Sinai attack ‘foreign-funded operation’

Egyptian President Abdel-Fattah el-Sisi has denounced a recent deadly attack on an army checkpoint in the country’s restive Sinai Peninsula, which left 30 troops dead, as a “foreign-funded operation.”

Sisi made the remarks on Saturday ahead of a military funeral for the slain soldiers, noting that there are foreign powers which seek to “break the back of Egypt.”

The president also pledged to take serious action to annihilate the militants.

According to security sources, thirty people were killed on Friday in a militant assault on the checkpoint in an area near the northern Sinai town of el-Arish that involved a car bomb, rocket-propelled grenades and roadside bombs planted to target rescuers.

Shortly after the first attack, gunmen opened fire on another checkpoint in el-Arish, leaving three members of security forces dead.

No group has so far claimed responsibility for the attacks.

A state of emergency was declared in the north and center of the Sinai for three months after Friday’s deadly assaults while a curfew is in place from 5 p.m. (1500 GMT on Friday) to 7 a.m. (0500 GMT) every night.

Sisi, meanwhile, said the violence aimed to “break the will of Egypt and the Egyptians as well as the will of the Egyptian army, which is considered a pillar of Egypt.”

The Sinai Peninsula has long been considered a safe haven for gunmen who use the region as a base for their acts of terror.

Since the ouster of Mohamed Morsi, Egypt’s former president, on July 3 last year, gunmen have launched almost daily attacks in Sinai, killing members of security forces.

Ansar Bait al-Maqdis, an al-Qaeda-affiliated militant group, has claimed responsibility for most of the terrorist attacks in the restive region.

MR/KA/SS

The un-making of civil rights in US

In 1892, Homer Plessy sat in a “white car” of a segregated East Louisiana Railroad passenger train, and was promptly arrested. Released on $500 bond, Plessy and his group, Comité des Citoyens (Committee of Citizens), initiated court proceedings against the arresting officer. The Plessy case made it all the way to the Supreme Court, arguing that the 14th Amendment justified full integration with the words, “no state shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States; nor shall any state deprive any person of life, liberty, and property, without due process of law.” Louisiana Judge John Howard Ferguson ruled that the company could maintain segregation, and the Supreme Court agreed, stating that “a commingling of the two races upon terms unsatisfactory to the either” would not benefit society as a whole, thus enshrining the “separate but equal doctrine” of Jim Crow.

For Mark Golub of Scripps College, this judgment can be seen as “a symbol of American racial Apartheid.” And why not? It rolled back many of the gains made through Reconstruction, most notably the Civil Rights Act of 1875, and established in rapid order the steps toward the disenfranchisement of Black voters.

The ruling against Plessy was a roadblock against a much broader movement. Galvanized by multiracial leadership emerging from churches, labor organizations, and social groups, the growing People’s Party would find support and shelter through strategic alliances with the Republican Party in the post-Reconstruction South. The political clout accrued through grassroots organizing among agrarian workers and disenfranchised social groups brought the Republican Party a tremendous deal of wins throughout the 1880s and early 1890s—particularly in North Carolina, where what was then the largest city in the state, Wilmington, was also predominantly Black.

After the Plessy v. Ferguson verdict, however, the tides began to shift. Not only were lynchings increasing throughout the South, as the Ku Klux Klan assembled along with the notorious Red Shirts of the violently racist Democratic Party, but the Republicans gradually relinquished their solidarity with Black voters. Not five years after Plessy lost in the Supreme Court, the People’s Party determined to join the Democratic Party’s failed bid for presidency under William Jennings Bryant, abandoning their Black supporters and organizers to the extent that the leader of the People’s Party would begin raving against Black people and encouraging lynchings.

Two years later, the city of Wilmington erupted in a “race riot” carried out by Red Shirts tied to a plot by Southern Democrat leaders—in actual fact, it was a putsch to force the Republican leadership to resign. Much of the city’s Black neighborhood of Brooklyn would be razed, and as many as a hundred Black people slain, as the governor called in the Wilmington Light Infantry to control the “riot,” which was immediately blamed on Black violence.

While the situation of Jim Crow would be challenged throughout the early 20th Century, “Separate but Equal” would not be transformed until Brown v. the Board of Education in 1954 and the Civil Rights Act of 1965. It was symbolically significant, then, that after the foreclosure crisis gutted the US homeowner, the rate of homeownership among Black people in the US fell to its lowest point since 1965. As de facto segregation continues to push people of color out of urban areas through the wake of the housing market crisis, “Urban Renewal” programs, and other forms of “spatial deconcentration,” Ferguson has become a symbol not only of the ongoing dispossession of people of color (from the cities and the suburbs to the exurbs and the rural), but of the degeneration of Civil Rights in the US.

Even while reaching its apparent apex through the achievement of the position of Presidency, it would appear that Civil Rights and integration remains a popular desire, not a reality for most people. Obama’s lack of genuine response to the phenomenon happening in Ferguson is symptomatic of his general irresponsiveness to the ongoing dispossession of people of color in the US. It is, in a way, the Democratic Party’s latest “Sister Souljah moment” (named after Bill Clinton’s denunciation of Jessie Jackson’s Rainbow Coalition for inviting the radical hip hop artist and intellectual to speak). By playing down or denouncing the radical response to police brutality clearly coordinated in efforts to remove Black people from the fast-gentrifying city of Ferguson, Obama is seen as playing pragmatic politics as opposed to the “angry populism” that characterized some of his earlier speeches.

It is true that his administration’s partners (Rahm Emmanuel, for instance) celebrated and attempted to harness the insecurity and anger of the suburbs through populist techniques in order to win the 2008 election. In avoiding Ferguson, Obama is performing the ultimatum of populist leadership: abandoning the “extremes” that comprised the core of the movement’s radicalism and attraction for resignation to aristocracy. The stoking of “angry populism” in the suburbs and the subsequent abandonment of self-defense faced with police brutality actuates a familiar model of populism seen also when the People’s Party’s (aka the Populist Party) abandonment of Black organizers and activists in favor of an exigent, though unsuccessful, compact with the Democratic Party, which led to the disaster of the Wilmington Putsch and the disenfranchisement of roughly 40,000 Black voters in North Carolina, alone, through the Democratic Party’s regime of poll taxes and literacy tests for voter registration after 1898. With the police behavior in Ferguson—assaulting crowds, killing people, spreading misinformation, and making false arrests—as well as the response from hate groups like the KKK, the riots in Ferguson, which began with peaceful protests until the police reacted with brutality, threatens to become another putsch; a historic victory for the revanchist right wing and the undoing of the Civil Rights Act of 1965, just as Wilmington was part of the undoing of the Civil Rights Act of 1875 that found its keystone in Plessy v. Ferguson.

Alexander Reid Ross is a contributing moderator of the Earth First! Newswire. He is the editor of Grabbing Back: Essays Against the Global Land Grab (AK Press 2014) and a contributor to Life During Wartime (AK Press 2013).

HRJ/HRJ

Iran to face China in volleyball final

Iran’s men’s national junior volleyball team is set to face China for the title of the 17th Asian U20 Men’s Volleyball Championships in the Persian Gulf kingdom of Bahrain.

The two Asian powerhouses, which have already booked their tickets for the FIVB Volleyball Men’s U21 World Championship scheduled for next year in Mexico, will clash in the Bahraini capital, Manama, on Saturday.

Earlier in the day and before the final match, host nation Bahrain, will take on South Korea in the third place play-off match.

On Friday, Iran advanced to the finals after defeating host nation, Bahrain, 3-1 (25-14, 21-25, 26-24 and 25-15).

“Bahrain lost today, but they showed they are a very good team, a very strong team,” Iran’s coach, Farhad Nafarzadeh, said after the match.

Bahrain’s coach Ali Ridha admitted that a very good team defeated his, saying, “We played two very good sets. Iran has more experience than our team. They have a good team, they are taller than us – they are strong. They know when they get to 20 points how to win a set.”

China also cruised its way into the gold medal match following a competitive four-set game against South Korean opponents.

The young Chinese athletes edged past South Koreans 3-1 (23-25, 25-22, 25-17 and 26-24).

The 17th Asian U20 Men’s Championship opened in Bahrain on October 17, and will wrap up on October 25.

Pool A consisted of Bahrain, the Maldives, Saudi Arabia and Thailand. Chinese Taipei, Japan, Kazakhstan, Kuwait and Uzbekistan were in Pool B, while China, New Zealand, South Korea and Sri Lanka made up Pool C.

Iran had been drawn in Pool D along with Hong Kong, India, Qatar and Turkmenistan.

MP/HJL/SS

‘Iran not to shut down N-facilities’

A senior Iranian negotiator says the Islamic Republic will not accept to shut down or even suspend the activities of any of its nuclear facilities in its talks with six world powers.

“All nuclear capabilities of Iran will be preserved and no facility will be shut down or even suspended and no device or equipment will be dismantled,” Abbas Araqchi, who is also Iran’s deputy foreign minister for legal and international affairs, said on Saturday. 

“We will not retreat one iota from the country’s nuclear rights, but we are fully ready for transparency and confidence-building,” he said, adding that Iran will push ahead with “industrial-scale enrichment” of uranium to meet the country’s civilian needs.

Araqchi also repeated Iran’s call for the removal of all sanctions against the country, saying: “All sanctions should be lifted and the Islamic Republic of Iran will not accept even a single instance of sanctions to remain in place under a [final] comprehensive nuclear deal.”

The Iranian official’s remarks came in response to repeated demands from the West that Iran shut down the Fordow nuclear facility in central Iran.

Meanwhile, US Undersecretary of State Wendy Sherman said on Thursday that the P5+1 group, which is negotiating with Iran over Tehran’s nuclear program, has offered the country ideas that are “equitable, enforceable and consistent” with Tehran’s desire for a civilian nuclear program, claiming that Iran would be responsible for any failure to reach a permanent accord over its nuclear work.

Iran and the P5+1 group of countries – Russia, China, France, Britain, the US and Germany – are in talks to work out a final deal aimed at ending the longstanding dispute over the Islamic Republic’s nuclear energy program as a November 24 deadline approaches.

Sources close to the Iranian negotiating team say the main stumbling block in the way of resolving the Western disputes over Iran’s nuclear energy program remains to be the removal of all the sanctions imposed on Iran and not the number of centrifuges or the level of enrichment.

Tehran wants the sanctions entirely lifted while the US, under pressure from the pro-Israeli lobby, insists that at least the UN-imposed sanctions against Iran should remain in place.

AR/KA/SS

EU ‘expects’ extra UK share in budget

A vice president of the European Parliament (EP) says Europe expects the UK to contribute an extra £1.7 billion to the EU budget, warning that the bloc would be “exasperated” if London tried to avoid paying.

Alexander Graf Lambsdorff, a German member of the EP and one of the parliament’s six vice presidents, made the remarks on Saturday, saying the UK must make the two-billion euro (USD 2.5-billion) budget contribution to the EU.

Brussels has been demanding that the UK pay the extra amount by December after a recalculation of the country’s national income since 1995 found that Britain’s economy has enjoyed better-than-expected performance in comparison with other European countries.

Lambsdorff said “everybody has to pay their dues,” arguing that “if you have higher GDP growth than forecast, that also means logically that you have a higher contribution to the community’s budget.”

“That is a logical consequence. That is something that everybody has signed up for,” Lambsdorff added.

The EP vice president’s comments come a day after British Prime Minister David Cameron said the UK will refuse to pay the amount, describing the union’s behavior as “appalling.”

Cameron also warned that such behavior would certainly affect Britain’s decision whether to remain in the EU.

The British prime minister is calling for a renegotiation of Britain’s EU membership terms, saying that the reforms are crucial to persuade Britain to stay in the bloc. Cameron has also vowed to hold an in-out vote on the country’s EU membership by 2017.

CAH/HJL/SS

China: Anti-graft fight will never end

China’s top anti-graft official says the fight against deeply-ingrained corruption will never end, signaling nonstop pressure against government fraud in the world’s second-largest economy.

Chinese politicians must follow the rules and implement the Communist Party’s discipline due to the tough and complicated anti-corruption drive, China’s head of the Central Commission for Discipline Inspection Wang Qishan said on Saturday.

“The fight against corruption and the construction of a clean government is still ongoing,” Wang noted.

The Chinese Communist Party promised this week to boost the anti-graft campaign.

President Xi Jinping kicked off an anti-corruption campaign two years ago. Since then, several high-profile lawmakers have been expelled from the ruling Communist Party and charged with corruption.

China investigated more than 25,000 people for corruption in the first half of 2014.

The vow to punish graft came only days after the Communist Party began an investigation into former domestic security chief, Zhou Yongkang, by far the highest-profile figure caught up in Xi’s corruption crackdown.

President Xi has pledged to root out every corrupt official as widespread graft threatens the survival of the Communist Party.

GMA/HJL/SS

Tunisia warns of attacks during vote

The Tunisian prime minister has warned of possible terrorist attacks during the North African country’s parliamentary elections, as the government tightens security ahead of Sunday’s vote.

“We know that this [elections] will be a target (for militants) because it is unique in the region. It brings hope,” Mehdi Jomaa said on Saturday.

The Tunisian premier said the success of the country’s landmark elections may be a threat to those who oppose the country’s transition to democracy.

“They know that the success of (the elections) is a threat to them, not only in Tunisia but throughout the region,” he added.

Meanwhile, Tunisia’s Defense Minister Ghazi Jeribi has called on Tunisians to cast their ballots and “not to be afraid of the threat of terrorists who aim to stop this election.”

The country’s security forces are on high alert ahead of the key elections, in which approximately 5.2 million voters are eligible to cast their ballots.

On Friday, Tunisian police killed six Takfiri terrorists who had taken a number of people hostage in a suburban house near the capital, Tunis.

The militants, five of them women, were reportedly planning an attack to mar the country’s parliamentary elections.

More than 13,000 candidates started their official electoral campaigns around three weeks ago for the 217 seats in the country’s National Assembly.

The Islamist Ennahda Movement and the secular Nidaa Tounes Party are expected to win the majority of votes in the upcoming elections.

Authorities have warned that militants would launch a spate of attacks in an attempt to destabilize the country.

YH/KA/SS

Fresh clashes erupt in West Bank

Fresh clashes have erupted between Israeli forces and Palestinian protesters who were furious about the recent death of a Palestinian teenager at the hands of Israeli troops.

The skirmishes broke out in the village of Silwad, north of the West Bank city of Ramallah, on Saturday, a day after Orwah Hammad, 14, was shot in the head there.

The Israeli army added that the youth, who was a US citizen, was about to throw a petrol bomb at Israeli motorists.

“The forces fired immediately to neutralize the danger…and confirmed a hit,” said an army spokeswoman.

Also on Friday, Israeli police in East al-Quds (Jerusalem) fired tear gas to disperse stone-throwing Palestinian protesters.

Clashes have been taking place every night after Israelis said a driver, identified as Abdel Rahman al-Shaludi, rammed his car into a railway stop in al-Quds, killing a baby girl and injuring eight others on Wednesday. He later died of injuries sustained from Israeli forces’ gunfire.

The Tel Aviv regime claims that the incident was deliberate, but family of the 21-year-old said it was an accident.

Israeli media also reported clashes between Palestinians and Israeli forces in al-Quds’ Silwan neighborhood on Saturday, ahead of the upcoming funeral of al-Shaludi.

The timing of his funeral has been set by Tel Aviv, which has also said a maximum of 80 people could attend the ceremony, the Israeli Radio reported. The teenager’s funeral is also set to be held on Sunday.

MR/KA/SS

Top Pakistani Shia cleric says Pakistan is the Base of ISIS

Allama Sajid Naqvi, Chief of Shia Ulema Council, has said that takfiri terrorism including  ISIS originated from Pakistan but they were bound to fail because of Shiites rational course of action.

“Masterminds of ISIS are those who invented takfiri nasbi terrorists in Pakistan and their prime target were Shia Muslims but we defeated them by unity of Muslims and now ISIS are disgusted, condemned and isolated outfit,” he said speaking at “Ulema Conference on Protection of Azadari and Defence of Shiites,” in Karachi.

He said that those who stage rallies and public gatherings for Hazrat Usman lacked any right or justification to oppose the mourning processions and congregations.

“We need alternate policies to stop genocide against Shia Muslims in Karachi and other parts of Pakistan. We should remain vigilant during Moharram in particular and strengthen our unity to counter plots of enemies,” he urged.

The SUC officials namely Allama Arif Wahidi, Allama Baqar Najafi, Allama Shabbir Maisami, Allama Shahenshah Naqvi and Allama Jafar Subhani also spoke at the scholars’ conference.

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Bahrain: Chairman of Shura Al Wefaq called in for interrogation

The Bahraini Authorities have called in Sayed Jameel Khadim, the chairman of Shura Al Wefaq (consultative board), for interrogation this morning.

Al Wefaq believes this measure is related to tweets he posted, expressing his opinion in the upcoming legislative and municipal elections. The opposition societies in Bahrain declared they will boycott the elections that manipulate the people’s will.

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