Troops reportedly open fire on anti-regime demonstrators as protests spread from Syria’s south to Damascus and Aleppo Demonstrations in the Syrian capital, Damascus, and elsewhere were met with force as security forces struggled to contain unrest that had begun in the southern city of Deraa a week ago. Thousands once again joined funeral processions in Deraa on Friday, chanting: “Deraa people are hungry, we want freedom.” Hundreds took to the streets in the cities of Homs, Hama, Tel and Latakia and in towns surrounding Deraa, with smaller protests in the major cities of Damascus and Aleppo, which are more firmly under the watch of security forces. Troops reportedly opened fire in some cases. Protests in the capital are rare and not tolerated by the Ba’athist regime. A witness told the Guardian that efforts at protests in Damascus were broken up by plain-clothed agents using batons. By nightfall, a counter-demonstration had been mounted near the historic Umayyad mosque in the heart of the capital. Brief clashes were reported between anti-regime demonstrators and loyalists. A large rally then began in support of President Bashar al-Assad. Hundreds drove around the capital beeping horns and waving flags, whilst posters of the president were put up in the city. The violence in Syria came after the government had pledged on Thursday to look into reforms. But activists using the Syrian Revolution Facebook page had called for a day of solidarity with Deraa, where according to unofficial reports at least 44 have been killed in the past week. In the past, many young Syrians had been willing to overlook corruption, a lack of freedom and the slow pace of reforms in return for what they have seen as dignified leadership brought about by Assad’s anti-Western foreign policy. He has also had a youthful appeal. Both appear to now be wearing thin. “Regimes become really weak when their image turns to brutality. The killings in Deraa have done that,” said Ziad Malki, an activist living in exile in Switzerland. “The Syrian people want more now.” Others agreed that a turning point had been reached. “Syrians [normally] never come out to protests. This shows how the killings, the worthless reforms announced yesterday and the government propaganda is insulting and is only making us angrier,” said a 32-year-old man. The protests and revolts across the Arab world continued elsewhere in Jordan, Bahrain and Yemen. In Amman, one person was killed and more than 100 wounded when pro-government loyalists attacked a weekly pro-reform vigil in the heart of the Jordanian capital. The clashes were broken up by riot police. The violence was the first of its kind in Jordan in more than two months of protests which have seen the king sack his cabinet and pledge reforms. Islamic Action Front leader Hamza Mansour, whose party leads Jordan’s nascent opposition, said one of its members, Khairi Jamil Saeed, 26, was killed by being beaten by police. “This is an atrocious crime and we blame it on prime minister Marouf al-Bakhit and his cabinet,” Mansour told the Associated Press. “The prime minister and the cabinet must resign.” In Yemen, President Ali Abdullah Saleh said that he was willing to relinquish power but not unconditionally. “We are prepared to give up power but only to good, capable hands, not to malicious forces who conspire against the homeland,” said Saleh after calling on young people leading protests against him to establish a political party and deliver a roadmap for Yemen’s future. Striking a defiant pose, Saleh attacked those he claims are “conspiring against him”, calling them Houthis – an armed clan demanding autonomy in north Yemen – and drug dealers. A few miles away, anti-government protesters staged their biggest pro-democracy rally since unrest broke out five months ago, in what they called the Friday of Departure. Tens of thousands knelt in neat rows for a mass prayer ceremony as a weeping imam demanded: “Why do you kill us Ali? Why?” A week ago, 53 protesters were killed at the spot by plain-clothed government loyalists firing from the roofs of nearby houses. In the Bahrain capital, Manama, riot police fired teargas at demonstrators who defied a ban on public gatherings and staged a rally in the Shia suburb of Duraz. At least 20 people have been killed in a two-month uprising led by a disaffected Shia majority against the Gulf island’s Sunni rulers. Katherine Marsh is a pseudonym for a journalist living in Damascus Syria Yemen Middle East Protest Tom Finn Martin Chulov guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Interactive apps are a bad idea that keeps children from the written word, says best-selling writer The bestselling children’s author Julia Donaldson, whose signature rhyming picture books dominate top 10 lists, has revealed that she vetoed an ebook version of her most famous title, The Gruffalo, because she thinks interactive book apps for children are a bad idea. “I actually really don’t like it for children’s books,” she said on the phone from her home in Glasgow. “I think there are lots of pros to ebooks but I don’t feel we have to be controlled by technology and I don’t feel we should say, ‘Oh, that’s the way things are going, that’s the future, let’s do it.’ I think it would be great if there were lots of ebooks but there were also quite a lot of titles not available as ebooks. I feel if everyone just says yes to there being an ebook of everything, there is a danger they could take over.” The UK market for children’s ebooks and book-based apps is in its early stages, but Donaldson’s comments will resonate because of her high profile, and sales worth £10m last year. Eight of the top 10 children’s picture books in 2010 were by Donaldson and illustrators Axel Scheffler and Lydia Monks. Liz Thomson, editor of the website BookBrunch, says others share Donaldson’s doubts: “There’s a lot of stuff at the moment that we’re doing because we can. It’s a question of whether you can really add value to the story. If you can, then it’s fun, and there is some really creative stuff going on, but certainly ebooks seem to me not so cosy, that there’s a feeling of curling up with a book that you can’t replicate, however good the technology.” Donaldson was speaking on the eve of the Bologna book fair, which opens on Monday and where her publishers will be selling foreign rights to a clutch of new books including The Highway Rat with Axel Scheffler, who drew The Gruffalo. She says she does not know who owns the rights to develop her work for new digital applications. “I’d have to look at my contract – it could be that I haven’t even got the right to say that, and my publishers are just respecting my feelings and not pushing me in a direction I don’t want to go in. I’d have to check the small print.” Several years ago Donaldson worked on an interactive CD to go with Room on the Broom, and she writes an original song to go on every audiobook with her husband, Malcolm. Last month her publisher issued a special ebook edition of the Gruffalo Song Book for Comic Relief, and they have also produced ebooks of her books for older children. She sees the practical advantages of digital publishing in terms of portability and storage. But she feels that time spent reading books is valuable, and that we spend much of our lives plugged into screens and headphones already. “The publishers showed me an ebook of Alice in Wonderland. They said, ‘Look, you can press buttons and do this and that’, and they showed me the page where Alice’s neck gets longer. There’s a button the child can press to make the neck stretch, and I thought, well, if the child’s doing that, they are not going to be listening or reading, ‘I wish my cat Dinah was here’ or whatever it says in the text – they’re just going to be fiddling with this wretched button.” She compares the onrush of digital technology to the abolition of the net book agreement, which resulted in massive discounting of popular titles by supermarkets and a decline in writers’ royalties. “I think it would be good if a few people like me spiked the future, punctured it a bit, so that people could say that with all their advantages, you couldn’t get every single book there is as an ebook and that would encourage people to buy proper books.” Kate Wilson, who published The Gruffalo at PanMacmillan back in 1999 and now runs her own company Nosy Crow producing a mixture of books and apps for children, says: “You judge a medium that is right for the work. I can completely understand why someone like Julia, who crafts every one of those words, doesn’t want the rhythm interrupted by interactivity.” But she says people will quickly tire of apps that are not interactive: “If parents and children are moving towards screens, I feel really profoundly that it is our responsibility as publishers to provide really compelling reading experiences that are at least as interesting as games. I think it’s luddite and refusenik not to embrace where your readers are going. “We can’t be a worthy antique as an industry – we have to go where people are. If we turn our backs on that, other people will fill the space, and they won’t be people who’ve had 25 years’ experience writing, illustrating and publishing the best children’s books.” Children’s favourites in 2010 1 The Gruffalo Julia Donaldson 2 The Gruffalo’s Child Julia Donaldson 3 Thomas to the Rescue: Thomas & Friends (Based on Rev W Awdry character) 4 What the Ladybird Heard Julia Donaldson 5 Stick Man Julia Donaldson 6 Zog Julia Donaldson 7 Room on the Broom Julia Donaldson 8 The Snail and the Whale Julia Donaldson 9 Peppa Pig: Little Library (various) 10. The Princess and the Wizard Julia Donaldson *TCM chart of best-selling children’s picture books in UK, 2010 Children’s books: 7 and under Children and teenagers Susanna Rustin guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …On Thursday at Reuters , Andrew Quinn, with the help of Caren Bohan, cobbled together a pathetic “analysis” full of sympathy for a “struggling” Barack Obama and recognition of the need to keep oil flowing from Saudi Arabia. It also contained a false jab at George W. Bush and the War in Iraq. First, let's look at Quinn's Bush jab: Obama is committed to partnering with other countries rather than going it alone as did his predecessor George W. Bush, which both broadens and complicates the decision-making process. This got the attention of Jeffrey Goldberg at the Atlantic (HT Instapundit ), who linked to the identical but unbylined Reuters item at the New York Times. Goldberg's response: This, of course, is wildly inaccurate and misleading. Say what you will about the second Iraq war, but George W. Bush made partnerships with many nations in advance of the invasion, including and especially America's most valuable ally, Great Britain, as well as Australia, Spain, Hungary, Poland, Denmark, South Korea, the Czech Republic, and a couple of dozen others. Reuters should correct this inaccurate statement. Good luck with that. Quinn's assertion is more than “wildly inaccurate.” It's objectively false. ICasualties.org has a list of casualties by country entitled (of all things): “Coalition Military Fatalities By Year and Month.” 23 Counties are listed. There was a military coalition. George W. Bush was not “going it alone.” Additionally, Fox Nation has a post indicating that the Iraq War coalition involved roughly twice as many nations (30, reportedly per the State Department) as the Libya (cough) “kinetic military action” (16). What's more, even though the wire service appears to have been childishly determined to avoid using the word “coalition” during the Iraq War, I was able to find two examples where Reuters did acknowledge the existence of a military coalition: July 7, 2006 (“US Sees Security Transfer in Half Iraq's Provinces”) —
Continue reading …Guardian/ICM poll finds 57% support for current or deeper cuts, despite a fall in economic confidence Voters have given this week’s budget a cautious welcome despite plunging consumer confidence, according to a Guardian/ICM poll. It suggests most still tolerate the government’s plan for spending cuts – or think they should go further. The poll puts the Conservatives back into a narrow lead, although movement between the parties is within the margin of error. Tory support is 37%, up two, and Labour is 36%, down two. The Lib Dems are on 16%, down two on the last ICM poll. Other parties score 11%, up two, including the Greens on 2%. In recent polls from other firms using different methodology the Lib Dem rating is lower and Labour consequently higher, with the Tory score similar to that found by ICM. Despite Saturday’s protest march in London, public tolerance of cuts seems to be sustained. Only 35% think the plans go too far – a 10 point drop since ICM asked the question in November. Meanwhile 28% think the government has found the right balance and 29% say the cuts are not severe enough. That amounts to 57% support for current cuts or more. The coalition is split: 43% of people who voted Lib Dem in 2010 think the cuts go too far, against 17% of Tories. Among current Labour supporters, 57% think the cuts too deep. The wider verdict on the budget is mixed. People who think it will boost the economy outnumber those who think it will harm it by a net nine points. But most – 48% – expect it to make no difference. Only 50% of Conservatives and 23% of Lib Dems think the budget will strengthen the economy. The fuel tax cut was a drop in the ocean. Only 21% think the measure was about right, while 4% say it goes too far and 70% say it doesn’t go far enough. Supporters of all parties want more action to cut the cost of petrol. The background is a fall in economic confidence to levels only seen at the height of the financial crisis. Only 43% are now confident about their personal financial circumstances and ability to cope with inflation, against 56% who are not. That net score of -13 points compares to a net positive of 6 last October and 1 last July. Only once, in July 2008, have people been more afraid in this regular tracker question. The coalition has slipped into negative territory. The proportion of people who think it is doing a bad job outnumbers the proportion who think it is doing a good job by 46% to 41% – a net rating of -5. In August last year it had a rating of +10. Tories like the coalition: giving it a net positive of 71 points. Labour voters do not: a net negative of -56. Lib Dem opinion is mixed. Among current Lib Dems the coalition has a positive of 26 but among all people who backed the party in 2010 it is -9. Coalition leaders are becoming more unpopular too. Cameron continues to be an asset to his party with a net positive rating among all voters of +5. But more people now think George Osborne is doing a bad job than a good one: a net rating of -2. Nick Clegg trails in with a net of -18. Ed Miliband is also much more unpopular than Osborne, with a negative of -13. Among people who voted Labour in 2005 50% think he is doing a good job; among current Labour voters 58%. ICM Research interviewed a random sample of 1014 adults aged 18+ by telephone on 23-24 March 2011. Interviews were conducted across the country and the results have been weighted to the profile of all adults. Opinion polls Budget Public sector cuts Liberal-Conservative coalition Economic policy Julian Glover guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Well, now! I hope someone brings this to the attention of the Justice Department (I know, I know, only kidding!). No, I hope someone files a RICO case against the Chamber of Commerce: Earlier this month, Richard Clarke, who served for both Democratic and Republican Presidents, including a stint as the cyber security czar for the Bush administration, denounced the U.S. Chamber of Commerce for plotting with a group of military contractors to hack into progressive groups. Clarke was in DC speaking at a cyber security conference hosted by Symantec. Although Clarke focused his remarks about the growing threat of global cyber terrorism, ThinkProgress spoke to the longtime public servant about the ChamberLeaks story we originally broke . According to documents first reported by ThinkProgress, the U.S. Chamber of Commerce’s attorneys began working with three military contractors — Berico, HB Gary, and Palantir — to come up with a proposal to discredit groups like ThinkProgress, the SEIU, StopTheChamber.com, MoveOn.org, and others. The tactics proposed included spying on families, using malware computer viruses to steal private information, using fake documents to embarrass liberals, and creating fake identities to infiltrate their targets. Clarke denounced the scandal in no uncertain terms. Noting accurately that the Chamber “took foreign money in the last election,” a story also uncovered by ThinkProgress , Clarke said the Chamber’s attorneys had conspired to commit a “felony”: FANG: Hi. You talked a lot about classifying and recognizing cyber security threats, but you mostly focused on foreign threats. I’m curious about a story that broke last month, that the US Chamber of Commerce, the world’s largest trade association, based here in DC, had contracted or attempted to contract military defense firms like HB Gary Federal, Palantir, and Berico, to develop proposals to use the same type of cyber warfare tactics normally reserved for Jihadi websites against left-wing activists, trade — labor unions, and left of center think tanks here in America. What do you think about that type of threat from a lobbyist or a corporation targeting political enemies, or perceived enemies here in the US? CLARKE: I think it’s a violation of 10USC. I think it’s a felony, and I think they should go to jail. You call them a large trade association, I call them a large political action group that took foreign money in the last election. But be that as it may, if you in the United States, if any American citizen anywhere in the world, because this is an extraterritorial law, so don’t think you can go to Bermuda and do it, if any American citizen anywhere in the world engages in unauthorized penetration, or identity theft, accessing a number through identity theft purposes, that’s a felony and if the Chamber of Commerce wants to try that, that’s fine with me because the FBI will be on their doorstep in a matter of hours.
Continue reading …Question Time host warns that people could ‘come to regret’ the advent of the electoral TV debates They were greeted as the most important innovation in television coverage of a general election for a generation. But David Dimbleby, the host of BBC1′s flagship political programme Question Time, has questioned whether the hugely popular TV party leader debates were a good thing after all. Dimbleby, who hosted the BBC’s edition of the live head-to-heads between Gordon Brown, David Cameron and Nick Clegg last year, used an awards ceremony on Friday to warn that people could “come to regret” the advent of the TV debates, which look set to become a permanent fixture of the UK political landscape. “The debates certainly were an innovation. They will change the way electoral campaigns are conducted, not necessarily entirely for the better,” said Dimbleby in a video message to the Broadcasting Press Guild awards in central London , where the party leader debates won the innovation prize. “In one way they are odd because we don’t have a presidential system in Britain. We have a parliamentary system. We don’t elect prime ministers, we elect parliaments and MPs; we have after all got a coalition now,” he added. “And looking back on it we introduced the debates as the three men who want to be prime minister. What are we going to do at the next election? Maybe say the two men who want to be prime minister and the one man who wants to be deputy prime minister.” Dimbleby said he also had “doubts on another score”. “I would hate it if these debates stop people taking part in the kind of thing we do on Question Time. During the campaign the party leaders come in, face the voters and make their case and face fierce criticism from them,” he added. “So as an innovation we have to be a bit cautious. It was fun to do – I was lucky to be third on, actually all I had to do was try and remember the next person to speak which wasn’t always that easy. “But that said it’s a big innovation, a big change, an exciting event and I am really grateful for this prize. I just hope it’s not one of those things that you could come to regret what you wish for.” But his concerns were batted away by Sky News’s political editor Adam Boulton. “All the research shows they engage people and engage young people in the political process,” said Boulton after the awards at the Theatre Royal, Drury Lane. “I don’t think they distort the political process and I hope they are going to happen again,” he added. “Obviously everyone has their own views. I think we would all like to experiment and innovate with the formats and do slightly different things. All that depends on having the confidence of the parties to do it.” Boulton said Dimbleby had “covered the political process for god knows how long, he obviously has some thoughts on the impact [of the debates] on the political process… It’s an interesting question given his age and all that whether he is going to be around for the next election anyway.” Dimbleby’s views did not appear to be shared either by the BBC’s head of political programmes and analysis, Sue Inglish, who commented at the end of the Question Time presenter’s recorded message: “That’s very David, is it not?” Inglish said it had been a “great honour” to be involved in organising the debates, which she said had been watched by nearly 22 million people, describing the combined audience as “quite extraordinary”. The first ever UK televised leaders’ debate, broadcast on ITV1 on 15 April last year, was watched by an average audience of 9.4 million viewers, a 37% share of the audience beating both Coronation Street and EastEnders . The second, broadcast across Sky News, the BBC News channel and Sky 3, had a combined audience of 4.1 million on 22 April , while the third – broadcast on BBC1 and hosted by Dimbleby – drew 8.4 million viewers . The debates were only made possible following prolonged negotiations between broadcasters and political parties which resulted in a 76-point pact on the format they would take place . Dimbleby has also recently expressed concern at changes to BBC1′s Question Time , which will move from London to a new base in Glasgow. • To contact the MediaGuardian news desk email editor@mediaguardian.co.uk or phone 020 3353 3857. For all other inquiries please call the main Guardian switchboard on 020 3353 2000. If you are writing a comment for publication, please mark clearly “for publication”. • To get the latest media news to your desktop or mobile, follow MediaGuardian on Twitter and Facebook David Dimbleby Television industry John Plunkett guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …32-year-old mother of three has faced death threats and prison, but devotion to cause has earned international acclaim Tawakul Karman, a 32-year-old mother of three, may seem an unlikely leader of the fight to overthrow the president of Yemen. But the outspoken journalist and human rights activist has long been a thorn in Ali Abdullah Saleh’s side, agitating for press freedoms and staging weekly sit-ins to demand the release of political prisoners from jail – a place she has been several times herself. Now inspired by the uprising in Tunisia and the resignation of Hosni Mubarak in Egypt, she finds herself at the head of a popular protest movement which is shaking the Yemeni regime to its core. “With two civil wars, an al-Qaida presence and 40% unemployment, what else is President Saleh waiting for? He should leave office now,” she says, claiming that Yemen, like Tunisia and Egypt, needs an end to a dictatorship in the guise of a presidency. “This revolution is inevitable, the people have endured dictatorship, corruption, poverty and unemployment for years and now the whole thing is exploding,” she says. Karman has many grievances against her government but it was a sheikh’s tyranny against villagers in Ibb, a governorate south of the capital, that ignited her activism. “I watched as families were thrown off their land by a corrupt tribal leader. They were a symbol to me of the injustice faced by so many in Yemen,” she says. “It dawned on me that nothing could change this regime, only protest.” While she identifies herself first and foremost as a campaigner for Yemen’s alienated youth, she is also a member of Yemen’s leading Islamic opposition party, the Islah, a group that has caused alarm in the west, mainly because of its most notorious member, Abdul Majeed al-Zindani, a former Osama bin Laden adviser considered a terrorist by the Americans. Karman has a mixed relationship with the Islah. She says it was the best party in Yemen for supporting female members but last October she ran into trouble after publishing a paper condemning ultra-conservative party members for blocking a bill that would make it illegal to marry girls under the age of 17. “The extremist people hate me. They speak about me in the mosques and pass round leaflets condemning me as un-Islamic. They say I’m trying to take women away from their houses.” Some of the student protest leaders have accused her and her party of trying to hijack their movement to make personal bids for power. Karman says: “Our party needs the youth but the youth also need the parties to help them organise. Neither will succeed in overthrowing this regime without the other. We don’t want the international community to label our revolution an Islamic one.” At the protests, her husband, Mohammed, can be seen at by her side, patiently answering her phone while she gives interviews to al-Jazeera television and shakes the hands of tribesmen. “You can’t imagine the respect people give me when I’m outside,” she says. “All the people respect me, even tribes and soldiers. They stop and salute me. I faced many obstacles but I overcame them,” she says. Last year, a woman tried to stab her with a jambiya, a traditional Yemeni dagger, at one of the demonstrations. Karman says her crowds of supporters helped her survive the attack. Like most Yemeni women, Karman used to wear the full face-covering niqab but she dropped it a few years ago when it began “getting in the way” of her activism. She remembers unveiling in public for the first time, minutes before stepping up to deliver a speech at a human rights conference in Washington. “I discovered that wearing the veil is not suitable for a woman who wants to work in activism and the public domain,” she says. “People need to see you, to associate and relate to you. It is not stated in my religion to wear the veil; it is a traditional practice so I took it off.” Now Karman wears just a headscarf. Today, she wears a long plain black abaya with beaded cuffs and a pink, flowered scarf. On other days, she dresses head to toe in bright pink. Her advice for women is not to wait for permission before demanding rights: “If you go to the protests now, you will see something you never saw before: hundreds of women. They shout and sing, they even sleep there in tents. This is not just a political revolution, it’s a social revolution.” Her tireless campaigning has earned her international acclaim and devoted admirers around the world. Her seven Facebook pages (she claims six were created by the government) are filled with messages of support and admiration, many from exiled Yemenis. In 2010, she was nominated for a US state department woman of courage award. The government has used a carrot and stick approach to try to tame her. She was promised a position in government as well as financial compensation last year, but when she said no, death threats started arriving. “I was threatened through phone calls, letters, even text messages. They said I’d be imprisoned or even killed if I did not stop causing inconvenience. But I consider taking my right to expression away far worse than any form of physical violence,” she says. Karman smiles when asked if she would consider running for president once Saleh stepped down. “My aim for now is to lead a peaceful revolution to remove this regime,” she says. “I think if I can be in the street with the people I can achieve more than if I am the president.” Yemen Middle East Arab and Middle East unrest Protest Tom Finn guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …A brief guide to key facts everyone should know about Syria 1. Greater Syria: Syria was the name once applied to most of the territory on the eastern side of the Mediterranean Sea and in the seventh century it became the seat of the Umayyad caliphate . The smaller modern state of Syria – adjoining Turkey, Iraq, Jordan, Israel and Lebanon – began as a French mandate when the Ottoman empire was broken up after the first world war. It became independent in 1946. Its capital, Damascus, is one of the world’s oldest continuously inhabited cities. 2. Order of the Ba’ath: The Ba’ath party , which has dominated Syrian politics since seizing power in 1963, was founded in 1947 as a pan-Arab nationalist and socialist “renaissance” movement. Its slogan is “unity, freedom, socialism”. Under President Hafez al-Assad (1971–2000), the Ba’athists consolidated central government and brought a measure of stability to the country – though at a high cost in terms of repression. 3. President Bashar: Bashar al-Assad was in London, pursuing a career in ophthalmology when his elder brother, Basil – heir apparent to the presidency – died in a car crash in 1994. Bashar was recalled to be groomed for power. When his father died in 2000, Bashar was made head of the army and leader of the Ba’ath party. But at 34, he was too young to become president under the Syrian constitution. The age qualification was hastily revised and he was “elected” president in a referendum. His wife, Asma Akhras , was born in Britain to Syrian parents. She formerly worked as an investment banker at JP Morgan. 4. The occupied Golan: The Golan Heights, a mountainous and strategically import area bordering the Sea of Galilee, was captured by Israel during the 1967 war. Part of it was handed back after the 1973 war, but the return of the remaining territory has been one of the Syrian regime’s principal goals ever since. There is a spot on the ceasefire line known as Shouting Valley where Syrians use megaphones to hail their relatives on the other side. 5. The Hama massacre: In 1982 Syrian forces launched a brutal assault on the city of Hama to quell an uprising by the Muslim Brotherhood, killing thousands. Memories of the event, which is rarely mentioned publicly in Syria, continue to cast a long shadow over political opposition to the regime. 6. Elegant lines: Syria has some of the world’s most beautiful railway stations. 7. Syria and Lebanon: Lebanon was separated from Syria under the French mandate, since it was largely a Christian enclave, and became officially independent in 1943. From Damascus, Lebanon still tends to be viewed as part of Syria’s traditional sphere of influence. Syria used its military to stabilise Lebanon after the 1975-91 civil war but also meddled extensively in Lebanese politics. Protests and diplomatic pressure after the assassination of former prime minister Rafik Hariri in 2005 forced Syria (which was widely blamed for the attack) to withdraw its troops. However, Syrian influence continues, with Lebanese politics divided into the pro-Syrian “March 8″ camp and the “March 14″ camp backed by Saudi Arabia and the US. 8. Hooray for the president: During public speeches in Syria, it is customary to applaud each time the name of President Assad is mentioned. 9. Religion and the Alawites: The Alawites are a secretive religious sect usually regarded as an offshoot of Shia Islam. In Syria they are a tiny minority but, through the president’s family and others in senior positions, they are dominant within the regime. About 74% of Syria’s inhabitants are Sunni Muslims; Shia Muslims (including the Alawites and Ismailis) account for 13%, various Christian groups 10%, and Druze 3%. Jewish communities have existed in Syria for centuries but today their number is extremely small – probably no more than a few dozen people. 10. Crony capitalism: Despite its socialist origins, the Syrian regime is plagued by corruption and crony capitalism – especially involving relatives of the president. A particular target of protesters is Rami Makhlouf, Assad’s cousin, who was sanctioned by the US Treasury in 2008 on the grounds that he “improperly benefits from and aids the public corruption of Syrian regime officials”. 11. Kurdish aspirations: Syria has a marginalised Kurdish minority who are thought to number about 1.75 million – roughly 10% of the total population – and the regime has made persistent efforts over the years to Arabise them. Many of the Kurds, meanwhile, aspire to have their own independent state including other Kurds from Turkey, Iraq and Iran. Kurdish discontent flares up from time to time, though the regime generally denies that Syria has problems relating to ethnicity. 12. Road to Damascus: It was on the road to Damascus , according to the Bible, that St Paul was dazzled by a heavenly light and converted to Christianity. He later escaped arrest in the city by being lowered from a window in a basket . 13. Cold steel: Swords made from Damascus steel have been much prized over the centuries. According to written sources , blades were prepared by heating and then cooling them rapidly – sometimes by plunging them into the urine of red-headed boys or into the body of a muscular slave. 14. Shia pilgrims: Syria is a popular destination for Shia pilgrims from Iran. In Damascus, many visit the shrine of Sayidda Zeinab (granddaughter of the prophet Muhammad and daughter of Ali, the fourth caliph). Historical and religious ties are part of the background to Syria’s current relationship with Iran, though both countries see themselves as stalwart opponents of American and Israeli influence in the region. 15. Syria and Hezbollah: Syria (along with Iran) supports the armed Lebanese Shia movement, Hezbollah . Besides providing a means to wield influence in Lebanon, this gives Syria an important bargaining chip in any future negotiations with Israel. 16. Political suicide: The disgraced former prime minister Mahmoud Zuabi allegedly shot himself in 2000 when police arrived to arrest him on corruption charges. Five years later, the interior minister Ghazi Kanaan also apparently shot himself in mysterious circumstances. 17. Silken threads: Damascus was once a major centre for weaving and trading in textiles. Damask – using an ancient technique for weaving patterns into cloth – derives its name from the city. 18. Crusader territory: Parts of Syria were conquered by the Crusaders. The 11th century Crusader fortress Krak des Chevaliers – still remarkably well preserved – is now a major tourist attraction. 19. The Argentinian connection: About 1.3m Argentinians are of Syrian or Lebanese origin, many of them having settled there during the 19th century. The parents of former Argentinian president Carlos Menem came from the Syrian village of Yabrud. 20. Assault in Deraa: Deraa, the centre of the 2011 uprising, is where TE Lawrence (“Lawrence of Arabia”) was captured during the first world war while reconnoitring in disguise and, according to his account, was severely beaten and sexually abused by the Turkish governor. The incident affected Lawrence deeply and is said to have awakened his masochistic tendencies which later resulted in him paying military colleagues to beat him. Syria Middle East Brian Whitaker guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Pink Floyd guitarist’s son alleged to have thrown bin at car containing prince’s bodyguards during student fees protest Charlie Gilmour, son of the Pink Floyd guitarist David Gilmour, has been committed for trial over the attack on a royal convoy of cars during a student fees protest. The 21-year-old Cambridge University student made a brief three-minute appearance at City of Westminster magistrates court where his case was adjourned to Southwark crown court on 26 April. Gilmour is accused of violent disorder during the student tuition fees protest on 9 December, when a car carrying Prince Charles and his wife, the Duchess of Cornwall, was attacked on its way to the royal variety performance in London’s West End. He allegedly threw a rubbish bin at one vehicle containing the prince’s security officers, and sat on the bonnet of the same car. He was remanded on bail with the condition he must not enter the City of Westminster without approval. His solicitor indicated the charge would be contested. Gilmour, who spoke only to confirm his name, address and date of birth, was among thousands of people who protested in Trafalgar Square and Parliament Square and was photographed hanging from a union flag on the Cenotaph during the march. He issued an apology the day after the demonstrations, describing it as a “moment of idiocy”, and added he did not realise the Whitehall monument commemorated Britain’s war dead. Gilmour’s biological father is the poet and playwright Heathcote Williams but he was adopted by the rock star when his mother, writer and journalist Polly Samson, remarried. Protest Student politics Tuition fees Students Crime London Prince Charles Caroline Davies guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Barack Obama’s distant Irish cousin (eight times removed) helps village get spruced up as US president returns to his Irish roots President Barack Obama’s Irish cousin (eight times removed) toured either side of the tiny village of Moneygall, picking out pavements to be repaired and houses to be repainted in preparation for the visit of the most powerful man on Earth. With a population of just 300, the residents will be heavily outnumbered by the US president’s own entourage when Obama returns to his Irish roots in May. The village is bisected by the old Dublin to Limerick road, where part of the old homestead of Obama’s Irish ancestors still stands. Moneygall has become a tourist trap two months before Air Force One touches down in the Republic. Henry Healy, accompanied by officials from Offaly county council, was helping to spruce up the village for Obama’s arrival. Since the president announced on St Patrick’s Day that he would visit Ireland in two months’ time Obamamania has been building in this quiet corner of the Irish midlands. On Friday night the locals held their first public meeting to discuss the trip. Healy, who traces his family links back to the president’s Irish ancestors, the Kearneys, was a guest of Obama when he was sworn into office in Washington DC. The president’s great-great-great grandfather (on his mother’s side) is said to have been born in Ireland. “Our family connection is very distant but … we do share the same lineage,” said Healy. “Our ancestry is shared by the Healy and the Kearney families way back to 1761. Sarah Healy would be five-eighths grandmother of Barack Obama. I still think it’s sort of surreal to say you have some connection to the president of the United States. ” Healy said the Obama connection had brightened up the lives of Moneygall’s people at a time of national economic hardship. “When the primaries started in 2008 our village wasn’t like the rest of Ireland. We were not talking about recession or doom and gloom. We were talking about the American presidential campaign all the way from Iowa to the White House. It was a massive boost to our morale in these dark times.” No US presidential visit to Ireland would be complete without a photo of him supping a pint at the bar. JFK, Ronald Reagan and Bill Clinton have all been snapped by the world’s cameras knocking back beer amid cheering Irish locals. Inside Olli Hayes’s bar on Main Street Obama memorabilia dominates the walls, with framed pictures from his presidential campaign, paintings of the first black US president and the latest addition, a cast-iron bust of him at the end of the bar. “I hope nobody lifts that up one day and hits me on the head with it like they did with the bust of Queen Victoria in that murder on EastEnders,” jokes Hayes. Another stop on Obama’s Moneygall tour will be Templeharry Anglican church, just over a mile outside the village. It was here that Church of Ireland minister Stephen Neill unearthed Obama’s roots in 2007. Inside the church, built around 1800, Neill produces the dust-laden parish record books which he used to trace Obama’s lineage to the village. “We have the baptismal records which include the Kearney relatives and back in April 2007 it transpired that this lineage related to Barack Obama through Falmouth Kearney, who emigrated to America. So on these pews, inside this very church, the president’s antecedents on his Irish side worshipped here on a regular basis.” Obama’s links to the Church of Ireland also stretch further south to Kilkenny city, where another branch of the family claims a connection to him. Jane de Montmorency Wright said she had traced Obama to the former Anglican bishop of Kilkenny, John Kearney. “The president’s ancestor was a bishop here in Kilkenny city where he is buried in St Canice’s cathedral, so there will be plenty for him to see,” she said. Hayes and Moneygall’s other 299 residents are expecting droves of other Americans to follow in the president’s footsteps. A few hours earlier two couples from Chicago, the base from which Obama launched his presidential bid, turned up to have their pictures taken outside the bar. Barack Obama Ireland Family Europe Henry McDonald guardian.co.uk
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