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Clashes leave casualties in Tunisia as radical Islamists defy protest ban

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One protester has died and several others have been injured in Tunisia after radical Islamists defied a ban on their demonstration and clashed with police.

The 27-year-old man was killed in the capital; there was also trouble in the central city of Kairouan.

In Tunis police arrested dozens of people in one district. In the midst of the clashes some of the protesters reportedly lowered the Tunisian flag and replaced it with an al Qaeda banner.

The Salafist group Ansar al-Sharia is the most radical to emerge since the revolution two years ago.

It had wanted to demonstrate in Kairouan where but was forbidden from doing so. The ban did not stop the protesters: they threw stones at police who responded with tear gas.

The demonstrators’ cause gained no sympathy among one group of Kairouan residents. “Why would we want an Islamist state? Earning a living, security and stability, that’s what the Arab world needs!” exclaimed one man.

In Tunis a police union official said: “We’re here to stop their behaviour. We’ll stay for a month if need be. The law must be respected.”

Ansar al-Sharia presents a clear challenge to Tunisia’s government, led by the more moderate Islamists from Ennahda. The Prime Minister Ali Larayedh claimed on Saturday that the group is linked to terrorism.

Al Qaeda’s regional wing has urged it to defy the crackdown.

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Snail speed: France’s economy slips into recession

Official figures show France has returned to its second recession in four years, as the economy shrank by 0.2% in Q1 of 2013, after shrinking the same amount in the final of quarter of last year, which has brought the Guardian newspaper to declare a ‘triple-dip recession’ in the eurozone’s second largest economy.The preliminary data from the INSEE statistics agency shows that overall investment contracted 0.9 percent in the first quarter.Business investment was down 0.8 percent, and exports contracted for a second consecutive quarter, shrinking 0.5 percent. Household consumption fell by 0.1 percent, the first time since Q2 of last year, despite high spending on energy over the winter season.The data is more bad news for President Hollande and the Socialist government, who were elected on the promise to end austerity, and one year later, have failed.30,000 leftists demonstrated against Hollande and the Socialist government, who have not delivered on their promise of 0.1 percent growth. The protesters’ message was clear- austerity isn’t working for France.“We are here to tell him, Mr. President, time is up and you need to start changing things,” one protester, teacher Thibault Sans, told RT.First on the agenda of change is unemployment, which in France is expected to hit at least 12.2% this year, up almost 1% from 11.4% in 2012.French employment is also well below the Eurozone average, but much lower than crisis headliners Spain and Greece, where unemployment is expected to peak at 27%.Waning citizen support A survey of 1,027 French people between April 26 and April 28 showed that only 11% think Mr. Hollande will succeed in his objective of getting unemployment to start falling by the end of the year, according to the Wall Street Journal.Earlier this month, the European Commission warned that France would enter recession this year and said the eurozone’s economy would shrink by 0.4%. The commission also forecast a rise in the deficit of 3.9% of GDP, much higher than the acceptable EU deficit target of 3%The most explicit of warning signs may have come two weeks ago when the European Central Bank cut its key interest rate from 0.75% to 0.5%, a clear indication of a deepening crisis, with no improvement on the horizon.According to a Reuters poll of economists, there will be no strong recovery until at least 2015.A near miss for Germany, but not the Netherlands The eurozone’s strongest economy, Germany, also showed some sluggish signs of growth. GDP grew by just 0.1% in the first quarter, far less than 0.3% expected by economists, showing sluggish signs of growth.The German office of statistics had previously reported a 0.6 percent contraction, but later revised that figure to the standing 0.7 percent.”The German economy is only slowly picking up steam,” the Statistics Office said in a statement. “The extreme winter weather played a role in this weak growth.”Commerzbank today lowered its German 2013 growth forecast to 0.2 percent from 0.5 percent, Bloomberg reported.Growth may have been delayed in German due to a long winter, some experts think. The particularly cold winter delayed construction and business confidence.Merkel’s initiative to bring the Eurozone afloat seems to only be producing results in Germany, as the rest of Europe is drowning in stagnated economies and bad credit.“The euro area is a drag on the economy and certainly a handicap for German companies,” Andreas Scheuele, an economist at Dekabank in Frankfurt, told Bloomberg.The Netherlands, which entered recession three months ago, also showed contraction, with GDP falling by 0.1% in the first quarter of this year. Once one of the strongest-looking members of the eurozone, the Netherlands suffers from rising unemployment and the housing market bubble having burst.Paris-Berlin rapportThe new French recession could further complicate the strained relationship between France and Germany, pro-growth and pro-austerity, respectively.On May 6th, Finance Minister Pierre Moscovici said French austerity measures are at an end, instead opting for growth.“We’ve been pleading for a growth policy for a year. Austerity on its own impedes growth.”President Hollande and France have been tiptoeing around Germany’s call for austerity, stirring a ‘friendly tension’ instead of direct opposition to Chancellor Merkel’s agenda. Hollande has not continued the legacy of ‘Merkozy’, a warm and public alliance between the German Chancellor and his predecessor, Nicolas Sarkozy.France is in a difficult position: either continue its power alliance with Germany and unpopular support for austerity, or break with Germany and instead align itself with Europe’s troubled ‘south’ – Italy and Spain.Wednesday’s sobering results technically align France in camp ‘B’, but it will remains to be seen if the French Finance Ministry continues to tag-along with Merkel and friends. Read More

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‘Scrap Trident’: Police arrest 47 protesters at Faslane nuclear base

Police estimated that nearly 250 people participated in the demonstration. Around 20 protesters sat or lay down on the ground at the main entrance to the base and covered themselves with banners. They also tied themselves to each other with plastic piping in the protest against the UK’s Trident nuclear weapons system. Another eight people locked themselves onto the south gate.The protesters called for the Trident nuclear weapons program to be scrapped, and for its £100 billion budget money spent instead on social programs. “I am taking action to stop the breach of the peace committed by the UK by owning and refusing to disarm the weapons of mass destruction,” Dominic Lindley, a 20-year-old development officer said as quoted by scraptrident.org.”These weapons are both inhumane, illegal and their use can never be justified. In the next few years the UK has an opportunity to join the vast majority of countries in the world by disarming our pointless nuclear weapons and spend the £100 billion wasted on them on vital services for our communities like the NHS, Education and the Welfare State,” Lindley added.Dozens of police officers surrounded the protesters and formed a line in front of the metal gates. One protester chanted “they say warfare”, and the crowd replied with “we say welfare .”Police used cutting equipment on the plastic piping to separate the protesters from each other before moving them off the road and into police vans.”It would take a fraction of the cost of the Trident nuclear program to fund free education for all in the UK,” Sara Moon, a development officer from Sheffield University said. “At a time when the worst-off in our communities have been stripped of their access to education we have to demand that public money is not wasted on something as unnecessary and devastating as Trident.”Those arrested ranged in age from 19 to 83, and came from across Scotland, Wales and England. The protest capped off a weekend of ‘Scrap Trident’ protests and actions, which began on Saturday with a mass demonstration in Glasgow’s George Square. Thousands of anti-nuclear demonstrators called for Scotland to dismantle its nuclear arsenal.The UK’s Trident program encompasses the development, procurement and operation of the current generation of British nuclear weapons, and the means to deliver them. Trident includes four Vanguard-class submarines armed with Trident II D-5 ballistic missiles, capable of delivering thermonuclear warheads from multiple independent re-entry vehicles.Trident is the most expensive and the most powerful weapon in the UK’s arsenal. At least one Trident submarine is always on patrol to provide a continuous at-sea deterrent.The program was announced in July 1980, and patrols began in December 1994. Since 1998, Trident has been the only British nuclear weapon system in service. Its stated purpose is to provide “the minimum effective nuclear deterrent as the ultimate means to deter the most extreme threat.”The system is due to go out of service in 2024, but the UK government is contemplating a replacement. A decision on the renewal of the system is expected in 2016.There is speculation the program could be forced to close if Scotland became independent in 2014. A government report suggested that if Scotland dismantles its nuclear weapons, the construction of the necessary facilities in other parts of the UK could take up to 20 years. Read More

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‘Nobody elected the king’: Thousands protest monarchy in Spain (PHOTOS)

The marchers convened on Puerta del Sol, a central square in the capital. Waving thousands of red, gold and purple republican flags, the crowd chanted: “Tomorrow, Spain will be republican”.”Nobody elected the king,” protester Veronica Ruiz told AFP. “We want a referendum. It would be the fair and democratic way to find out what the people want.”The protest had been called to mark the anniversary of the country’s Second Republic, proclaimed on April 14, 1931, and followed by 40 years of dictatorship under General Francisco Franco after a 1936-39 civil war.Franco then transferred power to Prince Juan Carlos, and he became head of state in 1975. For decades, the king was largely admired for having led Spain from dictatorship to a modern democracy. The recent scandals around the royal family, however, have led to a slump in its popularity.Last year King Juan Carlos broke his hip during an unannounced safari while taking the presidential chair of the Spanish branch of the World Wildlife Fund. Besides the moral aspect, the cost of the adventure was higher than austerity-hit Spaniards believed appropriate.No apologies from the king have been able to repair the damage to his reputation.In another scandal, the king’s daughter, Princess Christina, was named as an official suspect in an alleged plot to embezzle public money.”This monarchy was imposed on us by the dictatorship, therefore we consider it to be illegal,” 45-year-old teacher Maria Ayuso told AP. “Also, we consider it anachronistic to have a non-elected head of state; it’s not democratic.” Support for the monarchy in Spain has fallen to a historic low of 54 percent, according to a poll published in the daily El Mundo in January. Read More

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‘Nobody elected the king’: Thousands protest monarchy in Spain (VIDEO, PHOTOS)

The marchers convened on Puerta del Sol, a central square in the capital. Waving thousands of red, gold and purple republican flags, the crowd chanted: “Tomorrow, Spain will be republican”.”Nobody elected the king,” protester Veronica Ruiz told AFP. “We want a referendum. It would be the fair and democratic way to find out what the people want.”The protest had been called to mark the anniversary of the country’s Second Republic, proclaimed on April 14, 1931, and followed by 40 years of dictatorship under General Francisco Franco after a 1936-39 civil war.Franco then transferred power to Prince Juan Carlos, and he became head of state in 1975. For decades, the king was largely admired for having led Spain from dictatorship to a modern democracy. The recent scandals around the royal family, however, have led to a slump in its popularity.Last year King Juan Carlos broke his hip during an unannounced safari while taking the presidential chair of the Spanish branch of the World Wildlife Fund. Besides the moral aspect, the cost of the adventure was higher than austerity-hit Spaniards believed appropriate.No apologies from the king have been able to repair the damage to his reputation.In another scandal, the king’s daughter, Princess Christina, was named as an official suspect in an alleged plot to embezzle public money.”This monarchy was imposed on us by the dictatorship, therefore we consider it to be illegal,” 45-year-old teacher Maria Ayuso told AP. “Also, we consider it anachronistic to have a non-elected head of state; it’s not democratic.” Support for the monarchy in Spain has fallen to a historic low of 54 percent, according to a poll published in the daily El Mundo in January. Read More

I was a political astroturfer

“There’s a movement building, and it’s spreading like wildfire,” announced Rafe Lieber of Citizens for Access to the Arts at a rally on the steps of Brooklyn Borough Hall early in January. With politicians, celebrities, a brass band and a screaming crowd, any passerby would conclude that some popular uprising was in the works.Speaker after speaker, including City Council members and even Brooklyn-native actress Rosie Perez, gave impassioned speeches about the importance of providing access to art to young people, leading the crowds in chants of, “We’re not gonna stop!” “Fuel our dreams!” “We’re coming for you!” and, most frequently, “Save Ovation!”The participants were decrying the decision of Time Warner Cable to deny the arts network Ovation TV to poor and minority viewers. Cheering along with them, I suddenly heard a cell phone ring. The woman behind me, a fellow protester, answered, saying, “Can you call me back? I’m at work.”While I had considered the rally more of a quick buck than work, her statement wasn’t technically wrong. Like me, many of the rally’s participants had arrived via the same November Craigslist ad for “TV Press Rally Extras.” A week before the rally, we received an email from Warren Cohn, an employee of the power lawyers David Schwartz and Bradley Gerstman’s lobbying firm Gotham Government Relations. In part, it read:Continue Reading… Read More