Feb 27, 2011

Space shuttle Discovery seen from airplane



Lucky passenger Neil Monday captured the experience of Discovery in the sky on his iPhone. Because of the delay of the airplane Neil got the life time opportunity to see the flight of the shuttle Discovery. He has no complains the airplane got delayed.
The video, which you can watch exclusively on http://seremb.blogspot.com, is of course, visually stunning, but it also contains a pretty good airplane joke; if you listen hard enough. While Neil records the shuttle's launch, the captain can be heard over the loudspeaker saying, "Those on the right side can see the space shuttle. Those on the left side can probably see the people on the right side looking at the space shuttle."

Feb 26, 2011

Skiing Center of Boge the best winter and summer place in western Kosova


Boge a small village in the beautiful western mountains of Rugova – Albanian Alps!  The village has a wonderful skiing and winter recreational center and is positioned between 1.400-1.800 meters above see level. It is 28km from Peja, the western city and the third largest in Kosova. Driving to Boge one will drive through the Rugova Neck and through the gorges Gores and Canyons of Rugova. Driving conditions are good, road is cleared every day. It is on of the Top Ten (10) most beautiful places in Kosova. Boge has a small skiing center – very small compared to Brezovica, but every weekend has more than two (2000) visitors.
The motels and cabins are always full, while visitors from Peja and Klina drive back every evening. All the facilities are around the ski-lift and the price per night is €10 per person. One cabin with three rooms costs €35-40 per night. For reservations one can call Hotel Burri 049653601, Rudi Group 044/049127637 or 044/049125 488; (www.rudigroup.net), Rugova Relax; 049129666; Facebook group: RugovaRelax.
Rugova Mountains as part of the Albanian Alps are bordered with Albania and Montenegro. Rugova has about 30 mountains and each is wild and more beautifule than the other. The Road to Boge is open and 85% is paved with asphalt. Only the whiled life are is in sand. The Peja municipality is trying to preserve the wild live of these gorges mountains.
The skiing slope is around 1.8km long. The area is wonderful for winter climbing and walking too. The ski pass is €10 for a day and €6 for half day. The skiing slope in Boge has three directions: one slope direction is for the beginners and those who ski for fund – easy and reliable; second: is mostly fast track and only for professionals – thick and manly in the shadows of trees; and third Boge slope is for the people who love adventures and like to do crazy. Things like hitting a straight line all the way – no turns.
In the evenings Boge offers the most beautiful wild life – especially for young people. Kosova’s population of 73% under age 35 years old! A very young population. It is the special place to “rock n roll”, “smoke funny things”, under the open clear sky and on top of it enjoy the night with your partner.
The skiing center starts from 10AM in the morning and is closed sometimes after 4PM in the evening. For all those who drive – there is enough places to park for free; offered by the motels and cabins. No charge for the parking. During the week days but especially during the weekend one things that every body has left their homes and came here to have fun?!

Feb 22, 2011

Kosova’s new government

PM Hashim Thaqi has decided to increase the governing cabinet with five more ministries and three deputy PM’s. The new five deputy PM’s are: Hajredin Kuçi will be Deputy Prime Minister for Law and Order, Edita Tahiri will be Deputy Prime Minister for Recognitions and Foreign Policy, Bujar Bukoshi for Economic Development and Slobodan Petrovic will be Deputy Prime Minister for Returns. There is also a possibility that after Muhamet Mustafa’s withdrawal from the position of Deputy PM, the post could be taken from another AKR senior official, Mimoza Kusari-Lila.
The current list of candidates for ministers which will be subject of voting on Tuesday in the assembly!

The list is as follows:

Hajredin Kuçi – Minister of Justice
Bajram Rexhepi – Minister of Internal Affairs
Vlora Çitaku – Minister of Integration 
Enver Hoxhaj – Minister of Foreign Affairs
Fehmi Mujota – Minister of Transport
Memli Krasniqi – Minister of Culture, Youth and Sports
Ramë Buja – Minister of Education science and Technology
Blerand Stavileci – Minister of Agriculture
Agim Çeku – Minister of Kosovo Security Force
Ferid Agani – Minister of Health
Mimoza Kusari-Lila Minister of Trade and Industry
Sasha Rasic – Minister of Returns and Communities
Nenad Rashiq – Minister of Labor and Social Welfare
Mahir Yagcilar – Minister of Public Administration
Dardan Gashi – Minister of Environment and Spatial Planning

Feb 21, 2011

The truth about Kosova/o

The attention of world diplomacy is focusing on Kosovo ever more. We have now in the hands of UN Security Council a proposal addressed by former Finish President Martti Ahtisari which is attached to the document that sets the framework for a possible future status of Kosovo, has summarized the guarantees for the position of minorities, and in particular the Serbian minority has described the modalities for the relatively emphasized international presence in Kosovo, with executive authority as well as authority to interpret its mandate, even after the decision for the new status, which limits Kosovo’s eventual sovereignty. Now it is on the members of the Security Council to reach a decision on Kosovo’s future.
We are aware that Serbia has undertaken a diplomatic offensive to influence the members of the Security Council of UN in order to unable the adoption of a new resolution, with the justification that Ahtisari’s proposal recommends “annexation of Serbia’s territory” and “removal of Serbia’s sovereignty over Kosovo” and that all of this, according to Belgrade officials, “is in contradiction with international law”. This is the reason why, in an effort to inform your readers and the members of the Security Council, I will highlight in broad lines a number of historic, political and legal arguments and facts that convincingly speak that Kosovo was occupied by Serbia in an unlawful manner, which is why Albanians, as a majority population in Kosovo, should enjoy the right to self-determination, whether that is as a majority population in an individualized territory or as their national right. By proving this truth, this article aims to, at the same time, prove that Serbia’s projects for the creation of two entities in Kosovo or its partition are unacceptable.
Firstly, given that Kosovo was annexed by Serbia in an unlawful manner Kosovo’s independence will in no way be in contradiction with international law. On the contrary, Kosovo independence even before being qualified as a “classic case of secession from a sovereign state”, as Serbs argue, should be considered as “annulment of an unlawful annexation. In fact it was Serbia that acted in contradiction with international law in 1912 when it annexed Kosovo through military occupation after its aggression against the Ottoman Empire, “even though Kosovo had its historic and ethnic identity, accompanied by its right to liberation, whether that was from the Ottoman occupation (1912) or Fascist occupation (1944), and in spite of its geographical demographic and cultural integrity”. Consequently, instead of admitting its unlawful act, which she committed while violating international law in a bold manner, Serbia is now using an argument which is scientifically and historically unsustainable, namely to “preserve its sovereignty over Kosovo”, which, as proved by facts, she held in an unlawful manner for a long period of time without ever asking the majority population of Kosovo or having their consent. Kosovo was occupied during Balkan wars (1912-1913)" in contradiction with the aspiration of the Albanians, expressed during their national liberation movement 1878-1912". In this manner Serbia, in spite of getting the “international legitimacy” for the occupation of Kosovo, in no way was able to justify the legitimacy of its act. In addition to this, Serbian possessive attitudes towards Kosovo which refer to history are unfounded. Firstly "they are unfounded in its methodological qualification of the national character of a territory because if history is to be taken as a criteria, in light of contemporary national-territorial realities, Hungary has the right to the Panonic part of Yugoslavia, Bulgaria and Hungary would argue about their rights over Belgrade, Greece would claim a right over Istanbul, Albania over Janina, Mexico over Florida and California, Sweden over Finland and Norway, Germany over Shlezi and Sudet regions, Denmark over Shlezivik, Iraq over Kuwait etc".
Secondly, Serbia’s possessive attitudes towards Kosovo are unfounded in the aspect of material truth, since Kosovo, in spite of allegations of such nature “in neither a cradle of Serbian nation, nor of Serbian state”. Finally, imperialistic ambitions with “historic rights” could not be defended by England, France, Spain, Portugal, Netherlands, which, as it is known “with centuries held many nations under their occupation. Therefore “with the destruction of colonial empires over 120 new states were created”. Serbia was “under the occupation of Ottoman Empire for over five centuries (1389-1878)". Spain “had conquered all Latin America in the beginning of XVI century". Neither do “Russians ever mention their historic rights over Ukraine”. Historic arguments speak very clearly that “Serbs were placed in Kosovo with their expansion under the rule of Nemanjics’”. As a result of occupations during the Ottoman Empire, many ethnic minorities, such as Serbs, Turks and Roma, were placed in the ethnic Albanian territories. The Serbian minority was greatly expanded with "the violent colonization that occurred between two world wars; nevertheless their percentage never exceeded 10% of the overall population". On the basis of these facts the conclusion is very clear: it was in deed the Serbian aggression, occupation and annexation of Kosovo that violated the international law and not otherwise, namely that Kosovo independence "would violate international law". History "is a witness of denationalization policies; of gross crimes against Albanians during 1912-1918; for genocidal Serbian plans for the extermination of Albanians; for the deportation of Albanians in Turkey and for confiscation the lands of the population and its colonization with Serbs and Montenegrins". The time period between February 1998 and June 10, 1999 only exceeded "these special cases and took the gravity of a general genocide of the Serbian regime against Albanians".
Secondly, the decision for Kosovo’s future cannot ignore the constitutional position of Kosovo in former Yugoslavia although Kosovo did not enjoy the status of a republic. However, most importantly, Kosovo was a constitute part of former Yugoslavia with a defined territory and borders, which could not be changed without its consent. Kosovo was directly represented in the former Yugoslav federation same as the other republics, not through Serbia because we would create a paradox as in that case Serbia "would have three votes in the Federation, while the other units would have only one vote". With its political-territorial identities, its constitution, Kosovo was a federally constitute unit of the multinational federation of Yugoslavia.
That Kosovo was not part of Serbia can be proven by the following historical and political facts:" Kosovo was not part of the independent sovereign state of Serbia with its international personality recognized in the Berlin Congress (1878); Kosovo was not part of Serbia in the Second AVNOJ Congress (1943); Kosovo was not part of Serbia during its establishment as a federal unit in the Anti-Fascist Popular Liberation Council (1944); Kosovo was not part of Serbia in the structure of Constitutional Assembly of Yugoslavia when the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia was founded (1945). Kosovo was not included in the sovereign Serbia, except in federal Serbia within federal Yugoslavia, during the military occupation of Kosovo (1945)". Finally it is worth mentioning that the abolishment of Kosovo’s autonomy with the amendments in the Constitution of Serbia, an act, which occurred on March 28 1989, was done in an unlawful manner. Even if we didn’t have the essential deficiencies regarding the declaration in the Kosovo Assembly, deficiencies that are proven, “lack of free will”, as a result of extraordinary political pressures, "makes the declaration for constitutional amendments unconstitutional".
Thirdly, the future of Kosovo cannot be compared with secessions in some other parts of the world. The states that remain reserved towards Kosovo independence should be mindful of this fact. They should instead look and find the “common ground” between Kosovo and certain other countries of the world, which have agreed to the removal of sovereignty over other territories. In this regard, the relations between Kosovo and Serbia are comparable with the relations of Indonesia and East Timor. As it is well known, East Timor was occupied and annexed by Indonesia in 1975, "contrary to the will of Portugal as the external sovereign", a fact which makes the annexation of Indonesia unlawful. In 1988 Indonesian government recognized the right to self-determination to the East Timor people. Singapore is another example that should be taken under consideration. This country was partitioned from Malaysia in 1965. The example of Eritrea is also meaningful for Kosovo. It was the Ethiopian government that recognized the right to self-determination to Eritrea in 1991. The case of Kosovo is also similar to the case of Namibia. Partition of Namibia from South Africa and its independence occurred in 1991. Therefore Kosovo’s independence should not be compared with secession of territories that were "not annexed in a unilateral manner (against the will of the people of the original sovereigns), which joined existing states but that they are operating in territories that were part of these states at the time when they were established". In this way even the separatist movements in Transdnjestrovle (Moldavia), in Southern Osetia and Abkhazia (Georgia) that do not have the ethnic basis that Kosovo has and which didn’t have an autonomous or federal status at the time of dissolution of former Soviet Union as Kosovo had at the time of dissolution of former Yugoslavia. Finally, Kosovo Albanians are not comparable with Catalonians, Scots, Wellsians, Basks or Corsicans… because they did not face a massive deportation from the states, which controlled them.
Fourthly, the existence of Albania as an Albanian state cannot hinder the independence and sovereignty for Kosovo, because as we can recall from history neither did the status of Romania "hinder the independence of Moldavia nor did the existence of France hindered the establishment of the canton-state of Switzerland". Finally, "even if Kosovo was constituted as an Albanian state in the Balkans, this would be a handicap rather than an advantage of Albanian population in the Balkans". Consequently Kosovo fulfills all the criteria for being an independent and sovereign state. If it is about the size of the territory, 34 states with smaller territory are members of the UN. If it is about the population, 58 states with a smaller number of population are members of the UN. If it is for the acceptance or not of new states in the UN, it should be noted that between 1990 and 2002, UN has accepted 34 new member states. The proverb that “wherever we have facts, words become unnecessary” is not meaningless.
On the basis of these arguments and facts emphasized, in broad lines, the new political legal and international status of Kosovo should be the equivalent, without any doubt, with independence and sovereignty with internationally recognized personality in all of its territory, in the manner to ensure the consistent enforcement of law, including the northern part of Kosovo and the so-called municipalities with Serbian majority, which in the proposal of Ambassador Martti Ahtisari have gained significant competencies in the name of an asymmetric territorial and ethnic based decentralization, which in spite of its well intentions threatens the future of Kosovo. Serbian claims for the creation of two entities or for partitioning of Kosovo are unacceptable for Kosovo. These claims "ignore the fact of expressively different demographic and national quantum and proportions". In the end we would like to emphasize the fact that Kosovo "is not an ethnically diversifiable territory of an enclave character". Therefore "the violent surrounding of one part of Kosovo’s territory", in spite of painful compromises that Kosovo delegation agreed to with decentralization, protective zones around Serbian heritage sites and favorable legislative procedures for minorities would directly contradict the derivative political entity of that territory and would not be in accordance with it.
It is about time that Kosovo gets out from the “closed circle” in which it was for so many years. Kosovo is awaiting a new resolution from the Security Council of UN, which should be characterized from:
Firstly, political, legal and international clarity regarding the status of Kosovo, which would prevent ambiguity in regard to it. Secondly, full international personality which would enable Kosovo to seek membership in international mechanisms, including UN. Thirdly, territorial integrity, which would ensure the extension of Kosovo governing institutions and consistent enforcement of the law in its entire territory.
Fourthly, functional state of Kosovo, which would prevent its possible invalidation.

Feb 7, 2011

Mr. Dick Marty did not identify a single victim supposedly killed on Mr. Thaci's orders and fails to "demonstrate any link" between later scandals of a clinic in Pristina involved in kidney harvesting and Mr. Thaci's former role as political leader of the Kosovo Liberation Army in 1999”, states Sir Geoffrey Nice, one of Britain's most respected international lawyer.



By Denis Macshane
Last month the Council of Europe adopted a report by Swiss politician Dick Marty, which accused the prime minister of Kosovo, Hashim Thaci, of having harvested organs for sale from executed Serb prisoners in 1999. The allegations made world headlines. After the Iraq war controversy, the message was clear: The West's intervention in Kosovo 12 years ago was also wrong. The problem is that the Marty report seems more politically motivated fiction than hard-nosed criminal investigation.
Sir Geoffrey Nice, one of Britain's most respected international lawyers, quietly deconstructed Mr. Marty's report in last week's London Review of Books. Mr. Nice, who as deputy prosecutor at the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia in the Hague was in charge of prosecuting Slobodan Milosevic, and who was present when Bosnians and Kosovars were brought to trial at the Hague, accuses Mr. Marty of ignoring basic standards of evidence. According to Mr. Nice, Mr. Marty did not identify a single victim supposedly killed on Mr. Thaci's orders and fails to "demonstrate any link" between later scandals of a clinic in Pristina involved in kidney harvesting and Mr. Thaci's former role as political leader of the Kosovo Liberation Army in 1999.
Most troublesome, according to Mr. Nice, is that Mr. Marty's narrative implicitly depends on an anonymous witness, "K144," who Belgrade says has provided evidence of these atrocities, but who most likely does not exist. Mr. Nice confirms that all the Hague witnesses dealing with Kosovo were given the initial "K" and a number. But the last number used was "K116" and no one involved in the Hague trial knows of a witness "K144." Further, writes Mr. Nice, "If K144 has indeed given a statement of the kind [Mr.] Marty suggests before March 2006—when the Milosevic trial ended with the accused's death—I would have known about it."
"K144" appears to be the invention of the Belgrade media, which regularly whip up nationalist and revanchist passions. This populism makes it hard, almost impossible, for Serb leaders to conclude an agreement with Kosovo that would allow both nations to advance to a European future.
Mr. Marty also seems to rely heavily on a 2008 book published by Carla del Ponto, the Swiss-Italian prosecutor, who for a while was Mr. Nice's boss at the Hague. But Ms. del Ponte also failed to produce any real evidence in her book.

Mr. Marty, a member of the upper house in the Swiss parliament, is a forceful politician who robustly defends Swiss banking secrecy in Council of Europe debates. The thing to remember about the Council of Europe is that it is not a cozy group of human rights parliamentarians. Instead, it is a deeply political body. When it comes to issues related to the former Yugoslavia, the Council is clearly divided between politicians aligned along a Belgrade-Moscow axis and those from countries that have now recognized Kosovo.
The latter group would like Belgrade to finally overcome the 1990s and to accept that its former domination of the now separated states in the former Yugoslavia will never return. But for Russian members and other anti-Nato politicians at the Council of Europe it is important to assert that NATO's 1999 intervention was illegal and that Kosovo's declaration of independence—now validated by the International Court of Justice—should not lead to full statehood.
Mr. Nice puts it, well, nicely, when he asks if the Marty and del Ponte allegations are "part of a media campaign to obstruct the recognition of Kosovo as an independent state." The answer for anyone who has attended Council of Europe assemblies and committee meetings in recent years can only be "yes."
One article in a British literary magazine cannot counter the avalanche of headlines in December accusing Mr. Thaci of organ harvesting. But Mr. Nice has taken apart the Marty report with forensic precision. Perhaps the Council of Europe should organize a debate between the British and Swiss lawyers.
But it's not just the Council of Europe that needs to examine more critically whether it should allow its name to be used to promote wild allegations. The Western media, too, need to reassess their practices. By uncritically swallowing the Marty line, they have acted, unwittingly, as aides in a political campaign against Kosovo.
The real way forward is to hold a credible inquiry into the crimes committed by both parties, Serbs and Kosovar Albanians alike. Such an inquiry, though, must not be allowed to hold up Kosovo's independence. It is time for Belgrade to move on from its destructive opposition that is blocking regional progress.

Mr. MacShane, a member of the U.K. Parliament, was Minister for the Balkans between 2001 and 2005 and U.K. delegate to the Council of Europe between 2005 and 2010.

Feb 5, 2011

Egypt: Torture and Weeks of Rage - New Government Should Prosecute Police Abuses, Make Clean Break with Torture


Egyptians deserve a clean break from the incredibly entrenched practice of torture. The Egyptian government's foul record on this issue is a huge part of what is still bringing crowds onto the streets today, said Joe Stork, deputy director of the Middle East and North Africa Division

Torture is an endemic problem in Egypt and ending police abuse has been a driving element behind the massive popular demonstrations that swept Egypt over the past week, Human Rights Watch said in a report released today. Prosecuting torture and ending the emergency laws that enable a culture of impunity for the security forces should be a priority for the Egyptian government, Human Rights Watch said.

The 95-page report, "‘Work on Him Until He Confesses': Impunity for Torture in Egypt," documents how President Hosni Mubarak's government implicitly condones police abuse by failing to ensure that law enforcement officials accused of torture are investigated and criminally prosecuted, leaving victims without a remedy.
"Egyptians deserve a clean break from the incredibly entrenched practice of torture," said Joe Stork, deputy director of the Middle East and North Africa Division at Human Rights Watch. "The Egyptian government's foul record on this issue is a huge part of what is still bringing crowds onto the streets today."
The case of Khaled Said, a 28-year-old man beaten to death by two undercover police officers on an Alexandria street in June, dominated headlines and set off demonstrations across the country. The local prosecutor initially closed an investigation and ordered Said's burial, but escalating public protests prompted the Public Prosecutor to reopen the investigation and refer it to court. "We Are All Khaled Said" is the name of the Facebook group that helped initiate the mass demonstrations on January 25, 2011.

The report urges officials to undertake immediate legal, structural, and political reforms to ensure that the judicial system holds perpetrators of torture accountable and deters future abuse. It examines dozens of cases of torture and death in custody for which victims or their families instituted legal proceedings by filing a complaint.

The vast majority of torture complaints never reach court because of police intimidation of victims and witnesses who file complaints, an inadequate legal framework, and delays in referring victims for medical examination, Human Rights Watch said. Another factor is that police from the same unit as the alleged torturer are responsible for gathering evidence and summoning witnesses.

Said's case was an exception, one of very few in which media coverage and public outrage prompted senior members of the Public Prosecutor's office to become involved, which ensures a speedy and full investigation. In November 2009 the government published statistics showing that between 2006 and 2009, Egyptian courts had sentenced only six police officers for torture and inhumane treatment, despite hundreds of complaints about torture and deaths in custody. In July 2010 an Alexandria appeals court confirmed a five-year sentence against a seventh officer.

"In a country where torture remains a serious and systemic problem, the conviction of a mere seven police officers over four years reflects a huge disconnect from reality and leaves hundreds of victims and families without justice," Stork said.

Human Rights Watch found that law enforcement officers routinely and deliberately use torture and ill-treatment - in ordinary criminal cases as well as with political dissidents and security detainees - to coerce confessions, extract other information, or simply to punish detainees.

Ahmad Abd al-Mo'ez Basha, a 22-year-old driver in Imbaba, Cairo, told Human Rights Watch how officers arrested him at his home in July 2010:
They took me to Imbaba police station and put me in a room by myself. Two officers came in and told me to confess. I asked, "What to?" They answered, "Confess to the theft." The head of the Criminal Investigations unit said, "Work on him until he confesses." They handcuffed my hands in front of me and hung me from the door for more than two hours. They had whips and hit me on the legs, on the bottom of my feet, and on my back. When they took me down, they brought a black electric device and applied electro-shocks four or five times to my arms until they started smoking. All of this time they kept saying, "You have to confess." The next morning they beat me again and whipped me with the cable on my back and on my shoulders. I fainted after three hours of the beating.
Impunity for torture is especially acute with State Security Investigations (SSI), the Interior Ministry department responsible for monitoring political dissidents, Human Rights Watch said. The SSI routinely engages in enforced disappearances, detaining suspects in its facilities for extended periods, concealing the fact that it is holding them or refusing to provide their whereabouts and denying detainees contact with lawyers, family, or doctors.

SSI facilities are not lawful places of detention: Egyptian law prohibits detention in facilities other than recognized prisons and police stations. The government denies that the SSI detains suspects at its sites - where suspects often face torture - despite considerable testimony to the contrary. Detaining an individual followed by a denial or refusal to acknowledge the detention, so that the person is deprived the protection of law, constitutes an enforced disappearance that, like torture, is a serious crime under international law.

No SSI officer has ever been convicted for torture, although in at least three cases officers have appeared before a court. One former SSI detainee and Muslim Brotherhood member, Nasr al-Sayed Hassan Nasr, told Human Rights Watch of his 60-day detention by SSI in 2010, during which he says he was blindfolded the entire time:
They beat me with a shoe across the face. They kicked me in the testicles so that I'd fall to the ground. Once on the floor they used electro-shocks to make me stand up and then would kick me again in the testicles. At one point the officer tried to strangle me. The officer would call the guards and say, "By four o'clock I want you to bring Nasr's wife and daughters here and strip them in front of him." They took photographs of me while I was naked and being tortured and threatened to publish them.
Victims and families of victims who had made complaints of torture consistently told Human Rights Watch that police officials tried to intimidate them to withdraw their complaint or to settle out of court. The fact that the police unit accused of ill-treatment is involved in gathering evidence and summoning witnesses during the prosecutor's preliminary investigation is a major factor preventing an impartial investigation, Human Rights Watch said. Prosecutors - whether due to lack of time or political will - do not properly assess the evidence that police produce, or the quality of their investigation. Police often delay in carrying out a prosecutor's order to bring the complainant to a forensic medical doctor for examination until after physical evidence of abuse fades.

"Victims of abuse need to feel that the judiciary will protect their rights and that they can take complaints to prosecutors without fear of reprisal," Stork said.

Egypt's legal framework fails to criminalize torture fully in line with international law, another factor contributing to impunity, Human Rights Watch said. The definition of torture in article 126 of the penal code excludes acts of torture for reasons other than the extraction of a confession, such as punishment or intimidation. Egyptian law provides only for sentences ranging from three to five years - penalties not commensurate with the seriousness of the crime of torture. The penal code further gives judges discretion to exercise clemency and reduce sentences, which they frequently do. In November 2009 and again in February 2010, the government pledged to the United Nations Human Rights Council during its Universal Periodic Review that it would amend the definition of torture in line with international law, but more than a year later there has been no progress on this commitment, Human Rights Watch said.

Human Rights Watch urged the Egyptian government to investigate all credible allegations of torture and ill-treatment, even in the absence of a formal complaint. Prosecutors should conduct these inquiries promptly, impartially, and thoroughly, ensuring that they investigate all those allegedly responsible, including superiors. Forensic medical examinations should occur promptly. Alleged abusers should not gather evidence, or interact with complainants and witnesses. The government should end the illegal detention of suspects in SSI offices and allow prosecutors to conduct unannounced visits to such sites to verify compliance.

Human Rights Watch called on the European Union and United States to speak out publicly against torture in Egypt, as well as about the government's failure to suppress these practices and punish those responsible.

"Police abuse becomes commonplace when there is effective impunity for law enforcement officers and their superiors," Stork said. "That's one reason why so many people took to the streets this past week demanding an end to police abuses. Egypt needs to seriously confront the crime of torture, starting with the faulty investigation process, to send a strong signal that torturers will be held accountable."

KOSOVO CHARGE IN LONDON REPORTS HIS ACCREDITATION TO NEW ZEALAND ON TRACK


 9:09PM GMT 04 Feb 2011
Ref ID: 09LONDON778
Date: 3/30/2009 14:52
Origin: Embassy London
Classification: CONFIDENTIAL
Destination: 09STATE27328|09WELLINGTON5045
Header: P 301452Z MAR 09FM AM EMBASSY LONDONTO SECSTATE WASHDC PRIORITY 1874INFO AMEMBASSY WELLINGTON PRIORITY AMEMBASSY PRISTINA PRIORITY USEU BRUSSELS PRIORITY
Tags: ODIP,PREL,KVPR,NZ,KV,UK
C O N F I D E N T I A L LONDON 000778 E.O. 12958: DECL: 03/27/2019 TAGS: ODIP, PREL, KVPR, NZ, KV, UK SUBJECT: KOSOVO CHARGE IN LONDON REPORTS HIS ACCREDITATION TO NEW ZEALAND ON TRACK REF: STATE 27328 Classified By: Political Minister Counselor Greg Berry for reasons 1.4 (B) and (D).
1.(C) The New Zealand Foreign Ministry has communicated to the Kosovo Foreign Ministry its acceptance "in principle" for the Kosovo Charge in London, Muhamet Hamiti, to be jointly accredited to New Zealand, Hamiti informed Political Minister Counselor on March 26. Hamiti, who shared a copy of a March 24 letter sent from Wellington to the Kosovo Foreign Ministry on the issue (text of letter at para. 5), said that what remained to be worked out were "the practicalities" of his dual accreditation, but he believed the process is on track. He expects, assuming the remaining steps are completed on schedule, to travel to New Zealand to formally present his credentials sometime in April. Hamiti did note that the Kosovo Foreign Minister is traveling over the next few weeks to New York and Prague, which may slow down how fast the Kosovo Ministry can resolve the final details. He did not believe any U.S. facilitation with either the New Zealand or Kosovo governments was needed at this time, but said he would contact Embassy London if there were unforeseen roadblocks.
2. (C) Polcounselor spoke with his counterpart at the New Zealand High Commission in London on March 27, Jake Collins. Collins reported that Wellington had instructed the High Commission to not engage directly on the issue or contact Hamiti, as Wellington preferred to deal with the Kosovo Foreign Ministry directly and through the Ministry with Hamiti as necessary. Against that background, Collins said he understood that Wellington was moving forward with the proposal and had a good line of communication with the Kosovars. He did not know about the March 24 letter sent to the Kosovo Foreign Ministry agreeing in principle to the dual accreditation. According to Collins, some of the initial reluctance to the proposal from his government had been over the accreditation of a Charge, rather than a sitting Ambassador, to Wellington. Collins suggested that some of the practicalities that needed to be worked out related to this issue. Hamiti Pressing Other Diplomats on Recognition --------------------------------------------- -
3. (C) Hamiti struck poloffs as an energetic diplomat, with an excellent command of English, if a little verbose. During his first four months in London, he said he had met with over 40 of his diplomatic counterparts from countries that have not yet recognized Kosovo. In his own view, the key to achieving recognition from other states would be for a few key governments -- such as Saudi Arabia and Pakistan -- to announce their recognition of Kosovar independence. Hamiti said many of Middle Eastern diplomats in London tell him that their governments are looking for movement on recognition from Riyadh or Islamabad to pave the way for their own government's action. Hamiti said Spain's recent decision to pull its troops out of KFOR was "disappointing" and suggested it was a step backward in terms of moving Madrid forward in relations with Kosovo. In contrast, he said the recently announced drawdown of UK forces from KFOR was handled satisfactorily, after full consultation with NATO headquarters.
4.(C) Hamiti's immediate focus is moving the last five EU holdouts on recognition forward as he believes having all the European nations in the recognition column would send a strong signal to the International Court of Justice -- "its a European question and we could point out that all of Europe is united in recognizing our independence." He thought obtaining Greece's recognition was the most possible, as well as that of Cyprus, among the holdouts. Text of March 24 Letter from New Zealand Foreign Ministry --------------------------------------------- ------------
5.(SBU) Begin text: Ministry of Foreign Affairs & Trade 195 Lambton Quay Wellington 5045, New Zealand The Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade presents its compliments to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Kosovo, and has the honour to refer to the letter from the Minister of Foreign Affairs, Kosovo, dated 23 January 2009 to the Minister of Foreign Affairs, New Zealand, proposing the establishment of diplomatic and consular relations between New Zealand and the Republic of Kosovo on the basis of terms set out in the Vienna Conventions on Diplomatic and Consular Relations. The Ministry has been instructed by the Minister of Foreign Affairs to respond through standard diplomatic channels by means of this note. New Zealand is receptive in principle to the accreditation by the Kosovo of a suitable person in accordance with diplomatic protocol. The Ministry notes that some aspects of the specific proposal to accredit the Charg d, Affairs a.e. of the Republic of Kosovo in the UK to New Zealand require further clarification. The Ministry, consistent with earlier advice, notes that arrangements for such accreditation should be handled in correspondence with Mr George Troup, Director, Europe Division, Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade, New Zealand. The email address for Mr. Troup is XXXXXXXXXXXX. Mr. Troup will be making direct contact with the designated officials of Kosovo in order to discuss the matters referred to in the previous paragraph. The Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade takes this opportunity to renew to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Kosovo the assurances of its highest consideration. Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade Wellington 24 March 2009 End text.

Feb 3, 2011

Military steps in – prime minister of Egypt apologizes

Egypt's Prime Minister Ahmed Shafiq apologized on Thursday for the violent attacks of yesterday. The president Mubarak has asked me to investigate the security chaos caused yesterday between por-Mubaraki and anti-Mubaraki groups. "This is a fatal error and I promise they will be held accountable and will be punished for what they did. PM stated that when investigations reveal who is behind this crime and who allowed it to happen – individuals or groups will be held accountable. His address on state TV came one day after the clashes in Tahrir Square.
Egypt - Tahrir Square 2nd February 

The military now took position between the clashing groups. During the violent clashes between the supporters and opposition groups of President Hosni Mubarak on Thursday remained still.

Who is behind the attackers in Tahrir Square

The morning after Mubarak announced he would not run again for president in September, his supporters massed into Tahrir Square and prolonged violence reigned in central Cairo.
There were immediate suspicions that the pro-Mubarak demonstrators were not simply average citizens standing up for the man who has led Egypt for three decades.
Suspicions that proved at least partly founded. As battles raged between the two sides, some pro-Mubarak protesters were captured by his opponents. Some were terrified to be caught and begged for their lives, screaming that the government had paid them to come out in violent protest. Others turned out to be carrying what seemed to be police identification, though they were dressed in plain clothes.
"It looks like much of this violence is being orchestrated by the Egyptian authorities in order to force an end to the anti-government protests, restore their control and cling onto power in the face of unprecedented public demands for them to go," said Hassiba Hadj Sahraoui, the deputy director for the Middle East and North Africa at Amnesty International.

Feb 2, 2011

A "horse" and a "camel" was stolen in today’s riots in Egypt




Supporters and opponents of President Hosni Mubarak battled in Cairo's main square on Wednesday the 2nd, raining stones, bottles and firebombs on each other in scenes of uncontrolled violence as soldiers stood by without intervening.
Police with civil cloths galloped on horses and camels in the middle of riots who were dragged to the ground and beaten.
Next to the Egyptian Museum next to the Tahrir Square, pro-government rioters blanketed the rooftops of nearby buildings and dumped bricks and firebombs onto the crowds below.
The two sides pummeled each other with hurled chunks of concrete and bottles at each of the six entrances of the square, where the 10,000 anti-Mubarak protesters tried to fend off the more than 3,000 attackers who besieged the square.

The protesters accused Mubarak's regime of unleashing a force of paid thugs and plainclothes police to crush their unprecedented 9-day-old movement demanding his ouster, a day after the 82-year-old president refused to step down. They showed off police ID badges they said were wrested off their attackers.
The health minister announced one dead person and nearly 600 injured. Bloodied young men staggered or were carried into makeshift clinics set up in mosques and alleyways by the anti-government side.
Protesters pleaded for protection from soldiers stationed at the square, who refused. Soldiers did nothing to stop the violence beyond firing an occasional shot in the air and no uniformed police were in sight state sources.
Some 20,000 pro-government demonstrators held an angry but mostly peaceful rally across the Nile River from Tahrir, saying Mubarak's concessions were enough and demanding protests end now that he has promised not to run for re-election in September, named a new government and appointed a vice president for the first time.
In his 10-minute speech Tuesday night, Mubarak emphasized the theme that he has often used in justifying his rule during his nearly three decades in power — that he can keep stability. Now he was promising to do so as he heads out the door.
He said he would serve out the rest of his term working "to accomplish the necessary steps for the peaceful transfer of power." He said he will carry out amendments to rules on presidential elections.

Feb 1, 2011

New Era of Egypt and Middle East History



All the changes in the Islamic world (Middle East) started in Egypt in 1952 when Nasser started the communist revolution and took over the power. After that, another issue reuse in the air. Arab world in 1967 wanted to concur Israeli State and lost the war in three fronts. It was the biggest humiliation known until now for the Arab world and the biggest victory in the Jewish history. Than in 1979 another revolution happened in Iran – the Islamic Revolution.
Egypt today - 01-02-2011


This week another event happened in Egypt. Now will Cairo do the requested political reform after the death of 100 people in the weekend clashes between Egyptian security forces and protesters who are still asking for change. No it all depends on the current Egyptian president Hosni Mubarak. The protesters are asking Mubarak to resign.
If the Egyptian drama ends with a peaceful departure of Mr. Mubarak, followed by an actual open election in the heart of the Arab world to pick his successor, hoping the for just possibly to be replaced by a new phase of moderation. The unrest in Egypt, coming on the heels of a similar story in less-important Tunisia!

It's no accident that each of these seminal events has centered on Egypt, the Western Arab anchor of the Middle East, or Iran, the eastern Persian anchor of the region. What happens in those two lands has always had an outsized influence on the entire Middle East, which is why American foreign policy is and remains so fixated on what happens in those two nations.
Egypt
Mr. Nasser was the force behind the 1952 revolution, though it took him nearly four years to consolidate power. Once he did, he advanced himself as the de facto leader of not just Egypt, but of a great, sprawling Arab nation still angry over the creation of the state of Israel. By banding the disparate Arab states together, he argued, a great Arab nation could emerge and take its rightful place alongside the world's superpowers. The defeat of 1967 Arab-Israeli war jolted that mindset.
Now Egypt offers the prospect of another turn. Which will be? The creation of secular democratic rule; or Anti-Western forces to complete the process begun in Iran?
Which is why the way the Egyptian drama is handled is so important. If Mr. Mubarak decides to lead an orderly transition to an open election; if Mr. ElBaradei can emerge as an effective bridging figure to a secular civilian government; if Mr. Obama can, as leader of Egypt's most important benefactor, prod all parties to such results—well, maybe the new phase is a happy one for Washington and the Western Democratic World.