Bill Weinberg
Turkey: deadly attack on Christian publishing house
Three people were killed April 18 in an attack on a Turkish publishing house which prints Bibles and Christian literature, according to media reports. CNN Turk television said the victims' throats were cut and that police had detained six people in connection with the slayings at the Zirve publishing house in Malatya. TV images showed casualties being carried out of the building and one man being restrained by police. Nationalists had previously held a protest outside the publishing house, accusing it of proselytising, the Dogan news agency reported. (AlJazeera, April 18)
The Virginia Tech massacre and Hitler's shadow
The massacre of at least 32 students at Virginia Tech university April 16—apparently by a South Korea-born English major, Cho Seung-Hui—is the worst such incident in US history. Many commentators point out, of course, that it came a few days short of the anniversary of the 1999 Columbine massacre. Few are pointing out that Columbine's "Trench-Coat Mafia" chose April 20 as their day to act because it was Hitler's birthday. Even fewer have noted why the days around April 20 have taken on an eerie significance in America in the past generation...
Colombia: para probe hits Uribe's home turf
An investigation that has already exposed links between government officials and illegal paramilitary groups in six of Colombia's coastal departments has now reached the home department of President Álvaro Uribe, focusing on his administration's politically powerful allies. Colombia's Supreme Court, responsible for investigating corruption in Congress, has opened a probe into three lawmakers from Antioquia department—including Sen. Rubén Darío Quintero, Uribe's private secretary when he was governor there from 1995 to 1997. Investigators are also said to be probing Sen. Mario Uribe, the president's cousin. Quintero and Sen. Uribe both deny involvement with the paramilitaries.
Germans at it again
From AP, April 16:
Racist German Army Tape Stirs Outrage
BERLIN - A German army instructor ordered a soldier to envision himself in New York City facing hostile blacks while firing his machine gun, a video that aired Saturday on national television showed.
WHY WE FIGHT
From the Daily News, April 16:
2 die as cars plunge from highways
Two people were killed early yesterday morning in unrelated accidents that sent their cars plummeting from city highways, cops said.
Pakistanis march for secularism
On April 15, tens of thousands rallied in Pakistan's biggest city, Karachi, to protest demands by a radical religious school which has begun a Taliban-style anti-vice campaign in the capital, Islamabad. "The people of Islamabad are insecure and under threat due to the activities of these religious terrorists," said Altaf Hussain, exiled head of the Muttahida Qaumi Movement (MQM), addressing the rally by telephone from London. Hussain said the radicals in Islamabad's Lal Masjid, or Red Mosque, and adjoining Jamia Hafsa Madrassa were hurting the image of Islam. "Islam is a religion of peace and it does not need Kalashnikovs and sticks," he told the rally, while a police helicopter whirled overhead.
Padilla case opens —minus "dirty bomb" charge
Remember all the hype when Padilla was first arrested? Now that he is finally going to trial—on considerably less ambitious charges than those originaly floated—it is a discrete little story on the inside pages. Funny how that works, huh? We have noted a lot of utterly specious terrorism cases lately. This much-hyped case could turn out to be another one. From Los Angeles Times, April 16:
NYT: Mideast nuclear arms race seen
Now that Iran has a nuclear program, other Middle East countries want nuclear power—potentially resulting in a nuclear arms race in the region, the New York Times reported April 15. "Two years ago, the leaders of Saudi Arabia told international atomic regulators that they could foresee no need for the kingdom to develop nuclear power. Today, they are scrambling to hire atomic contractors, buy nuclear hardware and build support for a regional system of reactors," the newspaper said. "Turkey is preparing for its first atomic plant and Egypt has announced plans to build one on its Mediterranean coast. In all, roughly a dozen states in the region have recently turned to the International Atomic Energy Agency in Vienna for help in starting their own nuclear program."

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