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06 Friday Jan 2012
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06 Friday Jan 2012
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COMMENTARY
When I saw Diane Abbott on Newsnight, I knew she was annoyed.
Martin Basher spoke like a press officer for the Met when he declared words to the effect of credit where credit’s due.
It had taken 18 years for two of a possible six to get something like a sentence for what they did.
The police had not investigated this case properly because they did not value the life of another human being.
Yet Mr Basher, Bashir if you like, did not seem to show any understanding of this – in fact, he seemed to qualify his remarks with I came up close and personal with the attackers myself.
Well good for you, aren’t you the clever one.
Basher, like others from the race relations industry, have done nothing to change this country’s still questionable position and attitude towards people they regard as ‘Other.’
However, they certainly have done well out of it – you know Basher’s part of the NBC staff now.
Diane Abbott is refreshingly honest about everything, which is why she never progressed in the same way as say another left winger had during Tony Blair.
When I asked Diane why she hadn’t compromised a little like that person in question, she told me ‘I can sleep easy at night’.
When Tony Blair took this country to war against Iraq, that particular person resigned, despite all the compliments they were getting regarding the importance of their work.
Diane Abbott is not racist and she certainly wasn’t saying all ‘white’ people are either, however ask anyone of another colour and they will tell that they have suffered from divide and rule at some stage, as well as other things like projection, just to teach them a lesson for thinking they are special.
I wish it wasn’t true, but it is.
If we are going to trust politicians ever in this country, then they need to be allowed to be human beings, which also means cutting them some slack, otherwise we will always end up with robots like Tony Blair and David Cameron.
04 Wednesday Jan 2012
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Black Lives Matter, BlackLivesMatterUK, Distant Echoes, Eltham, London, Nayab Chohan, NayabChohanLIVE, Politics πΌ π³ πͺ, Race Relations, racism, Stephen Lawrence, Template News, UK
Posted by The Template News, Current Affairs and Sport Website | Filed under Analysis π, Breaking News πΊ ππ, Comment, Politics πΌ π³ πͺ, Race Relations, Social Affairs, Terrorism, UK
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03 Tuesday Jan 2012
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Black Lives Matter, BlackLivesMatterUK, Distant Echoes, Eltham, Nayab Chohan, NayabChohanLIVE, Politics πΌ π³ πͺ, Race Relations, Stephen Lawrence, Template News, UK
Posted by The Template News, Current Affairs and Sport Website | Filed under Analysis π, Comment, Politics πΌ π³ πͺ, Race Relations, Terrorism, UK
01 Sunday Jan 2012
22 Thursday Dec 2011
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Cold War, Distant Echoes, Mikhail Gorbachev, Nayab Chohan, NayabChohan, NayabChohanLIVE, Politics πΌ π³ πͺ, Putin, Putin and Russia, Russia and the Soviet Union, Russia π·πΊ, Soviet Union, Template News, USA πΊπΈ, USSR, Vladimir Putin
With the twentieth anniversary of the collapse of the Soviet Union approaching, many have been offering their thoughts as to how this superpower met her end, how was it that on Christmas Day 1991 Mikhail Gorbachev appeared on television to tell his people that he had resigned as their president.
A British ambassador for Moscow, from 1988 to 1992, charted her decline from the 1960s, she was falling behindΒ to her rival and had to rely on high oil prices for the next 15 years, Rodric Braithwaite observed in the Financial Times.
Many Russians from that period would tell you that things weren’t as bad as the cold war propaganda showed, that the food queues broadcast in the West could easily have been replaced byΒ pictures of theΒ dole queues and people sleeping in the streets on Washington, London and Paris.
Over the last ten years, Islamists have argued that the defeat at Afghanistan was the beginning of the end of the empire that denied the existence of God.
For an empire built on fear, admitting defeat was a disaster, however, the Soviet Union’s decision to put 150,000 troops into Kabul was perhaps the first sign that something was wrongΒ at the Kremlin.
Gorbachev himself has been quoted as saying that he felt that things could not continue in the way that they had before he came to power.
I have always believed that the Soviet Union never recovered from the carnage of the Second World War, for on the face of it she wasΒ equally matched with the United States of America, truth was her position as number one had come at a horrendous cost, millions of young men had given their lives for the protection of mother Russia.
Whilst industries and infrastructures can be replaced, human beings despite whatΒ Cold War propaganda said of the Soviet worker,Β are not machines, theyΒ are just flesh and blood, and in that they are unique.
21 Wednesday Dec 2011
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Armenian Genocide, Balkans, Bosnia, Distant Echoes, france, Greece, Islam, Nayab Chohan, NayabChohan, NayabChohanLIVE, Ottoman Empire, Politics πΌ π³ πͺ, Religion, Serbia, Template News, Terrorism, Turkey
Nicolas Sarkozy has sponsored aΒ proposed bill to make the denial of the Armenian genocide a crimeΒ in France, which would be met with up to a year in prison and a fineΒ of 45,000 euros.
Predictably, the move has brought a fierce response from Turkey.
France has warned her against any reprisals that would damageΒ Paris’s commercial interests, arguing that law was part of the French state’s commitment to the World Trade Organisation.
The Europeans have always taken the high ground when it comes to human rights, whilst being strangely myopic when it comes toΒ admitting to their own crimes against humanity.
Here are a couple of episodes that IΒ discovered during research for my novel, Pictures and Words.
Armenia was part of the Ottoman Empire which had allied itself with Germany and Austria in the First World War against the allies, Britain, France and Russia.
The decision to go to war was made by Ottoman War Minister, Enver Pasha, the head ofΒ aΒ movement that aimed unite the empire under the idea of aΒ greater Turkey, in the same way as Germany and Italy had been forged from disparate states.
Europeans called this movement the ‘Young Turks.’Β Β Β
Chapter 4
The Treatment of Armenians in the Ottoman Empire in 1915-16 was a publication of the British Propaganda Office. It was written by James Byrce and Arnold Toynbee, and presented, until now, unpublished news sources that showed how the Armenians suffered during the First World War. The only problem with the report, known as the βblue bookβ, was that it ignored the slaughter of Muslims by Armenian rebels whilst they were under Russian control and French tutelage. As the war began to turn on the Ottomans, Armenian nationalists pursued their dream of a Greater Armenia stretching all way to the Caucasus. Nothing would get in their way – they would commit horrendous acts while exaggerating the pain suffered by their βownβ people.
Β βI arrived at Bayburt on August 8 1917. What I saw was terrifying,β observed Tatiana Karamel, a nurse Russian Red Cross. βArmenians under the Russian administration were carrying out horrifying wild atrocities against the Turks in Bayburt and Ispir.
βThe rebels named Arshak amd Antranik slaughtered the children in the orphanage, I worked at, with their daggers. They raped young girls and women.
βThey took away 150 children with them, while they were withdrawing from Bayburt and killed most of them while they were still on the way.β
Old men and women, who had made it past a century of living, recounted some of the horrors they witnessed in their youth, when Armenian rebels committed atrocities in the eastern and southern Anatolia, all the way through to modern-day Azerbaijan.
Sirri Huseyinoglu, from Alacain, in Erzurum, remembered: βI was 19 during the period of Armenians atrocities. The Armenians had established an organisation.
βAn Armenian general called Antwon-ich led them. They started atrocities in the villages
βAt Erzurum they massacred 6 or 7000 people. They imprisoned them in huts
They tied a quilt on a water buffalo then they poured gasoline on the quilt and set it o on fire, They closed the buffalo in the hut. It went wild in the hut killing people.
βMakes a man go out of his mind to remember it.β
Mehmet Ackal , 106, Sambeyli, Adana : βNot one Muslim man was left they were imprisoned and killed. Children were boiled in water. They said βWe are serving you lambβ and made women eat their husbands.β
On Russian commander wrote on Jan 29, 1915 that the Armenian rebels were behaving in an βundisciplined and immoralβ manner, βsubjecting the civilians to violenceβ during the takeover of Van.
To this day, the stories of these people is ignored, written out of history as an irrelevance.
Europeans prefer the version offered by Jewish writer and poet Franz Werfel.
Fearing for the fate of Jews in Nazi Germany, he wrote an allegory called βThe 40 Days of Musa Dagh,β.
In this work, Werfel substituted the Nazis with the Young Turks, and the Jews with the Armenians.
Chapter 10
Before the American defeat at Vietnam, it was the Algerian war of independence that had inspired the colonised peoples of the world.
When the French had forced their way into what they regarded as a rundown Ottoman province, it took them decades to βpacifyβ this land. During this time, her soldiers took a fancy to the silver ear rings, leg rings and arm rings worn by the local girls, which they took by cutting off entire limbs. Then, no one was too concerned for the French were bringing the benefits of civilisation to a backward people. France always felt bitter about the way the Arabs had repaid them, as the world horrified at the military crackdown forced the colonisers to leave a land they still regard as theirs.
19 Monday Dec 2011
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Democracy, Distant Echoes, Egypt, Egypt and Mubarak, Egypt and Protests, Middle East Politics, Mubarak, Muslim Brotherhood, Nayab Chohan, NayabChohan, NayabChohanLIVE, Politics πΌ π³ πͺ, Template News, woman in blue bra
Until yesterday, I would have said that the most horrific and disturbing image of the year would have been the slaughter of Colonel Gaddafi by thugs armed by Nato.
What a difference a day makes…no one even those of us used to the stories of the brutality engaged by Middle Eastern governments on their own people were prepared for the casual, shameless attack on this young woman.
At first, you could haveΒ mistaken the body, lying on the floor with her top half there for the world to see,Β for aΒ manikin as she was set upon by two, three may be more security guards.
Later credible reports say she was veiled before her humiliation.
The Egyptian army are going to find thisΒ impossible to explain away.
Muslims never attack women.
The protesters on Tahrir Square say Mubarak has never left – on the evidence of this image perhaps they are right.
19 Monday Dec 2011
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Distant Echoes, Korean War, Nayab Chohan, NayabChohan, NayabChohanLIVE, North Korea, Politics πΌ π³ πͺ, Template News, USA πΊπΈ
And so, much to the delight of his enemies, the Great Leader has died. Those enemies – namely the Western nations – are hailing this as a step forward, a new opportunity, and already Japan and South Korea have promised to work together in solving the problem of the north.
The modern history of this reclusive state is born of two events, namely the Korean war and the war on terror.
Both were a result of Great Power interference.
The first was sparked by a north attempting to reunite a nation that had been carved up by imperial Japan. In the process, she drew the fury of the new master of the Pacific, the United States of America.
When there was nothing else to bomb the Americans destroyed bridges in an effort to bring this stubborn little nation of Asians to their knees.
Eventually, the frontier that we now recognise was marked out – at huge human cost.
And the second event was that speech by George Bush after those terrorist outrages, where he spoke of an axis of evil – Iraq, Iran and north Korea.
A year before, the north was in talks abouth reuniting with the south, and western diplomats found themselves very welcome, as this reclusive state – perhaps encouraged by China – had begun the process of opening up.
Unlike Libya and Iraq, North Korea never gave up her weapons programme, instead she testfired a nuclear bomb as a warning to anyone who may think of invading her yet again.
North Korea may be mad and many other things, but she can say that at the time of the death of the Great Leader, she and her people had maintained their independence.
Can the same thing be said of Japan and South Korea?