Thursday, 9 December 2010

Iraq zooms ahead with new driving permits

First Published: 2010-12-09

Iraqis signing up for new licensing system that authorities hope will bring order to chaotic traffic.

Middle East Online


By Prashant Rao - BAGHDAD


Vehicle safety on Iraq's streets remains tenuous at best

Dawood Salman clutches the steering wheel and stares ahead as he nervously accelerates toward something only a few Iraqis have: a valid driving licence.

The 27-year-old is among a handful of Iraqis who are signing up for a new post-invasion licensing system that authorities hope will bring order to the chaotic traffic that has resembled a video game since 2003.

"Baghdad roads are very scary for someone learning to drive because of all the traffic jams -- it's frustrating and difficult to learn here," Salman says at the Maysaloon driving school in eastern Baghdad.

"But introducing (new) driving licences is a good step... I'm convinced that 30 to 40 percent of the people on the streets either don't know how to drive, or drive too fast."

The new driving licences are part of a bid by Iraqi authorities to restore some method to the madness of Iraq's streets, which widely range from drivers ploughing the wrong way down a one-way street to the often arbitrary adherence to traffic lights, on the rare occasions that they work.

While motorists were required to take driving tests and obtain licences under the regime of now-executed Saddam Hussein, that system collapsed after the 2003 US-led invasion.

And the number of vehicles on the streets has more than doubled since then, creating situations where it can take several hours to traverse a handful of kilometres (miles) in Baghdad.

Around 1.25 million cars were registered with Iraqi authorities before the invasion, according to the head of Iraq's traffic police Major General Jaafar Tohman Kadhim al-Khafaji.

Since then, 1.5 million cars have legally been imported into Iraq, Khafaji says, with illicit purchases raising that figure still further.

"Before the invasion it was very difficult to buy a car," says Khafaji, a traffic police veteran of 36 years. "Now, it's very easy," he adds.

"For seven years, we had no licences. Everything -- all our equipment -- was stolen. But now, we hope that in two years, no driver will be able to move in the streets without having a licence."

Iraqi authorities have so far handed out more than 8,000 of the new driving permits since the first issuing centre was opened in Baghdad on October 21. The pace is increasing as staff become more familiar with the new computer systems and provincial centres open over this month.

Applicants must undergo a medical examination, demonstrate an understanding of traffic signs, complete a driving test and know basic vehicle mechanics to obtain the five-year licence.

Drivers with licences issued before 2003 only need to pass the medical test.

While some learn to drive from their parents or relatives, others such as Salman take private lessons like the 10-hour course offered by Maysaloon which costs between 130 and 155 dollars.

At Baghdad's main testing centre, adjacent to the capital's Al-Shaab stadium, hopeful drivers are given instructions from a serving police officer, who does not ride with them as they complete the test.

Typically, the examiner instructs drivers to navigate the vehicle to one end of a narrow street, execute a three-point turn, drive to the other end, complete another three-point turn and return to the starting position.

The facilities and equipment for the new system remain very basic: shipping containers house the offices where licences are printed, and where computers and equipment are stored.

"Yes, the buildings may not look that impressive," notes Brigadier General Majid Shanoun Hatem, the officer in charge of the main Baghdad testing centre.

"But the technology is the best in the region."

The entire project to bring all Iraqi drivers into the new system has so far cost 12 million dollars, according to Khafaji, who hopes to complete it in two years.

"First they started with making the seat belt mandatory," says Uday Abdulwahad, referring to a widely-flouted rule introduced last year that ostensibly requires Baghdad's drivers to wear a seat belt, but in reality sees many buckling up only when nearing checkpoints.

"Now they are giving out driving licences, so this is the second good thing the police have done recently," the 34-year-old taxi driver adds, holding up his newly-received licence.

"This is going to make the streets safer -- it shows a driver is qualified to be on the streets. Some of the people who drive now should not be allowed to, people with poor eyesight, or who are too young."

For now, however, vehicle safety on Iraq's streets remains tenuous at best.

"More than a third of my time on the road is spent frustrated and stressed because of the number of cars, the quality of driving, and the constant traffic jams," laments Wissam Jawad, a Maysaloon driving instructor.

"At some crossroads in Baghdad, it is like a fight," the 35-year-old says, holding up his fists.

US pushed Germany not to arrest CIA agents

First Published: 2010-12-09

Cables show US threat to Germany over CIA agents who abducted German citizen of Lebanese origin.

Middle East Online


Masri (L) is one of the best-known cases of the 'extraordinary renditions'

WASHINGTON - Leaked documents Wednesday showed that Washington put intense pressure on Berlin to not enforce arrest warrants against CIA agents involved in the 2003 abduction of a German citizen mistakenly believed to be a terrorist.

The information, made public in diplomatic cables released by WikiLeaks and first reported by the New York Times, involved Khaled el-Masri, a German citizen of Lebanese origin.

Masri, an unemployed car salesman, was captured in late December 2003 as he entered Macedonia on vacation. Local authorities mistook him for an Al-Qaeda operative with a similar name and turned him over to the CIA.

Masri said he was held and tortured in a secret US prison in Afghanistan before US agents realized their mistake and released him, five months later, on an Albanian roadside.

Thirteen operatives believed to be Central Intelligence Agency agents were eventually charged in indictments issued in Munich as well as in Spain, which was involved because investigators concluded that the plane transporting Masri traveled through Spanish territory.

In a February 2007 cable classified "Secret," and titled "Al-Masri case -- Chancellery aware of USG concerns," the US deputy chief of mission in Berlin, John Koenig, emphasized to German Deputy National Security Adviser Rolf Nikel "that issuance of international arrest warrants would have a negative impact on our bilateral relationship."

Koening "pointed out that our intention was not to threaten Germany, but rather to urge that the German Government weigh carefully at every step of the way the implications for relations with the US."

The dispatch was written by William Timken, Washington's envoy to Berlin.

Masri's is one of the best-known cases of the "extraordinary renditions" undertaken by the CIA as part of the "war on terror".

Five injured as Kuwait police crackdown on opposition

First Published: 2010-12-09

Kuwaiti special forces use batons to beat up dozens of participants, who included at least six opposition MPs.

Middle East Online


The government warned it would not allow outdoor public gatherings

KUWAIT CITY - Five Kuwaitis including an MP were treated in hospital for injuries on Wednesday as special forces cracked down on an unauthorised opposition rally, medics and witnesses said.

The elite special forces used batons to beat up dozens of participants, who included at least six opposition MPs, at the outdoor rally in Sulaibkhat, 10 kilometres (six miles) west of Kuwait City, witnesses said.

Medical sources said Islamist MP Waleed al-Tabtabai and four men were taken to hospital for treatment of wounds and fractures caused by the beating.

The rally was the second of a series of opposition protests against an alleged "government plot" to amend the 1962 constitution which made Kuwait the first Arab state in the Gulf to embrace parliamentary democracy.

After the police crackdown, 11 opposition lawmakers held an urgent meeting and decided to motion for the questioning of Prime Minister Sheikh Nasser Mohammed al-Ahmad al-Sabah, a senior member of the Al-Sabah ruling family.

Earlier in the day, the government of the oil-rich emirate warned it would not allow outdoor public gatherings and advised the opposition to organise their rallies indoor.

Kuwait, OPEC's fifth largest producer, has a 50-member parliament. The 16 cabinet ministers, of whom 15 are unelected, automatically become members of parliament and have similar voting rights as elected MPs.

The emirate has been rocked by a series of political crises over the past five years that led the ruler to dissolve parliament three times, while the cabinet has resigned five times.

Hariri killing indictment ready 'very, very soon'

First Published: 2010-12-09

UN-backed tribunal to target individuals rather than groups, as fingers point to senior Hezbollah figures.

Middle East Online


One step closer to justice or to a civil war

LEIDSCHENDAM (The Netherlands) - An indictment for the 2005 assassination of former Lebanese prime minister Rafiq Hariri should be served within a matter of weeks, a UN-backed tribunal said on Thursday.

Hariri was assassinated in a massive car bombing in Beirut that also killed another 22 people, and the Netherlands-based Special Tribunal for Lebanon is tasked with finding who was responsible.

"Everyone is waiting for the moment when the prosecutor is going (to come) out with an indictment," the clerk of the court, Herman von Hebel, told reporters.

"Of course I cannot give any date, there is no date yet, but what I can tell you is: it is very, very soon.

"We are not talking about months and months again. We are really talking about weeks."

The indictment would be confidential at least until it is confirmed by the pre-trial judge, he said adding that a trial could open four to six months after the confirmation, "maybe September or October, something like that, at some point of the second half of the year".

He said the estimates were based on the experience at other international courts. "It really depends on the developments of the court next year," he said.

Several foreign media, including the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (CBC), have reported that the tribunal will indict members of the powerful Shiite militant group, Hezbollah, in connection with the murder.

Hezbollah, which fought a 2006 war with Israel, has warned any such accusation would have grave repercussions in Lebanon.

But von Hebel said: "This tribunal is not targeting a particular group of people, it is about finding out who has been involved in the attack against Mr Hariri".

"We are talking about individual responsibility not about group responsibility."

The Special Tribunal for Lebanon, which is based on the outskirts of The Hague, was created in 2007 following a UN resolution.

Assad warns of Lebanon strife ahead of Hariri tribunal indictments

First Published: 2010-12-09

Syrian President tells Sarkozy no one wants 'fitna', but highlights roles played by Damascus, Riyadh.

Middle East Online


Our eyes and ears on our neighbour

PARIS - Syrian President Bashar al-Assad said Thursday that no one wants civil strife in Lebanon, amid tensions ahead of indictments over the 2005 assassination of former Lebanon prime minister Rafiq Hariri.

"No one wants there to be clashes, fitna (strife within the Muslim community), between Lebanese," Assad said after lunchtime talks with French President Nicolas Sarkozy centred on Lebanon, for decades dominated by Syria.

Pro-Saudi billionaire Hariri was assassinated in a massive car bombing in Beirut that also killed another 22 people, and a UN-backed tribunal tasked with finding who was responsible has said it will issue indictments "very soon."

The killing led to the withdrawal of Syrian troops who had been in neighbouring Lebanon since the end of the devastating 1975-1990 civil war.

Several foreign media have reported that the tribunal will indict members of the powerful Shiite group, Hezbollah, which is backed by Syria and Iran, in connection with the murder.

Hezbollah, which fought a devastating 2006 war with Israel, has warned any such accusation would have grave repercussions in Lebanon.

Assad travelled to Saudi Arabia in October to discuss Middle East tensions heightened by the UN probe into the Hariri killing.

Asked about an eventual Syrian-Saudi initiative in Lebanon, Assad said that "the solution can only be Lebanese, it can be neither Syrian, nor Saudi, nor French.

"We (Syrians) don't want to intervene, we don't want to interfere in an internal Lebanese situation," Assad said.

Croatian ex-PM Ivo Sanader leaves country amid inquiry

 Ivo Sanader in office as Croatian prime minister (image from 2006) Mr Sanader is now an independent MP

A former Croatian prime minister facing a corruption inquiry has quit the country but reportedly denied he was fleeing prosecution.

Ivo Sanader crossed the border into Slovenia as parliament began the process to lift the MP's immunity from prosecution.

The inquiry has been focusing on officials from the ruling HDZ party who were in office under Mr Sanader.

Brussels has put pressure on EU-hopeful Croatia to stamp out corruption.

Mr Sanader stepped down as prime minister in July last year in a surprise move and was expelled from the HDZ in January.

As an independent MP, he still enjoys immunity from prosecution.

The procedure for lifting immunity is usually launched when an investigation is near the end or completed, the Associated Press news agency reports.

'I am on a trip'

The former prime minister crossed into Slovenia on Thursday, the interior ministry said, adding that police had had no legal reason to stop him.

Croatian newspaper Vecernji List contacted him to ask if he was "on the run" and whether he would respond to a summons from the Office for Suppression of Corruption and Organised Crime (respond to Uskok).

"I am on a trip, planned beforehand and of course I will respond," he was quoted as replying in a text message.

There are conflicting reports about whether Mr Sanader may have Austrian citizenship.

Acting on a request from Uskok, parliament's immunity commission decided unanimously on Thursday to recommend that Mr Sanader be arrested on suspicion of "conspiracy to commit crime and abuse of office".

The decision will be put to a plenary session of parliament "shortly", Croatian state news agency Hina reports.

On Monday, former Defence Minister Berislav Roncevic, who served in Mr Sanader's cabinet in 2003-07, was sentenced to five years in prison for corruption on Monday.

Since Mr Sanader's departure from office, a dozen managers of banks and state companies have been arrested for corruption but in most cases indictments are still pending, Reuters news agency reports.

China Nobel row: Prize 'not enforcing Western values'

The award of the Nobel Peace Prize to an imprisoned Chinese dissident is not an attempt to enforce Western values on China, organisers say.

The award to Liu Xiaobo was about universal human rights and "honouring people in China", Nobel Committee chairman Thorbjoern Jagland said.

Beijing has said nations which attend Friday's award ceremony in Oslo will be showing disrespect to China.

At least 18 nations are set to boycott the ceremony.

Liu Xiaobo, 54, was a key leader in the Tiananmen Square protests in 1989.

Last year he received an 11-year sentence for "inciting subversion" and will not be in Oslo. The Nobel Foundation has praised Mr Liu for his "long and non-violent struggle".

'Strong symbol'

After Thursday saw China stepped up its campaign to try to discredit the Nobel Committee, Mr Jagland insisted the award was "not a prize against China. This is a prize honouring people in China".

He said: "This is not a protest, it is a signal to China that it would be very important for China's future to combine economic development with political reforms and support for those in China fighting for basic human rights.

"This prize conveys the understanding that these are universal rights and universal values, they are not Western standards."

Mr Jagland said all members of the United Nations had signed the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and they had "certain obligations because of this".

Countries boycotting Nobel ceremony

  • China, Vietnam, Kazakhstan
  • Russia, Serbia
  • Venezuela, Cuba
  • Tunisia, Morocco, Sudan, Algeria
  • Saudi Arabia, Iraq, Iran, Egypt
  • Pakistan, Afghanistan, Sri Lanka

He said Mr Liu's empty chair at the awards ceremony in the Norwegian capital on Friday would be "a very strong symbol [that] shows how appropriate this prize was".

It will be the first time since 1936 that the prize, now worth $1.5m, will not be handed out.

Burmese Nobel Peace Prize winner Aung San Suu Kyi has expressed solidarity with Mr Liu, saying that as one human being to another she would like to hold out a hand of sympathy.

UN human rights chief Navi Pillay on Thursday again called for Mr Liu to be released "as soon as possible".

China's foreign ministry called on countries to boycott the ceremony.

Spokeswoman Jiang Yu said: "We hope those countries that have received the invitation can tell right from wrong."

At least 18 nations are set to boycott the event. Ukraine, which had earlier declined an invitation, will now attend, the Nobel Committee said, as will the Philippines. The attendance of Argentina is in doubt.

Amnesty International accused China of pressuring members of Norway's Chinese community to join protests on Friday against the awards ceremony.

'Clowns'

China's foreign ministry insisted Mr Liu had not been convicted only for his calls for more democracy but had actively tried to subvert state power.

Earlier this week, Ms Jiang referred to the members of the Nobel committee as "clowns", and accused them of orchestrating an "anti-China fuss".

Separately in Beijing, a group of academics has awarded the first Confucius Peace Prize to Taiwan's former vice-president Lien Chan for brokering warmer ties between Beijing and Taipei.

Click to play

Democracy activist Wuer Kaixi will be collecting the award on behalf of Mr Xiaobo

The head of the prize jury, Tan Changliu, a professor at Beijing Normal University, said the award had been planned for "a long time" and denied it was a stunt.

Meanwhile, the BBC website appears to have been blocked in China.

Users in several parts of the country have reported that they are unable to access the BBC's internet site and the BBC has noticed a steep drop in traffic from China.

It is the first time the BBC's English-language website has been blocked since the Beijing Olympics in 2008. Access to other international news sites such as CNN also appears to be blocked.

MPs have backed plans to increase fees to up to £9,000

BBC's Philip Herd: "The horses' hooves were causing sparks as they charged"

The coalition government has won the vote to raise tuition fees in England to up to £9,000 per year - amid violent protests in Westminster.

Three ministerial aides have resigned over the issue - as the fee rise passed by a majority of 21 votes.

Scotland Yard says eight police officers have been hurt in clashes between police and students.

In angry scenes, protesters are battling with police and attacking buildings, including the Treasury.

Earlier protesters had forced their way into Parliament Square and pushed hard against lines of riot police in front of the Houses of Parliament.

Violent scenes

It will mean fees being almost tripled, as the government saw its majority cut by three-quarters in a backbench rebellion.

There were 21 Lib Dem MPs who voted against the coalition.

Mounted police were used to control crowds, as demonstrators protested outside the Houses of Parliament.

The London Ambulance Service says 19 people have been treated for injuries - six have been taken to hospital.

Heather Sharp, BBC News, central London

Scuffles broke out in front of Westminster Abbey. A flare was thrown, and placards and sticks flew above the crowds.

The demonstrators pushed at the police line to shouts of "no ifs, no buts, no education cuts".

One of the protesters struggled back through crowd with blood running down his face as another held a burning placard aloft.

As the sun went down and the vote neared, groups of students in the rest of Parliament Square gathered around bonfires.

The warmest and the biggest of the bonfires turned out to be a park bench.

There were angry clashes as protesters - some throwing missiles - fought to break through police lines.

The police now say they are containing protesters on the square. Seven people have been arrested and a container is on fire.

The BBC's Ben Brown, outside Parliament, said protesters shouted "shame on you" as news of the result filtered out to the crowd.

In violent scenes earlier, the BBC's Mark Georgiou said there had been injuries to both police and protesters near to Westminster Abbey.

The Metropolitan Police say there have been attacks using "flares, sticks, snooker balls and paint balls".

Students from around the UK gathered in London for a day of protests and a rally - with police expecting about 20,000 demonstrators.

The coalition government faced its first major backbench rebellion in the vote.

Resignations

Two Lib Dem ministerial aides, Mike Crockart and Jenny Willott, have resigned their posts as a ministerial aide because they intend to vote against the fee increase.

fee protest map

A Conservative ministerial aide, Lee Scott, has also resigned.

Business Secretary Vince Cable welcomed the result as a way of delivering a "high-quality university sector that is more responsive to the needs of students".

Liberal Democrat MPs had been under intense pressure - after their election pledge to vote against any fee increase.

Party leader and Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg, who has become a target for student anger, was able to call on the support of all Lib Dem ministers.

But Liberal Democrat deputy leader Simon Hughes abstained.

Mr Hughes said that the "level of fee increase... may have a significant disincentive effect on youngsters going to university".

Reacting to the result, Labour leader Ed Miliband said it was a "bad day for families and young people, and a bad day for democracy".

Spending cuts

Shadow business secretary John Denham said in the debate that the fee increase was being driven by the government's decision to have deep cuts to university funding.

Students protesting in Parliament Square Protesters used barriers to try to breach police lines

"Even if they had just cut universities the way they are cutting other public services, students would be facing fees of no more than £4,000," he told the BBC.

"This is a choice they have made and they don't have to make it."

The package of measures will see fees rising to an upper limit of £9,000 per year - with requirements for universities to protect access for poorer students if they charge more than £6,000 per year.

College occupations

The proposals to raise fees have triggered a wave of student and school pupil protests, with a march last month leading to an attack on the Conservative headquarters in Millbank.

Dozens of universities have been occupied by students - with students in five more universities occupying buildings this week.

For the first time, there have also been occupations of schools by pupils.

Aaron Porter, president of the National Union of Students, said the students had "won the arguments and the battle for public opinion".

"We have lost in the House of Commons today only because MPs have broken their promises. We are incredibly disappointed and angry with the politicians who have let us down so badly," said Mr Porter.

OUTSIDE LONDON PROTESTS

  • Swansea: Protest planned between 1200-1400 GMT at Castle Square
  • Edinburgh: NUS Scotland organising a candlelight vigil outside Holyrood at 1630 GMT
  • Kidderminster
  • Possibly Brighton before students gather in London

There has been no consensus within the university sector about the fees deal.

The university lecturers' union has backed student protesters - while university vice chancellors have been split over whether to support or oppose the fees plan.

Steve Smith, president of Universities UK, said: "No one takes any pleasure in asking graduates to take on more debt.

"But the cuts to the higher education budget are a reality and we must make sure that our universities are properly funded."

The plan to raise fees will apply to students in England. Welsh students will not pay the higher rate of fees, even at universities in England.

In Scotland there are no tuition fees - and Northern Ireland has still to decide how it will respond to any fee rise in England.

Egypt November inflation dips to lowest in 15 months

Thu, 09/12/2010 - 13:20
Photographed by AP

Urban consumer price inflation in Egypt fell in the year to November to its lowest in 15 months, giving the central bank room to keep its benchmark interest rates unchanged in December to support economic growth.

Inflation in the 12 months to November was 10.2 percent, down from 11 percent in October, the state statistics agency CAPMAS said on its website on Wednesday, below analysts' forecasts.

The annual rate slid to its lowest level since August 2009, when it reached 9 percent year-on-year.

Three analysts cited forecasts for urban inflation -- the most closely watched indicator of prices -- that ranged from 11.1 percent to 11.8 percent. The average of the forecasts was 11.46 percent.

"This further reiterates that there will be no change in interest rates in the coming meeting," said Mohamed Rahmy, Beltone Financial economist, also citing limited impact from European economic woes.

Several economists expect a rate hike could be introduced by the middle of 2011.

The central bank on November 4 kept its key overnight interest rates steady at a four-year-low, saying non-food price inflation was largely subdued and global economic growth was uncertain.

The bank held its overnight lending rate steady at 9.75 percent and the deposit rate at 8.25 percent, the ninth time it has done so since it stopped cutting rates in September 2009. It also left the discount rate unchanged at 8.5 percent.

Prices of food and beverages, which account for 44 percent of the weighting of the basket Egypt uses to measure inflation, decelerated year-on-year to 17.1 percent in November, from 19.9 percent in October.

CAPMAS released inflation figures on Wednesday on its website. It earlier said the figure would be released on Thursday.

A Reuters poll of 12 economists predicted GDP growth would reach 5.5 percent in fiscal year 2010/11, up from 5.2 percent in the year that ended in June.

Egypt revised down its gross domestic product growth figure for the April-June quarter to 5.4 percent from a previously stated 5.9 percent.

The next policy meeting of the central bank's Monetary Policy Committee is scheduled for December 16.

Abbas: No talks with Israel in shadow of settlements

AFP
Thu, 09/12/2010 - 12:41
Palestinian
Photographed by AFP

President Mahmoud Abbas on Thursday ruled out negotiations with Israel as long as it refuses to freeze settlement building, but did not specify if he would agree to indirect talks.

"We will not accept negotiations as long as settlements continue," Abbas told reporters in Cairo after more than one hour of talks with Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak.

He said the discussions focused on "what comes after" Washington on Tuesday admitted that weeks-long efforts to persuade Israel to freeze settlements in the occupied West Bank and annexed east Jerusalem had failed.

But Abbas appeared to leave the door open to a final decision on resuming talks with Israel in some form or other, saying he would first hold further consultations with Arab and Palestinian officials.

"There must be clear references for peace... and we will discuss all that with the follow-up committee, the Palestinian leadership and after that there will be a decision," he said.

Abbas has in the past sought the endorsement of the Arab follow-up committee on the question of resuming direct US-brokered peace talks with Israel.

Direct talks were re-launched on September 2 after a 20-month hiatus but stalled three weeks later when Israel refused to renew a moratorium on settlement building.

Egypt's government daily Al-Ahram quoted the Palestinian ambassador to Cairo Barakat al-Farra as saying that Abbas would travel later to Amman for consultations with Jordan's King Abdullah II.

Egypt and Jordan are the only two Arab countries to have peace treaties with Israel and both countries are a must-stop for Palestinian leaders for consultations when the going gets rough.

Abbas arrived Wednesday in Cairo from Athens and immediately went into talks with Arab League chief Amr Mussa who later told reporters that a ministerial committee on the peace process would convene next week.

Washington on Tuesday announced that weeks-long efforts to coax Israel into imposing new curbs on settlement construction had failed, leaving direct peace talks deadlocked.

The Palestinians have repeatedly stressed they will not resume direct peace talks unless there is a halt to building in the occupied West Bank as well as a freeze in annexed east Jerusalem, which they consider the capital of their future state.

Chief Palestinian negotiator Saeb Erakat has said Washington should recognize an independent Palestinian state in response to Israel's refusal to freeze settlement building.

Erakat said Abbas, who on Wednesday said the peace process was in crisis, was to hold separate talks with US Middle East envoy George Mitchell and Arab leaders over the next few days.

"The president will consult with the Arab brothers before responding to the American ideas," he said Wednesday in Cairo.

Erakat and Palestinian premier Salam Fayyad were heading to Washington on Thursday for talks with US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton. Israeli Defence Minister Ehud Barak and top negotiator Isaac Molho preceded them there.

The Palestinian and Israeli officials will be attending a conference in Washington during which Clinton was to give a keynote address outlining a new strategy for advancing the peace process.

One shark caught, another still at large

AP
Thu, 09/12/2010 - 13:07
Photographed by AFP

Sharm al-Sheikh--A top Egyptian official said Wednesday that he believes that one of two sharks involved in attacks on tourists in the Red Sea resort of Sharm al-Sheikh has been caught, while the other remains at large.

Governor of South Sinai Mohammed Shousha said according to initial findings from US and Egyptian experts a Mako shark caught Thursday mauled two tourists last week.

An Oceanic White Tip that mauled two Russians last week and killed a German woman on Sunday remains at large and the resort's 30-miles of beaches remain closed indefinitely.

The scientists drew their conclusions based on the pattern of bite marks on the victims and according to witness accounts, Shousha said.

A team of US experts is in Sharm al-Sheikh to help investigate the unusual series of attacks in one of the world's top diving destinations.

"The search for the Oceanic White Tip continues," he said. Divers are surveying the waters.

Sharm al-Sheikh is a major Egyptian tourist attraction, with a busy airport that brings in package tours from Europe and offers a warm and quick escape from frigid winter temperatures on the continent. Divers are drawn by the steep drop-offs of coral reefs just offshore that offer deep walls of coral with a rich and colorful sea life. There is also an observatory to view wild sharks.

Shark attacks in the area are rare and authorities were scrambling to prevent them from cutting into the crucial revenues that Red Sea tourism brings to Egypt.

Sharm's trouble's began in the middle of last week when sharks mauled three Russians and one Ukrainian tourist. One Russian woman had her hand bitten off and another lost a hand and a leg. But all four victims survived.

Then on Sunday, a shark tore the arm off a 70-year-old German tourist while she was snorkeling and she died almost immediately.

The resort at the southern tip of the Sinai peninsula has boomed since the 1980s. There are some 100 hotels, long stretches of sandy white beaches, desert safari excursions and a vibrant night life.

Beach tourism is believed to contribute about 66 percent of Egypt's total income from tourism, which is expected to reach US$12.3 billion by the end of the current fiscal year in June, Tourism Minister Zohair Garanah was quoted as saying in state-owned Al-Gomhorriya daily.

Experts so far have been at a loss to explain the reasons for the sudden spate of shark attacks.

Environmentalists have theorized that overfishing or depletion of food sources from other causes could be driving sharks closer to shore in search of food. There are also accusations that tourist boats are illegally dumping meat into the water to attract sharks for passengers wanting to photograph them.

Amr Moussa: Negotiations pointless while settlement building continues

Thu, 09/12/2010 - 13:43
Secretary general of Arabe league Amr Moussa
Photographed by Hossam Fadl

Arab League Secretary General Amr Moussa on Wednesday said there is no point engaging in peace negotiations while Israel persists with settlement construction.

"If settlement building continues to eat away at the land, how can there be a Palestinian state?" questioned Moussa in statements to the press, following a meeting with Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas.

The Arab League head said he considers it unlikely that any Arab state will give the US another chance at the peace process, adding that it would be a miracle if moribund negotiations are resurrected.

The Arab World is not prepared to surrender, nor to cede control of the Palestinian state's destiny to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, Moussa said.

Moussa added that the letter Obama recently sent to president Abbas concerning settlements and peace negotiations will be disclosed and discussed during the impending Arab Peace Initiative Committee meeting.

Egyptian court rejects release appeal for Coptic 'rioters'

Thu, 09/12/2010 - 13:55


Photographed by Mohamed Hossam Eddin

The Badrashin Misdemeanor Appeals Court has rebuffed an appeal for the release of Coptic defendants involved in riots that erupted on 24 November following a decision by Omraneya, Giza authorities to halt construction on a local church.

Trial is pending for 158 individuals currently held in custody. The accused face charges of attempting to murder 22 policemen, illegal possession of weapons, and destabilizing public order.

Defense lawyer Adel Mikhael said he submitted an appeal to the court requesting the detainees' release. He claimed the accused are held without due cause.

Meanwhile, 14 defendants were inadvertently omitted from the list of suspects demanded for release.

Following the court decision, 20 police cars and 600 officers escorted the defendants back to Tora prison.

Security officers cordoned off the court’s premises on Wednesday night, prohibiting entry in an effort to prevent clashes.

The families of those detained stood quietly outside the building from 6AM to 12PM.

Referendum postponed on disputed Sudan region Abyei

Thu, 09/12/2010 - 14:36
Photographed by other

The referendum for Sudan's Abyei region will not proceed as planned on 9 January, announced Nafaa Ali Nafaa, an aide to Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir, on Thursday . Nafaa confirmed, however, the general referendum for South Sudan secession will be held as scheduled.

The plebiscites were originally slated to coincide.

“It is essential to postpone the referendum on Abyei due to the lack of agreement determining who will vote in the elections and the insistence, of the Popular Movement to Liberate Sudan, that the region only belongs to the Dinka Naquk tribe," Nafaa said.

Nafaa added that the Abyei region is inhabited by a variety of tribes, not just the Dinka Naquk.

Sudanese in the oil-rich Abyei region were scheduled to vote on whether to join an independent South Sudan, should the southern Sudanese opt for independence on 9 January.

The aide warned that continued disagreement between northern and southern officials over Abyei could fuel conflict.

A security official of the ruling National Conference Party, Ali Hamed, said inadequate preparatory measures have rendered the Abyei vote impractical.

Hamed claimed the Sudanese government is dealing with all submitted proposals, except those that deviate from protocol stipulated by the Naivasha peace agreement.

Hamed emphasized that the northern and southern officials are taking part in negotiations in order to prevent a return to civil war, explaining that the peace agreement provides mechanisms to resolve differences.

Prominent Salafi preacher reportedly arrested in Alexandria

Thu, 09/12/2010 - 14:51


Photographed by other

Security authorities in Alexandria have detained Sheikh Abdel Moneim al-Shahat, a prominent Salafi figure, according to OnIslam.net. The website quoted Salafi sources as saying that the sheikh has been in custody since Sunday.

Security authorities did not confirm the reports.

According to the report, some Salafi sources attributed the arrest to articles al-Shahat recently published in which he accuses Copts together with the ruling National Democratic Party (NDP) of spurring violence. But others believe that the primary reason for government concern with underground Salafi movements is their influential preaching activity, even though Alexandria's Salafis do not call for armed violence.

Another possible cause for government concern is al-Shahat’s call for rapprochement with the Muslim Brotherhood after the latter's parliamentary election failure. Al-Shahat, in his fifties, is a well known preacher of Alexandria's Salafi School. He is particularly known for his Salafi perspective on national events relating to Egypt.

Many believe that Salafis lie behind a number of Muslim protests demanding the whereabouts of Kamilia Shehata, a priest's wife thought to be held in church custody for converting to Islam.

Al-Shahat's lessons and lectures had been ordered to a halt several months ago because he addresses the issue of Shehata in some of his writings.

Egyptian authorities discover tunnels along Gaza border

Thu, 09/12/2010 - 15:42
One of Palestinians is inside Gaza's tunnels which is used to deliver supplies and aids inside Gaza strip
Photographed by AFP

Egyptian security on Thursday uncovered seven smuggling tunnels along Egypt's border with the Gaza Strip.

Authorities made the discoveries in the vicinity of Egyptian border towns Rafah and Salah al-Din during a security campaign that aimed to shut down smuggling activity in the area.

Although authorities failed to find goods or smugglers, they discovered tunnels clearly intended for transport operations.

In attempting to identify suspects and uncover additional tunnels, security personnel assigned to the area seek to stem the flow of goods between the Gaza Strip and Egypt.

Smuggling between Egypt and Gaza has proliferated since the Israeli-imposed Gaza blockade that began after Hamas assumed control of the territory in 2007.

Israel accuses Hamas of using the tunnels to smuggle weapons into Gaza.

'Poppy Flowers' theft case appeal adjourned until January

Thu, 09/12/2010 - 16:37
Photographed by other

An Egyptian court of appeals on Thursday began hearings to reverse the decision to imprison ministry of culture officials accused of permitting the theft of the Van Gogh painting "Poppy Flowers" in August.

The Dokki Misdemeanors Court previously sentenced Ministry of Culture First Undersecretary Mohsen Shaalan and 10 other ministry employees with three years imprisonment and an LE10,000 bail each in October.

During the first appeal hearing, the Misdemeanors Appeals Court in Dokki set 6 January as the date for the following hearing, in order to allow lawyers sufficient time to prepare arguments.

Van Gogh's painting "Poppy Flowers" was stolen from the Mahmoud Khalil Museum in Dokki. The painting has an estimated value of roughly US$55 million.

During an inspection of the museum in the wake of the theft, Egypt's Attorney General found that only seven of the museum's 43 electronic surveillance camera's were operational. The inspection also revealed the anti-theft alarms installed on all of the museum's paintings were broken.

Two Egyptian authors on 'Arabic booker' short list

Thu, 09/12/2010 - 16:39


Photographed by other

Two young Egyptian authors have made the shortlist for the 2011 International Prize for Arabic Fiction (IPAF), popularly known as the “Arabic Booker.”

The shortlist was announced today in Doha, Qatar.

The two Egyptians are Miral al-Tahawy, for her novel “Brooklyn Heights,” and Khaled al-Berry, for his “Middle Eastern Dance.” The two are joined on the six-strong shortlist by celebrated Saudi author Raja Alem (for “The Doves’ Necklace”), Sudanese author Amir Tag El-Sir (for “The Head Hunter”), and both Morocco’s current Minister of Culture and a former holder of the post: Bensalem Himmich (for “My Tormentor”) and Mohammed Achaari (for “The Arch and the Butterfly”).

The IPAF winner, who will take home US$50,000, will be announced on 14 March in Abu Dhabi on the eve of the Abu Dhabi International Book Fair. Each of the shortlisted writers will be awarded US$10,000.

The two Egyptian natives, Al-Tahawy and Al-Berry, both currently reside outside of the country; Al-Tahawy, a former resident of New York City’s Brooklyn Heights neighborhood, now works as an assistant professor at Appalachian State University in North Carolina. Al-Berry works for the BBC in London.

Both Al-Tahawy’s “Brooklyn Heights” and Al-Berry’s “Middle Eastern Dance” explore the experiences of Egyptians abroad. “Brooklyn Heights” centers on an Egyptian immigrant experience in New York City, and “Middle Eastern Dance” tells the story of an Egyptian killed in Italy on New Year’s Eve.

Al-Berry said that being shortlisted for the IPAF makes a big difference for him as a novelist: "[It means] that I can say that I'm a novelist, write with more confidence, feel that my work has a chance of recognition. It's also put my name on the map, which is really important for unknown name like myself."

The prize, now in its fourth year, has been won twice by Egyptians. The inaugural prize was taken by Bahaa Taher for “Sunset Oasis.” The following year, in 2009, it was won by Youssef Ziedan’s controversial “Azazeel.” In 2010, Saudi author Abdo Khal was awarded the prize for his satiric novel “She Throws Sparks.”

Of the previous winners, only Bahaa Taher has thus far been translated into English. However, four of this year’s shortlisted authors, including both Al-Tahawy and Al-Berry, have books in English translation.

Raja Alem, a prominent Saudi author, has two books out in English translation. Her “My Thousand & One Nights: A Novel of Mecca” and “Fatima: A Novel of Arabia” were translated by Tom McDonough and published by Syracuse University Press. And Naguib Mahfouz Medal-winning author Bensalem Himmich has had English translations of his award-winning “The Polymath” and his “The Theocrat” published by AUC Press. Both of Himmich’s novels were translated by Roger Allen.

It’s also noteworthy that two of the novels on the 2011 shortlist were written by women. In previous years, IPAF organizers were criticized for having few women on the longlist. Few books by women were submitted by publishers, and only one woman made the shortlist each year: May Menassa (2008), Inaam Kachachi (2009) and, last year, Egyptian author Mansoura Ez Eldin.

This year, publishers submitted more books by women and the longlist was divided almost evenly between male and female authors. However, Egyptian novelist Amina Zaydan still insisted last month, in an interview with Youm 7, that a woman wouldn’t win the IPAF prize in 2011. She said that women’s writing in Arabic is not taken as seriously as men’s.

The panel of judges—which has similarly been criticized for a lack of gender parity and diversity—was also revealed Thursday. They are Iraqi poet and novelist Fadhil al-Azzawi (Chair); Bahraini academic, critic, and researcher Munira al-Fadhel; Italian academic, translator, and critic Isabella Camera d’Afflitto; Jordanian author Amjad Nasser; and Moroccan writer and critic Said Yaktine.

All the shortlisted authors are expected to be in Abu Dhabi on 14 March for the announcement of the 2011 IPAF winner.

Autopsy report: No trace of violence found on Alex arrestee’s body

Thu, 09/12/2010 - 18:08
Photographed by Noha El-Hennawy

Alexandria's district attorney on Thursday received the autopsy report on the body of a local man who died while being arrested by police earlier this week.

The report ruled out the possibility that the deceased had been beaten or assaulted in any way, noting that no traces of violence had been found on the body.

Prosecutors, meanwhile, continued to question the policeman who had carried out the arrest and the owner of the shop in which the incident occurred.

The policeman alleges that, while attempting to arrest the deceased--who had been convicted eight times in absentia for writing bad checks--the latter abruptly fell to the floor. By the time he was brought to hospital, he had already been pronounced dead.

Two policemen are currently being tried for the murder of 28-year-old Khaled Saeed, who was allegedly beaten to death in the coastal city of Alexandria in early June. The case received widespread attention in the local and international media and triggered outrage among human rights groups both in Egypt and abroad.

Egyptian expert withdraws from team studying shark attacks

Thu, 09/12/2010 - 18:41

Photographed by Mohamed Elmeshad

Egyptian oceanography professor Mahmoud Hanafy has pulled out of the joint American-Egyptian team of experts mandated with studying possible reasons for the recent spate of shark attacks off the southern coast of Egypt's Sinai Peninsula.

“We weren't allowed to meet the Americans or consult with them,” Hanafy complained. “What kind of joint team is this?”

Meanwhile, at a press conference on Thursday, South Sinai Governor Mohamed Shousha reiterated that he had never aired suspicions that Israel was somehow involved in the attacks, as was reported by certain news agencies.

“We've restricted diving and snorkeling activities,” he said. “And we intend to hang nets in order to protect swimmers.”

In related news, Tamer Marzouq, director of the Egyptian Tourism Promotion Bureau in Germany, said he had received no cancellations until now of planned vacations to Sharm al-Sheikh. “We have only received phone calls from some patrons asking for more information,” he said.

Marzouq went on to explain that some 85 percent of German beach tourists chose to vacation in Hurghada, while the remaining 15 percent generally holiday in Sharm.

“The German media has reported that these attacks represent an exception to the rule,“ he said. “But it nevertheless advised against trips to the area.”