Top Stories - Google News

Showing posts with label minister. Show all posts
Showing posts with label minister. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 2, 2011

Copy that: Plagiarism charges unseat Germany's 'superstar' Defense minister (The Christian Science Monitor)

Frankfurt, Germany – He was Germany’s favorite politician, a conservative star boosting his party’s standing in the polls, a doer who pushed through a historic reform of the German armed forces.

But in a development that's rare for a country that never seemed to care much about politicians' private lives or personal indiscretions, Baron Theodor zu Guttenberg resigned this week amid Internet-fueled charges that he plagiarized his PhD dissertation. It was an embarrassment to Chancellor Angela Merkel's battered center-right Christian Democratic Union and the downfall of a politician whose career marked a departure from traditionally bland German politics.

"We’re seeing the failure of a concept where a person presents himself as superstar, where a politician tries to rise so high with so much glamour that he thinks he is an icon," says Gero Neugebauer of the Free University in Berlin.

RELATED: Think you know Europe? Take our geography quiz.

Mr. Guttenberg, whose wife is the great-great granddaughter of former chancellor Otto von Bismarck, seemed to flaunt his family name the way no German politician had done before. He was seen as a man of action, responsible for pushing through a plan to end the draft in the boldest reform of the armed forces since World War II.

Like many politicians here who see getting a doctorate as a way to increase their political fortunes, Guttenberg wrote his PhD dissertation in 2006 on the development of the US and European constitutions. But trouble started only two weeks ago when a law professor doing a review of the unpublished thesis uncovered incidents of plagiarism.

On Feb. 16, a German newspaper reported that parts of the thesis appeared to draw on articles in other newspapers, a US State Department website, and other essays without attribution. That news led to the development of a website, GuttenPlag Wiki, that made it possible for others to read the dissertation and discuss it.

Saying that Guttenberg, who became known as "baron cut and paste," had violated basic academic standards of honesty and integrity, 51,000 scholars signed a letter asking Chancellor Merkel for Guttenberg's dismissal.

Guttenberg initially dismissed the charges as "absurd." Merkel, too, treated it as a side issue, saying she’d hired a minister, not a research assistant. But when the University of Bayreuth, which had awarded his doctorate, withdrew Guttenberg’s degree, he resigned. "I’ve always been prepared to fight but I have reached the limits of my strength," he said Monday.

"The academic community acted collectively and said, ‘We’re not going to let that happen,' " says Mr. Neugebauer. "It was a milestone that scholars, and not politicians, were the ones that drove a politician to step down."

The scandal "is a reassertion of academic sovereignty vis-à-vis the political sphere," says Paul Nolte, a German historian who is currently a visiting professor of history at the University of North Carolina (UNC) at Chapel Hill. "But perhaps the lesson is that German politicians should think of themselves as doing politics, not at the same time pursuing some kind of academic career."

On Wednesday, Chancellor Merkel replaced Guttenberg, a potential chancellor candidate, with one of her most trusted aides, and seemingly increased her political chances for the future at the same time.

"Angela Merkel has lost a formidable competitor for chancellor," says Professor Nolte. "If there was anybody having the stature of a chancellor, it was Guttenberg and nobody else."

De Maiziere, the new Defense minister, is the best choice to continue Guttenberg’s milestone reform of the Army, says Nolte. "It’s striking a good deal for Merkel."

RELATED: Think you know Europe? Take our geography quiz


View the original article here

Pakistan media warns of growing chaos as minister slain (Reuters)

ISLAMABAD (Reuters) – Pakistan is being swept toward violent chaos by a growing wave of Islamist extremism, newspapers said on Thursday, a day after Taliban militants killed the country's only Christian government minister.

The assassination of Minister for Minorities Shahbaz Bhatti in broad daylight in the capital Islamabad on Wednesday, threatens to further destabilize the nuclear-armed U.S. ally where secular-minded politicians are imperiled by a rising strain of violent religious conservatism in the society.

"Mr. Bhatti's brutal assassination has once again highlighted the fact that we are fast turning into a violent society," the liberal Daily Times said in its editorial.

"This is not the time to be frightened into silence. It is time to implement the law and not surrender in front of extremists."

Bhatti is the second senior official to be assassinated this year for challenging the country's controversial blasphemy law, which sanctions the death penalty for insulting Islam or its Prophet Mohammad. Punjab provincial governor Salman Taseer was shot dead by his own bodyguard in January for calling for curbing abuses in the law.

"Terrorists silence another voice of interfaith harmony," the daily Dawn ran a banner headline on its front page. "Shahbaz Bhatti silenced forever," said The News.

President Asif Ali Zardari told a party meeting on Wednesday he would resist the slide toward extremism.

"We have to fight this mindset and defeat them. We will not be intimidated nor will we retreat the official APP news agency quoted him as saying.

Mehbood Ahmed, a senior police official, said around 20 people had been detained for questioning, but police did not yet know who was responsible. "But we are confident we will get hold of culprits," he said.

Condemnation poured in from around the world after news of Bhatti's killing broke, with the Church of England and the Vatican decrying the violence against Christians in Pakistan.

"I hope the government of Pakistan will not only hold the killers to account, but reflect on how it can more effectively confront the extremism which is poisoning Pakistani society," United Nations human rights chief Navi Pillay said from Geneva on Wednesday.

These killings, along with frequent militant attacks and chronic economic problems have raised fears for the future of the U.S.-ally, where an unpopular coalition government is struggling to cope.

'THERE'S BLOOD ON THEIR HANDS'

Ties between the two old allies have hit new lows after the arrest in January of Raymond Davis, a U.S. Central Intelligence Agency contractor, who shot dead two armed men in the city of Lahore. The United States says Davis has immunity, but Pakistan has said it is for the courts to decide.

In the meantime, Davis was in court on Thursday for the second hearing of his murder trial. His immunity hearing is March 14.

The government of President Asif Ali Zardari has repeatedly said it would not change the blasphemy law, and officials have distanced themselves from anyone calling for amendments for fear of a backlash from extremists, a move that dismayed moderates and liberals.

"Of course the silent majority, which keeps silent over these things, also must bear responsibility," I.A. Rehman, director of the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan, told the Express 24/7 television channel Wednesday night. "There's blood on their hands also."

The law has been in the spotlight since last November, when a court sentenced a Christian mother of four to death after her neighbors complained she had insulted Prophet Muhammad. Both Taseer and Bhatti championed the cause of poor Christian woman.

Al Qaeda-linked Pakistani Taliban militants, fighting to bring down the state, had called for Bhatti's death because of his attempts to amend the law.

The funeral of Bhatti, a Catholic, is expected to take place on Friday or Saturday, his family friends said.

Christians and other religious minorities have staged protests in several cities, denouncing his death and have called on the government to provide them protection.

(Additional reporting by Chris Allbritton and Robert Evans in Geneva, editing by Andrew Marshall)


View the original article here

Sunday, February 13, 2011

Tunisian minister resigns from transitional govt (AP)

TUNIS, Tunisia – Tunisia's foreign minister has resigned just weeks after he was named to replace the month-old transitional government's first, short-lived foreign minister, the official TAP news agency said Sunday.
The report didn't provide any details about the reasons behind Ahmed Ounaies' resignation, but critics have decried what they saw as the offhand way he described the "people's revolution" that ousted the North African nation's longtime autocratic president, Zine Al Abidine Ben Ali, on Jan. 14.
It was not immediately clear when Ounaies' replacement would be named.
Ounaies's predecessor, Kamel Morjane, was a minister under Ben Ali and one of several who initially kept their jobs in the transitional government formed days after the mass uprising forced Ben Ali into exile. Continuing street protests later forced the resignations of Morjane and most other Cabinet ministers with their roots in Ben Ali's ruling RCD party.
Ounaies, a 75-year-old retired diplomat, was named to replace Morjane on Jan. 27 but soon ran into trouble.
An interview with Tunisian television channel Nessma angered many who didn't appreciated the light tone with which he spoke about the deadly protests that toppled Ben Ali after 23 years in power.
A Feb. 4 visit to Paris, where he met with French counterpart Michele Alliot-Marie, got him into more trouble. In declarations following their meeting, Ounaies told reporters "Meeting Mrs. Alliot-Marie is a dream come true. I love to hear what she says in every circumstance."
Tunisia is a former French protectorate, and some here took umbrage with the comment's sycophantic overtones.
Alliot-Marie was also embroiled in a controversy over a year-end 2010 trip to Tunisia that saw her and her family members take a private plane owned by a Tunisian businessman suspected of having close relations with the fallen regime.
France's foreign minister had also come under fire for offering French police know-how to Tunisian security forces while the number of demonstrators killed by Tunisian police mounted. The opposition called on her to resign, but Alliot-Marie has resisted.
View the original article here

Wednesday, February 9, 2011

Southern Sudanese minister, bodyguard shot dead

His driver is detained and his gun seizedThe shooting occurred in Juba
(CNN) -- A Southern Sudanese minister and his bodyguard were fatally shot Monday in Juba, authorities said.
Rural Development Minister Jimmy Lemi Milla was shot by his driver, said spokesman Philip Auger of the Sudan's People's Liberation Army.
Auger said the driver was detained.
"The gun was taken from him and he was arrested," he said.
Juba is the capital of Southern Sudan, which recently voted to split from the government based in north Sudan.
Southern Sudan is expected to become the world's newest country in July.
No more information was immediately available on the shooting.
View the original article here

S. Sudanese minister, bodyguard shot

His driver is detained and his gun seizedThe shooting occurred in Juba
(CNN) -- A Southern Sudanese minister and his bodyguard were fatally shot Monday in Juba, authorities said.
Rural Development Minister Jimmy Lemi Milla was shot by his driver, said spokesman Philip Auger of the Sudan's People's Liberation Army.
Auger said the driver was detained.
"The gun was taken from him and he was arrested," he said.
Juba is the capital of Southern Sudan, which recently voted to split from the government based in north Sudan.
Southern Sudan is expected to become the world's newest country in July.
No more information was immediately available on the shooting.
View the original article here