Mideast News & Politics
For Every One Woman They Put in Jail, There are 10 More in Her Place
- Published on Saturday, 19 November 2011 00:00
- Category: World News
On October 23rd, The Walter H. Capps Center for the Study of Ethics, Religion, and Public Life at UC Santa Barbara held an event to launch it’s new Hamdani World Harmony Lecture Series.
Leading the series with “The Role of Women in Promoting Peace and Democracy in the Middle East,” Nobel Peace Prize Laureate, Iranian Human Rights lawyer, author, and recent exile Shirin Ebadi, drew a substantial audience at the Santa Barabara campus.
As as stop along her book tour for her acclaimed The Golden Cage, Ebadi’s presentation not only touched on the fate of the Iran’s Green movement, it also discussed the larger landscape of women’s rights in the Middle East in the midst of the recent revolutions.
Aslan Media had the chance to sit down with Ebadi before she took the stage to discuss her new book, the current climate in Iran, and her thoughts on America’s unrest.
“There Has Not Been a Peace Process; There Has Been an Annexation Process”: Norman Finkelstein Discusses the Israel-Palestine Conflict
- Published on Thursday, 17 November 2011 06:07
- Category: U.S. News
Though several YouTube clips portray him as a radical, many of Dr. Norman Finkelstein’s ideas and resolutions to the Israel-Palestine conflict are so reasonable that it is no wonder his opponents try to silence and/or discredit him (in fact, an acquaintance of mine complained he wasn’t radical enough!).
Speakers can easily be put-down as “extremist” or “anti-Semitic” when their ideas are radically out of the norm. But with Finkelstein these labels go down like a lead balloon.
As part of his speaking tour of the UK, Finkelstein’s lecture in Manchester, England in early November was originally intended to be held at the University of Manchester.
Thank You For Giving Me the Vote, King Abdullah. Now Can I Please Have Something to Vote About?
- Published on Wednesday, 16 November 2011 00:00
- Category: World News
When I, a Saudi female who lives in the city of Jeddah, first heard the news last month that King Abdullah was going to let women vote, my first reaction was, "vote in what?"
As is well known, the country of Saudi Arabia is an absolute monarchy. The king has the final say in everything.
There is no parliament, no prime minister, not even a constitution.
I suppose democracy must begin somewhere. But what elections was the king even talking about?
Perhaps he meant municipal elections. Those were held for the second time ever earlier this year. Yet when women went to their municipalities to vote, they were turned away at the polls.
Israel: A Friend with Benefits – and Costs
- Published on Tuesday, 15 November 2011 00:00
- Category: World News
"Our security relationship with Israel is broader, deeper, and more intense than ever before," said Andrew Shapiro, Assistant Secretary of State for Political-Military Affairs, speaking to the Washington Institute for Near East Policy last Saturday.
The majority of his speech could have been taken directly from the pages of a recent report by Robert Blackwill and Walter Slocombe entitled, "Israel: A Strategic Asset for the United States. " Both Shapiro and the authors of the report argue that Israel confers significant benefits upon the US and its national interests, and that this justifies the support the US provides to the Jewish state.
Blackwill and Slocombe ably delineate the positive aspects of the relationship. The authors assert that Israeli and US national interests are "virtually identical." Both states seek to prevent nuclear proliferation (especially by unfriendly states like Iran), combat terrorism and Islamic extremism, promote stability and "an orderly process of democratic change" in the region, and ensure the security of Israel.
Arab League Ambassador Visits DC
- Published on Monday, 14 November 2011 06:06
- Category: World News
Supra-national bodies tend to get bogged down in political discussions and controversies. That has certainly been the case with the League of Arab States, which represents the diverse political, social, and economic interests of twenty-two nation-states.
The League is routinely criticized as ineffectual and unimportant on the international stage. Yet it has nevertheless received greater attention lately because of the Arab Spring, the recent bid for Palestinian statehood at the UN, Tunisia's October elections, and the ongoing Arab-Israeli conflict. In fact, one could argue that the League has never been more important than in 2011.
From Cairo to Phoenix. What the Occupy Movement Owes to the Arab Spring
- Published on Sunday, 13 November 2011 00:00
- Category: World News
Protests have become the bread and butter of the evening news.
In light of recent events, news viewers have come to expect protests in their “news meal,” whether it is on the home front or abroad, almost as much as they expect to enjoy a Kaiser roll with their steak dinner.
As a student at Arizona State University, I haven’t been personally witness to the Arab Spring and the tumult in the Middle East, but have closely followed the shock-wave of protests that have spread throughout the United States. What began in lower Manhattan and Zucotti Park has now spread to just a few miles from my campus—and in towns and cities much like my own across the nation.
What many don’t see is that the Middle East and the United States share a common thread. Mohamed Bouazizi set himself aflame in Tunisia last December and the heat behind his frustration fueled a regional revolution. That was nearly a year ago. But how will the successes of one country or region affect another? Who and what is changing?
Interview with Moaz al-Sibaai
- Published on Saturday, 12 November 2011 00:00
- Category: World News
Moaz Al-Sibaai currently leads the Political Office of the Homs Revolutionary Council and is a member of the recently formed Syrian National Council. Mr. al-Sibaai is also the Chair and Founder of The Syrian Dream group and chair of the Syrian Activists Network (SYAN). Moaz is a senior IT infrastructure consultant and also manages consulting delivery in Saudi Arabia.
Recently, Aslan Media spoke with him from his home in Riyadh.
Petition to prevent Manchester-based family from eviction
- Published on Friday, 11 November 2011 03:19
- Category: World News
Manchester - Around 30 people gathered outside the Crown Prosecution Service in Manchester on Tuesday to hand in a petition which generated over 10,000 signatures to prevent a family from being evicted from their home in Longsight, Manchester.
The “Save the Family Home” campaign was set up after the Farooqi family of five adults and two children, including an eight month old baby, were told they could be made homeless as a result of the father’s conviction.
The father, Munir Farooqi, was found guilty of terrorism charges, which he is appealing. Greater Manchester Police (GMP) and the CPS want to seize his home in Longsight, Manchester, saying it was used for terrorism. This is the first time that such a move has been attempted under section 23A of the Terrorism Act 2000, which allows forfeiture of property in terrorism cases. If granted, the order would enable the property to be sold and the proceeds placed into the Magistrates’ Court.
Harris Farooqi, who also faced terror charges but was found not guilty, said the signatures were a 'small drop in the ocean'. "When a person commits no crime, he always wins", he said after the petition was handed in to the CPS. "It's been a miscarriage of justice and we will prove that very soon".
Crying Wolf: How Fear-Mongering About a Nuclear Iran Never Gets Old
- Published on Thursday, 10 November 2011 05:06
- Category: World News
“Within three to five years we can assume that Iran will become autonomous in its ability to develop and produce a nuclear bomb.”
These words were Benjamin Netanyahu’s ominous warning to the Israeli Knesset, predicting the imminent rise of a nuclear armed and ostensibly aggressive Iran.
The interesting thing about this quote is that it was given by Netanyahu to the Knesset in 1992. Then there was Israeli President Shimon Peres telling American television viewers to expect an Iranian nuclear bomb within “three to four years” - that’s three to four years from 1996, when he made that statement. Not long after, the CIA issued a report predicting that Iran would have nuclear capacity by 2000. And who can forget last year’s hysterical headline on the cover of the Atlantic Magazine, in which Jeffrey Goldberg warned that Israel was six months away from bombing Iran? And now, here we are again, with another IAEA report fueling fears that Iran is on the brink of having the bomb.
Guantanamo at Home: The Horrifying Case of Syed Fahad Hashimi
- Published on Saturday, 05 November 2011 05:15
- Category: World News
They kept him in a small cell, barely the size of a bathroom. There was one window, painted black to prevent natural light from coming in, a concrete bed, toilet, and sink. He was under 24 hours video surveillance, and 23 hours of solitary confinement. This is where he slept, ate, prayed if they allowed it, and relieved himself.
These were the Special Administrative Measures (SAMs) that Syed Fahad Hashmi, then 27, was placed under for three years before he was convicted of any crime.
After September 11, many such Americans have faced similar cases. In October, a two-day conference and talk held at Brooklyn College and the City University of New York discussed several of these trials and detentions marked by inhumanity and injustice.
Hundreds of students, scholars, and activists came together to discuss the conditions that these Americans have faced on tenuous evidence. Among the higher profile of these cases was that of Fahad Hashmi.
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