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NOVANEWS   by crescentandcross     BRUSSELS – After two airstrikes in a week on targets close to Moammar Gadhafi, NATO ...Read more

NOVANEWS   Washington Post   BEIRUT — The toppling of the presidents in Tunisia and Egypt precipitated a tumult of ...Read more

Iran | USA
NOVANEWS by crescentandcross   Iran’s Foreign Ministry Spokesman Ramin Mehmanparast Iran’s Foreign Ministry spokesman says the news of Osama bin Laden’s ...Read more

NOVANEWS   Osama Bin Laden was reportedly shot by US Navy Seals in the early hours of Monday. A senior ...Read more

NOVANEWS   by crescentandcross   NATO Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen has said the alliance will continue its mission in Afghanistan ...Read more

USA
NOVANEWS   crescentandcross   Hundreds flock to Ground Zero after Obama declares terrorist dead. ‘Great day to be American,’ says ...Read more

NOVANEWS   “Forbes” — Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov told the Russian press on Saturday that they were aware of ...Read more

NOVANEWS   Associated Press   CAIRO (AP) — Seif al-Arab Gadhafi escaped a U.S. airstrike targeting his father’s compound in ...Read more

NOVANEWS     Richard Falk is the UN Special Rapporteur on the human rights situation in the Palestinian territories. The ...Read more

NOVANEWS   Russia and Venezuela join Libyan regime in accusing Nato of attempting to assassinate Muammar Gaddafi The Guardian The ...Read more

NOVANEWS   Racist Defense Minister says IsraHell should not fear Syrian president being replaced; ‘Changes in Mideast hold great promise ...Read more

NOVANEWS by crescentandcross   IsraHell withholds transfer of $105 million in customs duties and other levies it collects on behalf of ...Read more

NATO on defensive over strikes close to Gadhafi

NOVANEWS

 
by crescentandcross

 

 

BRUSSELS – After two airstrikes in a week on targets close to Moammar Gadhafi, NATO was on the defensive Sunday over accusations that it was overstepping its mandate by trying to kill the Libyan leader.

Russia said Sunday that the bombing of the home of Gadhafi’s youngest son raised “serious doubts” about NATO’s assertions that it is not targeting the Libyan strongman or his relatives.

“Disproportionate use of force … is leading to detrimental consequences and the death of innocent civilians,” the Russian Foreign Ministry warned.

International law does not explicitly forbid attacks on military commanders during wartime, but the U.N. Security Council mandate authorizing NATO action charged alliance forces with establishing a no-fly zone and protecting civilians from attack.

Security council members Russia, China and Brazil have warned that attempts to change the regime or eliminate its members would be a violation of the mandate.

Alliance officials and allied leaders emphatically denied they were hunting Gadhafi in order to break a stalemate in the war between the better-trained government forces and the lightly armed rebels. NATO said the Libyan government’s announcement that Gadhafi’s son and three grandchildren were killed in the airstrike late Saturday remained unconfirmed.

“All NATO’s targets are military in nature and have been clearly linked to the Gadhafi regime’s systematic attacks on the Libyan population and populated areas. We do not target individuals,” said Canadian Lt. Gen. Charles Bouchard, who commands NATO’s operation in Libya.

Bouchard said the strike was part of NATO’s strategy to disrupt and destroy “the command and control of those forces which have been attacking civilians.”

Michael Clarke, director of the Royal United Services Institute, a London military think tank, noted that NATO warplanes have been shifting their focus in the past two weeks, from providing close support for the rebels on the front lines to focusing on military and government communication nodes. The immediate aim appeared to be to impair Gadhafi’s ability to direct units surrounding the besieged enclave of Misrata on the Mediterranean coast, where pro-regime forces have suffered a series of setbacks, he said.

Another aim could be to increase the psychological pressure on Gadhafi and the people close to him, by demonstrating “that the war is getting closer to them,” he said.

Another analyst said that there was a fine line between hitting military command-and-control centers, and hitting the people commanding and controlling Libya’s armed forces.

“You’re obviously risking hitting Gadhafi and members of his family, certainly those members involved in commanding the military,” said Nate Hughes, director of military analysis at Stratfor, a global intelligence company.

Hughes said there was confusion about the aim of the strikes partly because of an “inherent contradiction” about what NATO’s military objectives were. Politicians in the U.S., Britain and the Netherlands are talking about forcing Gadhafi out of power but NATO continues to insist that the strongman is not a target, he noted.

NATO took over command of the operation on March 31, after its governing body approved military plans to implement a U.N. Security Council resolution calling for the protection of civilians from attacks by regime troops.

One of the first targets of the international force after the start of hostilities, was Gadhafi’s Bab al-Aziziya presidential compound — which was previously bombed by U.S. warplanes in 1986 in retaliation for the attack on a German disco in which two U.S. servicemen were killed.

Last Monday, another strike on the same complex destroyed two more buildings.

At a joint news conference a day later, U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates and British Defense Minister Liam Fox denied the warplanes had targeted Gadhafi specifically, but said they would continue to take aim at his command centers.

NATO says the air offensive, which began on March 21 with attacks by a U.S.-led coalition, has so far destroyed or damaged about 600 targets, including about 200 tanks and armored personnel carriers, as well as dozens of surface-to-air missile sites, ammunition dumps and artillery pieces.

It declined to say Sunday how many command centers had been attacked.

‘Doomsday scenario’ if Syria fails

NOVANEWS
 

Washington Post
 

BEIRUT — The toppling of the presidents in Tunisia and Egypt precipitated a tumult of revolutionary fervor that promises to transform the Middle East, but the potential collapse of the Syrian regime could wreak havoc of a very different kind.

In Syria, the fall of President Bashar al-Assad would unleash a cataclysm of chaos, sectarian strife and extremism that spreads far beyond its borders, threatening not only the entrenched rulers already battling to hold at bay a clamor for democratic change but also the entire balance of power in the volatile region, analysts and experts say.

With Syria’s minority Shiite Alawite government overseeing a majority Sunni population, its strategic location and its web of alliances including the radical Hamas and Hezbollah movements, regime change could look a lot more like it did in Iraq than in Egypt — and the ramifications could prove even more profound.

“If the regime collapses you will have civil war and it will spread throughout the region,” engulfing Lebanon, Iraq, Saudi Arabia and beyond, said Hilal Khashan, professor of political science at the American University of Beirut. “A collapse of the Syrian regime is a doomsday scenario for the entire Middle East.”

Many believe that is why the international community, including the United States, has offered such a tempered response to the bloodshed in Syria, the latest Arab country to be swept up in the unrest roiling the region. NATO warplanes are bombing Libya to protect civilians there, but there have been no calls even for Assad to step aside, despite an increasingly violent crackdown by the Syrian military in which at least 550 people have died. On Sunday, hundreds of people were detained as the military swept through towns and villages raiding homes in search of those who participated in recent protests, human rights groups said.

Analyst Rami Khouri describes Syria as the Middle East equivalent of a bank that’s too big to be allowed to fail. “The spillover effect would be too horrible to contemplate,” he wrote in a commentary in Beirut’s Daily Star.

“The specter of sectarian-based chaos within a post-Assad Syria that could spread to other parts of the Middle East is frightening to many people.”

Part of the problem is that so little is known about what would come next should Assad be ousted. Egypt and Tunisia took great leaps into uncertainty when their regimes fell, but in each case the army, a known quantity, asserted its independence and seized power to oversee the transition.

In Syria, the army is so tightly bound to Assad’s Alawite clan that the fall of the regime would almost certainly lead to its disintegration, setting the stage for an Iraq-style implosion in which the state collapses, a majority seeks to exact revenge on a minority and regional powers pile in to assert their own interests, said Joshua Landis of the University of Oklahoma, who writes the blog Syria Comment.

“Syria is the cockpit of the Middle East, and a struggle for control of Syria would be ignited,” he said.

Implications for Iraq

It is the specter of Iraq, where U.S. troops are preparing to withdraw by the end of the year, that most haunts the Obama administration as it seeks to balance demands for a firmer response to the escalating bloodshed with America’s strategic interests, analysts say.

Syria shares a long desert border with Iraq that was for many years the chief transit point for Islamic extremists seeking to join the Sunni insurgency. Only recently, officials say, had the United States noted genuine efforts on the part of the Syrians to curtail the traffic, prompting the United States to return an ambassador to Syria in January for the first time since 2005.

“For the Obama administration, the last thing they want, just at the time they’re withdrawing from Iraq, is a destabilized Syria that would lead to open season for jihadis to cross the border into Iraq,” said David Lesch, professor of Middle East history at Trinity University in Texas.

Iraq’s own Shiite government also views with alarm the upheaval across the border, mindful that the collapse of Syria’s Shiite minority government would almost certainly herald the rise of a Sunni state on its doorstep, and perhaps renewed support for Sunni insurgents still resisting the Shiite ascendancy in Baghdad.

But Iraq is by no means the only country in the region looking askance at the Syrian upheaval. Israel has expressed misgivings about the tumult threatening its chief foe, which has reliably not attempted to recover by force the occupied Golan Heights for nearly four decades — something that could change if a populist Syrian government emerged.

Neighboring Lebanon has its own Sunni-Shiite divide that has long been delineated by pro- and anti-Syrian camps. They have fought one another on many occasions in the recent past, and it is inconceivable that Syria’s troubles would not spill over the border into Lebanon, Khashan said.

To the north, Turkey is concerned about the potential aspirations of Syria’s Kurds, who could seek to assert their identity and claims to statehood as Iraq’s Kurds did after the fall of Saddam Hussein.

Iran has relied on its three-decade-old alliance with Syria to project its influence into the Arab world, and has no wish to see the country controlled by Sunnis. It would almost certainly intervene to support its Alawite allies, just as it intervened in Iraq to help Shiites there. The Obama administration has already accused Iran of helping Damascus repress the revolt.

And the Persian Gulf states, though long on frosty terms with Damascus, also are nervous about the prospect of sectarian conflict, which could leach into Saudi Arabia and Bahrain. For Saudi Arabia, there is also the worry that the assertion of Sunni power in Syria could inspire restive domestic Sunni radicals to intensify their opposition to the monarchy.

Unclear opposition

Yet little is known about who the opposition in Syria is, or who might take over should the regime fall — offering another reason that governments have been so hesitant to call for Assad’s departure.

The authorities have denied entry to the news media, and even before this latest unrest, visas were issued sparingly to journalists and academics, making it hard to know exactly who is behind the sudden, and for many unexpected, outpouring of dissent.

Syria has sought to portray its opponents as armed Islamic extremists intent on sowing sectarian strife, and indeed, the last time there was significant domestic unrest in the country was in 1982, when the Syrian army ruthlessly crushed an insurrection by armed members of the Muslim Brotherhood in the town of Hama, killing between 10,000 and 40,000 people.

Syrian activists bristle at the suggestion that their movement is dominated by Islamists, and say their revolution is no different from the one in Egypt, in which ordinary people spontaneously took to the streets to vent their frustrations with corruption, nepotism and the ruthlessness of the security forces.

“I feel disgusted by how the superpowers make these calculations based on their own interests, while my own people are dying on the streets,” said Mohammed Ali Atassi, a prominent journalist and filmmaker currently in Beirut.

“The Syrians will get their freedom, and we will decide, and the Americans and Europeans will have to accept our choice,” he said. “But in any case, democratically elected governments always go for a peaceful and rational foreign policy.”

‘Overexaggerated’ fears

Some analysts say there is indeed no reason to fear a transition in Syria, which has in any case long been blamed by the West for much of the instability plaguing the region. Predictions of the chaos that would ensue if the regime in Damascus were to fall “are way overexaggerated,” said Riad Kahwaji of the Dubai-based Institute for Gulf and Near East Military Analysis.

Syria has been implicated in the assassination of the former Lebanese prime minister Rafik Hariri, hosts the remnants of Hussein’s Baath Party facilitating the insurgency in Iraq, and enables Iran to ship weapons to Hamas and Hezbollah through its territory. A new regime could prove far more moderate, Kahwaji said.

Yet Syria’s long history as the master manipulator of the Middle East may be another reason that the world is reluctant to alienate Assad. With its long record of sponsoring multiple, shadowy extremist groups in pursuit of foreign policy goals, the Syrian regime is also in a position to unleash considerable chaos across the region should it feel unduly threatened, analysts say.

And that, according to Khashan, the American University of Beirut professor, makes it unlikely the Syrian regime will fall. “Because, to tell the truth, no one wants it to fall, including Israel, the U.S. and the gulf states,” he said.

Iran–’No excuse for US presence in region’ now that Osama Dead

NOVANEWS

by crescentandcross

 

Iran’s Foreign Ministry Spokesman Ramin Mehmanparast

Iran’s Foreign Ministry spokesman says the news of Osama bin Laden’s death has left the US and its allies with no excuse to stay in Afghanistan.

“We hope that this development will end war, conflict, unrest and the death of innocent people, and help to establish peace and tranquility in the region,” Ramin Mehmanparast said in a statement released on Monday.

“This development (Bin Laden’s death) clearly shows that there is no need for a major military deployment to counter one individual,” he added.

Mehmanparast underlined that “Iran, as one of the main victims of terrorism, strongly condemns any act of terror in the world including organized terrorism in the Zionist regime [of Israel].”

Meanwhile, member of the Parliament (Majlis) National Security and Foreign Policy Commission Javad Jahangirzadeh said the United States conducted an operation that killed Osama bin Laden for fear that he would leak classified and sensitive information.

“How could a terrorist (Osama bin Laden) hide himself from intelligence sources …and intelligence services cooperating with the West,” the Iranian lawmaker asked.

He went on to say that the al-Qaeda leader was a key figure in promoting Islamophobia and showing a violent image of Islam and had been terminated in order to prevent him from leaking sensitive intelligence.

“Naturally the West was satisfied with Bin Laden’s performance over the past years, and today, as they believed their [anti-Islam] project had been completed and so to prevent the leaking of valuable information they were forced to kill him,” Jahangirzadeh said.

In a televised speech on Sunday, US President Barack Obama announced that al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden had been killed in a US operation in Pakistan.

“Tonight, I can report to the American people and to the world that the United States has conducted an operation that killed Osama bin Laden, the leader of al-Qaeda, and a terrorist who’s responsible for the murder of thousands of innocent men, women and children,” Obama said.

“The United States launched a targeted operation against that compound in Abbottabad, in Pakistan. A small team of Americans carried out the operation with extraordinary courage and capability. No Americans were harmed. They took care to avoid civilian casualties. After a firefight, they killed Osama bin Laden, and took custody of his body,” he added.

Meanwhile, a US official says bin Laden’s body has been buried at sea, alleging that his hasty burial was in accordance with Islamic law, which requires burial within 24 hours of death.

This is while burial at sea is not an Islamic practice and Islam does not determine a timeframe for burial.

The official added that finding a country willing to accept the remains of the world’s most wanted man was difficult, so the US decided to bury him at sea.

Iran lawmaker downplays Osama death

NOVANEWS
 

Osama Bin Laden was reportedly shot by US Navy Seals in the early hours of Monday.

A senior Iranian lawmaker has raised doubt about the US claim that al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden has been killed by American forces near Islamabad.

“We are not sure how accurate the announcement made by the United States is as they have in the past claimed that Bin Laden has been killed,” head of the Parliament (Majlis) National Security and Foreign Policy Commission Alaeddin Boroujerdi was quoted by ISNA as saying on Monday.

”Today 47 or 48 countries have military forces in Afghanistan,” he said.

“They haven’t accomplished much even if in fact they (the US) are telling the truth about having killed Bin Laden after ten years,” Boroujerdi concluded.

On Sunday, US President Barack Obama announced that al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden was killed by US forces after he was found hiding in a compound in Pakistan.

This is while analysts and military experts believe that the United States had delayed the killing of bin Laden to continue the presence of US-led forces in war-torn Afghanistan, a Press TV correspondent reported.

The US president further said that “The US has never been and will never be at war with Islam,” adding that bin Laden was also a mass-murderer of Muslims.

The announcement of bin Laden’s death comes almost ten years after the September 11 attacks on the United States.

Meanwhile, a US official says bin Laden’s body has been buried at sea, alleging that his hasty burial was in accordance with Islamic law, which requires burial within 24 hours of death.

This is while burial at sea is not an Islamic practice and Islam does not determine a timeframe for burial.

The official added that finding a country willing to accept the remains of the world’s most wanted man was difficult, so the US decided to bury him at sea.

 

NATO will continue Afghan mission’

NOVANEWS

 

by crescentandcross

 

NATO Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen has said the alliance will continue its mission in Afghanistan despite the recent killing of al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden in Pakistan.

Rasmussen hailed the death of bin Laden and said NATO will continue its presence in Afghanistan in an attempt to prevent the war-torn country from becoming a terrorist haven again, AFP reported.

The NATO chief’s remarks came after US President Barack Obama announced the killing of bin Laden on Monday.

The world’s most wanted man was killed on Sunday during a US military operation on his compound in Pakistani town of Abbottabad in northeast of Islamabad.

Many observers believe bin Laden’s killing will trigger a violent reaction across the world where al-Qaeda has headquarters, including Pakistan, Afghanistan, Morocco and Algeria.

Some analysts and military experts also say the United States had delayed the killing of bin Laden to continue the presence of US-led forces in war-torn Afghanistan.

The announcement of bin Laden’s death comes almost ten years after the September 11 attacks on the United States.

The number of US-led forces in Afghanistan stands at about 150,000 while more than 47,000 American soldiers are being stationed inside Iraq.

US cheers bin Laden’s death

NOVANEWS

 

crescentandcross

 

Hundreds flock to Ground Zero after Obama declares terrorist dead. ‘Great day to be American,’ says one

Hundreds of jubilant people streamed to the spot where the World Trade Center towers fell almost 10 years ago, waving American flags, snapping pictures and breaking into song early Monday to celebrate the death of Osama bin Laden.

Mastermind of Sept. 11, 2001 attacks killed by US-led team after manhunt that took nearly a decade, president announces. Senior officials say al-Qaeda leader killed in firefight at his fortified compound in Pakistan, remains being handled according to Islam

It was easily the happiest crowd ever at a site where more familiar scenes are bagpipes playing “Amazing Grace” and solemn speeches memorializing the dead during annual anniversary ceremonies.

Guy Madsen drove from his home in New Jersey with his son when he heard of bin Laden’s death.

“This is Judgment Day and we’re winning,” he said.

Farther uptown in Times Square, dozens stood together on the clear spring night and broke into applause when a New York Fire Department sports utility vehicle drove by, flashed its lights and sounded its siren.

A man held an American flag and others sang “The Star-Spangled Banner.”

And in Washington, a large group gathered in front of the White House, chanting “USA! USA!” and waving American flags. The throng had filled the street in front and was spilling into Lafayette Park.

Will Ditto, 25, a legislative aide, said he was getting ready to go to bed Sunday night when his mother called him with the news. He decided to leave his home on Capitol Hill and join the crowd. As he rode the subway to the White House, he told fellow passengers the news.

“It’s huge,” he said. “It’s a great day to be an American.”

George Washington University student Alex Washofsky, 20, and his roommate Dan Fallon, 20, joined the crowd.

“George Bush said, `Bring him to justice, dead or alive,’ and we did it,” said Washofsky, a junior and a member of the Navy Reserve Officer Training Corps.

The crowd began gathering before President Barack Obama addressed the nation at about 11:30 pm Sunday.

Some people sprinted up on foot to join the crowd. Others arrived on bicycles, and some people brought dogs.

‘He’s dead, but now what?’

In Dearborn, Michigan, a, heavily Middle Eastern suburb that’s home to one of the nation’s largest Arab and Muslim communities, a small crowd gathered outside City Hall, chanting “USA” and waving American flags.

Across town, some honked their car horns as they drove along the main street where most of the Arab-American restaurants and shops are located.

At the Arabica Cafe, the big screen TVs that normally show sports were all turned to news about bin Laden.

Cafe manager Mohamed Kobeissi says it’s finally justice for those victims.

In Philadelphia, at a game between the New York Mets and Philadelphia Phillies, chants of “USA! USA!” began in the top of the ninth inning at Citizens Bank Park. Fans could be seen all over the stadium checking their phones and sharing the news.

Shirley Miller watched a headline flip across a monitor in Chicago’s O’Hare Airport before her daughter and husband texted her with the same news: Bin Laden was dead.

But for the 42-year-old Miller, whose son has deployed twice to Afghanistan following 9/11, the news didn’t soothe worries that bin Laden’s death could prompt more attacks against the U.S.

“OK. He’s dead, but now what?” Miller asked as she flew from Chicago to Little Rock, Arkansas.

“It’s kind of scary because you don’t know what’s going to happen,” she said. “It could get worse.”

Russian Official Tells Press NATO Going into Libya

NOVANEWS
 

“Forbes” — Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov told the Russian press on Saturday that they were aware of a ground campaign being prepared within NATO and some European nations.

“The information we have from our channels shows that both NATO and the EU are working on similar plans,” Lavrov saind on Russian TV. Translated from the Russian, Lavrov said that the he understands the idea is for the EU to develop plans for humanitarian convoys, and that nothing would be done with NATO on the ground unless the United Nations Security Council said a ground invasion to oust Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi was within their authority.

“If anybody wants to ask for this idea for carrying out ground campaign to the UN Security Council, then we will discuss it there and try to understand what is being planned on the ground,” Lavrov said.

A NATO campaign against Libya was launched on March 17 after a late night UN Security Council resolution condemned Gadhafi’s government and military for ordering strikes against anti-government protests.

Over the weekend, the Libyan leader declared war on Italy.

Last week, Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin said he still didn’t understand the modus operandi behind the NATO Libya operation. According to Ria Novosti newswire in Moscow, Putin said NATO went beyond the UN’s March 16th mandate when it dropped guided missiles on Gadhafi’s government offices in Tripoli.

“What kind of no-fly zone is this if they are striking palaces every night?” Putin said in Ria Novosti. “What do they need to bomb palaces for? To drive out the mice?” Putin even went as far as suggesting that Libya’s oil resources were a main object for NATO’s interest in Libya.

Libya is not a major oil exporter to the US. Russia is a larger oil and gas exporter to Europe and the US than is Libya.

Gadhafi’s son had survived US strike in 1986

NOVANEWS
 
Associated Press
 

CAIRO (AP) — Seif al-Arab Gadhafi escaped a U.S. airstrike targeting his father’s compound in Tripoli in 1986. Twenty-five years later, the Libyan leader’s second-youngest son was reportedly killed in a NATO airstrike.

Libyan officials announced on state TV that Seif al-Arab, whose name means Sword of the Arabs, was killed along with three of Moammar Gadhafi’s grandchildren in a NATO airstrike against his house in the Tripoli neighborhood of Ghargour.

The Libyan leader and his wife were inside but escaped unharmed, according to Libyan officials.

Seif al-Arab, 29, was one of the least prominent of Gadhafi’s eight biological children, with no clear political or military power. He clearly tried to avoid rivalries as his siblings jockeyed for clout.

Seif al-Arab was four when U.S. warplanes bombs his father’s compound at Bab al-Azaziya in 1986 after Libya was blamed for masterminding a bombing in West Berlin that killed an American soldier and a woman. His 15-month-old adopted sister was killed and his younger brother Khamis badly wounded in the attack.

Seif al-Arab was hospitalized but discharged after a few days, and his injuries were never fully known to reporters.

He spent most of his later years in Germany, where he was said to be studying for an economics graduate degree.

His elder brother, Seif al-Islam, is believed to have been groomed to succeed his father. The youngest Gadhafi, Khamis, 27, leads an elite military brigade named after him, known to be Libya’s most well-trained.

Three other older brothers, Al-Saadi, Al-Moatassem and Hannibal, have been engaged in either senior military and national security advisory posts or business deals, and recently began competing with Seif al-Islam, who has appeared to be monopolizing his father’s and international attention, according to U.S. diplomatic cables published by the secret-spilling website WikiLeaks.

The cables described a brewing sibling rivalry that was expected to bode ill for Libya’s political transition ahead of the developing upheaval. The only daughter, Aisha, a lawyer in her mid-thirties, was also vying for a prominent role, often disagreeing with Seif al-Islam.

While the cables written in 2009 portray a bitter competition between the siblings over power, Seif al-Arab was absent from any alignment or taking sides.

He remained largely in the shadows, although, like his brothers, he had a penchant for the high life. He has spent his recent years in Munich, where he had a few run-ins with the law. The flamboyant Gadhafis were embroiled in a number of lawsuits in Europe, involving fast cars, alcohol abuse. Hannibal caused a diplomatic tiff between Libya and Switzerland after he allegedly beat his servants in a Swiss hotel.

Seif al-Arab’s incidents paled in comparison. In 2006, he was involved in a brawl with a Munich nightclub bouncer who kicked out his companion for the night because she attempted to undress on the dance floor, the German Der Spiegel magazine reported.

In 2007, he even saw his house and hotel suite raided by police over allegations of illegally possessing weapons despite his claims of enjoying diplomatic immunity.

Between November 2006 and July 2010 police led investigations against Gadhafi’s son on 10 accounts, ranging from speeding incidents to bodily harm and possession of illegal weapons, Bavaria’s state justice ministry confirmed last month. All the investigations against him, however, were dropped.

German media reported that Gadhafi’s son returned to Libya in February and Bavaria’s Interior Ministry later said he had been declared a persona-non-grata.

The U.S. diplomatic cables say Seif al-Arab pursued “ill-defined business interests.” This may explain why he appeared on the recently drafted U.S. sanctions list against Libyan officials and Gadhafi family.

Even photos of him are scarce. On Sunday, Ibrahim distributed a headshot showing him with a full black beard and wearing a black shirt.

Libyan government spokesman Moussa Ibrahim was the first to announce that Seif al-Arab was killed in Saturday’s airstrike. But in a sign of how little was known about Seif al-Arab, Ibrahim initially misidentified him as Gadhafi’s youngest son, who is “well known” to his colleagues in one of the German universities. Ibrahim had to correct himself the next day, confirming for reporters that Seif al-Arab was Gadhafi’s second-youngest son.

Rebels welcomed the news of the airstrike, but some cast doubt on claims Seif al-Arab had been killed, alleging it was a ploy by Gadhafi to gain sympathy and discredit the international military campaign.

State TV showed scores of Libyans chanting as they entered the hospital where those wounded in the attack were treated: “Be pleased our leader. Your son and grandchildren are in heaven.”

The funeral for those killed in the airstrike is planned for Monday.

Gestapo's killed 1,300 kids in Gaza: UN

NOVANEWS
 

 

Richard Falk is the UN Special Rapporteur on the human rights situation in the Palestinian territories.

The UN Special Rapporteur on the human rights situation in the Palestinian territories says Israel has killed 1,300 Palestinian children since 2000.

Richard Falk announced the figure during a press conference in the Jordanian capital city of Amman late on Monday, the Palestinian News Network reported on its website.

In his latest report, Falk noted that in 2010 alone, the Israeli army’s gunfire and shelling of the Gaza Strip claimed the lives of 17 children.

Israel has not responded to repeated calls by the UN Special Rapporteur for access to the occupied Palestinian territories.

Due to the prevailing security situation in Gaza, Falk was forced to cancel his visit to the Israeli-blockaded enclave — part of the mandate given to him by the Human Rights Council.

The United Nations says he will visit Gaza later in the year.

Since his appointment in May 2008, Falk has faced hindrances by the Israeli regime, which has refused to cooperate with the rapporteur in his field missions.

In mid-December 2008, Falk was denied entry into the occupied territories by Tel Aviv. He was detained, interrogated and subsequently deported.

The move occurred days before Tel Aviv launched a deadly onslaught against the populated coastal sliver on December 27. The 22-day offensive killed more than 1,400 Palestinians, mostly women and children, injured thousands of others, leveled hundreds of civilian homes and offices and devastated a great portion of the infrastructure in the impoverished territory.

Gaddafi’s Son’s Killing Puts Nato in Line of Fire

NOVANEWS
 

Russia and Venezuela join Libyan regime in accusing Nato of attempting to assassinate Muammar Gaddafi

The Guardian

The Libyan regime’s claims that Nato is attempting to assassinate Muammar Gaddafi have intensified following the apparent death of one of the leader’s sons and three of his grandchildren in an air strike on Tripoli.

Gaddafi was at the one-storey house in a residential area of Tripoli when the missile struck late on Saturday, according to the government spokesman Moussa Ibrahim.

In a rare acknowledgement that security around Gaddafi may not be watertight, Ibrahim told reporters that intelligence about Gaddafi’s whereabouts or plans must have been leaked to Nato.

The missile struck the house of Saif al-Arab, 29, the youngest and least well-known of Gaddafi’s seven sons, just after 8pm on Saturday during a family gathering. The three grandchildren who were killed were under the age of 12, said Ibrahim.

David Cameron insisted that Nato was acting within the remit of the UN security council resolution, which authorised military actions to protect civilians.

But officials in Russia and Venezuela criticised the attack. “More and more facts indicate that the purpose of the anti-Libyan coalition is to physically destroy Gaddafi,” said Konstantin Kosachev, a Russian legislator.

Nato said it had carried out a precision strike against a known command and control building. “All Nato’s targets are military in nature and have been clearly linked to the Gaddafi regime’s systematic attacks on the Libyan population and populated areas. We do not target individuals,” said Lieutenant General Charles Bouchard, commander of Nato’s Operation Unified Protector.

“I am aware of unconfirmed media reports that some of Gaddafi’s family members may have been killed,” he said. “We regret all loss of life, especially the innocent civilians being harmed as a result of the ongoing conflict. Nato is fulfilling its UN mandate to stop and prevent attacks against civilians with precision and care – unlike Gaddafi’s forces, which are causing so much suffering.”

The strike came hours after Gaddafi called for a ceasefire in the two-and-a-half-month civil war in a speech delivered live on Libyan state television. The Libyan government has repeatedly said it is ready for a political resolution to the conflict and a ceasefire, while continuing to launch military assaults on opposition forces, particularly in Misrata and the western mountains region.

“We renew our call for peace and negotiations,” said Ibrahim following the air strike. “What we have now is the law of the jungle. How is this helping in the protection of civilians?”

Cameron declined to comment on the “unconfirmed report”, but told the BBC: “The targeting policy of Nato and the alliance is absolutely clear. It is in line with UN resolution 1973 and it is about preventing a loss of civilian life by targeting Gaddafi’s war-making machine. That is obviously tanks and guns and rocket launchers, but also command and control as well.”

The Libyan regime will use the apparent death of close members of Gaddafi’s family to reinforce its claims that Nato is acting illegitimately and that Libya is a victim of a western plot to topple Gaddafi.

UN resolution 1973 permits military action to protect Libyan civilians, which has been interpreted as covering Libyan military facilities, such as command and control centres, as well as military equipment in the field. It does not permit the specific targeting of individuals.

However some politicians in the west have urged Nato to target Gaddafi. “We must cut the head of the snake off,” US senator Lindsey Graham said a week ago after the bombing of a building within Gaddafi’s Tripoli compound.

Journalists taken to the scene of Saif al-Arab’s house in a smart neighbourhood of the capital reported seeing an unexploded missile lying amid shattered concrete and twisted metal. A large crater exposed what appeared to be an underground bunker.

In his 80-minute speech on Libyan state TV in the early hours of Saturday morning, Gaddafi said: “I’m not leaving my country. No one can force me to leave my country, and no one can tell me not to fight for my country.”

He described Nato’s military intervention in Libya as “a massacre”.

Racist Barak: Assad nearing end of reign in Syria

NOVANEWS
 

Barak - AP - March 24, 2011

Racist Defense Minister says IsraHell should not fear Syrian president being replaced; ‘Changes in Mideast hold great promise for IsraHell’s children and grandchildren’, says Racist Barak.

Reuters

Syrian President Bashar al-Assad’s use of force against his own people is precipitating his downfall, Defense Minister Ehud Barak said Monday, adding that Israel should not fear change in Damascus.

“I believe Assad is approaching the moment in which he will lose his authority. The growing brutality is pushing him into a corner, the more people are killed, the less chance Assad has to come out of it,” Barak told Channel 10 television.

“I don’t think Israel should be alarmed by the possibility of Assad being replaced. The process taking place in the Middle East holds great promise and inspiration in the long term for our children and grandchildren,” he said.

Israeli officials have previously kept quiet about the uprising in Syria and local media had reported that Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu had told ministers not to discuss the matter in public to avoid accusations of interference.

Human rights groups say at least 560 civilians have been killed by Assad’s security forces since an uprising in the southern city of Deraa erupted on March 18.

The Syrian government, condemned by the West for its repression of the unrest, has blamed the violence on “armed terrorist groups”. The country of 20 million people has been under authoritarian Baath Party rule since 1963.

Barak said change across the Middle East was ending autocratic regimes but would take time to produce stable democracies. “In the short term no-one is expecting Western democracies to emerge here,” he said.

Barak said that even if Assad ordered troops to stop using force to quell the demonstrations it was probably too late for him to cling to power for an extended period.

“If he stops killing people I can’t see faith being restored in him. I don’t know if he will end his role in a month or two months, he may recover but I don’t think he will be the same and I think his fate is going in the same direction as that of other
Arab leaders,” Barak said.

Unlike Egypt, Syria has never made peace with Israel following a 1973 war, but it has stuck rigorously to its disengagement commitments, establishing a security status quo that has suited both sides down the years.

Syria also backs two of Israel’ss most active enemies – Lebanon’s Hezbollah and the Palestinian Hamas Islamists who rule the Gaza Strip.

 

Palestinian government workers face pay cuts after Israel freezes tax money

NOVANEWS

by crescentandcross

 

Mahmoud Abbas and Benjamin Netanyahu, AP

IsraHell withholds transfer of $105 million in customs duties and other levies it collects on behalf of the PA, fearing the money would fall into the hands of Hamas; PM Fayyad says PA won’t be able to pay wages unless IsraHell releases the funds.

Reuters

Palestinian government workers fear pay cuts this month after Israel halted the transfer of tax revenues in response to a deal to reunite the former Palestinian rival groups Fatah and Hamas.

But many believe the surprise agreement between President Mahmoud Abbas’ secular Fatah faction and Hamas Islamists in Gaza will be worth the price if it brings statehood closer.

Israel refuses to deal with Hamas, which does not recognize its right to exist. The two exchanged heavy fire over the Gaza border last month, which some feared would escalate to war.

On Sunday, Israel blocked the transfer of 105 million dollars in customs duties and other levies it collects on behalf of the Palestinian Authority, which is under the control of Abbas and has been engaged for years in a peace process with Israel.

Israel explained the withholding of funds, saying it won’t let revenues flow to Hamas.

Palestinian officials say that Israel’s concern is baseless, as any new Palestinian government would be formed by independents.

Prime Minister Salam Fayyad says the PA won’t be able to pay wages unless Israel releases the April revenues.

The aid-dependent government would have to take out loans to pay its 155,000 workers, Fayyad told reporters on Monday.

Like the majority of government workers, Nidal Arar, a 47-year old government employee, has a mortgage on an apartment in the administrative capital, Ramallah.

“I am very much worried,” said the father of three. “I may end up getting half my salary. We will suffer. But I do not mind it if the division is over for good,” he said.

“Israel is trying to blackmail us but this won’t last long. We have been through this experience before,” said Samah Kharouf, a government worker from Nablus.

“If there will be no salaries there will be no Palestinian Authority and this will be in nobody’s interest,” she added.

Abbas’ Fatah movement, once the dominant Palestinian party, was driven out of the Gaza Strip by the Hamas militia in a brief civil war in 2007 and its influence is now confined to the West Bank, part of which is controlled by Israel.

Peace talks with Israel reached a dead-end last September after Israel resumed building in the West Bank following a nine-month freeze.

Abbas is now pursuing a plan to declare statehood at the United Nations in September, without Israeli agreement. He claims that ending the political and geographic split in Palestinian ranks in order to present a united front to the world is central to the credibility of this goal

Prospects of reconciliation were dim during two years of fruitless Egyptian mediation. But recently, Palestinians infected by the spirit of the “Arab Spring” began demanding an end to the crippling rivalry. A deal was reached in Cairo last Wednesday.

The Israelis have warned they will not accept what they call a unilateral Palestinian declaration of independence, saying recognition of statehood by a majority of UN members can never substitute for a Middle East peace treaty mutually agreed upon.

Allied to Iran and Syria and shunned by Western governments as a terrorist organization, Hamas is ideologically at odds with Fayyad and the PA.

On Monday, Fayyad welcomed the killing of Osama Bin Laden as a “landmark event”. Hamas denounced it as the murder of an Arab “Holy warrior” by U.S. state terrorism.

When Hamas briefly ran the Palestinian government after its surprise election defeat of Fatah in the 2006 parliamentary poll, Western powers imposed an aid embargo to force the group to recognize Israel and accept past peace deals.

As a result, government workers could not get full wages for 17 months, until Abbas appointed the Western-backed economist Fayyad in 2007 and financial aid was resumed.

The PA, which gets most of its operating funds from the European Union, needs 180 million dollars each month for salaries.

Fayyad has urged Arab donor countries to pay their overdue financial pledges to make up the budget shortfall.

Banks in the Palestinian territories lent up to 300 million dollars to government employees in the past few years, mainly for homes or cars. Public sector wages are a key driver of the business cycle in the territories, whose economy grew by 9.3 percent
in 2010.

“We went through hard times in the past but we did not disappear,” said government worker Arar. “Let this be the price for unity.”