Scoffing could be heard throughout the Palestinian Authority areas Sunday and Monday as dozens of wanted Fatah terrorists relinquished their weapons in return for tens of thousands of dollars, and a clean bill of health from Israel.
The arrangement was approved by Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert, who Saturday night signed an agreement granting amnesty to 180 men on Israel's wanted list.
OPPOSITION KNESSET MEMBERS SLAMMED THE PLAN AS A "MIXTURE OF CRIMINAL SPIN AND PLAIN STUPIDITY."
In accordance with the deal, a terrorist who handed in an M-16 rifle received $15,000, while an AK-47 was "surrendered" for $3750. Smaller guns earned their owners up to $6,000. The money paid to these killers came from donations made to the PA by the international community.
Apart from the dollars, the men who had been wanted - some for years - for their acts of criminal violence against Israeli Jews were free to come out of hiding and bask in the embrace of their people.
AND A WEEK AFTER PAYING THIS "PRICE" FOR THEIR SINS, THE AGREEMENT STIPULATES THAT THESE TERRORISTS WILL BE "INTEGRATED" INTO THE PALESTINIAN AUTHORITY'S "SECURITY FORCES" AND ISSUED WITH WEAPONS TO REPLACE THE ONES THEY JUST SURRENDERED FOR CASH.
10,000 young Russians - the new Red Guards to fight Kremlin's opponents
AT A lakeside camp five hours drive north of Moscow, 10,000 young Russians are learning WHY THE PRESIDENT, VLADIMIR PUTIN, IS SUCH A BRILLIANT LEADER AND WHY HIS OPPONENTS ARE SO EVIL.
In the middle of the camp stand large portraits of Other Russia's leaders under the banner: "The Red Light Street". Vocal opponents of Mr Putin's rule, Other Russia's three male leaders, including the world chess champion Garry Kasparov, are portrayed as prostitutes. In lurid colours they pout and pose in stockings, their faces frozen in feline grins. "I didn't know who those people were until I came here," 20-year-old Lena from St Petersburg said. "Now I know they are fascists."
THE GROUP CAME TO PROMINENCE LAST YEAR WHEN IT HOUNDED THE BRITISH AMBASSADOR TO RUSSIA FOR MONTHS AFTER HE ATTENDED AN ANTI-KREMLIN CONFERENCE. A spokeswoman said it had 100,000 members across Russia. All the Nashi members who spoke were aged between 18 and 23, were at university or had just left and came from lower income families whose parents worked in jobs such as teachers and engineers.
SINISTER ECHO OF PAST REGIME - "IN TEN years, we will have a huge network of people who share our ideology and who know that is Russia's proper place in the world," Vasily Yakemenko, the founder of Nashi, said this week. It has organised huge street demonstrations, where tens of thousands of young people have congratulated Vladimir Putin on his birthday or election anniversary. But analysts say these rallies have another purpose: to warn opposition groups that any anti-Kremlin street protests will be met by larger counter-demonstrations.
Nashi has supported the Kremlin in other ways. In April, members of the group besieged the Estonian Embassy in Moscow to protest the relocation of a Red Army memorial in the Estonian capital, Tallinn. At one point, boisterous young activists chased the ambassador from her car.
A roundup of Politics in Europe
EU FOREIGN MINISTER WILL HAVE AUTOMATIC RIGHT TO SPEAK FOR BRITAIN AT UN
The Telegraph reports that the new EU Foreign Minister, created by the revised EU Constitution, will automatically speak for Britain at the UN Security Council when the EU has a united position on issues - despite previous assurances from the British Government that this provision had been stripped from the new treaty.
SARKOZY SUGGESTS UK AND FRANCE "HARMONISE" EU POLICY
The FT reports that Nicolas Sarkozy has suggested France and the UK hold regular meetings to "harmonise" their positions ahead of EU Council summits, reviving the idea of a "troika" of the EU's three biggest member states (the UK, France and Germany) shaping the Union's agenda. How much appeal the idea has in London is unclear: one spokesman for the British Prime Minister said, "we want a strong relationship with all our allies, not just France," while a British diplomat warned harmonising positions with France should not be at the expense of smaller EU states.
US PLANS CRACKDOWN ON EUROPEAN BUSINESSES TRADING WITH IRAN
The Times reports that a new bill attracting bipartisan support in the US Congress will impose sanctions on the US operations of EU firms who continue to trade with Iran. The article notes that whilst American companies are already banned from doing business with Iran, many European companies retain interests in the oil-rich Islamic Republic, which they regard as having the potential to become one of the world's last great emerging markets.
THE EUROPEAN COMMISSION yesterday gave the German government the go-ahead to pump €120 million into developing a European rival to Google, which the EUReferendum blog dubs "the Galileo of the internet".
IN AN INTERVIEW WITH Suddeutsche Zeitung Dr Andreas Maurer from the German Institute for International Relations and Security, argues that a "two-speed Europe" is a growing reality, and that there is a "high"risk of the EU going to war in future, for instance over energy.
MANDELSON: THERE MUST BE NO REFERENDUM AND BROWN MUST STOP BASHING THE EU
The Telegraph reports that EU Commissioner Peter Mandelson has said he sees no need for a referendum on the revised Constitutional Treaty, but urged Gordon Brown to enter the debate on Europe, saying that "ducking the issues" did the cause of Britain's membership of the EU a disservice. Mandelson said, "I don't favour a referendum because I don't believe the treaty warrants it, nor do I believe further movement towards referendums fits with parliamentary democracy."
A LEADER IN THE SUN argues that "the PM has gone back on Tony Blair's promise of a referendum on the EU treaty. Every leader in Europe admits it's the same as the Constitution. So the people MUST have a say."
EU BIOFUEL TARGETS ARE "COMPLETE LUNACY"
Christopher Booker argued in the Sunday Telegraph that the EU's 10% target for biofuel use by 2020 is "complete lunacy". He wrote that "The UK's current wheat production is 11 million tons (against our consumption of 10 million). To meet the 10 per cent target by 2020 from wheat alone would require us to grow 14 million tons of wheat a year, 3 million more than we currently grow. WORLD DEMAND FOR WHEAT IS RISING SO FAST THAT, IN THE PAST TWO YEARS, A GLOBAL SURPLUS HAS BECOME A DEFICIT. SOARING PRICES HAVE ALREADY DOUBLED. Yet it is at this very moment that the EU decides we must either turn our entire domestic wheat production into fuel (thus needing to import 13 million additional tons from the world market), or devote similar amounts of our farmland to growing other fuel crops."
US IRRITATION AT BROWN'S FOREIGN POLICY SHIFT
The Telegraph reports that there are "signs of irritation" in Washington over Gordon Brown's desire to run a foreign policy more independent of the US. US-UK relations have been made more tense by comments by Lord Malloch-Brown (Minister for Africa, Asia and the UN) and Douglas Alexander (International Development Secretary), who have respectively called for Britain to be no longer "joined at the hip" with the US and for "multi-lateralism".
HEAD OF THE ARMY WARNS BRITAIN ALMOST OUT OF TROOPS
The front page of Saturday's Telegraph, and also the Mail, reported on a leaked memo from the Head of the Army Gen Sir Richard Dannatt, which warns that BRITAIN HAS ALMOST RUN OUT OF TROOPS TO DEFEND THE COUNTRY OR FIGHT ABROAD. He has told senior commanders that reinforcements for emergencies or for operations in Iraq or Afghanistan are "now almost non-existent". A leader in the Telegraph lamented that Britain's defence spending is misallocated, spent in the interests of our defence contractors rather than our soldiers. WE THROW AWAY MONSTROUS SUMS ON WEAPONS FOR WHICH WE HAVE NO PRACTICAL USE - the Eurofighter being the supreme example - but fail to invest in modern war-fighting systems: drones, unmanned naval and aerial vehicles, communications satellites, guided missiles.
IN THE SUNDAY TIMES, MICHAEL PORTILLO ARGUED THAT OTHER EUROPEAN COUNTRIES MUST COMMIT THEIR FORCES TO COMBAT ROLES IN AFGHANISTAN: "Our European allies have failed to come up with the numbers requested by Nato, and some have heavily restricted the role their forces will play. German and Spanish politicians have allowed public disquiet over Iraq to dictate their policy in Afghanistan, even though following 9/11 we were unanimous that the Taliban be ousted?You have to wonder what the EU is for if its purposes do not include fighting together against those who wish to subvert its values and bring down its societies HOW CAN A PRIME MINISTER FACE THE GRIEVING FAMILIES OF BRITISH SERVICEMEN KILLED IN ACTION, UNLESS HE HAS TRIED BY EVERY MEANS TO REINFORCE OUR NUMBERS WITH THE THOUSANDS OF EUROPEAN TROOPS, ALREADY IN THEATRE BUT STANDING IDLY BY? Our partners want our agreement to their cherished treaty. Brown should refuse consent while they fail in their obligations to our common security."
BROWN TO HOLD SNAP ELECTION IN OCTOBER?
In Saturday's Express Patrick O'Flynn predicted that Gordon Brown will call a snap election for 25 October. Meanwhile the Guardian argues spring 2009 remains the most likely date, mainly because in the autumn the economic situation will not be so favourable for Labour.
The number of school children prescribed anti-depressants and mind-altering drugs has more than quadrupled in the last decade, it has emerged.
New figures show GPs are prescribing pills in record numbers to combat stress, violent behaviour and even tiredness. Under-16s were given drugs for mental health problems more than 631,000 times in the last year, compared to just 146,000 in the mid-Nineties.
The steady increase in the use of anti-depressants over the last 10 years has been blamed on family breakdown and high-stakes school exams. Behaviour-altering drugs soared ten-fold in a decade. These include Ritalin, for attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) and Modafinil, for daytime sleepiness.
Academics say Modafinil is increasingly used by students to stay awake and boost short-term memory.
Prescriptions for the drug for under-16s rose from 48,264 in 1996/97 to 454,797 in 2006/07.
Doctors are now recommended not to prescribe most anti-depressants to under-18s. Among the drugs effectively banned are Seroxat, which was taken by an estimated 50,000 British youngsters before guidelines ruled it out in 2003. Seroxat - also known as paroxetine - alters levels of mood-regulating chemicals in the brain. It was given to children as young as six but critics said young patients became more likely to commit suicide, and parents told how their children had mood swings, nightmares and personality changes.
Holidaymakers desperate to find some respite from the unrelenting rain and flooding in the UK are flocking in record numbers to the sun-baked shores of the Mediterranean's tourist hot spots.
However, while Britain drowns amid record-breaking rainfall, Mediterranean countries are currently enduring a devastating heatwave which is claiming lives and creating misery throughout the region. The death toll from Romania's heat wave rose to 15 on Sunday after six more people died in the Black Sea country where temperatures hovered around 40 degrees Celsius (104 Fahrenheit), Health Minister Eugen Nicolaescu said.
Meteorologists say high temperatures, which could exceed 42 degrees in the southern regions on the Danube river border with Bulgaria, might last until early next week. The heatwave is a result of high pressure extending east from the Azores, blocking cooler weather fronts that normally provide relief across the eastern Mediterranean in countries such as Cyprus at this time of year.
A previous two-week long heat wave in June claimed 30 lives, scorched thousands of hectares of farmland and plunged the country's cereal crop to a four-year record low. Tiny ex-Soviet neighbour Moldova, one of Europe's poorest nations, is suffering from the worst drought in 60 years, with day temperatures hovering at a record 41 Celsius.
The temperature in Greece this weekend is due to soar to 43C in the shade. "It is a desperate situation," Eleftherotypia said. Meanwhile, the Observer reported, Macedonia has declared a state of emergency while France and Spain are experiencing droughts gearing up to become the worst on record.
The blazing temperatures have stoked fears of a tourism backlash as the heat becomes unbearable. "The Mediterranean climate of this country no longer exists," Michalis Petrakis, director of the Greek Institute of Environmental Research, told the Observer. "It is changing even faster than we expected."
The impoverished African kingdom of Lesotho has declared an official food crisis after bad harvests left more than 400,000 people in need of food aid, a U.N. agency said.
"The situation is critical for those already living on the edge, struggling to cope with the combined impact of successive crop failures, poverty and HIV/AIDS," UN emergency relief coordinator John Holmes said in a statement late on Wednesday."The international community must respond rapidly to assist the government in averting a crisis," he said.
UNAIDS says about 270,000 people -- making up 14 percent of Lesotho's population -- are infected with HIV, giving it one of the worst AIDS crises in the world. The food crunch was triggered by the country's worst drought in over 30 years, which OCHA said had cut the staple maize crop harvest by more than 40 percent.
Close to 328,000 tonnes of cereals are now needed to feed hungry people in the country, which only harvested a meagre 72,000 tonnes of cereals during its last harvest, down from 126,000 tonnes last year. Sparse supplies, and reduced harvests in neighbouring South Africa, the regional supplier, have helped to push prices beyond the reach of many in Lesotho, which is one of the poorest countries in the region.
Almost half a million people have been evacuated from the flood basin of China's Huai River.
The Huai River is swollen to its highest level in over half a century. Their misery is compounded by a plague of rats blamed on a scarcity of snakes and owls. China is also trying to deal with 2 billion flood-displaced rats in the central province of Hunan alone which have destroyed 1.6 million ha (6,200 sq miles) of crops.
Experts blame the plague partly on the shortage of owls and snakes, both popular in traditional Chinese medicine, with snake a favourite winter dish in the south.
"A snake can eat as many as 400 rats a year and an owl 1,500," the China Daily said. "Snakes in the region have been caught and exported to Guangdong in recent years and have ended up on the dining table. It has become a lucrative business and depleted the number of snakes... Owls have suffered the same fate."
China's flood season is notoriously deadly. At least 360 people have died in floods and related disasters across the country this summer and more than 4 million ha (15,440 sq miles) of crops had been destroyed.
The flooding crisis in central and western England continues as Britain's two biggest rivers, the Severn and the Thames, threaten to overflow.
Prime Minister Gordon Brown has visited Gloucestershire, the worst-affected county, where thousands of people have been left without water supply. Supplies to other areas will also run out - leaving 350,000 without water. Some 40,000 homes have also lost power.
Severn Trent Water said 150,000 homes in Gloucestershire were without water after a treatment works was flooded. But it warned all residents in Gloucester, Cheltenham and Tewkesbury - an estimated 350,000 people - they would lose their supply within the next 15 hours. The situation is expected to last several days, it said.
Elsewhere in Gloucestershire, 43,000 homes were left without power after a major electricity substation was turned off because of the rising water.
URUMQI - More than 2,100 houses have collapsed and 8,250 people have been evacuated after a 5.7-magnitude earthquake jolted a county in northwest China's Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region, local officials said on Sunday.
An official with the Tekes county, Ili Kazak Autonomous Prefecture in northern Xinjiang, confirmed that the quake caused no human casualties but leveled or damaged 2,120 homes.
The quake hit Tekes county at 6:06 p.m. on Friday (Beijing Time), with its epicenter at a mountainous region 60 kilometers from the county seat and 430 kilometers from Urumqi, capital of Xinjiang.
Rescuers have displaced 8,250 residents as their houses, most of which are mud-brick ones, either collapsed or became dangerous, said the official.
China's president visited a flood-battered southern city on Sunday, expressing condolences and vowing to help the thousands affected as the death toll from rain-triggered floods, landslides and mud flows across the nation rose to 152 from this week alone.
Since the start of the annual rainy season in May, floods have hit nearly half of China's regions and killed at least 400 people, the official Xinhua News Agency said.
In the southwestern city of Chongqing, 42 people died and 12 have been reported missing. Another 300,000 people have been evacuated.
Chinese media have reported that 266.6 millimeters (10.5 inches) of rain fell between Monday night and Tuesday afternoon in Chongqing, the largest volume since records began in 1892. The previous record of 206.1 millimeters (8.1 inches) was set on July 1996.
Storms dumped more than a foot of rain on parts of Texas, stranding more than 170 passengers on an Amtrak train for hours and forcing rescue crews elsewhere to pull at least 50 people to safety.
Water covering the tracks in Knippa, about 75 miles west of San Antonio, stopped a westbound Amtrak train carrying 176 passengers at around 9 a.m. Saturday, authorities said. Amtrak spokeswoman Vernae Graham said buses were driving the passengers to El Paso, where they were expected to board another train early Sunday.
The train never lost power, but buses could not reach it until early Saturday evening because of flooded roads, Graham said. Parts of northern Uvalde and Medina counties got as much as 17 inches of rain between 10 p.m. Friday and 10 a.m. Saturday, said Pat McDonald, a National Weather Service forecaster.
Seco Creek overflowed, inundating the town of D'Hanis near San Antonio, said Medina County Sheriff Randy Brown. Many businesses were flooded with 3 to 4 feet of water. Boats, fire trucks and helicopters rescued stranded residents, but only one minor injury was reported, Brown said. In San Antonio, there were 20 to 30 road closures, said Orlando Hernandez, county emergency management coordinator.
"Other than a couple of days, we've had rain for the last three to four weeks," he said. "The ground is saturated. Any rain we get is resulting in flooding."
IN THE United States, opposition to the teaching of evolution in public schools has largely been fuelled by the religious right, particularly Protestant fundamentalism.
Now another voice is entering the debate, in dramatic fashion. He is Adnan Oktar, from Turkey, who under the name Harun Yahya has produced numerous books, videos and DVDs on science and faith, in particular what he calls the "deceit" inherent in the theory of evolution.
One of his books, Atlas Of Creation, is turning up unsolicited in the mailboxes of scientists and members of the US Congress, and at science museums around the country. The lavishly illustrated 800-page book is one of the most significant creationist challenges to Charles Darwin's theory, which Yahya calls a feeble and perverted ideology contradicted by the Koran.
In bowing to scripture, Yahya resembles some fundamentalist creationists in the United States. But he is not among those who assert that the Earth is only a few thousand years old.
Water supplies in Gloucester could run out by 1600 BST on Sunday.
Treated water supplies to Cheltenham, Tewkesbury and the surrounding villages are expected to run out later.
Severn Trent Water said a major pumping plant in Mythe near Tewkesbury had been overwhelmed by flood water and put out of action.
More than 200 people in the dockside area of Gloucester are preparing to evacuate their homes in preparation for the River Severn bursting its banks.
The town of Tewkesbury remains virtually cut off.
The death toll from fierce rain storms and flooding in China continued to rise Saturday as the government scrambled to step up relief and prevention efforts, state press reported.
A record 180 millimetres (7.2 inches) of rain pummelled the city on Wednesday, snarling traffic and cutting off electricity and water supplies in the fiercest storms to hit the capital since 1916, meteorologists said. The latest toll was up from 32 dead as of early Friday.
By Saturday more than 559,000 people had been affected by flooding in Shandong and 112,600 evacuated as water-levels on the nearby Yellow River and in surrounding reservoirs remained above warning lines, the report said. The state flood headquarters issued warnings to shore up dykes and levies on major rivers and reservoirs and dispatch relief and medical supplies to hard hit regions in both east and southwest China.
Meanwhile, the death toll in Chongqing municipal in China's southwest rose to 42 people and 12 missing from torrential downpours that have affected up to 6.8 million people since Monday. More than 292,000 people have been evacuated in the mountainous region along the Yangtze river, with over 100,000 homes damaged and crops on about 175,000 hectares (432,000 acres) of farmland destroyed, Xinhua said in a separate report.
In neighboring Yunnan province, south of Chongqing, rescuers Saturday continued to search for two migrant workers that went missing when a giant landslide engulfed their work camp on Thursday killing 27 other labourers, other press reports said.
China's death toll from natural disasters this year reached 715 by July 16 with about half of the fatalities coming this month and 129 people still missing, Xinhua said Friday, citing the civil affairs ministry. The Ministry of Civil Affairs and the Ministry of Finance have allocated 435 million yuan (57 million dollars) in relief aid to 18 disaster-stricken regions so far this year, it said.
A fierce hail storm pounded the town of Cananea Sonoroa, Mexico, last night.
"I was talking with my mother this morning," writes international viewer Ing. Hctor Manuel Germn Gardner, "and she says that in her whole life she didn't remember something like yesterday ever happening in Cananea, and she's almost 80 years old!!!"
You see hail the size of golf balls and bigger fell upon the town, along with flooding rain. "There was a lot of damage caused by the hailstorm," writes Ing. Gardner. "It lasted more than one hour and it was really scary. Lots of cars got their windshields broken and many houses were flooded."
Today we find the Church of God in a “wilderness of religious confusion!”
The confusion is not merely around the Church – within the religions of the world outside – but WITHIN the very heart of The True Church itself!
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