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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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الدكتور محمد البرادعى

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الرئيس السابق حسنى مبارك

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الجمعة، أبريل 26، 2013

EU concerned over Israel destruction of Palestinian structures

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A protester waves a Palestinian flag in front of the Jewish settlement of Ofra during clashes near the West Bank village of Deir Jarir near Ramallah April 26, 2013. (Reuters)

European Union missions in Jerusalem and Ramallah expressed serious concerns on Friday about the demolition this week of 22 structures in eight places across the West Bank, including East Jerusalem.

The destruction displaced 28 people, including 18 children, and affected 120 other people including 57 children, a statement from EU missions in Ramallah and Jerusalem said of the actions on Tuesday and Wednesday.

Some of these structures were funded by EU member states, including France, it said.

"These and other recent demolitions appear to put an end to a period in which a welcome reduction in demolitions had been noted," the EU said.

"Since the year 2008 more than 2,400 Palestinian houses and structures have been demolished in Area C of West Bank and east Jerusalem, displacing more than 4,400 people."

Places designated as Area C are under full Israeli control

The statement said that, on May 14, 2012 they had called on Israel to meet its obligations regarding the living conditions of the Palestinian population in Area C, including halting forced transfers of people and demolition of Palestinian housing and infrastructure.

French foreign ministry spokesman Philippe Lalliot condemned the destruction of a Palestinian Bedouin camp by the Israeli army on Tuesday in the north of the Jordan Valley.

He said the camp had been financed by France and was "clearly identifiable."

"France has made representations to the Israeli authorities to stop the destruction of homes, the displacement and the destruction... in Area C, which are contrary to international humanitarian law," Lalliot said.

The U.N. Office for Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs reported on Friday the demolition of two farm sheds and a Palestinian restaurant in Area C on April 19 and the temporary displacement of some 60 people, including 36 children, in the Jordan Valley due to Israeli military training.

27 Apr, 2013


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Source: http://english.alarabiya.net/en/News/middle-east/2013/04/27/EU-concerned-over-Israel-destruction-of-Palestinian-structures-.html
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Protesters clash with police near Egypt’s presidential palace

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Etian protesters clashed with police near the Presidential Palace in Egypt's Cairo on Friday. (Al Arabiya)

Egyptian protesters clashed with police near the Presidential Palace in Cairo on Friday leaving at least 16 people injured, Al Arabiya correspondent reported.

To disperse protesters, who were throwing rocks at the police to keep them away from the vicinity, security forces in turn fired tear gas.

A police car was also set ablaze by the angry demonstrators.

The clashes came after dozens of protesters from Tahrir Square, backed up by the Black Bloc group and football ultras youth, started their march toward the Presidential Palace from Al-Murj metro station in the capital.

Black Bloc group stands against Islamist President Mohammed Mursi and the Muslim Brotherhood, and its slogan is "chaos against injustice." The group emerged in January and was at the forefront of anti-government protests in Cairo, Alexandria and the Suez Canal.

On Saturday, Egypt's state security prosecution detained seven Black Bloc members and banned them from traveling on charges the group seeks to cause destruction in the country.

In another incident on Friday, the black-clad group threw Molotov cocktail at the headquarters of the Freedom and Justice Party in Al-Sharqiya provice, Youm 7 newspaper reported Friday.

The party is the political arm of the Muslim Brotherhood movement.

Before setting the exterior frontier of the party's headquarters on fire, the group was protesting against the Brotherhood.


 

27 Apr, 2013


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Source: http://english.alarabiya.net/en/News/middle-east/2013/04/26/Egypt-protesters-clash-with-police-near-Cairo-s-presidential-palace-.html
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Israeli court: Stop detaining women at holy site

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Israeli police arrest American Rabbi Susan Silverman (L), sister of comedian Sarah Silverman, and her teenage daughter Hallel Abramowitz (C), after performing Rosh Hodesh prayers at the Western Wall in Jerusalem, on February 11, 2013 (AFP)

An Israeli court has instructed police to stop detaining women for performing religious rituals that ultra-Orthodox Jews say are reserved for men.

Members of a liberal women's Jewish group have been trying to break the Orthodox monopoly at the Western Wall in Jerusalem by conducting mixed-gender prayer and wearing religious garb.

The Western Wall is the holiest site where Jews can pray. It is currently divided into men's and women's sections.

Orthodox rabbis, who control Israel's religious institutions, oppose mixed-gender prayers.

In a ruling on Thursday, a Jerusalem court said the woman were not disturbing the peace with their prayer and saw no justification for detaining them.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu recently gave preliminary support to a compromise plan to create a new section for mixed-gender prayers.

27 Apr, 2013


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Source: http://english.alarabiya.net/en/News/middle-east/2013/04/26/Israeli-court-Stop-detaining-women-at-holy-site.html
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Bomb blast near Pakistan party office kills six

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Men stand outside the campaign office of the Muttahida Qaumi Movement (MQM) political party, after Thursday's bomb blast in Karachi April 26, 2013. (Reuters)

A car bomb exploded outside a secular party's election office in Pakistan's commercial hub Karachi late Friday killing six people, officials said, the latest violence ahead of historic polls next month.

The bomb went off close to the election office of a candidate for the Pashtun-dominated Awami National Party in the city's western neighborhood of Mominabad, local police officer Mohammad Khan said.

It was an improvised explosive device planted in a Suzuki car, police spokesman Imran Shaukat said.

"Six people have died and more than a dozen are wounded," senior police officer Aslam Pechuho told AFP.

The blast was heard several kilometers away and damaged nearby shops and houses, witnesses said.

"The target was the election office of the ANP whose candidate Bashir Jan was to address a corner meeting" in the impoverished area which is home to many ethnic Pashtuns, police officer Khan said.

Friday's blast was the second to hit the port city in less than 24 hours. Five people were killed on Thursday when a bomb exploded outside the office of secular Muttahida Qaumi Movement (MQM) party, police said.

The ANP and MQM were coalition partners in the outgoing Pakistan People's Party-led government and have been threatened by the Taliban for backing military operations against the Islamists.

The three parties are perceived as secular.

Deadly attacks targeting politicians or political parties have killed 40 people since April 11, according to an AFP tally.

May 11 national polls should see power pass from a civilian government that has served a full term to another through the ballot box for the first time in the nuclear-armed country's turbulent history.


 

27 Apr, 2013


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Source: http://english.alarabiya.net/en/News/asia/2013/04/26/Bomb-blast-near-Pakistan-party-office-kills-six-.html
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FSA Chief: After Qusayr, Hezbollah fighters reach Idlib and Aleppo

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Colonel Fateh Hassoun, deputy chief of Staff and commander of FSA front in the central province of Homs, said the Syrian army is bombarding certain areas to help camouflage Hezbollah fighters. (Al Arabiya)

Fighters from the Lebanese Shiite group Hezbollah, a staunch ally of the Syrian regime, have infiltrated two other Syrian provinces, Idlib and Aleppo, after leading the fight against rebels in a strategic town in Homs province, a Free Syrian Army commander told Al Arabiya on Friday.

Colonel Fateh Hassoun, who is the deputy chief of Staff and commander of FSA front in the central province of Homs, said the Syrian army is bombarding certain areas to help camouflage Hezbollah fighters, adding it is the latest military tactic that is being employed by the Syrian government.

The colonel said it is the same method which helped elite Hezbollah fighters to maintain control over the strategic town of Qusayr in Homs.

During clashes between rebels and Hezbollah fighters in Qusyar activists said the Syrian government was providing the Shiite Lebanese fighters with an aerial shield to help them advance into the strategic town that borders Lebanon.

Qusayr has witnessed fierce fighting between Syrian rebels and Hezbollah fighters.

On Monday, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said Hezbollah fighters were leading the fight against rebels in Qusayr.

"It's Hezbollah that is leading the battle in Qusayr, with its elite forces," Rami Abdel Rahman, director of the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, told AFP.

"It's not necessarily fighters coming from Lebanon, its Hezbollah fighters from Shiite villages on the Syrian side which are inhabited by Lebanese," he said.

That has raised fears among the rebels that the town of Qusayr could fall into government hands.

Qusayr is a town near a key highway that links Damascus to Syria's coast.


 

27 Apr, 2013


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Source: http://english.alarabiya.net/en/News/middle-east/2013/04/26/FSA-Chief-After-Qusayr-Hezbollah-fighters-reach-Idlib-and-Aleppo.html
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Wide rift between Mursi government and judges over reform

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Essam el-Erian member of the Freedom and Justice Party said new law defining powers of the judiciary should not be delayed. (Photo courtesy: BBC)

Egypt's Islamist-dominated parliament must move quickly to adopt judicial reforms that have sparked a revolt by judges, the deputy leader of the Muslim Brotherhood's political arm argued on Friday.

The proposed reforms, which would get rid of more than 3,000 judges by lowering the retirement age, have widened the rift between President Mohamed Mursi's government and a judiciary that is seen by its critics as a last bastion of the old regime that was toppled in the 2011 revolution.

Essam el-Erian, a member of parliament from the Freedom and Justice Party which dominates the chamber, said in a Facebook post that passage of a new law defining the powers of the judiciary should not be delayed.

Judges have slammed the Islamist-led parliament for attempting to pass the changes, put forward by the moderate Islamist Wasat Party. But Erian said the upper house had the legislative authority to do so, in consultation with the judiciary.

The lower chamber of parliament was dissolved last year by a court ruling, thrusting the upper house into the position of passing legislation, although the opposition has questioned its right to do this.

New elections were postponed by a court ruling, and Mursi has said they could be held in October.

A senior official of Egypt's biggest hardline Islamist party on Friday rejected the reforms under consideration. Abdullah Badran of the Nour Party wrote on Facebook that the constitution required greater consultation with the judiciary in changing the law.

Separately, a judge who served as the head of the embattled constitution-drafting body said reforms should be postponed until after a new parliament is elected, state news agency MENA reported.

Outside the High Court, which was the scene of clashes last week between Islamist protesters and their opponents, a small crowd of demonstrators gathered on Friday to chant for the judiciary's independence. Islamist parties postponed their latest round of protests calling for it to be purged.
 

27 Apr, 2013


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Source: http://english.alarabiya.net/en/News/middle-east/2013/04/26/Wide-rift-between-Mursi-government-and-judges-over-reform.html
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Russia detains 140 suspected Islamic extremists

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Russian police and security agents have detained 140 people at a mosque in Moscow on suspicion of involvement with Islamic extremism.

A statement from the Federal Security Agency reported by Russian news agencies said among those detained in the Friday action were 30 citizens of unspecified foreign countries.

The detentions come a week after the two suspects in the fatal Boston Marathon bombing were identified as originating from the Russian region of Chechnya and sympathizing with Islamic extremists.

There were no immediate reports of charges being filed. The security agency referred The Associated Press to a district office, where the telephone was not answered.

The reports cited the agency as saying the mosque previously has been visited by people who had been involved in preparing or carrying out terrorist attacks.
 

27 Apr, 2013


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Source: http://english.alarabiya.net/en/News/world/2013/04/26/Russia-detains-140-suspected-Islamic-extremists.html
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Muslim-Christian romance fuels Egypt sectarian row

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gyptian Christian Coptic worshippers attend a function on April 25, 2013 at the St Samaans (Simon) Church also known as the Cave Church in the Mokattam village, nicknamed "Garbage City," in Cairo. (Reuters)

An Egyptian security official and a priest say police fired tear gas and clashed with a stone-throwing mob of Muslims who had surrounded a Coptic Church in anger over an inter-faith romance.

The Muslim protesters accuse the church of helping to secret away 21-year-old Rana el-Shazli, believed to have converted to Christianity before fleeing her small town with a Coptic Christian man to Turkey.

The alleged romance ignited sectarian tension in Wasta, a rural town in Beni Suef province, about 95 kilometers (60 miles) south of Cairo. Clashes flared anew on Friday after weekly Muslim prayers.

For more than a month, Muslims have attacked churches over the incident and forced Christians to close their shops in the town.

Christians make up nearly 10 percent of Egypt's population of 90 million.

Meanwhile, Coptic Pope Tawadros II said Egypt's Christians feel sidelined, ignored and neglected by Muslim Brotherhood-led authorities, who proffer assurances but have taken little or no action to protect them from violence.

In his first interview since emerging from seclusion after eight people were killed in sectarian violence between Muslims and Christians this month, the pope called official accounts of clashes at Cairo's Coptic cathedral on April 7 "a pack of lies".

He also voiced dismay at attempts by President Mohamed Mursi's Islamist allies to purge thousands of judges appointed under ousted President Hosni Mubarak, saying the judiciary was a pillar of Egyptian society and should not be touched.

"There is a sense of marginalization and rejection, which we can call social isolation," the pope told Reuters on Thursday of the feelings of Christians, who he said make up at least 15 percent of Egypt's 84 million people. Most Egyptians are Sunni Muslims.

Attacks on churches and sectarian tensions increased significantly after the rise of Islamists to power following the 2011 uprising that overthrew Mubarak, even though Christians had demonstrated alongside Muslims for his removal.

Asked about the government's response to this month's attacks, he said: "It made a bad judgment and it was negligent... I would have expected better security for the place and the people."

27 Apr, 2013


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Source: http://english.alarabiya.net/en/News/middle-east/2013/04/26/Muslim-Christian-romance-fuels-Egypt-sectarian-row.html
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Obama says ‘facts’ needed to cast judgment on Syria chemical weapons

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U.S. President Barack Obama says "facts" are needed to make any "definitive judgment" regarding Syrian government using chemical weapons. (AFP)

U.S. President Barack Obama is awaiting a "definitive judgment" on whether the Syrian regime used chemical weapons against rebel fighters before taking action, AFP reported the White House as saying on Friday.

"We're working to establish credible and corroborated facts," White House spokesman Jay Carney told reporters. "The president wants the facts," he added, saying there was no timeline for further action by the United States.

Carney also said that options for dealing with Syria's use of chemical weapons "include" but are "not exclusive" to military force.

Amid U.S. assertions that the Syrian government has used chemical weapons against the country's rebels, the European Union has reiterated its request Damascus enable a U.N. chemical weapons probe into Syria.

"We hope there will be a United Nations investigation inside Syria to hopefully shed some light on what has really happened," AFP reported, EU's top diplomat Catherine Ashton, as saying after being queried over the EU stand on Friday.

"The bottom line is this would of course be clearly unacceptable" if proven, she added.

Washington sounded the alarm on Thursday that Damascus may have used chemical weapons but on a "small scale," but emphasized U.S. spy agencies were still not 100 percent sure, and it needs to collect more evidence.

The London-based The Times newspaper published a video on Friday, saying that it is part of evidence chemical weapons were being used in Syria.

It described the killing of a Syrian citizen's family as a "private affair," in the northern city in Aleppo as "no one might have ever known what wiped out the family."

Red line crossed? 
 

President Obama said Damascus using chemical weapons is a "red line."

While the U.S. administration is still not sure of its claim, there are those who think differently.

The republican U.S. senator John McCain, who has long urged for military intervention in Syria, said after a national security briefing "I think it's pretty obvious that a red line has been crossed."

"Now I hope the administration will consider what we have been recommending now for over two years of this bloodletting and massacre, and that is to provide a safe area for the opposition to operate, to establish a no-fly zone and provide weapons to the people in the resistance who we trust," he added.

Also, Senate Intelligence Committee Chairwoman Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif said "It is clear that 'red lines' have been crossed and action must be taken to prevent larger scale use."

Feinstein urged the United Nations Security Council to take "strong and meaningful action," against Syria.

Meanwhile, two Syrian officials denied on Friday that government forces had used chemical weapons against rebels, Damascus' first response to U.S. assertions that it had, The Associated Press reported.

In Damascus, a government official said President Bashar al-Assad's army "did not and will not use chemical weapons even if it had them." He instead accused opposition forces of using them in a March attack on the village of Khan al-Assad outside the northern city of Aleppo.

Both sides have blamed each other for the deadly attack.

27 Apr, 2013


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Source: http://english.alarabiya.net/en/News/middle-east/2013/04/26/Obama-says-facts-needed-to-cast-judgment-on-Syria-chemical-weapons-.html
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Mali ‘cannot have two armies’ says French minister

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French Defence Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian (2nd L) arrives at the French military base at the airport in Gao April 26, 2013. (Reuters)

French Defense Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian said Friday that Mali "cannot have two armies" in the rebel-held city of Kidal, calling for talks with armed Tuareg militants in the war-torn north.

The Tuaregs' National Movement for the Liberation of Azawad (MNLA), which runs Kidal, has refused to give up its weapons or take part in elections planned for July until negotiations have taken place with the Mali government.

"It is obvious that there cannot be two Malian armies. But in this specific case, to recover the territorial integrity of Kidal, we need dialogue. There will be no partition," Le Drian told a media conference in Gao, northern Mali's biggest city.

"It is therefore necessary to resume dialogue, dialogue that allows Mali recover its sovereignty in a climate of mutual respect."

The MNLA launched a rebellion for independence of the north in January last year which plunged the West African nation into crisis.

Its insurgency sparked a coup in Bamako by soldiers in March 2012, and the crisis deepened when the rebellion was hijacked by its Islamist allies, leaving the north of the country in the hands of hardline extremists.

As former colonial power France swept to Mali's aid in January and drove out the Al Qaeda-linked Islamists, the MNLA reclaimed control of Kidal, the heart of the Tuareg homeland which they call Azawad.

French and Chadian troops took charge of securing the town, as the MNLA refused the presence of Malian soldiers, demanding autonomy.

"This visit to Gao is first of all to congratulate the French troops for their commitment and professionalism, and to let them know how proud of them the nation is," Le Drian added.

"I also came to say that the mission continues and that France will remain as long as it takes."

Le Drian's visit comes shortly after the beginning of a phased withdrawal of the 4,500-strong French contingency which will see just 1,000 troops left in Mali by the end of the year.

They will be gradually be replaced, starting from July, by a force of 12,600 peacekeepers responsible for stabilizing the north, whose creation was approved Thursday by the United Nations Security Council.

Le Drian, who arrived Thursday in Bamako on the first leg of a tour of several countries to prepare for a post-war Mali, heads from Gao to Niamey and N'Djamena, the respective capitals of Niger and Chad.


 

26 Apr, 2013


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Source: http://english.alarabiya.net/en/News/africa/2013/04/26/Mali-cannot-have-two-armies-says-French-minister-.html
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Turkey says forces will take ‘care’ during Kurdish rebel pullback

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Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) rebels walk as they gather to listen to the speech of the PKK leader on April 25, 2013 in the Qandil mountain. (AFP)

Turkey said Friday its forces would show "great care" during a pullback starting next month by Kurdish rebels heading back to their bases in Iraq, in a major step to end three decades of hostilities.

"Our armed forces and collective security forces will do their tasks with great care and attention," Deputy Prime Minister Bulent Arinc said on Turkish television, without elaborating further.

Arinc did not provide any details on the government strategy during the withdrawal of outlawed Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) fighters from the Turkish territory but instead called on everyone to "act with sensitivity" and avoid any action which could "sabotage" the peace process.

The PKK's retreat from Turkey will be closely watched because previous withdrawal attempts by the group have seen clashes between Turkey's security forces and the PKK.

Arinc's comments came a day after Kurdish rebels announced they would on May 8 begin withdrawing from Turkey into their safe haven in northern Iraq amid a peace push between Ankara and the PKK, which is listed as a terrorist group by Turkey and its Western allies.

The pledged withdrawal, which is expected to take several months, is aimed to be finalized "as soon as possible," according to PKK leader Murat Karayilan.

There are an estimated 2,000 armed PKK militants inside Turkey and up to 5,000 in northern Iraq, which has been used by Kurdish rebels as a springboard for attacks targeting Turkish security forces in the southeast.

Karayilan said independent observers could monitor their retreat but warned that his fighters would resort to self-defense if it came under attack by the Turkish army.

Arinc welcomed the PKK announcement.

The Kurdish rebel movement started an armed rebellion for self-rule in the Kurdish-majority southeast in 1984, which has cost around 45,000 lives.

Turkey has entered a process of a ceasefire with the PKK after months of clandestine negotiations with the group's jailed leader Abdullah Ocalan, who has been serving a life sentence for treason on Imrali Island off Istanbul since 1999.


 

26 Apr, 2013


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Source: http://english.alarabiya.net/en/News/middle-east/2013/04/26/Turkey-says-forces-will-take-care-during-Kurdish-rebel-pullback-.html
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Troops backed by militia battle rebels around Damascus

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Smoke rises after what activists said was a missile fired by a Syrian Air Force fighter jet loyal to President Bashar al-Assad in Deraa, April 26, 2013. (Reuters)

Fresh fighting erupted on the outskirts of Damascus on Friday, as Syrian regime troops battled rebels in the north, south and east, backed in some areas by tanks and militia, a watchdog said.

"Fierce clashes are raging in Barzeh district, pitting rebels against troops and members of the pro-regime popular committees," the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said.

The district in northern Damascus also came under tank fire by the army, the British-based group said.

The militiamen were brought in from Esh al-Warwar district, which has a population drawn mainly from the Alawite minority community to which President Bashar al-Assad belongs, it added.

Most of the rebels are from Syria's Sunni Muslim majority.

In its third year, the conflict has taken on an increasingly sectarian nature, as Assad's regime has armed militias among the Alawites and other minority groups.

Analysts say the militias have better knowledge of the ground and are more adept at street fighting than the regular army, which is largely made up of conscripts.

Rebels and troops also clashed in several areas of south Damascus, parts of which have been reduced to rubble by months of fighting.

In the east of the capital, fresh fighting erupted in Jubar district, where rebels hold a number of enclaves, the Observatory said.

The army also shelled the eastern suburbs, where rebels have established rear bases they have used to launch attacks deeper inside the capital.

Warplanes, meanwhile, bombarded Ain Terma, east of Damascus, and Daraa to the southwest, the Observatory reported.

Regime forces launched a campaign several months ago to crush the insurgency near Damascus and to secure the capital.

Activists say civilians are paying the highest price for the violence near and around Damascus.

Thousands of people, among them women and children, are holed up in rebel stronghold Moadamiyet al-Sham, close to the town of Daraya, an activist with close ties to anti-regime networks in Damascus province said.

"There is daily bombardment, and thousands of residents in Moadamiyet al-Sham are under siege by the army. There is no bread, no baby formula for children. People are eating rotten bread," the activist, who identified himself as Malek, told AFP.

Elsewhere, jihadist rebels planted explosives targeting troops on a strategic road used by the army to send reinforcements and supplies towards eastern Aleppo, the Observatory said, adding that the attacks had killed an unknown number of soldiers.

And in the northwestern province of Idlib, clashes raged around the Abu Al-Dohur airport, as rebels kept up a fierce campaign to take over air bases in insurgent-held areas in Syria.

At least 130 people died in violence across Syria on Thursday, the Observatory said -- 53 civilians, 27 soldiers and 50 rebels.


 

26 Apr, 2013


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Source: http://english.alarabiya.net/en/News/middle-east/2013/04/26/Troops-backed-by-militia-battle-rebels-around-Damascus--1220.html
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Jordanians torch U.S. flag to protest troop deployment

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Jordanians torch U.S. flag to protest troop deployment

Jordanian protesters torched a U.S. flag at a demonstration in Amman Friday against an American troop deployment in Jordan in connection with the war in neighboring Syria as hundreds also rallied in other cities.

An AFP photographer said about 400 people took to the streets of the old city of Amman after weekly Muslim prayers chanting: "We don't want to see American" soldiers in our country.

The demonstrators set off from the Al-Husseini mosque in a protest organized by opposition leftist parties and youth groups, carrying signs that read: "The (Jordanian) Arab army protects us" and "U.S. presence undermines national sovereignty."

Some demonstrators set on fire a U.S. flag before the rally broke off into two groups, one heading towards the royal palace that overlooks downtown Amman, while the other marched on the main square outside city hall.

Similar protests were held in the northern city of Irbid and in Zarqa, east of the capital, a stronghold of Islamists, where demonstrators chanted: "America is the head of the snake" and "Syria free, free. America out," witnesses said.

Earlier this month U.S. Defense Minister Chuck Hagel revealed that some 150 U.S. military specialists have been deployed in Jordan since last year and that he had ordered a U.S. Army headquarters team to bolster the mission, bringing the total American presence to more than 200 troops.

Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, whose regime has been battling rebels trying to oust him from power since March 2011, warned in an interview this month that the war in his country could spread to Jordan, which he accused of allowing rebels free movement across the border.

But on Thursday a U.S. Defense official played down chances of military action over Syria, despite an assessment from U.S. spy agencies that the Syrian regime likely used chemical agents in the conflict.

26 Apr, 2013


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Source: http://english.alarabiya.net/en/News/middle-east/2013/04/26/Jordanians-torch-U-S-flag-to-protest-troop-deployment-.html
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Eleven British Islamists jailed for Al-Qaeda bomb plot

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This combination of handout images released by Britain's West Midlands Police on February 21, 2013, shows Irfan Naseer, (L) Irfan Khalid (C) and Ashik Ali (R). (AFP)

Eleven British Muslims were jailed on Friday for planning what a court heard was an Al-Qaeda-backed plot to carry out a string of bombings that they hoped would rival 9/11 and the 2005 London attacks.

The conspiracy involved at least six of the plotters travelling to Pakistan for terror training, with the eventual aim of setting off eight rucksack bombs in crowded areas and possibly other timed devices.

Ringleader Irfan Naseer received a life sentence, his right-hand man Irfan Khalid was jailed for 18 years and co-conspirator Ashik Ali was jailed for 15 years by a judge at Woolwich Crown Court in southeast London.

Eight other members of the cell which was based in Birmingham, central England, were also sentenced on Friday.

"Your plot had the blessing of Al-Qaeda and you intended to further the aims of Al-Qaeda," Judge Richard Henriques said as he sentenced the men.

"The only barrier between (Naseer's) team and mass murder was the intervention of the authorities."

The terror cell was heavily influenced by the teachings of American-born Al-Qaeda preacher Anwar al-Awlaki, who was killed by a drone strike in Yemen in September 2011, police said.

Prosecutors said that the attacks planned by the men would have been the deadliest since the July 7, 2005 London bombings, in which 52 people were killed by three Islamist suicide bombers on subway trains and a fourth bomber on a bus.

Khalid meanwhile boasted that the attack would be "another 9/11," referring to the September 11, 2001 attacks on the United States, the trial heard.

The plot was also the most significant terror plan uncovered in Britain since the 2006 plot to blow up transatlantic airliners using bombs in drinks bottles, police said.

The judge said the attacks may have been intended to target Birmingham, although police said the planned location was not clear.

Naseer, a jobless 31-year-old pharmacy graduate nicknamed Chubbs because of his weight, and Khalid and Ali, both 28, were found guilty by a jury in February of engaging in conduct in preparation of terrorist acts.

Naseer and Khalid had visited Pakistan to receive terrorism training, while Naseer also helped four others to travel to the country for the same purpose, although the four had second thoughts on arrival in Pakistan and dropped out.

"Irfan Naseer was the leader, driving force and man in charge and he alone must take responsibility for sending four young men to Pakistan for terrorism training," the judge said, handing Naseer a life sentence with a minimum of 18 years.

The group's chief financier Rahin Ahmed, 26, was jailed for 12 years and will serve a minimum of six after pleading guilty to collecting money for terrorism and helping others to travel to Pakistan for terror training.

The group tried to fund their plot by posing as street collectors for a Muslim charity and raised £12,000 ($18,000, 14,000 euros) -- but then lost £9,000 playing foreign currency markets and had to apply for bank loans, the trial heard.

Ashik Ali's older brother Bahader, 29, was sentenced to six years and two other cell members, Mohammed Rizwan, 34, and Mujahid Hussain, 21, were jailed for four years each.

The four group members who travelled to Pakistan for terror training but had second thoughts -- Shahid Khan, 21, Khobaib Hussain, 21, Ishaaq Hussain, 21 and Naweed Ali, 25 -- were each jailed for 40 months.

The main plotters were arrested while headed for a takeaway meal in September 2011.

In addition to the loss of the money the group showed an amateurish side.

During the surveillance Naseer was heard talking about mixing poison into creams such as Vaseline or Nivea and smearing them on car handles to kill people, and about welding blades to a truck and driving it into people.

Naseer and Khalid were also recorded reminiscing about a time at the training camp in Pakistan when a "Pakistani guy, AQ (Al-Qaeda) guy" told them to hide under a tree for four hours to avoid a US drone flying overhead.

"Underneath the tree, the drone can't detect you, innit," Naseer said.

"So I'm lying underneath the tree innit, and the drones are right about me bro, and it's going (makes a sound like a drone) and I'm thinking any minute it's going to fire a missile."

26 Apr, 2013


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Source: http://english.alarabiya.net/en/News/middle-east/2013/04/26/Eleven-British-Islamists-jailed-for-Al-Qaeda-bomb-plot-.html
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Israel’s army to stop using white phosphorus

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Palestinian civilians and medics run to safety during an Israeli strike using phosphorus shells at a UN school. (AFP)

Israel's army has announced it will stop using munitions containing white phosphorus, for which it was internationally condemned during a military operation against Gaza in 2008-2009.

Shells containing the chemical "will no longer be used," the army said in a statement released late Thursday.

"In around a year, the Israeli artillery will have developed a new munition which can create smoke screens and that uses only gas. This will replace the current munitions which contain small amounts of phosphorus," it said.

On January 15, 2009 the military fired white phosphorous shells in the vicinity of a compound of the UN's agency for Palestinian refugees (UNRWA) in Gaza City to obscure Israeli troop positions from Hamas fighters in the area, local media said.

International law prohibits the use of white phosphorous shells in heavily populated civilian areas, but allows them in open spaces to be used as cover for troops.

Israel launched a 22-day offensive on the Gaza Strip on December 27, 2008 in response to rocket fire from the Islamist Hamas-run territory.

The war killed 1,400 Palestinians and 13 Israelis, and it sparked widespread international criticism of the Jewish state for using disproportionate force.
 

26 Apr, 2013


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Source: http://english.alarabiya.net/en/News/middle-east/2013/04/26/Israel-s-army-to-stop-using-white-phosphorus-.html
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UNHCR : Syrian refugee numbers top 1.4 million

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Syrian refugees walk at Al Zaatri refugee camp in the Jordanian city of Mafraq, near the border with Syria, April 25, 2013. (Reuters)

The number of Syrians who have fled their conflict-ravaged homeland has surpassed 1.4 million, the United Nations refugee agency said Friday, warning that it was no longer able to meet their medical needs.

As of Thursday, the total number of Syrians registered as refugees was 1,401,435, the UNHCR said.

"This corresponds to 30 percent more than the total envisaged under the current Regional Refugee Response Plan by end June 2013," it underlined.

The UNHCR said it has received just 55 percent of the funding it has sought to help cope with the crisis.

"We cannot deal with all cases and the costs," Paul Spiegel, deputy director of the UNHCR's program department, told reporters in Geneva.

Syrians have been pouring out of their country since March 2011, when a crackdown on protests against the regime of President Bashar al-Assad heralded the start of an armed rebellion.

Numbers surged as the conflict morphed into an increasingly sectarian civil war, and the total topped a million in March this year.

The overwhelming majority of the refugees have fled to neighboring Lebanon, Turkey, Iraq and Jordan.

A major difficulty for the UNHCR is the growing number of Syrians living beyond refugee camps, which makes it harder to run program to help them.

The UNHCR underlined that because the Syrian population's pre-war health profile was similar to that of other middle-income nations, the refugees need more than basic care directly linked to the impact of the conflict.

For example, a significant proportion of the elderly refugees need treatment for chronic illnesses such as cancer or cardiovascular disease.

26 Apr, 2013


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Source: http://english.alarabiya.net/en/News/middle-east/2013/04/26/UNHCR-Syrian-refugee-numbers-top-1-4-million-.html
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Turkey says chemical arms use would escalate Syria crisis

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Turkish foreign ministry spokesman Levent Gumrukcu says the use of chemical arms in Syria will escalate the crisis. (Photo Courtesy: TRT)

Turkey said on Friday any use of chemical weapons by Syrian President Bashar al-Assad would "take the crisis to another level", but remained cautious about any foreign military intervention in the conflict on its border.

The White House said on Thursday Assad's government had probably used chemical arms on a small scale, but that President Barack Obama needed proof before he would act.

"We have been hearing allegations of the use of chemical weapons for quite some time now and these new findings take things to another level. They are very alarming," Turkish foreign ministry spokesman Levent Gumrukcu said.

"Since the very first reports of chemical weapons being used in Syria emerged we have been asking for a thorough investigation by the United Nations to substantiate these reports. However, the Syrian regime has not allowed this."

Syria, which has so far denied access to U.N. investigators because of a dispute over their remit, denies firing chemical weapons and accuses anti-Assad rebels of using them.

"This has been done by organizations, including al-Qaeda, which threatened to use chemical weapons against Syria. They have carried out their threat near Aleppo. There were victims," Syrian Information Minister Omran al-Zoubi said in Moscow.

"The Syrian army does not have chemical weapons," Interfax news agency quoted Zoubi as saying.

A once-fervent advocate of foreign intervention in Syria, Turkey has grown increasingly frustrated with the fractured opposition to Assad and with international disunity.

Asked whether Turkey would allow foreign military action in Syria from its soil, Gumrukcu said the facts about chemical weapons usage needed to be substantiated first.

Red line

"Let's not jump to that right now, let's have a thorough investigation," he said, adding any response if the claims were verified would need to be discussed among the "Friends of Syria" grouping of the opposition's Western, Arab and other allies.

The U.S. disclosure created a quandary for Obama, who has set the use of chemical weapons as a "red line" Assad must not cross. It triggered calls from some hawkish Washington lawmakers for a U.S. military response, which the president has resisted.

Ankara had been pushing for a foreign-protected "safe zone" inside Syria that could serve as a refuge for civilians caught up in the chaos and ease the burden on refugee camps in Turkey, now housing more than a quarter of a million people.

But it has been less vocal in recent months and officials were privately cautious about the latest U.S. disclosure.

"[The] statements are very vague and they themselves do not seem to be very confident of their arguments," one source close to the Turkish government said.

"Turkey has been voicing some concerns to that end as well but without proof, I don't think any further steps than the current level of involvement would be made," the source said.

"Intervention is very risky."

The European Union also responded cautiously, saying it hoped the United Nations would be able to send its investigating mission to Syria to check for chemical weapons use.

"We are still monitoring this along with our international partners to see what has really happened because it doesn't seem entirely clear at this point in time," said Michael Mann, a spokesman for EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton.

"We've seen that the regime in Syria doesn't seem to have much respect for human life, but we can't be definitive on this until we see definitive evidence," Mann said.

26 Apr, 2013


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Source: http://english.alarabiya.net/en/News/middle-east/2013/04/26/Turkey-says-chemical-arms-use-would-escalate-Syria-crisis.html
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Sudan harboring Ugandan warlord Kony, report says

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Joseph Kony speaks to journalists at Ri-Kwamba in Southern Sudan on November 12, 2006. (AFP)

Sudan appears to be providing shelter to Joseph Kony, one of the world's most wanted warlords, according to a report released on Friday by the Washington-based Resolve group.

Kony is the leader of the Lord's Resistance Army, which is infamous for mutilating its victims and abducting children for use as fighters and sex slaves. It has waged an insurgency against the Ugandan government for over 25 years.

A self-proclaimed prophet who claims his rebels are fighting to establish a government based on the Biblical Ten Commandments, Kony and other LRA leaders face charges of war crimes and crimes against humanity at the International Criminal Court.

According to Friday's report, "eyewitnesses testify that elements from Sudan's military actively provided Kony and other LRA leaders with periodic safe haven in Sudanese-controlled territory from 2009 until at least February 2013."

The report, called "Hidden in Plain Sight," also included satellite images of a recently-abandoned LRA camp abandoned, where Kony was last sighted in late 2012, in Sudanese-controlled territory along the disputed border with South Sudan.

Defectors and other sources told researchers that even while Kony was in the Sudanese-controlled territories, he "continued to direct LRA attacks against civilians in neighboring countries."

"As long as Kony is able to find a safe haven in Sudan, he can avoid pursuit by Ugandan forces by simply crossing the border whenever they get close," said Michael Poffenberger, Executive Director of The Resolve LRA Crisis Initiative and one of the report's primary authors.

"Sudan should not be allowed to harbor one of the most brutal and notorious war criminals in the world with impunity."

The group calls on the international community, including the United Nations and the African Union, to pressure Sudan to cooperate with efforts to fight the LRA and strengthen their own efforts against the group.

Earlier this month, the U.S. offered a $5 million reward for the capture of Kony, who Secretary of State John Kerry said would "not be easy to find."

26 Apr, 2013


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Source: http://english.alarabiya.net/en/News/africa/2013/04/26/Sudan-harboring-Ugandan-warlord-Kony-report-says-.html
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Iraqi forces enter Suleiman Bek town after gunmen leave

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Smoke billows from a destroyed makeshift camp at a public square in Hawija, near Kirkuk, 170 km (100 miles) north of Baghdad, April 23, 2013. (Reuters)

Iraqi security forces began moving back into a northern town on Friday after gunmen who seized it two days ago made an agreed withdrawal, officials said.

The gunmen pulled out of Sulaiman Bek in Salaheddin province early in the day under a deal worked out by tribal chiefs and government officials, local official Shalal Abdul Baban and municipal council deputy chief Ahmed Aziz told AFP.

The gunmen swarmed into the predominantly Sunni Turkmen town on Wednesday after deadly clashes with the security forces, who pulled back in the face of the offensive as residents fled.

Army Staff General Ali Ghaidan Majeed told AFP on Thursday that the gunmen had been given 48 hours to withdraw or face attack.

Majeed said at the time that intelligence information indicated there were about 175 gunmen in Sulaiman Bek -- 25 allegedly from Al-Qaeda, and 150 from the Naqshbandiya Army, another Sunni militant group.

The gunmen's seizure of Sulaiman Bek came during a bloody wave of violence that killed more than 180 people in three days.

Escalating conditions

On Thursday, Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Malki urged citizens in a televised statement to avoid dropping in sectarian rifts that would drag the country into civil war.

The statement came as residents of a number of Sunni cities in Iraq have announced on Thursday the formation of "military forces" to counter attack the Iraqi army and its crackdown against protesters calling for Maliki – a Shiite – to step down, Al Arabiya's correspondent said.

The military raid launched last Tuesday targeted a Sunni Muslim anti-government protest at a camp in Hawija, near Kirkuk. The act prompted Sunni tribesmen to gear up against the government.
The violence is the deadliest so far linked to demonstrations that erupted in Sunni areas of the Shiite-majority country more than four months ago.
 

26 Apr, 2013


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Source: http://english.alarabiya.net/en/News/middle-east/2013/04/26/Iraqi-forces-enter-Suleiman-Bek-town-after-gunmen-leave-.html
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Egypt’s Pope says Islamist rulers neglect Copts

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Coptic Pope Tawadros II, head of Coptic Orthodox church, gestures during an interview with Reuters in Cairo, April 25, 2013. (Reuters)

Egypt's Christians feel sidelined, ignored and neglected by Muslim Brotherhood-led authorities, who proffer assurances but have taken little or no action to protect them from violence, Coptic Pope Tawadros II said.

In his first interview since emerging from seclusion after eight people were killed in sectarian violence between Muslims and Christians this month, the pope called official accounts of clashes at Cairo's Coptic cathedral on April 7 "a pack of lies".

He also voiced dismay at attempts by President Mohamed Mursi's Islamist allies to purge thousands of judges appointed under ousted President Hosni Mubarak, saying the judiciary was a pillar of Egyptian society and should not be touched.

"There is a sense of marginalisation and rejection, which we can call social isolation," the pope told Reuters on Thursday of the feelings of Christians, who he said make up at least 15 percent of Egypt's 84 million people. Most Egyptians are Sunni Muslims.

Attacks on churches and sectarian tensions increased significantly after the rise of Islamists to power following the 2011 uprising that overthrew Mubarak, even though Christians had demonstrated alongside Muslims for his removal.

Asked about the government's response to this month's attacks, he said: "It made a bad judgment and it was negligent... I would have expected better security for the place and the people."

Mursi and his ministers tried to mend fences with the 60-year-old Coptic pontiff after the April 5 clashes in the town of El Khusus, north of Cairo, in which four Christians and one Muslim were killed.

Sectarian violence spread to the capital's sprawling St Mark's Cathedral, the pope's headquaters, after the funerals.

"Sometimes we get nice feelings from officials, but such feelings require actions, and the actions are slow, and maybe little, and sometimes don't exist at all," the pope said.

Riot police appeared to stand aside during what was the first attack on the seat of Christianity in Egypt in more than 1,400 years, although Coptic churches and community centres have suffered periodic violence for years.

Emigration out of fear

The pope said he was concerned by signs that some Copts were emigrating "because they are fearing the new regime". Others were going abroad to study, seek work or join family, he said.

In a concerted drive , the interior minister paid a condolence call on Tawadros on Wednesday and the ministers of information and tourism visited him on Thursday for a meeting televised on state media.

But the pope said that beyond promises to investigate the incidents and bring the perpetrators to justice, nothing practical had been done to improve the lot of Copts.

"After the last incidents, we gained some promises from the authorities and the government, from some ministers, but till now there is nothing new," he said.

Christians have long complained of discrimination in employment and treatment by the authorities and called for changes in laws to make it as easy to build or renovate churches as it is for mosques.

"Christians' problems and hardships have two sides, a religious side and a civilian one. The religious side involves two main issues: building churches and land," the pope said.

"I expect the government to facilitate and solve the chronic problems... For example, the building of a new church takes more than 15-16 years to get permission."

Scathing

The black-robed pontiff, carrying a white-tipped staff and a Coptic cross in his hand, was particularly scathing about an account of the cathedral violence posted on the Facebook page of Mursi's national security adviser, Essam Haddad.

"It is 100 percent rejected," Tawadros said. "This statement was in English, directed to the U.S. State Department, and was sent with a CD to explain their position and to cover up, but this statement is a pack of lies. It did not tell the truth."

Haddad's office said Christians had instigated the clashes by vandalising cars outside the cathedral during the funeral procession, and that firearms and petrol bombs had been used from inside the church compound, provoking the security forces.

A Reuters witness saw at least two people carrying guns and petrol bombs on the roof of the cathedral that day, but the pope said mourners had merely been reacting to an assault.

"They did not come to make violence, they came for a funeral, and when they came out of the church, they started to be subjected to violence. And hence they acted. There is a difference between action and reaction," he said.

The pope said the church had not even been asked to provide its account of events to government officials.

Pope Tawadros, the 118th head of Coptic Orthodox church, was picked on November 5 in a ceremony steeped in the traditions of a community that predates Islam's arrival in Egypt. He studied pharmacology in Egypt and England and managed a state-owned pharmaceutical factory for a few years before becoming a monk.

The 60-year-old pontiff succeeded Pope Shenouda III, who had led Egyptian Christians for four decades, clashing early on with former President Anwar Sadat but enjoying warmer relations with Mubarak, who acted as the Copts' political protector.

By contrast, Mursi has kept his distance, staying away from Tawadros' inauguration and shunning Coptic Christmas celebrations, to avoid alienating hardline conservative Salafi Islamists who refuse to recognise Christian holidays.

He offended Copts by setting the date for parliamentary elections on the Coptic Easter holiday, then admitting when he changed the polling day after Christian protests that he had been aware of the religious festival.

During the interview the pope offered an Easter prayer for Mursi, saying: "May God help you to serve in the work you are doing and may the situation in Egypt improve and the bridges of trust between all officials and citizens be strengthened."

26 Apr, 2013


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Source: http://english.alarabiya.net/en/News/middle-east/2013/04/26/Egypt-s-Pope-says-Islamist-rulers-neglect-Copts.html
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Iranian suspect tells Thai court ‘stunned’ to find bombs

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Iranian citizen Saeid Moradi is escorted by prison officers at Bangkok South Criminal Court April 26, 2013. (Reuters)

An Iranian man whose legs were blown off during an alleged botched bomb plot last year against Israeli diplomats in Bangkok said Friday he found the explosives and was trying to dispose of them safely when they detonated.

Saeid Moradi, 29, told a Bangkok court that he was about to leave Thailand when he found four bombs hidden inside radios in a cupboard at a rented house in the city.

Two of the devices exploded as he ran into the street to throw them into a nearby canal -- the second tearing off his legs, he said.

Moradi and Mohammad Khazaei, 42, are among five Iranians suspected of involvement in the February 2012 blasts that followed attacks in India and Georgia and saw Tehran accused by Israel of a terror campaign.

Giving his evidence first, the younger defendant said he accidentally triggered one of the bombs when he opened a cupboard in the apartment.

"I was stunned and threw it into the corner, believing it was a smoke bomb," the wheelchair-bound suspect said via a translator, adding he grabbed two other bombs and ran outside to throw them into a nearby canal.

He did not refer to the fourth device.

Prosecutors accuse Moradi of hurling one bomb at a taxi and a second at two police officers as they approached him on the street, but it instead detonated near the suspect.

The defendant gave a different version of events saying he dropped one of the devices near the taxi by mistake, and tried to throw the other away as the policemen approached fearing it would detonate and hurt them.

"I knew if the police stopped me I'd have to drop the bomb which may have endangered them and people nearby.

"So I threw it about a metre in front of me," he said, adding he blacked out and woke up at hospital later to find his legs had been torn off in the blast.

Fellow defendant Khazaei, who smiled and gave a two-finger victory sign to the waiting press as he arrived from prison for the hearing, is due to give testimony after his alleged accomplice.

The pair have already pleaded not guilty to charges including attempted murder and possessing explosives.

"The penalty for attempted murder and possessing explosives... will probably be quite severe but we will fight every charge," their lawyer Kittipong Kiattanapoom told reporters earlier outside the court.

In June last year a Malaysian court ordered the extradition to Thailand of another of the Iranian suspects, Masoud Sedaghatzadeh.

Sedaghatzadeh was arrested at Kuala Lumpur's international airport a day after the Bangkok blasts. Two other suspects are believed to have returned to Iran.

The trial continues.

26 Apr, 2013


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Source: http://english.alarabiya.net/en/News/middle-east/2013/04/26/Iranian-suspect-tells-Thai-court-stunned-to-find-bombs-.html
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Israel urges U.S. action over Syrian chemical weapons

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Israel urges U.S. action over Syrian chemical weapons

Israel's Deputy Foreign Minister Zev Elkin says the U.S. should consider military action to curb Syrian chemical weapons. (Photo Courtesy: Haaretz)

The United States should consider military action to curb Syrian chemical weapons after Washington went public with suspicions they have been used in the country's civil war, Israel's deputy foreign minister said on Friday.

The challenge by Zev Elkin, a confidant of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, underscored tension this week over the allies' assessments on Syria, as well as longer-running disputes about how aggressively to confront Iran's nuclear program.

The White House said on Thursday the Syrian government had probably employed chemical arms on a small scale against rebels. The disclosure created a bind for President Barack Obama, who has declared such use a "red line" that must not be crossed.

It was also a shift from Washington's skeptical response to Tuesday's publication by the Israeli military of intelligence findings that Syrian President Bashar al-Assad's forces had used chemical weapons repeatedly in recent months.

"The Iranians are watching, the whole world is watching too, and we should also see what happens," Elkin told Israel's Army Radio, when asked how U.S. strategy on Syria might unfold.

"There is a question here of when you set a red line, do you stand behind it?"

Israel has threatened to strike Syria, an enemy with which it previously maintained a decades-old truce, to prevent Assad's chemical arsenal falling into the hands of jihadi insurgents or of Hezbollah guerrillas in neighboring Lebanon.

There has been similar Israeli sabre-rattling against Iran. But the Jewish state, with its military and diplomatic clout limited in a volatile region, has made clear it would prefer Washington to take the lead on any major offensive.

Commenting on the shift in Washington's stance on Syria's chemical weapons, Elkin said: "If, until today, there has been an effort to ignore our opinion, to a degree ... now that the Americans' red line has apparently been crossed, there is a test.

"It is clear that if the United States wants to and the international community wants to, it could act - inter alia, militarily - to take control of the chemical weapons, and then all the fears ... will not be relevant."

British Prime Minister David Cameron said on Friday that growing evidence of the use of chemical weapons by the Syrian regime was "extremely serious".

But Cameron said it was highly unlikely to trigger the deployment of British troops, instead saying he wanted to see more support for the opposition to put pressure on President Bashar al-Assad.

Britain and France informed U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon last month that they have reliable evidence Assad's forces used chemical weapons that caused injuries and deaths. They cited soil samples and interviews with witnesses and opposition figures.

The U.N. leader on Thursday renewed an "urgent call" for Syria to let inspectors into the country after the United States said government forces had probably used chemical weapons.

"The secretary general has consistently urged the Syrian authorities to provide full and unfettered access to the team. He renews this urgent call today," said U.N. spokesman Martin Nesirky.

"The fact-finding team is on stand-by and ready to deploy in 24-48 hours," the spokesman added, following the U.S. administration's claims that the Syrian government has probably "used chemical weapons on a small scale."

Syria asked for a U.N. investigation but has since refused to let a U.N. team waiting in the region into the country. Assad's government only wants its claims that opposition rebels used chemical arms to be investigated. Ban has said the team should also look into opposition claims.

26 Apr, 2013


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Source: http://english.alarabiya.net/en/News/middle-east/2013/04/26/Israel-urges-U-S-action-over-Syrian-chemical-weapons.html
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Troops backed by militia battle rebels around Damascus

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Fighting across Syria has forced more than 1 million people to flee their homes and seek refuge abroad. (AFP)

Fresh fighting broke out on the edges of Damascus on Friday, as troops took on rebels in the north, south and east, backed in some areas by tanks and militia, a watchdog said.

"Fierce clashes are raging in Barzeh district pitting rebels against troops and members of the pro-regime popular committees," the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said.

The north Damascus neighborhood also came under tank fire by the army, the Britain-based group said.

The militiamen were brought in from the Esh al-Warwar district, which has a population mainly drawn from the same Alawite minority as President Bashar al-Assad, it added.

Most of the rebels are from Syria's Sunni Muslim majority.

In its third year, the conflict has grown increasingly sectarian, as Assad's regime has armed militia among the Alawites and other minority groups.

Analysts say the militia have better knowledge of the ground than the largely conscript army and are more adept at street fighting.

The White House said on Thursday that the Syrian government of President Bashar al-Assad has probably used chemical weapons on a small scale in the country's civil war, but insisted that President Barack Obama needed definitive proof before he would take action.

The disclosure created a quandary for Obama, who has set the use of chemical weapons as a "red line" that Assad must not cross, and triggered calls from some hawkish Washington lawmakers for a U.S. military response, which the president has resisted.

In a shift from a White House assessment just days earlier, U.S. officials said the intelligence community believed with "varying degrees of confidence" that the chemical nerve agent sarin was used by Assad's forces against rebel fighters. However, it noted that "the chain of custody is not clear."

The fighting across the country has forced more than 1 million people to flee their homes and seek refuge abroad. Millions have also been displaced inside Syria.

International aid agencies have been pleading for funds to help refugees in neighboring countries such as Jordan and Lebanon. They have also been asking the Syrian government to allow aid convoys into the country and facilitate access to the area inside cities and towns that have been affected by fighting.

Jordan's U.N. Ambassador Prince Zeid al Hussein sent a letter to the U.N. Security Council on Thursday, saying the increasing influx of Syrian refugees had sparked "a grave humanitarian situation" that threatens his country's security and stability. More than 500,000 Syrians have fled to Jordan since the conflict began.

The letter asks members to make a determination that the refugee influx, "if left unchecked and in the absence of the financial assistance required to enable Jordan to cope," constitutes a threat to international peace and security, a statement obtained by AP said. The letter asked the Security Council to invite Jordan to a private meeting on the issue and to visit Jordan as soon as possible.

26 Apr, 2013


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Source: http://english.alarabiya.net/en/News/middle-east/2013/04/26/Troops-backed-by-militia-battle-rebels-around-Damascus-.html
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