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== PRIMA EDIZIONE == Before Egyptian President Anwar Sadat set off for his journey to Jerusalem in 1977, he announced to the world that he did not intend to live "among the pygmies". This was tough on pygmies but there was no doubt what it revealed about Sadat. He thought he was a Great Man. History suggests he was wrong. His 1978 Camp David agreement with Menachem Begin of Israel brought the Sinai back under Egyptian control, but it locked Sadat’s country into a cold peace and near-bankrupt isolation. He was finally called "Pharaoh", a description Sadat might have appreciated had it not been shouted by his murderers as they stormed his military reviewing stand in 1981.
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''' al jazeera oscurata ''' The Middle East, of course, is awash with kings and dictators who are called - or like to imagine themselves - Great Men. Saddam Hussein thought he was Stalin - evil, unfortunately, is also for some a quality of greatness - while George Bush Senior thought Saddam was Hitler. Eden claimed that Nasser, when he nationalised the Suez Canal in 1956, was the Mussolini of the Nile (though Mussolini was not Great, he thought he was). Yasser Arafat claimed that Hashemite King Hussein of Jordan, when he died, was Saladin, the warrior who drove the Crusaders out of Palestine. The truth was that the Israelis had driven the Hashemites from Palestine. But Hussein was on "our" side and the Plucky Little King, when he died of cancer in 1999, was immortalised by President Clinton who said he was "already in heaven", a feat that went unequalled until Pope John Paul II made it to the same location before his funeral this month.
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Alle 5 del pomeriggio di martedi' scorso il New York Times titolava: "Al Jazeera oscurata dagli hackers". I listened to much of the tosh uttered about this hopelessly right-wing pontiff when he was dying, and read a good deal of the vitriol that was splashed on him a few days later. I agree with much of the latter. But he was the one prominent world figure - being of "world" importance is not necessarily a quality for greatness, but it helps - who stood up against President Bush’s insane invasion of Iraq. With absolute resolution, he condemned and re-condemned the illegality of the assault on Iraq in a way that no other prominent churchman did. Good on yer, Pope, I remember saying at the time - and it would be churlish of me to forget this now. But a Great Man?
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Casualmente il presunto attacco è avvenuto lo stesso giorno della polemica sulla messa in onda da parte del network di lingua araba delle immagini dei soldati angloamericani morti in Iraq.
E ancora: il sito, ospitato su tre server nel mondo: uno in Qatar, un in Francia e uno negli Usa, era irraggiungibile solo da chi si connetteva dagli Stati Uniti. L'improbabile attacco degli hacker (che firmandosi Patriot, Freedom Cyber Force Militia indirizzavano gli utenti in un sito nazionalista Usa - http://members.networld.com/freedom2003/) assomiglia tanto alla censura.
A confermarlo la notizia che oggi e' rimbalzata su tutti i giornali del mondo: al jazeera e' oscurata non solo nella sua versione in lingua inglese, ma anche in quella in lingua araba.
In truth, our world seems full of Little Men. Not just Sadat’s "pygmies". Gaddafi may be a "statesman" in the eyes of our Trot of a foreign secretary - this was just before the Libyan dictator was found to be plotting the assassination of Crown Prince Abdullah of Saudi Arabia - but anyone who can seriously suggest that a joint Israeli-Palestinian state might be called "Israeltine" is clearly a candidate for the men in white coats. Indeed, it raises the question: are there any Great Men in the Middle East?
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And, are there any Great Men in the world today? Where - this is a question I’ve been asked by several readers recently - are the Churchills, the Roosevelts, the Trumans, the Eisenhowers, the Titos, the Lloyd Georges, the Woodrow Wilsons, the de Gaulles and Clemenceaus?
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''' mobilitazioni in italia ''' Our present band of poseur presidents and prime ministers cannot come close. Bush may think he is Churchill - remember all that condemnation of Chamberlain’s 1938 appeasement we had to suffer before we invaded Iraq? - but he cannot really compare himself to his dad, let alone our Winston. Bush Junior looks like a nerd while his friends - Cheney, Rumsfeld, Wolfowitz and the rest - actually look disreputable. Chirac would like to be a Great Man but his problem is that he can be mocked - see France’s equivalent of Spitting Image. Blair has a worse impediment. He has become a mockery of himself, slowly assuming the role of his clergyman namesake in Private Eye - to the point where the latter simply became no longer funny. Blair’s self-righteousness and self-regard would have earned him my Dad’s ultimate put-down of all pretentious men: that he was a twerp. And my Dad, I should add, kept Churchill’s portrait over the dining room fireplace.
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sgomberato a milano il mediacenter occupato ieri pomeriggio nelle vicinanze dell'università di milano. ora i mediattivisti milanesi, indymedia e reti universitarie lavorano alla ricostruzione di questo progetto facendolo diventare un centro di comunicazione interno o vicino all'università. Sacrifice obviously has something to do with it. To get bumped off for your good deeds - preferably "making peace", although many of those at work on the "peace" project seem to have spent a lot of time making war - is clearly a possible path to Greatness. Thus Sadat does have a chance. So does Yitzhak Rabin of Israel. And so, through sickness, King Hussein and - in more theatrical form - the last Pope, although my Mum died of the same illness with much less drama and pomp. Those who successfully fight their countries’ occupiers get a look in; de Gaulle again, Tito again, maybe Ho Chi Minh but not, apparently, the leaders of the Algerian FLN and most definitely not the lads from the Lebanese Hizbollah. And we all know how Arafat went from being Superterrorist to Superstatesman and back to Super-terrorist again.
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In the Middle East, I do have a soft spot for President Khatami of Iran. A truly decent, philosophical, morally good man, he was crushed by the political power of his clerical enemies set up by Ayatollah Khomeini. Khatami’s "civil society" never materialised; had it blossomed, he might have been a Great Man. Instead, his life seems to be a tragedy of withered hope. I mention Khomeini and I fear we have to put him in the list. He lived the poverty of Gandhi, overthrew a vicious dictatorship and changed the history of the Middle East. That his country is now a necrocracy - government ruled by and for the dead - does not, sadly, change this.
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Yet this raises another dark question? Why do we stop only a generation or two ago? Why stop at the First World War? Where now, we might ask, are the Duke of Wellingtons and the Napoleons, the Queen Elizabeths, the Richard the Lionhearts, and yes, the Saladins and the Caesars and the Genghis Khans?
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'''La Cap Horn lascia Livorno''' Oddly, the list of Great Men doesn’t usually include Gandhi, whom I would think an obvious candidate for all the right reasons. He was palpably a good man, a peaceful man, and freed his country from imperial rule and was assassinated.
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Nessuna riparazione per la nave-traghetto "Cape Horn", noleggiata dall'esercito Usa che ha ripreso il largo lasciando la rada del porto di Livorno.
La decisione e' stata assunta dal comando della nave, probabilmente su ordini provenienti da livelli piu' alti. La "Cape Horn" aveva chiesto al Cantiere Navale Fratelli Orlando, gestito da una coop operaia e attualmente in amministrazione controllata, di poter usufruire dei servizi di riparazione
Ad un primo rifiuto dei lavoratori, che non volevano aiutare gli Stati Uniti in una fase di guerra, ieri sera e' seguita la decisione dei sindacati di riprendere i lavori adducendo "superiori esigenze di sicurezza della nave" ma molto più probabilmente dovuta a ragioni di carattere economico, la stessa regione Liguria aveva espresso la sua preoccupazione che gli scioperi del settore potessero danneggiare il mercato, in questo caso quello delle armi. In nottata la svolta definitiva: la nave, che evidentemente poteva navigare nonostante l'avaria, ha levato l'ancora lasciando Livorno e non si sa dove sia diretta.
Nelson Mandela would be among my candidates for all the obvious reasons (his objections to Bush not being the least of them). Nurse Edith Cavell - "patriotism is not enough" - who was shot by the Germans in the First World War, and Margaret Hassan, the supremely brave and selfless charity worker butchered in Iraq, must be in my list - proving, of course, that we should also ask: where are the Great Women of our age? Rachel Corrie, I’d say, the American girl who was crushed by an Israeli bulldozer as she stood in its path to protect Palestinian homes in Gaza. And how about Mordechai Vanunu, the Israeli nuclear whistleblower?
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'''Ritter contro ministro britannico'''

Scott Ritter, ex ispettore Onu ed ex marine ha rilasciato alle agenzie internazionali una dichiarazione nella quale afferma di essere molto preoccupato che alla fine BUSH ordini di usare ordigni nucleari. Il presidente statunitense infatti potrebbe decidere di impiegare armi dagli effetti devastanti nella guerra in corso ''. Inoltre Ritter ha aggiunto che non ci sono armi di distruzione di massa in Iraq e definisce ''un gigantesco bluff'' i piani militari Usa. Sono dichiarazioni in aperto contrasto con quello che oggi va affermando il ministro della difesa britannico Geoff Hoon, il quale naturalmente da per certe scoperte importanti circa l'intenzione irachena di usare armi chimico-batteriologiche

'''IRAQ: PERSI CONTATTI CON CINQUE GIORNALISTI'''

Persi i contatti con cinque giornalisti che lavorano in Iraq. Due giornalisti del quotidiano statunitense 'Newsday' a Baghdad e una troupe di tre persone della televisione di Dubai, 'Al Arabiya', sono dati per dispersi. L'inviato Matt McAllester, 33 anni, ex corrispondente dal Medio Oriente per il Newsday, e il fotoreporter Moises Saman, 29 annii non si mettono in contatto con la loro redazione da lunedì. Poco prima le autorita' irachene avevano notificato agli interessati che sarebbero stati accompagnati al confine con la Giordania perche' i loro visti erano scaduti.

Per quanto riguarda i tre dell'emittente 'Al Arabya', la redazione ha fatto sapere di avere perso dal 22 marzo i contatti con il giornalista siriano Wael Awwad, con il cameraman libanese Talal Masri e con il tecnico libanese Ali Safa.

'''IRAQ: TV AL JAZIRA ESORTA USA A GARANTIRE LIBERTA' DI STAMPA'''

Messa al bando da Wall Street e attaccata dagli 'hacker' su Internet, l'emittente araba Al Jazira, ha difeso la sua copertura della guerra irachena e chiesto aiuto agli Stati Uniti nel nome della liberta' di stampa.

L'emittente satellitare del Qatar ha manifestato forte preoccupazione per l'espulsione di due suoi corrispondenti dalla sala delle grida della borsa di New York e per l'attacco dei pirati informatici al suo sito 'web'. I responsabili di Wall Street hanno bloccato le trasmissioni dell'emittente, dicendo che le credenziali erano concesse soltanto alle reti in grado di fornire informazioni "resposanbili".

'''PALESTINA'''

Un elicottero apache israeliano ha attaccato una sede della polizia dell'Autorita' nazionale palestinese uccidendo tre poliziotti. E' accaduto nel nord della striscia di Gaza. Le squadre di soccorso palestinesi hanno dichiarato che i soldati di Israele hanno impedito loro di raggiungere il luogo dell'aggressione, sparando per diverse volte verso le autombulanze che intendevano soccorrere i feriti.
secondo l'ANP a Beit Hanoon 10 carrarmati sono entrati nell'area occupata dai palestinesi, gli abitanti della zona hanno subito organizzato una resistenza con lancio di pietre e bottiglie molotov.


'''FUJIMORI ‘WANTED'''

La persona può essere pericolosa.. Questo l’avvertimento che spicca sulla ‘Red Notice’ (avviso rosso) relativa ad Alberto Fujimori, pubblicata ieri dall’Interpol sul suo sito internet. Ii reati attribuiti al 64enne ex presidente peruviano, oggi residente a Tokyo sono assalto, contraffazione, rapimento, sparizione forzata, omicidio, crimine organizzato.

L’Interpol, alla quale aderiscono 181 Paesi, ha accolto la richiesta delle autorità del Perù diffondendo un mandato emesso nel 2001 dalla magistratura locale per assassinio e sequestro. Spetta adesso ai Paesi membri decidere, in base alla legislazione nazionale ed ai trattati bilaterali con il Perù, se considerare la ‘Red Notice’ come un ordine di arresto provvisorio o come una semplice informazione, priva di valore giuridico.

http://www.interpol.int/




















U.S.A.

governo americano

presidente GeorgewBush

the Cabinet uyybzcfzesxbole Secretary of Agriculture Ann Veneman

Secretary of Commerce Don Evans

Secretary of Defense DonaldRumsfeld

Secretary of Education Rod Paige

Secretary of Energy Spencer Abraham

Secretary of Health & Human Services Tommy Thompson

Secretary of Homeland Security TomRidge

Secretary of State ColinPowell

Secretary of Transportation Norman Mineta

Secretary of Treasury John Snow

Secretary of Veterans Affairs Anthony Principi

Secretary of Housing & Urban Development Mel Martinez

Secretary of Interior GaleNorton

Attorney General John Ashcroft

Secretary of Labor Elaine Chao

consiglieri del presidente

Consigliere Di Sicurezza Nazionale CondoleezzaRice

ISRAELE

governo israeliano

ArielSharon - Prime Minister

(inoltre tiene le comunicazioni, l'alloggiamento e la costruzione, gli affari labor e sociali e le cartelle religiose di affari)

      YosefLapid - Ministro della Giustizia, and Deputy Prime Minister

      EhudOlmert - Ministro dell'industria e del commercio, and Deputy Prime Minister

      SilvanShalom -Ministro degli affari esteri, and Deputy Prime Minister

      BenyaminElon - Ministro del turismo

      TzachiHanegbi - Ministro della pubblica sicurezza

      YisraelKatz - Ministro dell'agricoltura e dello sviluppo rurale

      AvigdorLieberman - Ministro dei trasporti

      LimorLivnat - Ministro della educazione, cultura e sport

      TzipiLivni - Ministero per l'assorbimento degli immigrati

      ShaulMofaz - Ministro delle difesa

      YehuditNaot - Ministro dell'ambiente

      DanNaveh - Ministro della salute

      BenjaminNetanyahu - Ministro della finanza

      JosephParitzky - Ministro delle infrastrutture nazionali

      Avraham Poraz - Ministro dell'interno

      Eliezer Sandberg - Ministero delle scienze e tecconologie

      Gideon Ezra - Minister without Portfolio

      Uzi Landau - Minister without Portfolio

      Natan Sharansky - Minister without Portfolio

Meir Sheetrit - Minister without Portfolio
And yes, all the humble folk - little people, if you like - who did what they did, whatever the cost, not because they sought Greatness, but because they believed it was the right thing to do.

Before Egyptian President Anwar Sadat set off for his journey to Jerusalem in 1977, he announced to the world that he did not intend to live "among the pygmies". This was tough on pygmies but there was no doubt what it revealed about Sadat. He thought he was a Great Man. History suggests he was wrong. His 1978 Camp David agreement with Menachem Begin of Israel brought the Sinai back under Egyptian control, but it locked Sadat’s country into a cold peace and near-bankrupt isolation. He was finally called "Pharaoh", a description Sadat might have appreciated had it not been shouted by his murderers as they stormed his military reviewing stand in 1981.

The Middle East, of course, is awash with kings and dictators who are called - or like to imagine themselves - Great Men. Saddam Hussein thought he was Stalin - evil, unfortunately, is also for some a quality of greatness - while George Bush Senior thought Saddam was Hitler. Eden claimed that Nasser, when he nationalised the Suez Canal in 1956, was the Mussolini of the Nile (though Mussolini was not Great, he thought he was). Yasser Arafat claimed that Hashemite King Hussein of Jordan, when he died, was Saladin, the warrior who drove the Crusaders out of Palestine. The truth was that the Israelis had driven the Hashemites from Palestine. But Hussein was on "our" side and the Plucky Little King, when he died of cancer in 1999, was immortalised by President Clinton who said he was "already in heaven", a feat that went unequalled until Pope John Paul II made it to the same location before his funeral this month.

I listened to much of the tosh uttered about this hopelessly right-wing pontiff when he was dying, and read a good deal of the vitriol that was splashed on him a few days later. I agree with much of the latter. But he was the one prominent world figure - being of "world" importance is not necessarily a quality for greatness, but it helps - who stood up against President Bush’s insane invasion of Iraq. With absolute resolution, he condemned and re-condemned the illegality of the assault on Iraq in a way that no other prominent churchman did. Good on yer, Pope, I remember saying at the time - and it would be churlish of me to forget this now. But a Great Man?

In truth, our world seems full of Little Men. Not just Sadat’s "pygmies". Gaddafi may be a "statesman" in the eyes of our Trot of a foreign secretary - this was just before the Libyan dictator was found to be plotting the assassination of Crown Prince Abdullah of Saudi Arabia - but anyone who can seriously suggest that a joint Israeli-Palestinian state might be called "Israeltine" is clearly a candidate for the men in white coats. Indeed, it raises the question: are there any Great Men in the Middle East?

And, are there any Great Men in the world today? Where - this is a question I’ve been asked by several readers recently - are the Churchills, the Roosevelts, the Trumans, the Eisenhowers, the Titos, the Lloyd Georges, the Woodrow Wilsons, the de Gaulles and Clemenceaus?

Our present band of poseur presidents and prime ministers cannot come close. Bush may think he is Churchill - remember all that condemnation of Chamberlain’s 1938 appeasement we had to suffer before we invaded Iraq? - but he cannot really compare himself to his dad, let alone our Winston. Bush Junior looks like a nerd while his friends - Cheney, Rumsfeld, Wolfowitz and the rest - actually look disreputable. Chirac would like to be a Great Man but his problem is that he can be mocked - see France’s equivalent of Spitting Image. Blair has a worse impediment. He has become a mockery of himself, slowly assuming the role of his clergyman namesake in Private Eye - to the point where the latter simply became no longer funny. Blair’s self-righteousness and self-regard would have earned him my Dad’s ultimate put-down of all pretentious men: that he was a twerp. And my Dad, I should add, kept Churchill’s portrait over the dining room fireplace.

Sacrifice obviously has something to do with it. To get bumped off for your good deeds - preferably "making peace", although many of those at work on the "peace" project seem to have spent a lot of time making war - is clearly a possible path to Greatness. Thus Sadat does have a chance. So does Yitzhak Rabin of Israel. And so, through sickness, King Hussein and - in more theatrical form - the last Pope, although my Mum died of the same illness with much less drama and pomp. Those who successfully fight their countries’ occupiers get a look in; de Gaulle again, Tito again, maybe Ho Chi Minh but not, apparently, the leaders of the Algerian FLN and most definitely not the lads from the Lebanese Hizbollah. And we all know how Arafat went from being Superterrorist to Superstatesman and back to Super-terrorist again.

In the Middle East, I do have a soft spot for President Khatami of Iran. A truly decent, philosophical, morally good man, he was crushed by the political power of his clerical enemies set up by Ayatollah Khomeini. Khatami’s "civil society" never materialised; had it blossomed, he might have been a Great Man. Instead, his life seems to be a tragedy of withered hope. I mention Khomeini and I fear we have to put him in the list. He lived the poverty of Gandhi, overthrew a vicious dictatorship and changed the history of the Middle East. That his country is now a necrocracy - government ruled by and for the dead - does not, sadly, change this.

Yet this raises another dark question? Why do we stop only a generation or two ago? Why stop at the First World War? Where now, we might ask, are the Duke of Wellingtons and the Napoleons, the Queen Elizabeths, the Richard the Lionhearts, and yes, the Saladins and the Caesars and the Genghis Khans?

Oddly, the list of Great Men doesn’t usually include Gandhi, whom I would think an obvious candidate for all the right reasons. He was palpably a good man, a peaceful man, and freed his country from imperial rule and was assassinated.

Nelson Mandela would be among my candidates for all the obvious reasons (his objections to Bush not being the least of them). Nurse Edith Cavell - "patriotism is not enough" - who was shot by the Germans in the First World War, and Margaret Hassan, the supremely brave and selfless charity worker butchered in Iraq, must be in my list - proving, of course, that we should also ask: where are the Great Women of our age? Rachel Corrie, I’d say, the American girl who was crushed by an Israeli bulldozer as she stood in its path to protect Palestinian homes in Gaza. And how about Mordechai Vanunu, the Israeli nuclear whistleblower?

And yes, all the humble folk - little people, if you like - who did what they did, whatever the cost, not because they sought Greatness, but because they believed it was the right thing to do.

mace (last edited 2008-06-26 09:53:48 by anonymous)