Saturday, 22 January 2011

Coptic Church rejects US congressional hearing on Alex bombing


Sat, 22/01/2011 - 10:20

A congressional hearing held by the US Commission on International Religious Freedom to discuss the New Year’s Eve Alexandria church bombing was rejected by Archbishop Salib Matta Sawiris, a member of the Confessional Council.

Sawiris said that the Coptic Orthodox Church rejects foreign intervention in internal Egyptian affairs, adding that the attack has received the attention of parliament and President Hosni Mubarak.

In a statement to Al-Masry Al-Youm, Sawiris said that calls for foreign intervention tend to harm Copts by giving the impression that they draw on the power of other countries. This tends to reflect on Copts generally, he added.

Coptic Pope Shenouda III opposes any form of foreign intervention in church affairs, he said, pointing out that all problems related to Copts are debated in Egypt and receive the attention of both Muslims and Copts.

The head of the US Commission on International Religious Freedom and Dina Guirguis, a Coptic activist and researcher at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy, had called for the congressional session which was held on Thursday. The attack in Alexandria church left 23 dead and scores injured.

Translated from the Arabic Edition.

Egypt's labor stronghold urges participation in 25 January protest


Sat, 22/01/2011 - 10:49

Photographed by محمد فايد

Members of various political movements in the Gharbiya governorate organized a protest on Friday near the headquarters of the ruling National Democratic Party to urge people to participate in a mass protest on 25 January.

Dozens of protesters called for the abolition of Emergency Law, the establishment of a minimum wage and the improvement of social conditions.

Surrounded by intense security, protesters raised Egyptian and Tunisian flags and applauded the Tunisian uprising that led to the ousting of President Zine al-Abidine Ben Ali this month. The protest lasted more than half an hour and protesters distributed leaflets calling for a general strike and collective protest on Tuesday, 25 January.

The protesters also called on Mahalla residents and textile workers to participate in Tuesday's protest.

In April 2008, Mahalla witnessed massive protests against high prices and unemployment after Facebook activists called for a general strike on 6 April in solidarity with textile workers in the city.

Mahalla has long been defined as the Egyptian labor movement's stronghold.

Translated from the Arabic Edition.

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Friday, 21 January 2011

Protests hit Tunisia amid mourning


Some police officers join demonstrators demanding the dissolution of the new interim government.
Last Modified: 21 Jan 2011 19:10 GMT



Thousands of Tunisians have gathered in front of their country's interior ministry, demanding the dissolution of the new interim government that assumed power after the president, Zine El Abidine Ben Ali, fled the country.

The protesters marched down the Avenue Habib Bourguiba on Friday morning in Tunis, the capital of the north African nation, chanting anti-government slogans, Al Jazeera's Yasmine Ryan reported.

Police blocked the protesters at the interior ministry and prepared water cannons, she said. Protesters soon dispersed, with many heading towards the headquarters of the main labour union, calling for a general strike.

Later in the day, some police officers joined protesters in a march towards the prime minister's office, Al Jazeera's Nazinine Moshiri said.

Many Tunisians are angry that several prominent members of Ben Ali's government have been included in the transitional cabinet, which convened for the first time on Thursday.

National mourning

The latest protests in the north African country come on the first day of a three-day period of national mourning for those who died during the month-long uprising that overthrew Ben Ali.

Flags in the country have been set at half mast.


Al Jazeera's Ayman Mohyeldin meets the mother of the 26-year-old whose suicide sparked the uprising

Security forces used tear gas and live ammunition to disperse crowds during the protests, causing the deaths of about 100 people, according to the United Nations.

Protests in Tunisia have continued even after Ben Ali fled to Saudi Arabia on December 14 and the new interim government offered major concessions.

Tayyib Al Bakouchi, a government spokesman, said the multiparty cabinet pledged to make security its top priority, to prepare for new presidential elections and speed up political reforms.

The ministers also vowed to restore goods and real estate appropriated by the Constitutional Democratic Rally (RCD), the ruling party under Ben Ali, officials said.

The transitional government says 1,800 political prisoners have already been freed this week.

However, Al Jazeera's Moshiri said it was difficult to ascertain the number of detainees in the first place.

"We've heard earlier in the day that some Islamist ones belonging to the Muslim Brotherhood, being kept under Tunisian anti-terror laws, may not have been freed yet," she said.

Under pressure

Thursday's cabinet session in Tunis coincided with protests by hundreds of people outside the RCD headquarters, demanding that ministers associated with the rule of Ben Ali leave the government.

Using a large steel cable, a government employee tore off the Arabic letters of the party's name from the facade.

Follow Al Jazeera's coverage of the
turmoil in Tunisia

Amid shouts protesting against the transitional government, the crowd brandished signs reading: "We are no longer afraid of you, traitors," and "RCD out!"

All ministers of the new cabinet were present in the meeting except five who resigned earlier this week, refusing to sit in a unity government with RCD members.

Before the cabinet convened, all of the eight ministers in the new government who had been members of RCD quit the party, without giving up their cabinet posts.

The transitional cabinet decided to recognise all banned political parties and agreed on a general amnesty for all political prisoners.

"The minister of justice presented a bill for a general amnesty, which was adopted by the cabinet, which decided to submit it to parliament," Ahmed Nejib Chebbi, the development minister, said.

Asked if the government had decided to lift bans on political groups, including the Islamist al-Nahda movement, Mohamed Aloulou, the youth minister, said: "We will recognise all the political movements."

Rachid al-Ghannouchi, the exiled head of al-Nahda, told Al Jazeera earlier this week that he plans to return to Tunisia.

However, Mohamed Ghannouchi, the interim prime minister, has said al-Ghannouchi would only be able to do so once the amnesty law is passed because he carries a life sentence for plots against the state.


Source:
Al Jazeera and agencies

Blair 'regrets' Iraq war dead



Former British PM's remarks on loss of life due to the 2003 invasion met with cries of "too late" from public gallery.
Last Modified: 21 Jan 2011 16:23 GMT

Opponents of the Iraq invasion accuse Blair and Bush of being set on war regardless of its legality [EPA]

Tony Blair has told an inquiry into Britain's role in the 2003 US-led invasion of Iraq that he profoundly regretted the loss of life in the conflict.

His remarks to the inquiry - the second time the former British prime minister has appeared before the investigation - sparked angry shouts of "too late" from dead soldiers' families attending the proceedings in London.

Blair said that his comments at his first hearing last year when he said that he had "no regret" had been misunderstood.

"That was taken as my meaning that I had no regrets about the loss of life and that was never my meaning or my intention," he said.

"I wanted to make that clear that of course I regret deeply and profoundly the loss of life, whether from our own armed forces, those of other nations, the civilians who helped people in Iraq or the Iraqis themselves."

His words sparked an angry response from the packed public gallery, where a number of relatives of British soldiers killed in Iraq were sitting. Blair sent 45,000 British troops as part of the US-led invasion in March 2003.

Several shouted out that his words were "too late" and two women stood up, deliberately turning their backs to Blair, before they were asked to be quiet.

"Your lies killed my son, I hope you can live with yourself," shouted Rose Gentle, whose 19-year-old son Gordon was killed in 2006 while serving in Basra, southern Iraq, as Blair left the hearing.

'Questions to answer'

Outside the central London venue, dozens of anti-war demonstrators gathered held up banners calling Blair a liar and chanting "Tony Blair to The Hague," where war crimes tribunals are held.

Alan Fisher, Al Jazeera's correspondent at the inquiry, said: "This hearing was all about nailing down some specific points after Tony Blair's initial evidence more than a year ago.

"Really it was about looking at the legality of going into Iraq without a second UN resolution.

"Tony Blair admitted his senior law officer had said it probably would be against the law to do that, but he [Blair] took a political position.

"Also we heard that after 9/11 Tony Blair decided there and then that if the Americans were intent on regime change in Iraq, then he would stand shoulder to shoulder with them.

"It's expected the report [of the inquiry] will be published in a few months ... but for Tony Blair there are many people who believe he still has questions to answer."

Bush pledge

Earlier, Blair told the inquiry that he had privately assured George Bush, the US president at the time, that "you can count on us", eight months before the invasion.

While Blair stopped short of saying he had promised Bush unconditional military support in early 2002, as critics claim, he said he had always agreed that Saddam Hussein, the former Iraqi leader, had to be dealt with.

"I accept entirely I was going to be with America in handling this," he told the London inquiry into Britain's role in the Iraq war, describing conversations between himself and Bush in summer 2002.

"What I was saying to President Bush was very clear and simple, you can count on us, we are going to be with you in tackling this. But there are difficulties."

The private note to Bush remain secrets, despite calls for it to be published by John Chilcot, the inquiry chairman and a former civil servant.

'Up for it'

The timing of the decision for military action is an important issue for opponents of the war, who accuse Blair and Bush of being set on invasion regardless of its legality or whether it had backing from the UN.

Blair sent 45,000 British troops as part of the US-led invasion in March 2003, was making his second appearance at the inquiry after being recalled to clarify evidence he gave at a hearing in January last year.

He repeated his message from his January 2010 appearance that the September 11, 2001, attacks on the US had changed the calculus of risk, meaning they had to deal with Saddam as he posed a threat to the world and was refusing to comply with the UN.

Facing a far more forensic probe of decisions he had taken, Blair said regime change in Iraq was on the cards immediately after the 9/11 attacks unless Saddam changed tack.

"If it became the only way to deal with this issue then we were going to be up for it," Blair said.

He said he had persuaded Bush to seek UN backing.

A statement he gave to the inquiry also revealed he had disregarded advice from the government's top lawyer, given in January 2003, warning an invasion of Iraq would be illegal without a specific UN resolution.

Peter Goldsmith, the attorney general, only changed his mind shortly before the invasion, and Blair said he viewed the earlier advice as "provisional" and believed it would change when Goldsmith became aware of the UN negotiations.

Controversial episode

The decision to go to war was one of the most controversial episodes of Blair's 10-year premiership which ended in 2007, leading to massive protests and accusations he had deliberately misled the public over the reasons for the invasion.

Alistair Campbell, Blair's former communications chief and one of his closest advisers until he resigned in late 2003, said people still felt angry about the war.

"Some people who actually really liked Tony Blair when he became prime minister ... they will never forgive him for Iraq," he told Sky News.

The inquiry, which began in November 2009, was set up by Blair's successor Gordon Brown to learn lessons from the conflict and is not designed to assign guilt or blame to any individual.

Hostility over Iraq continues to dog Blair, 57, now an envoy for the Quartet of Middle East peacemakers - the US, Russia, the European Union and the UN.


Source:
Agencies

Three shot dead in Albania clashes



Three people killed and dozens injured in extensive anti-government clashes with police outside PM's office in Tirana.
Last Modified: 21 Jan 2011 19:41 GMT

More than 20,000 people took to the streets to demand that the prime minister call early elections [EPA]

Three people have been killed and dozens injured in extensive anti-government clashes outside the prime minister's office in Tirana, the the Albanian capital.

State health officials confirmed three people had died from gunshot wounds during the clashes between opposition supporters and riot police.

About 30 civilians and 25 policemen and national guard officers were also hurt, the officials said.

The violence follows months of tension between the government of Sali Berisha, the prime minister, and opposition Socialists.

Speaking to Al Jazeera, Karolina Risto, chief editor at Albania's Vision Plus TV, said: "Albania is finally calm now after more than six hours of violent clashes.

"Three people are reported dead, all of them young men among the demonstrations in Albania's capital.

"The whole purpose of this gathering is because the opposition is accusing the government of stealing their votes in the last election."

'Corruption scandal'

More than 20,000 people took to the streets on Friday to demand that Berisha call early elections after Ilir Meta, the country's deputy prime minister, resigned over an alleged corruption scandal earlier this week.

The scandal broke after a private TV station aired a video allegedly showing Meta asking a colleague to influence the awarding of a contract for building a power station.

Clashes broke out when several hundred protesters broke away from the main group and started attacking a riot police cordon.

Chanting "Get out, Get Out," some of the protesters overturned and torched cars, smashed paving stones and hurled them at riot police and reached the steps of the government building.

Police responded with tear gas, plastic bullets and water canons.

As the night fell, hundreds of riot policemen and national guard officers swept through the centre of the capital, beating protesters with batons and detaining dozens of youths.

Police did not say how many people were arrested.

In a statement, the US, OSCE and European Union expressed "deep regret" at the violence

"Violence and excessive use of force cannot be justified and should be avoided," the text read.

"We urgently appeal for calm and restraint on all sides and to abstain from provocations".

The statement also renewed a call for "constructive dialogue and compromise to resolve the existing political differences".

'Barbaric power'

President Bamir Topi urged rival political leaders to start an urgent dialogue to defuse the tension.

Edi Rama, an opposition leader, also called for calm, but said Berisha should also heed the message from the mass protest.

"My call is for the so-called prime minister not to go any further down the blind alley," Rama said.

Rama appeared to suggest that protests will continue.

"I assure all of you, we shall continue our struggle in a determined way, because the way out is clear: Either a free Albania for all, or keep the people subdued under the boot or barbaric power," he said.

The Socialists have accused Berisha's conservative Democratic Party of rigging the 2009 general election, which it won by a narrow margin.

The next general election is scheduled for 2013.

Albania, one of Europe's poorest countries, is a NATO member, and is also seeking EU membership, but corruption is believed to be pervasive and there is widespread unemployment.


Source:
Agencies

Lebanon's Jumblatt backs Hezbollah



Druze leader's decision deals a blow to caretaker PM Saad Hariri's effort to form a new government.
Last Modified: 21 Jan 2011 17:03 GMT

Saad Hariri, centre, has said he will seek to form a new government despite mounting opposition pressure [Reuters]

Walid Jumblatt, a Druze leader from Lebanon's opposition camp, has announced his support behind Hezbollah in a move that could give the group and its allies a veto over who becomes the country's next prime minister.

Hezbollah, which has a parliamentary bloc as well as a powerful military wing, commands overwhelmingly support among Lebanon's Shia Muslim community.

Jumblatt said the aim of his decision on Friday was to preserve Lebanon's stability.

"I am announcing the right political stand ... by assuring the steadfastness of the group [Progressive Socialist Party] alongside Syria and the resistance [Hezbollah]," he said.

Jumblatt leads a bloc of 11 parliamentarians and his support is crucial to decide who forms the new government out of the two rivals: Hezbollah or Saad Hariri, the caretaker prime minister.

Hariri announced on Thursday in a televised speech that he would seek to form a new government despite strong pressure from Hezbollah for him to step down.

His speech comes after talks to try to end the stalemate over the formation of a new government in Lebanon came to a complete halt.

The Hezbollah-led opposition brought down Hariri's government last week after he rejected their demands to repudiate a UN-backed tribunal investigating the 2005 killing of his father, Rafiq al-Hariri.

"We have said Hariri should not come back, and yes he should not come back," said Michel Aoun, a Christian leader allied with Hezbollah.

Open to different outcome

Al Jazeera's Rula Amin, reporting from Beirut, said Hariri made it clear in his speech that he will accept any outcome from political consultations expected to be launched by Michel Suleiman, the country's president, on Monday.

Suleiman has called parliamentarians for consultations to name a new prime minister after which he will ask the candidate with most backing to form a new government.

"He seems to feel that he might lose the battle with the Hezbollah-led opposition if they get enough votes to nominate their own prime minister and form the next government without him," our correspondent said.

She said Hariri blamed the opposition for the failure of his effort to preserve Lebanon's stability and security.

He also appealed for calm, saying: "Any drop of blood that falls from any Lebanese citizen is more important to me than any post."

Hezbollah and its allies are widely expected to nominate the veteran Omar Karameh, who has already served twice as prime minister.

In Lebanon's power-sharing political system, the prime minister must be Sunni Muslim, the president Maronite Christian, and parliamentary speaker a Shia Muslim.

It was not clear whether Hariri will get enough support on Monday.


Source:
Al Jazeera and agencies