Sunday, 17 April 2011

Islamic Jihad to sue 100 officers for allegedly killing and torturing


Sun, 17/04/2011 - 19:35

<p>Islamic Jihad supporters shout anti-Israel slogans during a rally attended by tens of thousands of Palestinians to mark the 23rd anniversary of the founding of the hardline militant group, Gaza,Palestine, October 29, 2010.</p>
Photographed by AFP

The Islamic Jihad group said it will file lawsuits against 100 police officers who had allegedly killed and tortured group members throughout the last 30 years.

Group member Alaa Sheta said the list includes former governor of Daqahliya Mostafa Kamel, who is accused of perpetrating the abuse while warden of the Al-Wady prison; Samir Sallam, who later became governor of Minya; Adel Labib, who later became governor of Alexandria; and Mohsen Hefzy, the current governor of Daqahliya.

The group sued 42 police officers in the 1980s, but the officers were all vindicated by the courts.

“We will submit proof that they killed and tortured 5000 group members,” Sheta said.

Libyan rebels fear fresh attack on Ajdabiyah


Sun, 17/04/2011 - 21:48

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Photographed by AFP

Ajdabiyah -- Libyan rebels came under fire on the outskirts of Ajdabiyah on Sunday, forcing them back in to their eastern outpost and denting their hopes of pushing west to try to end a stalemate in the Libyan war.

One witness said he saw around a dozen rockets land near the western entrance to town, which rebels wanted to use as a staging post to retake the oil port of Brega. Many fled as loud explosions boomed across the town.
"There are still some guys out there at the western gate but the situation isn't very good," said Wassim el-Agouri, a 25-year-old rebel volunteer waiting at Ajdabiyah's eastern gate.
Some rebels on Saturday made it into the outskirts of Brega, 50 miles to the west, but many others retreated to Ajdabiyah after six were killed by rockets fired by Qadhafi loyalists on the exposed coastal road joining the two towns.
By Sunday, scores of volunteer fighters and civilian cars carrying men, women and children streamed east from Ajdabiyah up the coast road toward Benghazi, where the popular revolt against Qadhafi's 41-year rule began on 17 February.
Sunday marks a month since the UN Security Council passed a resolution authorizing force to protect civilians in Libya, leading to an international air campaign.
But despite NATO air strikes against Qadhafi's armor, rebels have been unable to hold gains in weeks of back-and-forth fighting over the coastal towns in eastern Libya.
In western Libya, the rebel-held city of Misrata has been besieged for seven weeks, leading to a growing humanitarian crisis. Hundreds of civilians are believed to have died in fighting and bombing in the city.
A rebel spokesman said Qadhafi's forces shelled Misrata again on Sunday, killing at least six people. Abdel Basset Mezerik said at least 47 people were also wounded.
The United States, France and Britain said last week they would not stop bombing Qadhafi's forces until he left power.
HEAVY WEAPONS
With NATO troops bogged down in Afghanistan, Western countries have however ruled out sending ground troops, a position reinforced by the British prime minister on Sunday.
"What we've said is there is no question of invasion or an occupation -- this is not about Britain putting boots on the ground," David Cameron told Sky News in an interview.
But he said outside powers would help in every other way to stop Qadhafi "unleashing this hell on people in Misrata" and other towns up and down the Libyan coast, including providing "non-lethal equipment" to the rebels.
The rebels have called repeatedly for heavier arms, saying their machineguns and rocket-propelled grenades are not able to stop government tanks and artillery.
"We want weapons, modern weapons," said rebel Ayman Aswey, 21. "If we had those, we could advance against them."
Ajdabiyah's streets were almost deserted by mid-afternoon and rebels had begun barricading the road through the town with concrete blocks, tree branches, trash bins and anything else they could find for fear of an attack by Qadhafi's forces.
Rebel pick-ups patrolled the streets and men took up positions across the town with machineguns and rocket-propelled grenade launchers. Others returned to positions at the western gate with their weapons pointed west and south into the desert.
"We are ready for a street war. We are prepared. We have got dynamite and we've got grenades," said rebel fighter Emtar al-Farjany, who was holding a stick of dynamite.
Earlier on Sunday a sandstorm obscured the flat expanse of desert stretching west to Brega. Rebel fighter Ahmed al-Zuwaihi blamed the weather for a lack of air strikes by NATO warplanes.
"The weather is no good today. NATO hasn't hit anything," he said. "It's a big opportunity for Qadhafi and he's taking advantage of it. He might enter Ajdabiyah today. Today the planes are not going to hit anything."
NATO warplanes instead bombed the area of Hira, 50km (30 miles) southwest of the capital Tripoli on Sunday and also hit the city of Sirte, Libyan state television said.
Days of sporadic clashes on the road west to Brega have failed to break a deadlock in the fighting. Rebel officials said on Saturday that their most experienced soldiers were clashing with Qadhafi's forces on the edge of Brega.
But the front line is hard to locate due to the hit-and-run style of fighting, long-distance shelling and the growing tendency of Qadhafi's followers to launch flanking maneuvers and ambush less experienced rebel fighters on the coastal road.
The rebels pushed hundreds of kilometers toward the capital Tripoli in late March after foreign warplanes began bombing Qadhafi's positions to protect civilians, but proved unable to hold territory and were pushed back as far as Ajdabiyah.
SNIPERS
In Misrata, rebels say they have faced daily bombardment from Qadhafi's forces. The US-based rights group Human Rights Watch has also accused Qadhafi's forces of using cluster bombs -- which scatter bomblets over a wide area, increasing civilian casualties. The Libyan government has rejected the allegations.
A rebel spokesman, called Abdelsalam, said there was fighting around Misrata's main thoroughfare Tripoli Street.
"Snipers are firing in all directions," he said. "For three days, it was very tough. Qadhafi troops were launching powerful attacks. They have been firing artillery, mortars."
Food was running short and long queues formed outside bakeries. Some streets were fast becoming unrecognizable.
Hundreds of Libyans fled attacks by government forces in the mountainous region southwest of Tripoli and crossed into neighboring Tunisia on Sunday. The region, including the town of Nalut, is populated by Berbers, an ethnic group traditionally viewed with suspicion by Qadhafi's government.
Mohamed, a Libyan from Nalut, said he had just arrived with his family at the Tunisian border crossing.
"There is random bombardment on Nalut. All residents in Nalut are coming here to flee," he said.
Aissa, from the same town, said: "I'm part of a convoy which included about 500 people fleeing death."
The Libyan government blames militants allied to Al-Qaeda for the fighting. Foreign Minister Abdelati Obeidi held talks with UN envoy Abdelilah al-Khatib in Tripoli and condemned "the unjustified crusader colonial aggression on Libya."
He said Libya was ready to comply with UN resolutions to implement a ceasefire and allow the delivery of humanitarian aid, according to the Jana state news agency.

Egypt refers former PM, finance minister to court


Sun, 17/04/2011 - 19:47

<p>أحمد نظيف ، رئيس الوزراء يتحدث خلال إحدي جلسات مجلس الشعب ، 23 مارس 2010 . </p>
Photographed by other
Archived

Egypt referred on Sunday its former prime minister and finance minister to court on charges of squandering public funds, the public prosecutor's office said.

Former Prime Minister Ahmed Nazif is now detained for investigations and Youssef Boutrous Ghali, the former finance minister, is abroad.

Habib el-Adly, the former interior minister, who is already facing trial on charges of killing protesters and graft, will be tried on the same charges.

Political forces welcome official demise of former ruling party


Sun, 17/04/2011 - 19:56

<p>The NDP HQ is on fire since Friday 28th evening</p>
Photographed by Ahmed Ramadan

Political parties and the Muslim Brotherhood group all welcomed the decision of the Supreme Administrative Court on Sunday to dissolve the former ruling National Democratic Party (NDP), liquidate its funds and return its assets to the ownership of the state.

“The middle management of that party financed the counter-revolution,” said the Wafd Party spokesman in Alexandria, adding that his party will request that the government ban former NDP members of parliament and local councils from running in elections for five years.

Muslim Brotherhood member Saber Abul Fotouh said that although the decision was late, it represented a positive step in the political reform process.

The Civil Democratic Coalition, which includes 29 political parties, welcomed the decision, and held the NDP responsible for corrupting political life in Egypt.

The Free Front for Peaceful Change described the decision as “historic” and called for expediting its implementation.

Dr. Nabil al-Garhy, head of the Doctors Syndicate in Minya, said the decision proves that the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces is keen on meeting the revolution’s demands for political reform.

Karama Party coordinator Magdi Zaabal said “the decision removed a big burden off the chests of Egyptians that was pressing them for 30 years.”

Egypt ministers face corruption charges



Public prosecutor targets country's former premier and former finance and interior ministers.
Last Modified: 17 Apr 2011 17:57

Nazif, seen as fronting free-market reforms in Egypt, now faces corruption charges [Reuters]

Egypt's former prime minister and his finance minister are to face trial on charges of corruption and squandering public money, according to the country's public prosecutor.

The prosecutor's office made the announcement on Sunday, but no date has yet been set for the trial.

Ahmed Nazif, the former premier, is currently in prison, while Youssef Boutrous Ghali, the former finance minister, is abroad.

Habib el-Adli, the former interior minister, who is already facing trial on charges of killing protesters and graft, will be tried on the same charges.

The three, along with a German businessman, are accused of illegal profiteering from a deal to import new vehicle number plates.

They allegedly bought the number plates directly without calling for a public tender as laid down by law, and also allegedly paid more for the number plates than the market price.

The deal is thought to have cost the state more than $16m in lost revenue.

Widening investigation

Many investors regard Nazif and Boutros-Ghali the driving forces behind free-market reforms in Egypt that helped boost economic growth to around an annual seven per cent in the three years before the 2008 global economic crisis.

But for many Egyptians, the two were part of Egypt's corrupt ruling elite and the military - which has governed Egypt since February when pro-democracy protests ousted Hosni Mubarak, the former Egyptian president - are keen to show they are committed to holding members of the previous government to account.

The protests, which saw violent clashes between protesters and Mubarak's loyalists and security forces, left an estimated 800 people dead and more than 6,000 injured.

Mubarak is in hospital in the Red Sea resort of Sharm el-Sheikh, where he fled with his family during the protests that brought the end of his presidency.

Although hospitalised last week following a heart attack, he has been remanded in custody in connection with the shooting of protesters.

His two sons, Alaa and Gamal, are in the Tora prison complex in the capital, and face similar accusations.

Former finance minister Boutros-Ghali is the nephew of Boutros Boutros-Ghali, the former UN chief, and held a senior post in the International Monetary Fund.

'Normal succession'

In another development on Sunday, Sherif Cararah, the head of Egyptian bank EFG-Hermes, resigned his position.

The bank said that Carah's resignation had been long planned, calling it a "normal succession", but the move still dented the stock price.

Widening investigations into charges of corruption by businessmen and government officials under have made many of Egypt's business elite jittery.

EFG has come under the spotlight for its association with Gamal Mubarak, who owns 18 per cent of the investment bank's subsidiary EFG-Hermes Private Equity.

The subsidiary generates no more than seven per cent of EFG Hermes Holding's total revenue, EFG has said.

The chairman of another Egyptian financial company, private equity firm Citadel Capital, was banned on Thursday from travel pending investigations into corruption allegations.


Source:
Agencies

Yemeni troops 'open fire on protesters'



Reports of more clashes come as leaders of opposition bloc head to Saudi Arabia to discuss transition of power.
Last Modified: 17 Apr 2011 16:44


Anti-government protesters in Yemen remain unsatisfied with Saleh's attempts at compromise [Reuters]

Forces loyal to Ali Abdullah Saleh, the Yemeni president, have opened fire at an anti-government protest march in the capital Sanaa, wounding at least four people, witnesses say.

They said the shooting began when they tried to march in a street outside their normal protest zone on Sunday.

Wounded people were being rushed to hospital in ambulances and private cars.

Security forces deployed heavily in Sanaa where hundreds of thousands of men and women took to the streets in protest against Saleh's call for an end to men and women joining together in anti-regime protests, and calling for his overthrow.

Protesters also took to the streets in the cities of Taiz and Ibb, south of Sanaa, and the Red Sea city of Al-Hudaydah, the organisers said.

Saleh has struck a defiant tone by calling the opposition liars and bandits. He also appealed to religious sensitivities in the conservative Muslim country by criticising the mixing of unrelated men and women among Sanaa protesters.

The remarks enraged many Yemeni women, who took to the streets in their thousands in across the country on Saturday to protest against his comments, saying women's participation in protests was a religious duty.

Transitional talks

Against this backdrop of continued unrest, Joint Meeting Parties, an opposition coalition formed in 2002, has said it would send a delegation to Saudi Arabia on Sunday to discuss with Gulf Arab ministers the transition of power in their country.


"We have requested this meeting with the GCC states' foreign ministers to explain our points of view on the Gulf initiative," Yassin Noman, an opposition leader, told Reuters.

He said Mohammed Basindwa, a former foreign minister, would head the delegation.

Opposition leaders previously refused to join Gulf-mediated talks with Saleh's representatives, saying they wanted to force him out within two weeks, because the Gulf plan did not include a quick or clear timetable for the transition of power.

The youth movement, which plays a prominent role in the anti-government demonstrations, said it remains unwilling to take part in any talks before president Saleh's departure.

The Gulf plan announced a week ago appeared to promise Saleh immunity from prosecution, an issue that had proved a stumbling block in earlier talks that stalled. Saleh accepted the Gulf talks framework the next day.

More than 116 protesters have been killed in clashes with security forces since late January, and there are fears that the violence could escalate in the country, at least half of whose 23 million people own a gun.


Source:
Agencies

Italy angry as France blocks migrant trains



France shuts border to trains from Italy to stop north African migrants and political activists from entering country.
Last Modified: 17 Apr 2011 17:23

Migrants wait for residence permits to enable them to go to France, at the police station of Ventimiglia [EPA]

France has shut its border to trains from Italy in an attempt to stop north African migrants and political activists from entering the country.

The action drew a formal protest on Sunday from Rome and accusations it was violating European principles.

A group of French and Italian activists had planned to board what they had dubbed The Train of Dignity in the Italian border town of Ventimiglia in support of migrants trying to cross the border.

About 60 mainly Tunisian migrants were at the station seeking passage to France, and were given sandwiches and drinks by support groups.

Italian railway and border police said France was preventing all trains passing the Ventimiglia-Menton border.

Franco Frattini, Italy's foreign minister, instructed the country's ambassador in Paris to express "the firm protest of the Italian government to the French authorities", a foreign ministry statement said.

France's actions appear to be "illegitimate and in clear violation of general European principles", it said.

Speaking to Al Jazeera from Rome, Maurizio Caprara, the diplomatic correspondent for Corriere Della Sera, an Italian newspaper, said both governments were being influenced in their actions by upcoming election campaigns.

Caprara said: "The French have an electoral campaign in 2012, Nicolas Sarkozy has the problem of Jean-Marie Le Pen and his Front National, that is strongly against foreign immigration.

"And in Italy we will have a partial term of administrative elections in which the Northern League is particularly active against this flow of immigration that recently came in Italy."

'Incomprehensible'

Italy has complained about being "left alone" by European Union partners to deal with thousands of mainly Tunisian migrants who have arrived on its southern island of Lampedusa in recent weeks, fleeing political turmoil in North Africa.

It has began issuing migrants with temporary permits allowing them to leave Italy to travel to other destinations in Europe, a policy which has been criticised by several of its partners, including France and Germany.

Some of the countries in the 27-nation EU are worried that offering shelter to too many migrants will encourage more to attempt illegal entry to Europe.

Roberto Maroni, Italy's interior minister, said in a television interview on Sunday that France's stance was "incomprehensible" and "tough and unjustified towards Italy".

He said he hoped "friendly relations" could be re-established with France at a summit meeting on April 26, where immigration will be near the top of the agenda.

Hundreds of Italian demonstrators gathered at the station at Ventimiglia to protest against France's actions, chanting anti-French slogans and trying to persuade police to allow them to demonstrate outside the French consulate at Menton.

A French interior ministry spokesman told Italian news agency ANSA that the decision to block the trains was a temporary measure taken for safety reasons due to the demonstrations around the station.

Italian protests against France crossed the political divide, with Mario Tullo, a politician from the opposition Democrats of the Left party saying its decision to block the trains was "illegal" and "absurd", and contravened EU treaties.

Earlier this month, the interior ministers of France and Germany agreed to set up joint patrols off the Tunisian coast to deter would-be migrants and Rome has also pledged assistance to Tunisia to try to halt the flow.


Source:
Agencies