Friday, April 30, 2010

Zone 3- Euro-Americas Summary Week # 115

Week # 115 – Dated 11-18 April 2010

WESTERN EUROPE

A damning report on human rights reveals that the discrimination Muslims face all across Europe is alarmingly on the rise, mainly due to raging conflicts.

UK Conservatives launched their manifesto earlier this month for the May 6 general election, with a raft of pledges they say will put power back in people's hands. Meanwhile British voters witnessed the first U.S.-style political debate, a historic event billed as an exciting prelude to one of the closest elections in years.

French President Nicolas Sarkozy said on Monday he would decide next year if he will stand for re-election in 2012. Sarkozy's center-right party was heavily beaten in regional elections last month and his approval ratings have fallen sharply as concern over the fragile state of the economy and disapproval of his restless governing style have grown.

Eurozone finance ministers gathered last week to seek ways to halt a government debt crisis as Greece asks the European Union and the International Monetary. The first debt sale since then raised 1.56 billion euros indicating improved investor confidence.

The Vatican responded Monday to allegations it long concealed clerical sex abuse by making it clear for the first time that bishops and clerics worldwide should report such crimes to police if they are required to by law.

Meanwhile Italy's constitutional court has rejected bids to have gay marriages recognized in two Italian cities i.e. Venice & Trento.

Belgium soon may be the first European nation to outlaw the burqa and other Islamic garb that completely hides a woman's body and face. Neighboring France and the Netherlands may also outlaw attire that is viewed by many in western European societies as demeaning to women. It is also considered a gateway to radical Islam, a fear that is stoking rightwing sentiment across the continent.

In Greece earlier this month Prosecutors pressed charges against six people over their alleged membership in the far-left terror group Revolutionary Struggle. The suspects -- five men and a woman -- are accused of multiple counts of attempted homicide, setting off explosions and armed offences. Meanwhile the Police also detained about 70 demonstrators who had gathered in downtown Athens to protest the arrests.

France last week voiced its opposition to a U.S. extradition request for an Iranian, Majid Kakavand, a 37-year-old engineer, accused of evading export controls to purchase technology over the Internet to sell to Iran's military.

Germany's defense minister said last week that military restructuring could free up more soldiers for international missions, potentially bringing it in line with other countries' efforts. Karl Theodor zu Guttenberg's comments come as the country faces pressure from the United States to send more soldiers to Afghanistan, where it currently has about 4,000 troops. The war is extremely unpopular at home and Chancellor Angela Merkel has resisted the request for further troops.

CENTRAL AND EASTERN EUROPE

Albania’s Defence Minister Arben Imami has said that the country plans to have all old ammunition destroyed by 2013 under a new dismantling effort in Elbasan and Polican, financed by Denmark. In need of dismantling are more than 90,000 tonnes of ammunition inherited from the communist regime. Meanwhile earlier this month Albania abolished its visa regime towards Serbian citizens, another sign of improving bilateral relations.

The Court of BiH has decided to release former Republika Srpska (RS) Prime Minister Gojko Klickovic on bail. Klickovic is accused of war crimes committed in Bosanska Krupa during the 1992-1995 Bosnian conflict.

The cloud of volcanic ash over Europe led US President Barack Obama and other World Leaders to cancel their trip to Poland to attend funeral of President Lech Kaczynski.

Bulgarian Prime Minister Boyko Borisov has announced that the country will give up its eurozone application for the time being due to its current inability to meet the European Monetary Union criteria.

The Kosovo Embassy in London received a note earlier this month informing it that Swaziland has recognized Kosovo's independence, the 66th country to do so since Pristina's declaration of independence in February 2008.

Montenegro’s Lawmakers with a 47 to 27 vote rejected a no-confidence motion last week against Prime Minister Milo Djukanovic's cabinet, submitted by the opposition Movement for Changes (PzP) and other parties.


Romania, Georgia and Azerbaijan signed an official agreement in Bucharest last week to provide natural gas from the Caspian Sea to Romania.

Serbian President Boris Tadic has stated that Serbia and Croatia are searching for an out-of-court solution to the two countries' reciprocal genocide lawsuits filed at the International Court of Justice, for war crimes committed during the 1990s.

Czech President Vaclav Klaus, a fierce critic of the European Union and its reforming Lisbon Treaty and the last EU leader to sign the reform deal said last week that the pact has failed to boost the 27-member bloc's effectiveness.

In Hungary the right-wing Federation of Young Democrats (FIDESZ) with 52.7% of the vote won an absolute majority in parliamentary elections held last week. The neo-fascist Party for a Better Hungary (Jobbik), which ran a racist election campaign directed against Roma and foreigners, obtained 17 % of the vote.

Kyrgyzstan’s ousted president, Kurmanbek Bakiyev, claims that two countries, Kazakhstan and Belarus have offered him political asylum.

Russia’s first Deputy Prime Minister Igor Shuvalov has disclosed that the nation may abandon its plans to join the World Trade Organization in a joint bid with Kazakhstan and Belarus.

Since Belarus was not invited to participate in the top-level 47-nation nuclear security summit in Washington on April12-13, during which world leaders agreed to ‘secure all vulnerable nuclear material in four years’, the Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko has announced that the nation has hundreds of kilograms of highly enriched uranium and it is not going to get rid of.

At the economic front, Czech central bank Vice-Governor Miroslav Singer very strongly condemned IMF for its ‘misleading reports’, painting a miserable picture of the country's financial exposure.

According to a Bloomberg survey, average gross wages in Hungary has probably advanced 3.5 % in February. Meanwhile the yield on Hungary’s 8 % bond due February 2015 fell 2 basis points to 5.789 percent.

The Ministry of Health of the Slovak Republic has awarded US Company Ness Technologies, Inc. a contract to provide the first phase of an electronic healthcare services system valued at €32.4m.

According to the Statistical Committee reported, Belarus gross domestic product (GDP) rose 4.0 % in the first quarter of 2010 from a year earlier.

the Ukrainian Prime Minister Mykola Azarov said last week that his country and the International Monetary Fund have agreed to revise its two-year bail out program that was approved in 2008 and Ukraine has so far received 11 billion U.S. dollars out of a 16.4-billion-dollar loan from the IMF while the rest had been suspended since last November.

Estonia is likely to become the seventeenth member of the euro zone in 2011 as its macro-economic performance remains under control despite the recession. The European Commission is set to give its green light in mid-May.

The Polish constitution stipulates that if a president dies in office, the speaker of parliament assumes his duties and must decide on an election date within 14 days, with the election to follow no less than 60 days after that. Acting president Bronislaw Komowski announced the election will be held on June 20.

Belarus has initiated discussions on the formation of active citizenship among the young generation of the CIS countries aimed at involving of youth in development and strengthening of human values, education for their civil and patriotic feelings.

The Ministry of Regional Development and Local Government presented to the Latvian Cabinet an information report on the implementation of the e-Government Development Program 2005-2009. This includes the introduction of a secure e-Signature infrastructure, national e-Procurement system, new State and municipal information systems etc.


RUSSIA

The 47-nation U.S. summit on nuclear security earlier this month got off to a rocky start when Russia indicated that it did not favor tough economic sanctions against Iran. Further news of Iran buying an ultra-sophisticated missile system from Russia to protect its nuclear sites has caused fury and fear among Western powers seeking to stop the country from developing nuclear weapons. The new START (Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty) bilateral nuclear arms reduction treaty between Russia and the United States was signed by Presidents Dmitry Medvedev and Barack Obama on April 8, 2010 in Prague. A ceiling was fixed for each country of 1,550 nuclear warheads and 700 deployed nuclear delivery vehicles. The new limits are about a third lower than the previous ones negotiated by George W. Bush in the 2002.

President Dmitry Medvedev participated in a summit of four i.e. Brazil, Russia, India, and China in Brasilia aimed at strengthening cooperation. The leaders called for a 'new international order' as they reached consensus to file a draft resolution before the Group of 20 (G20) in Canada in June, demanding more power for emerging and developing countries in global decision-making bodies.

After the Summit Medvedev said that Russia will leave the Kyoto Protocol on greenhouse gas emissions if a deal can't be reached on carbon emission reduction. The Kyoto Protocol expires in 2012.

Russia's uneasy ties with Poland face a test after Polish President Lech Kaczynski, his wife and dozens of other senior Polish officials died in a weekend plane crash tentatively blamed on fog and pilot error.

The foreign minister of Kazakhstan, who currently chairs the OSCE stated that the United States, Russia and Kazakhstan worked together to allow Kyrgystan's ousted president to leave the country. Meanwhile Russian President Dmitry Medvedev has linked the collapse of political regime in Kyrgyzstan with the failure to solve social and economic issues and announced to continue its humanitarian aid to the nation but will conclude major agreement only with a legitimate government that will be able to cope with them.

According to Moscow’s central bank reports the ruble weakened 0.2 % to 29.0225 per dollar. Also the yield on the 7.5 % government bond in dollars due March 2030 fell 1 basis point to 4.791%.

Prime Minister Vladimir Putin last week said that Russia might lend $5 billion to $6 billion to Ukraine to construct two nuclear reactors, while promising to consider a new deal on gas supply prices.

Three suspected Islamic insurgents blew themselves up as security forces stormed the private house where they were hiding in an Ingush village last week, and the widow of one of them attacked investigators killing one police officer.

According to a statement by the Russian Orthodox Church the bodies of victims of Stalinist purges found in a mass grave during the construction of a road near the Russian Far Eastern town of Vladivostok are to be reburied.

US/CANADA

Last week just hours after Congress passed an $18 billion bill to restore unemployment benefits for the long-term unemployed, President Barack Obama made it the law of the land. A measure to restore eligibility for the jobless to receive up to 99 weeks of unemployment checks appears on track despite objections from Republicans concerned about its cost.

Allied activists demonstrated this month all over the US protesting government spending and what they deem as the Washington tax grab. Meanwhile former President Bill Clinton warned of a slippery slope from angry anti-government rhetoric to violence like the 1995 Oklahoma City bombing, saying "the words we use really do matter."

Obama opened the global security summit earlier this month after two days of meetings with selected presidents and prime ministers of the 47 countries assembled to recharge efforts to keep nuclear material out of terrorist hands.

According to reports The United States is leading an effort by a handful of anti-whaling nations to broker an agreement that would limit and ultimately end whale hunting by Japan, Norway and Iceland.

In Canada a scandal involving a former cabinet minister has helped cut public support for the Conservatives. Meanwhile the weekly Ekos survey for the Canadian Broadcasting Corp put popular support for the Conservatives at 31.4%, down from 33.6% last week. Support for the main opposition Liberals rose to 29% from 27.3%.

On the Canadian financial front stronger-than-expected trade figures for February and a steady housing market confirm the Canadian economic recovery is picking up speed ahead of expected interest rate hikes by the Bank of Canada.

Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper has announced that Canada will return spent nuclear fuel to its supplier, the United States, as part of a global drive to secure fissile materials.


LATIN AMERICA

Earlier this month Argentina's Cristina Fernandez rejected the idea that her leftist politics would prevent a strong working relationship with Sebastian Pinera, a right-wing billionaire whose inauguration last month ended 20 years of center-left rule in Chile.

A landslide swept away dozens of houses near Rio de Janeiro last week, worsening a disaster caused by heavy rains that has killed many around Brazil’s second-biggest city. In a recent statement officials updated the number of confirmed dead to 219.

According to Agencia Angola Press reports Petroleo Brasileiro SA, Brazil’s state-run oil company, plans to expand its exploration activities in Angola.

Brazilian opposition candidate Jose Serra launched his bid for the presidencylast week, buoyed by an opinion poll lead and extensive experience ahead of what promises to be a tough race until the October 3 poll. According to a recent poll candidate Jose Serra and Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva’s chosen successor, Dilma Rousseff, are in a statistical dead heat six months before the October election.

Meanwhile President Barack Obama met with Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva of Brazil and Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan last week in Washington D.C. to discuss Iran's controversial nuclear program. The meeting took place on the sidelines of a summit that focused on nuclear security in the face of terrorist threats.

On the economic front according to reports Brazil may need to drill more wells to find the 5 billion barrels of oil reserves needed in a proposed swap for new shares in state-controlled Petroleo Brasileiro SA.

The United States and Brazil signed an agreement last week meant to bolster military ties, but Brazil's Defense Minister Nelson Jobim did not offer any hint about a key defense contract sought by U.S.-based Boeing Co. The accord, which was signed at the Pentagon by Jobim and U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates, is the first agreement of its kind in more than 30 years between the two countries.

Seeking to smooth relations with Mexico at the annual gathering of the NAFTA partners last week, Prime Minister Stephen Harper blamed Canada’s decision to impose visas on Mexican nationals on Canada’s refugee system, and urged Parliament to enact changes to stem the flow of “bogus” claims.

Despite a severe energy-related crisis at home Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez offered last week to help Uruguay expand a refinery and supply it with crude oil at discounted rates. Meanwhile President Chavez extended an electricity emergency for another 60 days despite recent rainfall that raised hopes that severe power shortages would end in the oil-exporting nation. According to the South American OPEC nation's oil minister Venezuela has diversified its oil markets and is selling more than 460,000 barrels per day to China, a 21 % increase from a year ago.

Venezuela's President Hugo Chavez in a recent statement during a ceremony to receive the first of eight naval patrol boats purchased from Spain, called U.S. officials "stupid" for criticizing his arms purchases from Russia and said he would keep buying weapons until the country is ready to defend itself.

AUSTRALASIA

Australia's Prime Minister Kevin Rudd threatened last week to ask voters to directly back his sweeping health reform plans as opposition from powerful state leaders threatens to hobble his re-election strategy. Rudd has played down early polls, but said he would go ahead with a risky referendum alongside the election if state leaders rejected his health shakeup.

Web attackers in China flooded an international network link to one of Optus' large commercial clients in Australia in what is known as a denial-of-service attack. This caused congestion that significantly slowed Internet and e-mail links to other customers on that link, including AAP and News.

The United Nations has raised concerns about Australia's decision to freeze asylum applications from Afghanistan and Sri Lanka, saying it could leave people in detention for prolonged periods. Australia this month suspended applications from Afghans and Sri Lankans, saying the situation in their war-weary homelands had improved and fewer nationals of these countries would likely be considered refugees in the future. §

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Business and Politics in the Muslim World (BPM)refers to the project entitled, "Globalized Business and Politics: A View from the Muslim World.' The blog development project has been undertaken and jointly developed by the Gilani Research Foundation and BPM as a free resource and social discussion tool.
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Monday, April 26, 2010

Zone 3- Euro-Americas Summary Week # 114

WESTERN EUROPE

In the British general elections a row over tax and spending has dominated the opening days of the campaign. The dispute between the Conservatives and Labour over payroll tax and public spending has eclipsed worries about a large budget deficit.

In the Netherlands, according to PVV’s party leader Geert Wilders, a ban on headscarves for city council workers and in all institutions and clubs which get local authority money will be the most important point in the party´s negotiations to join governing coalitions in Almere and the Hague.

Meanwhile the European rights chief while urging politicians to promote understanding of different cultures has warned that a ban on face-veil would violate individual privacy rights and alienate Muslim women.

The Guardian reports that French Muslims of North African descent have spending power worth an estimated of 5.5bn euros a year. The young ones want high-end halal luxuries and a range of halal cuisines, rather than the foods that their parents grew up with.


CENTRAL AND EASTERN EUROPE

Polish President Lech Kaczynski, 60, along with the country's highest military and civilian leaders died last week when the presidential plane crashed as it came in for a landing in thick fog in western Russia, killing 97 people. On board were the army chief of staff, national bank president, deputy foreign minister, head of the National Security Office, deputy parliament speaker, civil rights commissioner and at least two presidential aides and three lawmakers. The plane was taking the president and his delegation to events marking the 70th anniversary of the massacre of 22,000 Polish officers in KATYN forest by Soviet secret police. Reflecting the sensitivity of the incident on bilateral relations, Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin has personally assumed charge of the investigation.

Putin also made an unprecedented gesture of good will to Poland by attending the memorial ceremony for 22,000 Poles executed by Soviet secret police during World War. However after attending the solemn event he said Soviet dictator Josef Stalin ordered the atrocity as revenge for the death of Red Army soldiers in Polish prisoner of war camps in 1920.

Last week US President Barack Obama wrapped up a two-day visit to the Czech Republic that saw the signing of a new US- Russian nuclear arms control treaty.

In Slovakia, several groups have sought to make an election issue out of the questions of nationhood and ethnic minorities. Meanwhile, the Czechs look like they might swing to the left. The Czech voters will choose their next government on May 28-29, while in Slovakia the general election is scheduled for June 12.

According to Hungary’s national election office OVI after processing 99% of the votes, the country's center-right opposition party headed by FIDESZ got 52.8% of the vote in last week’s first round of parliamentary elections, while all other parties gained considerably less support. The second round of the elections is scheduled for April 25.

Ukrainian President Victor Yanukovych during a meeting with visiting Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov last week reiterated his country's willingness to strengthen strategic partnership with Russia. Meanwhile The Ukrainian president has dissolved the government's commission working toward NATO membership. The move has buried the ambitious pro-NATO policies by his predecessor, Orange Revolution hero Viktor Yushchenko.

On the economic front, according to a report of the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), Poland's GDP may rise 3 percent this year and up to 3.6 percent in 2011.

Czech consumer prices rose by 0.3 percent on the month in March, putting year-on-year inflation at 0.7 percent. According to the Central bank, it saw inflation near the 2 percent target in the first half of 2011, the bank's policy horizon.

Latest report from the International Monetary Fund (IMF) forecast that the total external debt of Belarus in 2010 would reach the highest level in history to take up some 52 percent of its gross domestic product (GDP).

Ukraine's Finance Ministry has received offers from nine lenders as the government prepares to sell Eurobonds after it resumed talks with the International Monetary Fund (IMF). The ministry is still receiving offers from banks across the globe, including the United States and Japan.

According to reports The Baltic countries of Latvia, Lithuania and Estonia were in the top four in unemployment among European Union countries in February. Latvia led with a 21.7 % unemployment rate, followed by Spain at 19%, Lithuania 15.8%, and Estonia at 15.5% jobless rate. The average unemployment rate in the 27-member European Union member states was 9.6 % in February.

Several local start-up software developers attended the first Czech Republic Microsoft Business Academy held in Brno last week

More than 20,000 Lithuanians have signed an electronic petition to the government against the planned construction of a nuclear power station in neighboring Belarus for the safety of 500,000 inhabitants around 50 kilometres (30 miles) from the planned site of the plant. Belarus plans to build a new nuclear plant that could possibly export energy to Lithuania. Lithuania agreed to close its own Soviet-era IGNALINA nuclear station by 2009 as part of its 2004 EU accession agreement.

Estonia's banking, media and government presence online was disrupted by several waves of distributed denial of service attacks that knocked services offline. The country is heavily wired - 90 percent of all financial transactions are conducted over the Internet and 70 percent of the population files their tax returns electronically.

RUSSIA

Russia's ambassador to the United Nations has introduced a draft resolution to the Security Council calling for new measures to ensure Somali pirates are punished when they are caught.

As USA President Obama signed a landmark arms-control treaty with Russian President Dmitry Medvedev last week, a chorus of skeptics in Russia has raised concerns that Moscow may have conceded too much in the deal. Meanwhile according to officials the Obama administration plans to send the new arms-control treaty package with Russia to Congress by the end of April, hoping for ratification by year's end.

Russian Prime Minister and a top Foreign Ministry official have strongly condemned suggestions that Russia could be involved in the disturbances in Kyrgyzstan.

In a statement from the kremlin, President Dmitry Medvedev has signed into law amendments to legislation on economic crimes that should increase the use of bail for suspects awaiting trial and cut abuse of the system.

On the economic front the first Russian-Arab cooperation forum is expected to be held in the capital of Russia, Moscow, by the end of 2010.

The Nord Stream pipeline project was laid last week in PORTOVAYA Bay, north of St. Petersburg, Russia. The dual-pipeline project, the first phase of which is to be completed in 2011, will allow Russia to pump its natural gas directly under the Baltic Sea to Germany. But the project has been hugely contentious in Europe, especially for Poland, who accused Germany of going behind the backs of its Eastern European neighbors by forging a closer energy alliance with Russia. The European Union obtains nearly 45 % of its gas imports from Russia, while 70 % of Russia’s gas exports are earmarked for the 27-country bloc.


Russian president Medvedev arrived in Slovakia last week to take part in activities commemorating the 65th anniversary of the end of World War II in Europe and liberation of former Czechoslovakia. In 2008, the bilateral trade exchange between Russia and Slovakia reached the record USD 9.6 billion, but in 2009 it dropped to a half of the figure. An important point in the Bratislava talks was the extension of the broad-gauge railway from the Ukrainian-Slovak border to Vienna, which would for the first time directly connect central Europe with the Russian railway system, including the Trans-Siberian Railway.

A joint Russian-US project has created a new 117-proton element, provisionally called ununseptium, making the second heaviest substance created thus far.

According to reports Over 4,000 Russian inmates died in 2009. There are currently 861,867 people imprisoned across Russia. The country's prisons are notorious for their overcrowding and the high incidence of infectious diseases.

US/CANADA

Last week in the USA a prominent national Muslim civil rights and advocacy group welcomed reports from Pakistan that American Al-Qaeda spokesman Adam Gadahn has been arrested. The Washington-based Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) also repudiated Gadahn’s latest call to violence contained in an Al-Qaeda video released recently.

LATIN AMERICA

President Cristina Kirchner admitted last week that Argentina would never succeed in claiming the Falkland Islands by military force. However she expressed the hope that diplomatic and political pressure would wrest them away from Britain.

China's Ministry of Commerce recently suggested that its traders cancel soy oil cargoes from Argentina due to sanitary problems, a move that elicited objections from the Argentine government. Argentina, Latin America's No. 3 economy, is facing a financing crunch this year to meet debt obligations of up to $15 billion.

Under Brazil's electoral law, the deadline for departure from government positions to participate in general elections is April 3, six months before the elections. 10 Brazilian ministers quit their posts last week in this stead. The most notable departing minister is Dilma Rousseff, who has been handpicked by President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva as his successor. Meanwhile Lula da Silva called for continuity of government policies and plans in the first cabinet meeting following the pre election reshuffle.

President Dmitry Medvedev visited Argentina and Brazil last week, as Russia strengthens relationships in a region long influenced heavily by the United States. Preceding that, in his first visit to Venezuela Prime Minister Vladimir Putin offered Russian assistance to help the nation set up its own space industry, including a satellite launch site. The two nations also agreed on a joint oil production project worth $20 billion. Meanwhile President Hugo Chavez affirmed last week that Venezuela and Russia are forging a strategic alliance aimed at the establishment of a new international order based on multilateralism.

Chinese President Hu Jintao is also expected to pay visits to Brazil, Chile and Venezuela this month.

Venezuela’s main thermoelectric plant, Planta Centro, was shut down last week due to failures in five of its generating units, exacerbating the country’s worsening electricity crisis.

Mexico’s Finance Ministry raised its forecast for economic growth this year to 4.1%, which would be the fastest pace in a decade, as U.S. shoppers increase demand for the country’s exports.

AUSTRALASIA

According to latest Roy Morgan findings a clear majority (81%) of Australians do not want Australia’s population to exceed 35 million by 2040.

Australians are more divided on the question of immigration where 46% say immigration should ‘remain about the same,’ while 39% say immigration should ‘be reduced’ and just 11% say immigrations should ‘be increased.’ §

________________________________________________________
Business and Politics in the Muslim World (BPM)refers to the project entitled, "Globalized Business and Politics: A View from the Muslim World.' The blog development project has been undertaken and jointly developed by the Gilani Research Foundation and BPM as a free resource and social discussion tool.
Please Preview your comments before posting.

Friday, April 16, 2010

Zone 3- Euro-Americas Summary Week # 113

Week # 113 – Dated 28 March- 3 April 2010
WESTERN EUROPE
Voters began casting ballots last week in Italy's regional elections, which are being seen as an important test of popularity for Premier Silvio Berlusconi. The premier has seen his popularity erode amid rising unemployment, a corruption scandal and an investigation into his alleged attempts to influence TV coverage. Despite apprehensions Berlusconi's coalition won crucial races and wrested control of four regions from the opposition.
Former UK Prime Minister Tony Blair made a dramatic pre-election return to domestic British politics last week with an attack on the policies of David Cameron a Tory leader. Blair's return, weeks before a national election, came in a speech urging voters to give his Labour Party a fourth term in office.
Senior Catholic bishops are urging British worshippers to carefully consider candidates' policies toward marriage and abortion when they vote in the looming national election — a move likely to benefit the opposition Conservatives. Meanwhile British protesters called on Pope Benedict XVI to resign last week as they staged a demonstration over the Catholic Church's handling of clerical sex abuse cases.
Relatives of Bosnian Muslims killed in Europe's worst massacre since World War II lost another round Tuesday in their attempt to sue the United Nations for responsibility. The Hague Appeals Court upheld a 2008 lower court ruling affirming U.N. immunity from prosecution enshrined in international conventions that established the world body, and said the legal protection is an essential foundation of its peacekeeping operations around the world.
France's highest administrative body warned last week that a total ban on full-body Islamic veils in public risks being found unconstitutional but that rules requiring the face to be uncovered could be justified. Meanwhile a parliamentary committee in Belgium unanimously voted last week to ban the wearing of face-covering veils in public, a major step in the legislative process that could make the country the first European nation to impose such a religious prohibition.
German Chancellor Angela Merkel visited Turkey last week amid the two countries disagreement over the mainly Muslim country's faltering bid to join the European. Also on the agenda for the two-day stay were differences linked to the huge Turkish immigrant population in Germany, where the world's largest Turkish diaspora is located.

CENTRAL AND EASTERN EUROPE
Albania’s main opposition Socialist Party (SP) wants to call a referendum on the government's plan to build a nuclear power plant.
The mission of Canadian troops in BiH officially ended on March 29th with five officers and one non-commissioned soldier returning home.
An impeachment motion against Bulgarian President Georgi Parvanov, initiated by the ruling GERB party, was introduced in parliament last week after it collected the signatures of 162 lawmakers well over the required 61. Meanwhile a court sentenced six Bulgarians to prison Monday (March 29th) for financial fraud and embezzlement of about 7.5m euros granted the country under the EU's SAPARD programme.
The defence ministry of Croatia has announced intentions to send 20 more troops to Afghanistan by September. Meanwhile 79 Macedonian soldiers left last week for Afghanistan, where they will join Macedonia's 170-strong contingent within the NATO-led mission ISAF.
Greek Ambassador to Macedonia Alexandra Papadopoulou last week condemned nationalist slogans chanted during a military parade in Athens. She was summoned to the Macedonian Foreign Ministry where Deputy Foreign Minister Zoran Petrov demanded a formal apology.
According to media reports Kosovo’s Prime Minister Hashim Thaci and representatives of the junior government partner, the Democratic League of Kosovo, have reached an agreement to restructure the government. Meanwhile the opposition has criticized the coalition for trying to distract the public from alleged corruption and mismanagement.
US troops handed over management of the borderline between Kosovo and Macedonia to the Kosovo Police last week.
Montenegro’s opposition Movement for Changes filed a no-confidence motion against the government last week. The opposition accuses the government of failing to fight corruption and organized crime, as well as inefficiency in addressing the economic situation.
In Romania buses and trams in Bucharest came to a halt last week after thousands of drivers staged a strike without advance warning, protesting government austerity measures that would cut their wages and Easter bonuses.
Polish Defense Minister is on a visit to Afghanistan to celebrate Easter with Polish troops stationed in Afghanistan.
US President Barack Obama met leaders of 11 central and eastern European countries in Prague last week. The meeting, held after the signing of a major nuclear weapons control treaty between the United States and Russia, dealt with these countries’ role in Afghanistan, and reassured the former Soviet satellites that by resetting its relations with Moscow, the United States would not curtail its interest in the region.
Visiting Slovak Foreign Minister Miroslav Lajcak and his Indonesian counterpart, Marty Natalegawa, signed an agreement last week aimed at bolstering economic ties between the two countries.
Hungary's opposition European People's Party-affiliated FIDESZ has announced that it will bar foreigners from buying arable land indefinitely if it wins elections this month. Fidesz is widely expected to obtain an absolute majority in parliament.
Belarusian Deputy Minister of Agriculture and Food, Vasily Pavlovsky informed that the country intends to export Belarusian flax yarn to China and Japan. Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko also approved the draft inter governmental agreement signed with Azerbaijan on promotion and reciprocal protection of investments.
Last week, in an oil-for-arms deal with Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko, Venezuela’s Chavez was able to add advanced ground-to-air radars to his arsenal.
Alexander Surikov, Russia's ambassador to Belarus, has said that there is a sharp difference in opinion between the two nations over the cost of a Belarusian nuclear power plant project. Last year the Belarusian government requested a $9 billion loan from Russia for the construction of the plant.
Cuba, Ukraine and the Chernobyl International Fund signed last week a medical cooperation accord, which will give continuity to the medical treatment of children from that nation suffering from health problems as a consequence of the1986 nuclear accident.
Ukraine’s new leadership said last week that it was inviting Russia to join the European Union in a plan to restore Ukraine’s gas pipeline network which carries crucial supplies of Russian gas to Europe. The announcement by Prime Minister Mykola Azarov effectively reversed a March 2009 agreement, signed by former Prime Minister Yulia Tymoshenko, for the EU to overhaul its pipeline system.
The Ukrainian Parliament refused last week to put on the agenda a draft resolution on Ukraine’s participation in forming a Common Economic Space (CES) together with Belarus, Kazakhstan and Russia and in the development of mutually beneficial economic cooperation.
Tiny Baltic State Estonia which joined NATO in 2004 said last week that it has taken a surface-to-air missile system from European defense giant MBDA and Sweden's SAAB in its largest-ever defense contract.
According to the Cabinet of Lithuanian, the Baltic state, which used to import 3 billion cubic meters of gas from GAZPROM annually, may have to increase its consumption by 150 percent to 200 percent.
Poland, along with France and Germany, is seeking to adopt common strategy regarding the future on European Union farming policy.
According to the Finance Ministry estimate, the Poland's inflation probably has decreased from 2.9 percent to 2.6 percent year-on-year in March. Meanwhile Poland's public debt rose to 49.9 percent of gross domestic product (GDP) in 2009 and stood just 0.1 percentage points below the first debt safety level.
The International Monetary Fund has signed an agreement with the Czech National Bank to provide it with about $1.4 billion.
According to the finance ministry's Debt and Liquidity Management Agency (ARDAL), Slovakia has sold 239.5 million euros ($323.6 million) worth of two-year, zero-coupon state bonds that mature on January 27, 2012.
The International Monetary Fund has approved last week releasing a $700 million tranche for Belarus and said the country was adapting well to higher Russian oil prices.
Moody's Investors Service Inc. raised the ratings outlook on Estonia, Latvia & Lithuania to stable from negative, reflecting improved financial and economic prospects, as well as likely euro adoption in 2011.
The move by the ruling Centrist Civic Platform party in the Polish parliament to increase the women seats to either half or a third of total seats, has aroused enormous controversy. Currently women have about a fifth of the seats in the lower house of the Polish parliament and less than 10 percent of the places in the Senate, lower than in many western European countries.
The Controversial Slovak Patriot Law requiring Slovak school children to sing the national anthem at the start of each school week and requiring new clerks in state administration to take a pledge of allegiance was passed again by the parliament with minor amendments and became effective on April 1st 2010.
Ukraine’s government has cut the salary of President Viktor Yanukovich by 50 percent. The salary of the former president was 41,000 hryvnas or 5,100 dollars. Yanukovich has also ordered to reduce his staff by 20 percent, or more. The staff of his predecessor numbered 530.

RUSSIA
Chechen rebel leader Doku Umarov claimed responsibility for the deadly Moscow metro last week (which killed 39 people and injured 85 others) following two new suicide bombings that killed at least 12 people in Dagestan.
Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin and Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez are to discuss military and economic cooperation, including a $2.2 billion loan to buy Russian arms, during his first visit to the South American country. Also Russia has offered to help Venezuela set up its own space industry, including a satellite launch site,
Meanwhile Medvedev and U.S. President Barack Obama last week approved the final terms of the Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty's successor, which would require the United States and Russia to both lower their respective strategic arsenals to 1,550 deployed warheads.
Last week Russian President Dmitry Medvedev harshly criticized State Duma deputies for failing to attend parliamentary sessions.
Moscow's markets shook off the bomb attacks on the city's metro to move higher last week, after focusing on the relief that the saga surrounding Greece's bailout appears finally to have wound down. Meanwhile according to reports Germany's Henkel plans to build two more plants in Russia for the production of mortar by 2012.
According to the Deputy Prime Minister Russia’s LUKOIL Company will invest 480 million dollars into the exploration and production of oil and gas in Uzbekistan over 2010. Meanwhile the signing of a contract between Russia and Belarus to build the ex-Soviet republic's first nuclear power plant has been delayed due to disagreements over the project's cost.

US/CANADA
US Presidents Barack Obama and Dmitry Medvedev agreed to an historic arms-control treaty on March 26th, calling for a substantial reduction of the two countries' deployed nuclear arsenals.
The United States last week finalized its first greenhouse gas emissions rules on automobiles and significantly boosted fuel efficiency standards for the first time since the 1970s, moves Canada jointly imposed on its industry.
According to reports the RBC Canadian Consumer Outlook Index dipped to 108 points in March from 109 in February, signaling that overall sentiment has barely budged. The index has been edging up and down since its launch in December, reflecting opinions that the country's economic recovery will be a bumpy one.

LATIN AMERICA
The Bolivian and Argentine governments have updated a natural gas contract dating back to 2006, establishing guarantees for both sides and also for construction of a $98 million gas pipeline.
Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, president of Brazil, has announced plans to visit Iran in May, to prevent that the crisis provoked by the nation’s nuclear program.
According to a recent poll 76% of Brazilians see the government of President Lula da Silva as good or great. The popularity of Brazil's president is at its highest level since he took office in 2003. Meanwhile the president launched a $878 billion program to upgrade Brazil's infrastructure last week, setting out a major campaign banner for his chosen candidate in October elections.
Mexican President Felipe Calderon alleged last week that powerful groups in the United States appear to be blocking efforts to stem the flow of assault weapons fueling Mexico's drug war.
Energy and Resources Minister Gerry Brownlee and Mexico’s Secretary of Energy Georgina Kessels have signed a cooperation arrangement in Cancun, Mexico to facilitate bilateral collaboration in the field of renewable energy. Meanwhile Mexico’s peso rose for the third time this week as the unemployment rate in February fell more than the forecasted level.
Venezuela's President Hugo Chávez said last week in Quito that his government has decided to "wait for the upcoming elections and see the attitude of the next Colombian President" to make a decision on resumption of bilateral relations. Meanwhile Venezuela's Foreign Minister Nicolás Maduro described as "politicized" the position of the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights (IACHR), which reported the "lack of independence" of the Judiciary in Venezuela. Also Venezuela's highest court last week barred an outspoken opponent of President Hugo Chavez from talking to news media about criminal charges alleging he struck a police official. Following the incident the leader of Venezuela's Roman Catholic Church accused the government of using judges and prosecutors to punish political adversaries.
With cycling and athletics medalists coming from the South American games, Venezuelan President Hugo Chávez decreed the whole week of Easter as holidays in order to save energy. Chavez has also announced the discovery of a “super well” that shows an offshore field holds almost twice as much natural gas as originally estimated.

AUSTRALASIA
Australia has expressed alarm at growing support for a plan to allow limited commercial whaling, saying it could not accept the proposal before the International Whaling Commission (IWC). New Zealand, which also opposes whaling, is supporting moves to allow restricted commercial hunts over the next 10 years if it means a big cut to the number of whales currently killed by Iceland, Norway and Japan.
Australian Prime Minister Kevin Rudd last week announced Australia's first population minister, citing concerns about sustainability as the number of people is tipped to balloon within decades. §
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Business and Politics in the Muslim World (BPM)refers to the project entitled, "Globalized Business and Politics: A View from the Muslim World.' The blog development project has been undertaken and jointly developed by the Gilani Research Foundation and BPM as a free resource and social discussion tool.
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