhammad cartoon plot
Good. More, faster, please.
AN Oslo court found two men guilty today of plotting a terrorist act for a planned attack on the Danish newspaper that published cartoons of the Prophet Muhammad in 2005.

Norwegian national Mikael Davud, a Norwegian of Chinese Uighur origin considered to be the mastermind behind the plot, was sentenced to seven years behind bars, while Shawan Sadek Saeed Bujak, an Iraqi Kurd residing in Norway, received a three-and-a-half-year prison term.

The two men, who were arrested in July 2010, had connections with al Qaeda and planned to use explosives at the Jyllands-Posten daily's Copenhagen offices and murder Kurt Westergaard, the cartoonist behind the most controversial of the 12 drawings published in September 2005, according to the prosecution.

Westergaard's drawing, which has earned him numerous death threats and an assassination attempt, showed Muhammad wearing a turban shaped like a bomb with a lit fuse.

The prosecution had demanded prison sentences of 11 and five years respectively.

A third man arrested at the same time as Davud and Bujak, David Jakobsen - an Uzbek living in Norway - was acquitted of the most serious charges, but sentenced to four months in prison for helping the others to procure the materials needed to create the explosives.
Posted by: tipper || 01/30/2012 10:50 || Comments || Link || [10 views] Top|| File under:

#1  what about the American who was doing the surveillance for the attck. The same guy who did the Mumbai surveillance
Posted by: chris || 01/30/2012 12:02 Comments || Top||


"Muslim taxi" offers Germans gender-segregated rides
This is an English language version of this story posted in Friday's Rantburg.
A German Muslim has created a new website to arrange shared car trips targeted toward Muslims, where drivers can only offer transport to members of the same sex. Called Muslimtaxi.de, the site is based on the same principle as other popular websites which let cost-conscious Germans arrange shared car rides.

Those interested in offering rides specify their gender, asking price and the number of passengers they can carry. Potential passengers contact the driver directly.

Selim Reid, a 24-year-old from Norderstedt told the Hamburger Abendblatt that Muslims' bad ride-sharing experiences inspired him to create the site. For example, his parents, originally from Iraq, caught a ride with a Muslim-hating driver who criticized them. Reid told the newspaper, "The driver and the people with him swore the whole way about foreigners in general and in particular about my mother's head scarf."

You don't need to be a Muslim to use Reid's service, of course. He told the Abendblatt, that's one of the main points of the service. He said, "Those really looking for dialogue will find it by using Muslim Taxi."

The website has attracted criticism. People have accused Reid of wanting a parallel society and supporting immigrants who don't want to integrate. But Reid says the positive response shows that he's filling a niche. He said, "Many Muslim brothers and sisters complained that they can't use conventional offers because the gender segregation stipulated by Islam is not implemented."
Posted by: ryuge || 01/30/2012 00:00 || Comments || Link || [10 views] Top|| File under:


German commemorations avoid Iranian holocaust denial
Posted by: ryuge || 01/30/2012 00:00 || Comments || Link || [10 views] Top|| File under:

#1  I'm sorry, but this article does not offer a fair view of the situation. We may very well argue about official and non-official contacts the German government maintains with Iran, but Iran's Holocaust denial has always been strongly rejected by Germany.

Marcel Reich Ranicki's tale about his experience in the Warsaw ghetto was a very moving one and has left a deep impression.

Unfortunately the speech seems to be only available in German. (report in English)

MRR recalled how the Nazis in July 1942 informed members of the ghetto's Jewish Council (‘Judenrat’) of plans for the inhabitants' "resettlement to the east".

He told lawmakers that those present "seemed to sense what had happened: that the sentence had been pronounced for the biggest Jewish city in Europe - the death sentence."

IThis was his last sentence and the Bundestag was quiet for half a minute before applause set in.
Posted by: European Conservative || 01/30/2012 3:33 Comments || Top||


Angry Greeks condemn EU plot to control its finances
Greece has reacted furiously to a German proposal that an EU budget commissioner with oversight of its economy be installed in Athens after mounting speculation that international lenders will have to stump up yet more money for the country.
Deadbeats usually do react strongly when it's pointed out openly that they are deadbeats...
Addicts don't take kindly to suggestions they have a problem, either.
The escalating row threatened to eclipse Monday's summit after Greece's finance minister, Evangelos Venizelos, issued a tart response to the suggestion, saying his compatriots were themselves capable of fulfilling the "historical obligation" to take the country out of crisis.

The proposal, in a leaked document, argued for the creation of a commissioner with veto powers over the Greek budget, saying Athens' inability to meet fiscal targets had made the post a precondition of further rescue funds from its "troika" of creditors: the EU, IMF and ECB.

"Budget consolidation has to be put under a strict steering and control system," noted the document. "Given the disappointing compliance so far, Greece has to accept shifting budgetary sovereignty to the European level for a certain period of time."

Under the plan, European institutions would have direct control over Greece's budget decisions in what would amount to an extraordinary depletion of a member state's independence in conducting its own affairs.

With the atmosphere among recession-hit Greeks becoming increasingly explosive three years into the crisis, the proposal was angrily denounced with one politician slamming it as the "product of a sick imagination".

"It's absolutely laughable," said a senior government source. "It's a draft paper that appears to have been deliberately leaked but we have no idea who the author is or where it's come from in the German government."

The spat erupted amid reports that the €130bn (£108bn) aid package, agreed as part of a second bailout for the country last October, would now not be enough.
Of course it isn't. The German and French banks are way over-exposed in southern Europe. The Greek citizens don't want to pay for their mistakes, don't see themselves as responsible for what their past governments have done, and don't want to be impoverished for the rest of their lives -- or their retirements at age 50, whichever comes first. And they're certainly not willing to pay back loans made by German bankers who were stupid enough to loan to the Greeks in the first place.
Citing Athens' worsening economic performance and prospects, the German news magazine Der Spiegel quoted a troika official as saying that Greece could need €145bn to be saved once and for all.
'Once and for all' means "about a month" in EU-speak...
Last week, the EU economic and monetary affairs commissioner, Olli Rehn, said a revised analysis had shown that more rescue loans would be needed to make up for a shortfall in the second aid package. The extra money, he said, was required to ensure that Greece's €350bn debt burden was reduced to 120% of GDP by 2020 -- a figure that is seen as manageable.
It used to be thought that a country's debt burden had to be less than 80% of GDP; above that default was inevitable. Then the barrier was said to be 100%. Now it's 120%.
To keep bankruptcy at bay Athens received €110bn from the EU and IMF in May 2010, the biggest bailout in western history. With European taxpayers already irate that Greece will need yet more funds to keep afloat, the €130bn financial support load had previously been seen as a red line across which no EU government was willing to step.

The spectre of the rescue programme being expanded appeared to be the biggest obstacle to a debt deal between Greece and its private sector creditors finally being concluded over the weekend.

Greek officials said while the contentious issue of interest rates on new bonds had been settled -- with one source describing the coupon as "a figure that has pleased everyone" -- the agreement would not be announced until there was consensus over the second bailout.
The same bankers who made the stupid loans in the first place get a cut of each restructuring. The new bonds have to be handled and marketed, after all, and someone has to be paid for that. There are all sorts of fees quietly tacked onto each new bailout. That's one way debtor nations get even more into debt.
The eurozone's first ever debt restructuring, the bond swap foresees banks and other private investors voluntarily accepting a 50% loss in the value of their holdings, a writedown that will slice about €100bn from the nation's debt pile.
I'll believe it when I see it. Did the 'private sector creditors' agree to so much as a single Euro's amount of a haircut in the past? But if they really do turn over 50% of the notes, it will just delay them from having to turn over the other 50% of the notes, which will come next year.
Private sector participation had been set as a prerequisite of further aid being given to Greece. "We are one step before [agreement] being reached," said Venizelos.

With Athens facing repayment of €14.5bn of debt on March 20 -- money it does not have -- time is of the essence in securing a deal.

But negotiations with international debt inspectors that have been conducted in tandem with talks between the government and private creditors have been vastly different in nature.

In what officials have described as "tense discussions", Greek government ministers have argued fiercely with auditors over the need for further belt-tightening measures to plug a burgeoning budget black hole.
And over the desirability for an audit in the first place...
The atmosphere deteriorated last week after the troika urged the interim coalition government to make further savage spending cuts. The demands come amid growing criticism over the performance of Lucas Papademos, the technocrat economist placed at the helm of Athens's transitional government last November.

Highlighting the mounting frustration over Greece's failure to enact economic and structural reforms, the IMF's managing director, Christine Lagarde, said over the weekend: "We're not terribly positive about what has been done, but we want to put together a programme for the country. The country itself has to provide adjustment."

In a bid to rally support for the austerity Athens will inevitably have to impose, Papademos held urgent talks with the leaders of the three parties backing his coalition telling them that without further belt-tightening Greece will not be given the funds it needs to survive. He emerged saying there had been "a convergence of views".

But with general elections scheduled in the spring and no politician willing to be associated with policies that have brought Greeks to their knees it remains to be seen whether the country's political class will put national interests before party politics.
The Greeks aren't serious. They won't admit that their economy is ill. They won't take the medicine. Far better to boot them from the Euro-zone, let them devalue the new drachma, and find a way to fix the German and French banks that are exposed.
Posted by: Steve White || 01/30/2012 00:00 || Comments || Link || [21 views] Top|| File under:

#1  See also WAFF > IMF, EU, + ECB [aka the "Troika] ASK GREECE TO DISBAND MILITARY + LAYOFF 150,000 JOBS | GREECE SHOULD STOP SPENDING ON DEFENSE, HEALTH: TROIKA DRAFT SAYS, in order to meet the anti-Deficit conditions of proposed 2012 Bailout Package.

Greece, etal. = at least 10 US States = USA vee Rising China???

Boy o boy, HUGO "THE US HAS [Land/Islands-destroying, sinking] EARTHQUAKE BOMBS" CHAVEZ is on a roll today.
Posted by: JosephMendiola || 01/30/2012 0:34 Comments || Top||

#2  Aris, you're cool with this, right?
Posted by: Raj || 01/30/2012 1:11 Comments || Top||

#3  Do not feed the trolls, Raj.
Posted by: gromky || 01/30/2012 5:27 Comments || Top||

#4  "The Greeks aren't serious. They won't admit that their economy is ill. They won't take the medicine. Far better to boot them from the Euro-zone, let them devalue the new drachma, and find a way to fix the German and French banks that are exposed."

Steve, many of them do know. It's not an issue of ignorance, it's a matter of not caring. It's a matter of them being the end product of the Gramscian termite, of believing that it is the responsibility of a force (in this case government) outside themselves having the responsibility to take wealth from neighbors and strangers - by force - to make sure that there is no interruption in their own income stream. It's a matter of believing that if there is someone, somewhere, who has two cents more than you do, that cosmically speaking the right thing to do is take one of those cents from that person and give it to you so that everyone ends up the same at the end of the day.

Without shame, or guilt, or loss of autonomy.

In this regard, they aren't a lot different from huge swaths of the rest of Euroland, or the U.S., either.
Posted by: no mo uro || 01/30/2012 5:57 Comments || Top||

#5  no mo uro,
Default, followed by bankruptcy, followed by pain, followed by restructuring, followed by healthier practices by all concerned.

Capitalism is a bit*h, but it works.
Posted by: Mike Ramsey || 01/30/2012 8:23 Comments || Top||

#6  Computers have served to hide the true conditions. Cause no one actually sees the money anymore.

What are needed are pictures of people with wheelbarrows full of bank notes going to buy a loaf of bread or some other vivid picture of the problem.

This is, currently, just spin and smoke and mirrors to the plebs.
Posted by: AlanC || 01/30/2012 9:02 Comments || Top||

#7  Well If the Germans or the Greeks won't the market will.
Posted by: Bright Pebbles || 01/30/2012 14:42 Comments || Top||

#8  See also DEFENCE.PK/FORUMS > THE NEXT GREECE: PORTUGAL BORROWING [public debt] COSTS HIT NEW RECORD [20.27%] | {REUTERS] INVESTORS CUE PORTUGAL AS THE NEXT GREECE.

and

* SAME > [WSJ.com] JAPAN'S DEBT PILE STARTS TO GRAB INVESTORS' ATTENTION.

Nippon may only have a couple of years grace, instead of several, until the country's prohibitive debt burden begins to affect its Govt. + quality-of-life, etc.
Posted by: JosephMendiola || 01/30/2012 20:17 Comments || Top||



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Two weeks of WOT
Mon 2012-01-30
  Assad's family caught trying to escape the country, returned to Damascus
Sun 2012-01-29
  Nigerian military kills 11 militants in northeast
Sat 2012-01-28
  UN loses count on Syria killings
Fri 2012-01-27
  Sectarian clashes kill at least 22 in Yemen
Thu 2012-01-26
  Woman Dead as Bombs, Bullets Rain on Nigeria Police Station
Wed 2012-01-25
  SEALS Spring Two, Bag Nine
Tue 2012-01-24
  EU imposes sanctions on Iran oil
Mon 2012-01-23
  U.S. aircraft carrier goes through Strait of Hormuz without incident
Sun 2012-01-22
  Syrian Forces Kill More than 50 Civilian as Dissidents Clash with Troops
Sat 2012-01-21
  Terror attacks in Kano, Nigeria, kill at least 162
Fri 2012-01-20
  Aslam Awan of Abbottabad Dronezapped
Thu 2012-01-19
  Bangladesh army says plot to topple government foiled
Wed 2012-01-18
  Syria 'absolutely rejects' calls for Arab troops
Tue 2012-01-17
  Kenyan jets bomb Al-Shabaab bases
Mon 2012-01-16
  Kenya Arrests 29 Ugandans 'Headed to Somalia to Fight'


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