Friday, October 28, 2011

Taseer's daughter wins human rights award for promoting religious tolerance in Pakistan

Big News Network.com
 Friday 28th October, 2011  






A US-based international human rights organisation has honoured Pakistani journalist Shehrbano Taseer, daughter of the assassinated former Punjab Governor Salmaan Taseer, for "her courage in carrying out her father's legacy of religious tolerance."

"Despite criticism and even death threats, Taseer, a journalist for Newsweek Pakistan, has worked unremittingly to shed light on the hundreds of victims of Pakistan's blasphemy laws and to encourage her government to take necessary steps to promote religious tolerance," Human Rights First said in a statement.

In the months since her father's slaying by own elite security force protectors, Malik Mumtaz Hussain Qadri, Shehrbano has continued to speak out publicly against discriminatory laws that target religious minorities, published a series of op-ed pieces calling for change in Pakistan, and openly criticized those who glorify her father's murderer, the organisation noted.

She was instrumental in the United Nation Human Rights Council's groundbreaking resolution that seeks to address violence, discrimination, and incitement to religious hatred without the controversial notion of "defamation of religions," it added.

Human Rights First also honoured renowned Egyptian activist Basem Fathy and Pakistani journalist Shehrbano Taseer, as well as Michelle and Robert King, creators of CBS's The Good Wife.

"Human Rights First is proud to honour these activists who have stood up for political freedom and religious tolerance, often at great personal risk," stated Human Rights First's President and CEO Elisa Massimino.

"Basem and Shehrbano are courageous leaders in their outspoken defense of rights in order to advance the freedom of their fellow citizens. We draw strength from their resolve and their example. We are privileged to work with them and to honour their courage and achievements with this award," Massimino added. (ANI)

US's most powerful nuclear bomb being dismantled

english.sina.com

2011-10-26 03:32:22 GMT2011-10-26 11:32:22(Beijing Time)  SINA.com

A B53 bomb is seen in this handout taken October 19, 2011 and released October 20, 2011. The U.S. Department of Energy's National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA) will dismantle the last of the nation's strongest nuclear bombs in its weapons stockpile at the Pantex Plant near Amarillo on October 25, 2011, local media reported. The bomb was first put into service during the Cold War and is considered to be more powerful than the atomic bomb dropped on Hiroshima. REUTERS

Production technicians conduct a training class on the B53 bomb in this handout taken October 19, 2011 and released October 20, 2011. The U.S. Department of Energy's National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA) will dismantle the last of the nation's strongest nuclear bombs in its weapons stockpile at the Pantex Plant near Amarillo on October 25, 2011, local media reported.

Workers unload a B53 bomb in this handout taken February 14, 2011 and released October 20, 2011. The U.S. Department of Energy's National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA) will dismantle the last of the nation's strongest nuclear bombs in its weapons stockpile at the Pantex Plant near Amarillo on October 25, 2011, local media reported. The bomb was first put into service during the Cold War and is considered to be more powerful than the atomic bomb dropped on Hiroshima. REUTERS

An aerial view of the U.S. Department of Energy's Pantex Plant near Amarillo, Texas, is shown on Sept. 4, 1992. The plutonium guts of about 9,000 former atomic weapons currently sit in storage, with about that many more waiting to be removed at the plant. (AP Photo/Pantex Plant, file)

AMARILLO, Texas — The last of the nation's most powerful nuclear bombs — a weapon hundreds of times stronger than the bomb dropped on Hiroshima — is being disassembled nearly half a century after it was put into service at the height of the Cold War.
The final components of the B53 bomb will be broken down Tuesday at the Pantex Plant near Amarillo, the nation's only nuclear weapons assembly and disassembly facility. The completion of the dismantling program is a year ahead of schedule, according to the U.S. Department of Energy's National Nuclear Security Administration, and aligns with President Barack Obama's goal of reducing the number of nuclear weapons.
Thomas D'Agostino, the nuclear administration's chief, called the bomb's elimination a "significant milestone."
Put into service in 1962, when Cold War tensions peaked during the Cuban Missile Crisis, the B53 weighed 10,000 pounds and was the size of a minivan. According to the American Federation of Scientists, it was 600 times more powerful than the atomic bomb dropped on Hiroshima, Japan, killing as many as 140,000 people and helping end World War II.
The B53 was designed to destroy facilities deep underground, and it was carried by B-52 bombers.
With its destruction, the next largest bomb in operation will be the B83, said Hans Kristensen, a spokesman for the Federation of American Scientists. It's 1.2 megatons, while the B53 was 9 megatons.
The B53's disassembly ends the era of big megaton bombs, he said. The bombs' size helped compensate for their lack of accuracy. Today's bombs are smaller but more precise, reducing the amount of collateral damage, Kristensen said.
Since the B53 was made using older technology by engineers who have since retired or died, developing a disassembly process took time. Engineers had to develop complex tools and new procedures to ensure safety.
"We knew going in that this was going to be a challenging project, and we put together an outstanding team with all of our partners to develop a way to achieve this objective safely and efficiently," said John Woolery, the plant's general manager.
Many of the B53s were disassembled in the 1980s, but a significant number remained in the U.S. arsenal until they were retired from the stockpile in 1997. Pantex spokesman Greg Cunningham said he couldn't comment on how many of the bombs have been disassembled at the Texas plant.
The weapon is considered dismantled when the roughly 300 pounds of high explosives inside are separated from the special nuclear material, known as the pit. The uranium pits from bombs dismantled at Pantex will be stored on an interim basis at the plant, Cunningham said.
The non-nuclear material and components are then processed, which includes sanitizing, recycling and disposal, the National Nuclear Security Administration said last fall when it announced the Texas plant's role in the B53 dismantling.
The plant will play a large role in similar projects as older weapons are retired from the U.S.'s nuclear arsenal.

Gaddafi son seeks flight to Hague war crimes court


english.sina.com

2011-10-28 03:50:29 GMT2011-10-28 11:50:29(Beijing Time)  SINA.com

http://news.yahoo.com/photos/file-photo-saif-al-islam-son-libyan-leader-photo-134528943.html

DUBAI - Saif al-Islam Gaddafi, fearing for his life if captured in Libya, has tried to arrange for an aircraft to fly him out of his desert refuge and into the custody of the Hague war crimes court, a senior Libyan official said Thursday.
Details were sketchy but a picture has built up since his father's grisly killing while in the hands of vengeful rebel fighters a week ago that suggests Muammar Gaddafi's 39-year-old heir-apparent has taken refuge among Sahara nomads and is seeking a safe haven abroad.
The senior Libyan official in the National Transitional Council said later that Saif al-Islam had crossed the border into Niger but had not yet found a way to hand himself in to the International Criminal Court at The Hague.
"There is a contact with Mali and with South Africa
and with another neighboring country to organize his exit ... He hasn't got confirmation yet, he's still waiting," said the official, who declined to be named.
Even if he can still draw on some of the vast fortune the Gaddafi clan built up abroad during 42 years in control of North Africa's main oilfields, his indictment by the ICC over his efforts to crush the revolt limits the options open to him.
That may explain an apparent willingness, in communications monitored by intelligence services and shared with Libya's interim rulers, to discuss a surrender to the ICC, whereas his mother and surviving siblings simply fled to Algeria and Niger.
The Court, which relies on signatory states to hand over suspects, said it was trying to confirm the whereabouts and intentions of Saif al-Islam and ex-intelligence chief Abdullah al-Senussi, the third man indicted along with the elder Gaddafi.
A source with the NTC, which drove the Gaddafis from power in Tripoli in August, told Reuters the two surviving indictees were together, protected by Tuareg nomads.
"Saif is concerned about his safety," the source said. "He believes handing himself over is the best option for him."
The younger Gaddafi, once seen as a potential liberal reformer but who adopted a belligerent, win-or-die persona at his father's side this year, was looking for help from abroad to fly out and take his chances at The Hague, where there is no death penalty:
"He wants to be sent an aircraft," the NTC source said by telephone from Libya. "He wants assurances."
COURT SEEKS CONFIRMATION
ICC spokesman Fadi El Abdallah said the court was trying to confirm the NTC comments and work out how to move the suspects:
"It depends where the suspect is and how we can get into contact with him and what would be necessary to bring him to The Hague. There are different scenarios," El Abdallah said.
Some observers question the accuracy of NTC information, given frequent lapses in intelligence recently. Some suggest surrendering to the ICC may be only one option for Saif al-Islam, who may hope for a welcome in one of the African states on which his father lavished gifts.
The African Union, and powerful members like South Africa, grumble about the nine-year-old ICC's focus so far on Africans and some of them may prove sympathetic. Even if arrested on charges relating to his role in attacks on protesters in February and March, Saif al-Islam could make defense arguments that might limit any sentence, lawyers said.
NTC forces, which overran Gaddafi's last bastions of Bani Walid and Sirte this month, lack the resources to hunt and capture fugitives deep in the desert, the source said.
NATO, whose air power turned the civil war in the rebels' favor, could help, he added.
But NATO, which will end its Libya operations at the end of the month, stresses its mission is to protect civilians, not target individuals - though it was a NATO air strike that halted Muammar Gaddafi's flight last week.
A captured pro-Gaddafi fighter at Bani Walid told Reuters that the London-educated Saif al-Islam had been in that town, south of Tripoli until it fell earlier this month.
The man, one of his bodyguards, said the younger Gaddafi was "confused" and in fear for his life when he escaped Bani Walid. If he has seen the gruesome video footage of his father's capture, he knows how he may be treated if he remains in Libya.
NTC WANTS TRIAL
Asked what the NTC was doing to cooperate with the ICC, the vice chairman of the Council, Abdel Hafiz Ghoga, noted that the Libyans still hoped to try the suspects themselves:
"There aren't any special arrangements by the NTC," he said. "If Abdullah al-Senussi and Saif al-Islam are arrested inside Libya they will be tried and judged based on Libyan law.
"If they fled and went to countries such as Niger, for example, they will have to be surrendered to the ICC," he adding, noting reports that Senussi had already reached Niger.
Earlier this week, an NTC official said Saif al-Islam had acquired a passport in a false name and was lying low south of Ghat, a border crossing with Algeria through which his mother, sister and two of his surviving brothers fled in August.
Algeria is not a signatory to the Rome treaty which set up the ICC, but might face strong diplomatic pressure to hand over indicted suspects. The NTC has also been pressing Algiers to hand over the other Gaddafi relatives.
Niger, an impoverished former French colony, has said it would honor its commitments to the ICC. The mayor of the northern Niger town of Agadez, a transit point for other fleeing Gaddafi allies, told Reuters Saif al-Islam would be extradited to The Hague if he showed up.
Tunisia, to where other Gaddafi loyalists have fled, is also a signatory to the ICC's conventions.
A member of the Malian parliament who has been in charge of relations with Libya's NTC discounted reports that Gaddafi and Senussi had crossed Algeria or Niger into Mali.
The mystery over their flight has spawned many rumours.
In South Africa, one newspaper said a plane was on standby there to fly north and rescue Saif al-Islam along with a group of South Africans working for him. NTC officials say South Africans may have been among those killed in Sirte last week when Gaddafi was caught and killed.
DEFENSE OPTIONS
Should he end up, like former Yugoslav leaders and others, in a Dutch jail, Saif al-Islam would have no shortage of defenders, though a defense of simply following his father's orders would carry little weight with ICC judges.
An Iraqi lawyer who defended allies of Saddam Hussein in the U.S.-supervised trials in Baghdad said the younger Gaddafi would be entitled to argue that his actions were legitimate acts of defense during an aggressive war by foreign powers.
Though some of the ICC indictment relates to the use of force against unarmed demonstrators before NATO intervened, Badie Arif, who defended former Iraqi deputy prime minister Tareq Aziz, told Reuters: "It was a foreign aggression made by colonialist countries and by NATO ... It is illegitimate and illegal by all international standards."
Geert-Jan Knoops, a Dutch-based international criminal law attorney, said Saif al-Islam could challenge the ICC case on two main fronts -- that it was a political show trial aimed at justifying Western-backed regime change, or by proving there was no evidence of a "political plan" to kill protesters.
A public platform could allow Saif al-Islam to embarrass some of the Western leaders with whom he led a rapprochement in recent years.
His role in promoting reforms, thwarted by domestic opponents, might also be used in his defense, though his angry outbursts against the revolt would enable prosecutors to bolster a case in which they accuse him of recruiting mercenaries to kill protesters as part of a "predetermined plan" with his father and Senussi.

Thursday, October 27, 2011

Israel, Palestinians agree on step toward new talks

CNN
By the CNN Wire Staff
October 27, 2011 -- Updated 1156 GMT (1956 HKT)
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • Israel and the Palestinians say they will come up with proposals on security and territory
  • This will be a step toward renewed direct peace talks
  • Quartet envoys will meet with both sides over the next 90 days to review progress
  • Peace talks fell apart last year over the issue of Israeli settlements
Jerusalem (CNN) -- Israel and the Palestinians have agreed to come forward with proposals on security and territory issues within the next three months, the European Union said, in a development that keeps alive hopes for renewed peace talks.
It comes after representatives from both sides met separately with envoys from the Middle East Quartet -- made up of the United States, the European Union, the United Nations and Russia -- and former British Prime Minister Tony Blair in Jerusalem on Wednesday, an EU statement said.
Both Israel and the Palestinians expressed their readiness "to overcome the current obstacles and resume direct bilateral negotiations without delay or preconditions," the EU said, in line with a Quartet statement issued September 23.
In that statement, the Quartet called on Israel and the Palestinians to resume peace talks within a month, and set the end of 2012 as the deadline for their completion.
It also "affirmed its determination to actively and vigorously seek a comprehensive resolution of the Arab-Israeli conflict" on the basis of numerous U.N. Security Council resolutions, previous agreements between the two sides and "the roadmap," a reference to the proposed plan for Middle East peace laid out by the quartet in 2003.
The roadmap calls on each side to take a series of steps, including Palestinians undertaking "an unconditional cessation of violence" and Israel freezing "all settlement activity."
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's special envoy, attorney Yitzhak Molcho, met Quartet representatives Wednesday to discuss ways to resume direct talks with the Palestinians, without preconditions.
It was decided that the sides would coordinate on a date to resume their discussions, the Israelis said.
Chief Palestinian negotiator Saeb Erekat told reporters in Ramallah that Palestinian officials had told Quartet members they were willing to engage in any effort to resume peace talks "provided that the Israeli side honor its commitments emanating from the roadmap, when we say Israel must stop settlement activities including in Jerusalem and accept the two state solution of 1967.
"These are not Palestinian conditions, these are Israeli obligations."
The Palestinians had passed documents concerning Israeli settlement building and the release of Palestinian prisoners to the Quartet representatives, he said.
Envoys from the Quartet will meet regularly over the next 90 days with representatives from both sides, the EU said.
The envoys reiterated the Quartet's call for Israelis and Palestinians to "refrain from provocative actions if negotiations are to be effective," the EU statement added.
Peace talks between the two sides fell apart over a year ago over disagreements on the issue of Israeli West Bank settlements.
Coming off a self-imposed 10-month halt in settlement construction, Israel said it would not renew the freeze. This led the Palestinians to quit the negotiations.
Last month, Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas made a bid for the United Nations to recognize a Palestinian state, a move Israel says is premature without direct talks that address its longstanding security concerns.
CNN's Kevin Flower in Jerusalem and Kareem Khadder in Ramallah contributed to this report.

Lawyer: Gadhafi family to file war crimes complaint against NATO

CNN
By the CNN Wire Staff
October 27, 2011 -- Updated 1951 GMT (0351 HKT)
Questions surround the death of Moammar Gadhafi, who eluded forces loyal to the National Transitional Council for months.
Questions surround the death of Moammar Gadhafi, who eluded forces loyal to the National Transitional Council for months.
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • NEW: NATO responds that it never targeted specific individuals in the operation
  • The Gadhafi family blames NATO for Gadhafi's death, the lawyer says
  • The family will file the complaint with the ICC, the lawyer says
  • The ICC had a warrant for Gadhafi's arrest
(CNN) -- The family of deceased Libyan strongman Moammar Gadhafi will file a war crimes complaint against NATO with the International Criminal Court, a lawyer representing the family said Thursday.
Members of the family believe NATO's actions led to Gadhafi's death last week, said Marcel Ceccaldi.
"All of the events that have taken place since February 2011 and the murder of Gadhafi, all of this means we are totally in our right to call upon the International Criminal Court," Ceccaldi, a French attorney, said.
NATO responded that it "conducts its operation in strict conformity with the relevant U.N. Security Council resolutions." In a statement Thursday, a NATO official said, "At no time during Operation Unified Protector has NATO targeted specific individuals."
The ICC had previously issued a warrant for Gadhafi's arrest, accusing him of crimes against humanity.
The ICC still has warrants for the arrest of Gadhafi's son, Saif al-Islam Gadhafi, and his brother-in-law Abdullah al-Sanussi.
Questions surround the death of Moammar Gadhafi, who eluded forces loyal to the National Transitional Council for months. Video shows Gadhafi was alive when captured by the opposition.
He died from a shot in the head, officials said, but the circumstances surrounding the shot remain unclear.
The United States said it supports an independent investigation, as called for by the United Nations and by Libya's new leadership.
Ceccaldi said the Gadhafi family's complaint will be filed in the coming days.
"Now we will wait and see if the ICC is a judicial system which is independent and impartial," he added.
Lt. Gen. Charles Bouchard, commander of the NATO military operation, said earlier this week that NATO "did not get involved in anything beyond what was our legal mandate and we remain well within the mandate assigned to us by the North Atlantic Council."
While Gadhafi survived an airstrike in the Sirte area shortly before he died, Bouchard said NATO did not know the former Libyan leader was in the convoy.
"We saw a convoy, and in fact we had no idea that Gadhafi was on board," Bouchard said. Some vehicles in the convoy were carrying weaponry, and seemed to present a potential threat to the population, he said.
The news came as the U.N. Security Council voted unanimously Thursday to end NATO's military operations in Libya.

From Hurriyet Daily News: No discrimination on foreign quake aid, says Gül

Alarabiya.net English

President Abdullah Gül. AA Photo.
President Abdullah Gül. AA Photo.
Turkish President Abdullah Gül says Turkey is now accepting quake aid from any foreign country willing to offer it as the country

Turkey is not discriminating between countries that have offered help in the wake of a devastating earthquake in Van, President Abdullah Gül said on Oct. 26, as Israel announced it would send prefabricated houses to the disaster-struck area after Ankara gave the green light for foreign aid.

“There are many countries offering assistance. The Turkish Foreign Ministry made an announcement for specific assistance at the moment the need emerged,” Gül told reporters.

Gül said that not only Israel, but other countries were also sending aid when asked about his phone conversation with Israeli President Shimon Peres and Israel’s assistance for Van.

“There is no discrimination against any country,” he said, adding that Azerbaijan and Iran had sent assistance immediately after the quake without giving prior notification to Ankara. ...

(For more on this, please see: http://www.hurriyetdailynews.com/n.php?n=no-discrimination-on-foreign-quake-aid-gul-2011-10-26)

Mustapha Ajbaili: Libyan NTC chief’s ‘liberation’ speech raises eyebrows

Alarabiya.net English

The head of Libya’s interim National Transitional Council, Mustafa Abdul Jalil, said the Islamic legal system, Shariah, will be the fundamental source of legislation in Libya. (Photo by Reuters)
The head of Libya’s interim National Transitional Council, Mustafa Abdul Jalil, said the Islamic legal system, Shariah, will be the fundamental source of legislation in Libya. (Photo by Reuters)
During his speech at Libya’s ‘liberation’ ceremony held in the city of Benghazi on Sunday, the head of the interim National Transitional Council (NTC), Mustafa Abdul Jalil made a few announcements that must have raised eyebrows among people with hopes for a moderate system that respects basic human rights and democratic governance of the country.

Abdul Jalil began his speech with a religious edict, telling the crowd that firing guns in the air as a way of thanking Allah for victory is Haram, meaning prohibited. He then went on to announce that Libya’s future legal system would be based on Islamic Shariah law, and that banks will be required to follow the Islamic banking system, which bans charging interest. But the most seemingly surprising part of the speech is the NTC chief’s announcement of reinstating polygamy. The statement highlighted the importance of polygamy in the new Libya, and Abdul Jalil, an inexperienced politician, evidently did not forget to “liberate” men in Libya’s day of “liberation.”
If Libyan women, who make up more than half of the country’s population, were asked to vote on a polygamy law, most of them would likely oppose it. Polygamy is a practice most Muslim women detest, but remain silent about it for fear they would be accused of going against Shariah.

When Libyans rose up against Muammar Qaddafi and fought eight months of war, with tremendous sacrifices, they did so for the sake of dignity and self-rule. If they want a legal system based on the Islamic Shariah law, they have the right to have it through a democratic process; it should not be imposed on them.

The NTC chairman enjoys wide support in Libya. He was one of the first to desert Qaddafi’s regime when he gave up his post as justice minister and joined revolutionaries in Benghazi. Since then, Abdul Jalil has had “revolutionary legitimacy” to represent Libyans and make urgent decisions on their behalf. In order for him to be able to make decisions on how Libyans should be governed for years to come, he now needs “electoral legitimacy.”

Abdul Jalil’s “liberation” speech should have been a historic one. Instead of reminding Libyans of the lofty principles of democracy, freedom, dignity, and nation-building, he addressed details that should be left for elected lawmakers to discuss.

But it should be noted that Abdul Jalil is an inexperienced politician; and both Libyan and international observers should cut him some slack. He has made some blunders before.