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Posts Tagged ‘Islamic Republic’

Teenager raped, whipped to death in Bangladesh

A teenager in Bangladesh died after being raped and then whipped 100 times following a fatwa by local clerics this week, a media report said. The Dhaka High Court directed the authorities concerned to explain why they failed to protect the teenager who was raped and then whipped following the fatwa (religious edict) by local [...]

Iran accuses West of double standards

Western countries who back Iranian anti-government protesters are guilty of double-standards, the Islamic Republic’s Foreign Ministry said, IRNA reported.
The statement came in response to last Saturday’s decision by Germany to grant political asylum to 50 Iranians dissidents who fled Iran after taking part in the failed Green Revolution of 2009.

Pak needs to learn from Chinese experience: Zardari


ISLAMABAD – President Asif Ali Zardari underlined the need to learn and follow the growth and development of China, saying that mutuality and convergence of interests should be fully utilised.
“There is a lot for Pakistan to learn from the Chinese experience of development and growth,” the President said while talking to a high-powered Chinese Delegation under Deputy Prime Minister Shang Dejiang.
According to an official handout, the President appreciated Chinese proactive role in socio-economic development and strategic stability of Pakistan. Reiterating that the region was facing a common challenge of militancy and extremism, he also lauded Chinese support for Pakistan in war against terrorism.
At the same time, the President found it necessary to reiterate that the democratic Government in Pakistan was committed to curb menace of militancy and extremism at any cost.
Earlier, the President conferred Hilal-i-Pakistan on the Chinese Deputy Prime Minister during a special ceremony at the Presidency.
“In recognition of his outstanding services towards promoting bilateral friendly relations between Pakistan and China, the President of the Islamic Republic of Pakistan is pleased to confer the award of Hilal-i-Pakistan on Zhang Dejiang,” according to a citation read on the occasion.
Besides thanking for the honour conferred on him, the Chinese Vice-Premier conveyed greetings from his President Hu Jintao to Zardari and extended an invitation to the President to visit China. Zhang Dejiang said that China valued its friendship with the Government and the people of Pakistan and would continue to provide every possible assistance.
Meanwhile, the visiting Chinese delegation also held a separate meeting with Prime Minister Syed Yousuf Raza Gilani, who observed that Pakistan-China friendship was a factor of peace and stability for the region and welcomed the Chinese support for peace and stability in South Asia.
During one-on-one meeting with the Chinese Vice-Premier Zhang Dejiang prior to bilateral talks here this evening at PMÂ’s House, the Prime Minister thanked China for its steadfast support and solidarity.
The Prime Minister said Pakistan would never allow any extraneous factors to affect this vital relationship. He appreciated the Chinese assistance in construction of infrastructure projects particularly extension of credit in setting up of Chashma Nuclear Power Plants to overcome energy shortage. He hoped that this cooperation would further expand.
Chinese Vice Premier told Gilani that Pakistan occupied an important place in the Chinese foreign policy and Beijing valued its partnership with the Government and the people of Pakistan.
Later, Pakistan and China have signed five agreements on Concessional Loan for PAKSAT I-R Project, Cooperation in Port Construction and Port-Management-Training, Cooperation in Information Technology, China-Pakistan Cable System Construction and Maintenance Agreement and Contract Agreement for Engineering, Procurement and Construction of Works for the Darawat Dam Project.
These agreements were signed at an impressive ceremony held at the PMÂ’s House in the presence of the Prime Minister Syed Yousuf Raza Gilani and the visiting Chinese Vice Premier Zhang Deijang.

Iran, Brazil, Turkey tied over nuclear swap agreement

On Monday Iran, Brazil and Turkey agreed over a nuclear fuel swap deal with a motive to relieve international concern about the Islamic Republic’s atomic ambitions.
Iran has agreed to swap 1,200 kg of its low-enriched uranium in exchange of higher-enriched nuclear fuel that can be utilized in a medical research reactor. This deal of exchange [...]

ML unification stressed


LAHORE – Speakers at an Iqbal Day function organised at Aiwan-e-Karkunan Tehrik-e-Pakistan on Wednesday to mark the 72nd death anniversary of the Philosopher-Poet of the East Dr Allama Muhammad Iqbal underscored the need for grooming and bringing to the fore a leadership having the vision of Allama Iqbal and the Quaid-i-Azam in a bid to transform Pakistan into a strong Islamic, welfare and democratic state capable of steering ahead the Ummah. The speakers wished unification of Muslim League, the party which created Pakistan.
Former defence minister and Sindh chief minister Syed Ghous Ali Shah and former NWFP chief minister Syed Sabir Shah were guests of honour while Chairman NPT Majid Nizami presided over the meeting. A cross-section of personalities from political, literary and social circles addressed the meeting. The hall was packed to capacity with motivated audience including women who also occupied seats in the corridors of the Aiwan. The hall burst into excitement, raising spirited slogans in favour of Iran and President Ahmadinejad when the Iranian Ambassador came to the dais. He delivered the message of Iranian President Ahmadinejad to the audience. The Iranian Ambassador Mashallah Shakiri narrated a lengthy discourse from the IqbalÂ’s poetry during which he was visibly moved. He made a confession that Iranian Islamic revolution greatly owed to the poetry of Allama Iqbal, which inspired his Iranian readers.
Legendary kalam-e-Iqbal reciters Bashir Hussain Nazim, Hafiz Marghoob Hamdani and Jamshed Azam Chishti enthralled the audience with recitation from IqbalÂ’s poetry. Syed Sabir Shah had to face tough criticism for PML to accept Khyber Pakhtunkhwa as the new name of NWFP.
Speaking on the occasion, Majid Nizami said that there would have been no Pakistan, had there been no Allama Iqbal. The Quaid came back to Pakistan on the advice of Allama Iqbal, led the Muslim League and adopted Pakistan Resolution in 1940. Pakistan came into being seven years after the adoption of the Resolution and we are now a free nation. He, however, lamented over the fact that the creator party was divided into factions and those who did not know who the Quaid was and what his ideology was, were ruling the country. There should have been a vision of Iqbal and the Quaid to make Pakistan an Islamic, democratic and welfare state.
Pir Sabir Shah said promotion of Pakistan ideology was not the duty of Majid Nizami only, rather every citizen should become Majid Nizami. He said, “We are following aliens’ theories instead of our own. Pakistan has a strategic importance.”
He said the enemy had hurled allegations against the Quaid but even the worst enemy could not point a finger on the QuaidÂ’s character and his devotion to Islam. According to Sirojini Naedo, if Patel, Ghandhi, Nehru, Bacha Khan and others had been in Muslim League and alone Quaid in Congress, India would never have been divided. He said Haji Adeel of ANP who had hurled remarks on Quaid was another Salman Rushdie, as, he abused the Quaid while living in QuaidÂ’s Pakistan. AdeelÂ’s party and leaders never accepted Pakistan and their agenda was to break Pakistan. Ghaffar Khan even did not like his burial in Pakistan.
Sabir Shah faced tough questions on the issue of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa from the audience. He said two assemblies had passed the resolution. The MQM, Fazal-ur-Rehman, PPP and UNO also pleaded for Pakhtunkhwa.
Nawaz Sharif, however, resisted and finally the word Khyber was given lead over Pakhtunkhwa. Khyber reminds us of Hazrat AliÂ’s conquest of Khyber while Khyber Pass was the gateway for Islamic forces in the sub-continent. The ANP has numerical strength in the Assembly which he said was the ugly side of the democracy in which heads are counted and not evaluated. As far as HazaraÂ’s demand for a separate province is concerned, it will also be resolved amicably. He said the ANP had also emphasised that if names of Major Abbot, Hari Singh Nalwa and Mansingh are accepted for Abbotabad, Haripur and Mansehra respectively why Pakhtunkhwa should not be accepted. The PML changed the name with Khyber as Pakhtunkhwa was a conspiracy to lay foundation for the break-up of Pakistan which the PML defeated.
Syed Ghous Ali Shah said, “We needed a leadership which could act according to Iqbal and the Quaid’s vision.” He said Nawaz Sharif was trying to come true to our expectations and he was treading the path of the Quaid.
Nawaz Sharif revived the judiciary with a long march, did nuclear detonation despite ClintonÂ’s telephone not to do so.. He said the Kalabagh Dam should be built with consensus. He, however, said if coal can provide energy for 80,000 years why to unearth controversial issues. He called for giving support to Nawaz Sharif.
PML-N Central Leader Makhdoom Javed Hashmi said Dr Allama Iqbal had foreseen the current mega changes in the world and particularly, he had predicted that China, Pakistan, Islamic Republic of Iran and Afghanistan would be the focal territories for long-term peace in the world. Allama Iqbal wished Iran to be the Geneva of Islamic world, he said. He also predicted that the western civilization would ultimately prove to be the death warrant for its own people in near future. “This came true when in world War II, Christians world killed each other,” he said.
Makhdoom said World War-1 was a crusade, launched against Islam, which finally sliced Ottoman Caliphate into many small countries, but during the World War-II, as Iqbal had anticipated, the western countries fought against their own civilization and inhabitants for their vested interests, causing millions of causalities in a single jerk. He said it was unprecedented in the history of the world that four new countries had been created for a king and his three sons, by disintegrating the great Ottoman Caliphate.
PML-N leader further said Pakistan was fighting the war against terrorism for the US, India and Israel. “This was the bitter result of American influence. Consequently our rulers are now scared of purchasing oil from our brother state Iran,” he added. Makhdoom Javed Hashmi said Iqbal was a multilingual poet of hope who desired a new separate Islamic State for the Muslims, which should lead the world. “Now we as a nation and according to the philosophy of the great poet are fully capable of leading the Islamic world,” he added.
PML-N leader Khawaja Saad Rafiq while addressing the meeting, said the followers of Iqbal’s philosophy of ‘Khudi’ was not to bow down before America. He said that today’s Pakistan also is not representing the thoughts of Iqbal because the rulers of the country did not try to make the country according to the vision of Iqbal and the Quaid and instead they ignored their teachings. Even politicians, establishment and the judiciary of the country seemed wandering far away from their thoughts.
He said those parliamentarians, supporting the 18th Amendment were just human beings and not angels, so they could also make mistakes, and there are flaws in the 18th Amendment. He said some persons wanted to create differences between the judiciary and the parliament, and in fact, they were not friends of the country. Commenting on NWFP, he described it a crucial issue, which must be resolved with national consensus but later, all the political parties of the country backed out of their commitment in this regard and held PML-N alone responsible for the change of its name. “Although, PML-N leadership did not consult us in this regard”, he added.
He stressed upon all the political parties of the country and the provinces to build consensus on construction of Kalabagh Dam as it was being built on the issue of change of name of NWFP by forgetting all the differences. He also appealed to the leadership of Pakistan Muslim League PML-N to plead the case of Kalabagh Dam as well. He condemned the inherited politics and stressed the need for holding elections in all political parties of the country saying that first of all political parties must be reformed for the sake of reforming country. He said Political Parties Act must be strengthened for the sake of strong democratic system.
Allama Iqbal’s grandson Waleed Iqbal, an advocate, said Iqbal was the poet of Islamic renaissance who showed Muslims the path of collective ego. Waleed also stressed that, “Allama Iqbal had realized the need for framing a separate state for the Muslims of the Sub-Continent during his early days when he had returned after completing his higher education from Europe”. He also thanked Islamic Democratic Republic of Iran for promoting Iqbal in such an impressive manner across the world. Waleed recited numerous Persian and Urdu verses besides interpreting them in a versatile manner delivering message for the rulers.
Islamic Democratic Republic of Iran ambassador Masha Allah Shakari said on the occasion that the Islamic Revolution of Iran was the genuine outcome of IqbalÂ’s philosophy and the current shape of Islamic Republic of Iran was the true interpretation of the message of the legendary poet. The honorable guest also recited Persian poetry of Allama Iqbal, saying that the great poet had huge reverence for Iran and wished the state to be the concrete citadel for the unification of the Muslim World.
In his address, Nazria Pakistan vice chairman, Dr Rafiq Ahmed said that creation of Pakistan was due to the benevolence of Iqbal so we pay tribute to him by celebrating Iqbal Day every year. He said the poetry of Iqbal in fact was the name of revolutionary thoughts and IranÂ’s Revolution also got inspiration from his poetry and it changed the thoughts of people of Iran. He said Nazria Pakistan Trust was also playing its due role for creating awareness about the Pakistan Movement and thoughts of Iqbal among the youngsters. He said Iqbal was the person who had convinced the Qauid with respect to leading the nation.
Hafiz Muhammad Idrees of Jamaat-e-Islami, who represented Qazi Hussain Ahmed, paid tributes to poetry of Iqbal and his services for Islam. He said his poetry in fact reflected love for the holy Prophet and Allah. He said he was ‘Poet of jihad’ and through his poetry we could tell the world that jihad did not mean terrorism but meant a struggle to fight for the right cause.
Prof. Dr. Akram Ikram Shah said the humanity was the focal point of IqbalÂ’s poetry and he told the world through his poetry that Islam was the only religion of the world, which taught showing affection to the humanity.
Khushnood Ali Khan, President CPNE, criticized the rulers and said that they were negating the Iqbal’s theory of Pakistan by torturing the innocent people of the country and humiliating them when they go to streets in support of their rights. “This is not the country, which was dreamt by Iqbal”, he added. He said the rulers even did not take action against senator Haji Adeel who in his statement had said that Islam is an additional word in Islamic Republic of Pakistan. Criticising the role of opposition, he said nobody had raised voice against price hike in the country and even condemned the raise in electricity and gas tariffs by PEPCO and OGRA.
Talking on the occasion, Sayed Faseeh Iqbal of Balochistan said the presence of such a large number of people on this auspicious day symbolises a living Pakistan and such ceremonies should also be held in the other provinces.
He suggested that all Pakistanis should also study IqbalÂ’s Persian poetry because the Persian poetry of Iqbal was basis of Islamic revolution in Islamic Democratic Republic of Iran. He added that Persian had played its pivotal role in enlightening the hearts of the Muslims and it was IqbalÂ’s benevolence that he raised the slogan of the Muslims while presently we are hearing anti-Pakistan slogans and in this regard it is need of the hour to be united to avoid any destruction or loss to the country.
He added that construction of Kala Bagh Dam was also the need of the hour and it should be constructed forthwith to overcome the energy crisis, adding that Majid Nizami was reminding us the forgotten lessons, which were needed to make Pakistan a prosperous country.
He further said we merely claimed that Iqbal was our national hero while Iranians followed his teachings and learnt a lot from his Persian poetry, saying Iqbalyat should have been introduced and taught in the seminaries in order to overcome the problems. He said Pakistan possessed huge stocks of coal, which was sufficient to meet the needs of prevailing energy crises. Faseeh said Pakistanis had been surrounded by innumerable conspiracies, which could only be tackled by following the thoughts of Iqbal.

Anil Kapoor trying to get ‘24′ to India

Anil Kapoor, who has got rave reviews in the American press for his stint on the just-premiered drama series “24″, was so self-effacing that he couldn’t ask the producers to let him show the first four episodes to his family back home.
When Anil left for Los Angeles last week, he had promised his family in [...]

Anil Kapoor: From ‘One Two ka Four’ to ‘24′

Actor Anil Kapoor has made an assured and credible debut on US television with a two-hour season premier of the hugely popular drama series “24″.
Playing president Omar Hassan of a fictional Middle Eastern country called Islamic Republic of Kamistan, Kapoor’s was a largely swift performance, laboured somewhat in a place or two by the inherent [...]

Mauritania recognizes Kosovo

Mauritania has recognized “the independence of Kosovo”, the Kosovo Albanian authorities in Priština announced on Wednesday. A statement issued in Priština and carried by Beta news agency said that the “Islamic Republic of Mauritania has recognized Kosovo as a sovereign and independent state and decided to establish diplomatic ties at the level of ambassadors”.

Bomb blast kills Iranian nuclear physicist

A remote-controlled bomb has killed a high-ranking nuclear scientist in Iran. The Islamic Republic is pointing the finger of blame at arch-foes the United States and Israel.

Mousavi “ready to die” for Iran reforms

The Iranian opposition leader Mir Hossein Mousavi has said he is ready to lay down his life to bring about change in the Islamic Republic. Demanding an end to a state crackdown on pro-reform supporters, he declared on his website: “I am not afraid to die for people’s demands.”

Obama congratulates Karzai, asks him to improve governance

US President Barack Obama congratulated Hamid Karzai on his re-election as President of Afghanistan and asked him to improve governance, besides eradicating corruption.
Congratulating Karzai over telephone on his re-election on Tuesday, Obama told the Afghan leader that his administration needs to be more serious in its efforts to eradicate corruption.
Later, Obama said that Karzai assured [...]

Ahmadinejad orders swift action against Iran bombers

President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad ordered Iranian authorities to swiftly track down those who planned Sunday’s suicide attack in the southeastern province of Sistan-Baluchestan.
“I am ordering the relevant officials to identify quickly the elements behind this terrorist crime and hand them over to the judiciary,” the official IRNA news agency quoted Ahmadinejad as saying.
“I assure the [...]

Russia and Iran Now OFFICIALLY Talking of Dumping Dollar for International Trade

After the Independent reported that Middle Eastern oil producers, plus China, Japan and France have all agreed to start trading oil using a basket of currencies – instead of the dollar – starting in 9 years, spokesmen for those governments denied it.Th…

Iran to present proposals, faces Western atom pressure

Iran said it would hand over a package of proposals to world powers on Wednesday. It comes as the Islamic Republic faced renewed Western pressure to swiftly engage in “meaningful” talks on its disputed nuclear program.

Iran ‘has new nuclear proposal’

Saeed Jalili

Iran has prepared a new nuclear proposal and is ready to resume talks on its nuclear programme, according to media reports.

The Islamic Republic’s chief nuclear negotiator Saeed Jalili was quoted making the claim on Iranian television.

Tougher UN sanctions against Iran are due to be considered at a meeting of world powers on Wednesday.

Iran faces pressure to halt nuclear enrichment, a move which it has repeatedly rejected to date.

Iran says the new package will be directed at the five permanent members of the UN Security Council – the UK, China, France, Russia and the United States – plus Germany, according to the reports.

The six nations are meeting near Frankfurt amid mounting international pressure for further measures against Iran.

US President Barack Obama has also given Iran until later this month to take up an offer of talks.


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Probe urged into Iran jail ‘rape’

Mehdi Karroubi

A defeated opposition candidate in Iran’s presidential election has called for an investigation into allegations some protesters were raped in prison.

In a letter to former president Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani, Mehdi Karroubi said senior officials had informed him of the "shameful behaviour" taking place.

Mr Karroubi wrote that both male and female detainees had been raped, with some suffering serious injuries.

He asked Mr Rafsanjani to consult the Supreme Leader about the allegations.

About 200 people arrested during the mass protests sparked by June’s disputed election, which saw President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad re-elected by a wide margin, are still being detained.

‘Brutality’

In the letter addressed to Mr Rafsanjani in his capacity as head of the Assembly of Experts, Mr Karroubi demanded an investigation into allegations that several detainees had been sexually assaulted.

"Some of those arrested [as a result] of the unrest claim that detained girls have been sexually assaulted with… brutality," he wrote.

"If Mousavi, Karroubi and [former president Mohammad] Khatami are the main suspects behind the soft revolution in Iran, which they are, we expect the judiciary… to go after them"

Yadollah Javan
Islamic Revolution Guards Corps

"The young men in detention were also sexually assaulted in such a way that some are now suffering from depression and other physical and psychological problems, and are incapable of even leaving their homes," he added.

Mr Karroubi said that the people who had told him about the allegations of sexual assault held "sensitive positions".

"Even if one account is true, it would be a tragedy for the Islamic Republic… and it would whitewash the sins of many dictatorships, including that of the deposed Shah," he added.

On Thursday, police confirmed serious rights violations had taken place at the Kahrizak detention centre, where most of those arrested at the protests were sent.

The head of Kahrizak was sacked and jailed on Sunday along with three of his guards, who were found to have beaten detainees.

Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei ordered the closure of the centre in July, because it had failed to "preserve the rights of detainees". Police officials have admitted that some of those held since June might have been tortured.

Earlier on Sunday, a senior commander of Iran’s Islamic Revolution Guards Corps said that Mr Karroubi, and the other main defeated opposition presidential candidate, Mir Hossein Mousavi, should be tried for inciting unrest after the election.

"If Mousavi, Karroubi and [former president Mohammad] Khatami are the main suspects behind the soft revolution in Iran, which they are, we expect the judiciary… to go after them, arrest them, put them on trial and punish them," Yadollah Javan told the Irna news agency.

Foreign media, including the BBC, have been restricted in their coverage of Iran since the election protests turned into confrontations with the authorities in which at least 30 people died.


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Video debunking

Muslims

By Richard Knight

A big YouTube hit makes startling predictions about the Islamification of Europe over the next few decades and has been viewed more than 10 million times. But can you believe what it says

This seven-and-a-half minute video "Muslim Demographics" uses slick graphics, punctuated with dramatic music, to make some surprising claims, asserting that much of Europe will be majority Muslim in just a few decades. It says that in the past two decades, 90% of all population growth in Europe has been Muslim immigration.

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In France, it says 30% of those aged 20 and younger are Muslim, with the birth rate for Muslim families massively exceeding that across all families. It says France will be an Islamic Republic within 39 years.

In the UK it says the Muslim population has risen 30-fold since the beginning of the 1980s.

But are any of the video’s statistics true

Of the video’s claims that 90% of Europe’s population growth since 1990 is due Islamic immigration, only a fragment is true. Immigration is the main driver of population growth according to EU statistics and in some exceptional years, 90% of population growth has been down to net inward migration.

But that includes all immigrants coming into the EU, not just Muslims.

It is the claims made about individual countries that are most striking. The video says that a typical French family has 1.8 children but that French Muslim families have 8.1 children.

MUSLIM DEMOGRAPHICS VIDEO

  • Watched 10 million times
  • Authorship unknown
  • Posted by inactive account "friendofmuslim"

No source is given for this information and the French government doesn’t collect statistics by religion. So it is impossible to say what the precise fertility rates among different religious groups in France are.

But no country on earth has such a high fertility rate and in Algeria and Morocco, the two nations which send the largest numbers of Muslim immigrants to France, the fertility rate is 2.38, according to the UN’s 2008 figures.

In the Netherlands, according to the video, half of all newborns are Muslim, and in 15 years half the population will be Muslim.

But the Dutch office of statistics estimates that Muslims make up only 5% of the population. For Dutch Muslim women to produce half the nation’s babies, they would have to be giving birth at at least 14 times the rate of their non-Muslim neighbours.

Muslims at prayers

Is 25% of the Belgian population Muslim, as the video asserts No. The Belgian office of statistics points to a 2008 study which suggests the real figure is just 6%.

The video also states that the Muslim population of the UK has grown 30-fold in the past 30 years. They get the figure by estimating that the British Muslim population has risen from 82,000 to 2.5 million.

The firm data is in the 2001 census, which counted close to 1.6 million Muslims in England and Wales. That number will have risen since 2001 so 2.5 million is not impossible. The 2011 census will be looked to for clarification.

However, according to Dr Andrew Hinde, a demographer at Southampton University, the 82,000 figure is a gross under-estimate. "If you take the 1981 census there was no question asked on religious belief," he says, "but if you take those born in Pakistan and Bangladesh as a minimum estimate of the number of Muslims in 1981, it’s about 300,000."

That would mean the growth rate has been significantly slower than the video suggests.

But the video doesn’t just rely on statistics, it also uses an official Government statement. It quotes it as saying: "The fall in German population can no longer be stopped. Its downward spiral is no longer reversible. It will be a Muslim state by the year 2050."

The statement in question was made by then vice-president of the Federal Statistics Office, Walter Radermacher, who is now chief statistician of the European Union. He says that while it is true he said Germany’s population was in decline, the last part of the quote [in italics] is just an invention. He said nothing about Germany becoming a Muslim state.

"The quotation which reads as if the German government believed that Germany will become a Muslim state is simply not true," he says. "There is no source which can be quoted that the German government has published such an expression or opinion."

Inexact science

The video also claims the German government believes the number of Muslims in Europe will double to 104 million.

Mr Radermacher adds: "That is not true. The German government does not believe that the Muslim population will double in the next 40 or 50 years. There are no reliable sources that give a proof for that assumption."

Population projection is an inexact science. No-one knows how many Muslims will be living in Europe or anywhere else by 2050. The current trends suggest that by 2050 Europe will have a bigger proportion of Muslims, although nothing like the level suggested in the video.

But the big assumption here is current trends. Levels of immigration and fertility change over time.

It is certainly true that immigrant communities often have higher fertility rates but over time these usually fall into line with the indigenous population. This might not happen with Muslim immigrants. But nobody can know and that’s why, according to Dr Hinde, it is so hard to guess the future.

"In the 1930s there were population projections made of the UK that by the end of the century the UK population would be 20 million. Well, it turned out to be 50 million.

"That’s how far out you can get when you’re moving 40 or 50 years down the line and not taking into account the uncertainty."

More or Less is produced in association with the Open University.


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This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Iran begins trials of activists who protested election

Up to 100 defendants accused of violence in aftermath of disputed presidential election appear in Tehran court

The first trials of opposition political activists and protesters arrested after June’s disputed Iranian presidential election began today.

Up to 100 defendants were reported by Iranian media to be appearing before a court in the capital, Tehran, accused of violence following the 12 June vote.

The election sparked days of protests as thousands of Iranians took to the streets to denounce the official results, which declared victory for the incumbent president, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.

The official IRNA news agency said the defendants were charged with rioting, attacking military and government buildings, having links with armed opposition groups and conspiring against the ruling system.

Under the country’s Islamic law, acting against national security – a common charge against dissidents – could be punishable by a long sentence or even the death penalty.

Several prominent reformist opposition activists – including the former vice president Mohammat Ali Abtahi, Abdollah Ramezanzadeh, a former government spokesman, and Behzad Nabavi, an ex-vice Speaker of parliament – are among the defendants.

The Associated Press said the former deputy foreign minister Mohsen Aminzadeh and Mohsen Mirdamadi, the leader of Iran’s biggest reformist party, the Islamic Iran Participation Front, were also facing trial.

Photographs from the courtroom showed a Abtahi and Mirdamadi, wearing prison uniform, sitting in the front row. Many other defendants were handcuffed but were not wearing prison clothes.

Prosecutors read out an indictment outlining what they alleged was a year-long plot by leading pro-reform political parties to carry out a “velvet revolution” – a popular, non-violent uprising to overthrow the Islamic Republic.

The phrase comes from the peaceful 1989 velvet revolution which overthrew decades of communism in Czechoslovakia.

The prosecutor said three of the biggest opposition parties had taken money from foreign non-governmental organisations and sought to use the election controversy as an opportunity to carry out their plot, according to a transcript reported by IRNA.

He claimed Israeli and western officials had spoken in recent years of fomenting revolution in Iran.

“Based on the evidence obtained and well-founded confessions of the defendants, these events had been planned in advance and stages of the velvet revolution were carried out in accordance with a time schedule,” the indictment said.

IRNA did not give information about how many defendants were in court, but the semi-official Fars news agency said more than 100 were present.

State media did not provide further details about the trial, and there was no information on when it would end and when a verdict could be expected.

The reformist mowjcamp website denounced the trial, saying defendants had no access to lawyers and there was no jury.

“Do those who organised this show trial think that the nation will remain silent to slaughter the nation’s best?” it asked.

Iran’s opposition maintains Ahmadinejad stole the vote from the opposition leader, Mir Hossein Mousavi, but demonstrations have been ruthlessly suppressed, leaving hundreds in prison.

Yesterday, Ahmadinejad said the Iranian supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, was like a father to him.

The president accused his hardline rivals of trying to drive a wedge between him and the man who sits at the top of Iran’s clerical leadership and has final say in all state matters.

On Monday, Khamenei will lead a ceremony formally approving Ahmadinejad’s second term. He will be sworn in before parliament two days later.

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Kahrizak Prison, Holding Iranian Protesters, Ordered Closed After Abuses

TEHRAN, Iran — Iran on Tuesday released 140 people detained in Iran’s postelection turmoil and the supreme leader ordered the closure of a prison where human rights groups say jailed protesters were killed, in a nod by authorities to all…

Divided leaders

Mahmoud Ahmadinejad at the presidency in Tehran11.7.09

By Jon Leyne
BBC News

With the row over Iran’s disputed election still bitterly dividing the country, President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad is now in a new dispute with fellow conservatives.

It is an argument every bit as heated as the election row, and potentially even more damaging to the president.

Just over a month after the election, Mr Ahmadinejad provoked fury amongst his fellow conservatives by promoting one of his vice-presidents, Esfandiar Rahim Mashaie, to the post of first vice-president.

The job would make him the president’s second in command, the man who would take over if Mr Ahmadinejad was run over by a Tehran bus.

As Mr Ahmadinejad must have known it would, the appointment infuriated conservatives.

Mr Mashaie had already angered the establishment by suggesting that Iran was friends with the Israeli people, even though he shared the Islamic Republic’s hatred of the state of Israel.

Esfandiar Rahim Mashaie and Mr Ahmadinejad 22.7.09

For days Mr Ahmadinejad rode the storm, ignoring behind-the-scenes hints that Supreme Leader Ayatollah Khamenei was not happy with the appointment.

Then, finally, a letter from Mr Khamenei was broadcast on state TV, calling for Mr Mashaie to go.

The president had to succumb. But the row is now having more lasting damage.

On Sunday it was announced that Mr Ahmadinejad had sacked his intelligence minister, Gholam Hossein Mohseni Ejeie, after what sounds like a heated argument in a cabinet meeting over Mr Mashaie’s appointment.

At one point it was reported that four ministers had left the government. That was denied.

Later, the Minister of Culture and Islamic Guidance, Mohammad-Hossein Saffar-Harandi, announced he had resigned.

It was said that Mr Ahmadinejad had not accepted that resignation, but as of Monday the situation remained unresolved.

Mr Saffar-Harrandi said the row over Mr Mashaie had weakened the government, and that is one of the more polite comments from within the conservative camp.

The conservative newspaper Tehran Emrouz described it as a "chaotic" day for the government.

Determined to provoke

Another conservative paper, Khabar, published the headline: "Dismissal – the consequence of objecting to Ahmadinejad".

MP Ali Motahari called on Mr Ahmadinejad to "control his nerves" and accused him of intentionally bringing tension to the country.

But Mr Ahmadinejad seems determined to provoke even those who should be his allies.

He immediately appointed Mr Mashaie as his chief of staff and one of his closest aides.

There is also a new job also for Ali Kordan, the former interior minister who was impeached by parliament after falsely claiming to possess a doctorate from an institution he quaintly called the "London Oxford University".

Intelligence Minister Gholam Hossein Mohseni Ejeie, July 24

The president has made him an inspector responsible for ministries and the government.

Mr Ahmadinejad’s behaviour may seem counter-productive, but it is completely in character.

When in a corner he likes to come out fighting. Compromise is not a word in his vocabulary.

But the reasons behind the row itself are harder to pin down.

In one version, Mr Mashaie is disliked by conservatives for his relative "moderation" in saying Iran was friends with the Israeli people.

Another analysis has it that conservatives are worried about Mr Mashaie’s links with the controversial sect the Hojjatieh, members of which believe in the imminent return of the so-called hidden imam, the Mahdi, in an apocalyptic scenario.

Certainly Mr Mashaie has been seen as a very powerful influence on Mr Ahmadinejad.

The argument may also indicate unease amongst conservatives over the disputed election itself.

Revolutionary Guards

There are many in Iran who see Mr Ahmadinejad’s re-election as a coup d’etat, in which the real winners were the Revolutionary Guards.

That worries even some dedicated supporters of the Islamic Revolution.

Guidance minister Mr Saffar-Harandi, for example, is not someone who could, by any stretch of the imagination, be called a moderate.

Mr Ahmadinejad has managed to alienate many fellow conservatives, figures like Ali Larijani, who now holds the powerful position of speaker of parliament.

The parliament, or Majlis, could be the next scene of confrontation.

Soon Mr Ahmadinejad is expected to be sworn in for his second term in office. The planned date keeps changing, indicating possible arguments behind the scenes.

Protest in Paris for Neda Agha-Soltan

Afterwards he must name his new cabinet to be approved by parliament. The present row shows that Mr Ahmadinejad is not likely to propose compromise candidates, and parliament is unlikely to give his nominees an easy ride.

Deadlock over the appointments could even lead to Ayatollah Khamenei being obliged to introduce some form of emergency powers, which would only further weaken his position.

Indeed, according to a strict reading of the constitution, the government would need a vote of confidence from the Majlis even to continue in office if the latest departures mean that more than half its members have been changed during Mr Ahmadinejad’s first term.

Parliament has already shown it can cause big trouble for the president.

According to one member, 200 MPs – a majority – have written to Mr Ahmadinejad asking him to "correct his behaviour so that he follows the leader’s opinion seriously".

Parliament has also set up a committee to look into the condition of detainees arrested in the post-election crackdown.

As much as Mr Ahmadinejad and Ayatollah Khamenei try to assert their power, it becomes clearer that they have become prisoners of their own constituency, right-wing conservatives.

Already there are whispers about possibly impeaching the president.

The key of course would be the position of the supreme leader, who would have to authorise such a move.

Equally damaging

Either keeping or ditching Mr Ahmadinejad could be almost equally damaging to Mr Khamenei.

All of this must be deeply satisfying for the opposition, as it continues its campaign to have the presidential election result overturned.

But reports continue to emerge of brutal treatment handed out to some of the many opposition supporters still held in prison. Two more detainees are reported to have died, 24-year-old Amir Javadifar and Hossein Akbari, aged 20.

Iran is approaching the Arbayeen or 40th day ceremonies to mark the deaths of those killed in the violence that followed the election. In Shia Islam it is a major date, often the spark for huge protests.

Thursday will be the anniversary of the death of Neda Agha-Soltan, the young Iranian woman who has become a symbol of the protest movement.

By all accounts, opposition supporters are as angry and motivated as they were on the day after the election. Now they face a government divided to its very core.</p


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