Sure, why shouldn’t they chop even more? It’s not as if there are any real people on the other end of those numbers: Senate Budget Committee Chairman Kent Conrad (D-N.D.) announced Wednesday that Democrats had finally reached an agreement on a budget plan. His announcement came as the leadership met with President Obama to inform him that their members had unified around a message for the debt-limit showdown. Conrad’s proposal, which he said he plans to introduce as soon as next week, would cut more than $4 trillion from the deficit, a greater reduction than what Obama’s fiscal commission had recommended. “We’ve reached an agreement after weeks of work,” Conrad told The Hill on Wednesday afternoon. “I think it’s big.”
Continue reading …Eurozone finance ministers scrap planned meeting in Brussels on Sunday for phone talks on Saturday evening Eurozone finance ministers have cancelled a crisis meeting planned for Sunday because they need more time – as much as two more months – to nail down the details of a second bailout for Greece, officials said Friday. They will, however, hold a video conference on Saturday to sign off on a new loan instalment that will keep Greece from bankruptcy over the summer. Whereas the payout of the next loan instalment from Greece’s first bailout was a near certainty after Athens voted through new austerity measures this week, talks were still ongoing over a second rescue package that would support Greece over the longer-term. “It would have been too ambitious to get the deal [on a second package of rescue loans] done by Sunday,” said a eurozone official. Several key aspects of a new bailout, such as the contribution of banks and other investment funds, are still up in the air – although eurozone leaders said last week that there will be new financing for the struggling country. The ministers will continue their discussions on the new programme at their next scheduled meeting on 11 July, but getting everything done by then may also prove difficult, the official said. He was speaking on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the talks on Greece. A second eurozone official said that while the cornerstones of the new programme have to be drawn up soon, it may not be finalized until the next Greek loan instalment is due in September. The official was also speaking on condition of anonymity. A spokesman for Jean-Claude Juncker, the prime minister of Luxembourg and chairman of the eurogroup, said earlier that a video conference had been scheduled for Saturday evening, but didn’t provide a reason for the change in the plan. He said he didn’t know whether a statement would be released after the call. The ministers have to sign of on a €12bn (£10bn) loan instalment of Greece’s existing bailout, without which the debt-ridden country would default in July. Greece this week fulfilled the preconditions for getting the money by passing unpopular austerity and privatization programmes through parliament. “It is good that the eurogroup procedure is being speeded up,” said a Greek finance ministry official. “The voting of the midterm programme and the implementation bill is acting internationally in favour of the country’s credibility and is the basis for tomorrow’s discussion at the Eurogroup.” The official declined to be named in line with department policy. European debt crisis European banks Greece Europe guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Former head of IMF and leading French presidential candidate Dominique Strauss-Kahn appears at bail hearing as reports claim sexual assault case against him could be close to collapse 3.56pm: My colleague Dominic Rushe is in court now. He says the court is packed, although the crowd is smaller than last time, and there are no maids outside protesting. “It’s bank holiday weekend [independence day, 4 July, is on Monday] so everyone wants out of her asap. James Cox, law professor at Duke University, told Dominic: “This has got to be the prosecution’s worse nightmare. You do what you think is right and then your witness goes south on you.” He said the prosecution was right to act decisively and quickly on the case when the charges were brought and could not be blamed for the media furore that followed. “You can not have a chambermaid bringing allegations against an aristocrat like Strauss-Kahn without there being this find of frenzy,” he said. But, said Cox, given subsequent developments he said he was surprised that the prosecution had not done more homework on their witness ahead of making such strong statements about the case and the strength of their witness. 3.53pm: The Associated Press news agency is now reporting that the New York district attorney will release Strauss-Kahn without bail, citing an “AP source”. 3.52pm: The Wall Street Journal is reporting that prosecutors have agreed to modify Dominique Strauss-Kahn’s bail and end his house arrest. 3.50pm: Strauss-Kahn is arriving at court now. 3.49pm: Strauss-Kahn is on his way to court. CNN has just been showing pictures of him and his wife leaving their residence to head to court. 3.33pm: Dominic Rushe writes that the local New York media is being let into the court first, much to the annoyance of the international media. 3.31pm: In a clear-headed piece at the Atlantic , Andrew Cohen draws out what he reckons is the key point from the New York Times’s article. It will be virtually impossible to neutralise this (from the Times’s piece): “According to the two officials, the woman had a phone conversation with an incarcerated man within a day of her encounter with Mr. Strauss-Kahn in which she discussed the possible benefits of pursuing the charges against him. The conversation was recorded.” If this is true, it establishes a motive for the woman to (falsely) accuse Kahn of rape after a consensual sexual encounter. It is enough, alone, to establish reasonable doubt? Prosecutors seem to think so and they are probably right. This accusation comes from the New York Times piece and cannot be corroborated by the Guardian. 3.24pm: Paul Harris in New York adds that CNN is reporting that Strauss-Kahn’s criminal charges might be reduced to a misdemeanour. “That means DSK will have his bail reduced greatly or even removed altogether and he will be free to travel throughout the US. Eventually, defence sources tell the channel, the defence will push to have all the charges dropped.” 3.23pm: My colleague Dominic Rushe writes from New York. He says there are around 200 journalists lining up at the court to get in and jockeying for position: French, German, British, American. Dominic writes: “Sympathy seems to be with the maid still in the line. She may have lied about her past but the question remains: was she assaulted?” 3.17pm: Just to translate “on his own recognizance” ( see 3.06pm ), it is a term used when the defendant is released but promises to attend all court proceedings and not to engage in any illegal activity or prohibited conduct. A financial bond is often set, but not demanded unless the court orders it forfeited. 3.10pm: Reuters has interviewed the brother of the woman who has accused Dominique Strauss-Kahn of sexual assault and attempted rape. He said she was the victim of a smear campaign. Mamoudou, whose surname is being withheld to protect his sister’s identity, said from Guinea: “These are lies that have been invented to discredit my sister.” 3.06pm: Bloomberg news is already tweeting that prosecutors have agreed to release Strauss-Kahn prosecutors “on his own recognizance”. The court hearing will begin in around an hour and a half. 3.05pm: In court in May, bail was set for Dominique Strauss-Kahn at $1m (£624,000) in cash with a $5m insurance bond. He was required to surrender all his travel documents and remain under house arrest in Manhattan under 24-hour armed guard. Stringent conditions included an electronic bracelet that sent a signal to a security company and a police station the moment Strauss-Kahn left the property, and video cameras to monitor him inside the property. The conditions are costing Mr. Strauss-Kahn $250,000 a month. The New York Times says that under the relaxed conditions of bail to be requested today, the district attorney’s office would retain Strauss-Kahn’s passport but he would be permitted to travel within the United States. 2.55pm: Dominique Strauss-Kahn will appear at the state supreme court in Manhattan this afternoon for a hearing at which Justice Michael Obus is expected to consider easing the former IMF chief’s bail conditions. The hearing comes as reports claim the sexual assault case against the man once considered a leading Socialist candidate for the French presidency is on the verge of collapse. As my colleagues Ed Pilkington, Dominic Rushe and Angelique Chrisafis report , there were claims in the New York Times last night that significant problems had emerged in the case against Strauss-Kahn. These could see the conditions of his house arrest in New York being relaxed with immediate effect. The paper claims “major holes” in the case will be admitted in court as early as today. The claims have thrown French politics into disarray , the second time this case has done so. Strauss-Kahn, a Socialist, was seen as the leading candidate to beat Nicolas Sarkozy in next year’s presidential elections until the allegations against him dramatically emerged in May. Strauss-Kahn is accused of sexually assaulting and attempting to rape a maid at the Sofitel hotel in Manhattan on 14 May. France’s former Socialist prime minister Lionel Jospin described the latest developments as a “thunderbolt” as allies speculated Strauss-Kahn may now be able to run after all. His job at the IMF has been taken by former French finance minister Christine Lagarde. This week, the Socialist party launched its primary race for a candidate on the basis that Strauss-Kahn’s political career was over. But the dramatic developments in New York have prompted some members to call on the party to suspend the process. Citing “two well-placed law enforcement officials”, the New York Times claims Strauss-Kahn’s “accuser has repeatedly lied”. Although forensic tests found unambiguous evidence of a sexual encounter between Mr Strauss-Kahn, a French politician, and the woman, prosecutors now do not believe much of what the accuser has told them about the circumstances or about herself … Senior prosecutors met with lawyers for Mr Strauss-Kahn on Thursday and provided details about their findings, and the parties are discussing whether to dismiss the felony charges. In addition to the New York Times claims, the Associated Press has reported that prosecutors have raised questions about the woman’s credibility and background. But Kenneth Thompson, a lawyer for the woman (who is not being named), told the NYT: “Nothing changes one very important fact, namely, that Dominique Strauss-Kahn violently sexually assaulted the victim inside of that hotel room at the Sofitel.” Here’s a timeline of the case so far , courtesy of my colleague Richard Nelsson: 13 May: Dominque Strauss-Kahn, head of the IMF, checks into $3,000 a night suite, room 2806, at the luxury Sofitel hotel in midtown Manhattan. 14 May: At around midday, a 32-year-old maid enters the suite, which she thought unoccupied, and an attack by the Frenchman is alleged to have occurred after she opened the bedroom door and found him naked. She reports what happened to her supervisor who calls the police. 14 May: At around 4.40pm Strauss-Kahn is pulled off a Paris-bound flight minutes before take-off from New York’s JFK airport and arrested . He is accused of a sexual assault on a maid in his suite. He asks “What is this about?” and 15 minutes later, says ” I have diplomatic immunity “. 15 May: The 62-year-old economist is charged with “criminal sexual act, unlawful imprisonment, attempted rape” of the so far unidentified woman employee of the hotel. 16 May: He enters Manhattan Criminal Court for a hearing . A New York judge accepts the prosecution argument that Strauss-Kahn is a flight risk and orders him detained without bail in New York’s Rikers Island jail . 17 May: Strauss-Kahn is reportedly under suicide watch on Rikers Island. US treasury secretary Timothy Geithner says the Frenchman is “obviously not in the position to run the IMF”. 18 May: The victim, an immigrant from the west African nation of Guinea, testifies behind closed doors at a grand jury hearing. Denies she had consensual relations with Strauss-Kahn. The New York police conduct forensic search of hotel suite. 18 May: Strauss-Kahn resigns as managing director of the IMF and denies all the allegations. 19 May: He is formally indicted by the grand jury and the seven charges against him are confirmed. Faces a potential maximum of 74 years prison if convicted. Bail is granted after he agrees to post $1m cash and $5m bond and submit to round-the-clock surveillance under house arrest 20 May: Released from Rikers and moves into an apartment near Wall Street, before moving on to a townhouse rented for a reported $50,000 a month. 23 May: Newspaper reports suggest that traces of Strauss-Kahn’s semen have been found on the maid’s shirt. 27 May: French president Nicolas Sarkozy calls it a “sad” affair. 6 June: At a brief hearing at Manhattan criminal court, the former head of the IMF pleads not guilty to allegations of attempted rape and the sexual assault of a hotel maid. His lawyers say they need six weeks to assess evidence collected by the US authorities. Hundreds of hotel workers gather outside the courthouse roaring their disapproval at Strauss-kahn by shouting “shame on you”. 28 June: Christine Lagarde selected to serve as IMF managing director. Dominique Strauss-Kahn France IMF United States Paul Owen guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Judges will consider application to stay judgment meaning officers can no longer bail suspects for more than four days without charging or releasing them The supreme court is to consider suspending a legal ruling on police bail that overturns 25 years of police practice. A court spokeswoman said three judges will consider the application to stay the judgment – which means officers can no longer bail suspects for more than four days without either charging or releasing them – on Monday. If granted, the move would put the ruling on hold until a full appeal is heard at the same court on 25 July. There will be no public hearing on Monday, with the three justices considering the application, by Greater Manchester police, in private. The Home Office was criticised on Thursday for not acting sooner to reverse the ruling, which could hamper tens of thousands of investigations and leave officers doing their job with “one hand tied behind their back”. The criticism came after the policing minister, Nick Herbert, told MPs that emergency legislation to reverse the ruling would be brought forward because he feared an appeal to the supreme court would take too long. The shadow home secretary, Yvette Cooper, said the Home Office was “clearly in chaos”, adding: “The home secretary is still failing to sort the problem.” “Shocking delays and home office incompetence are still putting investigations at risk and jeopardising justice for victims.” She said ministers “confirmed that the home office has known about this for over a month yet they still haven’t finished the emergency legislation, and the police still don’t know what they are supposed to do with suspects today”. “That means thousands of ongoing investigations are being jeopardised,” she added. “The catalogue of incompetence is deeply worrying.” Herbert admitted that officials were told of the oral judgment in May, but its full impact only became clear when the written judgment was handed down on 17 June and ministers were alerted on 24 June . The row started when district judge Jonathan Finestein, sitting at Salford magistrates court, refused a routine application from Greater Manchester police for a warrant of further detention of Paul Hookway, a murder suspect, on 5 April. High court judge Mr Justice McCombe confirmed the ruling in a judicial review on 19 May, which meant time spent on police bail counted towards the maximum 96-hour limit of pre-charge detention. Afterwards, Home Office officials were told about the problems. Herbert told MPs: “The police believe that the judgment will have a serious impact on their ability to investigate crime. “In some cases, it will mean that suspects who would normally be released on bail are detained for longer. It is likely that, in most forces, there will not be enough capacity to detain everybody in police cells. “In other cases, it risks impeding the police to such an extent that the investigation will have to be stopped because the detention time has run out. The judgment will also affect the ability of the police to enforce bail conditions.” He said the judgment “upsets a careful balance which has stood for a quarter of a century and impedes the police from doing their job”, adding: “That is why it must be reversed.” About 85,200 people are on bail in England and Wales at any one time, and the common practice in most major inquiries of releasing suspects on bail and calling them back for questioning weeks later is “pretty much a dead duck” following the ruling, police chiefs said. Police Yvette Cooper Labour Liberal-Conservative coalition guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Judges will consider application to stay judgment meaning officers can no longer bail suspects for more than four days without charging or releasing them The supreme court is to consider suspending a legal ruling on police bail that overturns 25 years of police practice. A court spokeswoman said three judges will consider the application to stay the judgment – which means officers can no longer bail suspects for more than four days without either charging or releasing them – on Monday. If granted, the move would put the ruling on hold until a full appeal is heard at the same court on 25 July. There will be no public hearing on Monday, with the three justices considering the application, by Greater Manchester police, in private. The Home Office was criticised on Thursday for not acting sooner to reverse the ruling, which could hamper tens of thousands of investigations and leave officers doing their job with “one hand tied behind their back”. The criticism came after the policing minister, Nick Herbert, told MPs that emergency legislation to reverse the ruling would be brought forward because he feared an appeal to the supreme court would take too long. The shadow home secretary, Yvette Cooper, said the Home Office was “clearly in chaos”, adding: “The home secretary is still failing to sort the problem.” “Shocking delays and home office incompetence are still putting investigations at risk and jeopardising justice for victims.” She said ministers “confirmed that the home office has known about this for over a month yet they still haven’t finished the emergency legislation, and the police still don’t know what they are supposed to do with suspects today”. “That means thousands of ongoing investigations are being jeopardised,” she added. “The catalogue of incompetence is deeply worrying.” Herbert admitted that officials were told of the oral judgment in May, but its full impact only became clear when the written judgment was handed down on 17 June and ministers were alerted on 24 June . The row started when district judge Jonathan Finestein, sitting at Salford magistrates court, refused a routine application from Greater Manchester police for a warrant of further detention of Paul Hookway, a murder suspect, on 5 April. High court judge Mr Justice McCombe confirmed the ruling in a judicial review on 19 May, which meant time spent on police bail counted towards the maximum 96-hour limit of pre-charge detention. Afterwards, Home Office officials were told about the problems. Herbert told MPs: “The police believe that the judgment will have a serious impact on their ability to investigate crime. “In some cases, it will mean that suspects who would normally be released on bail are detained for longer. It is likely that, in most forces, there will not be enough capacity to detain everybody in police cells. “In other cases, it risks impeding the police to such an extent that the investigation will have to be stopped because the detention time has run out. The judgment will also affect the ability of the police to enforce bail conditions.” He said the judgment “upsets a careful balance which has stood for a quarter of a century and impedes the police from doing their job”, adding: “That is why it must be reversed.” About 85,200 people are on bail in England and Wales at any one time, and the common practice in most major inquiries of releasing suspects on bail and calling them back for questioning weeks later is “pretty much a dead duck” following the ruling, police chiefs said. Police Yvette Cooper Labour Liberal-Conservative coalition guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …In the third of his series Jason Burke reports on growing tensions as clergy oppose incremental moves away from conservative Islam Part two: ‘A very different society from Egypt, Tunisia or Syria’ Part one: Stability, security and Iran On a Friday at one o’clock, Sheikh Saad Bin Naser al-Shethri is leading prayers in a small mosque in an upmarket neighbourhood of Riyadh, the Saudi capital. The faithful fill two floors, listening to the cleric’s sermon on the true sense of the traditional greeting ” salaam aleikum ” – peace be upon you. This, Shethri says, means love thy neighbour. It is a moderate message from a man who even in fiercely conservative Saudi Arabia, home to the most rigorous strands of Muslim practice in the world, is considered a hardliner. Only 18 months ago, Shethri, 46, was fired from the country’s high council of religious scholars by King Abdullah, who has ruled the kingdom since 2005. His offence was to have criticised the king’s decision to allow male and female researchers to work together at the new multibillion pound science university built outside Riyadh. The king had called the university, a key part of Saudi Arabia’s drive towards economic modernisation, a “beacon of tolerance”. Shethri retorted that “mixing [genders] is a great sin and a great evil … When men mix with women, their hearts burn and they will be diverted from their main goal [of] education.” Shethri remains unrepentant. In an interview with the Guardian, his first with a western newspaper, he says the duty of religious scholars is to advise sovereign rulers but also “to make governors fear God if they err from the right path and to remind them of God’s punishment if they continue to err”. In an implicit criticism of the hugely wealthy royal family, Shethri said the Qur’an teaches money should not be admired nor should the rich be envied. The poorer you are, he said, “the less you will have to account for in this life and the next”. Such tensions between the descendants of Abdul Aziz ibn Saud, the tribal chieftain who unified the warring states of the Arabian peninsula to form Saudi Arabia in 1932, and the country’s clerics are not new. Having used fanatical Wahhabi religious fighters to conquer his new kingdom, Saud crushed their subsequent revolt and did a deal with the country’s ultra-conservative clergy that has endured to this day. The religious establishment was allowed substantial independence, the control of key ministries and a share of the wealth of the kingdom. In return, in crisis after crisis, it has come to the aid of the family, buttressing its authority with fatwa – religious opinions. So in 1991, clerics declared US troops could be based in the kingdom. After the 9/11 attacks, in which 15 of the 19 hijackers were Saudis, religious scholars in the kingdom repudiated al-Qaida’s extremism, grudgingly accepted some changes to schoolbooks that encouraged intolerance, and co-operated in restricting the flow of money from Saudi Arabia to radical organisations. This year, as demonstrations unseated leaders in Tunisia and Egypt and threatened many more, they told the faithful that protests against their rulers would be un-Islamic. “Relations between the royal family and the clergy are very good,” says Turki al-Sudeiri, editor of the loyalist al’Riyadh newspaper. But such support is often grudging. Shethri is not the only cleric to dislike the current king’s moves towards incremental reform. The most conservative part of Saudi Arabia is al-Qassem province, a 250-mile drive west across the desert plateau from the capital. Cities here have seen repeated challenges to the authority of the Saud family. There were riots when women’s education was introduced in the 1960s and in the 1990s the province was a base for the “awakening” movement of radical clerics who inspired and influenced Osama bin Laden. Here both the house of al-Saud and establishment clerics close to the current king are seen with unspoken suspicion. From al-Qassem, “Riyadh looks like Paris and [the relatively tolerant port city of] Jeddah looks like Bangkok,” says one Saudi reformer. But there is variety in even al-Qassem’s conservatism. Ibrahim al-Duwaish runs a social science institute in the small town of As Rass. The 41-year-old religious scholar uses an iPhone and says he enjoyed his time in the UK last year, where he admired the orderly traffic and numerous universities – although not public drunkenness at weekends. Once a firebrand reactionary and now seen locally as a relative moderate, he says there is nothing wrong with women driving in theory but that he opposed it in practice because women taking to the road would cause too many accidents. Equally, Duwaish welcomed the change new communications technology has brought to the kingdom as the internet means he can employ women at his institute. They are able to work from home and still avoid contact with men who are not their husbands or immediate family, he says. “If you ask women all over the world if they prefer a mixed environment or to be away from men, they would choose the latter,” Duwaish, whose centre was one of the first to publish a report on domestic violence in the kingdom, told the Guardian. As elsewhere in Saudi Arabia, As Rass has changed immensely since Duwaish was a child. The last four decades here have seen a huge transfer of population from the countryside to small towns and into cities, a leap in material comfort and the demolition of almost every building that pre-dated the vast oil wealth of the 1970s. Forty years ago most women and many men could not read. But there is nostalgia for times past. As Rass was a “quiet town where everybody knew each other”, Duwaish, remembers. “It was so pure, so quiet.” The growing number of heritage projects in Saudi Arabia indicates such sentiments are widespread. The As Rass municipality recently opened a “traditional” museum in the corner of a shopping mall where a former soldier wears traditional dress and makes old-fashioned coffee for visitors who sit on rugs. More than 80 visitors come every day,mainly young people curious about their heritage. The museum is a good initiative, said Duwaish, the cleric, because “when traditions disappear overnight, people react badly”. One such reaction in recent decades has been violent extremism. Saudi Arabia was hit by a series of al-Qaida-inspired attacks between 2003 and 2004, prompting widespread reform of the security services and hundreds of people being rounded up. Some of those responsible were veterans of militant training camps in Afghanistan, others were new recruits. Recent years have been calm, however. “The problem has now almost disappeared,” said Abdulrahman al-Hadlaq, a Ministry of Interior criminologist who works on radical Islam in the kingdom. “Al-Qaida here is dying. Public awareness is much higher, security is stricter.” More than 10,000 people have been arrested on terrorism charges, sometimes on flimsy evidence, human rights campaigners say. Many senior extremists have fled to Yemen. Last week, the trial of alleged militants accused of an assault on a housing compound full of expatriates in 2003 started. Dozens of death sentences are expected. Less serious offenders are dealt with more leniently. Hadlaq runs a team of counsellors, psychologists and clerics who work to rehabilitate former militants at a centre on the outskirts of Riyadh. Since it opened in 2007, hundreds of recently released prisoners, all convicted for militant activity, have “graduated”. Recidivism rates, Hadlaq said, were around 10% for those involved in support activities or who had travelled to Iraq to fight American troops there but approached 25% for the 123 Saudi citizens who had been incarcerated in Guantánamo Bay. Many of these “Gitmo veterans” now head the Ministry of Interior’s wanted list, according to General Mansour al’Turki, a senior official. Several are now leaders of the “al-Qaida in the Arabian peninsula” group, based in Yemen. Yusef al’Rabesh, 32, is one “Gitmo veteran” who has been successfully “rehabilitated”, however. Detained like many others by American troops in Afghanistan in late 2001, he spent seven years in US custody before being released without charge. Rabesh claims he was in Afghanistan looking for his brother, a Taliban fighter. American military authorities said he was a trained combatant. In detention in Afghanistan and then in Cuba, “the [Americans] hit me, dragged me, chained me like a dog”, Rabesh said. “We were treated worse than animals. But the rehabilitation programme took this black experience away.” On his release, the government found Rabesh a job as a manager in a taxi company, a wife in his hometown of Burayda al Qassem province and provided tens of thousands of dollars for the wedding. He now “better understands Islam”, he says. “There are legitimate reasons for jihad in our religion but I have learned that no private person can say that a jihad is justified. It can only be the Islamic scholars who make that decision according to certain conditions,” he said. Last week, Prince Nayef, the most conservative of senior princes and minister of interior, told a local audience that terrorism had “wronged many, damaging the image of Islam, the Arabs and in particular the kingdom of Saudi Arabia.” Nayef is head of the religious police who continue to enforce, even if less brutally and intrusively than previously, Saudi Arabia’s fierce puritanism and is known to be opposed to any major social reforms in the country. The erosion of Saudi Arabia’s deep conservatism is a reality but is neither a uniform nor linear process. It is extremely unlikely even the more moderate elements within the royal family will seek to accelerate the pace of reform and risk alienating the clerical establishment. Should Prince Nayef succeed – he is currently 76, third in line to the throne and eleven years younger than the king – most analysts expect a new reactionary atmosphere. Many Saudis will be pleased. “You have democracy. We have our religion,” said Abdallah al’Utaiba, 32, a camel dealer who listened to the news of the Arab spring uprisings on a radio in a tent in the dusty hinterland on the fringes of Riyadh. “You have lost your traditions. We have not. It is better that it stays that way.” Saudi Arabia King Abdullah Islam Arab and Middle East unrest al-Qaida Global terrorism Religion Middle East Jason Burke guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …In the third of his series Jason Burke reports on growing tensions as clergy oppose incremental moves away from conservative Islam Part two: ‘A very different society from Egypt, Tunisia or Syria’ Part one: Stability, security and Iran On a Friday at one o’clock, Sheikh Saad Bin Naser al-Shethri is leading prayers in a small mosque in an upmarket neighbourhood of Riyadh, the Saudi capital. The faithful fill two floors, listening to the cleric’s sermon on the true sense of the traditional greeting ” salaam aleikum ” – peace be upon you. This, Shethri says, means love thy neighbour. It is a moderate message from a man who even in fiercely conservative Saudi Arabia, home to the most rigorous strands of Muslim practice in the world, is considered a hardliner. Only 18 months ago, Shethri, 46, was fired from the country’s high council of religious scholars by King Abdullah, who has ruled the kingdom since 2005. His offence was to have criticised the king’s decision to allow male and female researchers to work together at the new multibillion pound science university built outside Riyadh. The king had called the university, a key part of Saudi Arabia’s drive towards economic modernisation, a “beacon of tolerance”. Shethri retorted that “mixing [genders] is a great sin and a great evil … When men mix with women, their hearts burn and they will be diverted from their main goal [of] education.” Shethri remains unrepentant. In an interview with the Guardian, his first with a western newspaper, he says the duty of religious scholars is to advise sovereign rulers but also “to make governors fear God if they err from the right path and to remind them of God’s punishment if they continue to err”. In an implicit criticism of the hugely wealthy royal family, Shethri said the Qur’an teaches money should not be admired nor should the rich be envied. The poorer you are, he said, “the less you will have to account for in this life and the next”. Such tensions between the descendants of Abdul Aziz ibn Saud, the tribal chieftain who unified the warring states of the Arabian peninsula to form Saudi Arabia in 1932, and the country’s clerics are not new. Having used fanatical Wahhabi religious fighters to conquer his new kingdom, Saud crushed their subsequent revolt and did a deal with the country’s ultra-conservative clergy that has endured to this day. The religious establishment was allowed substantial independence, the control of key ministries and a share of the wealth of the kingdom. In return, in crisis after crisis, it has come to the aid of the family, buttressing its authority with fatwa – religious opinions. So in 1991, clerics declared US troops could be based in the kingdom. After the 9/11 attacks, in which 15 of the 19 hijackers were Saudis, religious scholars in the kingdom repudiated al-Qaida’s extremism, grudgingly accepted some changes to schoolbooks that encouraged intolerance, and co-operated in restricting the flow of money from Saudi Arabia to radical organisations. This year, as demonstrations unseated leaders in Tunisia and Egypt and threatened many more, they told the faithful that protests against their rulers would be un-Islamic. “Relations between the royal family and the clergy are very good,” says Turki al-Sudeiri, editor of the loyalist al’Riyadh newspaper. But such support is often grudging. Shethri is not the only cleric to dislike the current king’s moves towards incremental reform. The most conservative part of Saudi Arabia is al-Qassem province, a 250-mile drive west across the desert plateau from the capital. Cities here have seen repeated challenges to the authority of the Saud family. There were riots when women’s education was introduced in the 1960s and in the 1990s the province was a base for the “awakening” movement of radical clerics who inspired and influenced Osama bin Laden. Here both the house of al-Saud and establishment clerics close to the current king are seen with unspoken suspicion. From al-Qassem, “Riyadh looks like Paris and [the relatively tolerant port city of] Jeddah looks like Bangkok,” says one Saudi reformer. But there is variety in even al-Qassem’s conservatism. Ibrahim al-Duwaish runs a social science institute in the small town of As Rass. The 41-year-old religious scholar uses an iPhone and says he enjoyed his time in the UK last year, where he admired the orderly traffic and numerous universities – although not public drunkenness at weekends. Once a firebrand reactionary and now seen locally as a relative moderate, he says there is nothing wrong with women driving in theory but that he opposed it in practice because women taking to the road would cause too many accidents. Equally, Duwaish welcomed the change new communications technology has brought to the kingdom as the internet means he can employ women at his institute. They are able to work from home and still avoid contact with men who are not their husbands or immediate family, he says. “If you ask women all over the world if they prefer a mixed environment or to be away from men, they would choose the latter,” Duwaish, whose centre was one of the first to publish a report on domestic violence in the kingdom, told the Guardian. As elsewhere in Saudi Arabia, As Rass has changed immensely since Duwaish was a child. The last four decades here have seen a huge transfer of population from the countryside to small towns and into cities, a leap in material comfort and the demolition of almost every building that pre-dated the vast oil wealth of the 1970s. Forty years ago most women and many men could not read. But there is nostalgia for times past. As Rass was a “quiet town where everybody knew each other”, Duwaish, remembers. “It was so pure, so quiet.” The growing number of heritage projects in Saudi Arabia indicates such sentiments are widespread. The As Rass municipality recently opened a “traditional” museum in the corner of a shopping mall where a former soldier wears traditional dress and makes old-fashioned coffee for visitors who sit on rugs. More than 80 visitors come every day,mainly young people curious about their heritage. The museum is a good initiative, said Duwaish, the cleric, because “when traditions disappear overnight, people react badly”. One such reaction in recent decades has been violent extremism. Saudi Arabia was hit by a series of al-Qaida-inspired attacks between 2003 and 2004, prompting widespread reform of the security services and hundreds of people being rounded up. Some of those responsible were veterans of militant training camps in Afghanistan, others were new recruits. Recent years have been calm, however. “The problem has now almost disappeared,” said Abdulrahman al-Hadlaq, a Ministry of Interior criminologist who works on radical Islam in the kingdom. “Al-Qaida here is dying. Public awareness is much higher, security is stricter.” More than 10,000 people have been arrested on terrorism charges, sometimes on flimsy evidence, human rights campaigners say. Many senior extremists have fled to Yemen. Last week, the trial of alleged militants accused of an assault on a housing compound full of expatriates in 2003 started. Dozens of death sentences are expected. Less serious offenders are dealt with more leniently. Hadlaq runs a team of counsellors, psychologists and clerics who work to rehabilitate former militants at a centre on the outskirts of Riyadh. Since it opened in 2007, hundreds of recently released prisoners, all convicted for militant activity, have “graduated”. Recidivism rates, Hadlaq said, were around 10% for those involved in support activities or who had travelled to Iraq to fight American troops there but approached 25% for the 123 Saudi citizens who had been incarcerated in Guantánamo Bay. Many of these “Gitmo veterans” now head the Ministry of Interior’s wanted list, according to General Mansour al’Turki, a senior official. Several are now leaders of the “al-Qaida in the Arabian peninsula” group, based in Yemen. Yusef al’Rabesh, 32, is one “Gitmo veteran” who has been successfully “rehabilitated”, however. Detained like many others by American troops in Afghanistan in late 2001, he spent seven years in US custody before being released without charge. Rabesh claims he was in Afghanistan looking for his brother, a Taliban fighter. American military authorities said he was a trained combatant. In detention in Afghanistan and then in Cuba, “the [Americans] hit me, dragged me, chained me like a dog”, Rabesh said. “We were treated worse than animals. But the rehabilitation programme took this black experience away.” On his release, the government found Rabesh a job as a manager in a taxi company, a wife in his hometown of Burayda al Qassem province and provided tens of thousands of dollars for the wedding. He now “better understands Islam”, he says. “There are legitimate reasons for jihad in our religion but I have learned that no private person can say that a jihad is justified. It can only be the Islamic scholars who make that decision according to certain conditions,” he said. Last week, Prince Nayef, the most conservative of senior princes and minister of interior, told a local audience that terrorism had “wronged many, damaging the image of Islam, the Arabs and in particular the kingdom of Saudi Arabia.” Nayef is head of the religious police who continue to enforce, even if less brutally and intrusively than previously, Saudi Arabia’s fierce puritanism and is known to be opposed to any major social reforms in the country. The erosion of Saudi Arabia’s deep conservatism is a reality but is neither a uniform nor linear process. It is extremely unlikely even the more moderate elements within the royal family will seek to accelerate the pace of reform and risk alienating the clerical establishment. Should Prince Nayef succeed – he is currently 76, third in line to the throne and eleven years younger than the king – most analysts expect a new reactionary atmosphere. Many Saudis will be pleased. “You have democracy. We have our religion,” said Abdallah al’Utaiba, 32, a camel dealer who listened to the news of the Arab spring uprisings on a radio in a tent in the dusty hinterland on the fringes of Riyadh. “You have lost your traditions. We have not. It is better that it stays that way.” Saudi Arabia King Abdullah Islam Arab and Middle East unrest al-Qaida Global terrorism Religion Middle East Jason Burke guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …‘People are fighting with their guns, we are fighting with our voices,’ says FB 17, named after day rebellion broke out in Libya Bands the world over complain about how tough it was in the early years: no money, no gigs, money-grabbing producers. But such annoyances pale alongside the travails of Libya’s FB 17. Try cutting your first CD in Misrata, with the city under siege and missiles crashing down around you, in a studio that is no more than a bombproof room and a laptop which only works between long power cuts. That was how FB 17 – named for 17 February, the day rebellion broke out in Libya – recorded No More Lies, an album of five tracks which has become a hit across this besieged city. The English lyrics and Arabic rap of the album’s title song blare out of car stereos, shopfronts and crackly radios on the frontline trenches: “No more silence, no more fear, no more lies, no more tears, no more violence, no more screams.” The album was recorded between late March and late April, while rebel fighters were battling with Muammar Gaddafi’s tanks to push government forces out of the city . “When there was electricity we took the chance,” said Mohammed Derrija, 22, nicknamed Modee, who worked as a translator before the war. “The problem was we all lived far from each other so some guy would get a car and collected everyone. Then we would start immediately, and save [each track] immediately in case the electricity was cut.” The seed for the band was sown by Abdullah Elwafi, a 24-year-old singer-songwriter who wrote the first song, We Have a Dream, with his 19-year-old brother, Hakim on 17 February. Abdullah, nicknamed Abdo, lived a life of frustration under the Gaddafi regime. Studios would let a artist cut a song only if it namechecked Libya and its dictator. “Before we could do nothing, just write nothing,” he explains. “We had ideas but because of Gaddafi, he said you write about his family or his legion and that’s it.” When Gaddafi responded to the February protests by sending in the tanks, Abdo and other band members joined the rebels. Guitarist Mohamed Jibril – nickname Haq – was operating a rocket- propelled grenade launcher on Tripoli Street . “I was fighting, but now it’s about the music,” he says. “We are writing new songs all the time. We have many ideas. ” Once the front stabilised and the immediate crisis passed, the five friends decided to cut the album. “After the revolution a lot of bands came out,” says Nidal Hassen, a journalist at Radio Misrata. “In Benghazi there are hundreds of them, but in Misrata there is one band. Their songs, they are not only words. They capture everything we feel.” On a recent evening the band were in their new recording studio, which has a sound booth the size of a phone box, cutting a new album, this time to remember the dead. The sun had gone down and the nightly rumble of Grad rockets slamming into the city to the east was echoing through the streets. Modee said that the work was very different from conventional songwriting: “Just writing lyrics imagining something, thinking about it, and writing about it? No, we’re not doing this any more,” he said. “We’re just writing what we see in front of our eyes.” The band see themselves as plugged into a system in which all citizens do their bit – whether fighting, patching up the wounded, or organising food supplies. Initially, they were surprised by their popularity but now see themselves as on a mission. “People are fighting with their guns, we are fighting with our voices,” said Modee. “We are inspiring them, giving them the courage to fight.” Libya Middle East Africa Chris Stephen guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …‘People are fighting with their guns, we are fighting with our voices,’ says FB 17, named after day rebellion broke out in Libya Bands the world over complain about how tough it was in the early years: no money, no gigs, money-grabbing producers. But such annoyances pale alongside the travails of Libya’s FB 17. Try cutting your first CD in Misrata, with the city under siege and missiles crashing down around you, in a studio that is no more than a bombproof room and a laptop which only works between long power cuts. That was how FB 17 – named for 17 February, the day rebellion broke out in Libya – recorded No More Lies, an album of five tracks which has become a hit across this besieged city. The English lyrics and Arabic rap of the album’s title song blare out of car stereos, shopfronts and crackly radios on the frontline trenches: “No more silence, no more fear, no more lies, no more tears, no more violence, no more screams.” The album was recorded between late March and late April, while rebel fighters were battling with Muammar Gaddafi’s tanks to push government forces out of the city . “When there was electricity we took the chance,” said Mohammed Derrija, 22, nicknamed Modee, who worked as a translator before the war. “The problem was we all lived far from each other so some guy would get a car and collected everyone. Then we would start immediately, and save [each track] immediately in case the electricity was cut.” The seed for the band was sown by Abdullah Elwafi, a 24-year-old singer-songwriter who wrote the first song, We Have a Dream, with his 19-year-old brother, Hakim on 17 February. Abdullah, nicknamed Abdo, lived a life of frustration under the Gaddafi regime. Studios would let a artist cut a song only if it namechecked Libya and its dictator. “Before we could do nothing, just write nothing,” he explains. “We had ideas but because of Gaddafi, he said you write about his family or his legion and that’s it.” When Gaddafi responded to the February protests by sending in the tanks, Abdo and other band members joined the rebels. Guitarist Mohamed Jibril – nickname Haq – was operating a rocket- propelled grenade launcher on Tripoli Street . “I was fighting, but now it’s about the music,” he says. “We are writing new songs all the time. We have many ideas. ” Once the front stabilised and the immediate crisis passed, the five friends decided to cut the album. “After the revolution a lot of bands came out,” says Nidal Hassen, a journalist at Radio Misrata. “In Benghazi there are hundreds of them, but in Misrata there is one band. Their songs, they are not only words. They capture everything we feel.” On a recent evening the band were in their new recording studio, which has a sound booth the size of a phone box, cutting a new album, this time to remember the dead. The sun had gone down and the nightly rumble of Grad rockets slamming into the city to the east was echoing through the streets. Modee said that the work was very different from conventional songwriting: “Just writing lyrics imagining something, thinking about it, and writing about it? No, we’re not doing this any more,” he said. “We’re just writing what we see in front of our eyes.” The band see themselves as plugged into a system in which all citizens do their bit – whether fighting, patching up the wounded, or organising food supplies. Initially, they were surprised by their popularity but now see themselves as on a mission. “People are fighting with their guns, we are fighting with our voices,” said Modee. “We are inspiring them, giving them the courage to fight.” Libya Middle East Africa Chris Stephen guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Independent journalist accused of lifting quotes in interview with activist Malalai Joya Fresh evidence of Independent journalist Johann Hari’s habit of alleged plagiarism has emerged from a lengthy interview he gave with Afghan women’s rights activist Malalai Joya in July 2009. A 4,000-word interview with Joya written by Hari appears to pass off a number of quotes and formulations from her book, Raising my Voice, as if they were direct speech from an interview he conducted with her in a London flat. The similarities, identified by the author of the Islam Versus Europe blog , join a growing list of examples exposed by bloggers where the Orwell prize-winning writer appeared to have inserted quotes into interviews that looked to have come from elsewhere. The Islam Versus Europe blogger cites 15 examples of duplications in phraseology from the book which Joya published the same year in which Hari subsequently printed the interview. Hari says he conducted the interview in a London apartment “where she [Joya] is staying with a supporter for a week”. But at no stage does Hari indicate that some of the quotes he uses appear to be direct lifts from her book. Joya was also one of the writers whom Hari cited in his written explanation of his technique. Hari defended himself by saying he drew a distinction between the “intellectual accuracy of describing [interviewees'] ideas in their most considered words, or the reportorial accuracy of describing their ideas in the words they used on that particular afternoon”. Hari’s woes have been exacerbated by an announcement on Thursday by the organisers of the Orwell prize that they are formally investigating whether Hari should be allowed to keep the award for political journalism he won in 2008. A statement from the Orwell prize council said the seriousness of the allegations against Hari meant they had “no choice but to investigate further”. Hari’s position at the Independent is also likely to be more uncertain following the news that editor, Simon Kelner, supposedly Hari’s chief protector at the newspaper, is to be become editor-in-chief with the day to day editing taken over by the Evening Standard’s city editor, Chris Blackhurst. On Wednesday Kelner defended Hari on Radio 4′s The Media Show claiming the attacks were “politically motivated”. Hari and Kelner had not responded to inquiries at the time of publication. Examples Hari interview with Joya “I realised women’s rights had been sold out completely … Most people in the West have been led to believe that the intolerance and brutality towards women in Afghanistan began with the Taliban regime. But this is a lie”. Joya’s book Raising my Voice “Most people in the West have been led to believe that intolerance, brutality and the severe oppression of women in Afghanistan began with the Taliban regime. But this is a lie…” Hari’s interview “It turned out my mission,” she says, “would be to expose the true nature of the jirga from within.” From Raising my Voice “My mission would be to expose the true nature of the Jirga from within it” Hari’s interview For a moment, as these old killers started to give long speeches congratulating themselves on the transition to democracy, Joya felt nervous. But then, she says, “I remembered the oppression we face as women in my country, and my nervousness evaporated, replaced by anger.” In Raising my Voice “I stood up at the table in front of the room, wondering if my thoughts would be as dry as my mouth. But then I remembered the oppression we face as women in my country, and my nervousness evaporated, replaced by anger.” • 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 . The Independent Newspapers & magazines National newspapers Newspapers Ben Dowell guardian.co.uk
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