Archive for July, 2010

America’s Role in the Kashmir Crisis: India and Pakistan are Chained to Washington

July 21, 2010

By James Gundun, Global Research, July 21, 2010

Mounting unrest in Kashmir and the drivers behind it can appear endlessly complex. Simplification is needed for that reason alone, yet the conflict also breaks down naturally. The vast roots that disrupt Kashmir and Jammu were bundled together on July 8th by India’s Cabinet Committee on Security when it backed a “maximum crackdown” in Srinagar, the regional capital. Omar Abdullah, chief minister of Kashmir and Jammu, argued, “I had to put a stop to this cycle of violence,” a futile fallacy.

Maximum protests ensued giving way to renewed violence and casualties. Nine months ago Mirwaiz Umar Farooq, chairman of Kashmir’s leading political bloc, the All Parties Hurriyat Conference, allegedly met with Indian Home Minister P. Chidambaram in New Delhi to re-ignite the peace process. Now he tells reporters from under house arrest, “People have lost faith. The constituency of peace is shrinking day by day… The peace process is in tatters.”

Continues >>

Astronomers discover ‘monster’ star

July 21, 2010

By Alistair Keely, Press Association, The Independet/UK, July 21, 2010



AP

A visible-light image of the Tarantula nebula as seen with the Wide Field Imager on the MPG/ESO 2.2-metre telescope (left) along with a zoomed-in visible-light image from the Very Large Telescope (right)

Astronomers have discovered “monster” stars – whose size and brightness exceed what many scientists thought was possible.

Found within two young star clusters, NGC 3603 and RMC 136a, the stars weigh up to 300 times the mass of the Sun, a figure which doubles the previously accepted limit of solar mass.

A researcher at the University of Sheffield discovered the monster stars using the European Southern Observatory’s (ESO) Very Large Telescope.

The biggest star found, R136a1 within the R136a cluster, has a current mass of 265 solar masses, and it is thought its birthweight was as much as 320 times that of the Sun.

Continues >>

The pursuit of secrecy in UK

July 21, 2010

Richard Norton-Taylor, Index on Censorship,  15 Jul 2010

Richard Norton Taylor

As secret files reveal the UK’s role in abuse and torture, Richard Norton-Taylor addresses Labour’s legacy of secrets, spin and cover-up

“Drop it”, ministers strongly advised, as I sensed the government was not coming clean about their role in “extraordinary rendition”, the US practice of secretly transferring terror suspects to places where they were likely to be tortured.  It was the familiar attempt to smother an embarrassing tale, a practice at which New Labour and its spin doctors were particularly adept. The first indications from the Con-Lib coalition are that it intends to unearth its predecessor’s activities. William Hague, the foreign secretary, has delivered what he promised before the general election — a judge-led inquiry into allegations of complicity in torture.

What was astonishing was the lengths to which ministers and officials went to cover up their activities. As they persisted in a shameless pursuit of secrecy, they blamed journalists and conspiracy theorists, fed, they claimed, by human rights groups and misguided lawyers, for not letting go.

Continues >>

Yes, Jews Killed Jesus, Too—The Bible Told Me So

July 20, 2010
Jeremy R. Hammond, Foreign Policy Journal, July 20. 2010

There is a considerable manufactured controversy regarding the assertion that Jews were responsible for the crucifixion of Yeshua the Messiah (a.k.a. Jesus the Christ). According to this narrative, anyone who suggests Jews had a role is implicitly an anti-Semite, and comparisons to the Nazis and invocation of the Holocaust are seemingly obligatory in such arguments.

Continues >>

George Mitchell — fake American peace envoy

July 20, 2010

by Paul Woodward, War In ContextJuly 20, 2010

“Senator Mitchell will … work to support the objectives that the President and I believe are critical and pressing in Gaza, to develop a program for humanitarian aid and eventual reconstruction,” said Secretary of State Hillary Clinton on January 22, 2009, the day George Mitchell was named Special Envoy for Middle East Peace.

Continues >>

Human Rights Violations in Palestine: Interview With Richard Falk By C.J. Polychroniou

July 20, 2010

CounterCurrents.org, 19 July, 2010

Interview responses by Richard Falk to questions regarding his Annual Reports as Special Rapporteur for the occupied Palestinian Territories on behalf of UN Human Rights Council

CJP: Upon whose request was this report submitted and what are its main findings?

RF: As Special Rapporteur for the Occupied Palestinian Territories (West Bank, East Jerusalem, Gaza Strip) on behalf of the UN Human Rights Council (HRC), I have an obligation to submit annually two reports, one to the HRC and the other to the General Assembly. The most recent report was to the HRC, covering the period June-December 2009, and is addressed to Israeli violations of human rights law and international humanitarian law in the course of its occupation of the Palestinian territories occupied during the 1967 War. It does not cover violations of human rights law by the Palestinian Authority (PA) on the West Bank, nor by Hamas in Gaza. The report’s presentation to the HRC had been originally scheduled for presentation and discussion in March 2010 but was postponed at the initiative of the (PA) that had sought revision of the original text. Some modifications were made, but the PA continued to be dissatisfied, but their attempt to postpone again the consideration of the report was rejected by the parliamentary official who determines the HRC agenda. The report was presented and discussed at a session of the HRC on June 14, 2010. There was no serious friction although the substance of the report was generally criticized by the representative of the United States, who also complained that the framework of inquiry was biased because it only referred to Israeli violations.

Continues >>

Iran calls for new world body free of big power domination

July 20, 2010
World Bulletin, Tuesday, 20 July 2010


Senior Iranian official Ali Larijani called on Monday for a more powerful global body free of big-power domination.

Speaking to an audience including U.N. secretary-general Ban Ki-moon, Larijani said the new body should comprise “the elites” of the United Nations and the Inter-Parliamentary Union (IPU) and ensure more fairness in the global system.

“The current prevailing structure of power has not only been unable to secure international peace and security, but has also led to the emergence of such new phenomena as terrorism in a very dangerous and organised framework,” he declared.

“No doubt this inability is due to the double standards and unilateral policies exercised by the big powers, including the USA,” Larijani added.

Now speaker of parliament but formerly Iran’s chief disarmament negotiator, he was speaking to a gathering of parliamentary speakers from IPU member countries on increasing global democratic accountability.

The U.N. Security Council imposed new sanctions on Iran in June over its nuclear programme, Russia and China supporting U.S. proposals aimed at putting increased pressure on Tehran.

Iran says the programme is only for peaceful purposes, but Western powers believe it is trying to produce nuclear weapons.

Ban earlier met Larijani and told reporters they had discussed how the Iranian nuclear issue could be resolved harmoniously.

“I emphasised the importance of the Iranian government working together with the international community to resolve this issue through dialogue and negotiations,” he said.

Reuters

Generation without future, a future without generations: the endless suffering of Afghan children

July 20, 2010

By Gabriele Maranci, uruknet.info, July 19, 2010

19bala_baluk_wounded.jpg
“A collateral dammage”

Nine and a half have passed since the US and allies invaded Afghanistan. American and European soldiers (among whom the most affected are the British) sacrificed their lives for political games, international interests and local corruption, as well as strategic failure. While an unstoppable abacus precisely tracks each soldier’s death, little is really known about the civilian fatalities, which suggests a silent confession that, in this war, human blood weighs differently between the civilizer and the (un)civilizable Afghan.The war in Afghanistan started with two main public goals: the most important to the injured and humiliated US was the capture of Enemy Number One: Osama bin-Laden. The second aim was to free women from the barbaric oppression of the Taliban’s ‘Middle Age’ and their burqu. Neither of them have been accomplished. In reality, the mineral rich Afghan soil was most likely the real reason to spill blood. This was set to be an easy war against a third world religious army that turned into a mess, and for those who know history – unsurprisingly so.

Continues >>

‘Israel convinces US with credible military plan on Iran’

July 20, 2010

Nuclear Power plant [illustrative]
Photo by: AP [illustrative]


By Yaakov Katz, The Jerusalem Post, July 19, 2010

Recent media reports suggests Jerusalem has increased diplomatic efforts to persuade White House that credible military option needed.

Have Israel’s efforts to convince the US to threaten Iran with a credible military option paid off? According to recent media reports, the answer might be yes.

Since the US pushed a fourth round of sanctions against Iran through the UN Security Council last month, Jerusalem has increased diplomatic efforts to convince the White House that for the sanctions to work, a credible military option needs to be on the table to scare Iran to reconsider its pursuit of a nuclear weapon.

Continues >>

Demands for Release of Nuclear Whistleblower as Israel Holds Vanunu in Solitary Confinement

July 20, 2010

by Billy Briggs, The Herald Scotland, July 19, 2010

There were demands last night for the release from prison of the man known as the Israeli nuclear whistleblower after it emerged he was being held in solitary confinement in the same section of prison as some of Israel’s most notorious criminals.

[Mordechai Vanunu in the garden of St. George's Cathedral, two days  after his release from prison. (April 23, 2004) (photo: Ronald H.  Miller)]
Mordechai Vanunu in the garden of St. George’s Cathedral, two days after his release from prison. (April 23, 2004) (photo: Ronald H. Miller)

Mordechai Vanunu, who spent 18 years in jail for revealing details of Israel’s nuclear arsenal in 1986, was sent back to prison for three months in May after being found guilty of unauthorised meetings with foreign nationals. Vanunu, who became a cause celebre for human rights activists around the world and was elected rector of the University of Glasgow in absentia, is being held in Ayalon Prison in central Israel.Amnesty International is calling for Vanunu’s immediate release and his brother, Meir, contacted the Sunday Herald to express fears over Vanunu’s wellbeing after being the first person to visit him in seven weeks.

Continues >>