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Posts from — January 2012

The resurrection of the US Mercenary force Al Qaeda, in Libya

On 1 May 2011, Barack Obama announced that, in Abbottabad (Pakistan), the US Navy’s SEAL Team Six had taken out Osama bin Laden, about whom no reliable news had been heard for almost 10 years. The announcement padlocked the Al-Qaeda file and enabled the revamping of the jihadists into the renewed allies of the United States as in the good old days of the Afghanistan, Bosnia, Chechnya and Kosovo wars [7] On 6 August, all the members of SEAL commando 6 perished in the crash of their helicopter.

After the fall of Tripoli, Abdel Hakim Belhadj opened the gates of the Abu Salim prison, liberating all the Al-Qaeda jihadists who were still detained. He was appointed military governor of Tripoli. He currently demands an apology from the CIA and MI6 for the treatment inflicted on him in the past [8]. The National Transitional Council has put him in charge of training the army of the new Libya.


How Al Qaeda men came to power in Libya

by Thierry Meyssan

Voltaire Network has received letters from many readers enquiring about Al-Qaeda in Libya. To respond to them, Thierry Meyssan has assembled the main data available on the issue. The facts confirm his analysis, defended since the events of September 11, that Al Qaeda is a hotbed of mercenaries used by the United States to fight in Afghanistan, Bosnia, Chechnya, Kosovo, Iraq, and now Libya, Syria and Yemen.

Historical leader of Al Qaeda in Libya, Abdel Hakim Belhadj, is now the military governor of “liberated” Tripoli and in charge of organizing the army of the “new Libya”.

In the 80s, the CIA instigated Awatha al-Zuwawi to create an agency in Libya to recruit mercenaries for the jihad against the Soviets in Afghanistan. As from 1986, recruits were trained in the Salman al-Farisi Libyan camp in Pakistan, under the authority of anti-Communist billionaire Osama bin Laden.

When bin Laden moved to Sudan, the Libyan jihadists followed him there, and regrouped in a compound of their own. In 1994, Osama bin Laden dispatched Libyan jihadists back to their country to kill Muammar Gaddafi and reverse the Socialist People’s Libyan Arab Jamahiriya.

On 18 October 1995, the group reassembled under the label of Libyan Islamic Fighting Group (LIFG). During the three years that followed, the LIFG attempted to assassinate Muammar Gaddafi on four occasions and to establish a guerrilla in the Southern mountainous region. Following these operations, the Libyan army – under the command of General Abdel Fattah Younes – waged a campaign to eradicate the guerrillas, and the Libyan judicial authorities issued an arrest warrant against Osama bin Laden, disseminated internationally through Interpol as from 1998.
[Read more →]

January 6, 2012   No Comments

Explosions Across Iraq Kill Dozens Amid Political Crisis

Explosions Across Iraq Kill Dozens Amid Political Crisis
by MICHAEL S. SCHMIDT – 5 January, 2012 – New York Times

BAGHDAD — Insurgents unleashed a fierce string of bombings against Iraq’s Shiites on Thursday, attacking pilgrims marching through the desert and neighborhoods in Baghdad, in an attempt to stir sectarian violence. The attacks come amid a political crisis that has brought the government to a halt less than three weeks after American troops withdrew.

According to security officials, 68 people were killed in the attacks and more than 100 wounded, marking the second devastating and apparently coordinated attack in Iraq over the past month. The most lethal attack occurred near the southern city of Nasiriya where a suicide bomber detonated an explosive vest amid a crowd of pilgrims as they waited to pass through a check point, killing 44 and wounding dozens, including several Iraqi army officers, according to security officials.

The pilgrims were making a trip to the holy city of Karbala leading up to holiday of Arbaeen, which marks the end of the 40-day mourning period for the death of Imam Hussein ibn Ali, the grandson of the Prophet Muhammad. …more

January 6, 2012   No Comments

US begins resurrection of Taliban on exit from Afghanistan

Talibaan Opening Office in Qatar resurrection
Jafria News – 05 Janaury, 2012

US releasing Talibaan Prisoners from Guantonamo Bay to get a share of a future Taliban Govt in Afghanistan

JNN 04 Jan 2012 Kabul : Afghanistan’s President Hamid Karzai has agreed to the opening of a liaison office by the Taliban militant group in Qatar, his office has announced. While The United States is set to release several Taliban leaders from the Guantanamo Bay prison after Washington struck a deal with the militant group agreeing to their opening of an office in Qatar.

“Afghanistan agrees with the negotiations between the United States and the Taliban, which will lead to the establishment of an office in Qatar,” Karzai’s office said in a statement on Wednesday.

According to the statement, the talks could save the country from “conflict, conspiracy and the killings of innocent people.”
The statement comes after American and Taliban officials made a deal, in which the Taliban agreed to open an office in Qatar in return for the release of several high-ranking Taliban figures.

Under pressure from the White House, Karzai agreed to a US proposal to let the militants establish an office outside Afghanistan.

The Afghan president strongly rejected the idea previously, saying that he was not consulted with about the potential venue of a Taliban office.

The US-led war on Afghanistan was launched under the pretext of toppling the Taliban regime. Now after a decade, Washington has decided to hold negotiations with the militants.

Former Taliban Interior Minister Mullah Khair Khowa and senior Taliban military commander Noorullah Noori are among the Taliban officials, The Guardian reported on Tuesday.

The US may release “high-risk detainee” and former Taliban Deputy Defense Minister Mohammed Fazl, held at Guantanamo since 2002, but hand him over to Qatar, the newspaper said.

January 6, 2012   No Comments

In Review – Presidential Succession Scenarios in Egypt and Their Impact on U.S.-Egyptian Strategic Relations

Presidential Succession Scenarios in Egypt and Their Impact on U.S.-Egyptian Strategic Relations
by Gregory Aftandilian – September 30, 2011 – Strategic Studies Institute US Army War College

Download complete document PDF HERE

Although this monograph was written before the pro-democracy demonstrations in Egypt in January 2011, it examines the important question as to who might succeed President Hosni Mubarak by analyzing several possible scenarios and what they would mean for U.S. strategic relations with Egypt. The monograph first describes the importance of Egypt in the Middle East region and gives an overview of the U.S.-Egyptian strategic relationship. It then examines the power structure in Egypt to include the presidency, the military, and the ruling party. The monograph next explores various succession scenarios. Although some of the scenarios outlined in this monograph are no longer viable–for example, President Mubarak is now on trial for complicity in the deaths of protestors during the uprising that resulted in his ouster from power–other scenarios remain plausible, particularly given what we see as the more prominent role of the Egyptian military in this fluid political situation. In addition, some of the possible presidential successors that the author mentions have now risen to higher positions in the Egyptian government. The author also discusses the sensitive issue of the Muslim Brotherhood, Egypt’s most organized opposition group that is opposed to many U.S. policies. He examines a scenario of a Muslim Brotherhood-dominated government, but notes that this is unlikely to occur unless both the Brotherhood and the Egyptian military split apart.

January 6, 2012   No Comments

Egyptian Anarchists and Revolutionary Socialists under attack

Egyptian Anarchists and Revolutionary Socialists under attack
by Libertarian Socialist Movement – Egypt – Anarkismo.net

It’s about time! For weeks, several internet sites, and facebook pages that belong to the Muslim Brotherhood, either officially or administered by its members, launched an attack against Anarchists and Revolutionary Socialists in Egypt trying to single them out as inciters of violence and propagandists of state demolition. Today, a member of the Brotherhood filed a lawsuit against three socialists, one of them is comrade Yaser Abdel Kawy, a well known anarchist and a member of the Egyptian Libertarian Socialists Movement. The General Attorney forwarded the lawsuit to the State Security GA, an exceptional apparatus of the legal system that works only under a state of emergency.

It sure was expected. While small in numbers, Anarchists in Egypt have been quite prominent amongst the different revolutionary forces taking part in the Jan25 Egyptian revolution. Anarchists are distinguishably vocal on the social media sites, but more importantly they are always in the front lines on the streets whenever revolutionaries take a stand in the face of the brutal crackdown of the state.

The uneasy but strong alliance between the Brotherhood and the ruling military junta has been evident since the very beginning. The Brotherhood was the only political force that had one of its members in the legislative committee responsible for preparing the modifications of the 1971 constitution approved by a referendum on March 19th. The brotherhood refused to take part almost in any rally against the Supreme Council of Armed Forces (SCAF), and in many cases sought to tarnish these rallies and attack those who called for them.

The Brotherhood, had also taken an aggressive stance against laborers in their continuous struggle against the masters backed by the military junta. It has always condemned workers rallies, sit-ins, or occupations, and described the workers fight for their rights as counter-revolutionary and incited by clients of Mubarak’s regime.

Poised for a landslide victory in the current parliamentary elections along with the more radical Salafi Islamists, the Brotherhood is keen on getting rid of future opposition, namely socialists. It’s easy to know why if one takes a look at the policies that their counterparts in Tunisia have adopted once confident in their new seats in the parliament. It’s even clearer when one takes notice of their prominent leaders’ (mostly businessmen) statements to the media, especially ones describing the neoliberal financial and economic policies of Mubarak’s regime as good and effective, if not coupled with corruption and crony capitalism.

We are sure that these new attacks by the SCAF and its Islamist allies are nothing but an early beginning. A new phase of the Egyptian Revolution is already starting to take shape. This time the true conflict lines will be clear for all after being only clear for some. The Egyptian Revolution will take its true face of a class war of us the proletariat against them, the masters, the military junta, and the conservative fascist Islamists.

…source

January 6, 2012   No Comments

Egypt Defends Storming Civilian Groups

Egypt Defends Storming Civilian Groups
02 January, 2012 – Associated Press -by Aya Batrawi

CAIRO – A top Egyptian official responsible for overseeing civil society groups has defended sweeps through the offices of 10 human rights and pro-democracy organizations, rejecting denunciations from the U.S., U.N. and Germany.

Sunday’s comments were the first from the Egyptian government since the sweeps Thursday that targeted, among others, U.S.-based groups invited to observe Egypt’s months-long election process. Reports of heavily armed police and soldiers storming into offices, sealing the doors, rifling through files and confiscating computers set off a wave of international protest against Egypt’s rulers.

International Cooperation Minister Faiza Aboul Naga defended the operation as a legitimate investigation into organizations suspected of operating without permits and receiving “political funding” against the law.

Aboul Naga pointed to repeated complaints from the judiciary and the ruling military about civil society groups accepting foreign funds to promote protests and instability and “influence public opinion in non-peaceful ways.” She said the order to investigate the groups came from independent judges.

The military has pointed to “foreign hands” behind clashes with protesters who are demanding that the military hand over power to civilians. More than 100 people have been killed in the clashes since the military took over in February.

Rights groups dismiss the charges as an attempt to taint the reform movement that led to the ouster of longtime President Hosni Mubarak in a popular uprising that demanded democracy and human rights. …more

January 6, 2012   No Comments

Opportunism and Fractures in the Revolution

The Ugly Face of the Muslim Brotherhood
By As’ad AbuKhalil – 05 January, 2012 – Angry Corner – Al-Akhbar

It is the season of the Muslim Brotherhood. They are now everywhere. Their rise is not spontaneous, of course.

Qatar is now officially sponsoring the emergence and promotion of the Muslim Brotherhood around the world. Qatar seems to have abandoned its Arab nationalist pretensions and settled instead on various trends and currents of Islamism (even the Taliban now has a base in Doha, Qatar).

In Egypt, the New York Times uncovered an intensive flirtatious relationship between the US government and the Ikhwan. But the newly found love is two-sided: varieties of Islamists from Tunisia to Palestine (exemplified by Hamas) are now sending signals of reassurance and moderation to the US and even Israel. Hamas is now (deceptively and in contradictory messages) expressing willingness to abandon armed struggle against Israeli occupation and to settle its aspirations for 22 percent of Palestine (Hamas is now officially following in the footsteps of Fatah – and Fatah was launched by individuals inspired by Ikhwan thinking).

It is now clear that the Ikhwan (and variants of them) will dominate the new political arena vacated by the ouster of a few Arab dictators. In Egypt, there is a competition between the Ikhwan (sponsored by Qatar) and the Salafites (sponsored by Saudi Arabia). They are, more than any other political current – or as much as the liberal right-wingers – willing to compromise with the remnants of the ousted regime and with US and Israel. The signs are evident now. …more

January 6, 2012   No Comments

The Only “Existential Threat” to Israel Is Its Own Irrationality

The Only “Existential Threat” to Israel Is Its Own Irrationality
By Paul Mutter – 5 January, 2012 – FPIP

Wouldn’t it be nice if the heads of our own national security agencies spoke truth to power like this? Tamir Pardo, head of Mossad, had this to say to a roomful of Israeli ambassadors last week:

“What is the significance of the term existential threat?” the ambassadors quoted Pardo as asking. “Does Iran pose a threat to Israel? Absolutely. But if one said a nuclear bomb in Iranian hands was an existential threat, that would mean that we would have to close up shop and go home. That’s not the situation. The term existential threat is used too freely.”

Not only is Pardo going on the record to say that this language, favored by the very Prime Minister who appointed him to head Mossad, is overblown, but he did it in front of a roomful of Avigdor Lieberman’s people. This takes guts: Defense Minister Ehud Barak recently found himself in trouble for going off message on Iran when he suggested that Israel is not the sole motive force behind Iran’s nuclear talk. …more

January 6, 2012   No Comments

Hezbollah slams ‘US-led’ terror in Iraq

Hezbollah slams ‘US-led’ terror in Iraq
By shiapost – 5 January, 2011

Hezbollah has strongly condemned a new spate of terrorist attacks in Iraq that killed scores of people and left many more wounded in a single day, Press TV reports. “A new series of terrorist crimes has been committed by the evil, criminal, black hands against the sons of Iraq, which led to the spread of death and destruction in many cities and the killing and wounding of hundreds of people,” Hezbollah said in a statement on Thursday.

The Lebanese resistance movement blamed on the United States, and described it as a n act of vengeance over Washington’s eventual withdrawal from Iraq after nine years of costly war in the country. “These crimes are the new face of the American project of vengeance after the miserable defeat of the occupation forces which led to their humiliating withdrawal from Iraq,” the statement noted. “The terrorists who committed these horrible crimes, those who planned and executed, are merely cheap tools in the hands of the Americans,” it added.

The Islamic movement called for further solidarity among the Iraqi people and warned them against the “infernal plot.”

Hezbollah said the grizzly bombings, particularly as some of these blasts targeted pilgrims visiting holy sites, were to create sedition and discord amongst the Iraqi nation in order to serve the foreigners.

At least 45 people were killed on Thursday on the outskirts of Iraq’s southern city of Nassiriya when after a bomb attack targeted a group of Shia pilgrims walking to the holy shrine city of Karbala. …more

January 6, 2012   No Comments

Two Heros on a Bad Day

Disturbingly, Nabeel has confirmed earlier reports that his “family and house were attacked by teargas” whilst he was in hospital.

Two Heros on a Bad Day by Zainab

read more at EA WorldView HERE

January 6, 2012   No Comments

Direct Targeted attack by Regime Security Forces on Human Rights defender Nabeel Rajab

Nabeel Rajab has been released after being interrogated at the hospital.

On Fri, Jan 6, 2012 at 4:20 PM, confirmed

Bahrain: Vicious Attack on Human Rights defender Nabeel Rajab
06 Jan 2012

The Gulf Centre for Human Rights, the Bahrain Centre for Human Rights and Cairo Institute for Human Rights Studies hold the authorities in Bahrain full responsibility for the life and safety of human Rights defender Nabeel Rajab.

The President of Gulf Centre for Human Rights (GCHR) and Bahrain Centre for Human Rights (BCHR) Nabeel Rajab was beaten severely by the security forces in Bahrain then moved in an ambulance to Salmaniya hospital after participating in a peaceful protest in Manama earlier tonight (video of the attack on the protest). He has told his lawyer on a phone call following the attack that the policemen gathered around him suddenly and started to beat him. He informed the lawyer that while lying on the ground he was beaten all over his body and specially on his back and face and that his face injuries are serious. He has an injury just below his right eye. He was then taken to Salmanyia hospital which is still controlled by a heavy security presence since last March. Human rights activists from Bahrain Youth Society for Human Rights (BYSHR) and his lawyer Mohammed Al-Jishi who have headed immediately to the hospital were prevented from seeing him. His Son Adam Rajab saw his dad in the hospital, carried by police, he said Nabeel’s face was swollen. When Adam tried to take a picture of his dad he got pushed and his phone was taken from him. Dr Alaa AlShehabi reported from the hospital that Nabeel is surrounded by 8-10 security officers and that he is suffering from concussion, back pain and bruises to his back and face. He told Dr Alaa that he was attacked by a group of police officers with sticks, he was kicked, punched & beaten all over his body and especially on the face. BCHR member Said Yousif AlMahafdha was able to see Nabeel for a moment by was then asked by Minister of interior officers to leave immediately.

BCHR knew that Nabeel is being interrogated right now, though he can’t talk and is currently on a wheel chair. His family was not allowed to stay with him.

Following the same attack, Sayed Yousif AlMahafdha, active member of the BCHR, was also injured with a stun grenade in his leg and arm. In addition, supporters gathered in solidarity outside Nabeel’s house in Bani-Jamra were attacked with tear gas.

This is an urgent appeal, the fact that the ministry of interior is controlling access to Nabeel with heavy security presence around him and preventing taking photos is very worrying and we are concerned about his health and life. Rajab is believed to be under arrest, until authorities with the Ministry of Interior allow visitation or reveal Mr. Rajab’s status.

There is an imminent fear of torture, in case Rajab was transferred to a detention facility, particularly that there is a trend of targeting human right defenders in Bahrain, who are frequently subjected to torture and other ill treatment while in detention.

GCHR, BCHR and CIHRS believe that the security forces attack on human rights defender Nabeel Rajab is directly related to his legitimate work in defense of human rights and democracy in Bahrain.

We are deeply concerned that this latest attack comes as part of an increasingly hostile environment that human rights defenders in Bahrain are facing which has included the repression of peaceful demonstrations in the villages of Bahrain, the arbitrary arrest of nonviolent protesters on daily basis, and the attacks and intimidation of human rights defenders who are defending the people’s rights in Bahrain.

We condemn in the strongest possible term this vicious attack on a well known human rights figure inside Bahrain and on the regional and international levels. GCHR, BCHR and CIHRS, are gravely concerned for the physical and psychological integrity of Nabeel Rajab and hold the government of Bahrain responsible for his safety.

Report on previous attacks on Nabeel Rajab by the security forces in Bahrain , May 2011

undisclosed verified source

January 6, 2012   No Comments

2011 Ion Ratiu Democracy Award winner Nabeel Rajab Brutally Beaten by Regime Security Forces

Nabeel Rajab

New developments in the tiny Gulf Kingdom of Bahrain have reached boiling point after reports have surfaced that prominent human rights activist, president of the Bahrain Centre for Human Rights and 2011 Ion Ratiu Democracy Award winner Nabeel Rajab was brutally beaten and injured during his participation in a peaceful protest. Bahrain has exploded with calls for the immediate release of Nabeel Rajab with opposition group Al Wefaq condemning the incident and demanding an apology along side his release.

Nabeel was reportedly present at a peaceful protest alongside prominent human rights activist Zainab Al Khawaja who was also recently arrested and released pending trial. Nabeel was taken to hospital as witnesses say that he was severely beaten on the face, arms, eyes and back, to the point when “he he was not able to see”, just after tying to calm the situation with officers present at the scene of the protest. Lawyer Mohamed Al Jishi, after speaking with Mr. Rajab, claims that the attack came as a surprise to him as officers gathered around him and began beating him.

It has been reported that Mr. Rajab is now being detained in the hospital where his lawyer and other activists have been refused entry to see him. Maryam Al Khawaja, Head of the Foreign Relations Office Bahrain Center for Human Rights, has expressed her concern that his lawyer has been refused entry to see Mr. Rajab. The Ministry of Interior has released a statement claiming that police took Mr. Rajab to the hospital when they found him on the ground as they were scouring the area.

Ahmed Ali
Arab Uprising Channel Manager HumanRights TV
@ahmedali_
06/01/12
…source

January 6, 2012   No Comments

URGENT BREAKING Assassination Attempt by Security Forces: Nabeel Rajab Severly Beaten in Hospital inaccessible, Sayed Yousif injured by Stun Grenade

Bahrain Center for Human Rights president Nabeel Rajab was beaten severely then moved to the hospital. According to eye witnesses he was injured in his head back and chest. Human rights activists from BYSHR and his lawyer Mohammed AlJishi are being prevented from seeing him at the hospital.

Sayed Yousif, active member of the BCHR, was injured with a stun grenade in his leg and arm.

This is an urgent appeal, the fact that the ministry of interior is not allowing anyone in to see Nabeel Rajab, including his lawyer, is very worrying and we are concerned about his health and life.

undisclosed verified source

January 6, 2012   No Comments

Awkward moment at UN Security Council, Pakistan backs Russia’s move for probe into civilian casualties in Libya

At UN Security Council, Pakistan backs Russia’s move for probe into civilian casualties in Libya
06 January, 2012 -TermX

UNITED NATIONS, Jan 5 (APP): Pakistan is backing a Russian push for an investigation into civilian casualties in Libya during NATO’s bombing campaign to help the Libyan dissidents overthrow Col. Muammar Gaddafi’s regime from power, diplomatic sources told APP. During close-door Security Council consultations on Libya on Wednesday, Pakistan’s UN Ambassador Abdullah Hussain Haroon said his delegation would support such a Council-mandated probe, the sources said.

The United States and France are resisting any investigation into NATO’s human rights abuses in Libya. In fact, US Ambassador Susan Rice dismissed Russia’s demand for an investigation as a cheap stunt to distract attention away from the Syrian government’s crackdown on protesters.

Earlier, Russia’s UN Ambassador Vitaly Churlin told his last month’s year-end press conference that an investigation is the only way to support NATO claims that it was not responsible for civilian deaths in Libya that occurred during a bombing campaign ostensibly designed under the aegis of the United Nations to protect civilians.

On Wednesday, the coming president of the Security Council also called for such an investigation. Ambassador Baso Sangqu of South Africa, who holds the rotating Security Council presidency for January, said he believed NATO overstepped its mandate in Libya enforcing a no-fly zone, killing an untold number of innocent civilians.

“We were alive to the fact that the implementation of the resolution itself would have its own problems, but we now hear strong voices that talk about many mistakes that were made. They were supposed to be precision strikes, but it was clear that those were not that precise.” …source

January 6, 2012   No Comments

Down Hamad – Freedom for Bahrain

January 5, 2012   No Comments

Eman Oun, Diaries of an expelled Polytechnic student !

Hussain Almoumen, a 21 year old Mechanical Engineering student at Bahrain Polytechnic, was arrested on Wednesday, January 4th 2012. His arrest came after the police raided his grandfather’s house after a rally commemorating one of the martyrs who was killed a few days before.

..see more at this great blog HERE

January 5, 2012   No Comments

Paying the Price for Street Protests and “being in wrong place at wrong time” – witness the brutality at the hands of King Hamad

January 5, 2012   No Comments

Reckless Endangerment by Security Forces

January 5, 2012   No Comments

King Abdullah assures President Obama, “Witches will not fly our new F15s”

The Most Absurd Human Rights Violations: Witchcraft in Saudi Arabia
4 January, 2012 – by Filip Spagnoli – P.a.p.-Blog

danziger saudi witchcraft execution

Witchcraft is a capital offense in Saudi Arabia. Recently, another person was executed:

The Saudi Interior Ministry announced on Monday that it had beheaded a woman named Amina bint Abdul Halim bin Salem Nasser for practicing “witchcraft and sorcery.” The London-based al-Hayat newspaper, citing the chief of the religious police who arrested the woman after a report from a female investigator, claims Nasser was tricking people into paying $800 per session to have their illnesses cured. (source)

How do prosecutors prove that someone is in fact a witch?

[T]he bar for proving someone guilty isn’t very high. Witch hunting is fairly institutionalized in Saudi Arabia, with the country’s religious police running an Anti-Witchcraft Unit and a sorcery hotline to combat practices like astrology and fortune telling that are considered un-Islamic.

But institutionalized is not the same thing as codified. A top official in the kingdom’s Ministry of Justice told Human Rights Watch in 2008 that there is no legal definition for witchcraft (Saudi Arabia doesn’t have a penal code) or specific body of evidence that has probative value in witchcraft trials.

Instead, judges have wide latitude in interpreting Sharia law and sentencing suspected criminals. And Amnesty International claims these judges use witchcraft charges to arbitrarily ”punish people, generally after unfair trials, for exercising their right to freedom of speech or religion.” A Human Rights Watch researcher tells The Media Line that foreigners in particular are often the targets of sorcery accusations because of their traditional practices or, occasionally, because Saudi men facing charges of sexual harassment by domestic workers want to discredit their accusers.

The evidence arrayed against witchcraft suspects typically revolves around statements from accusers and suspicious personal belongings that suggest the supernatural, in a country where superstition is still widespread. (source)

In 2007, Saudi authorities beheaded an Egyptian pharmacist who had been accused by neighbors of casting spells to separate a man from his wife and placing Korans in mosque bathrooms. “He confessed to adultery with a woman and desecrating the Koran by placing it in the bathroom,” the Saudi Press Agency reported, adding that books on black magic, a candle with an incantation “to summon devils,” and “foul-smelling herbs” had been found in the pharmacist’s home. …source

January 5, 2012   No Comments

King Hamad buys more influence signs-up British Powerhouse, Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer, to polish Bahrain’s new Human Rights image

Freshfields and leading silks advise Bahrain Govt on human rights reform

by: Suzi Ring – 5 January, 2012 – legalweek

Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer and two leading silks have won roles advising the Government of Bahrain on human rights reforms following the Arab Spring uprisings last year.

Sir Daniel Bethlehem QC from 20 Essex Street and Blackstone’s Sir Jeffrey Jowell QC are leading the advice to the Bahrain Government.

Freshfields international arbitration and public international law co-head Jan Paulsson – who is based in Bahrain – and City-based associate Tariq Baloch are also advising the state.

The appointments have been made following recommendations put forward by the Bahrain Independent Commission of Inquiry (BICI) – an international committee set up last year in light of alleged torture of a number of Bahrain civilians during the uprising.

Bethlehem (pictured) and Jowell will be advising the Government with support from Freshfields on measures to improve accountability including the creation of a national body to investigate police officers responsible for torture, death or mistreatment of civilians.

Bethlehem was previously the primary legal adviser for the UK Foreign Office from 2006-11, before returning to private practice. Jowell was until recently the UK’s member of the Council of Europe’s Venice Commission, an advisory body of senior experts in constitutional law.

The Bahrain Government has pledged that the BICI’s recommendations will be implemented by the end of February this year with some reforms already in place. Key reforms include dropping charges against protestors related to freedom of speech; the removal of law enforcement and arrest powers from Bahrain’s National Security Agency; and the creation of a judicial panel to review convictions against protestors.

The news comes after Bahrain’s King Hamad Al-Khalifa visited the UK in December last year at which point Prime Minister David Cameron urged him to implement concrete reforms and offered UK support. …source

January 5, 2012   No Comments

Guantanamo: Reopening Under New Management

Guantanamo: Reopening Under New Management
by: Tom Parker – 5 January, 2012 – Human Rights Now

Next Wednesday will mark the tenth anniversary of the arrival of the first detainee at the military prison hurriedly erected on the arid scrubland of the United States Naval Station at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.

In the past decade more than 775 individuals have made that journey, the vast majority have been released without charge after years of harsh captivity, 171 still remain – many cleared for release by the military but trapped by the restrictions placed on their resettlement by Congress.

The last prisoner arrived in Guantanamo in March 2008 but this spring we can expect the first new arrivals in four years to start trickling into the facility. The passage of the 2012 National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) means that Gitmo has now been reopened for business.

In tandem with opening up Guantanamo to new detainees, the NDAA has also given a shot in the arm to the moribund Military Commissions process. Military Commissions have heard six cases to conclusion since they were first established by the Bush administration in 2001.

By contrast Federal courts successfully prosecuted 523 terrorism-related defendants between September 11, 2001, and December 31, 2009. Among those convicted were Al Qaeda members such as the shoe bomber Richard Reid and the Millennium bomber Ahmed Ressam. The Military Commissions convicted bin Laden’s cook.

Promoting an international global armed conflict paradigm as the most appropriate framework for confronting Al Qaeda has led the United States down some very dark paths in the past decade. To paraphrase Mark Twain, the military may have some pretty big hammers but not every problem is as straightforward to solve as pounding a nail.

Provoking the state to overreact, to undermine its own values and to discard human rights protections is a core staple of the terrorist playbook. It is a strategy you can find described in countless terrorist manuals dating back to the nineteenth century. And it is a trap into which the U.S. Government has fallen. …more

January 5, 2012   No Comments

Fakhriya Jassim Hasan Sakran 55 years old, dies of suffocation by CS Gas – King Hamad murders another innocent victim

Fakhriya Jassim Hasan Sakran 55 years suffocated tear gas tonight – we are still waiting for confirmed news of her martyrdom – she lives in JidAli and is originally from muharraq

…more on this tragedy HERE

January 4, 2012   No Comments

Bahraini teen arrested faces rape as extrajudical punishment

Bahraini teen arrested after speaking with human rights group
January 3, 2012 -Lebanon Now

An 18-year-old Bahraini man, Hassan Oun, from the Shia town of Samaheej was arrested for a fifth time on Tuesday after speaking at the Bahrain Center for Human Rights, the center’s foreign relations office wrote in an email received by NOW Lebanon.

During Oun’s first detention, he claimed to have been raped with a hose by officer Yousif Mulla Bukhait, the email said.

Following his release, Bukhait telephoned Oun, threatening him with further detention, rape and death if he continued to speak out against the Bahraini government, the rights group added.

Shia-led mass demonstrations that rocked Bahrain early last year were violently crushed by government forces using live ammunition and heavy-handed tactics.

A special commission appointed to probe last year’s crackdown on anti-government protests published a report in November denouncing the “excessive and unjustified use of force” by the authorities.
…source

January 4, 2012   No Comments

Obama further compromises global stability for pretense of 50,000 US jobs

White House Announces Sale of $30B Worth of F-15s to Saudi Arabia
By Sara Sorcher – 29 December, 2011 – National Journal

The White House announced the sale of almost $30 billion worth of F-15 fighter jets to Saudi Arabia on Thursday, in the latest sign of U.S. concern about Iran’s nuclear program.

In recent days, Washington and its Persian Gulf ally signed a formal agreement to send 84 new Boeing F-15 jets to Saudi Arabia, and upgrades for 70 more already in the Saudi fleet, Deputy Press Secretary Joshua Earnest said in a statement. The deal, valued at $29.4 billion, will also include munitions, spare parts, training, maintenance and logistical support.

Earnest said the deal would support more than 50,000 American jobs, engage 600 suppliers in 44 states, and provide $3.5 billion in annual economic impact to the U.S. economy. “This agreement reinforces the strong and enduring relationship between the United States and Saudi Arabia, and demonstrates the U.S. commitment to a strong Saudi defense capability as a key component to regional security,” he said.

The Obama administration announced its plans last October to sell the aircraft and military hardware as part of a $60 billion deal over 10 years.

January 4, 2012   No Comments

Reviewing Tahrir Square as a meme

Egypt, Bahrain, London, Spain?– Tahrir Square as a meme
21 May, 2011 – Deterritorial Support Group

As in the early days and weeks of what have become known as “The Arab Spring”– a series of insurrections against long-established regimes across North Africa– the British mainstream media seem to have missed the boat on the current “May 15th” movement currently filling the streets and squares of cities and towns across Spain. The basis of the Spanish protests bear more similarities with those insurrections- anger at soaring youth unemployment, political corruption and, like much of Europe, huge social and financial restructuring plans in the name of “austerity”. But there are now interesting examples of how the shared causes of these grievances are having a feedback effect on the tactics of popular protest being used, and how certain tropes of “struggle” are spreading memetically between movements against poverty, corruption and austerity measures. Not least of these is the potent symbol of Tahrir Square, the hub of dissent during the uprisings in Egypt this year, which we are seeing in an entirely new incarnation in Puerta Del Sol in Madrid this week (hashtags- #Acampadelsol #Spanishrevolution #yeswecamp).

The relationship between the North African and Middle-Eastern uprisings and the problems of Europe is highly symbiotic, although rarely flagged up by much of the media on the conservative right and liberal left. Whilst they have tried to diffuse the anger and it’s repercussions by portraying the insurrections as part of a cultural “quest for democracy”, the Arab Spring is, quite plainly, the result of the economic forces of the global downturn and the financial crisis that precipitated it. Faced with already high graduate unemployment and rocketing food prices, the collapse of their export economies were the straw that broke the working-classes back in North Africa– the ensuing crisis of legitimacy, industrial actions and massive street violence (also completely downplayed by the European media) may have then been painted as a political crisis, but they were only the symptoms of a financial crisis with which working people had been lumbered, and could no longer sustain.

It’s perhaps understandable why the west has sought to play down the economic and class nature of the uprisings. It may well seem crass for young westerners to compare, for example, the student and EMA protests of last year with the oppression faced by Egyptian, Bahrainian and Libyan youths and rebels, but the fundamental issues that cause the discontent have similar roots and manifestations– very high graduate unemployment, a rising cost in living (food and, in Europe, rent) and collapsing legitimacy of traditional political structures, both of those in office and opposition- in short, a crisis of trust in the ideology of a social contract. For those involved to start drawing international and class comparisons and links, and for the street protests and direct actions to be generalised across Europe, would not suit the established Western democracies at all well. It’s against this attempt to distance these shared struggles that workers, demonstrators and anti-austerity activists are fighting, because the inevitable realisation would be made, sooner or later, that the problems of each country are not due to, for example, an over bureaucratic welfare state or mismanagement by a particular tyrant, but due to international issues of capital.

These are, indeed, international issues of class vs capital. But what has also been fascinating is the way certain tropes, tactics and symbols of these protests have spread across the continents memetically, not because of any specific tactical or political efficacy relevant to each individual location, but as an only semi-conscious, infectious “linking” of different “struggles”. As an example, the image of Tahrir Square has now become a fundamental core feature linking many of these movements. When tens of thousands of Egyptians headed for the Square on the days following their “day of rage” against the government, they did so for practical reasons relevant to their very specific social and geographic conditions – the need to coalesce for self-defence reasons, to gain a certain communal courage, to keep out in the open and in the eye of the international media, expecting a brutal repression from the Egyptian state security services. But the idea of Tahrir– a central encampment, held for as long as possible, acting as a hub for the worlds media, has since become more than a practical development. It has become a meme of the social movements. …more

January 4, 2012   No Comments