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Euronews, Nov, 19 - Herman Van Rompuy is the European President - Prime Minister of the Kingdom of Belgium, the Fleming Herman Van Rompuy gained substantial favour as a candidate for the new job of full-time European Union President relatively late in the game. It was his consensus-building skill holding a challenging coalition together at home which grabbed attention.
Pragmatic rather than charismatic was how at least one analyst
described him. He is a Jesuit-educated former economics professor. He
earned praise for getting opposing language communities who were
tearing at the very fabric of Belgium to sit down with each other.
Discretion won him points, but critics said his cool exterior concealed
a degree of cynicism.
He is a steadfast devotee of NATO and the US. His backing by France and
Germany did not endear him to all the other EU members. Diplomats have
said what may be most in Van Rompuy’s favour is that so few people have
heard of him.
Foreign policy
Catherine Ashton has had little foreign affairs experience. She was
appointed a member of the British parliament’s upper house, the House
of Lords, as a life peer, ten years ago. She was made a Parliamentary
Under-Secretary of State in Education, then for Constitutional Affairs,
then at the new Ministry of Justice.
Prime Minister Gordon Brown appointed her to his cabinet, as Leader of
the House of Lords. Last year she was nominated as the UK’s member in
the European Commission, where she picked up the trade portfolio. She
holds the title Baroness Ashton of Upholland.
Ultimately, the European Socialists gave her their full backing for the
new EU post, to be the centre-left’s counterbalance to the centre-right
EU President Herman Van Rompuy.
Jewish leaders urge Germans to remember Kristallnacht - Berlin - AFP - German Jewish leaders urged the country Monday to
remember November 9 as not only the date the Berlin Wall fell, but also
as the anniversary of the Nazi Kristallnacht pogrom in 1938.
Kristallnacht, seen as a prelude to the Holocaust, saw Nazi thugs
attack hundreds of synagogues and Jewish businesses across Germany.
Around 90 Jews were killed and some 30,000 Jewish men were arrested for
deportation to concentration camps.
The pretext for the orgy of violence was the murder of German diplomat
Ernst vom Rath in Paris by a student, Herschel Grynspan, who sought
revenge for the expulsion of his family from Germany with about 15,000
other Polish Jews.
Meanwhile in the Serbian capital Belgrade, around 200 people protested
Monday against far-right groups on the International Day against
Fascism and Anti-Semitism which is organised to coincide with the
Kristallnacht anniversary.
Too many walls remain, says UNESCO Director-General elect on Berlin Wall anniversary - Paris, 9 November - On the occasion of the 20th anniversary of the fall of the Berlin Wall,
UNESCO Director-General-elect, Irina Bokova, warned world leaders
against complacency in the quest for freedom, human rights and cultural
diversity, stressing that the battles for these universal values were
not yet won.
“The fall of the Berlin wall, twenty years ago, was an event of immense
historical importance for world peace and the advance of democracy,” Ms
Bokova said. “It was the start of a new era, giving rise to hopes, not
just in Eastern Europe but around the world, for a better life. A page
had been turned.”
ISRAEL
Israel No. 4 in scientific activity worldwide - Jerusalem Post, Nov. 18, 2009 - By Abe Selig - Israel's in fourth in global scientific activity, ranking just behind
Switzerland, Sweden and Denmark for the number of scientific
publications per citizen, according to a report presented at Bar-Ilan
University in Ramat Gan on Monday.
Based on figures from 2005, the report, which was compiled by the
Council for Higher Education, also shows that in that year alone,
Israeli scientists and researchers published 6,309 essays and articles
in foreign scientific journals. According to those figures, nearly 1
percent (.089%) of all scientific publications in 2005 came from
Israel.
While impressive, that number was a slight drop from previous years. In
1997, for example, 1.03% of all scientific publications came from
Israel.
Additionally, citations of Israeli publications by other scientists
were extremely high. According to the report, Israel Institute of
Technology-Technion professor Avram Hershko, who won the Nobel Prize
for Chemistry in 2004, published 148 articles and was cited more than
16,000 times.
Finland, the Netherlands and Canada followed Israel in the report,
while the United States placed 12th, and Germany placed 15th. Japan,
Britain and Russia also fell behind Israel.
Israel's role in global scientific activity is nearly 10 times the size
of its percentage of the world's population, the report shows.
Despite the promising findings, however, the Council for Higher
Education's Planning and Budgeting Committee on Monday warned that new
research centers around the world could pose a threat to the status of
Israeli universities.
According to committee members, the relative drop in Israel's
scientific activity from previous years was based on the fast growth
rate of research centers in developing countries like China and India,
while the number of scientists at Israeli universities is dwindling due
to the brain drain, the emigration of skilled academics from the
country to higher-paying jobs abroad.
November 18 - Israel News - Ban Ki-moon condemns plan to expand Gilo - By Yitzhak Benhorin, AP - UN secretary-general, state heads harshly criticize government's
decision to construct 900 housing units at disputed southern Jerusalem
neighborhood. Ban: Such actions undermine efforts for peace, plan is
blatant expansion of settlement
Euronews, Nov 16 - Palestinians have announced new moves in a bid to secure international
support for an independent state in the West Bank and Gaza Strip - They
plan to take their case to the UN Security Council, frustrated at the
lack of progress in talks with Israel.
Saeb Erekat who is the Palestinian chief negotiator stressed that they
were not acting alone. “Palestinians are not going to take any
unilateral steps. Palestinians and Arabs are seeking in consultation
with the Europeans, the Russians, the UN, the African group, the Latin
group, the Asian group and others along with the Americans to see the
possibility of having the Security Council pass a resolution to
recognize the two-state solution on the 67 borders,” he said.
Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu responded with a warning.
“There is no substitute to negotiations between Israel and the
Palestinian Authority and any unilateral path will only unravel the
framework of agreements between us and will only bring unilateral steps
from Israel’s side,” he said.
Netanyahu has called for a swift resumption of peace talks that have
been stalled for a year. Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas is
demanding a halt to Israeli construction in the occupied West Bank
before that can happen.
IRAN
New York Times, November 17, 2009 - Inspectors Fear Iran Is Hiding Nuclear Plants - By David E. Sanger and William J. Broad - Washington - International inspectors who gained access to Iran’s newly
revealed underground nuclear enrichment plant voiced strong suspicions
in a report on Monday that the country was concealing other atomic
facilities.
The report was the first independent account of what was contained in
the once secret plant, tunneled into the side of a mountain, and came
as the Obama administration was expressing growing impatience with
Iran’s slow response in nuclear negotiations.
In unusually tough language, the International Atomic Energy Agency
appeared highly skeptical that Iran would have built the enrichment
plant without also constructing a variety of other facilities that
would give it an alternative way to produce nuclear fuel if its main
centers were bombed. So far, Iran has denied that it built other hidden
sites in addition to the one deep underground on a military base about
12 miles north of the holy city of Qum. The inspectors were given
access to the plant late last month and reported that they had found it
in “an advanced state” of construction, but that no centrifuges — the
fast-spinning machines needed to make nuclear fuel — had yet been
installed…….
MEMRI, Nov 16 - The current clashes between the Saudi security forces and
Iranian-backed Houthi rebels who have infiltrated Saudi Arabia from
Yemen have intensified the steadily escalating conflict between Iran
and Saudi Arabia - In a column titled "The Houthis Are the Yemeni
Hizbullah," Saudi columnist Muhammad bin 'Abd Al-Latif Aal Al-Sheikh
wrote: "The situation in northern Yemen and in the south of our
country, and the situation in Lebanon, are identical [reflections] of
Iran's aspirations [and its method of] exploiting the sectarian
dimension to further the next Persian agenda."
Iranian officials rejected the Saudi accusations, and made
threatening statements. Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki said about
the fighting in Yemen: "We firmly warn the countries in the region and
[our] neighbors against interfering in Yemen's internal affairs." An
article in the daily Iran, which is associated with the Ahmadinejad
government, claimed: "This war, which has been forced on the Shi'ites
in Yemen, is a coordinated conspiracy by America and several Arab
governments in the region, particularly Wahhabi ones...as evidenced by
the fact that Saudi Arabia has occupied three Yemeni provinces and some
10 Yemeni islands...and is unwilling to withdraw from them, because
they are very rich in oil."
OBAMA IN CHINA
Times, Nov. 17 - Obama urges China over Tibet and human rights - He affirms universal
rights for all Chinese citizens and urges Beijing to resume talks with
Dalai Lama..
Times, Nov. 17 - Obama in Shanghai criticizes internet censorship.
Times, Nov. 17 - China rounds up dissidents as Obama arrives - Beijing authorities
detain dozens of activists to prevent them trying to approach US
president.
EUROPE AND ISRAEL
European Jewish Press, Nov 10 - EU and Israel sign new agricultural agreement - Brussels (EJP) - The European Union and Israel have signed an
agricultural agreement under which 80 percent of Israeli exported fresh
products are totally exempt from all taxes and leaves.
The agreement was signed last week by Israel’s ambassador to the
European Union, Ran Curiel, and his Swedish counterpart, Christian
Danielsson. Sweden currently holds the rotating EU presidency.
The new agreement ratified in Brussels updates the original
agricultural agreement signed in the 1970's as a result of lengthy
negotiations led by Israel's Ministry of Agriculture and the Ministry
of Industry, Trade and Labor.
Access to the markets of both sides has been greatly improved. In the
processed agricultural products sector, over 95% of the products will
be exempt from all taxes or levies. Considerable liberalization was
undertaken in regards to all areas of fresh produce and approximately
80% will be exempt from all customs restrictions.
Each year, around one billion euros of Israeli agricultural and processed food products are exported to the EU.
Europe is Israel's most important trading partner in the agricultural
field. More than 25% of Israel's agricultural products and more than
75% of its total fresh agricultural products are exported to European
countries.
During the signing ceremony at the EU Council building, Israel’s
ambassador Ran Curiel noted that 60 % of the Israeli agricultural
exports to Europe come from the Arava region and Negev desert, in the
South of the country, where rainfall does not exceed 50 millimeters per
year.
Israel uses the world's leading technologies in the intensive production of fruits, vegetables and flowers.
Most of Israel's agricultural activities are conducted in periphery and
desert areas. Both Israel and the EU view the existence of active and
modern rural areas as essential as they are used to preserve open
spaces and prevent rapid urbanization processes.
The Israeli ambassador also stressed that oranges and flowers are not
anymore the products topping Israel’s exports. The country offers to
the European consumer a broad and diverse range of fresh and processed
food products.
The EU-Israel agreement is one element in the wide range of existing
agreements between the two parties, including the Israel-EU Association
Agreement, the Israeli-EU Action Plan as part of the European
Neighborhood Policy (ENP), the Euro-Mediterranean partnership, as well
as Israel's participation in several European programs and agencies,
such as the Seventh Framework Programme for Research and Technological
Development.
Another agreement on “mutual recognition of industrial products and conformity assessment” is to be signed within a few weeks.
In 2008, Israeli exports to Europe reached close to 18 billion dollars
while exports from the EU to Israel reached 22,5 billion dollars.
This year marks 50 years since the EU and Israel established diplomatic relations.
Haaretz, Nov 16 - Boxing / Yuri Foreman takes world title with TKO - Rabbi-in-training is first Israeli champ - San Francisco - Yuri Foreman late Saturday night became the first
Israeli to claim a professional boxing crown when he defeated Daniel
Santos of Puerto Rico to take the WBA junior middleweight (under-70
kilogram) title on points.
Foreman, a Belarus-born Israeli who has lived in Brooklyn for 10 years
and is studying to be an Orthodox rabbi, won the 12-round bout by
unanimous decision - 116-110, 117-109 and 117-10
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