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Uproar over Trump call for Muslim ban

Wednesday, 09 December 2015 00:00 Written by

Trump is unrepentant even as criticism rained downed from White House and as far as Cairo.

Donald Trump dismissed criticism at home and abroad Tuesday over his "grossly irresponsible" call to bar Muslims from entering the United States, as the White House branded him unfit to lead.

Trump, the leading candidate for the Republican presidential nomination, made the provocative remarks — just his latest on a range of topics on the campaign trail — after last week's shooting that left 14 dead in California by a Muslim couple said to have been radicalised.

In an address Sunday from the Oval Office, President Barack Obama called the attack in San Bernardino an "act of terrorism," but stressed there was no "war between America and Islam."

Less than 24 hours later, Trump triggered calls for him to be barred from taking power after he urged a "total and complete shutdown of Muslims entering the United States until our country's representatives can figure out what is going on."

The bombastic 69-year-old billionaire real estate mogul was unrepentant Tuesday, even as criticism rained down from the White House and as far afield as Ottawa, London and Cairo, where Egypt's official religious body Dar al-Iftaa denounced his "extremist and racist" comments.

Trump stood his ground. Asked by ABC News whether he regretted calling for the ban, he said "Not at all. We have to do the right thing."

And confronted with the charge that extremists would use Trump's rhetoric as a recruiting tool, the candidate scoffed.

"I'm the worst thing that's ever happened to ISIS," he said.

WHITE HOUSE

The strongest reaction came in the United States, where White House spokesman Josh Earnest said Trump's proposals were unconstitutional and challenged the mogul's fellow Republicans to denounce him.

Earnest was scathing and deeply personal, painting Trump — who has never held elected office — as a "carnival barker" with "fake hair."

"What Donald Trump said yesterday disqualifies him from serving as president," concluded Earnest, describing the remarks as "offensive" and "toxic."

Trump, whose comments were extreme even by his populist standards, was similarly lambasted by leading Republicans and campaign rivals.

Trump was the "ISIL man of the year," thundered Senator Lindsey Graham, referring to his belief that Trump was succeeding only in fuelling the radical ideology of the Islamic State group.

"Do you know how you win this war? You side with people in the faith who reject this ideology, which is 99 per cent," Graham told CNN, before invoking Trump's campaign slogan — "make America great again."

"And do you know how you make America great again?" asked Graham, who is lagging badly in the nomination race.

"Tell Donald Trump to go to hell."

Other Republican contenders lined up to reject Trump's proposal.

Hillary Clinton, the Democratic presidential frontrunner, said Trump was playing "right into the hands of terrorists" and Rick Kriseman, a Democratic mayor in Florida, tweeted he was "barring Donald Trump from entering St. Petersburg until we fully understand the dangerous threat posed by all Trumps."

EXTREMISTS

Zeid Ra'ad Al Hussein, the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, said Trump's comments could "lead to the victimization of the innocent" by extremists.

"It is grossly irresponsible, given the aim of these extremists, to play into their hands at the expense of the vast majority of ordinary Muslims."

Muslim leaders in the United States hit out too.

Sohaib Sultan, Muslim Life Coordinator and Chaplain at Princeton University, drew parallels between Trump and the radical ideology of the Islamic State group.

"ISIS is to Islam what Donald Trump is to American values: a complete distortion of everything that we as a country and a society stand for."

But Sultan also lambasted other Republicans.

"A lot of Republican candidates have really been using similar type of rhetoric throughout the election cycle as well," he told CNN.

Trump showed little inclination to back down, instead comparing the proposed ban to actions taken by Franklin Roosevelt against Japanese and German "enemy aliens" during World War II, though he stopped short of advocating internment camps.

Asked by ABC News whether he was concerned about being increasingly compared to Nazi leader Adolf Hitler, Trump said "No, because what I'm doing is no different than FDR."

Even "Harry Potter" author J.K. Rowling weighed in, saying he was worse than the notorious villain in her blockbuster books.

"How horrible. Voldemort was nowhere near as bad," she tweeted.

The British government was similarly unimpressed.

Prime Minister David Cameron "completely disagrees" with the remarks, which are "divisive, unhelpful and quite simply wrong," a spokeswoman for the Conservative leader said.

Amid the uproar, Trump announced on Twitter that he would travel to Israel by year's end, but that he would not be visiting Jordan at this time, as earlier reported.


Senior Al-Shabaab leader killed in US strike in Somalia: Pentagon

Tuesday, 08 December 2015 00:00 Written by

A senior leader of the Al-Shabaab died in a US air strike in Somalia last week which also killed two other militants, the Pentagon said Monday.

Pentagon spokesman Peter Cook said removal of Abdirahman Sandhere "is a significant blow to Al-Shabaab and reflects the painstaking work by our intelligence, military, and law enforcement professionals."

Sandhere, "also known as 'Ukash,' a senior leader of the Al Qaeda-affiliated group Al-Shabaab, is dead as a result of a US military air strike in Somalia undertaken on December 2" he said.

The Al-Shabaab is fighting to overthrow the internationally-backed government in Mogadishu, which is protected by 22,000 African Union troops.

The group has lost much ground in recent years but remain a threat in both Somalia and neighbouring Kenya, where they have carried out a series of attacks.

The movement is also facing growing divisions with some members shifting allegiance from Al-Qaeda to the Islamic State group.

The United States has led drone strikes in Somalia against Al-Shabaab since 2011.


US issues global travel warning amid 'increased terrorist threats'

Tuesday, 24 November 2015 00:00 Written by

 

The US government has issued a worldwide travel alert - warning its citizens of the risks of traveling because of “increased terrorist threats”.

In a message posted on its website, the State Department warned on Monday evening that people should be more vigilant after recent attacks in France and Mali.

“Current information suggests that (Islamic State), al-Qaeda, Boko Haram, and other terrorist groups continue to plan terrorist attacks in multiple regions,” it said,

Travel Alert: Authorities believe likelihood of terror attacks will continue as ISIL/Da’esh return from Syria/ Iraq. https://t.co/Ebm8Ny3Bom

“Authorities believe the likelihood of terror attacks will continue as members of ISIL/Da’esh return from Syria and Iraq. Additionally, there is a continuing threat from unaffiliated persons planning attacks inspired by major terrorist organizations but conducted on an individual basis.  

“Extremists have targeted large sporting events, theatres, open markets, and aviation services.  In the past year, there have been multiple attacks in France, Nigeria, Denmark, Turkey, and Mali.  ISIL/Da’esh has claimed responsibility for the bombing of a Russian airliner in Egypt.” 

The alert from Washington comes after the attacks in Paris that left more than 130 dead and the assault upon a hotel in Mali.

The warning urged people to "exercise vigilance when in public places or using transportation"

It added: "Be aware of immediate surroundings and avoid large crowds or crowed places.  Exercise particular caution during the holiday season and at holiday festivals or events."


 

Man Executed By Lethal Injection for Setting Fire That Killed His Children

Friday, 20 November 2015 00:00 Written by

 

A Texas inmate Raphael Holiday, was executed on Wednesday for setting a fire that killed his 18-month-old daughter and her two young half-sisters at an East Texas home 15 years ago.
 
According to AP, the 36-year-old Holiday, became the 13th convicted killer put to death this year in Texas, which carries out capital punishment more than any other state. It has accounted for half of all executions in the U.S. so far this year.

Asked by a warden if he had a final statement, Holiday thanked his "supporters and loved ones."

He said: "I love y'all. I want you to know I'm always going to be with you."

He also thanked the warden.
 
As the lethal dose of pentobarbital began, he took two deep breaths and appeared to yawn, his mouth remaining open as he wheezed several times. Then all movement stopped.

Nineteen minutes later, at 8:30 p.m. CST, he was pronounced dead.

The punishment was carried out after the U.S. Supreme Court rejected an appeal seeking to halt Holiday's punishment so new attorneys could be appointed to pursue additional unspecified appeals in his case.

Transgender Man Gets Pregnant 10 Years After Transitioning...

Friday, 13 November 2015 00:00 Written by

 

Transgender man, Kayden Coleman was beyond surprised when he realized that his growing belly was not the result of a lack of exercise, but the fact that he was pregnant.
 
Kayden Coleman
 
Kayden Coleman and husband Elijah who now have a 22-month-old baby named Azaelia, plans to tell her about her unusual family when she is five.
 
For almost a decade Kayden Coleman had been living as a man after he transitioned from being a woman.
 
Not only had he told all his friends and family that he was transgender, he had been taking testosterone pills for five years and had grown facial hair and was about to have a double mastectomy.
 
However, nature interrupted and despite years of taking male hormones, Kayden became pregnant. Kayden was stunned when he first realised his growing belly was not the result of a lack of exercise, but a baby.
 
With a broad smile, the 29-year-old explains: “I never thought about getting pregnant. Because of the male hormones, I didn’t think it was a possibility. It was ­definitely a surprise.”
 
Stillshocked, the couple set about turning their flat in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA, into a family home. And in July 2013, they got married .
Kayden Coleman
There was a lot to take in – especially for Elijah’s friends and family, who did not know Kayden was transgender.
 
Security, guard Elijah says: “It was such a personal thing that I felt if Kayden wanted them to know he should tell them himself.
 
“But when we found out Kayden was pregnant we knew we had to tell them. How could we explain the baby when she popped up after a couple of months?”
 
Kayden was lucky that most people failed to notice his bump but he did get some confused looks. He says: “This woman in a shop said to me, ‘Honey, you look like you’re pregnant’. I just laughed and said, ‘I am pregnant!’ She didn’t believe me.”
 
His pregnancy went smoothly but when it came to the birth in December 2013, it was a different story.
 
Kayden, who was in­­duced at nine months as he had high blood pressure , was in labour for four days, but eventually had their baby.
 
They are raising her as two fathers – she calls Kayden “Daddy” and Elijah “Poppy” – and will tell the youngster the full story in another three years.
 
Kayden Coleman, husband Elijah and baby, Azaelia

Nigerian Man Fingered in the Shooting of a Female American Judge

Thursday, 12 November 2015 00:00 Written by

A Nigerian man facing trial in a U.S. court has allegedly added to his list of crimes by shooting down a trial judge.

A Nigerian man named  Chimene Onyeri, 28, has been arrested in connection with the shooting of a Texas state judge, Julie Kocurek.
According to Daily Mail, Onyeri was a defendant whom the judge was prosecuting at the time of the shooting.
 
The Judge, Julie Kocurek
 
Onyeri was being prosecuted by Kocurek in a fraud case from 2012, when she was shot in the driveway of her Austin home on Friday night. She didn't die but an got away with an 'extremely serious injury'.
 
Onyeri will now be questioned about the shooting as he is indicted for a theft in Louisiana.
 
The scene of the crime
 
Kocurek had been receiving threats after presiding over controversial cases.

She was taken to hospital in a serious condition on Friday and has since been upgraded to a stable condition. Police said her injuries are not believed to be life threatening and refused to comment further on the arrest.

Why did a teacher called her a guttersnipe? -

Tuesday, 03 November 2015 00:00 Written by

FORMER British television presented Floella Benjamin has urged black Britons in the UK of African and Caribbean origin to learn how to pronounce English words properly if they want to succeed in life.  

Ms Benjamin, a former children's TV presenter from Trinidad moved to Britain aged 11 and became one of the most famous faces on television as the presenter of Play School. However, she has recently revealed that when she first moved to south London, a teacher called her a guttersnipe because of her thick West Indian accent.
Now a prominent equality campaigner, Ms Benjamin has invited other migrant children to adopt more received pronunciations. Awarded an OBE by the queen along with the title baroness, Ms Benjamin, now 66, has however, been criticised as it has been suggested that her comments encourage discrimination. 

Ms Benjamin said: 'That teacher did me a huge favour. If someone's seeing you like that, you must prove them wrong. 

"After that, I was the idol of her class. You have to be able to adapt to the situation and you have to be able to communicate." 

Kauser Jan of the National Union of Teachers, said: "Because a black person is saying it, we think it's OK? It's almost giving a green light to people by saying that by being racist, you're helping me.

 Anti-racism campaigners said that her comments encourage the notion that foreign accents are bad and should be discriminated against. Ms Benjamin, now a Liberal Democrat life peer, however, insists that young black Britons need to learn how to speak properly.


Canada’s new prime minister: who is Justin Trudeau, and how did he win?

Sunday, 01 November 2015 00:00 Written by

 

After a hard-fought election, Canada’s Liberal party has won a decisive parliamentary majority, and Canada will soon have an unfamiliar prime minister with a familiar last name. But 43-year-old Justin Trudeau’s rise to the top of Canadian politics was far from certain, even despite his remarkable political pedigree.

His father, the late

) he was a controversial and divisive figure in Canada. Loved by many, he was equally loathed throughout his federal political career by numerous voters, particularly across Western Canada and among Quebecois separatists and nationalists.

While the elder Trudeau’s career was unquestionably a success, he still never managed to get higher than 46% of the popular vote. He left his Liberal Party in disarray when he retired, and although the party has won elections since, it has never truly recovered.

How ironic, then, that Pierre’s eldest son, Justin, has led a Liberal resurgence – and has done so while not being much like his father after all.

A different path

Temperamentally speaking, Stephen Harper, Canada’s Conservative prime minister since 2006, resembled Trudeau the elder much more than Justin does.

Pierre Trudeau was respected for his intellect, having been a law professor and a writer, but equally reviled for at times coming across as arrogant and aloof. He was never known for his warmth, and his persona certainly would not lend itself to today’s more touchy-feely era of national politics as projected through television and social media.

Born to Pierre and his wife Margaret while Trudeau was prime minister, Justin spent his childhood in full view of the media – particularly when his parent’s marriage publicly disintegrated in the 1970s. Personality-wise, he is said to much more closely resemble his vibrant mother than his stoic father, and he appeared destined for a life outside of Canadian politics.

He became a school teacher, hardly the typical launchpad for an ascent to the top of political life. But Justin interrupted his relative anonymity with a nationally televised and generally well-regarded eulogy at his father’s funeral in October 2000 – an event that seems to have triggered a more political impulse in him.

 

Perhaps because of his lack of political experience or his own chosen career, Trudeau the younger gained the reputation of being a political lightweight. There was certainly nothing inevitable about his becoming head of the party his father had once led.

After a defeat to the Conservatives under Harper in 2006, the Liberals tried to replicate the Trudeau magic with similarly credentialled individuals. First there was Stéphane Dion, a Quebec academic turned politician. When he floundered in the 2008 election, the party headhunted Michael Ignatieff, an academic and public intellectual widely known in both the UK and the US. At the 2011 election, he captained the party to its worst ever electoral defeat, netting a third place showing with only 18.9% of the popular vote.

With three disastrous wipeouts under its belt, the party was ready to try Trudeau the younger.

Tricky ground

Elected as a Member of Parliament in the 2008 election, Justin handily won the party leadership in 2013, and quickly established a name for himself through controversial statements and positions.

He called for the legalisation of marijuana, and remarkably for any modern western politician, not only admitted that he had smoked pot in 2010 but declined to apologise for having done so. The new Liberal leader took a strong position on the right of women to have access to abortion including refusing to allow candidates to run for the party who would not support that right in a vote, an approach which drew scathing criticism.

The day after the Boston Marathon bombing he called for an exploration of the “root causes” of such violence, a response that was widely ridiculed as naïve and poorly timed even though the Canadian government itself dedicated resources to understanding the causes of terrorism.

He later alienated many progressives when his party supported the Harper government’s controversial counter-terrorism legislation, Bill C-51.

Justin Trudeau’s stumbles and lack of political experience provided space for the Harper Conservatives to try to diminish him further in the mind of the public. Hence, a series of television and radio advertisements were launched even before the 2015 election was called that centred around Trudeau’s lack of gravitas.

One such repeatedly aired ad took the form of a hiring committee reviewing Trudeau’s resume and deciding “he’s just not ready” – a committee member patronisingly, “nice hair though”.

 

The constant streams of attack ads against Trudeau may well have backfired in. Public expectations about him were so lowered that all he had to do to outperform them was remain standing and sound coherent. Better yet, the Liberals made a good job of answering the attack ads directly.

One early response showed Trudeau in a classroom speaking of his pride in having been a teacher. Another saw Trudeau speaking confidently into the camera about how he wasn’t ready – not ready, that is, to see Canadians fall behind economically

.

 

Finally, Trudeau managed to hold his own throughout the debates despite at times arguing for unpopular causes, among them women’s right to wear niqabs at citizenship ceremonies or convicted terrorists' right to retain their Canadian citizenship.

Whether it was Justin’s personality, a popular hunger for change, or the magic of the Trudeau name, the end result is a majority government. The party added 21 percentage points to its share of the vote in 2011. Once the dominant Canadian political party at the federal level, the Liberals are back – and a new Trudeau era has begun.

 

 

 

Author:  Steve Hewitt: Senior Lecturer in American and Canadian Studies, University of Birmingham

credit link:  https://theconversation.com/canadas-new-prime-minister-who-is-justin-trudeau-and-how-did-he-win-48792<img alt="The Conversation" height="1" src="https://counter.theconversation.edu.au/content/48792/count.gif" width="1" />

The article was originally published on The Conversation (www.conversation.com) and is republished with permission granted to www.oasesnews.com

 



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