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Extradition without justice

Gary McKinnon’s fight to face trial in the UK casts a stark light on our unfair international extradition agreements

Gary McKinnon’s fight to be prosecuted in the UK casts a stark light on our extradition arrangements with America. US prosecutors are threatening him with up to 70 years in a “supermax” prison – and this a man with Asperger’s syndrome who could hardly be less suited to such punishment.

But Britain’s extradition arrangements beyond those with the Americans make for equally unhappy reading. The Extradition Act was passed in the aftermath of September 11 and much of its focus is on fast-track extradition of terror suspects. But as with other aspects of the “war on terror“, the net result is damage to long-held principles of fairness and justice. Extradition arrangements are important. They ensure fugitives from justice do not escape prosecution for their crimes – and indeed this is required under human rights law. But it is vital that safeguards are in place.

Liberty believes, as did the UK parliament for many years, that no one should be extradited unless and until the requesting country makes out a basic case against them in a UK court. Failure on this front can result in an innocent person being sent halfway across the world – away from family, supporters and legal advisers – to face unsound, trumped-up or politically motivated charges, to say nothing of probable pre-trial imprisonment. This can and does happen under the European arrest warrant.

Even more worryingly, the home secretary has made orders dispensing with the requirement of a prima facie case in respect of over 20 other countries outside the European Union, including Azerbaijan, Georgia, Moldova, the Russian Federation and Turkey. Not only that, the European arrest warrant system, endorsed by parliament in the Extradition Act 2003, allows a person to be extradited to an EU country for something that may not be an offence in the UK provided the conduct fits within a broad list of 32 offences. While at first blush there seems no problem with extraditing someone for “murder”, we might think differently if another country’s laws define murder as including abortion.

Fast-track extradition is also provided for if the alleged offence is one of “racism or xenophobia”, however this is defined by the requesting country. Many EU countries criminalise speech offences to an extent that the UK – with its history of a robust approach to freedom of expression – does not. Yet a UK court cannot bar extradition on the basis that it is not a crime recognised by UK law.

More and more cases are appearing of unfair extradition practices that demonstrate the very real problems with the current system. This is why Liberty has a new campaign, Extradition Watch, to fight the unfairness of the current system. Fast-track extradition purely on the basis of administrative convenience and efficiency is justice denied. There are very good historical reasons why extradition safeguards were developed and recent cases like those of McKinnon and Andrew Symeou (a young Briton who faces extradition to Greece on extremely flimsy evidence) show why these safeguards should still form part of UK law. Liberty and others propose amending UK extradition arrangements to reinstate these traditional safeguards.

We are yet to learn what the courts will decide in respect of McKinnon’s last-ditch appeals. But it is certain that any legislative reforms will be too late to apply to his case. If this tragic case indicates the direction of travel for UK extradition law, we ignore the warning at our peril.

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US will encourage India, China and Russia to tackle global agenda: Clinton

Spelling out the United States’ foreign policy initiatives for the immediate future, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton Wednesday said that Washington would put special emphasis on encouraging major and emerging global powers – China, India, Russia and Brazil, as well as Turkey, Indonesia, and South Africa – to be full partners in tackling the global [...]

Implications of visa-free travel

If Serbia’s accedes to the Schengen visa white list, its citizens will still need visas only to visit Great Britain, Ireland, Albania and Turkey. The EU decision would allow Serbian citizens to visit the 25 countries of the Schengen zone without visas, covering a territory of about 4.3 million square meters, with a population of over 400 million people.

China issues alert in Algeria

Armed Chinese soldiers patrol in Urumqi on July 15, 2009

China has urged its citizens in Algeria to take extra care, after reports that a militant group might take revenge for the recent deaths of Muslim Uighurs.

On Tuesday a UK-based security firm reported that an al-Qaeda-linked group had threatened to target Chinese workers in north Africa.

The Chinese foreign minister recently appealed for understanding within the Muslim world in the wake of the unrest.

Officials say 137 Han Chinese and 46 Uighurs died in the riots, in Urumqi.

Urumqi, the capital of Xinjiang province, is currently under heavy police and military control.

Safety precautions

On Tuesday the London-based risk firm Stirling Assynt reported that al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb had threatened to target Chinese workers in north Africa.

In response to the report, the Chinese embassy in Algiers has urged all 50,000 Chinese who live and work in Algeria to be more aware of safety precautions.

It told residents to strengthen security measures "in consideration of the situation after the 5 July incident in Urumqi".

XINJIANG: ETHNIC UNREST

  • Main ethnic division: 45% Uighur, 40% Han Chinese
  • 26 June: Mass factory brawl after dispute between Han Chinese and Uighurs in Guangdong, southern China, leaves two Uighurs dead
  • 5 July: Uighur protest in Urumqi over the dispute turns violent, leaving 156 dead – most of them thought to be Han – and more than 1,000 hurt
  • 7 July: Uighur women protest at arrests of menfolk. Han Chinese make armed counter-march
  • 8 July: President Hu Jintao returns from G8 summit to tackle crisis

Q&A: China and the Uighurs

Views from China

Exiled Uighur organisations have said they oppose all forms of violence and condemn the alleged al-Qaeda threat.

One nation which has seen a particularly strong anti-China reaction in the wake of the Urumqi violence is Turkey.

Demonstrations have been held across the country to protest against the Chinese government’s handling of the incident, and the Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan accused the Chinese of "genocide".

Uighurs are Turkic-speaking people and share linguistic and cultural bonds with Turks.

Turkish news agency Anatolia reported on Wednesday that a Chinese diplomat, Song Aiguo, was in Ankara for talks with Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu.

Mr Song, a former ambassador to Ankara, said the Chinese government felt sorrow over the Xinjiang incidents, adding that he was in Ankara to avoid possible damage to Sino-Turkish ties.

Contentious film

Meanwhile Chinese diplomats in Australia are reportedly trying to block the screening of a film about exiled Uighur leader Rebiya Kadeer.

The director of the Melbourne Film Festival, Richard Moore, said that when the programme for next month’s festival was published, a Chinese consular official contacted him and insisted he withdraw it.

Mr Moore said he had declined the request.

The film – The Ten Conditions of Love – explores the impact on the family of Ms Kadeer of her fight for the rights of China’s Uighur minority.

China blamed the Xinjiang riots of Ms Kadeer, a claim she vehemently denies.</p


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

Villa agree £12m Downing fee

• Downing had been promised he could move to a big club
• England man likely to be out until October after foot surgery

Aston Villa have agreed a fee of around £12m with Middlesbrough for their winger Stewart Downing. Downing is currently recovering from surgery on a fractured bone in his foot, and is unlikely to be ready for competitive football before October at the earliest, but it appears the Villa manager Martin O’Neill is now keen to complete a deal this summer, rather than waiting until January as had previously been suggested.

Downing, for his part, did not relish the prospect of playing Championship football as he looks to press his claim for a place in Fabio Capello’s England squad ahead of next summer’s World Cup. He had been promised by Middlesbrough’s chairman, Steve Gibson, that he could leave if a big club came in at the right price and the Boro manager Gareth Southgate is resigned to losing the player.

Downing was given clearance to start gym work following a visit to a specialist last week and is due to have a pin inserted in his foot, which he fractured during a game against Aston Villa last season, removed during September. His surgeon is said to be “very pleased” with Downing’s progress and is confident he will make a full recovery.

Martin O’Neill regards Downing as a partial replacement for Gareth Barry, and is also understood to have expressed an interest in Boro’s Tuncay Sanli. Middlesbrough are reportedly demanding a fee of close to £8m for the Turkey international.

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Alan Lurie: What The Bible Teaches About Being Of Service

This is a follow up to last week’s message about answering the call to service. According to the Bible, the call to service began with…

Europe gas pipeline deal agreed

By David O’Byrne
BBC News, Ankara

A natural gas pipeline in Kiev (file image)

Four European countries are meeting in Turkey to sign a five-nation agreement for the long-planned 3,300km Nabucco natural gas pipeline.

Once completed, the line will bring up to 31 billion cubic metres of gas a year from the Caspian and the Middle East across Turkey and into Europe.

It will give an important alternative energy supply to Russia, which already meets 30% of Europe’s gas needs.

But much still remains to be agreed on, not least where the gas will come from.

The five countries – Turkey, Romania, Bulgaria, Hungary and Austria – have been working on the Nabucco project with the European Commission for seven years now.

But still the decision to sign the heads of government agreement on 13 July has come as a surprise.

To begin with there is still no clear idea as to what has been agreed.

Turkey and the European Commission are still at loggerheads over how much gas Turkey will be able to take from the line, with Ankara claiming that it might be another six months before a final agreement is reached.

More worrying still, Nabucco still has no guaranteed supply of gas.

Iran, Iraq, Kazakhstan, Turkmenistan and Egypt are all considered potential suppliers in the long term.

Currently though, only Azerbaijan is in a position to supply the 15 billion cubic metres a year the line needs if it is to be constructed as planned by 2014.

But two weeks ago, Baku agreed to sell some of that gas to Russia, a move many understood as a warning to the Nabucco partners to sort out their differences or look elsewhere.

In the same way, Monday’s signing ceremony is being seen as largely an attempt to persuade Baku that the Nabucco partners can reach an agreement, on some issues at least.</p


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

Obama ‘examining Afghan killings’

Afghan warlord Gen Abdul Rashid Dostum after his troops defeated pro-Taliban forces at a fortress near his stronghold of Mazar-e-Sharif in northern Afghanistan, on 28 November 2001

The US president says he is examining an alleged massacre in Afghanistan amid allegations the Bush administration resisted efforts to investigate it.

Barack Obama told CNN he had told officials to "collect the facts for me" and could order a full inquiry.

The allegations concern the deaths of hundreds or even thousands of Taliban fighters who had surrendered to the US-backed Northern Alliance in late 2001.

They were in the custody of a US-backed warlord, Gen Abdul Rashid Dostum.

The allegations that the prisoners were deliberately left to suffocate in shipping containers, or were shot dead through the container walls, first surfaced in 2002 but there has been no formal investigation.

"The first reaction of everybody [in the White House] was, ‘Oh, this is a sensitive issue; this is a touchy issue politically’"

Pierre Prosper
Former US envoy for war crimes

On Friday the New York Times quoted government officials and human rights organisations as saying that "Bush administration officials had repeatedly discouraged efforts to investigate the episode".

The issue has gained fresh urgency since Gen Dostum was reinstated as military chief of staff to the Afghan president last month.

At present he remains in exile in Turkey after being suspended last year over allegations he threatened a political rival at gunpoint.

‘We have to know’

Now Mr Obama says he is looking into the affair.

"The indications that this had not been properly investigated just recently was brought to my attention," Mr Obama told CNN in an interview to be aired at 2200 on Monday (0200 Tuesday GMT).

"So what I’ve asked my national security team to do is to collect the facts for me that are known, and we’ll probably make a decision in terms of how to approach it once we have all of the facts gathered up," he said, according to excerpts released in advance.

On the question of whether he could order a full investigation, he replied: "I think that there are responsibilities that all nations have, even in war.

"And if it appears that our conduct in some way supported violations of laws of war, then I think that we have to know about that."

US ‘feared investigation’

According to a Newsweek report published in 2002, which cited a UN memo, the prisoners died in crowded container trucks while being transported from Kunduz in northern Afghanistan to Sheberghan prison, west of Mazar-e-Sharif.

A photo from April 2002 showing a test trench dug by the group Physicians for Human Rights forensic as part of a preliminary investigation for the UN at the Dasht-e-Leili site near Sherberghan, Afghanistan, in which 15 bodies were exposed

The prisoners were allegedly left to suffocate to death, or were shot inside the containers, before being buried in mass graves.

The estimates of the number who died range from several hundred to 2,000.

At the time Gen Dostum was on the CIA payroll and his militia was working closely with US forces, The New York Times said.

It said the US government was also worried about destabilising the government of Hamid Karzai, in which Gen Dostum was serving as a defence official.

The newspaper quoted Pierre Prosper – who served as the envoy for war crimes under President George W Bush – as saying that, at the White House, "Nobody said no to an investigation, but nobody ever said yes, either.

"The first reaction of everybody there was, ‘Oh, this is a sensitive issue; this is a touchy issue politically.’"</p


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

Turkey attacks China ‘genocide’

Turkish protesters burn a Chinese flag at a rally in Istanbul. Photo: 10 July 2009

Turkey’s prime minister has described ethnic violence in China’s Xinjiang region as "a kind of genocide".

"There is no other way of commenting on this event," Recep Tayyip Erdogan said.

He spoke after a night-time curfew was reimposed in Xinjiang’s capital, Urumqi, where Muslim Uighurs and Han Chinese clashed last Sunday.

The death toll from the violence there has now risen from 156 to 184, China’s state-run Xinhua news agency reports. More than 1,000 people were injured.

Turkey, a predominantly Muslim country, shares linguistic and religious links with the Uighurs in China’s western-most region.

Quentin Sommerville, BBC News, Urumqi

After Friday’s prayers, a small group of Uighur Muslims marched along an Urumqi street demanding the release of men detained for their alleged role in last Sunday’s riot.

A large number of riot police surrounded the group, they punched and kicked the protestors – one officer used his baton to beat one of the Uighurs. A number of foreign journalists had their equipment seized, some have been detained.

Earlier the group said they feared for their safety. There’s no word from the authorities as to what happened to them.

In pictures: Closed mosques

New media openness

Q&A: China and the Uighurs

Quentin Sommerville

"The event taking place in China is a kind of genocide," Mr Erdogan told reporters in Turkey’s capital, Ankara.

"There are atrocities there, hundreds of people have been killed and 1,000 hurt. We have difficulty understanding how China’s leadership can remain a spectator in the face of these events."

The Turkish premier also urged Beijing to "address the question of human rights and do what is necessary to prosecute the guilty".

Mr Erdogan’s comments came a day after Turkish Trade and Industry Minister Nihat Ergun urged Turks to boycott Chinese goods.

Beijing has so far not publicly commented on Mr Erdogan’s criticism.

But it said that of the 184 people who died, 137 were Han Chinese.

Uighurs defiant

Earlier on Friday, the Chinese authorities reimposed a night-time curfew in Urumqi.

The curfew had been suspended for two days after officials said they had the city under control.

Mosques in the city were ordered to remain closed on Friday and notices were posted instructing people to stay at home to worship.

XINJIANG: ETHNIC UNREST

  • Main ethnic division: 45% Uighur, 40% Han Chinese
  • 26 June: Mass factory brawl after dispute between Han Chinese and Uighurs in Guangdong, southern China, leaves two Uighurs dead
  • 5 July: Uighur protest in Urumqi over the dispute turns violent, leaving 156 dead – most of them thought to be Han – and more than 1,000 hurt
  • 7 July: Uighur women protest at arrests of menfolk. Han Chinese make armed counter-march
  • 8 July: President Hu Jintao returns from G8 summit to tackle crisis

Taboo of ethnic tensions

Profile: Rebiya Kadeer

Xinjiang: Views from China

But at least two opened after crowds of Uighurs gathered outside and demanded to be allowed in to pray on the holiest day of the week in Islam.

"We decided to open the mosque because so many people had gathered. We did not want an incident," a policeman outside the White Mosque in a Uighur neighbourhood told the AP news agency.

After the prayers, riot police punched and kicked a small group of Uighurs protesters, who demanded the release of men detained after last Sunday’s violence, the BBC’s Quentin Sommerville says.

Meanwhile, the city’s main bus station was reported to be crowded with people trying to escape the unrest.

Extra bus services had been laid on and touts were charging up to five times the normal face price for tickets, AFP news agency said.

"It is just too risky to stay here. We are scared of the violence," a 23-year-old construction worker from central China said.

The violence began on Sunday when a Uighur rally to protest against a deadly brawl between Uighurs and Han Chinese several weeks ago in a toy factory in southern Guangdong province turned violent.

Tensions have been growing in Xinjiang for many years, as Han migrants have poured into the region, where the Uighur minority is concentrated.

Many Uighurs feel economic growth has bypassed them and complain of discrimination and diminished opportunities.


Are you leaving Urumqi What has been your experience of the unrest in the city in recent days Please send us your comments using the form below:

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

At the high temple of fashion

Suspend your disbelief, take a deep breath, and dive into the extraordinary world of Paris haute couture fashion week … Because there’s nothing else quite like it. By Jess Cartner-Morley

In pictures: Haute couture, the greatest show on earth

On Tuesday afternoon I waited for the best part of an hour for a 10-minute catwalk show comprising of 24 dresses, none of which in all probability will ever be available for sale. This was the Christian Lacroix show, and neither I nor the other 279 people in the audience would have dreamed of missing it. This, the new collection from a designer whose 22-year-old company has never made a profit and is now on the verge of bankruptcy, was the hot ticket of the week, despite the fact that if no buyer appears to rescue the company, the atelier where these clothes are produced will be shuttered and locked before these dresses get a chance to go into production.

What Paris haute couture week lacks in logic, however, it makes up for in poetry. The dresses at Lacroix were dark and elegant and grand, in the kind of fabrics you seldom come across in the real world: guipure lace, swiss muslin, silk taffeta. Midway through the show, the gathering clouds let rip and the slender glass windows of the Museum of Decorative Arts rattled in the driving rain: appropriately theatrical, battlefield weather for Lacroix’s last stance.

One of the details that distinguishes haute couture from other clothes is that these are clothes designed and perfected from every angle. The front view is only one element of the look: the side profile will have been tweaked to dramatic perfection, and the back view is often a work of art in its own right. At Lacroix, a midnight blue crepe dress was caught with a creamy silk bow at the base of the spine, while an evening gown was suspended by a single fragment of the lightest black lace stretched from one clavicle and over the shoulder bone. It was as if Lacroix was as focused on exits as entrances: which, seeing as how this could be his label’s last show, would be understandable.

The trouble with haute couture is that pictures don’t really tell the story at all. Trying to convey the full experience of haute couture via a photograph in a newspaper is like trying to capture the taste sensations of a meal by Heston Blumenthal or Ferran Adrià in a flavour of potato crisps. Watching it live is a full-on sensory experience: the angles, the ideas, the references, the colours, the texture of each outfit, not to mention the choreographed body language and painstaking hair and makeup of the models, or the ambience of the setting, every detail of which will have been meticulously planned, from the celebrities who have been invited to ornament the front row to the colour of the napkins handed out with the after-show canapes.

Now more than ever, attending haute couture requires a certain suspension of disbelief. To appreciate couture you have to leave your head-screwed-on, oh-for-goodness-sake-surely-no-one-buys-this-stuff attitude at the door and dive right in. Some people like to take deep lungfuls of air when they are by the sea, or in the mountains, in order to draw deeply on the good stuff: I do the same in Paris couture ateliers. I calculate that every lungful contains at least a tenner’s worth of Diptyque room fragrance, so I try to make the most of it, in the hope I will still have figuier or tuberose in my nostrils when I get off the Eurostar and back on the tube.

There are still people who have pots of money and the desire to spend it in ridiculous ways. If you doubt me, ask Nicolas Ouchenir, a calligrapher who is employed by designers including Miuccia Prada and Karl Lagerfeld to write the work-of-art, handwritten invitations that are a calling card of couture. He told Womenswear Daily this week that as well as fashion designers, his clients include wealthy Russians who pay him to transcribe love letters to their sweethearts, sometimes in ink laced with real gold.

But haute couture is in very real trouble, caught in a tug-of-war, between Paris and the rest of the world. There is a very real need to build a relationship with clients in emerging markets. The Russian and Middle Eastern clients who were a front-row novelty just a few years ago are now the old-timers; China, Brazil, Turkey, even Ukraine and Kazakhstan are where orders are coming from now. To seduce these customers, they need to be made to feel comfortable with what they are watching. Yet the value of couture is in its very Frenchness: every other city in the world has a fashion week, but only Paris has a week devoted to haute couture. That hoity-toity Parisian attitude is precisely what gives added value to the labels on the couture roster, and they tinker with it at their peril.

The dilemma can be seen in the contrast between the Chanel and Dior shows this week. At Chanel, Lagerfeld’s new look centred around long, column-shaped skirts and dresses slit at either side. It was reminiscent of the Chinese cheongsam shape – and, as such, may well succeed in grabbing the attention of the Chinese clients whom Chanel and Dior are currently battling to seduce. But on the Paris catwalk, the clothes looked a little tricksy, although the evening was staged with aplomb – an evening show in the Grand Palais, which merged seamlessly into a glamorous after-show soiree.

Dior took the polar opposite route, moving its show from the hangar-like, out-of-town venues it has favoured in recent seasons back into the iconic dove-grey rooms of Dior’s Avenue Montaigne headquarters. The setting, the clothes and the styling conspired to turn back the clock half a century to when Dior clients gathered in these very rooms to view classics such as the Bar peplum jacket and wasp-waisted suits, pieces that were revived this week. The makeup at a Dior show is always a work of art in its own right, and this season it conjured up memories of 1950s beauties. Dotted black net veils over the face recalled Irving Penn’s famous 1951 Vogue cover, in which the model’s face is closely wrapped in a black fishnet veil; the strong eyebrows and pale complexions artfully powdered and sculpted suggested Richard Avedon and the regal, arch allure of his 1955 portrait Dovima with Elephants.

The giant perfume bottles that dominated the Chanel catwalk made another important point about haute couture, which is that despite the tiny scale on which the actual dresses are produced, the economics only make sense on a giant scale. Couture is “a powerful tool to educate the customer about our brand”, as Chanel’s president of fashion, Bruno Pavlovsky, put it recently. The concept of a brand having a “DNA” has taken over from a colour being “the new black” as the fashion cliche of our time, and there is a very real danger of the creativity of couture being strangled by the obsession with bludgeoning home brand values. Death by brand-building: what a very 21st century way for couture to go.

The spirit of couture lives on, if nowhere else, in the studio of designer Bruno Frisoni, who twice a year creates a range of couture bags and shoes for the venerable Roger Vivier label and presents them in his gorgeous, pink-walled studio above the Rue Faubourg Saint-Honoré. Here, this week, he showed me his treasures for autumn: a clutch bag with one side in gold vermeil, modelled on a turtle shell, and the other in gold-painted crocodile, soft as the underside of a turtle; and a chainmail bag encrusted with jet dragonflies and the softest feathers, which he likened to “the magical remains of a mermaid”. Moments after I had laid my coffee cup on Frisoni’s table, Inès de la Fressange, his full-time muse – I told you, this place is very, very couture – discreetly picked up a stray teaspoon and replaced it on the saucer, apparently bothered by the asymmetry. Moments later, I spotted Frisoni absentmindedly rubbing at an entirely invisible mark on a white leather chair. After all, as Pavlovsky of Chanel said recently, “in couture, the objective is to be perfect”.

On my way home, as I got off the train at St Pancras, I fell into step behind a petite lady in harem pants and gladiator sandals. I wouldn’t have looked twice, except it was nearly dark and she was wearing sunglasses. It was Kylie, who had changed out of the curvy black lace skirt she had been wearing at Jean Paul Gaultier earlier that day. Families and businessmen jostled past her on the platform, and in the evening rush, no one noticed a pop princess. Haute couture was over, and it was back to reality, even for Kylie.

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Find God, win a trip to Mecca

Turkish gameshow enlists imam, Greek Orthodox priest, rabbi and monk to try to convert atheists, with pilgrimage as reward

It sounds like the beginning of a joke: what do you get when you put a Muslim imam, a Greek Orthodox priest, a rabbi, a Buddhist monk and 10 atheists in the same room?

Viewers of Turkish television will soon get the punchline when a new gameshow begins that offers a prize arguably greater than that offered by Who Wants to be a Millionaire?

Contestants will ponder whether to believe or not to believe when they pit their godless convictions against the possibilities of a new relationship with the almighty on Penitents Compete (Tovbekarlar Yarisiyor in Turkish), to be broadcast by the Kanal T station. Four spiritual guides from the different religions will seek to convert at least one of the 10 atheists in each programme to their faith.

Those persuaded will be rewarded with a pilgrimage to the spiritual home of their newly chosen creed – Mecca for Muslims, Jerusalem for Christians and Jews, and Tibet for Buddhists.

The programme’s makers say they want to promote religious belief while educating Turkey’s overwhelmingly Muslim population about other faiths.

“The project aims to turn disbelievers on to God,” the station’s deputy director, Ahmet Ozdemir, told the Hürriyet Daily News and Economic Review.

That mission is attested to in the programme’s advertising slogans, which include “We give you the biggest prize ever: we represent the belief in God” and “You will find serenity in this competition”.

Only true non-believers need apply. An eight-strong commission of theologians will assess the atheist credentials of would-be contestants before deciding who should take part.

Converts will be monitored to ensure their religious transformation is genuine and not simply a ruse to gain a free foreign trip. “They can’t see this trip as a getaway, but as a religious experience,” Ozdemir said.

The programme, which is scheduled to air in September, has been criticised by commentators and religious figures for trivialising God and faith.

Mustafa Cagrici, provincial head of the state-run religious affairs directorate for Istanbul, said: “I don’t find it right to discuss religion in such environments.”

Others may see the show as fuelling a widespread intolerance of atheism in Turkey, where a large majority profess a deep religious belief despite the state’s officially secular character.

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Turkey plans to restart dam project

Turkey today announced plans to resume a controversial £1bn dam project in the face of environmental protests that it would displace thousands of people, destroy habitats and drown priceless archaeological treasures.

The environment minister, Veysel Eroglu, said work on the Ilisu hydroelectric dam on the Tigris river in south-east Turkey would restart after a six-month funding suspension ends next week.

The announcement disappointed campaigners who believed that the project had suffered a potentially fatal blow last December, after German, Swiss and Austrian institutions announced they were withholding finance because fears about the dam’s environmental and social impact had not been addressed. The governments agreed that 150 World Bank conditions on the environment, heritage sites, neighbouring states and human relocation must be met.

Turkey’s government argues the dam – which is planned to generate 1,200MW of electricity – is an essential part of a £19.3bn plan to bring economic prosperity to the south-east, long blighted by armed conflict between the army and the outlawed Kurdistan Workers party (PKK).

At a press conference in Ankara, Eroglu confidently said that the necessary funds would be made available, after declaring that “important work” had been carried out to bring the dam into line with international standards. The claim was not immediately confirmed by the project’s backers. The [suspension] period lasts until 6 July. A spokesperson for the Swiss economy ministry told Reuters: “Switzerland is still examining the issue and will decide, together with Germany and Austria, how to proceed.”

Environmentalists have warned that the dam could destroy up to 80 towns, villages and hamlets, resulting in the forced relocation of between 50,000 and 80,000 people. Campaigners have argued that residents have not been offered adequate compensation and have accused Turkey of failing to properly consult Iraq, into which the Tigris flows, and Syria, another neighbour.

Historians have warned that the dam would submerge the ancient town of Hasankeyf, which was used as a fortress by the Romans against the Persians and later destroyed by the Mongols. It was re-built in the 11th century by the Seljuks.

Turkey, which is seeking to overcome dependence on imports of foreign gas for its energy needs, insists that valuable heritage will be protected or moved.

The Ilisu project — due for completion in 2013 — is part of a wider network of dams known as the South-eastern Anatolia Project, which the government of prime minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan has pinpointed as key to transforming the region’s economy and quelling Kurdish separatist violence.

First planned in the 1980s, the dam has a history of troubles. The British construction company Balfour Beatty scrapped plans for a £200m investment in 2001 under pressure from environmentalists and human rights groups.

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