Sunday, August 11, 2013

Chris Brown suffers a seizure 'caused by stress'

Chris Brown suffers a seizure 'caused by stress'

Chris Brown has suffered a seizure caused by "intense fatigue and extreme emotional stress" according to his publicist.
The R&B singer suffered a non-epileptic seizure early on Friday morning while he was working at a studio in Los Angeles.
Nicole Perna claims it was down to "the continued onslaught of unfounded legal matters and the nonstop negativity."
Doctors examined the 24-year-old but he wasn't taken to hospital.
On Saturday morning he posted: "They won't love u until u r a memory..." on his Twitter account.
Chris BrownChris Brown was given community service for assaulting Rihanna in 2009
Last month a US judge revoked Chris Brown's probation after looking at details of a hit-and-run accident although the Grammy winner was not ordered to go to jail.
The singer is accused of crashing into another car in California, refusing to share his insurance information and driving without a valid licence.
The driver of the other car also says the musician "went ballistic" at her after the crash in May.
Chris Brown has been on probation since attacking his ex-girlfriend, Rihanna, in 2009.

France: No change to 2013 growth forecasts

France: No change to 2013 growth forecasts

France's finance minister has denied that the eurozone's second-biggest country has revised down its economic prospects for 2013.
Pierre Moscovici was quoted on Saturday as saying that France's economy might shrink 0.1% this year, after predicting 0.1% growth earlier this year.
But he said on Sunday: "I have not made any revision on the forecast of growth in France."
France's Finance Minister Pierre Moscovici in London, 17 Sep 12 Mr Moscovici said 2014 "will be the first year of real growth for three years"
He added that a new forecast might appear with the new budget next month.
France has not had a year of negative growth since 2009.
"We know the trends and this year growth will be weak and between -0.1% and 0.1%," Mr Moscovici told the Nice Matin newspaper on Saturday. "What is important is that the trend has reversed.
"I have every reason to believe that 2014 will be the first year of real growth for three years."
Mr Moscovici told RTL radio on Sunday that the range he gave in the interview "reflected the consensus of economic institutes" and was not a change to the government's view.
'Not upset growth'
The International Monetary Fund in June called on France to lower its labour costs and halt tax rises to boost both growth and its competitiveness.
The IMF predicts France's GDP will fall 0.2% this year.
Mr Moscovici told the French newspaper that France needs to reduce its deficit "but at a pace that does not upset growth".
"First, in line with International Monetary Fund recommendations, we will reduce public spending, then by a limited increase in the tax burden of 0.3%, in line with social justice."
In June, the European Commission, gave France two years to trim its budget deficit from 3.7% of gross domestic product at the end of 2012 to 3%.
Unemployment in France, the eurozone's second-largest economy after Germany, currently stands at 11%.

Controversial republican parade taking place in Castlederg

Controversial republican parade taking place in Castlederg

The republican march was met with a protest demonstration by unionists and victims of the IRA
Hundreds of people are protesting at a controversial republican parade taking place in Castlederg, County Tyrone.
The Tyrone Volunteers Day Parade commemorates republicans who died during the Troubles, including two IRA men killed by their own bomb.
Several hundred bandsmen and republican supporters are taking part.
Northern Ireland Secretary Theresa Villiers had urged organisers to call off the march, saying it was "causing great hurt" to victims of terrorism.
The parade, which is supported by Sinn Féin, began after 15:00 BST on Sunday and supporters clapped as it moved off.
Re-routed
The protesters, who included family members of IRA murder victims, held banners opposing the march.
The Parades Commission has placed restrictions on the march, which the parade organisers had already re-routed away from the town's war memorial.
At a newly built republican memorial in Castlederg, the names of dead republicans were read out to the marchers.
They included the names of the two IRA men, who died when the bomb they were transporting exploded prematurely in 1973.
Hundred attend the republican parade in CastledergSeveral hundred bandsmen and supporters are taking part in the Castlederg march
Both Ms Villiers and the police had appealed for calm ahead of the parade, after 56 police officers were injured during loyalist protests against a republican parade in Belfast on Friday evening.
'Tense'
Speaking ahead of the march, Ms Villiers said she knew "the deep pain this parade will cause the families of victims in West Tyrone area and the rest of Northern Ireland".
"All possible support must be given to the police in upholding the rule of law and acting to keep the community safe at this tense time," she added.
The march has angered many unionists and the Derg Valley Victims Voice said the parade would glorify terrorism and traumatise families affected by IRA violence.
However, Sinn Féin's Martin McGuiness has said people should "respect the right" of republicans in Tyrone to "an act of remembrance".
Mr McGuiness, who is not attending the Castlederg because he is on holiday, said this week: "I don't have any other reason to believe that Sunday will not be peaceful - it's not a celebration, it's an act of remembrance."

Yemen violence: Gunmen launch deadly gas plant attack

Yemen violence: Gunmen launch deadly gas plant attack

Yemeni police guard a checkpoint on a street in Sanaa on 10 August 2013Security remains tight in Sanaa
Suspected al-Qaeda militants have killed five soldiers in an attack on a gas terminal in southern Yemen, reports say.
They opened fire on a checkpoint near the Balhaf terminal in Shabwa province, killing the soldiers before fleeing.
Almost all US diplomatic missions recently closed in the region due to threats were due to reopen on Sunday.
But the US embassy in the capital, Sanaa, was to stay closed "because of ongoing concerns".
Yemen is a stronghold of al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP) - an al-Qaeda offshoot considered by Washington to be the most dangerous to the West.
On Thursday, at least 14 suspected al-Qaeda militants - reportedly including seven from Saudi Arabia - were killed in Yemen in three drone strikes, Yemeni officials said.
The US closed 19 diplomatic missions in the Middle East and Africa last Sunday in response to what it said was a threat of a terrorist attack, but 18 out of the 19 missions were due to reopen on Sunday.
Yemen map
The consulate in the Pakistani city of Lahore, which closed after a separate threat, will also not reopen yet.
The US statement said its Sanaa embassy would stay closed because of concerns about a "threat stream" emanating from AQAP, without providing further details.
Most US employees at the Sanaa embassy were ordered to leave the country on Tuesday.
The embassy closures, along with a US global travel alert, came after the US reportedly intercepted al-Qaeda messages, with reports saying they were between senior figures talking about a plot against an embassy.
On Wednesday, Yemen said it had foiled a major al-Qaeda plot against oil pipelines and ports.

Abused girls can be to blame, suggests Eddy Shah

Abused girls can be to blame, suggests Eddy Shah

Former newspaper owner Eddy Shah has said under-age girls who engage in consensual sex can be "to blame" for the abuse they experience.
Mr Shah was recently cleared of raping a schoolgirl in London hotels when she was between 12 and 15.
He said charges of rape involving girls under 16 who "threw themselves" at celebrities could be "technical".
But the NSPCC and National Association of People Abused in Childhood said rape was always a crime.
Mr Shah, the 69-year-old founder of the newspaper Today, who lives in Chippenham, Wiltshire, was found not guilty at the Old Bailey last month of raping a girl at upmarket London hotels when she was between 12 and 15.
Eddy Shah
After the case he called for a review of how rape cases are dealt with by police, saying: "Anybody walking down the street can point at a celebrity and say, 'he raped me'.
And on Saturday he told BBC Radio 5 live's Stephen Nolan rape charges involving girls who "threw themselves" at celebrities were a legal technicality.
Mr Shah said: "If we take the pop groups and people of the 1960s, 70s, and 80s, who everybody knows that women were throwing themselves at them - young girls who looked 17, 18, 19 and 20...
"Rape was a technical thing - below a certain age. But these girls were going out with the pop groups and becoming groupies and all the rest of it, and throwing themselves at them. You cannot put that down to the fact they've been abused.
"Young girls and young men have always wanted a bit of excitement when they are young. They want to appear adult and do adult things."
When asked if he was implying that under-age victims could themselves be at fault, he said: "If we're talking about girls who go out and just have a good time, then they are to blame.
"If we talk about people who happen to be out and actually get 'raped' raped, then I feel no - and everything should be done against that."
'Witch-hunt'
Mr Shah also commented on Scotland Yard's Operation Yewtree investigation, set up in the wake of allegations of sexual abuse by BBC DJ Jimmy Savile and other television stars from the 1970s and 1980s.
He added that he had been helping a "very well-known person" charged under Operation Yewtree deal with the "horrible, horrible feeling" of "emptiness about everything", which Mr Shah said he had experienced when he was wrongly accused of rape.
Asked if he thought the investigation was in danger of becoming a witch-hunt, he said: "I think it's developing into that. It's easy policing and it's easy prosecutions...
"In a civilised society there's got to be more checks and balances before these sort of accusations are used."
He also talked again about the suicidal thoughts he had experienced after his arrest.
"Every night I worked out different ways of committing suicide to help me go to sleep, actually," he said.
'Always a crime'
His comments come after another case, in which a prosecutor was suspended and a judge placed under investigation after it emerged a 13-year-old girl was labelled "predatory" and "sexually experienced" during the trial where a man admitted abusing her.
The NSPCC's Jon Brown said there was "nothing valid" about Mr Shah's comments.
He told BBC News: "If we start talking about gradations of rape, it's extremely concerning.
"Mr Shah's also completely incorrect. A young person under the age of 16 cannot give consent to sexual activity.
"We are talking about child abuse or we're talking about rape, it's as simple as that."
'Train judges'
Mr Brown also called for more education and training to help judges with sentencing in child sex abuse cases.
Mr Shah's comments were also criticised by Pete Saunders, chief executive of the National Association of People Abused in Childhood.
Mr Saunders said: "I'd like to meet with Eddie, and to have him explain to me, and maybe explain to some rape victims, what he means by 'raped raped', because my understanding is there is rape, or there is not rape, and rape is always a crime."
His views were echoed by Jim Gamble, the former chief executive of Child Exploitation and Online Protection (CEOP).
Mr Gamble said: "At the end of the day, a child is a child, and the law is configured to protect a child, and there's an assumption made that adults, you know, will respect that, because they will want to protect children themselves."

Three Nato soldiers killed in Afghanistan

Three Nato soldiers killed in Afghanistan

Three Nato soldiers have been killed in an attack by insurgents in the east of theAfghanistan, officials say.
The three were part of the Nato-led International Security Assistance Force (Isaf).
The incident happened in the province of Paktia, which borders Pakistan.
Map
More than 100 foreign soldiers have been killed in Afghanistan this year - nearly 80 of them Americans. Isaf currently has troops from 50 nations, most of them from the US.
By the end of 2014 all foreign combat troops are due to have left Afghanistan to be replaced - if approved by the Afghan government - by a smaller force that will only train and advise.
US President Barack Obama has not yet said how many troops he will leave in Afghanistan along with other Nato forces at the end of 2014.

Pope Francis reaches out to Muslims at end of Ramadan

Pope Francis reaches out to Muslims at end of Ramadan

Pope Francis Angelus blessing 11/8/13The Pope has chosen to continue working at the Vatican during the summer
Pope Francis has urged Christians and Muslims to work together to promote mutual respect, particularly by educating new generations of believers.
He greeted Muslims around the world during his Sunday blessing of pilgrims gathered in St Peter's Square in Rome.
He said that "our brothers'' the Muslims had just concluded their holy month of Ramadan, dedicated to fasting, prayer and alms-giving.
The Pope spoke from his studio window overlooking the square.
The BBC's David Willey in Rome says Pope Francis, who has made caring for the poor the landmark theme of his pontificate, addressed tens of thousands of pilgrims gathered in scorching summer heat.
Unlike his predecessors who spent their summers in the papal villa at Castel Gandolfo outside the Italian capital, where the weather is slightly cooler, the Pope has chosen to continue working at the Vatican during the summer holidays.
Our correspondent says he is preparing major reforms of the Vatican bureaucracy as a result of scandals involving Vatican finances and clerical sexual abuse of minors.

North Korea: Detained US man Kenneth Bae 'seriously ill'

North Korea: Detained US man Kenneth Bae 'seriously ill'


he family of an American missionary who was detained in North Korea last year says he is seriously ill and has been moved from a labour camp to a hospital.
Kenneth Bae, who was sentenced to 15 years' hard labour for trying to overthrow the North Korean government, has diabetes and an enlarged heart.
His sister says the 45 year old is now too weak to work.
2011 picture of Kenneth BaeMr Bae was detained last year after entering North Korea as a tourist
The US government has appealed to North Korea to release Mr Bae.
Mr Bae (known in North Korea as Pae Jun-ho) was detained last year after entering North Korea as a tourist and sentenced in May this year.
He was said to have used his tourism business to form groups to overthrow the government.
His sister, Terri Chung, said on Saturday he had recently been visited by a Swedish diplomat and that her brother was now in a hospital.
"We're terribly worried about his health. I think it has been deteriorating,"she told the KING5.com news website in the US.
North Korea has arrested several US citizens in recent years, including journalists and Christians accused of proselytism.
They were released after visits to Pyongyang by high-profile officials, including former presidents Bill Clinton and Jimmy Carter.

Flash floods kill 22 in Afghanistan's Kabul province

Flash floods kill 22 in Afghanistan's Kabul province


Afghan villagers take part in the burial of victims after floods in the Shakardara district of Kabul
Most of the dead were reportedly in cars swept away in the floods

Flash floods in Afghanistan's Kabul province have killed 22 people, officials say.
The flooding hit a village in the Shakardara district following a weekend of heavy rain, a disaster management official told the BBC.
Many of those who died are thought to be women and children.
Many families had gone to the district, known for its vineyards and apple orchards, to celebrate the Muslim Eid al-Fitr holiday.
Reports say most of the victims were in cars which were submerged as the floods hit.
The floods also destroyed homes, agricultural land and fruit gardens, officials say.
"We are still trying to rescue people and look for those people who are still missing in the floods," Afghan interior ministry spokesman Sediq Sediqi told Reuters news agency.
Earlier this month, dozens were killed in Afghanistan and neighbouring Pakistan after a storm system caused torrential rain, washing away homes and destroying summer crops.

Iraq's uncertain future amid wave of violence

Iraq's uncertain future amid wave of violence

Children at the scene of a car bomb in Baghdad (Feb 2013)
More than 4,000 Iraqis have been killed so far this year

The passenger who sat next to me on the flight to Baghdad was an Iraqi Shia in his late 40s.
We had a few conversations during the flight. Hayder, who had been living in the UK for years, was going to see his family back in Iraq.
We went through immigration and reached the arrivals hall, where his brother was waiting for him. "Where is Ali?" Hayder asked about his younger brother, and the other man burst into tears.
"He was killed in a car bomb last week and we didn't want to tell you until you got here."
I left the two men hugging each other in their grief.

Start Quote

You have to consider the scale of the security challenge that we are facing”
Brig-Gen Saad MaanInterior Ministry spokesman
Iraq seems to be heading towards civil war once more. Ali was one of the 1,000 Iraqis killed in the month of July, making it one of the worst months in years. More than 4,000 Iraqis have lost their lives this year in acts of violence.
Al-Qaeda's Islamic State of Iraq, a Sunni extremist organization, is responsible for most of the bombings. Their targets are mainly Shia neighbourhoods across Iraq.
I went to some of those areas to talk to the people.
'Region is boiling'
Shias do not blame the whole Sunni community for what is happening.
Om Zeinab, a head teacher, said that Iraqis should not react in a way that serves al-Qaeda's goal of inciting another wave of sectarian killing of the scale the country experienced in 2006 and 2007.
Iraqi policeman in Baghdad (June 2013)A one-million-strong security force has failed to protect civilians
I had to go through many security checkpoints to reach central Baghdad. Soldiers and policemen are everywhere. Iraq has about one million security personnel, but they are still unable to control the security situation.
The Shias, for so long oppressed by Saddam Hussein's secular but Sunni-dominated regime, are in charge now. They control the security forces and the army.
I asked interior ministry spokesman Brig-Gen Saad Maan why the government was failing to providing security, given all its resources.

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There is no happiness in Iraq”
Baghdad taxi driver
"I do not agree with you in calling it failure," he said.
"You have to consider the scale of the security challenge that we are facing. Not only Iraq, the whole Middle East region is boiling.
"We might be high in numbers but Iraq is a big country. We are doing our jobs, chasing terrorists and bringing them to justice."
But government security efforts were hit with a major blow last month when militants raided the biggest prison in the country, Abu Ghraib. Al-Qaeda claimed responsibility for the attack.
Dozens of fighters stormed the highly fortified facility and freed 500 inmates, including many senior al-Qaeda members.
Exploiting grievances
There have been bombings in Sunni areas as well recently. No-one is claiming responsibility for such attacks.
Shia protest in Ramadi, Iraq (March 2013)Iraq's Sunnis say the Shia-led government is ignoring attacks against them
But Sunnis accuse the government of Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki, a Shia, of turning a blind eye, if not supporting, the activities of Shia militias.
For months, members of the Sunni minority have been protesting against Mr Maliki, accusing him of discrimination against them.
I could not go to the Sunni heartland in western Iraq - the government is blocking access to journalists, especially those who are from the international media.
I went instead to Adhamiaya, a Sunni neighbourhood in Baghdad.
Sheikh Mustafa al-Bayati, a Sunni cleric and protest leader told me that the demonstrations were not motivated by sectarianism.

Al-Qaeda in Iraq

  • Jihadist movement forms in 2003 in opposition to US-led invasion
  • Leaders declare allegiance to Osama Bin Laden's network in October 2004
  • Group kills and injures thousands of Iraqis and foreigners in 10 years of fighting; helps spread sectarian conflict
  • Group leaders announce in April 2013 they have merged with Syria's Nusra Front; now called Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant
  • Nusra Front sought to distance themselves from merger; extent of ties between the groups is unclear
"We did not rise against the Shia. We have lived with them for centuries. We rose against the government which puts our men in prison unfairly and abuses our human rights. That should stop.
"We will either live in dignity or die in dignity," he said.
Not so long ago the Sunni community turned against al-Qaeda. Today the extremist group is trying to exploit current grievances.
During the height of the sectarian violence many Sunni areas became no-go zones for Shias and vice-versa.
The situation subsequently improved and plenty of neighbourhoods are mixed again. But people are worried about what the future holds for their country, which has lacked stability for so long.
When you talk to people, you have a sense that they want to live together. They still believe that the Iraqi identity should supersede the sectarian.
On my way back to the airport my taxi driver was a 30-year-old Sunni man. He told me about his dream of leaving Iraq.
"Iraq is a rich country but we do not see that. I want to go to live in a better place - Europe or America or anywhere."
He then put a CD in the car stereo and started listening. All the songs were sad. As we approached the airport, he gazed longingly at a plane taking off.
"There is no happiness in Iraq. I never felt it."

A Point of View: Is democracy overrated?

A Point of View: Is democracy overrated?

A supporter of Pakatan Rakyat gholds up a banner during a political rally against election fraud on May 25, 2013 in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia
Democracy is championed as a universal good by the West, but we over-estimate its power to guarantee personal and political freedom, argues Roger Scruton.
For some time, the leading Western nations have acted upon the assumption that democracy is the solution to political conflict, and that the ultimate goal of foreign policy must be to encourage the emergence of democracy in countries which have not yet enjoyed its benefits. And they continue to adhere to this assumption, even when considering events in the Middle East today. We can easily sympathise with it. For democracies do not, in general, go to war with each other, and do not, in general experience, civil war within their borders. Where the people can choose their government, there is a safety valve that prevents conflicts from over-heating. Unpopular governments are rejected without violence.
The championship of democracy has therefore become a settled feature of Western foreign policy. In retrospect, the Cold War has been seen as a conflict between democracy and totalitarianism, in which democracy finally triumphed. And with democracy came the liberation of the people of the former communist states. Where there had been tyranny and oppression, there was now freedom and human rights. And if we study the words of Western politicians, we will constantly find that the three ideas - democracy, freedom and human rights - are spoken of in one breath, and assumed in all circumstances to coincide. That, for many of our political leaders, is the lesson to be drawn from the Cold War and the final collapse of the Soviet empire.

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Roger Scruton
  • Roger Scruton is a writer and philosopher
  • A Point of View is usually broadcast on Fridays on Radio 4 at 20:50 BST and repeated Sundays, 08:50 BST
In my view, the idea that there is a single, one-size-fits-all solution to social and political conflict around the world, and that democracy is the name of it, is based on a disregard of historical and cultural conditions, and a failure to see that democracy is only made possible by other and more deeply hidden institutions. And while we are willing to accept that democracy goes hand in hand with individual freedom and the protection of human rights, we often fail to realise that these three things are three things, not one, and that it is only under certain conditions that they coincide.
Democracy was introduced into Russia without any adequate protection for human rights. And many human rights were protected in 19th Century Britain long before the emergence of anything that we would call democracy. In the Middle East today, we find parties standing for election, like the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt, which regards an electoral victory as the opportunity to crush dissent and impose a way of life that for many citizens is simply unacceptable. In such circumstances democracy is a threat to human rights and not a way of protecting them.

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The totalitarian system endures by abolishing the distinction between civil society and the state”
I had the opportunity to study some of these issues during the 1980s, when visiting friends and colleagues who were attempting to plant the seeds of opposition in the communist countries. These were public-spirited citizens, who ran the risk of arrest and imprisonment for activities which you and I would regard as entirely innocent. They ran classes for young people who had been deprived of an education on account of their parents' political profile. They established support networks for writers, scholars, musicians and artists who were banned from presenting their work. They smuggled medicines, bibles, religious symbols and textbooks. And because charities were illegal under communism and religious institutions were controlled by the Communist Party, all this work had to be conducted in secret.
The totalitarian system, I learned, endures not simply by getting rid of democratic elections and imposing a one-party state. It endures by abolishing the distinction between civil society and the state, and by allowing nothing significant to occur which is not controlled by the Party. By studying the situation in Eastern Europe, I came quickly to see that political freedom depends upon a delicate network of institutions, which my friends were striving to understand and if possible to resuscitate.
So what are these institutions? First among them is judicial independence. In every case where the Communist Party had an interest, the judge was under instructions to deliver the verdict that the Party required. It didn't matter that there was no law that the victim had breached. If necessary, a law could be invented at the last moment. If the Party wanted someone to be in prison, then the judge had to put that person in prison. If he refused, then he would end up in prison himself, if he was lucky. In such circumstances the rule of law was a complete fiction: law was simply a mask worn by the Party, as it dictated its decisions to the people.
Egypt placardAttempts to bring democracy to Egypt have run into trouble
Then there is the institution of property rights. Normal people in the communist state had virtually nothing to their name - nothing legal, that is. Their houses or flats were owned by the state, their few personal possessions could not be freely traded in the market, and their salary and pension depended on their political conformity and could be removed at any time. In these circumstances the entire economy went underground. No court of law would enforce the contracts that people needed if they were to get on with their lives. You might have a deal with your neighbour to exchange vegetables for maths lessons. But if one of you defected and the other took the dispute to law, the only result would be that both of you went to prison for conducting an illegal business. All transactions therefore depended upon personal trust, in a situation in which trust was in shorter and shorter supply. Hence society was riven by conflicts and suspicions, which neither law nor politics could remedy. And the Communist Party rejoiced in this situation, since it prevented people from combining against it.

Democracy in a few words

  • George Bernard Shaw: "Democracy is a device that ensures we shall be governed no better than we deserve"
  • Winston Churchill: "Democracy is the worst form of government, except for all those other forms that have been tried from time to time."
  • Clement Atlee: "Democracy means government by discussion, but it is only effective if you can stop people talking"
  • Tom Stoppard: "It's not the voting that's democracy, it's the counting"
Then there is freedom of speech and opinion. The freedom to entertain and express opinions, however offensive to others, has been regarded since Locke in the 17th Century as the pre-condition of a political society. This freedom was enshrined in the US constitution, defended in the face of the Victorian moralists by John Stuart Mill, and upheld in our time by my dissident friends. We take this freedom so much for granted that we regard it as the default position of humanity - the position to which we return, if all oppressive powers are removed from us. But my experience of communist Europe convinced me of the opposite. Orthodoxy, conformity and the hounding of the dissident define the default position of mankind, and there is no reason to think that democracies are any different in this respect from Islamic theocracies or one-party totalitarian states.
Of course, the opinions that are suppressed change from one form of society to another, as do the methods of suppression. But we should be clear that to guarantee freedom of opinion goes against the grain of social life, and imposes risks that people may be reluctant to take. For in criticising orthodoxy, you are not just questioning a belief - you are threatening the social order that has been built on it. Also, orthodoxies are the more fiercely protected the more vulnerable they are.

More from the Magazine

Fall of the Berlin wall
John Gray examines the trouble with toppling tyrants (August 2012)
Andrew Whitehead speaks to historian Eric Hobsbawm about the possibility of Arab democracies (December 2011)
And in 2009, Clive James argued liberal democracies are are the 'first and essential requirement for all countries of the world'
Both those principles are surely obvious from the reaction of Islamists to criticisms directed at their religion. Just as it was in the wars of religion that ravaged Europe in the 17th Century, it is precisely what is most absurd that is most protected. And critics are not treated merely as people with an intellectual difficulty. They are a threat, the enemies of society and, for the believer, the enemies of God. So it was too under communism, in which a system of government had been built on theories that may have looked plausible in the early days of the industrial revolution but which in the post-war economy of Europe were palpably ridiculous. For that very reason it was the greatest heresy to criticise them.
Finally, there is legitimate opposition. This was perhaps the greatest casualty of communism as it afflicted Europe. When Lenin imposed the communist system on Russia it was in the form of a top-down dictatorship, in which orders were passed down to the ranks below. It was a kind of military government, and opposition could no more unite against it than soldiers in the ranks can unite against their commanders. In times of emergency this kind of discipline is perhaps necessary. But it is the opposite of civilised government.
It has been assumed in this country from the time of the Anglo-Saxons that political decisions are taken in council, after hearing all sides to the question, and taking note of the many interests that must be reconciled. Long before the advent of democracy, our parliament divided into government and opposition, and except in stressful periods during the 16th and 17th Centuries it was acknowledged that government without opposition is without any corrective when things go wrong. That is what we saw in the Soviet Union and its empire - a system of government without a reverse gear, which continued headlong towards the brick wall of the future.
In the underground universities of communist Europe, my friends and colleagues studied those things, and prepared themselves for the hoped-for day when the Communist Party, having starved itself of every rational input, would finally give up the ghost. And the lessons that they learned need to be learned again today, as our politicians lead us forth under the banner of democracy, without pausing to examine what democracy actually requires.

Syria refugees swell Christian community in Turkey

Syria refugees swell Christian community in Turkey

Father Joaqim at Mor Augen
Syria's Christians belong to one of the oldest Christian communities in the world, but chased away by the threat of violence some are heading for neighbouring Turkey, where they have been greeted with considerable enthusiasm.
Driven by a deep and humble faith, Father Joaqim is a young man with a sense of destiny. He has returned from 11 years in Holland to revive his dying community, high on a remote escarpment in eastern Turkey.
We are standing together on the terrace of his newly restored monastery, high on a remote escarpment near Nusaybin, looking south over the Mesopotamian Plain.
"Thank God our community is alive again," he says, his face radiating out from the distinctive black cap of his Syriac Orthodox habit. "On Sundays our church is full with worshippers from the village."
Mor Augen monastery
"You have transformed this place," I marvel, admiring the quality of the renovations. Back in the 1980s, when I first came here, there was no path and it took an hour to climb up here. This terrace was a vegetable patch and a local family was living in the ruins.

What is Syriac Christianity?

Inside a Syriac church
  • Syriac Christianity dates back to the third century
  • It was dynamic in the first millennium, bringing Christianity to China and India
  • It also acted as a medium for the transmission of Greek thought to the Arab world
  • The Syriac language is closely related to Arabic and Hebrew
"Yes," he replies serenely, "They were Yezidis. They moved in after the last monk died. They looked after the monastery very well."
The thought of a Syriac Orthodox monk being grateful to Yezidis, sometimes reviled as devil-worshippers by Muslims and Christians alike, was a novel one.
But surprises like these come thick and fast in eastern Turkey, where the Turkish government has invested heavily over the past decade, building hydro-electric dams on the Tigris and Euphrates, extending agriculture and employment to help settle local communities, including Kurdish ones.
As for the Syriac Christians, custodians of some of the earliest surviving churches in the world, this was always their homeland, the region known as Tur Abdin, Syriac for "Mountain of the Servants of God".
Map of the Tur Abdin region
Father Joaqim guides me out of the blazing summer sun into a shady spot to sit. A young helper appears with a tray of refreshments.
"Once there were 80 thriving monasteries here," he tells me. "This was the first, founded by Mor Augen - St Eugene. He was a 4th Century pearl diver in the Red Sea, who taught us the Egyptian monastic tradition."

From Our Own Correspondent

Mor Yaqoub Monastery
  • Insight and analysis from BBC correspondents, journalists and writers from around the world
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He describes - without any trace of rancour - how successive persecutions from Christians, Mongols and Turks decimated their numbers, leaving just a handful of monks struggling to keep the main monasteries alive.
"When I returned two years ago," he continues, gently sipping his tea, "I asked the government for permission to re-open the monastery, and they agreed.
"They paid for the new tarmac road to reach the foot of the mountain, and they paid to bring the electricity. We paid for the road to continue up here and for the restoration works."
"That can't have been easy, getting permission from the government," I say.
"It was very easy. We were invited back officially." He explains how EU pressure has gradually forced a change in Turkish policy. "The politicians now realise it is good to have us here. Rich members of our community are returning from Europe and investing their life savings."
He pauses. "What is more difficult," he elaborates, "are the land disputes with our Kurdish neighbours".
"In some places they use our churches as stables. We are only a minority, of course, but our local MP is now a Christian from our community. He represents the Kurdish Party, so maybe we can resolve our differences."
Father Joaqim at Mor Augen
I gesture down to the plain below and ask about the war in Syria just across the border, within sight of the monastery: "Are you afraid it will spill over here?"
"Not at all," he replies. "We want our brothers to come back from Syria. Most of them fled there during the First World War. They have always shared our ancient Syriac language and culture. Several of their families are living in our village. They help our church - and our football team," he smiles.
Across the Tur Abdin, some of the long-abandoned villages are slowly coming back to life, not just with emigre families from the Syriac disapora returning from Europe, but also with co-religionists from Syria, separated by an artificial border, returning to the bosom of their community in Turkey.
Boutique hotel in MidyatThe boutique hotel in Midyat
From a low point of just 80 families, there are now around 150. A slick Syriac-staffed factory even harvests the produce of Syriac vineyards, making Syriac wines for sale in the restaurants of the new boutique hotels in the historic towns of Mardin and Midyat.
"What about that smart refugee camp outside Midyat?" I ask him. "It looked brand-new but half empty."
"It is for Syriac Christians," Father Joaqim explains. "The land was donated by a Syriac businessman. Like us, he hopes many Syriac Christians from Syria will come with their families and settle here. Thank God for them."
Who could have imagined that in a remote corner of eastern Turkey, the war in Syria would be reuniting an ancient community? Only Father Joaqim, perhaps.