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Reported from harpazo
Ready:
-
On
Anniversary of Arafat's Death, Abbas Vows to Raise Palestine Flag in
Jerusalem (November 12, 2005)
- Thousands of Palestinians gathered near Yasser Arafat's grave in
his old West Bank compound on Friday for a subdued commemoration of
the first anniversary of their iconic leader's death. Palestinian
Authority chairman Mahmoud Abbas, his successor, led a rally
attended by top officials from major factions and a handful of
foreign diplomats in honor of Arafat, who died aged 75 having failed
to realize his dream of a Palestinian state. The focus of the
official commemoration was Arafat's old headquarters in the West
Bank city of Ramallah where he spent his final years isolated and
encircled by the Israeli army. "I renew the pledge to continue
on the path that he started and exert whatever efforts are needed to
raise the flag of Palestine on the walls, the minarets and the
churches of Jerusalem," Abbas said in a speech at the rally.
Abbas, like many in the crowd, wore the traditional Palestinian
"keffiyeh" scarf that became Arafat's trademark. Pictures
of Arafat were held by many in the crowd. Abbas earlier laid the
foundation stone for a new mausoleum complex while Koranic verses
were broadcast over loudspeakers. Many shops in West Bank cities
stayed closed, with portraits of Arafat adorning their shutters.
Smaller ceremonies were held in Bethlehem and Hebron. In the Gaza
Strip, a low-key memorial gathering was held on Thursday night.
Arafat, a former guerrilla leader who won a Nobel Peace Prize and
the deep admiration of his people only to sink into renewed conflict
with Israel, left a complicated legacy. more...
-
Dobson
blasts 'frightening' court ruling (November
12, 2005)
- A federal appeals court's dismissal of a lawsuit by parents
outraged that a school district surveyed their elementary school-age
children about sex is "frightening," says family advocate
James Dobson. "I think that's one of the most frightening
examples of judicial tyranny that has come down," said Dobson,
founder and head of Focus on the Family, on his daily radio
broadcast. Dobson called the 9th Circuit "the most
out-of-control, imperious, unelected, unaccountable court in the
country." The court determined there is "no fundamental
right of parents to be the exclusive provider of information
regarding sexual matters to their children." "What parents
do not have is the right to raise their own children," Dobson
said. He noted the ruling concerned not only sex education but the
whole curriculum. "I mean the parents either have the
responsibility to raise their own children or they don't," said
Dobson. The three-judge panel of the full court further ruled that
parents "have no due process or privacy right to override the
determinations of public schools as to the information to which
their children will be exposed while enrolled as students." Six
parents sued the Palmdale, Calif., School District after finding out
their kids had been asked a series of sexual questions in class.
They included asking the children about the frequency of:
Touching my private parts too much
Thinking about having sex
Thinking about touching other people's private parts
Thinking about sex when I don't want to
Washing myself because I feel dirty on the inside
Not trusting people because they might want sex
Getting scared or upset when I think about sex
Having sex feelings in my body
Can't stop thinking about sex
Getting upset when people talk about sex
-
Sharon
faces collapse after Labor elects new leader (November
11, 2005)
- Israel's coalition government was on the point of collapse
yesterday after the veteran politician Shimon Peres, a winner of the
Nobel peace prize, was unseated as the head of the Labor party. Mr.
Peres's political future is now uncertain after decades at the
forefront of Israeli and world politics, during which he earned a
reputation as a dove who favors a negotiated settlement to the
conflict with the Palestinians. He was defeated in a Labor
leadership election by a relative unknown who had promised to
withdraw the party from the coalition headed by the hawkish prime
minister, Ariel Sharon, the leader of the Right-wing Likud party.
Amir Peretz, a 53-year-old trade union leader, squeaked past Mr.
Peres after winning the votes of 42 per cent of Labor's 100,000
members. The poll, held on Wednesday night but lasting long into
yesterday morning after the Peres camp alleged fraud, was never
expected to be so close. In fact, surveys before voting suggested
that Mr. Peres, 82, would breeze through. By dawn, the party
committee had dismissed the claims of fraud and pronounced Mr.
Peretz its first leader of Middle Eastern origin. In his acceptance
speech at Labor's headquarters in Tel Aviv, Mr. Peretz repeated his
pledge to withdraw from the Mr. Sharon's government. "We want
to turn the Labor party into an alternative that intends to take
power in the next elections," said Mr. Peretz. A meeting
between him and Mr. Sharon is scheduled for next week. If Mr. Peretz
withdraws Labor, Mr. Sharon will be without a parliamentary
majority, and without a suitable replacement partner to secure a
majority. That will force Mr. Sharon to announce new elections
within three months, or to delay the poll and continue ruling
through a caretaker government. more...
-
West
offers uranium deal to Iranians (November
11, 2005)
- America and the European Union have agreed to offer Iran a
"last ditch" concession in an attempt to avoid a showdown
over its nuclear ambitions. The compromise would allow Iran to
produce the gas used for making enriched uranium, the essential
ingredient for nuclear power reactors and nuclear weapons. In
return, Teheran would let the final critical stage of enrichment be
made under international supervision in Russia. The proposal has
been promoted by Germany, France and Britain as a face-saving
compromise for Teheran. Iran has said it wants only to enrich
uranium for a domestic nuclear power program. The new proposal has
split the Bush administration. Washington is convinced that Iran is
hell-bent on making nuclear weapons, although it is struggling to
find a coherent policy to counter the threat. Hawkish officials and
analysts fear they have wasted valuable time by backing the EU's
diplomatic initiative.
-
French
losing patience (November
11, 2005)
- Fed up with television images of her country in flames, Paris
hairdresser Vesna Djoric said it is time for the French to stop
being so tolerant of immigrant troublemakers and consider replacing
compassion with toughness. "It's about time somebody said what
we're all thinking," Djoric commented, adding that she fully
supported a recent call by the hard-line interior minister, Nicolas
Sarkozy, for France to "pump out" its rioting
"scum." After nearly two weeks of nightly riots across the
country, France shows growing signs of an anti-immigrant backlash as
horrified citizens demand a harsher crackdown on troublemakers. Some
French are warning that the country's current mood could damage
relations with its Muslim community and bolster support for a
right-wing extremist party. Police said violence around the country,
occurring mainly in North African immigrant communities that ring
major urban centers, diminished considerably after a new curfew went
into effect late Tuesday, enforced by more than 11,000 officers.
Sarkozy warned on Wednesday that any foreigners, whether here
legally or illegally, who are convicted of violating the curfew
would be expelled from the country "without delay."
Sarkozy is expected to challenge his rival, Prime Minister Dominique
de Villepin, in presidential elections in 2007. In contrast to
Sarkozy, the prime minister has called for measures to create jobs,
reduce discrimination and address concerns among immigrants that
they are being neglected. Some French criticize De Villepin as being
too conciliatory. In well-to-do neighborhoods of central Paris,
shopkeepers and residents offered high praise for the combative
interior minister. more...
Reported from Steve
Quayle:
- Newfound
Ancient Beast Dubbed Godzilla (November
11, 2005)
- A newfound ancient sea creature looks to be part crocodile, part
T. rex, and 100 percent terrifying. The 13-foot long beast,
Dakosaurus
andiniensis, had a massive 18-inch-long jaw with
interlocking 4-inch teeth. It is a long-lost relative of the
crocodile yet it had fins. A digital
rendering of the creature reveals the sort of thing typically
reserved for horror movies. The sheer strangeness of the Dakosaurus andiniensis,
found in South America and announced today, led its discoverers to
call it Godzilla after the huge, amphibious, dinosaur-like movie
icon. "This species was very unusual, because other marine
crocodiles that were around at the same time had very delicate
features – long, skinny snouts and needle-like teeth for catching
small fish and mollusks," said Ohio State University researcher
Diego Pol, who determined the crocodile lineage. "But this croc
was just the opposite. It had a short snout, and large teeth with
serrated edges. It was definitely a predator of large sea
creatures." The fossils were found in Patagonia, in an area
that was once a deep tropical bay attached to the Pacific Ocean, by
paleontologists Zulma Gasparini and Luis Spalletti of the National
University of La Plata in Argentina. more...
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