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by Gjermund E Jansen ![]() Map of the Golan Heights According to the Israeli newspaper the negotiations between the two countries had taken place under strict confidentiality between 2004 and 2006 on an unknown location somewhere in Europe with the knowledge of senior officials in the government of former prime minister Ariel Sharon. In a statement the Israeli Prime minister Ehud Olmert categorically denied that Israeli diplomats had held secret talks and reached agreements with Syrian representatives during former prime minister Ariel Sharon's term in office, saying that such talks "never existed."Olmert continued by saying that he, serving as a deputy PM under Sharon, had no knowledge of such talks and neither did any other cabinet minister, calling the Haaretz report: "a private initiative of someone speaking to himself," adding that it was "not serious and not dignified, and there is no need to waste words on what has been said until now." Read more... (8 comments, 5578 words in story) by Gjermund E Jansen ![]() Augusto Pinochet Augusto Pinochet was born in the Chilean city of Valparaiso in 1915. After ending primary and secondary school at the San Rafael Seminary of Valparaíso he joined the Military School in 1933 starting a military career that allegedly was pushed on him by his mother and even encouraged further by his ambitious spouse Lucia. The young Pinochet rose through the officer corps in an army based on Prussian traditions of discipline and loyalty to the constitution, but as early as the 1950s he was involved in political struggles, as he headed the clampdown on the Chilean Communist party.
Paradoxically though, it was for his apparent lack of political ambition that he advanced to the rank of general under the left-wing Popular Unity government led by Salvador Allende in the early 1970s, a career that was finally crowned by Pinochet's appointment to Army Commander in Chief on August 23, 1973. Read more... (2 comments, 2608 words in story) by Gjermund E Jansen ![]() Map of Thailand In an effort to quell the coup in its infancy, the Thai Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra, attending a United Nations summit in New York at the moment, sacked the Thai military commander, Lieutenant General Sonthi Boonyaratglin, and ordered troops not to "move illegally". He urged the armed forces chiefs to report to acting Prime Minister Chidchai Vanasatidya while declaring a state of emergency, but the message seemed to have been cut off according to the online news site China view.
The soldiers that stormed the government building, said to be loyal to the deposed military commander, have at the moment occupied the Prime Ministers office and according to a recent statement on Thai television The Thai armed forces and national police chiefs have set up a commission to decide on political reforms. Read more... (30 comments, 709 words in story) by Gjermund E Jansen
The cartoon controversy took a rather nasty turn today when a demonstration in the Syrian capital Damascus, was hijacked by a violent mob. It all started when the mob broke a rather meagre police barrier and turned on the Danish and Norwegian embassies putting them ablaze.
Read more... (30 comments, 803 words in story) by Gjermund E Jansen
From the diaries ~ whataboutbob Read more... (27 comments, 1595 words in story) by Gjermund E Jansen
from the diaries. Important freedom of speech discussion. -- Jérôme
This story began in February 2004, when the Turkish writer Orhan Pamuk in an interview published in a Swiss newspaper stated that "a million Armenians and thirty thousand Kurds had been killed in Turkey", and that saying this publicly was taboo and even punishable by law. Now, Pamuk is not the first to stand trial for "denigrating Turkish identity". The Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink was tried in the same court for the same offence, under Article 301 of the same statute, and was found guilty, but according to The New Yorker, Pamuk remains "optimistic" before the trial starting on Friday, 16. December. Read more... (33 comments, 609 words in story) by Gjermund E Jansen
According to the Norwegian newspaper Dagbladet (in Norwegian)the Norwegian Navy has been using some of its submarines on intelligence missions in the Mediterranean Sea. The mission was conducted in 2003 and was part of a NATO-operation called Active Endeavour.
The mission was at the time secret and the order was to follow and observe certain ships operating illegally from inside the Mediterranean. The goal was to monitor traffic in and out of the Mediterranean in order to expose illegal activity in collusion with terrorist activities. The Norwegian subs were part of a bigger intelligence and security operation aimed at uncovering and terrorist transport networks operating at sea from ports in the Mediterranean.
In the aftermath of this NATO-led operation, political parties opposed to the War on Terror campaign, raised questions in the Norwegian parliament over whether these subs could be counted as partakers in the Iraqi war, but the government and the majority of delegates in the Parliament dismissed these allegations and emphasized that the operations started in 2001, long before the Iraq War, and that they were an extension of the ongoing NATO-operations in Afghanistan.
Comments >> (11 comments) by Gjermund E Jansen
Almost four years to the day after the 9/11 disaster Spain convicted 19 out of 21 al-Qaeda suspects to jail. The sentences ranged from 27 years for Imad Eddin Barakat Yarkas, the alleged leader of the al-Qaeda cell, to 7 years for Tayseer Alouni, an al-Jazzera journalist accused of aiding the cell as a courier.
Yarkas and two other al-Qaida suspects were charged with the specific offence of helping to plot the 2001 attacks. Judges in Madrid today acquitted the two other men of charges relating to the September 11 attacks, although one of them was found guilty of collaborating with a terrorist organisation.
Read more... (7 comments, 448 words in story) by Gjermund E Jansen This would be a significant development - from the diaries (with minor edits) ~ whataboutbob
The armed Basque separatist group ETA is expected to call a ceasefire within three months after secret, indirect negotiations with the Spanish government, according to the Guardian Unlimited.
The newspaper El Mundo quoted unnamed sources as saying that a date for a ceasefire was "practically fixed" and only a change of heart by ETA would prevent a deal.
During the Franco years, and after ETA carried out a number of violent attacks against government and civilians alike, resulting in hundreds of casualties, the most devastating being the period between 1978-80 with a total of 235 fatalities. Read more... (4 comments, 452 words in story) by Gjermund E Jansen From the diaries (with minor edits) ~ whataboutbob
Read more... (18 comments, 507 words in story) |
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