Saturday, 23 April 2011

Brotherhood leader: Preparing for an Islamic government


Sat, 23/04/2011 - 12:17

Photographed by محمد معروف

The role of the Muslim Brotherhood is to mobilize the nation to establish a way of life based on Islam, said its Deputy Supreme Guide Khairat al-Shater.

Speaking at a conference in Alexandria two days ago, Shater further said that the group is preparing to initiate an Islamic government to achieve progress based on Islamic principles, and that its objective is to establish an Islamic state and become world leaders.

Pointing out that no Sunni state currently has a regime with Islamic references, he urged Muslim scholars to contribute an workable, comprehensive, civilized Islamic model.

Asked about the recent resignations of some Brotherhood leaders, Shater said, “If two Brotherhood members have left, a hundred join every day.”

“If I myself violate the decisions of the group’s Shura Council, then I have to leave it, because the Brotherhood is not a group of individuals, it is a group based on institutions.”

He said the Brotherhood's strength lies in its moral and organizational elements and the reliance on its Shura Council in all its affairs.

He added that its principles cannot be changed for the sake of its new political party, the Freedom and Justice party, which will be one of its political tools. He revealed that a project is being examined to separate the party financially and administratively from the group.

Declaring that the Brotherhood will become more open in the near future, he added that internal regulations will be amended as part of its development.

He said the group has taken a final decision not to participate in the presidential election, but that it has not yet decided on the percentage of parliamentary seats to contest, adding that media reports represent only the educated guesses of group members. Its Shura Council will decide, he added.

Shater attributed contradictory statements by group leaders to the media crackdown on them in the past and the lack of proper communication between members, admitting that some do not know how to handle the media well. He also blamed the media for paying too much attention to certain members' individual positions.

He said members should not express views different from those of the Brotherhood.

Shater said the ousted regime used the most extreme form of repression against the group, which severely restricted its activities in the public sphere. He said that in 2000 alone, 9000 companies belonging to the Brotherhood were closed down, and an estimated 35,000 Brotherhood members were arrested during the Mubarak's rule.

Ethiopia won't allow inspection of dam, but ready to negotiate with post-Mubarak Egypt


Sat, 23/04/2011 - 11:06

<p>Nile Basin States</p>
Photographed by other

Egypt will not be allowed to examine a new mega dam Ethiopia is building on the Nile unless Cairo signs a deal relinquishing its power of veto over allocation of the river's waters, Ethiopian Foreign Minister Hailemariam Desalegn said two days ago.

Asked if Addis Ababa will allow Egypt to reassure itself that the dam will not affect the flow of Nile water, he said, “We are ready for negotiations and cooperation at the highest and technical level, but we are a sovereign state.”

At a press conference, Hailemariam said "The Cooperative Framework Agreement (signed by upstream countries) gives this option (examination) to all countries, so we have to engage ourselves to get to an agreement where we can work together equally.”

He also said that relations between Egypt and Ethiopia have improved since the ouster of ex-president Hosni Mubarak. "There's a new momentum now in Egypt after the revolution, there's desire from all sides that we should engage and close all the past chapters, because there were ups and downs in the past."

Meanwhile, Egyptian diplomatic sources also said that both are seeking to restore confidence and turn over a new leaf.

Though declining to comment on Hailemariam's statement that Egypt may not inspect the Grand Millennium Dam, sources pointed out however that the two countries are communicating to set a date for a visit by Egyptian Prime Minister Essam Sharaf to Ethiopia in May.

The sources said Sharaf’s visit will be part of an African tour that will also take him to Uganda and the Democratic Republic of Congo. These visits are expected to have a positive impact on relations with Nile Basin countries, the sources said.

Special from Syria: Demonstrators poised to continue in wake of bloodiest day


Sat, 23/04/2011 - 13:01

Photographed by Reuters

Damascus -- A strong military presence remained in place around Damascus on Saturday in the wake of the country’s bloodiest day in five weeks of growing unrest. Large turnouts are expected to mourn the scores of victims, which activists say has now reached more than 100.

Security forces fired on protesters, seeking to quell demonstrations following Friday prayers in Latakia, Homs, Hama, Damascus and the southern village of Isra’a. Tens of thousands took to the streets on Friday in defiance of earlier government warnings that any further displays of unrest would not be tolerated.
Damascus had been one of the few cities to so far avoid widespread demonstrations and violence. But, in a sign of the regime's growing nervousness, the military on Friday night deployed at main roads entering the Syrian capital. Soldiers manned checkpoints a few of kilometers outside Damascus on one main highway leading south.
Just two hours before morning prayers on Friday, soldiers were stopping cars and buses driving into the capital and checking drivers and passengers for identification. Those checkpoints remained in place on Saturday.
In Moadniyah, a small town roughly 10km south of Damascus, a massive cordon of troops encircled the town. Soldiers also positioned themselves on rooftops and outside mosques, while others peered out from behind barricades of sandbags and giant tires.
The town hosted sizeable unrest Friday, 15 March when thousands of residents marched towards Damascus but were forced back by security forces firing tear gas.
Late in the afternoon on Friday reports circulated claiming either the army or security forces had opened fire on demonstrators in the town.
"People are being taken to hospital in cars," said one demonstrator who did not want to be named for fear of reprisal.
Haitham Maleh, a human rights lawyer based in Damascus, said: "The regime has no idea how to change."
With the help of a pervasive security apparatus, President Bashar al-Assad, 45, maintains absolute power in the country he inherited from his father, Hafez, in 2000. Analysts have largely considered the fate of Syria’s top generals inextricably linked to Bashar’s but, in recent days, some international media are suggesting the formation of internal rifts within the Assad family.
Meanwhile, Maleh reported security services took over a stadium near Abbassiyeen Square in the center of Damascus, busing in hundreds of armed civilians in anticipation of unrest.
Abbassiyeen Square was the intended destination for protesters who marched on Damascus last week.
"There are demonstrations in all the cities and villages around Syria," added Mr Maleh. "People want the regime to fall."
In a concession to demonstrators last Friday, Assad announced intentions to lift the much-despised emergency laws, in place for 48 years since the Baath Party seized power in a coup.
A law was passed this week to scrap the decades-old measure. Many activists, however, believe the move is not enough to quell the ever-growing tide of anti-government feeling now sweeping the country.
A change in leadership in Syria, analysts say, will send reverberations throughout the region. Syria has a strong relationship with Iran, acting as a conduit for support to Hizbullah in Lebanon and Palestinian militant groups. The country is also an important geo-strategic player in the region.
In Jadiadeh Artooz, a small town of a few thousand people which lies about 14km south of Damascus, some young Syrians on Friday told Al-Masry Al-Youm they support the protests because of the authoritative rule of the country’s regime.
"I went to protest for the first time because I want freedom and dignity," said one young man in his twenties who sat on a bedroom floor sipping his glass of coke. "I want this country to be a good country."
Earlier in the day a crowd of roughly 1500 gathered in the streets of Jadiadeh Artooz after Friday prayers. There were no banners or carefully-prepared posters, just a number of fiery chants.
One of them, which would have been exceptionally dangerous just a couple of weeks ago, was a carbon copy of the slogan which rang around Cairo's Tahrir Square a couple of months ago: "The people want the system to fall!"

A peek into the post-revolution psyche


Sat, 23/04/2011 - 13:20

<p>An Egyptian man hugs an army commander at Cairo's Tahrir Square, February 12, 2011. Thousands of Egyptians were still singing and waving flags as dawn broke over a nation reborn, after a popular uprising toppled Mubarak.</p>
Photographed by AFP

It is only natural that a sense of national euphoria should follow a popular uprising that has toppled a tyrant who has been in power for 30 years. But what happens next to the country’s collective psyche is less clear.

The potential for great change exists, though, and conversations with many Egyptians suggest that even two months after the fall of the regime, there is still a tremendous pride and optimism, even if it is tempered by caution.

Shawky al-Akabawy, a prominent Egyptian psychology and sociology expert says that it would take years and a lot of work to turn the new-found positivity and national pride among Egyptians from a temporary high into a sustainable change.

“Sudden wars don’t allow people to take their time to change. Principles will cause change, not slogans,” said al-Akabawy, urging Egyptians to stick to the principles of the revolution in order to dispel the negativities that decades of oppression have instilled in the Egyptian character.

Basma Abdel Aziz, a psychologist at the Egyptian Mental Health Secretariat and El Nadeem Center for Rehabilitation of Victims of Violence, describes the Egyptian personality before the revolution as passive-aggressive and defeatist. Egyptians used to channel the anger resulting from their oppression in various wrong directions, she says, such as slacking at work or destroying public property, while simultaneously accepting the status quo.

Saneya Abdel Atty, a teacher, exemplifies that change. She says that she used to isolate herself in her house when she faced a problem. Now, whenever she has something to say, she heads to Tahrir Square.

“Before 25 January, I used to talk to myself. I would count my corrupt bosses and ask myself who to complain to,” says Abdel Atty. “Now, I still don’t know how to get my rights, but the difference is that I have Tahrir Square.”

Like many Egyptians, Abdel Atty’s relief is mixed with apprehension. “I am now living in a state of imbalance. I’m wondering whether the blood of the martyrs will pay off or go to waste?”

The triumph of the people’s will, which was crowned by Mubarak’s resignation in response to their demands, gave the Egyptian people a feeling of dignity and empowerment that many say has changed them drastically.

Al-Akabawy says that the revolution filled the people with pride, dignity and confidence after they succeeded in changing what they thought was unchangeable.

“I am not breathing air now, I am breathing freedom,” says Abdel Shafei Sirag al-Din, a protester. “Even if we haven’t collected the fruits of the revolution yet, the people are happy with the feeling of freedom and democracy, which they cherish more than the bread that the old regime used to humiliate us for.”

Architect Ahmed Anwar shares the same feeling. “I was numb before. Now I feel like a human being who has freedom and has a personality,” he says. “My voice finally came out. It’s enough for me that I became respected inside my country and outside.”

Many Egyptians had a gloomy outlook on the future before the revolution, but now a sense of hope has been ignited that Egypt and its people are headed for a better future.

Art student Radwa al-Ghoroury says that she had always loved Egypt but never felt that she had a future in the country, and was planning to emigrate after college. Now she believes that she may be facing a bright future in her homeland. “The determination of the people in the square inspired me to be determined myself,” says al-Ghoroury.

“After we were sure that there was no hope, the youth who started the revolution opened the door, and the whole population who had been suffering from corruption followed,” says Akabawy.

The removal of the fear barrier took a huge burden off the shoulders of Egyptians. Abdel Aziz says that Egyptians were finally able to speak out against their rulers, who they regarded as father figures before, making them off limits for criticism.

“After the revolution, I am no longer afraid of the government,” says Mohamed al-Sayed Fadl, a college graduate. “I saw that I was able to say no. I became stronger because now I know that no one can oppress us again. If we had an unjust ruler, we would be able to get our rights from him.”

Abdel Aziz says that the unrealistic expectation that some Egyptians had regarding the results of the revolution might lead to disappointment, which would halt the change in their personalities.

“We were surprised by the revolution and the fall of the regime, and we thought that life would be perfect after that, even though what has been accomplished is only a drop in an ocean,” says Abdel Aziz.

Nadia Hassan, a mother of five who lost one of her children in a car accident and was never able to prosecute the person responsible, risks experiencing such disappointment. She believes that she will never have to endure this feeling of injustice again. “Our youth performed a miracle that we weren’t able to do. They woke us up. What we lost is enough,” she tearfully declares.

The revolution also created a new sense of pride, replacing the shame that most Egyptians previously lived with.

“For the first time in 30 years, Egyptians are feeling that the world is looking at them with admiration and respect, which has restored the sense of national dignity that had been lost,” explains al-Akabawy.

Amira Khallaf, an English teacher, says that she is motivated by the feeling that Egypt is her country and that it’s her responsibility to develop it. “I never thought of Egypt as my country. I never felt that the streets were mine to clean, but now I feel that Egypt is mine and I will change it myself,” says Khallaf.

Many who were depressed by the thought that Egyptians are negative and unwilling to fight for change got a huge boost when they saw millions of people participating in the demonstrations that led to Mubarak’s fall.

“I felt I was trying to change the country on my own, but I was surprised to find that a lot of people share my vision, and now we can change it together,” says Sarah Abou Bakr, a marketing agent, adding that this realization returned hope to her and altered her state of mind completely.

Akabawy says that the extent to which the people’s hopes will be materialized during the next phase will determine whether this shift in Egyptian morale will last or fade away, leaving them in a state of despair similar to that which was common before the revolution.

Abdel Aziz believes that a radical transformation in the educational system, from teaching memorization and passivity to encouraging creative thinking and initiative, is crucial to sustaining a long-lasting change in the Egyptian personality.

But for now, more than two months after Mubarak’s resignation, the sense of hope and optimism is still there.

Talking to Mohamed Abdo, a state television employee, this hope and optimism is palpable. Abdo says he used to look at his seven-year-old son Khaled and his one-year-old Kholoud and wonder how they would manage to survive the tough future ahead. Not anymore. “Now there’s an energy, there’s a light. I know that their time will be better than mine, with a little patience.”

Investigations reveal further details of Mubaraks' hidden wealth

Sat, 23/04/2011 - 14:33

<p></p>
Photographed by other

Investigations into the wealth of ousted president Hosni Mubarak and his family will be expedited in time for questioning sessions on Tuesday, according to the orders of Assistant Minister of Justice for Illicit Gains Assem al-Gohari.

The wives of the ex-president’s sons Alaa and Gamal will be summoned for questioning over the assets owned by their husbands, as more details of the family's illegal gains emerged.

The Illicit Gains Authority (IGA) requested additional information on an account allegedly used by former First Lady Suzanne Mubarak to manage European grants, as well as on the Alexandria Library bank account.

According to investigators, Alaa and Gamal Mubarak have secret accounts overseas as well as villas and apartments taken from Egyptian embassies.

Investigations revealed that Alaa has millions of dollars in overseas accounts, besides funds held by both sons inside Egypt.

Investigators further showed that officials manipulated stocks to Alaa's profit. For example, the former minister of housing helped Alaa buy a certain stock at LE99 and sell it one week later at LE900, generating LE30 million.

They showed that Alaa also made millions through private placements conducted especially for him.

Investigations uncovered the fact that Mubarak paid LE500,000 for his residential palace in Sharm el-Sheikh -- an amount believed to be less than 1% of the value of finishing work on the palace, the total surface area of which is 16,000 square meters. The palace, with its private beach, is estimated to cost more than LE60 million.

Final investigations carried out by the Administrative Control Authority revealed that business tycoon Hussein Salem gave the palace to Mubarak for free in exchange for his approval to export gas to Israel and on other gas-related deals.

Gohari said that an Egyptian committee has met with representatives form the World Bank and United Nations Development Program to help restore money smuggled outside the country. Both organizations expressed readiness to help, he added.

He said that official documents requested by some European states have been submitted to help uncover secret accounts abroad. He added that Mubarak will only be summoned for questioning after all authorities have finished their work in order to confront him with the results and the charges brought against him.

Meanwhile, the IGA today extended the detention of former Shura Council Speaker Safwat al-Sherif.

Thursday's papers: Dealing with Qena unrest and erasing Mubarak's legacy

Thu, 21/04/2011 - 14:40
<p>Qena residents protest over new governor</p>

Thursday’s paper highlighted civil disobedience in the Upper Egyptian province of Qena. For the past week thousands of protests have flooded the streets of the city, holding sit-ins and closing the railway as they call for a new governor.

Most of the media coverage says that people in Qena are opposing the newly-appointed governor Emad Mikhail, a former police general, because he is Christian. State-run Al-Akhbar ran a headline that reads “Governor of Qena is still in his post,” adding details that Mikhail has yet to submit a resignation despite protesters’ calls for a new governor by Friday.

The paper quoted from the cabinet meeting on Wednesday, saying ministers discussed the impact Qena unrest is having on various levels.

Prime Minister Essam Sharaf’s media adviser, Ahmed al-Semman, told the paper that it is unacceptable to oppose an appointment because of religion. In addition, he said that closing the railway stations is a crime punishable by law and that the southern province of Aswan is being deprived of basic commodities and energy supplies.

Protesters in Qena paid little heed to cabinet warnings and have called for a "million-man" demonstration on Friday. Several imams from the city's mosques said the Ministry of Endowments had instructed them not to address the subject during Friday prayers.

Despite the significance of the issue, state owned Al-Ahram only covered the cabinet meeting in a short story equating protests with blackmail and saying the government will not respond.

Journalist Abdel Mohsen Salama wrote in his weekly column, “What’s going on in Qena is an alarming indicator for the rise of sectarianism.” Salama accused the government of being the first to make a mistake by appointing Christian governors for Qena.

Privately owned Al-Shorouk reported that most of the Christians are in favor of the protests against Mikhail. Al-Shorouk also reported that Bisoy Narooz from the Qena archbishop’s diocese gave a speech to protesters saying that Muslims and Christians are brothers and that the situation surrounding the previous governor should not be repeated.

Mikhail’s predecessor, Magdy Ayoub, also a Christian, was removed after residents petitioned for his removal due to his alleged involvement in corrupt land deals with the National Democratic Party.

Thursday’s papers also reported on the process of removing the former president’s name from awards and institutions. In a bid to erase a part of his legacy, one of the country’s most prestigious awards, the Mubarak Award, has been abolished, according to Al-Gomhorriya

The cabinet announced on Wednesday it “approved a decree law on the establishment of the Nile Prize in the fields of literature and the arts and social sciences, science and technology ... and the abolition of Mubarak Award."

Al-Dostour also highlighted a decision to remove Mubarak’s name from scientific centers.

Al-Akhbar reported on the government’s decision to cancel daylight saving time after a poll showed 80 percent of participants favored the move. The newspaper also said the cabinet is considering giving electoral representation to Nubians in Upper Egypt.

Egypt's papers:

Al-Ahram: Daily, state-run, largest distribution in Egypt

Al-Akhbar: Daily, state-run, second to Al-Ahram in institutional size

Al-Gomhorriya: Daily, state-run

Rose al-Youssef: Daily, state-run

Al-Dostour: Daily, privately owned

Al-Shorouk: Daily, privately owned

Al-Wafd: Daily, published by the liberal Wafd Party

Al-Arabi: Weekly, published by the Arab Nasserist party

Youm7: Weekly, privately owned

Sawt al-Umma: Weekly, privately owned

Argentine town battles mining company



Locals fear mine, potentially worth hundreds of billions of dollars, would threaten water reserves.
Last Modified: 23 Apr 2011 12:07

Video

A Canadian company plans to open a mine in Argentina’s Catamarca province to tap into a rich vein of copper and gold that could be worth hundreds of billions of dollars.

But residents in the valley below the Agua Rica mine have been taking on the miners, protesting for more than two years in an effort to block the project. They fear scarce water resources are in jeopardy.

Al Jazeera’s Craig Mauro reports from Argentina.


Source:
Aljazeera

Hopes fade for Philippines landslide victims



Rescue workers claw through mud and dirt in search of 21 people still missing after villagers buried alive by landslide.
Last Modified: 23 Apr 2011 08:51

Rescue workers frantically clawed through mud and dirt in search of survivors [Reuters]

Philippine rescuers have continued the frantic search for more survivors a day after a landslide buried workers in mining tunnels in a gold-rich area in the south.

But officials are losing hope of finding survivors among the 21 still missing, believed to be buried in a landslide that killed at least three people on Friday, including a 16-year-old miner.

The disaster hit Kingking village near Pantukan town in Compostela valley province on the island of Mindanao just before dawn on Friday, burying people under mud, rocks and rubble.

The number of people found alive rose to 15 on Saturday as some miners were recovered from a tunnel by diggers clawing through mud and dirt overnight.

Arturo Uy, the Compostela Valley governor, said the shanties and tents where miners and their family members were sleeping have been buried under about 25-30 metres of mud, soil, rocks and other debris from Friday's pre-dawn landslide.

Uy said on Saturday he will recommend a 30-day suspension of small-scale mining in Kingking while geologists determine whether it is still safe for miners.

Liza Mazo, the regional civil defence chief, on Saturday said that the depth of collapsed earth has lowered the prospect of finding more survivors.

"We are pessimistic. It is difficult [to dig] because the landslide is 15 to 20 metres deep," she told AFP.

On Friday, Lieutenant-Colonel Camilo Ligayo, a spokesman for a military unit aiding the site, said residents had told him at least 40 people were missing and feared buried in the tunnels and their homes.

"There are 40 still missing and that is a conservative estimate. The one who gave the estimate was one of the survivors from the tunnels. They know each other there," he told the AFP news agency.

"The landslide is massive and these people, the small scale miners, they work and live on the slopes. They have bunkers, houses, stores."

Safety concerns

It is difficult to pinpoint exact numbers for the missing because of the transient nature of mining work that draws people into the area.

The landslide covered numerous illegal, small-scale gold mines on the mountainside in Kingking, including mining tunnels, houses, stores and gold processing mills.

At the Pantukan town hall, which serves as a makeshift command centre for the disaster, more civil defence workers and soldiers departed on Saturday, carrying shovels for the hour-long ride to the landslide site.

"Time is of the essence but we are doing our best to recover the missing," Major Jake Obligado, a commander of a battalion engaged in the rescue effort, said.

Shanty towns have grown around Kingking following a gold rush in the area around two decades ago. Many of the mining operations are illegal and unregulated.

Two years ago, a similar landslide in another part of the village killed more than 20 people, including some children.

Residents had been ordered to relocate due to the instability of the land and higher risks of landslides.

The Philippines is said to sit on an estimated $1 trillion untapped mineral deposits, but has only targeted to attract $1bn in mining investment this year.


Source:
Agencies

Deadly drone raid sparks Pakistan protest



Hundreds gather in Peshawar to stage sit-in after unmanned drone killed at least 25 people in Hasan Khel.
Last Modified: 23 Apr 2011 12:15

US drone attacks are increasingly becoming a source of anger among Pakistanis [EPA]

Protesters angry over a US drone attack that left at least 25 people dead in Pakistan's tribal region of North Waziristan have begun a two-day sit-in near the city of Peshawar.

Friday's attack by the unmanned fighter jet hit a compound in Hasan Khel and was the latest in a series of drone attacks to have targeted the region.

The sit-in is being organised by opposition politician Imran Khan's Tehreek-e-Insaaf party, said Al Jazeera's correspondent in Peshawar, Kamal Hyder.

According to the Pakistani media, the border region has been targeted by at least 20 US drone attacks this year. And since August 2008, there have been over 250 drone attacks that have reportedly killed more than 1,500 people in north and south Waziristan.

Our correspondent said "hundreds of suppporters have already turned up early" for the protest.

"Most of them are using the shade of any tree they can find, sitting there, waiting for Imran Khan who is said to be travelling in a convoy of several hundred vehicles ...," Hyder said.

"Imran has invited all the opposition parties but not invited the ruling coalition - the Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP), the Muttahia Quami Movement (MQM) and Awami National Party (ANP).

"It is expected that thousands of supporters will gather here in Peshawar [and] by the time the sun goes down there will be a much larger crowd."

The opposition, said our correspondent, have started a new strategy.

"They're going to start blocking these roads to make sure that no NATO supplies get through - until the Americans categorically state that they will not violate Pakistan's sovereignty. That, of course, is the demand from the opposition and a large number of people in Pakistan."

Army claims victory

Meanwhile, Pakistan said on Saturday it had broken the back of anti-government fighters linked to al-Qaeda and the Taliban, according to the head of the military.

In a speech on Saturday, General Ashfaq Parvez Kayani said the army had attained major gains in its campaign against the fighters.

"In the war against terrorism, our officers and soldiers have made great sacrifices and have achieved tremendous success," he said in a speech to army cadets at Kakul military academy, north of Islamabad, broadcast by state television.

"The terrorists' backbone has been broken and Inshallah [God willing] we will soon prevail."

The Associated Press said it was unclear on what basis Kayani made his comments as Pakistan is routinely rocked by attacks by al-Qaeda and the Taliban, who hold sway in many tribal regions.

Parvez's comments followed criticism from the United States that Pakistan was not doing enough to fight militancy. But in his speech Parvez did not allude to Washington, which said Islamabad lacked a robust plan to defeat the fighters.

The US, struggling to put down a 10-year insurgency in Afghanistan, also said Pakistani intelligence agents were maintaining links with Afghan Taliban fighters.

Admiral Mike Mullen, the chairman of the US military's joint chiefs of staff, told Pakistani media during a visit this week that continuing ties between agents of Pakistan's Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) agency and the Haqqani faction, one of the most brutal Afghan Taliban groups, was "at the core" of problems between the two countries.

Despite the rising level of rhetoric, both sides have sought to mend their ties as both need each other for their own reasons.

Relations between the two countries have been recently strained following the fatal shooting of two Pakistanis by Raymond Davis, a CIA contractor, in the city of Lahore in January.

?

Source:
Al Jazeera and agencies

Rivals kick off Turkish election campaign


Turkish prime minister Erdogan launches campaign to win a third term while opposition leader pledges new constitution.
Last Modified: 23 Apr 2011 09:47
Opposition leader Kilicdaroglu, centre, said his party would initiate major reforms, including constitutional ones [EPA]

Turkey's main parties have kicked off their electoral campaigns ahead of parliamentary elections in June which could hand prime minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan a third term in office, local media reported.

Erdogan launched his re-election campaign on Friday in the northern province of Bayburt by explaining the government's economic vision and slamming the opposition, according to the English-language Hurriyet Daily News and Economic Review.

Erdogan's Islamist-influenced Justice and Development Party, or AKP, won landslide victories in 2002 and 2007 despite opposition from Turkey's secularist establishment.

Last year, Erdogan won public support to implement a raft of sweeping constitutional reforms, including reshaping the judiciary and curbs on the powers of the military, in a referendum seen as litmus test of his enduring popularity.

Launching his party's manifesto, opposition leader Kemal Kilicdaroglu, who heads the traditionally secular Republic People's Party, or CHP, promised a new constitution accompanied by social and political reforms to establish greater freedoms for all citizens, including Turkey's Kurdish and Alevi minorities.

Erdogan's stewardship of Turkey's successful economy is seen as crucial to his party's chances and on Friday he said his ambition was to make Turkey one of the world's top economies by 2023 and push gross domestic product to $2tn and per capita income to $25,000.

"Now some will ask whether you have $25,000 in your pocket or not. Look, we are talking about expanding the economy. No one puts such money into anybody's pocket in any part of the world," said Erdogan, whose party came to power in 2002.

The prime minister took a swipe at the opposition saying when it was in power Turks waited in queues for cooking oil and gas.

"They [CHP] used to meet in the cabinet with overcoats on their backs because the heaters were out of use," said Erdogan.

The pro-Kurdish Peace and Democracy Party, or BDP, also came in for criticism from the prime minister who alluded to the riots in the streets of eastern and southeastern Turkey in previous days and claimed the BDP and other parties were "rubbing their hands together [malevolently]" when the youth stoned the police.

Turkey is home to a large Kurdish minority - numbering about one-fifth of the country's population of 75 million - but they complain about marginalisation and abuse of their rights. Since 1984 the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) has waged a guerrilla campaign for an ethnic homeland in the southeast.

The CHP's election manifesto anticipates a number of reforms with regard to the constitution, press freedom, electoral reform, agriculture and the economy.

"The CHP is a party that realized significant transformations. We will now bring democracy and freedom to the country," Kilicdaroglu told supporters. "We will touch every field of life; we have projects related to every sphere of life ... Politics exists for the human being."

If elected, the party will make a new constitution its priority, which will be prepared with contribution from all segments of society, the CHP chief said.

The new charter would anticipate control over the military by civilian authority, a strengthened parliamentary system and separation of powers, while seeking equality.


Source:
Al Jazeera

Rights groups slam Bahraini crackdown



International NGOs say government has been targeting medical facilities, while also torturing pro-democracy activists.
Last Modified: 23 Apr 2011 08:28

Rights groups say that both sides have violated the 'medical neutrality' of the Salmaniya hospital in Manama [Reuters]

Rights organisations are calling on the Bahraini government to halt what they term human rights violations and to stop a crackdown on hospitals where doctors and patients suspected of being sympathetic to pro-democracy protests have been arrested.

In separate statements on Friday, Medicins Sans Frontieres (Doctors Without Borders), Amnesty International and Physicians for Human Rights slammed the government's attacks on medical staff.

London-based Amnesty urged the international community to step in to stop the crackdown, or risk being accused of having "double standards".

"North American and European governments, so vocal recently in espousing the cause of human rights in Libya, Tunisia and Egypt, need also to speak out loudly about what is going on in Bahrain," said Malcolm Smart, Amnesty International's director for the Middle East and North Africa.

"To avoid the charge of double standards, they must be much more robust in pressing the Bahraini authorities to uphold their international human rights obligations."

In a new report, the group accuses the Bahraini government of launching "a cleverly planned and orchestrated crackdown using excessive force to suppress protests calling for political change and reform".

Click here for more of Al Jazeera's special coverage

Amnesty says that security forces' use of shotguns, rubber bullets and tear gas, as well as live ammunition in some cases, was unjustified.

It said that more than 500 people have been arrested in the last month in the tiny Gulf island country, which has seen a series of protests against the current monarchy-led government since February 14.

At least four detainees have died while in custody under "suspicious circumstances", Amnesty says.

The group points out that many of those arrested are doctors and nurses at the capital Manama's main Salmaniya Medical Complex.

'Places to be feared'

Meanwhile, Paris-based Medecins Sans Frontieres said on Friday that the Bahraini government had turned hospitals into "places to be feared".

"Wounds are used to identify demonstrators, restricted access to health care is being used to deter people from protesting, and those who dare to seek treatment in health facilities are being arrested," Latifa Ayada, an MSF medical coordinator, said.

"Health facilities are used as bait to identify and arrest those who dare seek treatment."

The group said in a statement said during a visit to the Salmaniya hospital it appeared "virtually empty".

It said that injured people had told MSF staff that the military had beaten them, "including on their wounds", while others said patients were being arrested inside health facilities if it became apparent that they were injured during the pro-democracy protests.

'Medical neutrality' violated

It said that the use of the hospital as a site for demonstrations against the government, which had prompted an occupation by the Bahraini military to clear them out, had "undermined the ability of health facilities to provide impartial medical care".

Amnesty also accused both sides of violating the hospital's "medical neutrality" during the protests.

"The police, military and intelligence services must stop using the health system as a way to crack down on the protesters," MSF said in a statement.

Physicians for Human Rights (PHR), a US-based rights group, meanwhile, said the government was carrying out "systematic attacks" on medical staff.

"The excessive use of force against unarmed civilians, patients in hospitals and medical personnel that PHR's
investigators documented is extremely troubling and is cause for an immediate international investigation," the group said in a statement on Friday.


Source:
Al Jazeera and agencies

Fresh clashes on Thailand-Cambodia border


Thousands evacuate from villages in disputed border region and several troops killed in artillery and gunfire exchanges.
Last Modified: 23 Apr 2011 03:17

Thai and Cambodian soldiers fought with rocket-propelled grenades and guns on their disputed border [Reuters]

Clashes between Thai and Cambodian troops have resumed for a second day on their disputed border, shattering a two-month lull in long-standing tensions over their disputed border.

Cambodian officials said that the latest fighting began before dawn on Saturday and had not stopped. Three Cambodian troops and one Thai soldier were killed on Saturday, local officials said, taking the death toll to 10.

Both sides have evacuated thousands of villagers and accused each other of firing first in the thick, disputed jungle around Ta Moan and Ta Krabei temples in the northeastern Thai province of Surin, about 150 km southwest of the 900-year-old Hindu Preah Vihear temple, which saw a deadly stand-off in February.

On Friday, troops from the two countries clashed with gunfire and artillery shells when fighting broke out near Ta Muean Tom temple.

Three Thai soldiers were killed, and 13 wounded, in the clash, Lieutenant-Colonel Siriya Khuangsirikul, a Thai military spokeswoman, said.

Lieutenant-General Chhum Socheat, a Cambodian defence ministry spokesman, said that three of his country's soldiers had been killed in the clash, and several others were wounded.

Both sides accused each other of firing first in clashes about 100km southwest of Preah Vihear temple, which is claimed by both Southeast Asian nations and saw an armed stand-off in February.

Longstanding dispute

Thailand and Cambodia regularly accuse each other of starting border fighting.

The Thai-Cambodia border has never been fully demarcated, partly because it is littered with landmines left over from decades of war in Cambodia.


A festering dispute between the two countries over land near a different temple erupted into four days of fighting in February, leaving at least 10 people dead and prompting a UN appeal for a lasting ceasefire.

"It is a very similar situation to other times we've seen such skirmishes. It's very difficult to tell who fired first on these occasions," Al Jazeera's Wayne Hay reported from Bangkok.

"The Thais say that the Cambodians came too close to the disputed border ... in Surin, the Cambodians say that Thai soldiers actually crept across that disputed border into Cambodian territory."

Ties between the neighbours have been strained since Preah Vihear was granted UN World Heritage status in July 2008.

The International Court of Justice ruled in 1962 that the temple belonged to Cambodia, but both countries claim ownership of a 4.6sq km surrounding area.

Observers say the temple dispute has been used as a rallying point to stir nationalist sentiment in Thailand and Cambodia.

"There are many parts of this border ... that are disputed between the two countries," our correspondent said.

"They have fought over [the ancient Preah Vihear Temple] so many times, or at least the land surrounding that temple.

"What we saw in February, when many people were also forced to flee their homes, they went to temporary evacuation centres inside schools, inside community buildings, and they stayed there for many days - weeks in some cases.

"Certainly it'll be the same case on the Cambodian side as well," he said.


Source:
Al Jazeera and agencies

Libya rebels claim 'Misurata is free'



At least 10 dead and dozens hurt in street battles as government troops reported to be withdrawing from besieged city.
Last Modified: 23 Apr 2011 12:55

Intense street fighting continued in Misurata on Saturday, killing at least 10 and wounding dozens more [Reuters]

Rebels have declared Misurata "free" amid reports that government troops have been ordered to withdraw from Libya's besieged western port city.

"Misurata is free, the rebels have won. Of Gaddafi's forces, some are killed and others are running away," rebel spokesman Gemal Salem told Reuters news agency by telephone from the city.

Soldiers captured by rebel fighters on Saturday said the army had been ordered to retreat from the western port city.

"The rebels attacked us while we were withdrawing from Misurata near a bridge this morning," said Ayad Muhammad, a young soldier.

At least 10 people were killed in street battles in the city on Saturday, a doctor told AFP at a hospital overwhelmed by an influx of casualties including government soldiers.

"Since eight o'clock this morning, we have received 10 dead and 50 wounded, which is usually the number for a full day," Khalid Abu Salra said at the main Hikma hospital in Libya's third-largest city.

"We're overwhelmed, overwhelmed. We lack everything: personnel, equipment and medicines."

Hundreds of civilians have been killed in the fighting in Libya's third-largest city.

Tactical change

Saturday's upsurge in the battle for Misurata comes after the Gaddafi government said its soldier had been issued an "ultimatum" by local tribes to stop the rebellion in the city, 200 kilometres east of the capital Tripoli.

Libyan officials late on Friday acknowledged that the siege had been broken when rebels seized the port and NATO air strikes had taken their toll.

"The tactic of the Libyan army is to have a surgical solution, but it doesn't work, with the air strikes it
doesn't work," Khaled Kaim, the Libyan deputy foreign minister, said in the capital, Tripoli.

"The situation in Misurata will be eased, will be dealt with by the tribes around Misrata and the rest of Misurata's people and not by the Libyan army."

Click on image for comprehensive coverage on Libya

Abdelsalam, a rebel spokesman in Misurata, said pro-Gaddafi tribes were in a minority in the area.

"There are two small pro-Gaddafi settlements outside Misurata. They make less than one per cent of the population of Misurata and the surrounding area.

"Those people know that when Gaddafi's regime falls, they will fall with it," Abdelsalam added, predicting the government would boost their strength by paying mercenaries to pose as tribesmen.

Hours after the government's announcement of a shift in tactics in Misurata, NATO bombs struck what appeared to be a bunker near Gaddafi's Bab al-Aziziya compound in central Tripoli.

Reuters reporters who were part of a guided government tour for foreign reporters said the area was surrounded by a wall and guarded by watchtowers and soldiers.

They saw two large holes in the ground where the bombs had torn through soil and reinforced concrete, to pierce what appeared to be an underground bunker.

There was mixed reaction to the government's announcement about changing tactics.

Mustafa bin Sweid, a doctor at Misurata hospital, was sceptical about the government's withdrawal announcement, saying: "We don't believe anything that Gaddafi's people say. Just listen to the sounds of the mortars … they're lying."

Another doctor told Reuters on condition of anonymity that Gaddafi's forces were on the defensive, adding: "I don't think they would do this for tactical reasons. They're humiliated."

On Friday, rebels in Misurata seized control of a downtown office building that had been a base for Gaddafi's snipers and other troops after a furious two-week battle.

An aid ship chartered by the International Organisation for Migration delivered 160 tonnes of food and medicine to Misurata on Saturday before evacuating around 1,000 stranded refugees, mostly Nigerians.


Source:
Agencies

'Nine killed' at Syria funeral processions



Two MPs quit parliament after security forces reportedly open fire on processions for pro-democracy activists.
Last Modified: 23 Apr 2011 12:27

Four people have been killed in the Syrian town of Douma, a witness told Al Jazeera, after security forces on the ground and snipers on rooftops opened fire on a crowd of thousands of mourners gathered to bury protesters killed on Friday.

Army and security personnel also shot at mourners at a funeral procession in the southern town of Izraa. Eyewitnesses told Al Jazeera that five people had been killed there, four of them after having been shot in the chest. Several others were wounded.

The eyewitness in Douma said that the gunfire erupted during the processions on Saturday, in the largest of the towns that surround Damascus to the northeast. Eight people were killed and at least 25 injured in Douma when security forces fired upon pro-democracy protesters on Friday.

Snipers on Saturday had taken up positions on the top of a Baath Party building in the vicinity of the privately-run Hamdan Hospital, where residents had overnight formed a human shield around the main gate, in order to prevent security forces from arresting those who were injured and being treated inside.

Tens of thousands of mourners gathered across the country on Saturday to attend funeral processions for the more than 75 people who were killed during the deadliest day of protests in the country since the uprising against President Bashar al-Assad first began five weeks ago.

In protest of the violence, two Syrian politicians have resigned from parliament.

Nasser Hariri, from the town of Daraa, told Al Jazeera that he "feels sorry for those who were killed in Haran [today and yesterday] by the bullets of security forces despite the fact that the president has promised no live ammunition by security forces at all".

"Being an MP I feel the need to step down as I am not able to protect the voters killed by live ammunitions and now I feel better to resign so I'm resigning from the Syrian People's Assembly."

International leaders meanwhile have condemned the Syrian government's response to the protests, with Barack Obama, the US president, terming it "outrageous".

The Syrian government on Saturday rejected Obama's condemnation as not being "objective", state television reported.

Funerals turn into protests

Thousands of people gathered near the Osman Ibin Afan mosque in Izraa, a southern village that was the scene of some of the worst violence on Friday. At least 15 people were killed there.

During Saturday's funerals, army and security personnel shot at the mourners, killing five people and wounding several others, said an eyewitness present at the funerals.

"I saw four of the dead myself. They had been shot in the chest," he said.

Al Jazeera's correspondent, who we cannot name for security reasons, was just outside Izraa, and confirmed that he had witnessed a funeral procession being fired upon.

"[People marching on an overpass] were met with a hail of gunfire, many people certainly wounded directly in front of us, cars turned around, and I can tell you it was an incredibly chaotic scene, and it seems as though pretty much everyone down here in the southern part of the country is now carrying weapons. It is unclear who was firing at whom, that's part of the confusion ... but clearly a very violent incident now being carried out here in the south of the country," he reported.

"I think it's pretty clear now that the government feels that the eyes of the world are elsewhere, and that this is the best way to deal with what they are calling an armed insurrection ... we saw this yesterday, and clearly we're seeing this again today. The government was clearly anticipating funerals like this, and clearly was anticipating that violence could break out at these funerals, people are obviously very angry because they've had family members who have been killed, and I think the government was anticipating violence, but what I witnessed was a clear, brutal use of force on behalf of the security forces."

On Saturday, Abu Abdullah, an opposition activist, told Al Jazeera that security forces were firing "live bullets" at mourners who were trying to join the funeral processions.

A rights activist told the AFP news agency that more than 150 buses left the town of Deraa, which has from the beginning of the uprising been a focal point for pro-democracy protests, bound for the funeral procession in Izraa.

The activist said that the funerals in Izraa were expected "to become a huge rally against the regime".

Prayers were also held in the Damascus neighbourhood of Barzah for three of those killed during Friday's protests, activists said.

A funeral was also due to be held on Saturday in the Damascus neighbourhood of Midan for a person killed there during the protests.

Members of that procession chanted "the people demand the overthrow of the regime", a slogan that has been a common thread in popular protests against authoritarian governments in the region.

Protesters also chanted: "Bashar al-Assad, you traitor. Long live Syria, down with Bashar."

Deadliest day

At least 75 people are reported to have been killed on Friday, as security forces used live ammunition and tear gas to quell anti-government protests across the country, according to Amnesty International, the London-based rights group.

Map of April 22 'Great Friday' protests across Syria

Syrian activists sent Al Jazeera a list naming 103 people from across the country who they said had been killed by security forces during the "Great Friday" protests.

SANA, the official news agency, said that 10 people had died in clashes between protesters and passers-by, and that security forces had only used tear gas and water cannons. It reported that several police and firefighting personnel were injured during the clashes.

Rights groups and pro-democracy activists dispute the claim that security forces did not intervene with live rounds and rubber bullets against pro-democracy activists.

Fifteen of the protester's deaths took place in Izraa, near the flashpoint southern town of Daraa, according to the list released by activists, while another 21 were reported to have occured in Homs.

Deaths were also reported in Douma and Zamalka, near Damascus (see this video posted from an unknown source from Zamalka).

Other places where protesters were killed include Homs, Syria's third largest city, Moadamia and Daraa.

Demonstrators marching in peace were surprised by security forces' live ammunition, according to Hazem, a protester who spoke to Al Jazeera via phone from a Damascus suburb.

"Demonstrators were going with olive branches, it was peaceful" until they were "surprised by live ammunition from some security forces in one of the flats of the street", Hazem said.

The protesters took to the streets to mark what activists dubbed "Great Friday" - the biggest demonstrations against Assad's government to date.

Al Jazeera's Rula Amin reported from Damascus, which until now had been relatively calm, that the level of tension in the city on Friday marked a new point in the uprising.

"This day is turning into a very bloody day, probably the bloodiest since the protests started," she said.

Click here for more of Al Jazeera's special coverage

A heavy security presence prevented protests from taking off in Damascus.

"Obviously the government want[s] to make a point, the capital is a red line and they will not allow the protests to reach the capital," she said.

Several witnesses, including medical professionals, told Al Jazeera that many of the injured were either being refused access to hospitals or were too scared to seek treatment.

A spokesperson for the ministry of information told Al Jazeera on Friday that security forces would fire on protesters only if they were fired upon first.

Violence in Homs

Speaking under condition of anonymity, a witness in Homs described how about 200 protesters, moving ahead of a 3,000-strong group, came under fire as they marched down Cairo Street, close to the Clock Square that has been the city's focus for protests.

"Suddenly the security opened fire on us randomly," the activist told Al Jazeera by phone.

One of those killed in the city by government officers was a 25-year-old protester named Mohammed Bassam al-Kahil, he said.

Meanwhile, another witness in Hasakah, in Syria's mainly Kurdish northeast, told Al Jazeera that demonstrators gathering at a mosque after prayers were attacked by pro-government protesters.

Syrian activists co-ordinating the protests against al-Assad's rule have demanded the abolition of his Baath Party's monopoly on power and the establishment of a democratic political system.

In the first joint statement since protests erupted five weeks ago, the Local Co-ordination Committees, representing provinces across Syria, said "freedom and dignity slogans cannot be achieved except through peaceful democratic change".

"All prisoners of conscience must be freed. The existing security apparatus has to be dismantled and replaced by one with specific jurisdiction and which operates according to law," the joint statement said.

More than 220 protesters have been killed since pro-democracy protests erupted on March 18 in Daraa, rights campaigners say.

A decree Assad signed on Thursday that lifted emergency law is seen by the opposition as little more than symbolic, since other laws still give entrenched security forces wide powers.


Source:
Al Jazeera and agencies