Monday, November 30, 2009

Vatican and Muslims condemn Swiss minaret ban vote


France's FM Bernard Kouchner said he hoped the Swiss would reverse the decision


There are only four minarets in Switzerland


Religious leaders across the world have criticised Switzerland's referendum vote to ban the building of minarets.

The Vatican joined Muslim figureheads from Indonesia and Egypt, as well as Switzerland, in denouncing the vote as a blow to religious freedom.

France's FM Bernard Kouchner expressed shock at the ban which, he said, showed "intolerance" and should be reversed.

More than 57.5% of voters and 22 out of 26 cantons - or provinces - voted in favour of the ban on Sunday.

The proposal had been put forward by the Swiss People's Party, (SVP), the largest party in parliament, which said minarets were a sign of Islamisation.

'Expression of intolerance'

The Vatican on Monday endorsed a statement by the conference of Swiss Bishops criticising the vote for heightening "the problems of cohabitation between religions and cultures".

Egypt's Grand Mufti Ali Gomaa described the ban as an insult to the feelings of the Muslim community in Switzerland and elsewhere.

Sunday's surprise result also prompted dismay from secular leaders in Europe.

"I am a bit shocked by this decision," Mr Kouchner told France's RTL radio on Monday. "It is an expression of intolerance and I detest intolerance.

"I hope the Swiss will reverse this decision quickly."

The Swiss government had opposed the ban, saying it would harm Switzerland's image, particularly in the Muslim world.

The vote is very bad news for the Swiss government which fears unrest among the Muslim community, says the BBC's Imogen Foulkes in Bern.

Voters worried about rising immigration - and with it the rise of Islam - had ignored the government's advice, our correspondent adds.

The government said it accepted the decision, and that the construction of new minarets would no longer be permitted.

Justice Minister Eveline Widmer-Schlumpf said: "Concerns [about Islamic fundamentalism] have to be taken seriously.

"However, a ban on the construction of new minarets is not a feasible means of countering extremist tendencies."

She sought to reassure Swiss Muslims, saying the decision was "not a rejection of the Muslim community, religion or culture".

Spain got 400 000 Muslims.

Switzerland is home to some 400,000 Muslims and has just four minarets.

After Christianity, Islam is the most widespread religion in Switzerland, but it remains relatively hidden.

There are unofficial Muslim prayer rooms, and planning applications for new minarets are almost always refused.

Supporters of a ban claimed that allowing minarets would represent the growth of an ideology and a legal system - Sharia law - which are incompatible with Swiss democracy.

But others say the referendum campaign incited hatred. On Thursday the Geneva mosque was vandalised for the third time during the campaign, according to local media.

Amnesty International said the vote violated freedom of religion and would probably be overturned by the Swiss supreme court or the European Court of Human Rights.

The president of Zurich's Association of Muslim Organisations, Tamir Hadjipolu, told the BBC: "This will cause major problems because during this campaign mosques were attacked, which we never experienced in 40 years in Switzerland.

"Islamaphobia has increased intensively."

Sunday's referendum was held after the SVP collected 100,000 signatures from voters within 18 months calling for a vote.

In recent years, countries across Europe have been debating how best to integrate Muslim populations.

France focused on the headscarf, while in Germany there was controversy over plans to build one of Europe's largest mosques.

-----------

------------
RELATED POSTS:-

China city to open gay bar to promote safe sex promote condoms.


A drag queen performer is seen at a bar in Dali, Yunnan province, November 23, 2009.


A drag queen performer applies makeup at a bar in Dali, Yunnan province, November 23, 2009.


Zhang Jianbo, a bar manager, blows up a condom as part of an event encouraging condom use by homosexuals in Dali, Yunnan province, November 26, 2009.


A drag queen performer has makeup applied at a bar in Dali, Yunnan province, November 23, 2009.


Drag queen performers talk at a bar in Dali, Yunnan province, November 23, 2009.


Drag queen performers dance at a bar in Dali, Yunnan province, November 23, 2009.


A Chinese city with one of the nation's highest rates of AIDS has opened a government-funded gay bar in an outreach effort that has stirred debate over the use of taxpayers' money.

The health department in Dali, a picturesque city on a lake in southwestern Yunnan province, funded the bar to reach out to China's increasingly open gay community. Dali is one of the 10 cities in China most affected by AIDS.

Same-sex transmission accounts for about one-third of new HIV infections in China, the minister of health said this month.

"Some readers think that it's a waste of taxpayer money, or an indirect endorsement of homosexual behavior," the Beijing News said in an opinion piece on Monday, citing letters to the editor after it ran an article on the bar over the weekend.

"They think if there were another way to reach out to the gay community, it wouldn't be necessary to open a bar."

Founder Zhang Jianbo hopes that the bar will be a public gathering place for gay men, especially from rural villages, who used to gather in a patch of woods near the historic town.

The bar offers sex education and free condoms, in addition to companionship, Zhang said in an interview with the newspaper.

Though funded by the government, the bar is staffed by volunteers from a local non-government organization that works to prevent AIDS.

"Each year, the Dali city government spends 20,000 yuan ($2,929) on treatment drugs for AIDS. So if our bar succeeds in reducing transmission, our 120,000 yuan will be well-spend," Jiang Anmin, deputy director of health in Dali, told the paper.

China's gay community for decades lived in fear of discrimination and prejudice, with the earliest gay bars often the targets of police raids and closures while homosexuals often married women to avoid family and social pressures.

China now has about 100,000 known AIDS cases, but some health experts worry that HIV could spread easily among migrant workers and other hard-to-reach sectors. The government has switched to a strategy of outreach to the gay community, as part of efforts over the past few years to fight the spread of HIV.

"In the past the government relied on NGOs to reach out to the gay community," Bing Lan, director of outreach organization Aibai, told Reuters.

"Now there's a change, in that some local health bureaus feel they are able to reach out to the community themselves."

But one unintended consequence of outreach efforts in parks, bars and bathhouses frequented by gay men, Bing said, is that some gay men now avoid those haunts for fear of being found out.

"Today I saw a blog, saying that when the bar in Dali has its official opening on World Aids Day, no-one will dare to go because there will be too many reporters there," he said.

-----------

-------------

--------------

---------------
RELATED POSTS:-

Iran plan to expand nuclear program go against world powers.Cause tension.Rejected IAEA. Plan to build 10 more nuclear plants.


Iranian plan to build more nuclear facilities and plan to process own uranium fuels.


Iranian vice-president Salehi said Tehran's decision to expand its nuclear facilities was a response to a new UN resolution.After IAEA rebuke,Iran rejected the offer to sent enriched uranium to Russian for processing and now plan to build 10 more nuclear power plants.



A decision by the United Nations nuclear agency to censure Tehran for its disputed nuclear programme left the country with no choice but to order the construction of 10 new nuclear plants, an Iranian vice-president has said.

Ali Akbar Salehi told state radio on Monday that Tehran had no plans to build any new uranium enrichment faciliities until the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) passed a resolution rebuking Iran.

"We had no intention of building many facilities like the Natanz site, but apparently the West doesn't want to understand Iran's peaceful message," The Associated Press news agency quoted Salehi as saying.

"The action ... at the IAEA prompted the [Iranian] government to approve a proposal to build 10 sites like that of Natanz," he said, referring to Iran's largest nuclear enrichment plant.

But Ali Larijani, Iran's parliament speaker and former chief nuclear negotiator, said that negotiation was still possible over the programme, which he again insisted is meant only for civilian energy production

"I still think there is a diplomatic opportunity and it is beneficial to them [the world powers] to use this, so that Iran continues its work under the framework of the agency and international supervision," Larijani said.

"They are free to choose the decision and Iran will act accordingly."

Iranian anger

His comments came after the IAEA resolution demanded Iran halt the construction of a newly revealed enrichment facility near the city of Qom.

For the first time China and Russia, two of Iran's traditional allies, backed Friday's resolution.

Iran disclosed the Qom plant in September, but said that it had not broken any IAEA regulations in not announcing the presence of the facility earlier, because there is not yet any nuclear material at the plant.

"Iranians did not expect the resolution by the IAEA. They are angry and much of what they are saying is a reaction to the decision," Sadegh Zibakalam, a political science professor at Tehran university, said.

"The Iranian leaders are more angry with the Russian and Chinese leaders, rather than the Americans, British and French in the decision-making process. They did not expect Russia and China to go along in condemning Iran," he told Al Jazeera.

"But over the next few days and weeks tempers will be calm and I don't think Iran will go ahead with building more enrichment plants."

Al Jazeera's Alireza Ronaghi, reporting from Tehran, said Iran's announcement to build the new nuclear sites was an attempt to document the government's defiance against world powers on the nuclear issue.

"President Ahmadinejad has been under a lot of pressure internally even from his allies. They have been accusing his government of being too soft in front of Western powers," he said.

"Right now, quite the opposite is happening and President Ahmadinejad is being praised by his supporters over his stance, which is very, very aggressive now."

Parliament's demands

Iranian MPs have demanded that the government of Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, Iran's president, reduce co-operation with the IAEA in response to the resolution.

"We consider the behaviour of the IAEA to be that of double standards and political. We want it to give up this double standard which has tarnished its reputation," the MPs said in a statement on Friday.

But France on Monday called Iran's response to the IAEA "ridiculous" and "childish", and warned that such a stance could lead to the imposition of new UN sanctions.

"For Iran to continue to ignore the demands of a great independent agency like the International Atomic Energy Agency is very dangerous," Bernard Kouchner, France's foreign minister, told the daily Le Figaro newspaper.

"Why announce 10 new enrichment sites when Iran doesn't have a single nuclear power station to use the fuel?"

In a separate interview on RTL radio, Kouchner said the announcement proved the Iranians were "making fools of themselves" with their "ridiculous" and "fairly childish" reaction, the AFP news agency reported.

Western powers, including the US, accuse Iran of covertly seeking to develop atomic weapons, which Tehran denies.

They have urged Iran to accept a UN brokered offer that would delay Iran's ability to make a nuclear weapon as well as engage in broader talks with the ultimate goal of persuading it to stop its enrichment programme.

Iran has amassed about 1,500 kilogrammes of low-enriched uranium at Natanz but insists it is for civilian purposes.

The UN offer aims to convince Iran to hand over more than 1,200 kilogrammes, more than the commonly accepted amount needed to produce weapons-grade material.

Iran has rejected the UN terms for the plan.





-----------------

------------------

----------------
RELATED POSTS:-

4 cops were shot dead in coffee shop. Criminal targeting cop.Cop killer on the loose.


The victims were identified as Sgt Mark Renninger, 39; Ronald Owens, 37; Tina Griswold, 40; and Greg Richards 42 - all married with children


Staff and customers at the coffee shop were not shot at by the gunman


Police said Maurice Clemmons was one of several people investigators want to talk to but that he could not be called a suspect at this point


Pierce County sheriff's spokesman Ed Troyer said the officers had been specifically targeted


A Lakewood, Wash., city employee takes flowers to police headquarters in memory of the four slain officers.


A 37-year-old man with an extensive criminal past was sought for questioning last night after four police officers were fatally shot at a coffee shop as they sat working on their laptops.

One of the officers fought with the gunman and may have wounded him before dying just outside the doorway of the shop, said Pierce County sheriff's spokesman Ed Troyer, who described yesterday morning's shootings as a targeted ambush.

Troyer said Maurice Clemmons of Tacoma was one of several people investigators wanted to talk to. The sheriff's office said Clemmons had an extensive violent criminal history in Arkansas, including aggravated robbery and theft. He also recently was arrested and charged in Pierce County with assaulting a police officer and raping a child.

The four officers were with the 100-member police department of Lakewood, which adjoins the unincorporated area of Parkland, where the shootings took place. They were identified as Sgt. Mark Renninger, 39; Ronald Owens, 37; Tina Griswald, 40; and Greg Richards, 42.

Investigators say they think two of the officers were shot dead while sitting in the Forza Coffee Shop and a third was killed after standing up, Troyer said. The fourth apparently struggled with the gunman, getting off a few shots before collapsing outside the door.

"We believe there was a struggle, a commotion, a fight . . . that he fought the guy all the way out the door," Troyer said.

Troyer said the attack was clearly targeted at the officers, not a robbery gone bad.

"This was more of an execution," he said.

Troyer said the officers were catching up on paperwork at the start of their shift when they were attacked at 8:15 a.m. Pacific time. The coffee shop is in a small retail center.

"There were marked patrol cars outside, and they were all in uniform," Troyer said.

He said the gunman entered and walked up to the counter as though to place an order. A barista saw a gun when the man opened his jacket and she fled out the back door. The man then turned and opened fire on the officers.

Troyer said a couple of hundred officers from the Washington State Patrol and other agencies were at the crime scene, some on their own time.


In search of Maurice Clemmons to assists in the murder shoting of 4 cops.


Explosions were heard today as police searching for the killer of four officers shot dead in a suburban coffee shop in Washington reportedly tried to flush a man out of a house in Seattle.

Officers around the Pacific Northwest had been searching for Maurice Clemmons, 37, whom they say was near the coffee shop on the edge of the McChord Air Force Base when the shootings occurred.

Early this morning, police surrounded the house in Seattle and shone lights on the building as a hostage negotiator called out to Mr Clemmons by name.

"Mr Clemmons, I’d like to get you out of there safely. I can tell you this, we are not going away,” the negotiator said, before sirens began wailing, punctuated by several loud bangs.

“This is one of the toughest decisions you’ll make in your life, but you need to man up.”

The four officers have been named as Sergeant Mark Renninger and officers Ronald Owens, Tina Griswold and Greg Richards - all are married and have children. They were killed in a cold-blooded ambush that has shocked the country.

Investigators say they know of no reason why Clemmons or anyone else would have opened fire on the four officers as they sat working on their laptops early yesterday morning, catching up on paperwork at the beginning of their shifts.

“We’re going to be surprised if there is a motive worth mentioning,” said Ed Troyer, a spokesman for the Pierce County Sherriff’s office who sketched out a scene of controlled and deliberate carnage that spared the employees and other customers at the coffee shop in suburban Parkland.

“He was very versed with the weapon,” Mr Troyer said. “This wasn’t something where the windows were shot up and there bullets sprayed around the place. The bullets hit their targets.”

Mr Clemmons has an extensive violent criminal history from Arkansas, including aggravated robbery and theft, the sheriff’s office said. He also recently was arrested and charged in Washington state for assaulting a police officer, and second-degree rape of a child.

In 1989, Mr Clemmons, then 17, was convicted in Little Rock for aggravated robbery. He was paroled in 2000 after Mr Huckabee commuted a 95-year prison sentence.

The attack looks set to have a knock-on effect politically after it emerged that Mr Clemmons had had a lengthy jail term commuted by Mike Huckabee, the then governor of Arkansas, a decade ago.

Mr Huckabee came second to Senator John McCain in the 2008 contest for the Republican presidential nomination and recent polls have made him an early frontrunner for 2012.

But the controversy could deal a fatal blow to his presidential ambitions given past accusations that the conservative pastor was soft on crime. As governor of Arkansas Mr Huckabee helped to grant twice as many pardons and commutations as his three predecessors combined, including Bill Clinton.

Among those benefiting were Keith Richards, the Rolling Stones guitarist who was pardoned for a 1975 traffic offence after Mr Huckabee — who plays bass guitar in a band called Capitol Offense — met him at a rock concert.

They also included a castrated rapist called Wayne DuMond, who was released in 1999 after a politically controversial intervention by Mr Huckabee and went on to commit at least one murder. The case featured prominently during the 2008 Republican contest.

Mr Huckabee's "political action committee", dubbed HuckPAC, issued a statement last night clearly trying to distance the former governor from the decision to release Mr Clemmons by spreading the blame for the fact that he was not behind bars.

The statement lamented the "senseless and savage executions" of the four officers and noted early reports that police were searching for a "repeat offender who once lived in Arkansas".

It added: "Should he be found to be responsible for this horrible tragedy, it will be the result of a series of failures in the criminal justice system in both Arkansas and Washington State.

"He was recommended for and received a commutation of his original sentence from 1990, this commutation made him parole eligible and he was then paroled by the parole board once they determined he met the conditions at that time. He was arrested later for parole violation and taken back to prison to serve his full term, but prosecutors dropped the charges that would have held him."


---------

----------

--------------
RELATED POSTS:-

Sunday, November 29, 2009

Tiger woods and wife still no cooperating to talk to police.


A security officer guards the area in front of Tiger Woods' house in Windermere, Fla., Friday, Nov. 27, 2009. Woods was injured in an accident early Friday when his sport utility vehicle struck a fire hydrant and a tree near his mansion in a gated waterfront community.


Security guards gather near Tiger Woods' home, left, in Windemere, Fla., Friday, Nov. 27, 2009. Woods sustained facial cuts in a minor car accident early Friday when his SUV hit a fire hydrant and a neighbor's tree as he was leaving his mansion in a gated waterfront community near Orlando, Fla.


This aerial photo shows the home where golfer Tiger Woods was injured following an automobile accident in Orlando, Fla., Friday, Nov. 27, 2009.


A security officer guards the area in front of Tiger Woods' house, left, in Windermere, Fla., Friday, Nov. 27, 2009. Woods was injured in an accident early Friday when his sport utility vehicle struck a fire hydrant and a tree near his mansion in a gated waterfront community.




Elin Nordegren, wife of golfer Tiger Woods, prepares to turn in to the Isleworth subdivision in Windermere, Fla., on Saturday, Nov. 28, 2009.


A security officer guards the area in front of Tiger Woods' house in Windermere, Fla., Friday, Nov. 27, 2009. Woods was injured in an accident early Friday when his sport utility vehicle struck a fire hydrant and a tree near his mansion in a gated waterfront community.


A security officer guards the area in front of Tiger Woods' house in Windermere, Fla., Friday, Nov. 27, 2009. Woods was injured in an accident early Friday when his sport utility vehicle struck a fire hydrant and a tree near his mansion in a gated waterfront community. (AP Photo/Orlando Sentinel,


Elin Nordegren, wife of golfer Tiger Woods, leaves the Isleworth subdivision in Windermere, Fla., Saturday, Nov. 28, 2009.


Elin Nordegren, wife of golfer Tiger Woods, prepares to turn in to the Isleworth subdivision in Windermere, Fla., on Saturday, Nov. 28, 2009.


Tiger Woods with his daughter Sam and wife Elin are seen before the start of a NCAA college football game between Stanford and California in Stanford, Calif., in this Nov. 21, 2009 file photo. Tiger Woods was injured early Friday Nov. 27, 2009 when he lost control of his SUV outside his Florida mansion, and a local police chief said Woods' wife used a golf club to smash out the back window to help get him out.


Security guards gather near the home, left, of Tiger Woods on Friday, Nov. 27, 2009, in Windermere, Fla. Woods was injured in a car accident early Friday outside his Florida mansion, and a local police chief said his wife used a golf club to smash out the back window and help get the world's No. 1 golfer out of the SUV.




A security officer guards the area in front of Tiger Woods' house, left, in Windermere, Fla., Friday, Nov. 27, 2009. Woods was injured in an accident early Friday when his sport utility vehicle struck a fire hydrant and a tree near his mansion in a gated waterfront community.


Tiger Woods and his wife, Elin Nordegren, ride together after Woods won the U.S. Open at Torrey Pines Golf Course in June, 2008. Woods, who crashed his SUV outside his home Friday, plans to talk with the Florida Highway Patrol about the accident on Sunday.


Amid a flurry of questions about his actions early Friday when he crashed an SUV at his Orlando-area mansion, Tiger Woods postponed an interview Saturday with Florida Highway Patrol troopers, but the golfer has agreed to be interviewed today, the agency said.

The interview was supposed to take place after 3 p.m. Saturday but was postponed shortly beforehand by Woods' agent, Mark Steinberg of IMG. Troopers were asked to return today, said Sgt. Kim Montes, an FHP spokeswoman. Woods' wife, Elin, Friday told troopers seeking to interview Woods that he was sleeping. They agreed to return the next day.

Meanwhile, the Orange County Sheriff's Office has provided the 911 calls in the case to the highway patrol, the investigating agency. They will be released after a trooper determines whether they are needed as evidence, possibly today.

Woods, the world's No. 1-ranked golfer, suffered facial cuts when he crashed into a fire hydrant and a neighbor's tree while leaving his mansion about 2:25 a.m. Friday, said Windermere police, who initially responded to the call. There has been widespread speculation in the news media and among bloggers on what precipitated the accident, but no official account has emerged.

The 2009 Cadillac Escalade sustained between $5,000 and $8,000 in damage to the front right and left, troopers said. The left and right rear-side passenger windows were also broken out, but the FHP hasn't determined how that happened, Montes said.

On Friday, Windermere officials said Woods' wife told them she had smashed a window of the SUV with a golf club and pulled her husband out. Windermere police said that when they arrived, Woods was lying on the ground, dazed and bleeding from the lips and with blood in his mouth. The crash knocked Woods, 33, unconscious for about six minutes, according to the Orange County Sheriff's Office.

The Sheriff's Office, which does not investigate auto accidents but took the 911 calls, on Saturday issued a statement saying the information released by Windermere "may, in fact, be counterproductive to the ongoing investigation into this incident." Windermere Police Chief Daniel Saylor did not return repeated phone calls.

Tiger Woods and his wife were not available to speak to state troopers for the second straight day, asking that they return Sunday to try to clear up questions about how he crashed his SUV into a neighbor's tree.

The Florida Highway Patrol said the announcement that the world's No. 1 golfer and his wife, Elin, could not speak Saturday to authorities came from his agent. Mark Steinberg of IMG did not immediately respond to a text seeking comment.

Troopers previously tried to talk to Woods on Friday afternoon. The patrol said his wife told troopers Woods was sleeping, and they agreed to return the next day.

Woods smashed his Cadillac near his $2.4 million mansion at 2:25 a.m. Friday and was briefly hospitalized, police said. His lips were cut, and Windermere police chief Daniel Saylor has said Woods' wife used a golf club to smash out a back window and help Woods from the car.

Sgt. Kim Montes, the patrol spokeswoman, said Woods' agent contacted dispatch and the call was put through to the troopers, who were on their way to Woods' house.

"I don't know what was said," Montes said.

Montes said it was "kind of normal" for Woods not to speak on Friday, the day he was treated and released from a hospital.

"It is unusual that we haven't gotten a statement," she said. "This just delays us to getting closer to the completion of the investigation."

Montes said Woods is not required to talk to troopers in a traffic accident; they only need is driver's license, insurance and registration. She said troopers inside the gates at Isleworth are "looking at other things for their investigation."

She said Woods' Cadillac Escalade was not impounded, but taken to an undisclosed tow yard. She said the front and right of the SUV was damaged, and that both rear passenger windows were busted out.

"We still are going to move forward with our crash investigation," Montes said.

The 911 tapes of the crash could be released as early as Sunday.

Still unanswered is where Woods was going in the wee hours of the morning after Thanksgiving Day. The police report said alcohol was not a factor.

The world's No. 1 golfer and his family live in the exclusive, gated community of Isleworth, an exclusive subdivision near Orlando, set on an Arnold Palmer-designed golf course and a chain of small lakes. The neighborhood, which is fortified with high brick walls and has its own security force, is home to CEOs and other sports stars such as the NBA's Shaquille O'Neal.

On Saturday, more than two dozen media and clusters of TV trucks were camped out in front of its gates.

Woods' news conference for the Chevron World Challenge, the tournament he hosts that benefits his foundation, had been scheduled for Tuesday afternoon. It's unclear whether he would still play, or even attend.

"We do not know if Tiger is playing; we are anticipating a great week of competition," said Greg McLaughlin, the tournament director and president of his foundation.

One of Woods' neighbors, who didn't want her name to be used, said it was quiet in front of his house. She said there are usually two or three cars parked outside his home and that was the scene Saturday.

Saylor said his two officers found the 33-year-old Woods lying in the street with his wife hovering over him.

Saylor said she told officers she was in the house when she heard the accident and "broke the back window with a golf club." He said the front-door windows were not broken and that "the door was probably locked."

"She supposedly got him out and laid him on the ground," he said. "He was in and out of consciousness when my guys got there."

In a telephone interview, Woods' father-in-law, radio journalist Thomas Nordegren, told The Associated Press in Stockholm that he would not discuss the accident.

"I haven't spoken to her in the last few ... " Nordegren said about his daughter, Elin, before cutting himself off. "I don't want to go into that."

Woods' mother-in-law Barbro Holmberg also refused to address the matter.

"She doesn't want to comment on private issues like these," Holmberg's spokeswoman Eva Malmborg said.

Roger Federer, who has become close with Woods in recent years, said after losing in the semifinals of the ATP World Tour Finals in London, "I haven't spoken to him. I heard it's not too serious, which is a good thing."

Asked at a Friday evening news conference if the couple could have been arguing, Saylor said he had no knowledge of that.

The accident came two days after the National Enquirer published a story alleging that Woods had been seeing a New York night club hostess, and that they recently were together in Melbourne, where Woods competed in the Australian Masters.

The woman, Rachel Uchitel, denied having an affair with Woods when contacted by the AP.

"I resent my reputation is getting completely blasted in the media," she said during a telephone interview late Friday. "Everyone is assuming I came out and said this. This is not a story I have anything to do with."

Uchitel said she was in Melbourne two weeks ago with clients and never saw Woods the entire time she was there.

"The story stands for itself," National Enquirer executive editor Barry Levine told the AP on Saturday.

Saylor described Woods' wife as "frantic" when two officers arrived and found her kneeling over him in the street. The couple has been married five years and have two children, a 2-year-old daughter named Sam, and son Charlie who was born in February.

Nordegren, a former model from Sweden who once worked as a nanny for golfer Jesper Parnevik, is as private as Woods. She keeps a low profile at tournaments, watching her husband from behind the ropes, and moves on when photographers start taking her picture.

Woods rarely faces such private scrutiny, even as perhaps the most famous active athlete in the world.

He usually makes news only because of what he can do with a golf club. Few other athletes have managed to keep their private lives so guarded, or have a circle of friends so airtight when it comes to life off the course.

Woods has won 82 times around the world and 14 majors, becoming the first player of black heritage to win a major at the 1997 Masters when he was 21.

He won six times this year after missing eight months recovering from reconstructive surgery on his left knee. Even though he failed to win a major, Woods said he considered this a successful year because he did not know how his knee would respond.

------------

------------

--------------

---------------
RELATED POSTS:-

Relative sought in 4 Fla. Thanksgiving killings-$100 000 rewards for information.


This undated drivers license photo provided Friday, Nov. 27, 2009 by the Jupiter, Fla. Police shows Paul Michael Merhige. Police were searching Friday for Merhige, suspected in the Thanksgiving shooting deaths of his twin sisters, aunt and a 6-year-old cousin during a family celebration.


This undated photo provided by Jim Sitton via WPTV shows Makayla Sitton, 6. Four people including a child in bed were shot to death during a family Thanksgiving gathering Thursday night, Nov. 26, 2009 in Jupiter, Fla., and a manhunt was under way across South Florida early Friday for Paul Michael Merhige, 35, a relative suspected in the slayings.


This undated photo provided by Jim Sitton via WPTV shows Makayla Sitton, 6. Four people including a child in bed were shot to death during a family Thanksgiving gathering Thursday night, Nov. 26, 2009 in Jupiter, Fla., and a manhunt was under way across South Florida early Friday for Paul Michael Merhige, 35, a relative suspected in the slayings.


The body of one of the victims killed in a shooting Thursday night, Nov. 26, 2009 is placed in a van at the scene of the incident Friday Nov. 27, 2009 in Jupiter, Fla. Police were searching Friday for a man suspected in the Thanksgiving shooting deaths of his twin sisters, aunt and a 6-year-old cousin during a family celebration.


A manhunt is under way in Florida for a man police say opened fire on his family after Thanksgiving dinner and killed four people.

Paul Michael Merhinge of Miami is believed to be driving a royal blue 2007 Toyota Camry with a rear spoiler and a Florida license plate.

Authorities say 17 people were gathered in the home in Jupiter, Fla., on Thursday when the shootings happened. The town is about 90 miles north of Miami and is known as a home to celebrities such as Michael Jordan and Burt Reynolds.

Police say the victims are Merhige's pregnant sister, her twin, a 6-year-old cousin and a 79-year-old aunt.

---------------------------
RELATED POST:-

Last Nazi 89 years old face trial for the murder of 28 000 Jews in Hollocasts in Poland.Ivan the Terrible.


In this April 14, 2009 file photo John Demjanjuk, second from right, is taken from his home in Seven Hills, Ohio by immigration agents. The 89-year-old goes on trial Monday in Munich on 27,900 counts of accessory to murder following 30 years of legal efforts against Demjanjuk on three continents. The trial breaks new legal ground in Germany, which is pressing forward vigorously with attempts to bring to justice World War II perpetrators while they remain alive.


In this Feb. 28, 2005 file photo, John Demjanjuk arrives at the federal building in Cleveland, Ohio. The 89-year-old goes on trial Monday in Munich on 27,900 counts of accessory to murder following 30 years of legal efforts against Demjanjuk on three continents. The trial breaks new legal ground in Germany, which is pressing forward vigorously with attempts to bring to justice World War II perpetrators while they remain alive.


This file photo released by the Department of Justice on Feb. 21, 2002, shows a World War II-era military service pass for John Demjanjuk. The 89-year-old goes on trial Monday in Munich on 27,900 counts of accessory to murder following 30 years of legal efforts against Demjanjuk on three continents. The trial breaks new legal ground in Germany, which is pressing forward vigorously with attempts to bring to justice World War II perpetrators while they remain alive.


John Demjanjuk, pictured earlier this year, is going on trial in Munich on Monday over the murder of 27,900 Jews in the Holocaust

Clue: John Demjanjuk's alleged SS card






He is frail and almost 90 years old but a former SS guard will finally face justice over the deaths of almost 28,000 Jews in the Holocaust next week.

In what may be the final Nazi trial, John Demjanjuk, 89, will appear in court in Munich over allegations he took part in an extermination programme at Sobibor in Poland.

The Ukrainian-born former U.S. auto worker fought in the Red Army before being captured by the Nazis and recruited as a concentration camp guard, it is claimed by prosecutors.

He was extradited from the U.S. in May after months of legal wrangling and is due to go on trial on Monday despite his family insisting he is too frail to be in the dock.

Demjanjuk, who denies any involvement in the Holocaust, will come face to face with one of the lucky few who survived the camp where at least 250,000 people died.

Thomas Blatt, whose younger brother and parents were killed at Sobibor, has travelled from his American home to see the trial.

'It is important to hear the testimony of those times, for young people to truly know the meaning of the hell on earth that was Sobibor,' he 88-year-old told the Daily Mirror.

'The stink of carbon monoxide, the naked little children going to be gassed, the flames that licked out of the furnace chimney as all you knew and loved evaporated before your eyes.

'Demjanjuk is not an old man who deserves pity but who should come to terms with what he did.'

His physical condition alters by the day, even by the hour. He is an old man suffering from a range of ailments,' his lawyer, Guenther Maull, told Reuters.

'His mood swings, too. Sometimes you think he as an old man who is mentally absent but you don't know if it's a general condition or an illness,' he said.

Despite protestations from his family, medics have deemed Demjanjuk fit for trial.

The hearings in Munich will be limited to two 90-minute sessions per day due to his frail condition.

The trial is due to last until May and if convicted Demjanjuk could be sentenced to spend the rest of his life behind bars.

'It is an opportunity to demonstrate what inhuman behaviour the Nazi regime executed and to respect my family's memory,' said David van Huiden, a Dutch co-plaintiff whose parents and 18-year-old sister were gassed at Sobibor.

'He should get the heaviest available punishment according to German law.'

The Wiesenthal Center, which says Demjanjuk pushed men, women and children into gas chambers, says the trial sends a message that justice can be done even after decades.

'John Demjanjuk has lived a largely undisturbed life. He has been with his family, celebrated birthdays and anniversaries, something his victims didn't have the chance to do,' said Rabbi Marvin Hier, Dean of the Center in Los Angeles.

'Do we have compassion? No, not at all. He'll be in court where he belongs.'

Many Germans, keen to draw a line under the Nazi past and forge a new role for their country, are resigned to the spectacle of the trial which has underscored Germany's patchy record on bringing its Nazi war criminals to justice.

The Institute for Contemporary History in Munich says West Germany has seen only about 6,600 convictions. About two thirds of those individuals got sentences of less than two years in jail. There are no reliable figures for Communist East Germany.

'There have been many investigations but if you look at the dimensions of the crimes, the results are unsatisfactory,' said Andreas Eichmueller, a Nazi war crime expert at the Institute.

While acknowledging he was at other camps, Demjanjuk has denied he was in Sobibor, which prosecutors say was run by 20-30 SS members and 100-150 former Soviet prisoners of war.

In the gas chambers, Jews died within 30 minutes of a toxic mix of carbon monoxide and carbon dioxide, say prosecutors who argue Demjanjuk was at Sobibor for about six months in 1943.

Experts say the trial's most interesting aspect is whether prosecutors can prove Demjanjuk was party to specific crimes.

'The court will enter new ground if it convicts him just because he was there. Usually there has to be proof of a concrete crime,' said Eichmueller.

'The prosecutors seem to be saying purely because he was in an extermination camp, he was involved in murder. That's different from proving an actual crime,' said Eichmueller.

Demjanjuk was extradited from the United States to Israel in 1986, accused of being 'Ivan the Terrible', a notoriously sadistic guard at the Treblinka death camp.

He was sentenced to death in 1988 but his conviction was overturned when new evidence showed another man was probably 'Ivan'.

John Demjanjuk once was the focus of the world's attention for the bloodcurdling crimes he stood accused of. Today, he's attracting notice for being the lowest-ranking person to go on trial for Nazi crimes in World War II.

The latest chapter in a 32-year legal saga brings the retired Ohio autoworker to a court in Munich in a case opening Monday that breaks new ground in Germany's pursuit of alleged Holocaust perpetrators.

If successful, it could significantly lower the bar for who is considered important enough to go to jail for being part of the Nazi apparatus.

In the 1980s, Demjanjuk stood trial in Israel accused of being the notoriously brutal guard "Ivan the Terrible" at the Treblinka extermination camp. He was convicted, sentenced to death — then freed when an Israeli court overturned the ruling saying the evidence showed he was the victim of mistaken identity.

Now, at age 89, he is accused of serving as a low-ranking guard at the Sobibor death camp, charged with being an accessory to the murders of 27,900 people during the time he is alleged to have been there.

Demjanjuk maintains he was a victim of the Nazis — first wounded as a Soviet soldier fighting German forces, then captured and held as a prisoner of war under brutal conditions.

German prosecutors paint a different picture. After Ukrainian-born Demjanjuk was in German captivity, they maintain, he volunteered to serve with the fanatical German SS and was posted to Sobibor in Nazi-occupied Poland.

It is the first time prosecutors have tried someone so allegedly low-ranking without proof of a specific offense. If Demjanjuk is convicted, other low-ranking suspects could face prosecution.

"This definitely marks a change in the decades-old policies of the German judiciary — a positive change," said Efraim Zuroff, the top Nazi-hunter at the Simon Wiesenthal Center.

Immediately after the war, top Nazis such as Hermann Goering were convicted at war-crimes trials run by the Allied powers. Investigations of the lower ranks eventually fell to German courts.

Many of those trials ended with short sentences, or acquittal, of suspects in greater positions of responsibility than Demjanjuk allegedly had. Demjanjuk is accused of having served as a "Wachmann," a guard, the lowest rank of the "Hilfswillige" volunteers who were subordinate to German SS men.

For example, Karl Streibel — the commandant of the SS Trawniki training camp where Demjanjuk allegedly was trained — was tried in Hamburg but acquitted in 1976 after the judges ruled it hadn't been proven that he knew what the guards being trained would be used for.

But today's judges grew up in the 19550s and 1960s and recently have approached war crimes cases differently from their predecessors.

In August, the same court that will hear Demjanjuk's case convicted Josef Scheungraber, a former German officer, of murder for the massacre of 10 civilians in Italy in 1944 even though no witness saw him give the order.

There are no direct living witnesses in Demjanjuk's case either — but prosecutors argue that if he was a guard at the death camp, that necessarily means he was involved in the death machinery.

"In the early 1950s there were certainly some mistakes made, and sometimes there may have been an agenda behind it," said Kurt Schrimm, head of the special German prosecutors' office responsible for investigating Nazi-era crimes.

"One must remember, however, that our office has embarked since its founding in 1958 into completely uncharted territory," he added. "It is unique that a people pursues their own crimes over decades, and we are always learning more."

Demjanjuk's family argues that there is pressure from the Simon Wiesenthal Center, the U.S. Justice Department and others to try him.

"I think they're going to push forward to have the trial no matter what, to have the media event and make it seem like Germany is doing what it can to hunt down and prosecute so-called Nazi war criminals," John Demjanjuk Jr. told The Associated Press in a telephone interview, adding that his father suffers from a bone marrow disease and could only have months to live.

Schrimm said it was not until 2008, when his prosecutors' office found lists of Jews transported to Sobibor during the time Demjanjuk was allegedly there, that there was enough evidence to pursue a case against him in Germany. Now, he said, there is an obligation to proceed with the trial.

"It is naturally difficult to deal with men who are soon in their 90th year," Schrimm said. "But there are no doubts: The lawmakers decided in 1979 to remove the statute of limitations for murder, and therefore I see no reason to treat this case any differently."

Proving the case is another matter.

Demjanjuk maintains he was never at the camp and questions the authenticity of one of the prosecution's main pieces of evidence — an SS identity card that they say features a photo of a young, round-faced Demjanjuk and that says he worked at Sobibor.

He claims to be a victim of mistaken identity — a Red Army conscript from Ukraine who was captured in Crimea in May, 1942 and held prisoner until joining the Vlasov Army. This force of anti-communist Soviet POWs and others was formed to fight with the Germans against the Soviets in the final months of the war.

Demjanjuk, who is being tried in Munich because he lived in the area briefly after the war, emigrated to the U.S. in 1952 and gained citizenship in 1958.

He was extradited to Israel in 1986 after the U.S. Justice Department's Office of Special Investigations, or OSI, said it had evidence that he was "Ivan the Terrible."

He went on trial in 1987 and was convicted and sentenced to death. But in 1993 the Israeli high court overturned the ruling and freed him after it received evidence that another Ukrainian, not Demjanjuk, was that Nazi guard.

At the trial, former Treblinka prisoners misidentified Demjanjuk as Ivan the Terrible. But this time, there are no Sobibor survivors who claim to remember him at all.

Thomas Blatt, a Sobibor survivor whose mother, father and brother were killed immediately on arrival at the camp in April 1943, is to testify at the German trial, but he concedes that even if he had encountered Demjanjuk, he wouldn't be able to remember him after so many years.

"I don't remember the faces of my parents right now," said Blatt, 82. "How could I remember him?"

But he said he still looks forward to testifying about the role of the camp guards, whom he recalls seeing returning from the gas chambers, their boots splattered with the blood of Jews who resisted.

"That is what I can tell, only what the group (has) done. They were not regular guardsmen. They were murderers."

Some evidence against Demjanjuk comes from statements attributed to Ignat Danilchenko, a now-deceased Ukrainian who once served in the Soviet Army and was exiled to Siberia following World War II for helping the Nazis.

In 1979, he told the Soviet KGB that he served with Demjanjuk at Sobibor and that Demjanjuk "like all guards in the camp, participated in the mass killing of Jews."

But the OSI itself has questioned the validity of his statements, saying in reports that there are "numerous factual errors."

If convicted, Demjanjuk faces a possible 15-year sentence, though he could be given credit for some or all of the seven years he spent behind bars in Israel. Even if acquitted, however, Demjanjuk will likely have to remain in Germany because his U.S. citizenship has been revoked.

"There's no justice in this case, regardless of the outcome," Demjanjuk Jr. said.

Today Top Recent Posts Here.


Blogger Widgets
Related Posts with Thumbnails

Entertainment News