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  • 10:24 - 02.12.2008 News >> Latest

    Hitmen charge $100 a victim as Basra honour killings rise Fathers and husbands who openly hire assassins on the streets of the city are going unpunished Afif Sarhan The Observer, Sunday November 30 2008 Article history Authorities in the southern Iraqi city of Basra have admitted they are powerless to prevent 'honour killings' in the city following a 70 per cent increase in religious murders during the past year. There has been no improvement in conviction rates for these killings. So far this year, 81 women in the city have been murdered for allegedly bringing shame on their families. Only five people have been convicted. During 2007 the Basra security committee recorded 47 'honour killings' and three convictions. One lawyer in the city described how police were actively protecting perpetrators and said that a woman in Basra could now be murdered by hired hitmen for as little as $100 (£65).The figures come despite international outrage which followed The Observer's coverage of the death of 17-year-old Rand Abdel-Qader, who was murdered by her father last April in an 'honour killing' after falling in love with a British soldier in Basra. The 4,000 British troops stationed in the city since the invasion that toppled Saddam Hussein in 2003 withdrew to the airport last September.Rand Abdel-Qader was killed after her family discovered that she had formed a friendship with a 22-year-old infantryman whom she knew as Paul. She was suffocated by her father then hacked at with a knife. Abdel-Qader Ali was subsequently arrested and released without charge.Rand's mother, Leila Hussein, who divorced her husband after the killing, went into hiding but was tracked down weeks later and assassinated by an unknown gunman. Her husband had told The Observer that police had congratulated him for killing his daughter. Seven months after the murders, the problem of these killings in Basra has become worse, according to lawyers. Ali Azize Raja'a, an Iraqi prosecutor who has represented the victims of 32 'honour killings' since 2004, said that, despite accumulating sufficient evidence to prove who was responsible in each murder, he had won only one case. He said that the greatest issue was the decision by police to release suspects. Seven in 10 of those thought to be responsible for such a killing have left the city, with little attempt made to track them down. The father of Rand is also understood to have left Basra. He was held by police in connection with his daughter's murder for only two hours. A local businessman who described the actions of Rand's father as 'courageous' is believed to have given a considerable sum of money to him and his two sons, who disowned their mother after she objected to Rand's killing. Raja'a said that when he was approached by Leila over Rand's case, his family was threatened by relatives.Another Iraqi lawyer, who requested anonymity, said that some fathers had started to hire professional hitmen to carry out 'honour killings' which were…

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  • 09:17 - 04.10.2009 News >> Latest

       Secret pad is Letterman's top den Lights, cameras and plenty of action! Skirt-chasing funnyman David Letterman's restricted office at his Midtown studio has all the trimmings for a bachelor on the prowl, including a fold-out...  Read Full Story     

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  • 11:05 - 23.07.2010 News >> Latest

     Delay the PainThe Bush tax cuts are set to expire next year. Obama wants to let most of them go away, but Republicans want to keep all of them. How both sides can win. Read Article   

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  • 11:26 - 14.06.2010 News >> Latest

     Mass. Race Highlights Health CareSensitivity over health-care costs in Massachusetts is at the forefront of a tight three-way race for governor, and may offer a glimpse of how the overhaul will play out in elections to come.Read Article     

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  • 15:43 - 17.05.2010 News >> Latest

      How flossing can save your life We know it helps stop tooth decay – but new research shows that good oral care can prevent heart disease, diabetes and even dementia. By Simon UsborneRead Article   

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"you don't have to be a liberal to be worried by Sarah Palin" Print E-mail

 

Sarah Palin: queen tea party

Sarah Palin's tub-thumping speech gave a foretaste of her campaign for the presidency, with divine help from God

  • Sarah Palin signs copies of her new book 'Going Rogue'

Sarah Palin, queen of the tea party.

 Photograph: Rebecca Cook/Reuters

 

When someone bounds on stage before a roomful of conservatives and shouts "I'm so proud to be an American! Happy birthday Ronald Reagan!", it can mean only one thing: Sarah Palin is running for the presidency. Normal people don't begin conversations with those two sentences, but presidential candidates do, all the time.

Palin was speaking on Saturday before one of the nascent (and probably evanescent) tea party movement groupings, in Nashville, for a reputed $100,000 fee. And she probably gave her money's worth.

The first half of Palin's speech was designed for the television audience – the speech was covered on all news channels – and so was a relative standard campaign speech for a Republican presidential primary candidate. (America's best days are ahead of it. Ronald Reagan. Smaller government. Peace through strength. And so on.) The second half was the money-maker for the tea party paymasters and had a more markedly populist tone. "How's that hopey-changey stuff working out for you?" Palin asked the crowd.

As usual with a Palin speech it had some sentences that strained the limits of grammar. But it was much improved and underlines that she's a serious candidate, not matter how quickly Democrats might dismiss her. She has a set of themes she hammers away at, and now she has found a way to sound serious. "We need a commander in chief, not a professor of law standing at the lecturn," she said, speaking from a lecturn. The content still doesn't bear close examination – one moment she was calling for "carbon free energy" and the next demanding more off-shore drilling – but a Palin speech is more about mood than thinktank source material.

The weirdest part of the evening came not during the speech but during the following Q&A session. Asked what she thought that a Republican-controlled congress's top three priorities should be, she answered: stop spending, energy policy and ... well, here's the whole quote, judge for yourself:

I think, kind of tougher to put our arms around, but allowing America's spirit to rise again by not being afraid to kind of go back to some of our roots as a God fearing nation where we're not afraid to say especially in times of potential trouble in the future here, where we're not afraid to say, you know, we don't have all the answers as fallible men and women so it would be wise of us to start seeking some divine intervention again in this country, so that we can be safe and secure and prosperous again. To have people involved in government who aren't afraid to go that route, not so afraid of the political correctness that you know – they have to be afraid of what the media said about them if they were to proclaim their alliance to our creator.

So, one of the US congress's top priorities should be ... asking for divine intervention from God? "I can think of two words right now that scare liberals: President Palin," the moderator ended the evening by saying. A brief chant of "Run, Sarah, run," broke out, although not one shared by the whole room. Proving, perhaps, that you don't have to be a liberal to be worried by Sarah Palin.

 

 

 

 
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