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

source

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

September 2, 2010

Catholic Church defends male-only priesthood

Filed under: Britain,Christianity,Europe,Northern Europe,Religion — mungurk @ 06:19

source

Catholic Church defends male-only priesthood

Barring women from being Catholic priests is not the result of sexism 2,000 years ago, it’s because women cannot fulfill a basic function of the priesthood, “standing in the place of Jesus,” a leading British Catholic thinker argued Monday.

“This teaching is not at all a judgment on women’s abilities or rights. It says something about the specific role of the priest in Catholic understanding – which is to represent Jesus, to stand in his place,” argued Father Stephen Wang in a statement sent out by the Catholic Bishops Conference of England and Wales.

It’s rare for the Catholic Church to defend its fundamental positions in this way.

Wang was responding to the announcement that campaigners for female priests will plaster posters on London buses next month during the pope’s visit to London.

The ads read “Pope Benedict – Ordain Women Now!” and will be on 15 double-decker buses running in some of London’s main tourist areas, including Parliament and Oxford Street, said Pat Brown, a spokeswoman for Catholic Women’s Ordination (CWO).

The group spent “in excess of 10,000 pounds” ($15,500) on the ads and is hoping donations will help make up at least part of that cost, Brown told CNN Friday.

Wang rejected both the tone and the content of the ads, saying that while an atheist ad campaign last year was “hesitant and ended with gentle exhortations,” this one ends “with a shout.”

And it’s based on a fundamental misunderstanding, said Wang, the dean of studies at London’s main seminary for Catholic priests, Allen Hall.

Pope John Paul II declared in 1994 that the church has no authority to ordain women, a position confirmed a year later by Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, who is now Pope Benedict XVI. At the time, Ratzinger was the head of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, the arbiter of Catholic Church dogma.

Wang called the late pope’s position “surprising,” saying John Paul had meant he did not have the power to change “something that has been such a fundamental part of Christian identity from the beginning.”

The bottom line is that Jesus chose 12 men – and no women – to be his apostles, Wang argues.

The choice was “deliberate and significant, not just for that first period of history, but for every age,” Wang says.

Men and women are equal in Christianity, he continues, but “this does not mean that our sexual identity as men and women is interchangeable. Gender is not just an accident.”

He compared the role of a priest to that of an actor playing King Arthur or British soccer star Wayne Rooney in a movie.

“No one would be surprised if I said I wanted a male actor to play the lead,” he said, admitting the analogy was “weak.”

But, he said, “it shouldn’t surprise us if we expect a man to stand ‘in the person of Christ’ as a priest, to represent Jesus in his humanity – a humanity that is not sexually neutral.”

The Catholic women’s group says that in addition to its bus campaign, it plans to hold a vigil September 15, the day before the pope’s visit, outside Westminster Cathedral.

The group also plans to demonstrate at Lambeth Palace, the official London residence of the Archbishop of Canterbury – the head of the Church of England – during his meeting with the pope.

And members plan to hold a banner along the route of the popemobile, the secure vehicle which carries the pope, in London.

Pope Benedict plans to visit England and Scotland September 16-19. It will be the first state visit to the United Kingdom by a pope, according to the British Foreign Office. John Paul’s trip in 1982 was officially a pastoral visit.

CNN’s Richard Allen Greene and Melissa Gray contributed to this report.

August 29, 2010

Led by Germany, Manufacturing in Europe Is Stronger Than Expected

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

source

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

Catholic Church, U.K. govt in bomb cover-up: Report

Filed under: Britain,Christianity,Europe,Northern Europe,Religion,Terrorism — mungurk @ 16:55

source

Catholic Church, U.K. govt in bomb cover-up: Report

CLAUDY, Northern Ireland – The U.K. government, the police and the Catholic Church colluded to protect a priest suspected of involvement in a 1972 bombing in Northern Ireland that killed 9 people, a report said on Tuesday.
The Police Ombudsman’s eight-year probe revealed a cardinal was involved in moving Father James Chesney out of British-ruled Northern Ireland, highlighting anew the way the Church hierarchy shielded priests from allegations of criminal activity.
The inquiry showed former Secretary of State for Northern Ireland William Whitelaw had a private meeting with Cardinal William Conway, the head of the Catholic Church in Ireland, in which they discussed the possibility of transferring Chesney.
“I accept that 1972 was one of the worst years of the ‘Troubles’ and that the arrest of a priest might well have aggravated the security situation,” Police Ombudsman Al Hutchinson said. But “the decision failed those who were murdered, injured and bereaved in the bombing.”
No one was ever charged or convicted for the triple car bomb attack on the rural village of Claudy. Those killed included a 9-year-old girl and two teenage boys.
Chesney, a priest in a neighbouring parish, always denied any involvement, though the police had intelligence that he was the South Derry leader of republican guerrilla group, the IRA, and a sniffer dog found traces of explosive in his car when he was stopped at a checkpoint in September 1972. He died in 1980.
The current head of the Catholic Church in Ireland, who has been under pressure to resign over his role in concealing sex abuse cases, denied the Church took part in a cover-up.
“He (Cardinal Conway) was faced with an impossible situation but his primary consideration would be the prevention of any further acts of violence,” said Cardinal Sean Brady.
One of the relatives of those killed told reporters that she had been told the priest had continued his IRA activities after being transferred to Donegal in the Irish Republic in 1973.
“This is an absolute disgrace. It is an absolute outrage,” said Tracey Deans, whose grandfather was killed. “I would like to know how many more people suffered because of him.”
“A VERY BAD MAN”
July 1972 was the bloodiest month in the bloodiest year of three decades of conflict in Northern Ireland and the Claudy bombings came six months after British soldiers shot dead 13 unarmed civilians in a civil rights march in Londonderry.
A photograph of a Catholic priest waving a blood-stained handkerchief in front of a fatally wounded marcher being carried through the city was the defining image of “Bloody Sunday.”
The police may have feared that arresting a priest over the Claudy attack could have triggered a fierce backlash among Northern Ireland’s minority Catholic population.
The British government made an historic apology two months ago for “Bloody Sunday” and the Secretary of State for Northern Ireland, Owen Paterson, said on Tuesday he was “profoundly sorry” that the victims of Claudy had been denied justice.
Calls for a South African-style truth commission into the decades-long conflict is unlikely given the still shaky concord between groups that want to keep Northern Ireland part of Britain and those that want a united Ireland.
A senior police officer wrote in Nov. 1972 that, rather than arrest Chesney, “our masters may find it possible to bring the subject into any conversations they may be having with the Cardinal or Bishops at some future date . . . “
Conway’s protection of Chesney echoed action by the Catholic Church to shield priests from allegations of child sex abuse.
Scandals over the abuse and the cover-ups have helped topple the Church from its once dominant position in Irish life.
The key police officers in the Claudy bombing are now dead but the ombudsman said that had they been alive their actions would have been investigated.

© Copyright (c) Reuters

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.

Hacker’s Arrest Offers Glimpse Into Crime in Russia

Filed under: Eastern Europe,Europe,Financial Crimes,Russia — mungurk @ 09:19

source
By ANDREW E. KRAMER
Published: August 23, 2010

MOSCOW — On the Internet, he was known as BadB, a disembodied criminal flitting from one server to another selling stolen credit card numbers despite being pursued by the United States Secret Service.

And in real life, he was nearly as untouchable — because he lived inRussia.

BadB’s real name is Vladislav A. Horohorin, according to a statementreleased last week by the United States Justice Department, and he was a resident of Moscow before his arrest by the police in France during a trip to that country earlier this month.

He is expected to appear soon before a French court that will decide on his potential extradition to the United States, where Mr. Horohorin could face up to 12 years in prison and a fine of $500,000 if he is convicted on charges of fraud and identity theft. For at least nine months, however, he lived openly in Moscow as one of the world’s most wanted computer criminals.

The seizing of BadB provides a lens onto the shadowy world of Russian hackers, the often well-educated and sometimes darkly ingenious programmers who pose a recognized security threat to online commerce — besides being global spam nuisances — who often seem to operate with relative impunity.

Law enforcement groups in Russia have been reluctant to pursue these talented authors of Internet fraud, for reasons, security experts say, of incompetence, corruption or national pride. In this environment, BadB’s network arose as “one of the most sophisticated organizations of online financial criminals in the world,” according to a statement issued by Michael P. Merritt, the assistant director of investigations for the Secret Service, which pursues counterfeiting and some electronic financial fraud.

As long ago as November 2009, the United States attorney’s office in Washington, in a sealed indictment, identified BadB as Mr. Horohorin, a 27-year-old residing in Moscow with dual Ukrainian and Israeli citizenship.

But it was not until Aug. 7 this year that Mr. Horohorin, who was traveling from Russia to France, was detained on a warrant from the United States as he boarded a plane to return to Russia at an airport in Nice, in southern France.

The Secret Service released a statement on Aug. 11, when the indictment was unsealed. Max Milien, a Secret Service spokesman in Washington, said the agency could not comment about the decision to arrest Mr. Horohorin in France.

Olga K. Shklyarova, spokeswoman for the Russian bureau of Interpol, said no American law enforcement agency had requested Mr. Horohorin’s arrest in her country. “We never received such a request,” she said by telephone.

According to the Secret Service statement, Mr. Horohorin managed Web sites for hackers who were able to steal large numbers of credit card numbers that were sold online anonymously around the globe. Those buyers would do the more dangerous work of running up fraudulent bills.

The numbers were exchanged on Web sites called CarderPlanet — carder.su and badb.biz— according to the Secret Service, and payment was made indirectly through accounts at a Russian online settlement system known as Webmoney, an analogue to PayPal.

Underscoring the nationalistic tone of much of Russian computer crime, one site featured a cartoon of the Russian prime minister, Vladimir V. Putin, awarding medals to Russian hackers. “We awaiting you to fight the imperialism of the U.S.A.” the site said, in approximate English.

Mr. Horohorin lived openly in Moscow. As a foreign citizen, he registered with the police, according to Dmitri Zakharov, a spokesman for the Russian Association of Electronic Communication, an industry lobby for legitimate Russian Internet businesses, who cited a database of such registries.

A phone number for Mr. Horohorin was out of service Thursday.

Arrests in Russia for computer crimes are rare, even when hackers living in Russia have been publicly identified by outside groups, like Spamhaus, a nonprofit group in Geneva and in London that tracks sources of spam.

The F.B.I. in 2002 resorted to luring a Russian suspect, Vasily Gorshkov, to the United States with a fake offer of a job interview (with a fictitious Internet company called Invita), rather than ask the Russian police for help. To obtain evidence in the case, F.B.I. computer experts had hacked into Mr. Gorshkov’s computer in Russia. When this was revealed, Russian authorities expressed anger that the F.B.I. had resorted to a cross-border tactic.

Online fraud is not a high priority for the Russian police, Mr. Zakharov said, because most of it is aimed at computer users in Europe or the United States. “This is a main reason why spammers are not arrested,” he said.

Politics may also play a role. Vladimir Sokolov, deputy director of the Institute of Information Security, a Russian research organization, said the United States and Russia were still at odds on basic issues of computer security, although the differences were narrowing.

The United States tends to view computer security as a law enforcement matter. Russia has pushed for an international treaty that would regulate the use of online weapons by military or espionage agencies. Last year the United States opened talks on a treaty, but it has continued to press for closer law enforcement cooperation, Mr. Sokolov said.

Computer security researchers have raised a more sinister prospect: that criminal spamming gangs have been co-opted by the intelligence agencies in Russia, which provide cover for their activities in exchange for the criminals’ expertise or for allowing their networks of virus-infected computers to be used for political purposes — to crash dissident Web sites, perhaps.

Sometimes, the collateral damage for online business is immediate. A year ago, for example, hackers used a network of infected computers to direct huge amounts of junk traffic at the social networking accounts of a 34-year-old political blogger in Georgia, a country that fought a war with Russia in 2008. The attack, though, spun out of control and briefly crashed the global service of Twitter and slowed Facebook and LiveJournal, affecting tens of millions of computer users worldwide.

The Russian authorities have repeatedly denied that the state has any connection to such attacks.

Spamhaus says 7 of the top 10 spammers in the world are based in the former Soviet Union, in Ukraine, Russia and Estonia.

More ominously, Western law enforcement agencies have traced a code intended for breaking into banking sites to Russian programming.

In 2007, Swedish experts identified a Russian hacker known only by his colorful sobriquet — the Corpse — as the author of a virus that logged keystrokes on personal computers to capture passwords for Nordea, a Swedish bank, and the accounts were drained of about $1 million.

For a time, these rogue programs were openly for sale on a Russian Web site. The home page displayed an illustration of Lenin making a rude gesture.

Since Mr. Horohorin’s arrest, the badb.biz Web site has gone dark. But through Monday, at least, its CarderPlanet counterpart, the Russian site carder.su, was still open for business.

August 18, 2010

Venezuela’s Communists want ‘Carlos the Jackal’ repatriated

source

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.

August 17, 2010

Australia’s Gillard backs republic after Queen’s death

Filed under: Australia,Britain,Europe,Northern Europe,Oceania — mungurk @ 08:41

source

Australia’s Gillard backs republic after Queen’s death

17 August 2010 Last updated at 03:10 ET

Australia should become a republic when Queen Elizabeth II dies, Prime Minister Julia Gillard has said just days ahead of a general election.

Welsh-born Ms Gillard said the Queen’s death would be an “appropriate point” for Australia to move away from having a British monarch as head of state.

Australians voted against becoming a republic in a 1999 referendum, but the issue continues to be divisive.

Ms Gillard’s main opponent, Tony Abbott, is a staunch monarchist.

Up until now the question of an Australian republic has hardly featured in this election campaign.

The BBC’s Nick Bryant in Sydney says even in this strongly patriotic country it is not considered an urgent national priority and Julia Gillard has indicated it won’t become one for her Labor government while the Queen is on the throne.

Ms Gillard is a republican herself but says there is deep affection for the 84-year-old monarch whom she wished a long and healthy life.

Ms Gillard said that the appropriate time for Australia to move towards a republic was when there was a change in monarch, even if that didn’t happen for another decade or more.

Suicide Bomber Attacks Police in North Caucasus

Filed under: Eastern Europe,Europe,Russia,Terrorism — mungurk @ 08:39

source

Suicide Bomber Attacks Police in North Caucasus

By MICHAEL SCHWIRTZ
Published: August 17, 2010

MOSCOW — A suicide attack on a police checkpoint in Russia’s violence-plagued North Caucasus region on Tuesday killed at least one officer and injured several others, according to Russian news reports.

The attack occurred in North Ossetia, a mostly Christian region of the North Caucasus, where violence in recent years has been rare. Suicide bombings and other violence against police and government officials occur frequently in the majority-Muslim regions of the North Caucasus, which includes Chechnya.

Police released few immediate details of the attack on Tuesday. A source with the North Ossetia police told the Interfax news agency that a man in his 20s struck when he was stopped by police at a checkpoint close to the border with Ingushetia, a volatile Muslim republic that has had uneasy relations with North Ossetia in the past.

In the early 1990s, a bloody ethnic conflict erupted over a territorial dispute between North Ossetia and Ingushetia in the border area between both regions.

Still, North Ossetia has been relatively quiet for some years, particularly compared with neighboring regions where there are daily reports of bloodshed. A suicide attack in 2008 in North Ossetia’s capital, Vladikavkaz, killed about a dozen people.

North Ossetia saw its worst bout of violence in 2004 when militants from neighboring Chechnya raided a school in Beslan taking more than 1,000 children, parents and teachers hostage. More than 300 were killed when bombs wired by the militants exploded andRussian forces raided the school.

Older Posts »
Get Adobe Flash playerPlugin by wpburn.com wordpress themes

Powered by WordPress