


Arutz Sheva
In a statement, the Egyptian prosecutor general’s office said Wednesday that “the public prosecutor has ordered the detention of former president Mohamed Hosni Mubarak and his two sons Alaa and Gamal Mubarak for 15 days pending investigation after the public prosecutor presented them with the current state of its ongoing investigation of charges and submitted the detention decision to the relevant police authority.”
Mubarak and his sons were detained in the Sinai resort town of Sharm el-Sheikh, where they took refuge after Hosni Mubarak resigned as Egyptian president on February 11. The arrests came after reports last week that Mubarak may have stolen hundreds of billions of dollars over the years from the Egyptian treasury, squirreling it away in private bank accounts around the world. Questioning centered on the money, as well as “on the crimes of assault against protesters, leading to deaths and injuries,” the government said in a statement.
According to reports, Mubarak, 82, keeled over during questioning Tuesday, and was rushed to a nearby hospital. The reports said that Mubarak suffered a “heart event,” but was apparently not too sick to answer questions, as his interrogation resumed – under medical supervision. He reportedly requested permission to fly to Germany and be treated by doctors familiar with his situation there, but was refused by authorities. Press reports said that Mubarak refused to eat and drink on Tuesday after he learned he was to be questioned.
Mubarak has denied the accusations that he stole money from the treasury, appearing in a video broadcast on the Al-Arabiya network proclaiming his innocence, saying that the stories about the missing billions were part of a “smear campaign” against him. However, most Egyptians believe that he is indeed guilty, and when word spread Tuesday that it was Mubarak who was being taken to the hospital in the ambulance that set out from police headquarters, dozens of people spontaneously gathered and began hurling rocks and debris at the vehicle, witnesses said.
On Wednesday, numerous reports in the Egyptian media said that Mubarak had just been pretending to be sick in order to get out of questioning – in the hope that he will be allowed to leave the country under the guise of seeking medical treatment, and thus avoid justice. Mubarak, for his part, said last week he would cooperate with any investigation, and that he was innocent of all charges.
The Arab world has reacted with vicious anti-Semitism to retired Judge Richard Goldstone's change of heart about his report to the United Nations on Israel's 3-week counter terrorism war against the Hamas rulers of Gaza two years ago.
Goldstone wrote an op-ed piece on April 2 in the Washington Post in which he retracted his accusations that Israel had deliberately targeted the civilian population of Gaza.
Israel welcomed the change of heart, but asked Goldstone to go further and issue an official retraction of his report, which he did not do.
Leaders of the Arab world and Hamas terrorists, meanwhile, slammed the piece. A post on the website of the New York-based Anti-Defamation League gives examples of numerous anti-Semitic cartoons published in newspapers across the Middle East.
Some show Goldstone being bribed with “gold” by an Israeli soldier. Others feature Jews with stereotyped features such as a beard and a hat controlling the judge.
Al-Watan, April 7 - Saudi Arabia
Filastin, April 5 - Gaza (headline: Palestinian Condemnation of Goldstone's retraction)
Ad-Dustur, April 5 - Jordan
(IsraelNationalNews.com)
AFP - Egypt's ex-president Hosni Mubarak has been placed in detention for 15 days, prosecutors said Wednesday, after state media reported his two sons had also been detained as part of an inquiry into the use of force against protesters.
In a statement on the public prosecutor's Facebook page, a spokesman said the prosecutor Abdel Maguid Mahmoud authorised the detentions "as part of an inquiry into the use of force against protesters during the unrest in January and February."
Earlier state television said Mubarak's sons Gamal and Alaa have been placed in detention accused of incitement to fire at demonstrators during the revolution that lasted from January 25 till February 11 when their father reluctantly stepped down.
Nearly 800 people died during the uprising.
In rebel-held Misrata in western Libya, FRANCE 24 correspondents report on the daily attacks that have reduced much of the centre of the city to bullet-riddled rubble.
Misrata is the third-largest in Libya with a population of 550,000, has been under constant attack for the past five weeks.
FRANCE 24’s Alexandra Renard and Mathieu Mabin, reporting from the besieged city, say rebels holding out in the city's old town.
“They came yesterday and tried to remove the barricades from the street," one fighter told FRANCE 24. "But we destroyed their tanks with rocket launchers and killed several men.”
Lying on the ground around the barricades, the dead bodies of soldiers loyal to Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi testify to the intensity of the fighting.
Rights groups and residents say that the weeks of heavy fighting has resulted in dozens killed while food, water and medical supplies are becoming scarce.
|
Ahead of a Libyan contact group meeting of foreign ministers in Qatar on Wednesday, French Foreign Minister Alain Juppé said NATO was not doing enough to protect civilians from Gaddafi’s forces.
“NATO must fully play its role, and it is not doing so sufficiently,” Juppé told France Info radio on Tuesday.
The meeting takes place amid continued bloodshed in Libya and especially in Misrata, the only town in western Libya where the rebel forces still have a foothold.
NATO rejected France’s criticism on Tuesday, saying its forces had destroyed four of Gaddafi’s tanks near the southern rebel-held town of Zintan, while British jets patrolling near Misrata had fired missiles and destroyed one tank.
‘Contact group’
The Libyan contact group is made up of European powers, allies from the Middle East and North America, and international organisations including NATO. Envoys from the African Union – which has tried to broker a ceasefire that was rejected by the rebels, who are seeking Gaddafi's ouster – will also attend.
The group will hear from leaders of the pro-democracy movement in the country and Libya’s former foreign minister, Moussa Koussa, who defected to the UK last month, is expected to attend.
According to British Foreign Minister William Hague, the group will discuss how to “maintain the international unity while bringing together a wide range of nations in support of a better future for Libya”.
AFP - Japan cut its assessment of the economy for the first time in six months because of the devastating March 11 earthquake and tsunami and the resulting nuclear crisis, it said Wednesday.
The move came after the Bank of Japan last week downgraded its view of an economy ravaged by the quake and the monster wave it unleashed, which destroyed entire towns and left more than 28,000 dead or missing.
"The economy was picking up, but it has shown weak signs recently due to the impact of the Great East Japan Earthquake," the Cabinet Office said in its monthly report. "It remains in a severe condition."
The quake and tsunami devastated infrastructure and manufacturing facilities in northeastern Japan, plunging the nation into its worst crisis since World War II. An ongoing nuclear emergency had added to the uncertainty.
"The biggest risk, the most uncertain factor for the economy is the issue of power supply and the status of the power plant," fiscal policy minister Kaoru Yosano told reporters, referring to the stricken Fukushima Daiichi facility.
Wednesday's report warned exports may decline, production was stagnating and consumer sentiment eroding in the quake's aftermath.
The International Monetary Fund (IMF) on Monday cut its forecast for Japanese growth, while others were even more pessimistic.
"There will be such a sharp decline in GDP in the first half of the year that the economy will not be able to avoid a full year recession in 2011," Capital Economics said in a research note.
Key supply chains have been broken and power shortages have crippled production for Japan's biggest companies, such as Sony, Toyota and Honda.
Output overseas has also been compromised, with a shortage of Japanese components affecting global markets.
The Bank of Japan's Tankan survey last week showed Japanese business confidence in the outlook for the next three months had plunged.
On Wednesday the government said that once production was restored, the economy was likely to pick up, but highlighted ongoing electricity shortages as a key risk.
Many power plants were damaged and electricity supply in affected areas is expected to fall well short of demand, especially in the summer peak season.
"Downward risks still remain due to factors including power shortage, slow recovery of disrupted supply chains and soaring oil prices. Attention needs to be paid also to the deflationary trend and concerns over employment."
The government aims to compile a stimulus package this month that cabinet members have been reported as saying could be around four trillion yen ($47 billion).
Japan has said the cost of rebuilding could be as much as 25 trillion yen.
The estimate does not include the potential cost of contamination of the food and water supply from the crippled nuclear plant.
The monster wave knocked out reactor cooling systems at the plant north of Tokyo, causing explosions and the release of radiation.
Tens of thousands of people have been evacuated from a 20-kilometre (12-mile) radius around the plant amid a contamination scare that has led to restrictions on farm produce and overseas bans on the import of Japanese goods.
Japan upgraded its nuclear emergency to a maximum seven on an international scale of atomic crises on Tuesday, putting it on par with the Chernobyl disaster.
Officials have stressed however that far less radiation has been released and no one had died from contamination at the Fukushima site.
Unlike at Chernobyl 25 years ago, where the reactor vessel exploded and scores died from radiation exposure within weeks, Japanese crews have been able to work on site amid efforts to shut the plant down.
Chief Cabinet Secretary Yukio Edano warned on Wednesday however that economic fallout needed to be quickly minimised.
"The nuclear plant accident has affected agriculture and fisheries products not only near its neighbouring areas but in the Kanto region, which has placed an extra burden on local people," Edano told reporters.
"We have to make an effort to minimise the impact on the economy by settling down the issue as soon as possible."
AFP - Spanish Prime Minister Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero on Wednesday ruled out new budget cuts to help reduce his country's public deficit, after winning China's renewed support for buying Spanish debt.
Spanish and Chinese firms signed deals worth about one billion euros ($1.4 billion) during Zapatero's lightning visit to Beijing, aimed at securing fresh investment to shore up Madrid's embattled economy.
"There are no new plans on the horizon to have to take any new (deficit reduction) measures. None," Zapatero said.
"The government hopes to push through new stimulus measures," the prime minister said, insisting that his administration would see through those reforms already undertaken and would not "lower its guard".
Zapatero's socialist government has slashed spending and passed pension reforms in its effort to reassure markets worried that Spain's public deficit is unsustainably high.
It has also reformed the labour market in an attempt to revive the economy and fight an unemployment rate of just over 20 percent, the highest in the industrialised world.
The country's central bank estimated late last month that Spain's public deficit will be equal to 6.2 percent of gross domestic product this year before falling to 5.2 percent on 2012.
The government itself predicts the deficit will hit 6.0 percent in 2011 and 4.4 percent next year, a sharp improvement but still well above the European Union's 3.0 percent ceiling.
"The Spanish economy is still in a difficult situation requiring the pursuit of ambitious and demanding policies to correct the fiscal imbalances, while pressing ahead with structural reforms conducive to growth and with the restructuring and recapitalisation of the banking system," the bank said.
Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao said Tuesday in a meeting with Zapatero that Beijing was ready to buy more Spanish government debt and invest in the restructuring of the savings banks -- crucial support for Madrid's efforts.
Zapatero, who headed from Beijing to Singapore on Wednesday, is seeking new investments to shore up Spain's economy as it tries to avoid a crisis in refinancing and raising new debt.
He said China, the world's second-largest economy, now holds about 12 percent of Spain's public debt -- a major increase from the four percent it held at the start of the global financial crisis.
"This increase (in investment) in Spanish debt was a major factor boosting stability, solvency and confidence in the eyes of the markets," Zapatero said.
"China should be the priority of our economic diplomacy, which is a more and more important element" of Spain's foreign policy, he noted, adding he wanted the country to have an export-driven economy with a focus on emerging markets.
The European Union and the International Monetary Fund bailed out Ireland and Greece last year and have now offered to help Portugal. Spain's economy is as large as that of Ireland, Greece and Portugal combined.
Concerns that eurozone debt troubles could spread to Spain pushed bond rates sharply higher last year, adding to the costs of servicing the country's sovereign debt.
But such fears appear to have eased since then as Madrid strengthened bank balance sheets, cut spending and pursued economic reforms.
Among the deals in Beijing, Spain's Gamesa Corporacion Tecnologica SA signed agreements with both China Resources Power Holdings Co. and China Datang Corp Renewable Power Co. to provide a total of 300 turbines.
Each company will get 150 turbines with a total capacity of 300 megawatts from Gamesa, one of the world's top wind turbine groups, which also signed a strategic cooperation pact with China Longyuan Power Group Ltd.
Zapatero was due back in China on Thursday to participate in the annual Boao Forum for Asia, which will bring together past and present world leaders, businessmen and academics on the southern island of Hainan.