Signal, No Noise

September 7, 2010

Neo-Nazis Seek Foothold in Kindergartens

Filed under: Christianity,Europe,Germany,Religion,Western Europe — mungurk @ 18:41

Neo-Nazis Seek Foothold in Kindergartens

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Neo-Nazis at a demonstration in Halbe, eastern Germany.

Neo-Nazis at a demonstration in Halbe, eastern Germany.
An eastern German state is so worried about neo-Nazis trying to take over kindergartens that it has ordered teachers to vow allegiance to democracy. But that won’t tackle the underlying problem — the racist youths who assaulted immigrants in the 1990s are now parents intent on rearing little skinheads.
The government of the eastern German state of Mecklenburg Western-Pomerania took the unusual step last month of ordering anyone setting up a children’s day-care center to pledge their support for Germany’s democratic constitution. The move followed a number of cases in which neo-Nazis had tried to take over the running of a kindergarten, influence teaching in nurseries or get recruited as teachers.
“I am concerned that right-wing extremists could become managers of kindergartens,” said Manuela Schleswig, the state’s social affairs minister. Effective August 1, all managers setting up new nurseries or taking over existing ones in the state have been required to declare that they and their staff subscribe to the principles of democracy.
The announcement conjured up dark visions of neo-Nazi pied pipers teaching toddlers the Hitler salute. While such fears are exaggerated, and incidents have been isolated, anti-Nazi campaigners say they have indeed detected a new and disturbing phenomenon: the attempted indoctrination of young children by teachers and parents in the former communist east, which continues to grapple with a strong neo-Nazi presence even after more than a decade of government policies to counter the problem.
Schleswig’s decree followed a widely reported case in February when the village of Bartow in the northeast of the state almost permitted a father of seven to take over a kindergarten which had been on the verge of closing due to a lack of funds. The man had agreed to run it free of charge. When the mayor checked out his credentials, he found out that he was a member of the far-right National Democratic Party (NPD), which glorifies the Third Reich. He politely declined the offer.
Racist Books in Nurseries
Anti-racism activists say there has been a growing incidence of far-right members either training to be kindergarten carers or attempting to influence nurseries — for example parents bringing in racist books or demanding that photos of immigrant children be removed from the walls.
Concern is also growing that in some thinly populated regions there may be enough neo-Nazi parents to secure a majority on parent boards.
“Within the far-right scene there appears to be a more or less clear strategy to encourage young women to train for teaching and social work jobs because that offers an opportunity to spread nationalist ideology,” Heike Radvan, an educational scientist at the Berlin-based Amadeu Antonio Foundation, an anti-racism group, told SPIEGEL ONLINE.
“This is an observation we have made over the long term, and the trend seems to be increasing.”
An editorial in Deutsche Stimme (the German Voice), the newspaper of the NPD, published in April encouraged members to go into teaching to promote “nationalist education” for young Germans.
NPD spokesman Klaus Beier said on Tuesday that the party wasn’t actively lobbying its members to become kindergarten and nursery teachers. “But of course it is quite natural and normal that NPD members and sympathizers should want to get involved in these areas. Kindergartens and schools should be politically neutral but unfortunately they are being instrumentalized by left-wingers,” Beier told SPIEGEL ONLINE.
The party’s regional organisation in Mecklenburg said in a statement in July that efforts underway to counter far-right influence in kindergartens amounted to “politically correct brainwashing” of children. “The parents will find ways to prevent this kind of re-education,” the statement said.
Analysts doubt whether the neo-Nazi scene is pursuing a deliberate long-term indoctrination strategy. They say the debate about extremists in kindergartens is detracting from the far bigger problem of toddlers being influenced by their own far-right parents.
A New Generation
The youths who made international headlines by assaulting immigrants and asylum-seekers in the 1990s have had children, and are demanding a say in their education.
The prospect of a second generation of eastern neo-Nazis has dashed any lingering hopes that the upsurge in far-right support following German unification in 1990 might have been a temporary phenomenon caused by the collapse of the eastern economy and the resulting social upheaval and mass unemployment.
“A generation socialized in the far-right scene in the 1990s has now had children and we have to deal with the phenomenon of children of right-wing extremists in nurseries and schools,” Friedemann Bringt, who advises local authorities in the eastern state of Saxony on how to cope with far-right intimidation, told SPIEGEL ONLINE.
“Right-wing extremism has become embedded in eastern Germany since the 1990s and has a stable voter base.”
It is a depressing trend for anti-racism campaigners and government officials who have run programs to combat racism and neo-Nazism in the region since the 1990s.
Analysts said far-right views remain endemic in the east because decades of authoritarian rule until the fall of the Berlin Wall had made the region fertile ground for right-wing ideology. The problem was compounded by East Germany’s education system, which failed to instill a sense of national responsibility for the crimes of the Nazis.
“Far-right thinking is commonplace in many regions of eastern Germany and many people don’t view it as extremist,” Bernd Wagner, a prominent analyst of the far-right who co-founded EXIT, a group that helps neo-Nazis quit the scene, told SPIEGEL ONLINE.
“Many people — normal citizens, not just youths — view racial ideologies as common sense,” Wagner said. “The view that races are embroiled in a battle for survival is widespread. It’s social Darwinism. People view strangers as a potential threat that must be driven away.
An eastern German state is so worried about neo-Nazis trying to take over kindergartens that it has ordered teachers to vow allegiance to democracy. But that won’t tackle the underlying problem — the racist youths who assaulted immigrants in the 1990s are now parents intent on rearing little skinheads.
The government of the eastern German state of Mecklenburg Western-Pomerania took the unusual step last month of ordering anyone setting up a children’s day-care center to pledge their support for Germany’s democratic constitution. The move followed a number of cases in which neo-Nazis had tried to take over the running of a kindergarten, influence teaching in nurseries or get recruited as teachers.
“I am concerned that right-wing extremists could become managers of kindergartens,” said Manuela Schleswig, the state’s social affairs minister. Effective August 1, all managers setting up new nurseries or taking over existing ones in the state have been required to declare that they and their staff subscribe to the principles of democracy.The announcement conjured up dark visions of neo-Nazi pied pipers teaching toddlers the Hitler salute. While such fears are exaggerated, and incidents have been isolated, anti-Nazi campaigners say they have indeed detected a new and disturbing phenomenon: the attempted indoctrination of young children by teachers and parents in the former communist east, which continues to grapple with a strong neo-Nazi presence even after more than a decade of government policies to counter the problem.
Schleswig’s decree followed a widely reported case in February when the village of Bartow in the northeast of the state almost permitted a father of seven to take over a kindergarten which had been on the verge of closing due to a lack of funds. The man had agreed to run it free of charge. When the mayor checked out his credentials, he found out that he was a member of the far-right National Democratic Party (NPD), which glorifies the Third Reich. He politely declined the offer.
Racist Books in Nurseries
Anti-racism activists say there has been a growing incidence of far-right members either training to be kindergarten carers or attempting to influence nurseries — for example parents bringing in racist books or demanding that photos of immigrant children be removed from the walls.
Concern is also growing that in some thinly populated regions there may be enough neo-Nazi parents to secure a majority on parent boards.
“Within the far-right scene there appears to be a more or less clear strategy to encourage young women to train for teaching and social work jobs because that offers an opportunity to spread nationalist ideology,” Heike Radvan, an educational scientist at the Berlin-based Amadeu Antonio Foundation, an anti-racism group, told SPIEGEL ONLINE.
“This is an observation we have made over the long term, and the trend seems to be increasing.”
An editorial in Deutsche Stimme (the German Voice), the newspaper of the NPD, published in April encouraged members to go into teaching to promote “nationalist education” for young Germans.
NPD spokesman Klaus Beier said on Tuesday that the party wasn’t actively lobbying its members to become kindergarten and nursery teachers. “But of course it is quite natural and normal that NPD members and sympathizers should want to get involved in these areas. Kindergartens and schools should be politically neutral but unfortunately they are being instrumentalized by left-wingers,” Beier told SPIEGEL ONLINE.
The party’s regional organisation in Mecklenburg said in a statement in July that efforts underway to counter far-right influence in kindergartens amounted to “politically correct brainwashing” of children. “The parents will find ways to prevent this kind of re-education,” the statement said.
Analysts doubt whether the neo-Nazi scene is pursuing a deliberate long-term indoctrination strategy. They say the debate about extremists in kindergartens is detracting from the far bigger problem of toddlers being influenced by their own far-right parents.
A New Generation
The youths who made international headlines by assaulting immigrants and asylum-seekers in the 1990s have had children, and are demanding a say in their education.
The prospect of a second generation of eastern neo-Nazis has dashed any lingering hopes that the upsurge in far-right support following German unification in 1990 might have been a temporary phenomenon caused by the collapse of the eastern economy and the resulting social upheaval and mass unemployment.
“A generation socialized in the far-right scene in the 1990s has now had children and we have to deal with the phenomenon of children of right-wing extremists in nurseries and schools,” Friedemann Bringt, who advises local authorities in the eastern state of Saxony on how to cope with far-right intimidation, told SPIEGEL ONLINE.
“Right-wing extremism has become embedded in eastern Germany since the 1990s and has a stable voter base.”
It is a depressing trend for anti-racism campaigners and government officials who have run programs to combat racism and neo-Nazism in the region since the 1990s.
Analysts said far-right views remain endemic in the east because decades of authoritarian rule until the fall of the Berlin Wall had made the region fertile ground for right-wing ideology. The problem was compounded by East Germany’s education system, which failed to instill a sense of national responsibility for the crimes of the Nazis.”Far-right thinking is commonplace in many regions of eastern Germany and many people don’t view it as extremist,” Bernd Wagner, a prominent analyst of the far-right who co-founded EXIT, a group that helps neo-Nazis quit the scene, told SPIEGEL ONLINE.
“Many people — normal citizens, not just youths — view racial ideologies as common sense,” Wagner said. “The view that races are embroiled in a battle for survival is widespread. It’s social Darwinism. People view strangers as a potential threat that must be driven away.
Part 2: Teaching the Teachers
Activists say teachers need better training on how to spot far-right parents and how to counter any attempts by them to influence their work. The Amadeu Antonio Foundation, named after an Angolan immigrant who was murdered by neo-Nazis in the town of Eberswalde near Berlin in November 1990, is running a training course for teachers in the northeastern town of Ludwigslust.
“We show how to identify extremist parents by their clothing. Teachers need to know that they can set up a code of conduct for the nursery and simply evict parents who don’t stick to the rules,” Sandra Pingel-Schliemann, one of the project’s coaches, told SPIEGEL ONLINE.
“We get reports of constant confrontation with far-right people in some nurseries. One has to ask oneself what happens in the minds of little children who grow up with an ideology of hatred at home and then come to the nursery where they are taught exactly the opposite.
“We have noticed that the children of far-right parents tend to be very uncommunicative. When you ask them on a Monday what they did that weekend they won’t tell you.”
Swastika Cakes and Kids Called ‘Odin’
In some cases far-right parents can be identified by the Nordic names they call their children. “Some parents bring in children and say their child is called ‘Odin’ or ‘Heil Odin,’ says Heike Radvan, the education scientist. Nordic mythology is popular with Nazis and “Odin” is the name of one of its main gods.
Radvan also said she had heard of one mother who opposed a school calling itself “School Without Racism” and posted a recipe for a swastika-shaped cake on her home page.
Some parents try to curry favor with nurseries by providing unpaid help. “There are cases where mothers in a first step get involved in the nursery, for example by helping to build a playground,” said Radvan. “But then it becomes clear that they’re trying to bring in ideology. They may bring in a racist children’s book, for example. Or they might argue that a picture should be removed from the wall because it shows an immigrant child.”
Eastern Germany has been dogged by right-wing extremism ever since the fall of the Berlin Wall. Attacks on Jewish property and racist assaults on ethnic minorities are still commonplace in the region.
Assaults on people of dark skin color have become so frequent that immigrant groups have labelled parts of the east as “no-go areas”. Police recorded 891 far-right assaults in Germany in 2009, of which 351 were deemed racist and a further 31 anti-Semitic, according to the 2009 report of domestic intelligence service, the Office for the Protection of the Constitution (BfV). The statistics show that on a per capita basis, the incidence of attacks is highest in eastern regions.
The total of recorded far-right crimes in 2009 was 18,750, including offenses such as arson, daubing swastikas on headstones in Jewish cemeteries or smashing the windows of takeaway restaurants run by immigrants.
The NPD openly espouses Nazi ideology but also benefits from Germany’s liberal laws on freedom of speech and is a legitimate party — despite a failed attempt in the past by the federal government to ban it — which entitles it to public funding.
The Office for the Protection of the Constitution describes its as a “racist, anti-Semitic, revisionist” party bent on removing democracy and forming a Fourth Reich. It has seats in the regional parliaments of Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania and Saxony.
‘Time to Tackle the Parents’
So far none of Germany’s 15 other regional states has said it plans to issue a similar decree ordering nursery operators to sign up to the constitution. And several anti-racism campaigners said it wouldn’t help.
“I think it’s nonsense and totally exaggerated to respond by issuing such a rule,” said Wagner, the former police officer who co-founded EXIT. “It won’t have any impact because any NPD member would simply sign a pledge to the democratic constitution.
“Besides, what about the far-right parents who bring their children to the nursery? We urgently needed to address the welfare of children who grow up in such families and find out what scope local authorities have to deal with that.”
But amid all the gloom, there are some rays of hope, said Bringt, the anti-Nazi campaigner who runs an advice center in Dresden.
“I’ve got a positive feeling because we here in Saxony have launched some 120 pro-democracy initiatives over the last 10 years. That’s how I measure success. Victims of neo-Nazis know now that there are advice centers they can go to. And local authorities have set up structures for tackling the problem. But it’s a phenomenon that will take a very long time to combat.”

September 6, 2010

Switzerland Confidential: Behold the Legal Sex Drive-Thru

Filed under: Europe,Switzerland,Western Europe — mungurk @ 09:53

source

Switzerland Confidential: Behold the Legal Sex Drive-Thru

By: ALLIE TOWNSEND

article-1282829071578-0AEC6CB6000005DC-189186_636x331

It looks like police in Zurich are subscribing to the “if you can’t beat them, build them little huts to do the nasty in” theory of prostitution control. Only in Europe.

Prostitution has become such a problem in Switzerland that Zurich officials have made proposals to add “sex boxes” to the city. The idea itself is adopted from German cities like Essen and Cologne, and will be a way for prostitution to continue on behind closed, uh, doors.

The boxes will serve as quickie drive-throughs, so-to-speak, and will free up city streets from unsightly acts that haunt Zurich residents whose homes overlook the city’s red light district. “They get up to all sorts in broad daylight – and we’re sick to death of looking at it,” one resident told the U.K.’s Metro. (Silvio Berlusconi and the Politics of Sex)

From the looks of things, the boxes are big enough to conceal vehicles while prostitutes and clients handle business, away from the public eye.

This somewhat laissez faire approach to Swiss sex industry control even comes an official police endorsement: “We can’t get rid of prostitution, so have to learn how to control it,” Police spokesman Reto Casanova said.

Read more: http://newsfeed.time.com/2010/08/30/switzerland-confidential-behold-the-legal-sex-drive-thru/?hpt=T2#ixzz0ykzrQlfu

August 29, 2010

Led by Germany, Manufacturing in Europe Is Stronger Than Expected

Filed under: Economy,Europe,Germany,Western Europe — mungurk @ 19:18

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PARIS — Euro zone manufacturers met with unexpectedly strong demand for industrial goods in June, a report showed Tuesday, suggesting Germany’s export-driven factories will continue to strengthen output — even as the American economy slows and fears linger that the debt crisis could return to hamper the Continent’s recovery.

Eurostat reported from Luxembourg that industrial new orders in the 16 countries sharing the euro rose 2.5 percent in June from May, and 22.6 percent from June 2009. Excluding the volatile transportation-related sector, orders grew 1.6 percent from May. Demand for capital goods was the largest component of the increase, rising 5.3 percent in June.

Economists surveyed by Bloomberg News had expected overall June orders to rise about 1.5 percent.

The report came as the German government said gross domestic product expanded 2.2 percent in the second quarter from the first quarter, confirming its earlier estimate, showing growth well above its European peers and the fastest pace of expansion since East and West Germany were reunified in 1990.

German exports rose 8.2 percent in the quarter, aided by the 12 percent decline in the euro against the dollar this year. That juggernaut performance helped the overall euro area economy to grow by 1 percent in the second quarter, Eurostat, the European Union’s statistics office, said Aug. 13, the fastest in four years.

“The upswing in Germany has much more solid basis than people thought,” Ralph Solveen, an economist at Commerzbank in Frankfurt, said. Overseas demand is still the main driver, he said, but investment in machinery and equipment has also risen, and even private consumption — which rose 0.6 percent for its first gain in a year — “is looking a little better.”

“There’s a good chance that we’ll see an ongoing recovery of the German economy,” Mr. Solveen said, “but we can’t be sure that will be true for all of Europe.

“And the pace of growth will likely slow, because what we’ve seen was at least partly a countermovement to the sharp drop after the Lehman Brothers shock, which might now run out,” he added, referring to the bankruptcy of the investment bank in September 2008 that is widely thought to have exacerbated the global financial crisis.

In the factory report, Eurostat also revised upward May’s figure to show a 4.1 percent rise from April, compared with the 3.8 percent rise it previously reported.

The data, which are seen as a leading indicator because they refer to orders received but not completed, added to the picture of a relatively solid economy, in line with Markit’s euro zone flash composite purchasing managers’ index Monday that showed services and manufacturing activity at 56.1 in August, down from 56.7 in July, but still above 50, the dividing line between growth and contraction.

The German Federal Statistics Office also reported Tuesday that the government deficit had reached 3.5 percent of G.D.P. in the first six months, above the 3 percent limit dictated by the so-called Maastricht criteria for membership in the euro.

While investors have little doubt that Chancellor Angela Merkel’s government, which projects the deficit will rise to 4.5 percent of G.D.P. this year, can handle its spending, the announcement served as a reminder of the precarious state of public finances across the Continent.

Like other European governments, Germany has said it will move aggressively to cut the gap, even at the risk that doing so will weigh on growth.

The debt concerns, which were partly allayed in May after aggressive intervention by European leaders and by the European Central Bank, have continued to simmer throughout the summer.

The yield on Greek 10-year government bonds has climbed back to around 10.9 percent, despite central bank purchases on the secondary market; that is down from the May 7 peak of 12.4 percent, but shows steady upward movement since their recent low of 6.1 percent on March 17.

German bond yields, on the other hand, fell to new lows. The 10-year bund fell to 2.18 percent from 2.28 Monday.

Mr. Solveen attributed the move to fears that the United States might fall back intorecession and expectations that major central banks would keep rates at ultralow levels for some time.

He said the main risks to the European economy were external, the possibility that Asian growth would slow substantially or that the United States would enter a double-dip recession. While the sovereign debt issue remains on the minds of investors, Mr. Solveen said, it was probable that it would remain subdued for the rest of this year.

One prominent economist, the Nobel laureate Joseph Stiglitz, argued Tuesday in a radio interview that the focus on deficit reduction was exaggeratedly counterproductive.

“Cutting back willy-nilly on high-return investments just to make the picture of the deficit look better is really foolish,” Bloomberg News quoted Mr. Stiglitz as telling RTE radio in Ireland.

“Because so many in Europe are focusing on the 3 percent artificial number, which has no reality and is just looking at one side of a balance sheet, Europe is at risk of going into a double-dip,” Mr. Stiglitz said.

August 24, 2010

German man faces terrorism charges in US plot

source

BERLIN—German prosecutors say they have charged a man with membership in a group that plotted to attack U.S. targets in the European country.

Prosecutors announced Monday the man identified only as Salih S. was charged Aug. 12 with supporting a terrorist organization and membership in a terrorist organization.

They say the German citizen is alleged to be a member of the radical Islamic Jihad Union who trained at a terrorist camp in Pakistan. He was first arrested in 2008 in Turkey and extradited in July.

Salih S. is accused of procuring GPS devices, night vision goggles and other items for Adem Yilmaz

Yilmaz was convicted with three others earlier this year of plotting a thwarted attack that a judge said could have killed large numbers of U.S. soldiers and civilians.

Copyright 2010 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

August 18, 2010

Venezuela’s Communists want ‘Carlos the Jackal’ repatriated

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CARACAS, Venezuela | Venezuela’s Communist Party has urged the government to seek the repatriation of convicted terrorist “Carlos the Jackal,” who is serving a life sentence in France for murder.

Party representative Pedro Eusse said President Hugo Chavez’s administration should ask France to let “Carlos” serve the remainder of his sentence in his homeland.

The Venezuelan-born prisoner, whose real name is Ilich Ramirez Sanchez, is not getting adequate health care in France, and authorities there are denying his right to communicate with lawyers, Mr. Eusse charged.

“They have violated his human rights, he’s been incommunicado,” he said at a news conference on Monday.

Mr. Eusse described Ramirez’s health as “delicate,” without giving any details.

There was no immediate comment from France’s government about Mr. Eusse’s charges or from officials in Mr. Chavez’s administration on the Communist Party’s petition.

Ramirez is serving a life sentence for the 1975 murders in Paris of two French investigators and Michel Moukharbal, a Lebanese man who was an informant for the French government.

He also has been blamed for a series of Cold War-era bombings, assassinations and hostage dramas, including the 1976 hijacking of an Air France jet en route to Uganda.

He has testified that he led a 1975 attack that killed three people at the headquarters of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries in Vienna, Austria. Venezuela’s then-Oil Minister Valentin Hernandez Acosta was one of the 70 hostages seized by the attackers and later freed in Algeria.

Ramirez was captured in Khartoum, Sudan, in 1994 and hauled in a sack to Paris by French secret service agents. Venezuela’s government has questioned whether Ramirez’s rights were violated when he was abducted and whisked away to France.

It wasn’t known how Mr. Chavez’s administration would react to the Communist Party’s petition. Telephone calls to Venezuela’s Foreign Ministry seeking comment from government officials went unanswered.

Mr. Chavez has praised Ramirez in the past as a “revolutionary fighter,” saying he selflessly joined the Palestinian struggle as a member of the Palestine Liberation Organization. The comment raised concerns among Jewish groups such as the Simon Wiesenthal Center, which said Mr. Chavez condoned terrorism by eulogizing Ramirez.

March 29, 2010

Armed Gang Raids Swiss Casino

Filed under: Europe,Piracy,Switzerland,Terrorism,Western Europe — mungurk @ 11:30

source

PARIS

March 30, 2010

French and Swiss police are hunting an armed gang that stormed a Basel casino and forced open cash desks before fleeing with hundreds of thousands of Swiss francs.

The raid was carried out on Sunday at the city’s Grand Casino by about 10 masked raiders armed with machine guns and pistols.

After one man burst through the front entrance with a sledgehammer, his accomplices ran inside and ordered guests to the floor while firing into the air. ”The criminals fired a number of shots, but luckily no one was hit,” the Basel public prosecutor said.

The gang sped off across the border in two cars. The Grand Casino is 200 metres from the French border. Witnesses said the gang members had spoken French.

December 10, 2009

Terror charges for man in Germany over US targets

Filed under: Europe,Germany,Terrorism,Western Europe — mungurk @ 08:32

source

Wed Dec 9, 6:55 am ET

BERLIN – Germany has filed terrorism charges against a Turkish-German dual citizen allegedly linked to a member of a cell that plotted to attack U.S. targets, prosecutors said Wednesday.

The 24-year-old, identified only as Kadir T. in line with German privacy laws, was charged with supporting a foreign terrorist organization and violating export laws, federal prosecutors said.

The suspect, who was arrested in August, regularly attended meetings of a group centering around Adem Yilmaz, who used them to recruit candidates for the radical Islamic Jihad Union, prosecutors said.

In 2007, authorities foiled alleged plans by the Islamic Jihad Union to attack U.S. targets in Germany. Yilmaz, a Turk living in Germany, is on trial over the plans. Kadir T. was not charged in that plot.

Prosecutors said that in July 2007, Kadir T. bought a video camera and a night-vision device for the Islamic Jihad Union on orders from Yilmaz, who had them sent to members of the group in the Waziristan region, in the Afghanistan-Pakistan border area.

There was no immediate word on when a trial might start. The charges were filed Nov. 20 at a Frankfurt court.

Germany to set up centre to coordinate fight against botnets

Filed under: Cyberspace,Europe,Germany,Western Europe — mungurk @ 08:25

source

8 December 2009, 16:32

In 2010 the German government is planning to pick up the fight against infected home computers. In the first half of next year it plans to set up an advisory centre which will help users purge their computers of viruses and bots. The idea, jointly developed by the Federal Office for Information Security (BSI) and the Association of the German Internet Industry (eco), is based on the premise that internet service providers (ISPs) have long had the technical capability to identify infected computers by analysing network traffic. The project was officially announced by BSI and eco at today’s fourth national IT summit in Stuttgart.

According to the plan, ISPs will contact customers whose PCs are infected with a bot, possibly by post or by telephone. The plan also contemplates having infected computers automatically connect to a special web page each time they connect to the internet. Before the plans are implemented, however, a decision needs to be made on what sanctions customers who decline to cooperate with their ISP can be subjected to. According to an eco project manager, quoted by the dpa, “Anyone surfing without proper anti-virus software is endangering other web users, in the same way that a car driver driving with faulty brakes is endangering other road users.”

Germany has the third highest number of infected computers in the world. According to the BSI, the objective of the project, which is unique in Europe, is to get Germany out of the top ten originating countries for cybercriminality. Broadband providers will be expected to encourage their customers to use the new service, which should be provided free of charge. The service is, however, likely to be offered free only to customers authorised by their ISP. According to the project organisers, negotiations with broadband providers are already making excellent progress. The project planners estimate that up to a quarter of all computers in Germany are infected with viruses, with 60,000 new infections per month.

At the heart of the countrywide advisory service will be a call centre employing around 40 staff. Users with infected computers will first, however, be directed to a website hosting software for removing viruses from infected systems. If this first approach fails, ISPs will then provide customers with a code for accessing telephone support from anti-virus experts who will aid users in finding and eliminating malware. No official estimate of the likely cost of the project has been made.

There is also a question mark over the legality of ISPs inspecting customers’ network traffic. According to section 202b of the German Criminal Code, interception of information is illegal. Section 88 of the German Telecommunications Act also states that transmitted content must be treated as confidential. The third clause of this same section does, however, add that operators of telecommunications services may obtain information on content where this is required to protect their technical systems. A high network load due to a bot-launched spam wave could therefore be permissible grounds for examining a user’s traffic. Accusations of spying and censorship are sure to be forthcoming – particularly if, for instance, plans were to be introduced for ISPs to check that customers have anti-virus software installed on their computers. It would therefore be better to convince users who have previously failed to implement security measures on their PCs of the utility of the campaign and allow them to explicitly approve filtering measures.

The concept is nothing new. 1&1 launched a similar project, which informed users if their computers were infected, earlier this year. According to Thomas Plünnecke, spokesman for 1&1, the company employs more than 40 people involved in countering internet abuse working in three teams. The abuse department analyses around 2.5 million emails per month for indications of potential problems. Since the initiative was launched in February, almost 50,000 customers have been informed that their computer is infected with a virus or trojan.

Today’s announcement of a government-backed centre to combat viruses looks like testimony to the project’s success. Plünnecke reckons that 1&1 has played a major role in inspiring the centre.

The Australian Internet Industry Association (IIA) published draft guidelines on requiring ISPs to block bot-infected computers several months ago. More than 60 ISPs are reported to now be following these guidelines. It can only be hoped that the BSI-eco project does not end up seeing one in four Germans, or more, cut adrift from the web in 2010.

See also:

(crve)

December 9, 2009

Botnets threaten German economic development

Filed under: Cyberspace,Europe,Germany,Western Europe — mungurk @ 11:02

source

Government and industry leaders want to see Germany out of the 10 countries most infected by botnets. They announced new programs to combat the malicious and clandestine computer software.

Germany’s position as a technological leader needs to be improved – that was the tenor of statements made Tuesday at the fourth annual IT Summit in Stuttgart.

In fact, according to a government-funded survey by TNS Infratest announced at the summit, Germany tied with Norway for seventh place in a ranking of 15 nations in their competitiveness in the information and communications technology sector. The United States ranked first.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel, who attended the summit, concluded: “We’re not defeated worldwide, but we’re also not number one,” she said.

One of the prequisites for enabling Germany to move out of its mediocre position is a secure and complete network of broadband Internet access, experts said.

“We can be successful through achievements in the IT sector,” Economics Minister Rainer Bruederle said, noting that the expansion of broadband access would also create more jobs.

Bruederle said investments of 40 billion euros ($59 billion) by companies and the government into the comprehensive broadband project were necessary, adding that investments could yield up to one million jobs in all affected branches in Europe by 2020.

“We want to create more jobs with information and communication technology than are being lost in the rest of the economy,” he said.

The Federation of German Industries estimated that the creation of comprehensive broadband internet access could result in 400,000 jobs in the country by the end of 2014.

Internet security

Combating networks of malicious and clandestine programs must be another priority, experts at the summit said. The so-called “botnets” harness the power of many infected computers and use them to spread junk mail and illegal programs.

Germany is the third most infected country worldwide.

A public-private partnership announced at the summit will establish a self-help web site designed to help clean botnet-infected computers, and a call center will provide technical advice. The web site is scheduled to be launched by April, and the call center by June.

Similar programs have proved effective in Australia, Japan and South Korea.

Cooperation needed to combat botnets

Internet security remains vital to the growth of the IT sector, and the threat from botnets can only be combated through cooperation between government, industry and the public, experts said.

An estimated quarter of all German computers are infected with botnet software, with some 60,000 new infections occuring each month.

The proposed call center will be a last-resort option for users who have failed to solve the problem after working with their Internet providers and the self-help web site to remove a botnet infection.

Professor Michael Retort, chairman of the Association of the German Internet Industry, said the new public-private partnership would give internet providers and users an opportunity to protect themselves. He compared using the Internet with an infected computer to driving a car with faulty breaks.

“When a provider says a customer’s computer is infected and offers help, then the customer should accept that help. Otherwise he becomes a danger to others,” he told Deutsche Welle.

“Indirectly this presents a substantial danger to internet providers. A goal of the program is for citizens to understand they are responsible for their computers.”

Updated IT could reduce greenhouse gases

With the United Nations Climate Change Conference underway in Copenhagen, Stuttgart’s IT Summit also included an environmental component.

“People sometimes do not realize how much energy is consumed in this area,” said Chancellor Merkel, referring to the IT sector.

Advanced communication technology and intelligent software could help Germany reduce up to 25 percent of its CO2 emissions by 2020, according to a study released in Stuttgart by companies including Deutsche Telekom, SAP and Siemens.

The study was based on data assuming Germany’s CO2 output continues its current trajectory with no new mitigation efforts. While the information and communication technology branch contributed only 2 percent of German CO2 emissions in 2007, it steers sectors such as logistics, electricity production and industry.

Skeptics, however, said that communication technologies have helped contribute to the emissions problem.

Germany wants to reduce its CO2 output 40 percent by 2020 in comparison to 1990′s levels.

Author: Gerhard Schneibel
Editor: Louisa Schaefer

November 16, 2009

U.S. alert over German al Qaeda threat

Filed under: Americas,Europe,Germany,North America,Terrorism,USA,Western Europe — mungurk @ 08:48

source

Berlin, Germany (CNN) — U.S. officials extended a travel alert in Germany and urged Americans to remain wary after terrorist organization al Qaeda posted messages in recent months threatening attacks in the country.

The alert issued Thursday will remain in effect until February 10. It replaces one issued in September that expired Wednesday, a news statement said.

It urged Americans in Germany to keep up with news reports and to consider the security procedures in place when they visit hotels, restaurants, and other entertainment and recreation venues.

“Over the past few months, al Qaeda has released videos threatening to conduct terrorist attacks against German interests,” the statement said. “While these threats initially mentioned the German federal elections in September, al Qaeda continues to threaten Germany.”

Germany is investigating all threats, the U.S. State Department said.

The German interior ministry said in September that it had noted an increase in threats by al Qaeda and other Islamist groups since the beginning of the year.

Al Qaeda posted a video threat online on September 18, vowing attacks if federal elections in Germany on September 27 didn’t go its way.

The speaker in the video repeatedly criticized German Chancellor Angela Merkel — who was re-elected — and her support of the Iraq and Afghanistan wars.

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