CBS, Warner pull plug on season of Sheen’s sitcom; President Obama and First Lady host Motown event at White House for Black History Month; Cowell’s `X Factor’ sets US auditions. (Feb. 25)
Continue reading …A college student from Saudi Arabia who studied engineering in Texas bought explosive chemicals online as part of a plan to hide bomb materials inside dolls and baby carriages to blow up dams, nuclear plants or the home of former Pres. Bush. (Feb. 24)
Continue reading …RIYADH, Saudi Arabia – Influential intellectuals have asked Saudi Arabia’s monarch to adopt far-reaching political and social reforms. They said in a statement Thursday that Arab rulers should derive a lesson from the uprisings in Tunisia, Egypt and Libya and listen to the voice of disenchanted young people. The group includes renowned Islamic scholars, a female academic, a poet and a former diplomat. The call for change came after Saudi Arabia’s 86-year-old ruler announced an unprecedented economic aid package, including interest-free home loans. The package, estimated at 135 billion Saudi riyals ($36 billion), was seen as an attempt to get ahead of potential unrest. A wave of unrest has…
Continue reading …• Fighting spreads to Tripoli • Libyan regime calls on protesters to surrender weapons • Britons return from Libya • Obama tells Gaddafi to stop violence • Benghazi becomes Libya’s first free city 9.26am: Martin Chulov has been tweeting about Benghazi. 9.14am: An interesting article in the New York Times suggests Gaddafi maybe preparing for a final showdown on the streets of Tripoli today. Witnesses in the city told reporters he has deployed “thousands of mercenaries and irregular security” personnel on roads leading to the capital over the past 24 hours as his hold over the regular army slips away. “(They are) massing on roads to the capital, Tripoli, where one resident described scenes evocative of anarchic Somalia: clusters of heavily armed men in mismatched uniforms clutching machine guns and willing to carry out orders to kill Libyans that other police and military units, and even fighter pilots, have refused. Some residents of Tripoli said they took the gathering army as a sign that the uprising might be entering a decisive stage, with Colonel Gaddafi fortifying his main stronghold in the capital and protesters there gearing up for their first organized demonstration after days of spontaneous rioting and bloody crackdowns. ” The piece claims that Gaddafi has built up this mercenary force over many years. “Distrustful of even his own generals, Colonel Gaddafi has for years quietly built up this ruthless and loyal force. It is made up of special brigades headed by his sons, segments of the military loyal to his native tribe and its allies, and legions of African mercenaries he has helped train and equip. Many are believed to have fought elsewhere, in places like Sudan, but he has now called them back.” 9.13am: Oliva Fairless, who talked to the Guardian earlier this week about her mother, 66, and partner, who were trapped in Tripoli, has told us that they have managed to reach Warsaw thanks to the Polish ambassador in Libya, who was a “star”. They were stuck in the Corinthia hotel in Tripoli and decided to leave for the airport yesterday because they were afraid they would not be able to get petrol as supplies were running low. My mother said the airport was chaotic, it was like a refugee camp with about 10,000 people. There were about 94 people in the British section outside the airport, where many Arab workers were trying to get out. They could hear screaming and they could hear shooting, although it was probably for purposes for crowd control. My mother and partner were stuck there from 11am to 6.30pm, it was raining, muddy and freezing. The Polish ambassador came in person and offered seats on a Polish plane and 22 Brits accepted. He was a star, holding an umbrella for people, offering people shelter in his car. When the Polish plane came, it took three hours to get through the airport and the plane finally left at 12.10am. We’re really disappointed at the FCO response. They were left stranded with no advice and no communications. 8.52am: Passengers landing at Gatwick this morning spoke of their relief to be home as they described the “hellish” scenes in Libya. Helena Sheehan, 66, said she had just experienced “some of the worst hours of her life”. She said: “Libya is descending into hell. The airport is like nothing I’ve ever seen in my whole life. It’s absolute chaos. There’s just thousands and thousands of people trying to get out.” Oil worker Bryan Richards escaped from Libya last night on what he was told was the Polish President’s official plane after being offered one of 50 seats. Speaking to the BBC Radio 4 Today programme from Warsaw, he said: “I am not quite sure how it came about but we had a call saying that there’s a Polish plane going with 50 seats. ‘Does anyone want one?’ It was a bit of no-brainer really. I am in Warsaw. I am out of the sand and into the snow.” He said he was nearly “bludgeoned” as he tried to escape through Tripoli airport. “I was the tail-end Charlie of our little entourage going through the airport. I do this many times a year coming in and out of Tripoli airport. Now, we see organised chaos but we are used to it. This was manic. This was the worst nightmare of pop concerts and football hooligans all mixed into one.” 8.45am: While Muammar Gaddafi has lost control of Benghazi, Libya’s second city, he is fighting tooth and nail to hang on to the capital Tripoli. Just how desperate things are in Tripoli can be gauged by this Reuters report out of Cairo. The Libyan people’s committee for general security called on protesters to surrender their weapons and offered rewards for those who inform on protest leaders, in a statement broadcast live on Libyan TV. “He who submits his weapon and shows remorse will be exempted from being pursued legally. The committee calls on citizens to cooperate and inform on those who led on the youth or supplied them with money, equipment or intoxicating substances and hallucinatory pills,” the statement said. The committee also said those cooperating would be given money. “A lucrative monetary reward will be given to anyone who contributes or informs on them,” the statement, read out by a Libyan army officer, said on television monitored in Cairo. • Benghazi may be free but it has paid a heavy price. Read Martin Chulov’s gripping account of Libya’s first free city , where the rebels are busy erasing all traces of the man who has ruled the country for 41 years. • Ian Black writes about Gaddafi’s increasing isolation as senior aides defect . • Barack Obama finally breaks silence on Libya to condemn ruling regime and make threat of sanctions. Arab and Middle East protests Libya Egypt Bahrain Yemen Saudi Arabia Middle East Mark Tran Matthew Taylor Paul Owen guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Click here to view this media Dear Crooks and Liars community, please indulge me here and tell me what this man just said. Please? I know, I’m supposed to tell you what he just said but I can’t. Try as I might, I just can’t follow his leaps from Saudi Arabia to Mumbai to people living in shanties in the shadow of the rich guy’s 66-story mansion saying to themselves, “Gawd, I wanna be just like him” to the kids in the USA saying “Life sucks but I’m not getting out in the streets because I have a cool president” to the idea that none of this — none whatsoever — has to do with income inequality. As with any serving of word salad, the meat is usually in the bottom of the bowl, and so it is here, where he hits the punch line at young people, suggesting they’re so caught up in the president’s coolness they’re oblivious to their ongoing frustration about a lack of upward mobility. WTF? And how did we get from Mumbai mansions to that, anyway? About that income inequality thing. The chart they put up on the screen has absolutely nothing to do with per capita income. It’s per capita GDP, and by no means should be interpreted as mean income. Take Qatar , for example. The fact that it has the highest per capita GDP certainly shouldn’t cause anyone to assume all people in Qatar are rich. In fact, 20% of Qatar’s population holds 52% of the wealth . Not that facts matter or anything, but India actually has a lower rate of income inequality, though it is rising over time. Wonkery aside, did that man really just say that income inequality isn’t an issue? That the real problem is that people don’t believe there’s a possibility of upward mobility and that the reason for that is…coolness? It couldn’t be the permanently lost jobs, or the war being waged on the poor and middle class at all, right? It’s just…coolness? BECK: Let me go Charles to you. You brought up Saudi Arabia. I think Saudi Arabia’s absolutely — absolutely going to feel the pressure and possibly collapse. PAYNE: You’re absolutely right because this again — if it was about economics,, the average GDP per capita $23,000, they could probably get away with that, but it’s about something much larger, much bigger. But I gotta tell you, before you went to break you were talking about the youth and how this thing has spread. You know, the misconception this is somehow about income inequality and things like that I find amazing because people in Egypt, people in Tunisia, people in Saudi Arabia, the average person there makes more money per year than the average person in India or China. And then in the meantime you’ve got a guy in India who just built a 66-story house in Mumbai. Mumbai, 66% of the houses are made out of tin. So you’ve got this 60-story single family house casting a shadow on all of these shanties and people aren’t in the streets. You know why? BECK: Why? PAYNE: Because they look up at that and they say “That can be me.” We’re losing that in this country but around the world in certain pockets of the world where you don’t see that stuff going on…It has nothing to do with per capita income. Again, it has to do with the fact that where young people believe they have a chance at this upward mobility…and unfortunately what I’m worried about — we’re talking about these other countries…in this country our youth don’t really believe there’s upward mobility and the only reason there’s not outrage out there is because they think we have a cool president. This little onslaught came after Beck prepped us all with predictions of doom and death as the Middle East implodes in a domino effect that causes state after state to fall into one of several buckets: Open Society a la Soros, United Islamic Nations/Caliphate/Sharia Law, or Global Communism. Today’s villains star Van Jones, Richard Trumka, and the “clowns out front with the cheesehats”. I just have to share it, because someone you know will tell you that the cheesehat guys are going to subvert our country. You need to know where they got that from. Click here to view this media
Continue reading …Global food prices have been rising for some time , are predicted to rise up to 20% in 2011, and have played a background role in the successful and ongoing popular uprisings in North Africa. Now, United Arab Emirates’ The National reports that several states in the Middle East have begun reinforcing stockpiles of food staples, with the stated motivation being to offset
Continue reading …Democracy in Morocco – Sefrou 20 feb 2011 Libyan clash, Morocco unrest, Pyramids reopen, oil price to rise Fevrier 20 2011, feb 20th 2011, Moroccan protest, YES WE CAN even In Morocco Morocco Joins Middle East Protests: Protesters Demand New … (SCROLL DOWN FOR LIVE UPDATES) RABAT, Morocco (AP) — Thousands of people marched in cities across Morocco on Sunday, demanding a new constitution to bring more democracy in the North African kingdom amid the wave of Arab world upheaval. Thousands Rally in Morocco Demanding Reform — News from Antiwar.com The protests were the biggest in Morocco so far. The Facebook protests were initially organized by a youth movement angry with rising unemployment, but the group was also jointed by both a banned Islamist faction and the nation’s … World News Australia – Thousands rally for change in Morocco Thousands staged rallies in Moroccan cities on Sunday demanding political reform and limits on the powers of King Mohammed VI, the latest protests demanding change that have rocked the region. Morocco to China: A Hemisphere in Revolt — News from Antiwar.com From the growing calls for reform in Morocco , along the Atlantic Ocean, to the tiny Facebook organized protest in Beijing, the spirit of revolution appears to have sparked in tiny Tunisia and swept across the entire Eastern Hemisphere … Morocco protesters demand political change — Winds Of Jihad By … Analysts say that – unlike other countries that has seen protests – Morocco has a successful economy, an elected parliament and a reformist monarchy, making it less vulnerable to a major uprising than other countries. … fatpet says: Rhythms of Morocco – Chalf Hassan $14.99 http://c69.us/aNJ8jG #world
Continue reading …Tweet – Tunisia’s interim government on Sunday asked Saudi Arabia to extradite deposed strongman Zine El Abidine Ben Ali as it faced a second day of protests demanding its resignation. Prime Minister Mohamed Ghannouchi’s government made the official request to Riyadh, where Ben Ali fled on January 14 with his family after weeks of popular revolt against his 23-year regime, said a foreign ministry statement cited by state news agency TAP. The government acted “following a new batch of charges against the ousted president regarding his…
Continue reading …Popular unrest roiling the Middle East is is rocking the ultra-rich, ultra-conservative kingdom of Saudi Arabia, leaving its rulers feeling isolated both from regional allies and the United States alike, reports the New York Times . King Abdullah has called President Obama at least twice to voice his concerns about Egypt,…
Continue reading …Journalist Kim Barker was covering a jubilant demonstration in Pakistan in 2007, with thousands cheering for the country’s chief justice, when the crowd turned on her, groping her relentlessly. She only escaped because the chief justice saw and let her take shelter in his car. “I knew other female correspondents…
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