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قضايا الدولة" تطالب رشيد وعز وعسل برد 660 مليون جنيه للدولة

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خالد سعيد رحمة الله عليه

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الرئيس الأمريكى باراك أوباما

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الجمعة، مايو 03، 2013

Libyan rights activist attacked after interview with Al Arabiya

Libyan human rights activist Abdulsalam Al-Mesmari was reportedly attacked by anonymous individuals after his interview with Al Arabiya last week. (Al Arabiya)

Libyan human rights activist Abdulsalam Al-Mesmari was reportedly attacked by anonymous individuals after his interview with Al Arabiya last week, the channel's Libya correspondent reported Friday.

The activist, who appeared on Al Arabiya's program "Panorama" on Wednesday, criticized armed groups who had besieged Libyan ministries during the week.

Mesmari blamed the groups for the offensive on the ministries and said they were attacking a "legitimate government."

In the interview, Mesmari criticized political movements who he said used armed gangs to surround official administration buildings to impose pressure on the government.

Mesmari claimed that these parties failed at achieving their demands through Libya's National Congress and other democratic tools, referring to the fact this may be the reason why they resorted to armed gangs.

Meanwhile, civil establishments in Libya have organized peaceful demonstrations in Tripoli and other Libyan cities to condemn the recent encircling of governmental institutions by armed groups.

The demonstrators chanted slogans that called for the application of law and condemned poor state security.

04 May, 2013


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Source: http://english.alarabiya.net/en/News/africa/2013/05/04/Libyan-rights-activist-attacked-after-interview-with-Al-Arabiya-.html
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Securing Syria’s chemical arms would carry huge risks

U.N. Secretary General Ban Ki-Moon speaks to the press on allegations of Syrian chemical weapons, April 29, 2013, New York. (AFP)

A military mission to secure Syria's chemical arsenal would require a large ground force and pose huge risks, with the outcome hinging on the quality of Western intelligence, experts say.

With the Syrian regime suspected of using chemical agents against rebels, U.S. and Western military commanders are planning for a possible worst-case scenario in which an international force would move in to neutralize the lethal weapons.

Any attempt to seize control of chemical agents in Syria would depend on the intelligence gathered by foreign spy services, which have struggled at times to track the Damascus regime's stockpiles.

"The first thing is you have to know where they are. Where are the weapons stored and where are the production sites and production-related sites?" said David Kay, the former U.N. weapons inspector who led the Iraq Study Group.

"It seems obvious but it's not easy," Kay, now a senior fellow at the Potomac Institute for Policy Studies, told AFP.

Syria is believed to have hundreds of tons of chemical agents such as sarin and VX as well as mustard gas, but the precise details of its arsenal remain unknown.

To take control of the weapons, the United States or its allies would have to send in boots on the ground, including teams of technical experts, Special Forces units and a large contingent -- likely tens of thousands -- of conventional troops to seize and guard chemical sites, analysts said.

"Even under the best of circumstances, it's a highly manpower intensive effort because you have to -- 24/7 -- surround the sites, and ensure that others are not entering," Kay said.

The intervention force would have to launch bombing raids to take out air defenses as a preliminary step and would also likely need to target some depots that could not be seized by a ground force.

"There are probably some facilities that will be beyond our reach that we will have to use air strikes to deal with," said Michael Eisenstadt, a senior fellow at the Washington Institute.

At sites seized by ground forces, troops would need to stand guard while weapons experts -- clad in protective clothing and using special medical equipment -- document and neutralize the chemical agents and munitions.

The weapons experts would likely have to destroy the nerve agents or lethal gas on site, as transporting them would be too risky, according to Kay.

As special incinerators would not be available, the lethal agents likely would be placed in a lime pit and broken down with other chemicals, reducing toxicity to a level equivalent to industrial waste.

The painstaking process would take "weeks or months even," said Eisenstadt.

The intervention force would also need to destroy missiles, aerial bombs and artillery shells used to deliver chemical agents, which would likely require a wave of air strikes.

"You don't destroy the chemical weapons themselves but all the ways in which they can be delivered to the population," said Elizabeth O'Bagy of the Institute for the Study of War.

Part of the arsenal could be "entombed" by bombing designed to collapse and seal bunkers with rubble, Eisenstadt said.

"We've developed a series of munitions that could be used for these kind of missions," he said.

The U.S. military has a bomb, the BLU-119/B, specifically designed to incinerate chemical agents, though the Pentagon has never disclosed how it has fared in tests.

Air raids also could be used to prevent an adversary from accessing a chemical arms site, but any attempt to bomb from the air would be fraught with danger.

Flawed intelligence or a single mistake in an air strike could cause a disastrous release of chemical agents that would threaten the very civilians that the United States and its allies hope to protect.

Trying to secure the chemical stockpiles would be an unprecedented undertaking, so filled with peril and uncertainty that some have called it an impossible mission.

Even if an operation went mostly as planned, parts of the arsenal would likely fall into the wrong hands, analysts said.

It would "very tough," said Kay. "There are no good options."

04 May, 2013


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Source: http://english.alarabiya.net/en/News/middle-east/2013/05/04/Securing-Syria-s-chemical-arms-would-carry-huge-risks-.html
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Syria: ‘no-mans land’ for journalists

Saad Sulibi carries a camera and an assault rifle as he poses for a photograph in a neighborhood in the eastern Syrian town of Deir Ezzor on February 19, 2013. (AFP)

Journalists in Syria have been deliberately targeted by both government forces and rebel groups according to the latest report released by Amnesty international on World Press Freedom Day.

At least 36 journalists have died in the conflict since the 2011 uprising began.

The report entitled "Shoot the messenger: Journalists targeted by all sides in Syria" documents abuses carried out by Syrian authorities and armed opposition groups.

"Syria is currently one of the deadliest countries in the world for journalists. Our report documents cases that show violations, such as arrests, killings, harassment, forced disappearance and hostage taking are widely spread. The killing is only from one side, the situation of journalists and media activates is dire" said Nour Albazaz from the Syria research team at Amnesty.

The London-based organization discussed in detail the crucial role citizen journalists are now playing on the ground.

Many of them have risked their lives to make sure information from within the country reached the outside world.

Like their fellow professional reporters, citizen journalists have faced reprisals from all sides involved in Syria's war, which has prevented them from carrying out the job the originally set out to do.

The human rights groups said violations along with deliberate attacks on journalists and media personals may amount to war crimes.


"This is World Press Freedom Day and we wanted to use this opportunity call on all sides of the Syrian conflict to respect the laws of war and consider journalists as civilians, protect them and avoid targeting them in any way," Albazaz said.

The Syrian authorities continue to target, arrest and torture journalists despite the fact that the state of emergency law was lifted in March 2011, along with the introduction of new decrees which supposedly allow for greater freedom of expression.

Now there is barely any news organization which has a correspondent that is actually based in Syria and is covering the conflict.

04 May, 2013


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Source: http://english.alarabiya.net/en/News/middle-east/2013/05/03/Syria-no-mans-land-for-journalists-.html
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Russian FM opposed to U.N. Syrian refugee visit

Russian FM opposed to U.N. Syrian refugee visit

Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov. (Reuters)

The U.N. Security Council is not entitled to give the green light for inspections of Syrian refugee camps in Jordan, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said Friday, seeing it as an attempt to prepare "foreign intervention".

The U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) "is competent for [organizing] visits of refugee camps that have been set by the U.N., the Security Council has no competence for that," Lavrov said in Slovenia.

He added: "If there was an attempt to use the Syrian refugee situation to push forward some ideas about no-fly zones, then we and China might have seen in it an attempt to prepare a foreign intervention."

The 15 Security Council member nations discussed on Thursday the possibility of sending a delegation to visit the Syrian refugee camps in Jordan but Russia and China opposed the idea, diplomats said.

Jordan this week warned that the growing exodus of Syrian refugees who had flooded over its border to escape civil war -- already over 500,000 -- was placing a "crushing weight" on the country.

The UNHCR has said the number of refugees in Jordan could reach 1.2 million by the end of the year -- equivalent to one fifth of the Jordanian population.

04 May, 2013


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Source: http://english.alarabiya.net/en/News/middle-east/2013/05/04/Russian-FM-opposed-to-U-N-Syrian-refugee-visit-.html
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Ennahda: Breakthrough on Tunisia constitution talks

Ennahda leader, Rached Ghannouchi, said politicians have reached an agreement on a future political system in Tunisia, ending a months-old stalemate. (AFP)

Politicians have reached an agreement on a future political system in Tunisia, ending a months-old stalemate that had blocked progress on drafting the new constitution, the head of the ruling Islamist party said on Friday.

"We have overcome the impasse, we are heading towards a mixed regime where neither the head of state nor the head of the government will have supreme control over the executive power," Rached Ghannouchi told Tunisian radio.

Ghannouchi did not go into detail on the question of the division of powers, saying only that the president and the prime minister would each have their respective prerogatives.

Ghannouchi's Ennahda party, which heads the coalition government after scooping the largest share of seats in the national assembly in Tunisia's first post-revolution polls, has until now been demanding a purely parliamentary regime.

But most political parties, including Ennahda's allies in the coalition, want key prerogatives to remain in the hands of the presidency, which is currently held by Moncef Marzouki of the secular, center-left Congress for the Republic.

Work on drafting a new constitution has been heavily delayed by this lack of consensus, with the main political parties having originally agreed that the text would be completed in October in 2012.

The latest draft, published late last month, was strongly criticized by lawyers and the opposition for being too vague on certain highly sensitive issues, notably religion, human rights and gender equality.

A national dialogue held under the auspices of the presidency is currently taking place in a bid to resolve these problems.

Prime Minister Ali Larayedh, appointed in March in the wake of a political crisis sparked by the assassination of an opposition leader, has vowed to have the constitution adopted and legislative and presidential elections held by the end of 2013.

04 May, 2013


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Source: http://english.alarabiya.net/en/News/africa/2013/05/03/Ennahda-Breakthrough-on-Tunisia-Constitution-Talks-.html
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Kenyan leader, charged by ICC, invited to Somalia meeting in London

President of Kenya Uhuru Kenyatta waves to his supporters in front of a church in his hometown Gatundu March 10, 2013. (Reuters)

Kenyan President Uhuru Kenyatta, who faces charges of crimes against humanity at the International Criminal Court, is expected to visit London at Britain's invitation next week for a conference on Somalia.

It will be his first trip to a Western capital since his election in March. Britain and other countries said before his victory that, if he won, they would only have "essential contacts" with him because of the court case.

"Kenya is a vital partner on Somalia and we judge our contact according to the issue concerned," a spokesman for Britain's Foreign Office said.

Kenya was playing a crucial role in stabilizing neighboring Somalia and housing refugees, he added.

A source close to the Kenyan presidency and a diplomat both said Kenyatta was likely to travel to the meeting, which aims to build international support for Somalia, where Kenyan troops have battled Islamist militants.

The move reflected the West's desire to keep Kenya as a stable ally at the expense of other principles, Kenyan rights activist GeorgeMorara said.

"It is a U-turn in the UK and the Western world's approach to the whole issue of impunity," Morara said.

The March election passed off peacefully, a relief to many Kenyans after ethnic violence erupted following the vote five years ago. The charges against Kenyatta's in The Hague relate to allegations he had a role in orchestrating bloodshed last time.

Western states view Kenya as an ally in their battle against Islamist militancy in the region and it has sent about 5,000 troops to Somalia as part of an African force that has driven back al Shabaab Islamist fighters.

The British spokesman said the decision to invite Kenyatta was taken in part because the president had committed to cooperating with the court in The Hague.

Britain's high commissioner (ambassador) to Kenya, Christian Turner, whose remarks about essential contacts had angered Kenyatta's backers in the former British colony, offered the invitation during a meeting with him on Wednesday.

After the election result, Western diplomats had privately indicated that they would take a pragmatic or "flexible" approach in assessing the level of contacts with Kenyatta, 51.

As well as concerns about alienating an ally, Western powers are wary of jeopardizing trade ties with east Africa's biggest economy and worry the diplomatic wrangle could open the way for China and other Asian states to extend their influence.

04 May, 2013


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Source: http://english.alarabiya.net/en/News/africa/2013/05/03/Kenyan-leader-charged-by-ICC-invited-to-Somalia-meeting-in-London.html
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Sudan’s rebel wars reach placid heartland

A police officer guards a power station damaged during attacks by insurgents who stormed the city, in Um Rawaba May 2, 2013. (Reuters)

The line of army pickup trucks rumbled into the dusty streets of Um Rawaba, a once placid city in the heart of Sudan that days ago became a new front in the war of attrition between government and rebels.

Six days earlier, hundreds of insurgents had stormed in, spraying bullets and killing up to 13 civilians and soldiers, before pulling out as government planes started flying overhead.

A week on, Um Rawaba's traders and shoppers cheered and gave "thumbs-up" signs as the latest government reinforcements arrived and drove past buildings still bearing the scars of the attack.

Even as government minders looked on, some citizens acknowledged they were worried.
 

"This was the first time we had such an attack ... We want security," trader Omar Kuf told Reuters on Thursday.

Sudan has long been plagued by rebel attacks - but there were at least two main reasons for the Khartoum government to sit up and take particular notice after this assault.

Almost all the past turmoil has sprung up in the country's distant and arid peripheries, not in North Kordofan, the region that includes Um Rawaba and forms part of Sudan's commercial heartland, a hub for its agriculture, livestock and gum arabic industries.

Second, many of the earlier uprisings have been focused affairs - between the government and rebels fighting over grievances in their particular territories, among them Darfur, South Kordofan and Blue Nile.

But this was a coordinated attack by members of those rebel groups, fighting together under the single banner of the Sudanese Revolutionary Front (SRF) with a nation-wide agenda.

It was biggest assault yet by the umbrella group of fighters who have vowed to topple President Omar Hassan al-Bashir and end what they see as his elite's stranglehold on the whole country - an accusation he denies.

The government has previously played down the threat posed by the rebels, and called Um Rawaba's attackers "terrorists" holding civilians as "human shields".

New Fronts

Diplomats and analysts said the raid on Um Rawaba appeared to be a bid to stretch Sudan's army ever thinner, across an ever-changing line of battle in Sudan's savannahs and scrublands, rather than an attempted land grab.

"They now feel the government forces are weak, that they can strike anywhere," said Faisal Saleh, a Sudanese journalist.
Bashir, in power since 1989, has been facing small street protests over an economic crisis and also dissent inside the army and his ruling circles.

One of SRF's member groups - Darfur's Justice and Equality Movement (JEM) - has already shown its ability to spread chaos beyond its home territory by launching an unprecedented assault on Khartoum in 2008.

The attack on Um Rawaba, North Kordofan's second biggest city, 500km (300 miles) south of the capital, was much larger than initial reports indicated, officials said.

"They came with 140 cars, each manned with between four and six people," said Um Rawaba commissioner Sharif Fadhil, who, like other local officials, said the situation was now under control.

In the first official toll, Fadhil said 13 civilians and soldiers had been killed. Four other people died in other areas that the rebels had also attacked, officials said.

"Life returned to normality within 48 hours. Now life here will be better than before," said Adam Abdallah, head of a union representing local workers. "The army has spread out everywhere. Citizens stand by the government, army and authorities."

Around 19,000 people in North and South Kordofan have been affected or displaced by the fighting since Saturday, Haroun Abdallah, the government's humanitarian aid commissioner for South Kordofan, said by phone.

Security was tight in Um Rawaba on Thursday. Army trucks with mounted machine-guns were parked in front of all government buildings.

But something like normal life had returned to the streets. Women shopped in the packed market and men drank tea in the shade of makeshift cafes.
Outside the city, a backup transformer at the main power plant had been connected after the old one was set ablaze by the attackers.

"We are happy that power is back and shops open," said Khalid Ezzedin, speaking again in the presence of government minders. "We demand security from the government."

04 May, 2013


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Source: http://english.alarabiya.net/en/News/africa/2013/05/03/Sudan-s-rebel-wars-reach-placid-heartland.html
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U.S. names veteran diplomat as new envoy to Afghanistan, Pakistan

U.S. names veteran diplomat as new envoy to Afghanistan, Pakistan

U.S. diplomat James Dobbins is named as Washington's new special envoy to Afghanistan and Pakistan. (Reuters)

U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry has appointed veteran U.S. diplomat James Dobbins as Washington's new special envoy to Afghanistan and Pakistan, State Department spokesman Patrick Ventrell said on Friday.

Dobbins, head of international security and defense at the RAND National Defense Research Institute and a former senior U.S. diplomat, will replace Marc Grossman as special representative for Afghanistan and Pakistan.

Grossman had replaced the late Richard Holbrooke in the post. Holbrooke died suddenly in December 2010.

Ventrell said that Kerry spoke with Afghan President Hamid Karzai and Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari to inform them of the appointment earlier on Friday.

Dobbins is taking on a challenging post. The Afghan government has grown increasingly frustrated with Pakistan, suggesting its neighbor is intent on keeping Afghanistan unstable rather than helping to engage the Taliban in peace talks.

The appointment of Dobbins comes as the United States is encouraging Pakistan to help Afghanistan to coax the Taliban to the negotiating table ahead of the withdrawal of most NATO combat troops by the end of 2014.

There is also the sensitive question of U.S. drone strikes.

Civilian casualties from drone strikes have angered local populations and created tension between the United States and Pakistan and Afghanistan. Washington has sought to portray civilian casualties as minimal, but groups collecting data on these attacks say they have killed hundreds of civilians.

Dobbins represented the United States at the Bonn Conference that established the new Afghan government in December 2001, shortly after U.S.-led forces invaded Afghanistan and ousted the Taliban, and in the same month raised the flag over the reopened U.S. Embassy in Kabul.
 

04 May, 2013


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Source: http://english.alarabiya.net/en/News/asia/2013/05/03/U-S-names-veteran-diplomat-as-new-envoy-to-Afghanistan-Pakistan.html
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Civil Defense says flash floods in Saudi kill at least 24

Rescue teams evacuated six villages in the southwestern Bisha province in Saudi Arabia after a sand dam at the valley of Tabala partially collapsed. (Al Arabiya)

Several days of heavy rain and floods have left 24 people dead and four missing in Saudi Arabia, the General Directorate of Civil Defense, Saad bin Abdullah al-Tuwaijri said on Friday, the Saudi Press Agency (SPA) reported.

The official said rescue teams have been deployed in search of those who have been unaccounted for.

The region of Al-Taef was the most affected, with at least 7 dead. 5 were killed in the southern regions of Al-Akeek and Al-Baha due to flooding, Tuwaijiri said.

In addition, Riyadh governorates of Al-Kharj and Al-Aflaj at least 6 were killed, according to Al Arabiya. Individual deaths due to drowning were also reported by the TV channel in Al-Madina Al-Mounawwara, Al-Hareek , Al-Majmaa, al-Quayiaa, Bisha and Khamees Musheit.

Rescue teams evacuated six villages in the southwestern Bisha province after a sand dam at the valley of Tabala partially collapsed, SPA reported.

The cumulative rainfall in areas in southern Saudi has reached 100mm and 120mm.

The Civil defense is still predicting rain and thunder across the country.

04 May, 2013


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Source: http://english.alarabiya.net/en/News/middle-east/2013/05/03/Civil-Defense-says-flash-floods-in-Saudi-kill-at-least-24-.html
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Separatists slam Morocco ‘repression’ of protesters

Polisario Front rebel soldiers are seen on February 27, 2011 in the Western Sahara village of Tifariti. (AFP)

The Polisario Front on Friday slammed Morocco's "systematic repression" of separatist protesters in the disputed Western Sahara and urged the U.N. to apply a new resolution calling for greater efforts on human rights.

"The Sahrawi government vigorously denounces the systematic repression of peaceful Sahrawi protests in the occupied territories of the Western Sahara... and calls on the Security Council to ensure the application of its latest resolution," the pro-independence group said in a statement.

On April 25, the Security Council passed Resolution 2099 extending the Western Sahara peacekeeping mission for another year and urged Morocco and the Polisario Front to pursue efforts to promote human rights in Western Sahara.

The vote came after a bid by the United States to task the U.N. mission with rights monitoring was dropped.

The Polisario said the resolution was "violated by the Moroccan coloniser less than 24 hours after its adoption," and denounced the "brutal treatment inflicted on around 40 Sahrawi protesters by the Moroccan police" in Laayoune on April 26.

Speaking from Laayoune, Western Sahara's main city, an Amnesty International representative said at least 30 protesters were wounded when the pro-independence demonstration turned violent.

Sirine Rached told AFP the police had used "excessive force" to disperse the protesters who had been marching peacefully in the city center.

Morocco said the recent "events" in Laayoune had left 70 people wounded, among them members of the security forces.

During the protests "there were violations, including blocking a public road, aggression towards members of the security forces and the use of petrol bombs, causing damage to public and private property," said a police statement cited by official Moroccan media.

Morocco occupied the Western Sahara, a former Spanish colony, in 1975 in a move never recognised by the international community, and has proposed broad autonomy under Moroccan sovereignty for the phosphate-rich region.

But this is rejected by Polisario Front rebels, who took up arms to fight for an independent state until the United Nations negotiated a ceasefire in 1991, and who insist on the Sahrawis' right to a U.N.-monitored referendum on self-determination.

04 May, 2013


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Source: http://english.alarabiya.net/en/News/africa/2013/05/03/Separatists-slam-Morocco-repression-of-protesters.html
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U.S. reporter believed held by Syrian intelligence

U.S. reporter believed held by Syrian intelligence

U.S. freelance reporter James Foley seen here in the SYrian northern city of Aleppo, on November 5, 2012. (AFP)

A U.S. journalist missing in war-torn Syria is believed to be held by government intelligence agents at a detention center near Damascus, a spokesman for his family said Friday.

James Foley, a 39-year-old freelancer who has filed reports for GlobalPost, Agence France-Presse and other outlets, has been missing in Syria for nearly six months.

Foley's family and employers insist that he was working as an objective, professional reporter within Syria, and have called for his release. Syrian officials have never acknowledged having any news of his whereabouts.

On Friday, GlobalPost held an event in Boston on World Press Freedom Day to press Syrian President Bashar al-Assad's government for news.

The co-founder and CEO of the international online news network, Phil Balboni, said it had hired the international security firm Kroll, which had found evidence that Foley is being held by the Syrian regime.

"With a high degree of confidence, we now believe that Jim was most likely abducted by a pro-regime militia group, commonly referred to as the Shabiha, and subsequently turned over to Syrian government forces," said Balboni, who has also been serving as a spokesman for the Foley family.

"We have obtained multiple independent reports from very credible confidential sources who have both indirect and direct access that confirm our assessment that Jim is now being held by the Syrian government."

Balboni said the detention facility where Foley is reportedly being held is near the Syrian capital Damascus in an area still controlled by forces loyal to Assad's regime, which is battling an armed revolt.

"We further believe that this facility is under the control of the Syrian Air Force Intelligence service," he said, promising that GlobalPost would continue to press through private and diplomatic channels for Foley's release.

Foley, an experienced reporter who had worked in several conflict zones, was seized by armed men in the northern Syrian province of Idlib on November 22, according to witnesses, and has not been heard from since.

Several international and Syrian reporters are reported as missing in Syria, which has descended into civil war since March 2011, when a revolt erupted against Assad's rule. Some have later been released.

AFP chairman and chief executive Emmanuel Hoog issued a fresh call for Foley's release.

"This new information on James Foley is encouraging and gives us hope that we will see him freed as soon as possible," Hoog said in a statement.

"It is long past time for James to be sent home to his family and loved ones. On this World Press Freedom Day, I am launching a new appeal to all those who could help make this happen, and in particular, the Syrian authorities."

A report by human rights watchdog Amnesty International released on Friday to mark World Press Freedom Day estimated that 36 journalists have been killed covering the conflict, in what the group called "targeted attacks."

The report lays the blame for much of the violence towards reporters on the regime, including on the feared Air Force Intelligence unit, but also accuses Islamist rebel groups such as Jabhat al-Nusra of some of the killings.

Foley's mother, Diane Foley, said the news that her son may be in regime custody has sparked renewed hope that he might be freed.

"I'm thankful that they presume that Jim's alive, and that they've zeroed in," she told AFP, speaking before the start of the Boston event, making what she described as a "humanitarian plea" to Syrian authorities.

"It's very daunting to think he's in Damascus, because there's so much going on in Damascus. It's a very dangerous place," she said.

"But we are very hopeful... that the Syrian government will recognize Jim is an objective, innocent journalist, who cares for the Syrian people and was there to report their story."

Foley described her son as "a very strong individual, physically and spiritually," but added: "It will be almost six months, so obviously we're worried about him. We all have our limits of what we can endure."

Foley had previously been captured by troops fighting for Libyan strongman Muammar Qaddafi while he was covering the fighting there in March 2011. He was released after several weeks in custody.

04 May, 2013


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Source: http://english.alarabiya.net/en/News/middle-east/2013/05/03/U-S-reporter-believed-held-by-Syrian-intelligence.html
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Former Syrian VP urges U.S. to arm opposition

Former Syrian VP urges U.S. to arm opposition

Former Syrian Vice President Abdul Halim Khaddam claimed "there's no doubt" the Syrian government possesses chemical weapons. (Al Arabiya)

Former Syrian Vice President Abdul Halim Khaddam urged the United States on Friday to arm the country's opposition in its war against Syrian President Bashar al-Assad.

"The U.S. should provide the Syrian opposition with weapons, instead of sending troops," Khaddam said in an interview with Al Arabiya news channel.

Meanwhile, the top opposition official claimed "there's no doubt" the Syrian government possesses chemical weapons. However, Khaddam considers daily massacres taking place in Syria to be "more dangerous."

Khaddam's statement comes after U.S. President Barack Obama said Thursday that Washington is still considering "all options" in response to the use of chemical weapons in war-torn Syria.

The United States said recently that some 150 U.S. military specialists have been deployed in Jordan since last year, according to AFP.

The American government said the deployment of U.S. troops in Jordan is to help secure chemical weapons amid fears they could fall into the hands of extremist Islamist fighters battling Assad's forces.
 

04 May, 2013


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Source: http://english.alarabiya.net/en/News/middle-east/2013/05/03/Former-Syrian-VP-urges-U-S-to-arm-opposition-.html
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Israel has rigorous ‘red line’ on chemical weapons

Hikmat Massarwa (R), a member of Israel's Arab minority, attends a remand hearing at the Central District Court in Lod, near Tel Aviv April 25, 2013. (Reuters)

The dilemma Israel faces in trying to formulate a strategy on Syria two years into its civil war is symbolized by a case being heard in a small courtroom near Tel Aviv.

The state is prosecuting an Arab Israeli who briefly joined the rebel forces fighting to topple President Bashar al-Assad.

Arrested after his return to Israel, Hikmat Massarwa, a 29-year-old baker, is accused of unlawful military training, having contacts with foreign agents and traveling to a hostile state.

The trial hinges on the unanswered question of who, if anyone, Israel favors in the war and if the rebels will turn out to be friends or enemies.

The prosecutor in Lod is trying to depict Massarwa as having aligned himself with foes of Israel, but Judge Avraham Yaakov is struggling for clarity. "There's no legal guidance regarding the rebel groups fighting in Syria," he told a recent hearing.

Matters were simpler during the decades of unchallenged Assad family rule.

Technically Israeli is at war with its northern neighbor. It captured the Golan Heights in the 1967 Middle East War, built settlements and annexed the land. But belligerence was rare and the borderland has remained largely quiet for decades.

Assad's Syria is part of the so-called Axis of Resistance along with Iran and Lebanon's Hezbollah, both arch enemies of the Jewish state. But Syria itself avoided open conflict.

Israel was slow to welcome the uprising against Assad when it broke out in March 2011. Though some leaders now call for his overthrow, planners fret about what might follow.

"The question for us is no longer whether it is good or not if Assad stays in power, but how do we control our interests in this divided, murky situation which could last for decades," said Ofer Shelah of the Yesh Atid party, which is part of the government coalition.

The dilemma has grown more acute since Islamist fighters linked to al-Qaeda assumed a prominent role in the rebels' battle plans.

Israelis believe one in 10 of the rebels is a jihadi who might turn his gun on them once Assad is gone. They also worry that Hezbollah guerrillas allied to Assad could get hold of his chemical arsenal and other advanced weaponry.

So Israel has acted with restraint on Syria - shooting at its troops across the occupied Golan Heights only when hit by stray fire and playing down an Israeli airstrike on a suspected Hezbollah-bound convoy in January.

Officials say Israel has also been cool to Western proposals to increase aid to the Syrian rebels to help them match Assad's superior armed forces.

One Israeli official told Reuters that he responds to any suggestions of a foreign military role with the question: "Do you really know on whose behalf you'll be intervening?"

Mixed messages

But with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu presiding over a new, right-leaning coalition and the Israeli military stretched by keeping vigil over several fronts - including Islamist-ruled Egypt - the message has been far from uniform.

Netanyahu may have contributed to this by framing Iran and its nuclear program as Israel's overriding regional concern, bolstering the case for removing Tehran's ally Assad.

When an Israeli intelligence analyst said last week that Assad's forces had used chemical weapons, both the Netanyahu government and its foreign allies were blindsided, according to officials.

Washington confirmed the Israeli assessment, thus posing a problem for U.S. President Barack Obama, who had said use of chemical arms would be a "red line".

Israel's deputy foreign minister urged U.S. action in Syria - a call slapped down by more senior figures.

Israel's ambassador to Washington, Michael Oren, said it was not making any policy recommendations to Obama on Syria.

"We think this issue is very complex," he told Reuters.

Several officials said Israel would be unlikely to attack Syria unilaterally unless it had evidence that chemical weapons had been handed over to Hezbollah.

Lacking enough of the specialized ground troops that would be needed for a search-and-destroy sweep of chemical weapons, Israel would probably have to rely on aerial bombing.

The Netanyhau government might even acquiesce if the rebels acquire the chemical weapons, on the assumption that the insurgents were mainstream Syrians keen to rebuild their country and loath to invite catastrophic war with Israel.

"If the jihadis get the chemical weapons, that's very bad, but there's still the hope that these people lack the hard-core military wherewithal, and required technical support in Syria, that would be required to use them," one Israeli official said.

Indeed, Israeli planners are debating to what extent the radical Sunni Islamists fighting Assad could eventually constitute a direct threat to Israel.

The chief military spokesman, Brigadier-General Yoav Mordechai, sounded the alarm last month by saying the "Global Jihad" - meaning al Qaeda and its affiliates - wielded the most clout on the Syrian-held side of the Golan Heights.

Other Israeli authorities are more optimistic. The Mossad intelligence agency estimates that Syria's entrenched secularism will dilute enmity to Israel, according to one official.

"The Islamists there aren't all Salafists, and the Salafists aren't all al Qaeda, by any means," the official said.

"We may not make peace, but I think we might find some kind of dialogue, if only for the sake of mutual deterrence."

Israel has given no indication that it already has contacts with Syria's opposition. But it has coordinated closely on security with Jordan, a supporter of some rebel factions.

Back in Judge Yaakov's courtroom, the fate of Massarwa, who faces a maximum of 15 years in jail if convicted, rests on whether the state can prove there is danger to Israel from the Free Syrian Army unit he stayed with for a week in March.

Massarwa's lawyer, Helal Jaber, hopes the logic of "my enemy's enemy is my friend" will win clemency for his client, who went to Syria via Turkey in search of a missing brother who had separately joined the rebels.

"The greatest democracies in the world, including the United States, are supporting the opposition to Assad," Jaber said. "So how can Israel fault someone for doing the same?"

03 May, 2013


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Source: http://english.alarabiya.net/en/News/middle-east/2013/05/03/Israel-has-rigorous-red-line-on-chemical-weapons.html
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Syria rebels rocket Damascus airport

A handout picture released by the Syrian Arab News Agency (SANA) on April 14, 2013, shows travelers at Damascus' international airport. (AFP)

Rebels in Syria fired two rockets at Damascus international airport on Friday, hitting an aircraft and a fuel dump and sparking a massive fire, the official SANA news agency reported.

"One rocket hit a kerosene tank and the other hit a parked commercial aircraft, badly damaging it," the agency said, adding that traffic at the facility was "normal" and the fire had been extinguished.

Syrian government forces have mounted a string of attacks reaching from the capital Damascus and the central city of Homs out to the Mediterranean coast, homeland of the Alawite minority sect to which Syrian President Bashar al-Assad himself belongs.

The two-year uprising against four decades of Assad family rule has been led by Syria's Sunni Muslim majority, and sectarian clashes and alleged massacres have become increasingly common in a conflict that has killed more than 70,000 people.
 

04 May, 2013


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Source: http://english.alarabiya.net/en/News/middle-east/2013/05/03/Syria-rebels-rocket-Damascus-airport.html
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Afghan interpreters begin legal bid for right to live in Britain

A petition of nearly 80,000 signatures was handed into Britain's Foreign Office on Friday calling for Afghan interpreters to be offered asylum. (AFP)

Three men who worked as interpreters for British forces in Afghanistan began a legal challenge on Friday to win the right to live in Britain, arguing they are at risk of Taliban reprisals as the soldiers they helped prepare to return home.

They are challenging the British government's decision to refuse them the support offered to interpreters in Iraq, who were offered the right to indefinite leave to enter or settle in Britain or instead a compensation package.

The outcome of the case could affect the fate of about 500other Afghan interpreters who have worked for British forces.

Britain's 9,000 combat troops in Afghanistan are due to leave the country by the end of 2014, with nearly half of them expected to pull out this year, ending a war that has lasted over a decade and cost the lives of nearly 450 British troops.

The three Afghans say that despite being resettled several times within Afghanistan, they have still been tracked down by the Taliban, who were toppled by the U.S.-led invasion in 2001.

The say their lives are at risk, as well as the lives of their friends and families.

British Prime Minister David Cameron wants to offer interpreters who worked for British forces support to stay in Afghanistan and has said officials are drawing up an offer to encourage them to stay and help rebuild the country.

A petition of nearly 80,000 signatures was handed into Britain's Foreign Office on Friday calling for Afghan interpreters to be offered asylum.

Supporters include former Liberal Democrats party leader and ex-Royal Marine Paddy Ashdown. "We leave Afghanistan having paid a terrible price. We should not add dishonor to it," Ashdown told Reuters.

"It would be act of dishonor for us to leave Afghanistan without ensuring that they have at very least a choice between a large sum of money ... or the chance to make sure that they and their families are not killed when we leave."

The three interpreters have issued a claim at the High Court in London challenging the government's decision not to treat them in the same way as Iraqi interpreters.

The government has three weeks to decide whether to agree to the interpreters' demand or dispute it. If it disputes it, the court would decide whether to review the government's policy.
 

03 May, 2013


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Source: http://english.alarabiya.net/en/News/world/2013/05/03/Afghan-interpreters-begin-legal-bid-for-right-to-live-in-Britain.html
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Google recognizes Palestine

Google's previous tagline on the left and current tagline on the right. (Photo courtesy: BBC)

Internet search engine Google has taken a small but politically loaded step by changing the tagline on the homepage of its Palestinian version from "Palestinian Territories" to "Palestine."

The change, introduced at the beginning of May, shows Google's logo with "Palestine" written below in Arabic and English.

"We're changing the name 'Palestinian Territories' to 'Palestine' across our products. We consult a number of sources and authorities when naming countries," Google spokesman Nathan Tyler said in a statement.

"In this case, we are following the lead of the UN, Icann [the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers], ISO [International Organization for Standardization] and other international organizations," Tyler added.

The United Nations General Assembly granted Palestine the status of "non-member observer state" last November, providing Palestinians a certain degree of statehood recognition.

The move was strongly opposed by Israel and the United States.

Google's decision has been welcomed by the Palestinian Authority.

"This is a step in the right direction, a timely step and one that encourages others to join in and give the right definition and name for Palestine instead of Palestinian territories," Sabri Saidam, advisor to Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, told the BBC.

"Most of the traffic that happens now happens in the virtual world and this means putting Palestine on the virtual map as well as on the geographic maps," he added.

Saidam said that since the U.N. vote on Nov. 29, the PA had written to international companies, including Google, asking them to replace their usage of "Palestinian Territories" with "Palestine."

03 May, 2013


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Source: http://english.alarabiya.net/en/News/middle-east/2013/05/03/Google-recognizes-Palestine-.html
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Hamas rebuffs Arabs for softening Israeli-Palestinian peace plan

Islamist Hamas's leader in the Gaza Strip on Friday rejected a revised Middle East peace initiative put forward by the Arab League. (AFP)

Islamist Hamas's leader in the Gaza Strip on Friday rejected a revised Middle East peace initiative put forward by the Arab League, saying outsiders could not decide the fate of the Palestinians.

In meetings this week in Washington, Arab states appeared to soften their 2002 peace plan, acknowledging that Israelis and Palestinians may have to swap land in any eventual peace deal.

The United States and the Palestinian leadership in the West Bank praised the move. But speaking to hundreds of worshippers in a Gaza mosque, senior Hamas official Ismail Haniyeh said it was a concession that other Arabs were not authorized to make.

"The so-called new Arab initiative is rejected by our people, by our nation and no one can accept it," said Haniyeh, prime minister of the Hamas government in the coastal enclave.

"The initiative contains numerous dangers to our people in the occupied land of 1967, 1948 and to our people in exile."

He was referring to the partition of British-mandate Palestine in 1948 when the United Nations voted to divide the territory into a Jewish state and an Arab state and to the 1967war when Israel captured the West Bank, East Jerusalem and Gaza.

Hamas refuses to recognize Israel's right to exist and claims all the territory between the Mediterranean and the Jordan River as rightfully Palestinian. It never accepted the Arab plan which was first presented in 2002.

Rare spat

The modified version was announced by Qatar's prime minister on Monday and Haniyeh's comments represented a rare public disagreement between Hamas and one of its main supporters.

The rich Gulf state has pledged over $400 million to fund housing projects in the Gaza Strip, which Hamas seized from the rival Palestinian Fatah faction in a brief civil war in 2007.

"To those who speak of land swaps we say: Palestine is not a property, it is not for sale, not for a swap and cannot be traded," Haniyeh said.

Haniyeh said the rival Palestinian Authority, headed by Western-backed Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, was to blame for inspiring the softer Arab position because it accepted the need for land swaps with Israel.

Israel rejected the Arab peace plan when it was proposed 11years ago. Israeli officials gave a cautious welcome to the new suggestions, but the government still objects to key points, including the "right of return" for Palestinian refugees and the creation of a Palestinian capital in East Jerusalem.

U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry is seeking to revive direct peace talks that broke down in 2010 over the issue of Jewish settlement building in East Jerusalem and the West Bank.

On Tuesday, he hailed the Arab League announcement as "a very big step forward."

However, any peace moves will have to confront the fractured Palestinian political landscape with Abbas holding sway over parts of the West Bank and Hamas firmly entrenched in Gaza. Repeated attempts by the two sides to secure a political reunification of the two territories have failed.
 

03 May, 2013


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Source: http://english.alarabiya.net/en/News/middle-east/2013/05/03/Hamas-rebuffs-Arabs-for-softening-Israeli-Palestinian-peace-plan.html
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Bomb explosion at Iraq mosque kills 7

Iraqi residents stand next to a damaged vehicle at the scene of a car bomb in Baghdad. (AFP)

A bomb attack outside a Sunni mosque on Friday killed seven worshippers as Sunnis continued to hold demonstrations in Iraq to protest what they say is second-class treatment by the Shiite-led government.

Sunni mosques have been targeted in several recent attacks amid rising sectarian tension in Iraq following a deadly crackdown by security forces on a Sunni protest site in Hawija town last month. Since then, violence have been on the upswing, raising concerns that the nation is on a return to bloody fighting in the past decade that approached a state of civil war.

Police officials said the attack on the Sunni mosque occurred as worshippers were leaving mid-day prayers at al-Ghofran mosque in a primarily Sunni area of Rashidiya.

There was no immediate claim of responsibility.

Al-Qaeda's Iraqi branch, known as the Islamic State of Iraq, often attacks civilian targets, including mosques. It primarily targets Shiites as well as security forces. In the past, it has also struck Sunni targets in an attempt to re-ignite sectarian fighting. Shiite militias in the past also targeted Sunnis as sectarian fighting in 2006-2007, but they are not known to have carried out large-scale bombing attacks against Sunnis for years.

Many from Iraq's Sunni minority say they are marginalized and discriminated against by the Shiite-led government. They say they face discrimination, particularly in the application of a tough anti-terrorism law that they believe unfairly targets their sect.

Sunni anti-government protests continued in the western province of Anbar and several Sunni areas in Iraq, with thousands massing for Friday prayers.

In the western city of Fallujah, Sunni cleric Ahmed Delly lashed out at the Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki for ignoring his sect's demands and for adopting "sectarian policies harming the Sunnis."

In Samarra, Sunni cleric Mohammed Taha warned that the country is descending to civil war because of what he described as a-Maliki's dictatorship.

"Al-Maliki has brought the country to the abyss and he refused to meet our demands. This leaves us with two options: Either the civil war or the formation of our own [autonomous] region," said Taha during the Friday sermon.

Before midnight Thursday, gunmen and security forces clashed in several districts of the former Sunni insurgent stronghold of Mosul in northern Iraq, authorities said Friday.

Police and hospital officials said nine police and four militants were killed in the fighting in Mosul, one of the hardest areas to calm since bloodshed erupted after the U.S.-led invasion that ousted Saddam Hussein in 2003.

Hospital officials confirmed the casualties for all the attacks. All officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they are not authorized to speak to reporters.

03 May, 2013


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Source: http://english.alarabiya.net/en/News/middle-east/2013/05/03/Bomb-explosion-at-Iraq-mosque-kills-7.html
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Pope Francis meets Lebanese President Michel Suleiman

Pope Francis talks with Lebanese President Michel Suleiman during a private audience at the Vatican May 3, 2013. (Reuters)

Pope Francis met with the President of Lebanon, Michel Suleiman, on Friday.

The main discussion was the tumultuous situation in the Middle East, particularly the on-going civil war in Syria and the resulting refugee crisis.

The two men first held a private meeting for nearly half an hour, assisted by an interpreter, in the Papal library.

They were later joined by Suleiman's wife, Wafaa Suleiman and another 10 people in the Lebanese delegation.

More than 70,000 people have been killed so far in the Syrian conflict, according to the United Nations.

More than 1 million Syrians have fled their homes and sought shelter in neighboring countries such as Jordan, Lebanon and Turkey, while millions more have been internally displaced by the fighting.

The two men discussed the ethnic diversity in Lebanon and the importance of dialogue and collaboration among the different ethnic communities.

Lebanese Shiites and Sunnis are divided over Syria's civil war, with many Shiites backing President Bashar Assad's regime while a large numbers of Sunnis back the opposition.

Lebanon and Syria share a complex network of political and sectarian ties and many fear that violence in Syria will spread to Lebanon.

The Pope and the President also discussed the on-going tensions between the Israelis and Palestinians, noting that negotiations need to be re-started in order to guarantee peace and stability in the region.

03 May, 2013


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Source: http://english.alarabiya.net/en/News/middle-east/2013/05/03/Pope-Francis-meets-Lebanese-President-Michel-Suleiman.html
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Libyan army stationed on Tripoli streets ahead of pro-government rally

Supporters of Libyan leader Moamer Qaddafi take part in a pro-government rally in Tripoli. (AFP)

Libyan soldiers have been stationed at Tripoli's main square to protect a rally in support of the government that was planned for Friday afternoon, a source at the prime minister's office said.

"They are expecting to have some demonstrations and I would expect it's because they want to protect the demonstrators," the source told Reuters. A defense ministry source said the order came from the prime minister's office.

Reuters witnesses saw the soldiers on the square as well a son the main road to the airport.

Armed militia targeting Libya's ministries and media in the capital this week have alarmed international observers who say deteriorating security conditions are becoming a matter of serious concern.

Gunmen in heavily armed vehicles were in control of Libya's Foreign Ministry for a sixth day on Friday. The Justice Ministry was also surrounded.

03 May, 2013


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Source: http://english.alarabiya.net/en/News/middle-east/2013/05/03/Libyan-army-stationed-on-Tripoli-streets-ahead-of-pro-government-rally.html
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Bodies of drowned Saudis recovered, others still missing

Members of the Saudi Civil Defense help people to cross a flooded area after heavy rain in Tabuk. (Reuters)

The bodies of three Saudis who drowned in their cars due to flash floods have been recovered in the city of Taif.

A search is ongoing for two missing persons in the northern Qarn valley, al-Riyadh newspaper reported Friday.

Steeply rising water levels due to torrential rain in various regions of Saudi Arabia have forced rescue teams to use boats and divers.

03 May, 2013


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Source: http://english.alarabiya.net/en/News/middle-east/2013/05/03/Bodies-of-drowned-Saudis-recovered-others-still-missing.html
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China could hold Israel-Palestinian talks if asked

China says it's willing to set up a meeting between Israeli PM Benjamin Netanyahi and Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas. (AFP)

The Chinese government said it was willing to set up a meeting between the Israeli prime minister and the Palestinian president when the two leaders visit Beijing next week, if the sides expressed interest in doing so.

Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying said Friday at a regular briefing that China would be happy to facilitate a meeting between Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas if they were willing to meet.

Abbas will be in China from Sunday to Tuesday, overlapping with Netanyahu's Monday-Friday visit.

Negotiations for peace between the sides have been frozen for more than four years.

China has traditionally had a low profile in Middle East diplomacy but in recent years has tried to play a more active role in the region.

03 May, 2013


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Source: http://english.alarabiya.net/en/News/middle-east/2013/05/03/China-could-hold-Israel-Palestinian-talks-if-asked.html
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Pentagon report: North Korea could eventually reach U.S. with nuclear arms

Pentagon report: North Korea could eventually reach U.S. with nuclear arms

The Pentagon. (AFP)

North Korea's continuing development of nuclear technology and long-range ballistic missiles will move it closer to its stated goal of being able to hit the United States with an atomic weapon, a new Pentagon report to Congress said on Thursday.

The report, the first version of an annual Pentagon assessment required by law, said Pyongyang's Taepodong-2missile, with continued development, and might ultimately be able to reach parts of the United States carrying a nuclear payload if configured as an intercontinental ballistic missile.

North Korea launched a multi-stage rocket that delivered a satellite into orbit in December, an advance that "contributes heavily" to the country's development of a long-range ballistic missile capability, the report said.

It is also continuing to refine its atomic weapons capability, including with a nuclear detonation in February, and is capable of conducting "additional nuclear tests at any time," the report said.

"These advances in ballistic-missile delivery systems, coupled with developments in nuclear technology ... are in line with North Korea's stated objective of being able to strike the U.S. homeland," the report said.

"North Korea will move closer to this goal, as well as increase the threat it poses to U.S. forces and allies in the region, if it continues testing and devoting scarce regime resources to these programs," it said.

The document characterized North Korea as one of the biggest U.S. security challenges in the region because of its effort to develop nuclear arms and missiles, its record of selling weapons technology to other countries and its willingness to "undertake provocative and destabilizing behavior."

The report comes at a sensitive time in the region, with friction between Washington and Pyongyang only now beginning to ease following two months of increasingly shrill rhetoric that seemed to edge the Korean peninsula close to war.

Tensions between the two countries rose sharply after North Korea put the satellite into space in late December and conducted the nuclear test in February. The test triggered new U.N. sanctions, which led to a barrage of threats from Pyongyang.
North Korea went so far as to warn of nuclear strikes on the United States and South Korea, as its new leader, Kim Jong-un, marked his first year in office following the death of his father.

The U.S. and South Korean militaries went ahead with a long-scheduled military exercise despite the threats and Washington sending stealth bombers and other planes to the region in a show of force.

North Korea signed a deal to get rid of its nuclear program in exchange for aid in 2005 but later backed out of the pact and now says it will not give up its atomic weapons program.

The United States has firmly rejected North Korean demands that it be recognized as a nuclear-armed state. Washington has stepped up its diplomacy with China over the issue.

03 May, 2013


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Source: http://english.alarabiya.net/en/News/world/2013/05/03/Pentagon-report-North-Korea-could-eventually-reach-U-S-with-nuclear-arms-.html
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Syrian opposition blames regime for village deaths

Men throw stones at riot police during clashes in the Mediterranean coastal town of Banias, on May 27, 2011. (AFP)

Syria's main opposition group says President Bashar al-Assad's regime was behind an attack on a Sunni village near the Mediterranean coast that killed at least 50 people, according to activists.

The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said Syrian troops backed by pro-government gunmen swept into Bayda, a village outside the city of Banias, on Thursday. The group documented the names of at least 50 dead but says as many as 100 may have been killed.

The Syrian National Coalition on Friday denounced the Bayda killings as a "large-scale massacre," saying Assad's regime was behind it. The regime is dominated by the Alawite sect, a Shiite offshoot.

The Observatory cited witnesses outside the predominantly Sunni village saying women and children were among the dead. Dozens of villagers were still missing.

03 May, 2013


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Source: http://english.alarabiya.net/en/News/middle-east/2013/05/03/Syrian-opposition-blames-regime-for-village-deaths.html
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Bangladeshi engineer arrested in building collapse

A view of rescue workers attempting to find survivors from the rubble of the collapsed Rana Plaza building in Savara round 30 km outside Dhaka April 30, 2013. (Reuters)

More than 500 bodies have been recovered from the Bangladesh garment-factory building that collapsed last week, authorities said Friday after arresting an engineer who warned the building was unsafe but is also accused of helping the owner add three illegal floors to the structure.

Abdur Razzak Khan worked as the Rana Plaza owner's consultant when the owner made the illegal addition atop his five-story building, police official Ohiduzzaman said Friday. Khan was arrested Thursday on a charge of negligence.

Owner Mohammed Sohel Rana called Khan to inspect the building after it developed cracks on April 23, local media reported. That night Khan appeared on a private television station saying that after his inspection he told Rana to evacuate the building because it was not safe.

Khan, a former engineer at Jahangirnagar University near Savar, said he drew attention of the government engineers for the building to be examined further.

Police ordered the building evacuated, but witnesses say Rana told people gathered outside the next morning that the building was safe and that garment factory managers told their workers to go inside. It collapsed hours later.

The elected mayor of Savar municipality, Mohammad Refatullah, also has been suspended for alleged negligence in approving the design and layout of the doomed building, said Abu Alam, a top official of the local government ministry.

Alam said an official investigation has found that the mayor ignored rules in approving the design and layout. The mayor is from main opposition Bangladesh Nationalist Party, and the opposition BNP has criticized the suspension as politically motivated.

The confirmed death toll reached 501 as workers continued to pull bodies from the wreckage. The building collapse was the deadliest disaster in Bangladesh's $20 billion-a-year garment industry, far surpassing a fire late last year that killed 112 workers at a garment factory that had locked doors and no fire escapes.

Workers were carefully using cranes to remove the concrete rubble Friday morning.

"We are still proceeding cautiously so that we get the bodies intact," said Maj. Gen. Chowdhury Hassan Suhwardy, the commander of the area's army garrison supervising the rescue operation.

The official number of missing has been 149 since Wednesday, though unofficial estimates are higher.

Rana was arrested earlier and is expected to be charged with negligence, illegal construction and forcing workers to join work, which are punishable by a maximum of seven years in jail. Authorities have not said if more serious crimes will be added.

The Bangladesh High Court has ordered the government to confiscate Rana's property and freeze the assets of the owners of the factories in Rana Plaza so the money can be used to pay the salaries of their workers.

Among the garment makers in the building were Phantom Apparels, Phantom Tac, Ether Tex, New Wave Style and New Wave Bottoms.

03 May, 2013


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Source: http://english.alarabiya.net/en/News/asia/2013/05/03/Bangladeshi-engineer-arrested-in-building-collapse.html
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