The new Big Fat Gypsy Weddings reality series in Britain is infuriating members of the traveler community who charge that the over-the-top shindigs have very little to do with them and are fueling prejudice. The Irish Traveler Movement has demanded a “right of reply” to the Channel 4 program, which…
Continue reading …Arab governments must embrace a generation of men and women who are making their own history The entire Arab world is witnessing a tectonic shift. There is a fragile, if for many sublime, expectation that democracy may now spread in our region. At the same time, the prospect of Arab self-determination has left some uneasy. One of the defining characteristics over the last 18 days of protest in Cairo is that no one has been able to predict what would happen next. But today some things can be said with certainty. The first is that there is no going back. A new generation has come of age. Creativity, new communication technologies and the use of rational peaceful protest have restored Arab self-esteem. Cairo concluded what Tunisia had hinted at : that decades of realpolitik had failed. It seems to have united east and west in the understanding that true security begins with the dignity of the human being, and is based upon what we often refer to as hurriya , or “freedom”. While in Jordan the youth element may not be as evident, protesters still call for inclusivity, and seek participation in a body politic and within a wider national platform. With the government change here objectives are being discussed regarding what I call the “social contract”, and a politics which needs to become more normalised than radicalised. Such voices are being heeded, because almost everyone here understands that the credibility and security of the country depends upon it. Recent events have shown that men and women make their own history, and are capable of controlling their own destinies. Unfortunately in our region this has not always been self-evident. It is now. Rather than fearing this “new wave”, Arab governments should embrace it. It’s time to put Humpty Dumpty back together again. The Mumbai-based Strategic Foresight Group has calculated that, between 1991 and 2010, constant war and conflict has cost the region $12 trillion in lost opportunity. A new architecture of relations is urgently required to replace the ad-hoc structures of the past. Co-operation can be achieved in three ways. The first is what I refer to as a zakat or “responsibility” fund, collected and distributed regionally, in order to create more integrated economic development – just as the Marshall plan did for postwar Europe. The giving of alms is an Islamic pillar of faith. It is an obligation. So too should be its distribution – on an equitable, institutional and trans-border basis. Second, we need a supranational Community for Water and Energy for the Human Environment – an Arab equivalent of the European Coal and Steel Community established by Robert Schuman and Jean Monnet in 1950. Our water resources and woes are shared – water has no respect for national boundaries. The Jordan river, one of the most complex and contested waterways in the world, has four riparian parties – Lebanon, Syria, Israel and Palestine. At the same time a global energy and water belt extends from the central Asian republics down the Volga through Turkey to the Strait of Hormuz. It can no longer be protected solely by military forces guarding the ports of the Persian Gulf. Our security is constantly undermined by our energy interdependence and dependence, and time is running out. Finally, it is time to convene a Semi-Permanent Conference for Peace based in the region and modelled on the Conference for Security and Cooperation in Europe and the three baskets of the Helsinki Process – co-operation in security, economy and humanitarian issues. These are my thoughts in parenthesis, as we consider an Arabia no less complex but far more pregnant with possibility … a new psychological landscape. To paraphrase George Marshall, a place “that hangs in the balance as to what it is to be”. The scales of justice have been tipped. The arc of history no longer bends towards reform. It insists on it. Egypt Middle East Jordan Tunisia El Hassan bin Talal guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Thousands of people are taking to streets across the region demanding political and social reform.
Continue reading …http://www.youtube.com/v/q9Bw45P2zGs?f=user_uploads&app=youtube_gdata More here: Protesters clash with police in Benghazi, Libya
Continue reading …United Airlines is temporarily grounding 96 Boeing 757s while it conducts maintenance checks. The move forced the cancellation of 15 flights and several delays yesterday, with more cancellations possible today, AP reports. The planes were grounded when it was discovered operational checks had not been completed on modifications to on-board…
Continue reading …Local residents and Western tourists in Pyongyang celebrated the 69th birthday of North Korea’s leader Kim Jong Il Wednesday. (Feb. 16)
Continue reading …• Libya – clashes in the eastern city of Benghazi • Bahrain – demonstrations enter third day • Iran – President Ahmadinejad says protests are doomed 8.04am: Protests continue in the Middle East and North Africa. The latest flashpoints are Bahrain, where demonstrations continue for a third day despite the intervention of King Hadad, and Libya where the arrest of a human rights campaign sparked clashes with police in the eastern city of Benghazi. Up to 2,000 people were involved in the clashes in Libya , according to the BBC. Eyewitnesses told the BBC that the unrest had been triggered by the arrest of a lawyer who is an outspoken critic of the government. The lawyer was later said to have been released, but the demonstrations reportedly continued.. They [the witnesses] say stones were thrown at police who are said to have responded with water cannon, tear gas and rubber bullets. In Bahrain protesters have occupied Pearl Roundabout, a landmark in the capital Manama. Thousands of people are expected to take part in a funeral procession for Fadhel Matrook who was killed at a funeral yesterday. Here’s a round-up by country of yesterday’s events in the region: Bahrain King Hamad tried to quell unrest by promising to investigate the killings of opposition protesters . Ali Abdulhadi Mushaima was killed in Monday’s protests. Fadhel Matrook was shot when security forces fired at crowds of people who had gathered yesterday for Mushaima’s funeral. The opposition Shia party al-Wifaq, announced that it was withdrawing from parliament in protest against the crackdown. This was a key event , writes our Middle East editor Ian Black, because political participation al-Wifaq party is seen as crucial to political stability, as a leaked US embassy cable revealed . Yemen Protests calling for removal of President Ali Abdullah Saleh have been taking place for last five days in the capital Sana’a. Yesterday pro-government supporters clashed with protesters yesterday amid alarm about increasing violence. Egypt • Elements of Egypt’s fractured political opposition are concerned that the army will hijack the revolution . They are alarmed by the army’s unilateral declarations of reform and the apparent unwillingness of senior officers to open up genuine negotiations with activists. • The Muslim Brotherhood announced that it plans to set up a political party. • The Guardian is compiling a database of those missing and detained during the unrest in Egypt . • Barack Obama said his administration was “on the right side of history” for its response to the downfall of the Mubarak regime. • CBS News journalist Lara Logan is recovering in hospital after being violently attacked and sexually assaulted by a mob in Egypt’s Tahrir Square on Friday. Iran The authorities confirmed that a second person had died in Monday’s unrest, in which security forces used teargas, pepper spray and batons against the protesters. Around 1,500 were arrested in the protests. M Ps have branded opposition leaders Mehdi Karroubi and Mirhossein Mousavi “corrupt on earth” a charge that carries the death penalty. Jordan The government sought to head off trouble by easing restrictions on public gatherings. Jordan’s interior minister Saed Hayel Srour said that protesters would still have to inform authorities of any gathering two days in advance to ensure public safety. Tunisia The new government extended a state of emergency in place since Zine al Abidine Ben Ali fled to Saudi Arabia, but ended a curfew imposed during the protests. Morocco The government appears to be trying to calm fears over price hikes on basic goods ahead of a Facebook-arranged protests planned for next Sunday. It has doubled the money it sets aside for state subsidies to counter rising global commodity prices. Middle East Bahrain Iran Libya Egypt Tunisia Yemen Jordan Morocco Matthew Weaver guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …OJ Simpson Beaten Unconscious In Prison WATCH OJ Simpson Beaten Unconscious In Prison Attack (Video) OJ Simpson: Beaten in prison? Prison denies rumors of race-fueled … When the National Inquirer reported that O.J. Simpson was “beaten unconscious in a brutal prison yard attack,” our first reaction was “O.J. Simpson is in… Oj Simpson Beaten In Prison UPDATE: According to USA Today, a prison official said that the National Enquirer’s report about O.J. Simpson being attacked is totally bogus. Steve Suwe, the public information officer for the Lovelock Correctional Center in Nevada, O.J. Simpson Beaten Unconscious In Prison | The Urban Daily O.J. Simpson was reportedly beaten unconscious in a prison attack and spent three weeks in the infirmary. The beating has left Simpson afraid to leave his prison cell. O.J. Simpson Beaten in Prison by Skinhead? T or F? | Gather Feb 15, 2011 O.J. Simpson was beaten in prison rumors are running rampant, thanks to a tabloid known for gossip. However, the National Enquirer ski. O.J. Simpson prison attack | O.J. Simpson skinheads | O.J. Simpson … The National Enquirer reports that O.J. Simpson was brutally attacked by a skinhead in prison. A prison spokesman tells Gossip Cop the story is NOT true. poodlesnatchers says: Oj Simpson Beaten http://bit.ly/fL45cc Video, Torrent
Continue reading …America’s new top dog is Hickory, a 5-year-old Scottish deerhound more at home chasing rabbits and deer around the Virginia farm she calls home than being under the spotlight in Madison Square Garden. Hickory was awarded Best In Show at the 135th annual Westminster Kennel Club Dog Show, becoming the…
Continue reading …The feds have obtained a court order to grab Twitter account details from three tweeters—including a member of Iceland’s parliament—linked to WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange. The three—who also include a Dutch hacker and a US computer programmer—are blasting the order as an invasion of privacy. “What’s…
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