Posts Tagged ‘Europe’
Thursday, September 18th, 2008
18/9/08
Anti-Muslim and anti-Jewish feelings are rising in several major European countries, according to a worldwide survey released on Wednesday. The Washington-based Pew Research Center’s global attitude survey found that most Muslims in countries where they are in the majority worry about the rise of Islamic extremism at home and abroad. Majorities held that view in Indonesia, Pakistan, Tanzania, Lebanon, Egypt, Jordan and Nigeria. Large numbers of respondents in several Muslim countries also identified struggles within their countries between people who want to modernize the society and those dedicated to maintaining fundamentalist practices of Islam.
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Tags: Europe, Global, Survey
Posted in Israel & Palestine, Religion | No Comments »
Friday, September 12th, 2008
Jonathan Power; 12/9/08
Does America know what a dangerous game its leaders are playing? Does it know its history? And do the leaders of Europe, who should be a brake on American determination, go along with Washington because they are almost equally ignorant? After all, none of the present crop of European leaders has had time to study much history, and all of them made their way upwards in their party ranks because of their skill and knowledge of domestic affairs. They have had little or no preparation for the affairs of the world. On the Russian, Georgian and Ukrainian side, one can make the same argument. Ignorance reigns so history can be repeated.
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Tags: Europe, Terrorism
Posted in Terrorism, War | No Comments »
Wednesday, September 10th, 2008
Shenaz Kermalli;10/9/08
Shukaina, says she feels ‘prouder than ever’ to wear the headscarf. An Irish family at the centre of a nationwide dispute over the wearing of the Islamic headscarf in schools has accused Ireland’s government of repressing minority rights while “flaunting itself as the bastion of democracy”. Liam Egam,whose daughter’s desire to wear the headscarf to school last year sparked the debate, said: “It is time the world witnessed the true face of Ireland. “The issue of the hijab [Islamic headscarf] is a reflection of how Ireland treats its minorities. “It has silently repressed Muslim rights while flaunting itself as the bastion of democracy for far too long.”
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Tags: Europe, Ireland, Religion
Posted in Christianity, Religion | No Comments »
Thursday, September 4th, 2008
Uri Avnery; 4/9/08
If he steals my cow, that is bad. If I steal his cow, that is good” — this moral rule was attributed by European racists to the Hottentots, an ancient tribe in southern Africa. It’s hard not to be reminded of this when the United States and the European countries cry out against Russia’s recognition of the independence of South Ossetia and Abkhazia, the two provinces which seceded from the Republic of Sakartvelo, known in the West as Georgia. Not so long ago, the Western countries recognized the Republic of Kosovo, which seceded from Serbia. The West argued that the population of Kosovo is not Serbian, its culture and language is not Serbian, and that therefore it has a right to independence from Serbia. Especially after Serbia had conducted a grievous campaign of oppression against them. I supported this view with all my heart. Unlike many of my friends, I even supported the military operation that helped the Kosovars to free themselves.
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Tags: Europe, USA
Posted in USA, War | No Comments »
Wednesday, August 27th, 2008
Adam Sage; 27/8/08
Teenagers are to be banned from buying alcohol in France, as health advisers dismiss the cherished Gallic belief that children should be initiated in the art of wine drinking at an early age. With British-style binge drinking gaining ground among French youth, officials say they want to send a clear message against adolescent consumption. Health Minister Roselyne Bachelot said she was planning to make it illegal to sell alcohol to the under-18s, with legislation likely to be introduced next year.
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Tags: Children, Drugs, Europe
Posted in Aid / Trade, Drugs, Health & Children, Human Rights | No Comments »
Tuesday, August 26th, 2008
26/8/08; Tony Kevin served as an Australian diplomat in Moscow (1969-71), UN New York (1973-76), and as Australian Ambassador in Poland (1991-1994).
Triggered by events in Georgia, the US and Polish governments have agreed that Poland will host an American base for ten interceptor missiles designed to shoot down a limited number of ballistic missiles that, the US claims, might one day be launched against NATO Europe by a future ‘rogue state’ adversary such as Iran. The system, on Poland’s Baltic coast (and Russia’s doorstep), to be manned by 100 US military personnel, is expected to operate by 2012. The Czech government had previously agreed to host a complementary tracking radar system. Separately, the US will provide Poland with advanced air defence systems, unrelated to the shooting down of ballistic missiles. The US proposed giving Poland such a modest anti-missile system two years ago, but Poland hesitated in the face of strong opposition and retaliatory threats from Moscow, which from the beginning believed that it was the true target of the proposed system. Such prototype systems — already being installed in some NATO countries — are politically and technically controversial. Democrat critics in the US Congress last year condemned such ‘high-risk, immature programs’.
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Tags: Australia, Europe, Terrorism, USA
Posted in Australia, Terrorism, USA | No Comments »
Wednesday, August 6th, 2008
Geoffrey Robertson; 6/8/08
The appearance of Radovan Karadzic in The Hague dock has provided some satisfaction for victims of his Bosnian Serb regime - not only families who grieve for those it massacred but for all of us forced impotently to read of the atrocities at Sarajevo and Srebrenica, a form of wickedness never experienced in Europe since the Nazis. The big question is whether justice will be seen to be done better than in the convoluted and inconclusive trial of Slobodan Milosevic. Can the Karadzic trial be fair, expeditious and effective - and cost-effective as well? The trial will surely benefit from lessons learnt in the course of the Milosevic proceedings, when prosecutors “threw the book” at the defendant and the judges insisted that all charges against him over the three wars he waged - in Croatia, Bosnia and Kosovo - should be heard together.
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Tags: Europe, Human Rights, ICC, UN
Posted in Human Rights, Religion, Terrorism, United Nations | No Comments »
Thursday, July 31st, 2008
Michael Gawenda; 31/7/08
Radovan Karadzic was arrested in Belgrade two months after the death in Warsaw, at the age of 98, of Irena Sendler. Karadzic’s arrest was extensively covered by the media as you would expect. He is, after all, postwar Europe’s greatest exponent and theoretician of eliminationist ethnic cleansing. There have been excellent profiles of him published in newspapers around the world, including in Australia, and great journalism done on current affairs programs in Britain, the US and here. The commentary has been thoughtful and informed. But Radovan Karadzic, poet, psychiatrist, folk singer, Serbian lute player and genocidal mass murderer, remains a mystery. How are we to relate to this man who ordered the massacre of thousands of men and boys at Srebrenica and the siege of Sarajevo during which, over almost four years, thousands died?
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Tags: Europe, Human Rights
Posted in Christianity, Human Rights, Religion | No Comments »
Wednesday, July 30th, 2008
30/7/08: See: http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/story/0,25197,24100079-12335,00.html
Bosnia’s war crimes court today sentenced seven Serbs to heavy jail terms after finding them guilty of genocide for the murder of more than 1000 Muslims during the 1995 Srebrenica massacre. Of the seven, six were convicted of direct participation in the murder of more than 1,000 Muslims in a single day in Kravice, near the ill-fated eastern Bosnian town, said Court of Bosnia-Hercegovina judge Hilmo Vucinic.
Tags: Europe, ICC, Terrorism
Posted in Human Rights, Terrorism | No Comments »
Saturday, July 26th, 2008
Ronald P. Sokol; 24/7/08
Moroccan-born Faiza Mabchour speaks French fluently, has three children born in France, and a French husband. Yet France’s top administrative court last month denied her bid for citizenship. The reason? Mabchour wears a burqa, a long veil that some Muslim women use to cover themselves from head to toe. In an interview with officials, she said she wore the burqa not for any special religious belief but because her husband asked her to. A government report stated that “she lives in total submission to the men of her family, and the notion of questioning this submission does not even occur to her”. The court said such a radical religious practice is incompatible with fundamental French values such as the equality of the sexes; thus, she was judged unable to assimilate - a must for citizenship.
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Tags: Europe, Religion, Womens Rights
Posted in Human Rights, Religion, Womens Rights | No Comments »