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Monday, November 30, 2009

Michael's Top 7 - 30 November



Senior Turkish military officers had made extensive plans to terrorize non-Muslims in Turkey. In the large Ergenekon[1] scandal recently a well-planned terrorist operation was revealed. The operation which is called "Kafes Operasyonu Eylem Planı", in English meaning "the execution of the cage - operation" was to eliminate the remaining small group of Christians living in Turkey today. The plan was revealed when police arrested Levent Bektas, a major in the Turkish army. The evidence seized reveals more than 27 officers and senior military officers involved in the conspiracy against Christians. In order to identify key persons among the Christians and then kill them, this terrorist network has broken into a Greek Church congregation compound and stolen computers. The purpose of this was to access the congregation’s member lists. "When our office was emptied of computers and files, church members were very concerned. Since the murder of the monk Santoro, the journalist Hrant Dink and the brutal murder of three publishing workers in Malatya, Christians are living in constant fear", said lawyer Kezban Hatemi, representing the Greek Orthodox Patriarchate in Constantinople (Istanbul). On 28 November 2007, the Syriac Orthodox monk Daniel Savci in Turabdin was kidnapped in southeastern Turkey. The monk resides in the St. Gabriel monastery, which Turkish authorities are trying to confiscate. A few days later the monk was found beaten. Shortly after, the police arrested some village guards, a state-sanctioned militia subordinate to the Turkish army, for the kidnapping. Many people with insight into the situation interpret the kidnapping as a direct threat to the remaining Assyrians in Turabdin. Christians were attacked across the country. To implement the strategic attacks, the country's Christian population was mapped out and 939 key persons from different parts of the country were identified as potential targets. The fully detailed operation consists of four phases: preparation, spreading propaganda, shape opinion and execute. The newspaper Taraf, which has been able to access the information, has published several articles about this. On its website www.taraf.com.tr it is described in detail how the plan to attack the Christians was to be implemented. Below are some points that constitute the plan's main lines: Christians are mapped; Famous and wealthy Christian businessmen kidnapped; Systematic fires and looting of Christian businesses; The Armenian newspaper AGOS be subjected to several explosions; Murder patrols executing attacks against selected individuals; Christian cemeteries subjected to explosions; Churches and institutions belonging to Christians subjected to explosions; Put the blame on imaginary militant organizations. From the late 1980s to the 2000s, thousands of people have been killed, among them there were also many Christians. The perpetrators of the killings have never been found. But officially they have been systematically identified as an organization named "Hizbullah". A military arsenal provides the network with weapons. The police have, after following the tracks, at a house search in Poyrazköy outside Istanbul found a weapon cache to be used in the attacks. Among the weapons were several items, from C4 explosives to Uzi firearms and other sophisticated weapons. According to the newspaper Taraf, major Eren Günay has been arrested for having provided the attackers with arms and ammunition. According to the newspaper there are indications that the plan is sanctioned by the highest Turkish military leadership. For a long time, Christians’ houses, property and businesses in the Christian areas of the cities of Istanbul and Izmir have been labeled, in order to identify them. MP Sebah Tuncel notified the Turkish government with a written question last summer. The question addressed the Ministry of Interior and was about what the government intends to do against the labeling of Christian properties and about Christians being identified. Even today, the government has not replied to this question yet. As long as the attacks were aimed at Christians and other minority groups, the Turkish government acted indifferently. Not until the ruling government party AKP themselves felt threatened they began to act. In recent years the relationship between the government and the military has been strained and on several occasions the military has made attempts to make a coup d'état, without succeeding fully.


The Greek-owned supertanker Maran Centaurus was seized by pirates off Somalia while heading to the U.S., as attackers venture ever farther from shore to hijack merchant ships. It’s the second time Somali pirates have seized an oil supertanker, with the last incident a year ago leading to a record ransom and an increase in Western naval patrols. Today’s hijacking is “probably” the farthest from shore by Somali pirates, said Cyrus Mody, a manager at the International Maritime Bureau in London. His organization has yet to verify details of the attack, he said. The vessel, which can carry 2 million barrels of oil, was taken by Somali pirates in the Somali Basin about 600 nautical miles northeast of the Seychelles, the European Union anti- piracy naval force in the region said on its Web site today. The 28-man crew comes from Greece, Philippines, Ukraine, and Romania. “The range of pirates has increased over that which we would have expected,” Mark Jenkins, an analyst at Simpson, Spence & Young Ltd., the second-largest shipbroker, said by phone. “It does imply there’s a need for greater vigilance to safeguard against these things.” Somali pirates last seized an oil tanker in November 2008 when they took the Saudi supertanker Sirius Star and its 2 million barrels of oil. It was released in January 2009 for a ransom that the U.S. Congressional Research Service estimated at $3 million, believed to be largest ransom paid to Somali pirates at that point. Some press reports said pirates received $3.5 million for the February 2009 release of the MV Faina, a Ukrainian ship loaded with Russian tanks and other weapons.


An exceptional fortification structure surrounding the ancient city of Vergina, located in northern Greece, was recently discovered by archaeologists from the Aristotle University of Thessaloniki. According to the university’s announcement, cited by the www.ana-mpa.gr website, the architectural elements of the enclosure indicate that it dates back to the reign of Cassander, in the early third century BC, a period when Macedonia was plagued by major turmoil, including civil wars and attacks from the outside. The finding, according to the publication, is of remarkable importance because the wall is preserved in perfect condition. In addition to the structure, the university’s archaeological team also discovered a large number of artefacts, charred seeds and food, dating to the second and first centuries BC. Vergina is a small town in northern Greece, located in the prefecture of Imathia, Central Macedonia. The town became internationally famous in 1977, when Greek archaeologist Manolis Andronikos unearthed what he claimed was the burial site of the kings of Macedon, including the tomb of Philip II, father of Alexander the Great. The finds established the site as the ancient Aigai, which was once the royal capital of ancient Macedon, ruled by the Argead dynasty from about 650 BC onwards.


More than a hundred ethnographic, archaeological and historic pieces from the Republic of Cyprus, as well as compact discs and books that give account of culture in that nation, were donated to the National Museum of Cultures (MNC) to be included in the halls that to present undergo remodeling, which did not count on with Cypriot items. The donation will enrich mainly the Ancient Cultures Collection of the National Institute of Anthropology and History (INAH) precinct, integrated until now with pieces from Greece, North Africa and Arab countries. Among donated pieces outstands a historical map from the 19th century that illustrates the 3rd journey of Saint Paul through Cyprus, one of the most important points of the trips he carried on during the early 1st century to convert inhabitants. Other pieces donated are 4 replicas of cruciform idols dated from 3000-2500 BC, as well as 2 silver reliefs that represent Saint George. From ethnographic objects, 4 traditional garments from different parts of the island outstand, 2 women’s, from Phafos and Nicosia, and 2 men’s. The official donation act took place at the National Museum of Cultures, with the presence of the Ambassador of Cypriot Republic, Vasilis Philippou, who handed over the objects to Leonel Duran and Luis Felipe Crespo, director and sub director of the museum. Vasilis Philippou remarked his interest to fulfill his diplomatic task in Mexico; delivering these objects is part of it, considering the importance of the exhibition of Cypriot objects at the National Museum of Cultures for the good relations between both countries. The diplomatic pointed out that it is an opportunity for Mexican public to discover history, writing and religion of his nation. In his opportunity, and in the name of Alfonso de Maria y Campos, general director of INAH, Leonel Duran thanked the sign of friendship from Ambassador Philippou. “This donation confirms that the National Museum of Cultures has a key role in cultural relations of Mexico with other fellow countries, generating a spirit of international communication, cooperation and exchange”. Duran recalled that during the restructuring process of MNC, a complete conceptual revision has been carried out, representing Mediterranean Civilizations in an integral way, a perspective that the prior museography lacked. The MNC director mentioned that the heap of the museum is integrated by 17,000 objects, which places it between the largest ethnographical collections in Mexico. The fact that most of these objects have been donated by fellow countries to Mexico gives account of the good relations kept with other nations. Other important pieces donated by Cyprus are an amphora decorated with a bird dated from 850-700 BC, representative of Classic Greece pieces; a Virgin and Christ icon; a flute; a small ceramic bowl decorated with 2 women and an archaeological symbol manufactured in silver. The collection includes several books about history and religion in Cyprus, a literature magazine and 3 compact discs.


The International Court of Justice is likely to rule in Serbia's favor that Kosovo's unilateral declaration of independence is illegal, a Serbian official says. Foreign Minister Vuk Jeremic says the ICJ, which is set to consider Kosovo's move starting Dec. 1 in The Hague, will probably opt to rule it was a secession, buttressing Belgrade's claims that Kosovo's Provisional Institutions of Self-Government broke international law, the Serbian news Web site B92 reported Monday. "We have reason to believe that the court will base its opinion solely on legal merits and will make a decision that ... the unilateral proclamation of independence by the temporary institutions on Feb. 17, 2008, was an ethnically motivated effort of secession which represents a violation of international law," Jeremic told B92. The Web site said officials from 28 countries and the Kosovo authorities will all make presentations at the non-binding ICJ hearing, which is set to last until Dec. 11. "This will be a historic process," he said. "There have never been more countries signing up to participate in a public debate, and never all five permanent members of the U.N. Security Council."


The governments of Russia and Serbia are in negotiations to build a nuclear power plant in Serbia, the Russian ambassador to Belgrade says. "The construction of a nuclear power plant in Serbia is being given serious consideration," Aleksandr Konuzin was quoted as saying this Monday. He stated that Serbia wishes to export electricity, and added that the country has the resources to do so. "Russia is prepared to help Serbia with this intention through partnership and joint investments," the Radio-Television of Vojvodina (RTV) reported. Konuzin reminded that Serbia had recently reached agreements to build hydro plants with Germany and Italy, that Russian experts are currently working on modernizing the Đerdap 1 (Iron Gate) plant on the Danube, and that Russia is also ready to build more hydro power plants in Serbia. The ambassador also noted that the construction of several natural-gas heating plants has already been agreed.


As Abraham, Isaac and Jacob could tell you, being a patriarch isn’t easy.Leading your people through the desert is a task filled with trials and tribulations. It requires enduring patience and a clear vision of the goal at the other end. Of all the leaders of the world’s 15 Orthodox Churches, none bore a stronger resemblance to his titular namesakes than Patriarch Pavle of Serbia, who recently reposed at the biblical age of 95. The future patriarch was born on a tightrope. The first World War began just months before he entered the world, and by the time he reached adulthood, another broke out. He survived the Croatian Fascist genocide of 800,000 of his countrymen and labored to rebuild his shattered country as a construction worker after the war. Despite the anti-religious climate of Titoist Yugoslavia, he became a monk. His intellectual gifts led to post-graduate studies and a teaching position at the Orthodox seminary in Prizren, Kosovo (now abandoned as a result of the “cleansing” of that city’s Serbs). For the 33 years preceding his election as patriarch, he was bishop of the diocese encompassing Kosovo. There he earned the moniker of “the walking saint” because he never owned an automobile. Said he: “I will not purchase one until every Albanian and Serbian household in Kosovo and Metohija has an automobile.” He even made his own shoes. In 1989, a mob of Muslim youths so severely beat the then-75-year-old Pavle that he was hospitalized for three months. In spite of such persecution, both of himself and his flock, he never acquiesced to the nationalistic machinations of Serbia’s communist leaders. Having forsaken God, Slobodan Milosevic and his cronies forsook their own humanity. With a prophetic voice, the patriarch called for Milosevic’s ouster. He participated in marches and rallies, even breaking through a police cordon at one point. Pavle saw communism rise and fall. But as with his biblical predecessors, one trial followed another. Having successfully branded the Serbs as the Balkan bad guys, our Western intelligentsia now dismisses their suffering as “reverse” ethnic cleansing. Pavle didn’t submit to this double standard, and aggressively denounced NATO’s failure to protect Kosovo’s Serb minority. He pointed to the refugees, to the murdered Serbs, to the more than 150 Orthodox churches and monasteries destroyed by NATO’s de facto Muslim allies. He dared to say that one evil does not justify another. In denouncing the hypocrisy of the West, he was labeled as anti-Western. I was disappointed but not surprised to see this distorted image reproduced in a two-paragraph Associated Press feed that The Chieftain ran on Pavle’s death. The blurb said Pavle, “failed to openly condemn extreme Serb nationalism.” The falsehood of this statement was demonstrated by the condolences that flowed not just from other Orthodox potentates, but from the Vatican and leaders of Serbia’s Jewish and Islamic communities – many of whom were among the 500,000 mourners at his funeral. Pavle’s real crime was denouncing all nationalisms. That, and refusing to go silently away. As for Pavle’s likely successor, Metropolitan Amfilohije, he was similarly written off in the AP blurb as “a hard-liner known for his anti-Western and ultra-nationalist stands.” This description fits an ignorant, bloodthirsty Neanderthal, not the gentle and intelligent man I met five years ago in Belgrade. “Anti-Western” is a hard label to pin on someone with Amfilohije’s pedigree of post-graduate classics studies in Rome and Switzerland, and years of teaching at a Parisian seminary. Pavle’s likely successor is fluent not only in Serbian, Russian and Greek, but Italian, French and German. As I discovered, his English also is passable. Let’s save the “anti-Western” stereotype for those who actually want to destroy Western civilization, not those who stand in their way. Like Pavle, Amfilohije shares another enduring characteristic of the biblical patriarchs: tenacity. You’ve got to respect the stubborn endurance of a patriarch, even if he proclaims truths that are inconvenient.

Wednesday, November 25, 2009

Michael's VII Things - 25 November



Cyprus has given notice to all other European Union countries that it will take action to block further progress in Turkey's negotiations to join the block. Cyprus warned other European states that Turkey will not come out untouched if it fails to implement an agreement with the EU requiring Ankara to extend recognition to all 10 states which joined the block in 2004, including Cyprus. Cyprus has been divided since 1974 when the Turkish military intervened and occupied the northern part. In 1983, Turkish Cypriot authorities declared the establishment of the "Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus," which is recognized only by Turkey. Ankara has retained some 35,000 troops in the north of the Mediterranean island. Ankara has so far refused to recognize the Republic of Cyprus, effectively governing the Greek Cypriot south. Turkish air space and ports are not open to Greek Cypriot aircraft and ships. The Cyprus issue remains one of the main obstacles to Ankara's bid to join the EU, of which the Republic of Cyprus is a member state. Turkey launched its accession talks with the EU in 2005. But EUfroze eight of the 35 negotiating chapters, or policy areas, in 2006 as a result of Ankara's stance on Cyprus. Cyprus has recently expressed its disappointment at a European Commission annual report released last month on progress of EU candidate countries, including Turkey, as the report recommended no further measures to be taken against Ankara who has so far failed to fulfilled its obligations concerning Cyprus. Cyprus warned its EU partners that if they fail to agree on sanctions against Turkey, it will act unilaterally.


A row over cats has erupted between Cyprus and Turkey, adding a surprising new flavour to a long-standing stalemate between the communities of the divided island and its difficult relationship with Turkey, the divided EU country's biggest neighbour. The Cypriot Feline Society is fighting for the recognition of two separate breeds of Cypriot cats, but groups from Turkey and the "Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus" are also trying to lay claim to the island's feline legacy, the Cyprus Mail reports. "This cat belongs to its country," said Rania Razorenova, president of the Association of Cyprus Purebred Cats. "There is a real danger that foreigners – and particularly groups from Turkey – will try to officially register a Cypriot breed of cat outside Cyprus," she said. In co-operation with scientists from Davis University, California, the Cyprus Feline Society has identified two separate breeds of Cypriot cats, named St. Helena and Aphrodite. According to the society, the Cypriot cat evolved from the Van breed, originating from Lake Van in Turkey. The Aphrodite breed is larger than the St. Helena: strong, with slightly taller hind legs and a silky coat. St. Helena is smaller in size, with larger eyes but a smaller face. Efforts to register these cats as a Cypriot pedigree began last year, but in the meantime cat breeders in the north, Turkey and even Germany have tried to lay claim to the breed. Groups in Turkey have tried to cross the Cypriot cat with Turkish a breed, and then register the offspring of the two breeds in the north, presenting it as a Cypriot cat. To prevent any unpleasant surprises, the Cyprus Feline Society has taken DNA samples from the best Cypriot cats that took part in last weekend's annual cat show at Governor's Beach. The DNA samples will be sent to laboratories at Davis University in California for analysis, as a first step to registering the Cypriot cat as a pedigree breed. Cypriots were the first civilisation worldwide to have a cat as a pet. A human and a cat were found buried in the same 9,500 year-old site, Shillourokambos (which means 'field of dogs' in Cypriot dialect), by French archaeologists in 2001. Until that discovery, ancient Egyptians were considered the earliest civilisation to keep domesticated cats. The buried cat was a wildcat, larger than today's domesticated felines and about eight months old.


A French amphibious assault ship like the one Russia hopes to buy arrived Monday in St. Petersburg, fueling concern in Georgia and other ex-Soviet nations that Russia is upgrading its navy to intimidate its neighbors. The Mistral military ship, which can carry more than a dozen helicopters along with dozens of tanks and other armored vehicles, would certainly be a modern way to project Russian power. Media reports have said it would cost Russia up to euro500 million ($750 million) to buy a Mistral-class ship. The Kremlin increasingly has sought in recent years to reaffirm Russia's global reach and prestige in world affairs. It has sent its warships to patrol pirate-infested waters off Somalia and dispatched a navy squadron to the Caribbean where it took part in joint maneuvers with the Venezuelan navy and made several port calls in 2008. The Caribbean mission, aimed at flexing military muscles near the U.S. in the tense months after the war between Russia and Georgia in August 2008, was the most visible Russian navy deployment since Soviet times. But despite the Kremlin's ambitions, the post-Soviet economic meltdown has left the Russian navy with only a handful of big ships in seaworthy condition and badly crippled the nation's shipbuilding industries. Russia has only one Soviet-built aircraft carrier, the Admiral Kuznetsov, which is much smaller than the U.S. aircraft carriers and has been plagued by mechanical problems and accidents. The navy chief, Adm. Vladimir Vysotsky, has said a ship like Mistral would have allowed the Russian navy to mount a much more efficient operation in the Black Sea during the Russia-Georgia war. He said the French ship would take just 40 minutes to do the job that the Russian Black Sea Fleet vessels did in 26 hours, apparently referring to amphibious landing operations. Georgia was clearly worried about the possible deal. Since the 2008 war, Russia has declared the Georgian territory of Abkhazia an independent nation and sent thousands of troops there. Abkhazia has a coastline along the Black Sea that is next to Russia's coast.


A meeting of the Russia-NATO council at the level of ambassadors will be held on Wednesday at NATO headquarters in Brussels, Russia's mission to the alliance has said. Diplomats from Russia and NATO countries will meet to discuss preparations for the upcoming December 4 meeting of the Russia-NATO Council's foreign ministers. The ministerial meeting, the first official one to be held since the August 2008 armed conflict between Russia and Georgia over South Ossetia, will be organized as part of a session of NATO foreign ministers in Brussels on December 3-4. The diplomats will also discuss the forthcoming visit to Moscow by NATO Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen, also due in December. During an informal ministerial meeting in Greece in June, Russia and NATO agreed to renew cooperation on security issues, which was frozen after Russia and Georgia fought a five-day war in August over the former Georgian republic of South Ossetia, after which Russia recognized the independence of South Ossetia and Abkhazia, another former Georgian republic. Relations have also been strained by Russia's resistance to Georgia and Ukraine's bids to join NATO. NATO foreign ministers resolved to restore full-scale cooperation with Russia during their March 5 meeting in Brussels.


Justice Minister Haris Kastanidis admitted yesterday that Greece will have no choice but to remove religious icons from school classrooms and other public buildings if the European Court of Human Rights stands by a ruling it made earlier this month. “If the European Court of Human Rights sticks to its original decision that religious symbols should be removed from all public buildings, then I think our country will have to adapt to the new situation arising from this decision,” said Kastanidis in response to a question from right-wing Popular Orthodox Rally (LAOS) MP Asterios Rondoulis. However, Kastanidis added that any change to the status quo, which sees icons of the Virgin Mary hung in classrooms, courtrooms and public service offices, would take place “only after agreement has been reached with the Church of Greece.” However, it seems that the Church is highly unlikely to concede to the removal of icons or crucifixes from buildings. The Church of Greece reacted angrily to such suggestions when it emerged earlier this month that the European Court of Human Rights had ruled that the presence of crucifixes in classrooms was a breach of human rights after hearing a case brought by a mother from Italy. “It is not only minorities that have rights, the majority has them as well,” said the head of the Greek Church, Archbishop Ieronymos, adding that the matter would be discussed by the Holy Synod if necessary. “Youngsters will soon not have any symbols to inspire and protect them,” said Bishop Nikolaos of Fthiotida. Bishop Anthimos of Thessaloniki said he hopes Greek officials will appeal any decision by the court in Strasbourg. The European court found that the right of parents to educate their children according to their own beliefs, and children’s right to freedom of religion, were breached by the presence of a crucifix in classrooms.


The new head of the Serbian Orthodox Church (SPC) is expected to be elected on January 22. The Holy Synod of the SPC announced today in Belgrade that the Conclave of the Serbian Orthodox Church will meet on that day. It was also announced that the 40-day service for late Patriarch Pavle will be given on December 24. The patriarch passed away in Belgrade on November 15 and was laid to rest four days later. Meanwhile, media today continue to speculate on who might become the next spiritual leader of Serb Orthodox Christians. Blic newspaper writes that candidates include Metropolitan Amfilohije, Bishop of Zvornik and Tuzla Vasilije, Bishop of Zahumlje and Herzegovina Grigorije, and Bishop of Bačka Irinej. However, the SPC bishops and clergy have only one answer when asked about the likely successor to Patriarch Pavle: “Only the Holy Spirit knows.” The daily says that it is "already almost clear which bishops would receive the most votes after the first round of voting in the upcoming Election Conclave". Every bishop in the conclave votes for three candidates. 22 votes are needed in order to proceed to the next phase. After the first candidate is chosen in the lot, the bishops vote for two candidates, and then after the next round, just for one candidate. Even though it is possible, it is not likely that all three candidates will be chosen after the first round, writes the newspaper. According to this, Bishop Vasilije is most likely to go through after the first round of voting. "The bishop has eleven secured votes and it can be assumed with certainty that at least 17 bishops would vote for him," the article continued. The report also states that this bishop, and those close to him, had a crucial role in making some decisions while Patriarch Pavle was in hospital. Metropolitan Amfilohije, currently "the guardian of the throne", will for the most part depend on the bishops who support Vasilije in the voting, said the daily. "Amfilohije would have had a better chance even than the bishop of Zvornik and Tuzla if the Election Conclave was held earlier. However, the metropolitan has lost some support," writes Blic. The report also states that this bishop, and those close to him, had a crucial role in making some decisions while Patriarch Pavle was in hospital. Metropolitan Amfilohije, currently "the guardian of the throne", will for the most part depend on the bishops who support Vasilije in the voting, said the daily. "Amfilohije would have had a better chance even than the bishop of Zvornik and Tuzla if the Election Conclave was held earlier. However, the metropolitan has lost some support," writes Blic.


A ceremony of the transfer of an Orthodox pilgrim center in Bari, Italy, to the Russian Orthodox Church's management took place at the Patriarch's residence in Moscow. Patriarch Kirill of Moscow and All Russia said before the ceremony that "property once belonging to the Russian Church is being transferred to its disposal with the Russian state's very important participation." Vladimir Kozhin, the сhief of the Presidential Property Department, said at the ceremony that the Russian state is "only at the beginning of the way" and is taking first steps to return "shrines that are abroad of our homeland. I hope this process will gain momentum and we will make efforts so that such work be done more actively in the Kingdom of Jordan and in Israel," he said. Bari is home to the Saint Nicholas Cathedral, which was returned to the Russian Orthodox Church following a decision taken by the Italian authorities when Russia's then President Vladimir Putin was visiting the country in March 2007. In April 2008, the Italian government finalized all domestic procedures as part of the transfer of the Cathedral to Russia. A document confirming the hand-over was signed in Rome on November 13, 2008. The religious center, which is located in an area of 8,000 square meters, was established at the initiative of Grand Duchess Yelizaveta Fyodorovna of Russia to accept Russian pilgrims coming to Bari to worship St. Nicholas. It was built under the design of Russian architect Alexey Schusev and with donations from religious people, including Russia's Tsar Nicolas II, in 1913-1917. Work was not completed because of World War I. Russian emigrants, who were members of the Russian Palestinian Society, passed all church buildings to the municipality of Bari in 1937, because they lacked the funds to maintain the church. Bari authorities gave some church buildings back to Russia in late 1990s; however, the church remained in control of the municipality.

Tuesday, November 24, 2009

Michael's VII Things - 24 November



The Greek Orthodox church of Cyprus has taken Turkey to the European court of human rights over allegedly preventing the 500 Greek Cypriots living in the Turkish north worshipping at religious sites there, a church lawyer said today. The lawsuit concerns 520 churches, monasteries, chapels and cemeteries under Turkish control since Turkey invaded Cyprus in 1974, said Simos Angelides. The north's Greek Cypriot community cannot worship at these sites because they are either derelict or have been converted into mosques, army barracks, stables or nightclubs, he added. The lawsuit will likely further stoke tensions between Turkish Cypriots and the church leader, Archbishop Chrysostomos II. It is unlikely, however, to damage ongoing reunification talks between the Greek Cyprus president, Dimitris Christofias, and Turkish Cypriot leader, Mehmet Ali Talat. Although critical of Christofias' handling of the talks, Chrysostomos has been careful not to interfere, saying the lawsuit is not linked to the peace process. The church is suing Turkey because the court's past rulings hold that country responsible for the north, where it keeps 35,000-strong military force, Chrysostomos told the Associated Press. The church has "documented proof" of the destruction of religious sites in the north, and will seek unrestricted access to its property there so the faithful can worship freely, he said. The archbishop added that the church was also seeking damages for being denied use of property that should be restored to its pre-invasion condition wherever possible. "It's obvious that the only reason why these aforementioned rights are being violated is because we are Greek Cypriot Orthodox Christians," Chrysostomos said.


Britain urged Turkey on Monday to honour a pledge to the European Union to open its ports and airports to neighbouring Cyprus, saying it would be an important step in Ankara's talks to join the bloc. Turkey has no diplomatic relations with Cyprus, an EU member since 2004, but is under pressure to make good a promise to open its ports to its southern neighbour under a deal which enabled it to start accession talks in 2005. "I urge the Turkish government to honour the commitments that it has already made. We would like to see the ports opened, we'd like to see them making that commitment again and seeing action rather than just words," said British Minister for Europe Chris Bryant. Cyprus was divided in a Turkish invasion in 1974 triggered by a brief Greek-inspired coup. The conflict has slowed Turkey's EU entry talks at the urging of Greek Cypriots, who represent the island in the 27-member bloc. "We don't want (Turkey's accession process) to stop, we don't want to slam the door shut. We think it is really important that the process towards EU accession of Turkey is maintained as a strong possibility," Bryant told reporters in Nicosia, Cyprus's ethnically partitioned capital. Although the peace talks and Turkey's EU membership negotiations are separate processes, a breakthrough on one is likely to have a positive impact on the other. Cyprus is a former British colony and Britain is a guarantor power of Cypriot sovereignty. Britain recently offered to relinquish up to half of the sovereign territory it retained in Cyprus, about three percent of its landmass now used partially for military purposes. The offer is contingent on a peace deal between the two Cypriot sides.


Madrid will not recognize the independence of Kosovo, Spain's Foreign Minister Miguel Angel Moratinos has stated. Speaking before a European parliament commission about his country's priorities during its EU upcoming EU presidency, Moratinos explained that Kosovo still be allowed to attend the meetings concerning the Balkans, but "in accordance with accepted international frameworks and mechanisms". He also stated, according to the Spanish media, that the Spanish government would maintain contact with the authorities in Kosovo without recognizing its secession from Serbia. "We will not obstruct development and institutional and political stability in Kosovo, but do not ask us to explain why Spain did something that was in accordance with international law," Moratinos remarked. The minister did, however, allow for the possibility of Spain changing its view and recognizing Kosovo, "but only after the UN had done it or after Serbia had come to an agreement with the authorities in the breakaway province". He said that the decision by the International Court of Justice on the legality of Kosovo's independence declaration would be important to Spain, but that Madrid had no intention of opening a diplomatic office in Priština.


Greece, Albania and FYROM will hold an informal meeting on Friday in the Prespes Lakes region in northwestern Greece, at the initiative of Greek premier George Papandreou, to discuss prospects of cooperation in the protection and viable development of the Prespes national park region, which straddles the borders of all three countries. The initiative, according to Greek government spokesman George Petalotis, reflects the "high priority" placed by the government on environmental issues only days ahead of the UN international summit on climate change in Copenhagen. The Lakes Small and Large Prespes in the prefecture of Florina, in the northwest corner of the country, form a unique ecosystem and constitute a natural border between the three countries. The Lakes are home to the Mediterranean's most ancient species of trout, and also the short-horn pygmy cow, both of which are threatened with extinction. The Prespes are also among the 10 most important wetlands of the Mediterranean, while eight of the 11 fish species native to the lakes are endemic and not found anywhere else in the world. According to the UNESCO World Heritage Center, the area is characterized by outstanding natural beauty and has been inhabited without interruption from antiquity (with traces of ancient inhabitation in the area of "Lemos" and on the island of Agios Achilleos) to the present day. The Prespes region contains the highest degree of species biodiversity in a corresponding surface area in Europe. It is also that with the highest biodiversity levels. It begins at an altitude of 850m and contains oak, beech, deciduous, fir and cedar forests. More than 1500 plant species and 12 forest types can be encountered in the area in which 46 mammal species live, including some of the rarest in Europe such as the wolf, bear, wild ibex and otter. Moreover, the area is one of the most important biotopes in Greece with 260 species of birds. The grey goose (Anser anser) and the goosander (Mergus mersander), cranes (Ardeidae), cormorants (Phalacrocorax carbo sinensis) and pygmy cormorants (Phalacrocorax pygmeus) nest here, as well as quite a few species of duck, terns, birds of prey, woodpeckers, etc. It is the only area in Europe other than the Danube Delta and the former USSR where two species of pelican reproduce, the White pelican (Pelecanus onocratulus) and the Dalmatian pelican (Pelecanus crispus). The water meadows surrounding the lakes are home to significant amphibians and reptile populations.


U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton will not attend an Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) foreign ministers' meeting in early December in Athens, a Greek Foreign Ministry spokesman said. "Today the U.S. ambassador informed us that Secretary Clinton will not be able to attend the OSCE meeting," spokesman Gregory Delavekouras said Monday, without giving a reason. This will be the second time in a row that Clinton has missed a meeting of foreign ministers from the OSCE, a regional security organization that includes both the United States and Russia amongst its 56 member states. She canceled a trip to an OSCE meeting in Greece in June because of an arm injury. At that gathering, the West assessed Russia's pan-Europe security pact.


Iran can take legal action if Russia refuses to fulfill its commitments to deliver an advanced missile defense system to the Islamic Republic, a senior military official said on Tuesday. Iranian officials have voiced growing irritation at Russia's failure so far to supply the S-300 missile system, which Israel and the United States do not want Tehran to have. "The Russians, surely under the pressure of the Zionist lobby and America, refuse to fulfill their commitments," the official IRNA news agency quoted Brigadier General Mohammad Hassan Mansourian as saying. "And because this is an official agreement it can be pursued through international legal bodies," said Mansourian, who is deputy head of Iran's air defenses. U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton praised Russia last month for not providing the S-300 to Iran. Like Israel, Washington has not ruled out military action if diplomacy fails to resolve the row over Iran's nuclear program. The West suspects Iran is seeking to build nuclear bombs. Tehran says it only seeks to generate electricity. The truck-mounted S-300PMU1, known in the West as the SA-20, can shoot down cruise missiles and aircraft. It can fire at targets up to 150 km (90 miles) away.


Only a few days after a religious extremist shot 13 people on an American Army base, another extremist shot and killed a priest at his church in Moscow. This was not the first priest who has been killed in Russia in recent years. In fact, in the last two decades, at least 26 Russian clergy have been killed and many others wounded in failed murder attempts. Of course, not all of these murders were motivated by religious beliefs; some were committed by criminals who did not believe in much of anything at all. Yet, many murderers claimed to have been acting in the name of Satan, Krishna, or Allah. The latest victim in a string of murders motivated by religion appears to have become Priest Daniil Sysoev, the rector of the Apostle Thomas church in Moscow. Father Daniil was known for saving human souls from the grips of various sects and destructive ideologies. He tirelessly worked to expose the lies by which totalitarian sects lure ignorant people into their assemblies, and led theological polemics with various other religions, including Islam. It appears that a theological arsenal was not enough for some of Father Daniil’s opponents, and they decided to resort to firearms. The investigation into the murder of Father Daniil has not been completed yet, but it is becoming increasingly clear to many that he was killed for his faith in Christ, his defense of the Church, and his preaching of the truth. And if we are to learn a lesson from Father Daniil’s death, it must be that not all religions are created equal. Enough self-deception and false tolerance! May those who continue to repeat that all faiths believe in the same God be ashamed and may their mouths be silenced before the casket of a 35-year-old priest who was killed by someone who believed in a very different god from that preached by Father Daniil. Here in the West and increasingly in Russia, we are told not to question beliefs, to tolerate difference, and to respect any kind of nonsense or crazy idea that anyone chooses to proclaim as their “theology.” I believe it is time people began to use their God-given brains to take a closer look at their faith, to carefully examine its history and foundations, to question its principles and learn from where those principles came, and to familiarize themselves with the lives and teaching of the founders and leaders of their religious bodies and assemblies. It is also time for us to examine our Orthodox faith—the faith for which Father Daniil gave his life. We believe that human life is sacred because it is a gift from God, and those who murder people in the name of their god, do not believe in the same God as we. We believe that Jesus Christ is Lord, true God of true God, and those who reject His divinity do not believe in the same God as we. We believe that Christ came to save all who will accept His Gospel, regardless of color, gender, or nationality; and those who believe that one nation is better than another, or that one language—be it Arabic, Hebrew, Latin, or Slavonic—is more pleasing to God than another, do not believe in the same God as we. We believe that Jesus Christ established His Church—the ark of our salvation—through His Apostles, and that this Church has persevered and has not been overcome by the gates of hell from the days of Christ’s earthly ministry even until this day. We believe that the Holy Spirit of God guides the Church in the teachings and lives of the saints, and gives it life in the Holy Eucharist—the Sacrament of the Body and Blood of our Saviour. We believe that salvation is in this Body, and those who do not believe this, do not believe in the same God as we. Let us not fool ourselves: there are many demons and many idols, and not everyone who worships something that is spiritual in nature necessarily worships the one and only true God. “Not everyone who says…, ‘Lord, Lord,’ shall enter the kingdom of heaven, but he who does the will of [the] Father who is in heaven” (Matt. 7:21). Let us be vigilant and discerning in spiritual matters—our salvation depends on this. Let us “not be led away by diverse and strange teachings” (Heb. 13:9), and let us warn others of their danger. And let us remember in our prayers those who lost their lives for their belief in the true God at the hands of those who worship a very different “deity.” Please remember in your holy prayers the murdered, newly-reposed Priest Daniil; may God give him a peaceful repose and strengthen other pastors who will continue the work in His vineyard. Remember also Father Daniil’s wife and his orphaned children, and pray for the all-merciful Saviour to give them comfort and strength as they deal with this terrible loss.

Monday, November 23, 2009

Michael's 7 Things - 23 November



Asked at a news conference in Yalta about Saakashvili's visit to Kiev last week, the Russian leader, who is known for his sharp tongue, said that the Georgian leader and Ukraine's fiercely pro-Western president, Vikor Yuschenko, should meet wearing open-necked shirts. "The two presidents would be better off holding a dinner - if they are to hold it - without ties. Ties are pricey these days....Well, you understand what I mean," he said, eliciting laughter from officials and journalists. Putin was alluding to widely circulated video footage of Saakashvili with the tip of his tie ino his mouth, chewing on it as he waited to be interviewed last year. Putin, who was in Yalta for talks with the Ukranian prime minister, Yulia Tymoshenko, said that Yuschenko and Saakashvili would have much to talk about. Putin and Tymoshenko, who is a political rival of Yuschenko, were using their talks as an opportunity to demonstrate their strong relationship in the run-up to the presidential elections in January in which both Tymoshenko and Yushcenko will run. Neith Putin nor Tymoshenko made any mention of the Ukranian election on January 17, but the Russian prime minister said he felt comfortable working with his Ukrainian counterpart. "It's comfortable for us to work with the Tymoshenko government," he said. "During the time of our cooperation relations between Russia have become more stable and strenghthened." Tymoshenko agreed, saying that Russia and Ukraine have begun to build ties for years to come. "That is what our peoples want I believe: calm, worthy, pragmatic and equal cooperation....That is true freedom and true partnership." In August Putin's protege, President Dmitry Medvedev, disavowed doing business with Yuschenko, accusing him of pursuing "anti-Russian" policies.


Serbia has opened its biggest military base in a tense area near the boundary with Kosovo, amid protest by local ethnic Albanian leaders. Officials say the base will help secure peace and stability in the region which was the scene of an ethnic Albanian rebellion in 2000-2001. Some 1,000 troops will be based there. President Boris Tadic said during the opening ceremony Monday that the facility also will help boost the fight against rampant organized crime. Local ethnic Albanian leaders say stepping up military presence in the ethnically-mixed south of Serbia amounts to "militarization" and "occupation." The area has been tense since the 1998-99 war in Kosovo when a NATO bombing forced Serbia to pull out of the province. Kosovo declared independence last year.


Media reports citing unidentified senior sources in Brussels are claiming that the European Commission is to urge Athens and Skopje to come up with a solution to the dispute about the use of the name Macedonia by December 7 2009 – failing which Macedonia may find its hopes for an early start to EU membership talks receding. "The opening of negotiations with the Republic of Macedonia would substantively encourage the other countries in the region to further pursue pre-accession reforms and it will furthermore confirm the credibility of the EU’s enlargement policy," Milososki said in the letter. Media reports in Skopje said that on December 2, European Commission President Jose Barroso would tell Greek prime minister George Papandreou and Macedonian prime minister Nikola Gruevski that they should make progress on solving the name dispute – and do so by December 7. On November 19, Macedonian daily Vecer said that Swedish foreign minister Carl Bildt, whose country currently holds the rotating presidency of the EU, had called on Macedonia and Greece to start direct talks to solve the name dispute, Bulgarian news agency Focus reported. Until now, the dispute, which has endured since 1991, has been the subject of attempts by the United Nations through its mediator Matthew Nimetz to broker a deal. Meanwhile, media reports about statements by other figures have drawn reaction. A report that Nato Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen had called for direct talks led to a statement from the alliance’s headquarters saying that the name issue was "absurd" but clearing it away remained a precondition for Macedonia to join the alliance. In 2008, Greece blocked the issuing of an invitation to Macedonia to join Nato, a move that has led Skopje to take court action against Athens, alleging a breach of a bilateral treaty. In Belgrade, there was fallout on November 19 after Serbian foreign minister Vuk Jeremic told a news conference after meeting the Greek alternate foreign minister that Belgrade supported Athens in the name dispute. Macedonian president Gjorge Ivanov, who was in Belgrade for the funeral of the Serbian Orthodox Church’s late Patriarch Pavle, withdrew from an official reception in protest against Jeremic’s statement, which had left him "deeply disappointed", Ivanov’s office said. In the hours afterward, Serbian president Boris Tadic, who hosted the reception, issued a statement jointly with Ivanov that said Serbia recognises Macedonia under that country’s constitutional name and this position was not going to change.


When he entered office, US President Barack Obama promised to inject US foreign policy with a new tone of respect and diplomacy. His recent trip to Asia, however, showed that it's not working. A shift to Bush-style bluntness may be coming. Barack Obama looked tired on Thursday, as he stood in the Blue House in Seoul, the official residence of the South Korean president. He also seemed irritable and even slightly forlorn. The CNN cameras had already been set up. But then Obama decided not to play along, and not to answer the question he had already been asked several times on his trip: what did he plan to take home with him? Instead, he simply said "thank you, guys," and disappeared. David Axelrod, senior advisor to the president, fielded the journalists' questions in the hallway of the Blue House instead, telling them that the public's expectations had been "too high." The mood in Obama's foreign policy team is tense following an extended Asia trip that produced no palpable results. The "first Pacific president," as Obama called himself, came as a friend and returned as a stranger. The Asians smiled but made no concessions. Upon taking office, Obama said that he wanted to listen to the world, promising respect instead of arrogance. But Obama's currency isn't as strong as he had believed. Everyone wants respect, but hardly anyone is willing to pay for it. Interests, not emotions, dominate the world of realpolitik. The Asia trip revealed the limits of Washington's new foreign policy: Although Obama did not lose face in China and Japan, he did appear to have lost some of his initial stature. The White House did not even stand up for itself when it came to the question of human rights in China. The president, who had said only a few days earlier that freedom of expression is a universal right, was coerced into attending a joint press conference with Chinese President Hu Jintao, at which questions were forbidden. Former US President George W. Bush had always managed to avoid such press conferences.


Since Attorney General Eric Holder announced the alleged masterminds of the 9/11 attacks would be tried in New York, there’s been much speculation about whether they’ll plead guilty, as some have suggested they would before military commissions, or insist on a trial and put on a defense. Scott Fenstermaker, a lawyer defending one of the men, told The Associated Press that they won’t deny their role, but will use the opportunity to “explain what happened and why they did it,” and they will provide “their assessment of foreign policy.” Fenstermaker reportedly met with his client, Ammar al Baluchi, a nephew of Khalid Sheikh Mohammed (KSM), at the Guantanamo Bay prison last week. Baluchi told him the men had discussed the trial among themselves. Critics of the trial have complained, among other things, that KSM — who has boasted that he was the lead planner behind the 9/11 attacks, as well as many others — will use the opportunity to grandstand and spread terrorist propaganda. The alternative, however, would be to not allow them to speak at their own trial, which would hardly showcase the American principles of open government and fair trials that the attorney general presumably wants to highlight. Justice Department spokesman Dean Boyd told the AP on Sunday that he’s not worried that the men will dominate the trial or be able to use it as a vehicle to win new recruits. “We have full confidence in the ability of the courts and in particular the federal judge who may preside over the trial to ensure that the proceeding is conducted appropriately and with minimal disruption, as federal courts have done in the past,” he said. The Southern District of New York, where the Justice Department wants to hold the trial, is the most experienced of all U.S. federal courts in handling major international terrorism cases.


Patriarch of Moscow and All Russia, Cyril, made a statement considering the death of a priest Daniel Sysoev: I deeply grieve the tragic death of the murdered Priest Daniel Sysoev. Today, at the Divine Liturgy, I have prayed for his repose. I will continue to share, with his family and bereaved congregation, a prayer that the Lord would take his faithful servant to the celestial abode. My condolences to the mother and the children of Father Daniel, his parent - Priest Alexy, all family, friends, spiritual children and the flock of priest Daniel. Father Daniel was a zealous pastor, working much in the field of education and giving himself to the service of God and people. Many Orthodox Christians flowed to him with love, seeking spiritual guidance, inspiration of faith, and instructions for the right path. Any lawless deprivation of human life is a terrible sin, but the murder of a priest in the Church is also a challenge to God's law, desecrating the shrines given to us by the Lord himself. And this sin will not remain without God’s vengeance. I hope that human justice will prevail. However, while the names of the perpetrators are still unknown, I ask everyone to refrain from hasty accusations and harsh judgments against any persons or groups. The main thing that we all - arch pastors, pastors and faithful children of the church - must do today is to pray fervently for the repose of the soul of the murdered priest of God. Do not forget that we are called by the Lord to keep peace among ourselves, in the Church and in the society, so that atrocities like this do not sow anger and lawlessness in our hearts. In particular, I appeal today to our brothers and children in Christ. We all must keep firmly in our mind that the way to serve Christ and His Church is always сonnected with the confession of faith and even martyrdom. The tragic death of Father Daniel should not place in our hearts fear and faint-heartedness, and weaken our zeal in carrying out God’s work. We will firmly follow the path of Christ, for this is the way of victory over sin and evil, the way in which neither suffering nor death can stop us. + Cyril, PATRIARCH OF MOSCOW AND ALL RUSSIA


Cyprus' Greek Orthodox church says it has sued Turkey for allegedly preventing worship at religious sites in the breakaway Turkish Cypriot north of the divided island. Church lawyer Simos Angelides said Monday the lawsuit with the European Court of Human Rights concerns 520 churches, monasteries, chapels and cemeteries. He said the court's past rulings hold Turkey responsible for the north because it maintains 35,000 occupation troops there. Angelides said Orthodox Christian faithful cannot worship at those sites because they are either derelict or have been converted to mosques, army barracks, stables or nightclubs. He said Turkey committed "ethnic and religious cleansing" on Cyprus in 1974 when it invaded after a coup by supporters of union with Greece.

Friday, November 20, 2009

Michael's 7 Things - Friday November 20



The Rev. Jesse Jackson on Wednesday night criticized Rep. Artur Davis (D-Ala.) for voting against the Democrats’ signature healthcare bill. “We even have blacks voting against the healthcare bill from Alabama,” Jackson said at a reception Wednesday night. “You can’t vote against healthcare and call yourself a black man.” The remark stirred a murmur at the reception, held by the Congressional Black Caucus (CBC) Foundation as part of a series of events revolving around the 25th anniversary of Jackson’s run for president. Several CBC members were in attendance, including Chairwoman Barbara Lee (D-Calif.), who’d introduced Jackson. Davis, who is running for governor, is the only black member of Congress from Alabama. He is also the only member of the CBC to have voted against the healthcare bill earlier this month. Davis referred to Jackson’s 1988 run for president in a statement, issued through his office, that said he would not engage Jackson on his criticism. “One of the reasons that I like and admire Rev. Jesse Jackson is that 21 years ago he inspired the idea that a black politician would not be judged simply as a black leader,” Davis’s statement said. “The best way to honor Rev. Jackson’s legacy is to decline to engage in an argument with him that begins and ends with race.” Rep. Maxine Waters (D-Calif.) called the remarks "vintage Jesse Jackson," but said Davis's vote against healthcare was consistent with a voting record more conservative than many CBC members. "Artur Davis has a more conservative constituency," Waters said. Rep. Sheila Jackson-Lee (D-Texas) said each man was doing what he considered the right thing. "People have a right to vote their constituency, and people have a right to speak their conscience," Jackson-Lee said. "Both happened." Davis said he voted against the healthcare bill because "House leadership's approach is not the best we can do." He said he preferred a version passed by the Senate Finance Committee because it reduces subsidization of the healthcare industry, taxes high-value health plans instead of wealthy people, and is more effective in getting employers to help with health coverage.


EU leaders have agreed to appoint Belgian Prime Minister Herman Van Rompuy as EU president and Britain's Catherine Ashton as its foreign affairs chief. "This is a breakthrough," said Martin Schulz, a German legislator who heads the Socialist grouping in the European Parliament. Swedish Prime Minister Fredrik Reinfeldt, who chaired the meeting, said it took time to consult with all of his other 26 EU colleagues. "But it’s very important to show that everyone has a say, that this is the Europe of 27, that everyone was actually in on this decision, and this also showed tonight when we unanimously could support both of these candidates," Reinfeldt said. Differences over political affiliations, geographical considerations and even gender have been a severe strain on the selection process over the last several weeks. There has even been frequent bickering over what role exactly the president should play as the top representative of the European Union. Belgian Prime Minister Herman Van Rompuy, 62, has been in charge of the Belgian coalition government for less than one year. His tenure has seen a calming of the often turmoil-stricken Belgian government. During the mid-to-late ‘90s, Van Rompuy held the post of budget minister under the Christian Democrat-led government of Jean-Luc Dehaene. He was regarded as a budgetary hardliner and has been critical of governments spending their way out of recession. Prior to entering politics Van Rompuy held a position in the Belgian central bank. He is also known as having strong religious convictions and as an intellectual, and has authored six books. Catherine Ashton, 53 and formally a Baroness, has been a close ally of British Prime Minister Gordon Brown since joining the UK Labour Party. Ashton had held a number of mid-level positions in the UK government related to education, justice and human rights before being promoted to the position of EU trade commissioner a year ago. During her time in Brussels Ashton has been a central figure in trade negotiations with nations such as China and Russia.


Colombia's government says Venezuelan soldiers have blown up two small pedestrian bridges that stretch across their border. Colombia's Defense Minister says the incident is a violation of international law. [Gabriel Silva, Colombian Defense Minister]: "Today in the north of Santander, in the town of Ragonvalia, uniformed men that had arrived to the Venezuelan side in SUVs and apparently were Venezuelan army members, found two community pedestrian bridges linking the communities on both sides, civilian bridges constructed by locals, and they dynamited the bridges on the Venezuelan side affecting the normal life of the community in the area." This is the latest incident to test diplomatic ties between the two Andean neighbors. Colombia plans to allow the United States more access to its military bases as part of anti-drug and counter-insurgency cooperation against leftist guerrillas. The Venezuelan President has sent more troops to the border. Hugo Chavez told his military commanders to "prepare for war" because he says the U.S. base plan could be used to stage an invasion of his nation.


President of the Republic of Cyprus Demetris Christofias has said he looks forward to close cooperation with the EU leadership elected on Thursday evening during an informal meeting of the EU leaders. Belgian Prime Minister Herman Van Rompuy was named the EU’s first president while British Catherine Ashton was appointed High Representative of the Union for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy. Pierre de Boissieu was elected Secretary-General of the Council Secretariat. Speaking in Brussels after the meeting, President Christofias said, “I would like to express my congratulations and note that we look forward to a close and constructive cooperation.” He said that with this decision, the EU is now ready to undertake action based on the Lisbon Treaty, which will come into effect on 1st December. “We hope that with its implementation, the EU will become more effective and powerful so it can play a more active role in international relations and promote the principles and values on which it is based,” President Christofias remarked. He also said “we will work so that this course will lead to a Europe with greater cohesion and a more social face, a Europe that will be closer to its citizens, will be more democratic, fairer and will be a factor of improvement, prosperity and stability.” Concluding, the Cypriot President said “we expect that it will be able to decisively contribute in the resolution of problems and consolidation of peace and stability, with full respect and cooperation with the wider international community”.


United States Army Major Nidal Hasan told a radical cleric considered by authorities to be an al-Qaeda recruiter, "I can't wait to join you" in the afterlife, according to an American official with top secret access to 18 e-mails exchanged between Hasan and the cleric, Anwar al Awlaki, over a six month period between Dec. 2008 and June 2009. Other messages include questions, the official with access to the e-mails said, that include when is jihad appropriate, and whether it is permissible if there are innocents killed in a suicide attack. "Hasan told Awlaki he couldn't wait to join him in the discussions they would having over non-alcoholic wine in the afterlife." Major Hasan also wrote, "My strength is my financial capabilities." Federal investigators have found that Hasan donated $20,000 to $30,000 a year to overseas Islamic "charities." Two FBI task forces, in Washington and San Diego, received the intercepted messages, but deemed them innocent. On Capitol Hill today, Senators questioned how that could be. "The choice of this recipient of emails says a lot about what Hasan was looking for," said Senator Joseph Lieberman, chair of the Senate's Homeland Security committee. Lieberman's committee held a hearing on the Fort Hood shootings, and announced that it was launching an investigation. "What I'm getting at," said Lieberman, "Is he may have been looking for spiritual sanctions for what he's accused of ultimately doing." Secretary of Defense Robert Gates announced his own investigation of the incident. Gates said the Pentagon probe would try "to find possible gaps or deficiencies in Defense Department programs, processes and procedures for identifying service members who could potentially pose credible threats to others." "I promise the Department of Defense's full and open disclosure," said Gates.


A masked gunman entered a church and murdered a Russian Orthodox priest who had received death threats for converting Muslims to Christianity and criticizing Islam, prosecutors and church officials said Friday. The killing could threaten delicate relations between the powerful majority Russian Orthodox Church, which has close ties to the Kremlin, and the country's Muslim minority. The gunman approached priest Daniil Sysoyev, 34, in St Thomas Church in southern Moscow Thursday night, checked his name and then opened fire with a pistol, a spokesman for the investigating committee of the Prosecutor-General's office said. "The main theory is that religious motives are behind the crime," spokesman Anatoly Bagmet said. Sysoyev died on the way to hospital. His choirmaster was injured in the attack, Bagmet said, and is in hospital under armed guard. Sysoyev was from Tatarstan, a predominantly Muslim region of Russia on the Volga river. He was threatened after preaching to Muslims and Christians from other denominations. "I have received 10 threats via e-mail that I shall have my head cut off (if I do not stop preaching to Muslims)," Sysoyev stated on a television program in February 2008, according to Interfax. "As I see it, it is a sin not to preach to Muslims." Russia is home to Europe's largest Muslim community. The Russian Patriarch's press service refused to comment on the murder but some of Sysoyev's Orthodox colleagues referred to Muslim attacks on him prior to the killing. "Father Daniil ... has been periodically receiving e-mails which said he will be treated as 'infidel' if he did not stop polemics with Muslims," Kiril Frolov, the head of the Orthodox Experts Association, told Interfax news agency.


On Thursday, November 19, 2009, with the blessing of His Beatitude, Metropolitan JONAH of All America and Canada, His Grace, Bishop IRENEE of Quebec City and Vicar of the Archdiocese of Canada, together with the Very Reverend Archimandrite Zacchaeus, Representative of the Orthodox Church in America to the Moscow Patriarchate participated in the Divine Liturgy and Funeral Service for His Holiness, Patriarch PAVLE of Serbia, officially representing the Orthodox Church in America at the event. The day began with the celebration of the Divine Liturgy at 7:30 am, led by His All Holiness, Patriarch BARTHOLOMEW of Constantinople, New Rome and Ecumenical Patriarchate, together with His Eminence, Metropolitan AMPHILOCHIJE of Montenegro and the Coastlands and Locum Tenens of the Serbian Orthodox Church; His Beatitude, DANIEL, Archbishop of Bucharest, Metropolitan of Muntenia and Dobrudgea, Locum tenens of the throne of Caesarea of Cappadocia, Patriarch of Romania; His Beatitude, ANASTASIOS, Archbishop of Tirana, Durres, and All Albania; His Beatitude, Metropolitan CHRISTOPHER, Primate of the Church of the Czech lands and Slovakia; and with official Representatives from all 15 Autocephalous Orthodox Churches also concelebrating at Belgrade’s Archangel Michael Sobor across from the Patriarchate’s official Chancery. After the conclusion of the Patriarchal Divine Liturgy, His All Holiness, Patriarch BARTHOLOMEW together with the other Primates of Local Autocephalous Orthodox Churches, and the concelebrating Hierarchs and clergy processed to the Memorial Church of St. Sava of Serbia where the funeral service was celebrated in the open air before the church’s main entrance. In attendance at the funeral of the newly departed Patriarch PAVLE was the President of Serbia, Boris Tadic who offered words at an appropriate time, following sermons by His All Holiness, Patriarch BARTHOLOMEW and His Eminence, Metropolitan AMPHILOCHIJE on the life and legacy of the newly departed and ever memorable Serbian Patriarch. Also in attendance were other members of the Serbian Government, foreign Ambassadors and Official Representatives of numerous Sovereign Nations, inter-faith religious leaders, and over one million Serbian Orthodox faithful who came to pray for the blessed repose of their beloved and newly departed Patriarch PAVLE. His Grace, Bishop IRENEE of Quebec City and Archimandrite Zacchaeus participated in the memorial meal following the funeral which was held in the church’s parish hall and attended by the concelebrating Patriarchs, Hierarchs and Clergy. There, both the bishop and the archimandrite were able to convey condolences to the Serbian Orthodox Church, through their hierarchs, on behalf of His Beatitude, Metropolitan JONAH, the Holy Synod of Bishops, Clergy, Monastics and Faithful of the Orthodox Church in America. May Patriarch PAVLE’s memory be eternal! A photogallery from the liturgy and Funeral of Patriarch PAVLE of Serbia in Belgrade on November 19 2009, can be viewed here.

Thursday, November 19, 2009

Michael's 7 Things - 19 November



The European Union's 27 leaders were facing an all-nighter Thursday as a bruising battle loomed over naming the bloc's first full-time president and new foreign policy chief. Sweden's Prime Minister Fredrik Reinfeldt, chair of the EU summit, said despite his best efforts at mediation, the EU leaders were deadlocked ahead of Thursday night's dinner to decide who will represent the European Union to the world. Reinfeldt told reporters in Stockholm that "it might take all night" to get all the leaders to agree on two names, and added that the list of candidates he has drafted is far too long. "We are not of the same opinion," said Reinfeldt. "I need of course the collaboration of all my colleagues to get this through." The new posts must be filled before the EU's new reform treaty comes into force in less than two weeks, on Dec. 1. The two posts aim to bolster the bloc's influence amid the rise of China, Brazil and India and handle global issues like climate change, terrorism and trade. The leaders are trying to strike the right balance between big countries and small, rich and poor, east and west, socialists and conservatives, male and female. Lawmakers and protesters have already questioned why only one woman — former Latvian President Vaira Vike-Freiberga — is being considered so far. Vike-Freiberga told The Associated Press ahead of the decision Thursday that the way leaders dole out key jobs behind closed doors has to change. "In my country, people found it strange, they said how does this work? Is it true that the prime minister alone is responsible, what about the rest of us, don't we have a say?" asked Vike-Freiberga. Belgium's little-known Premier Herman Van Rompuy leads the pack of a half-dozen politicians said to be interested in the presidential post, which is being created under the new EU charter. Britain however, opposes Van Rompuy and is pushing hard for its ex-prime minister Tony Blair to get the job, saying Europe needs a high-profile EU president. Others like France and Spain, fearing Blair would overshadow them, favor a low-profile person in the top EU post, one limited to chairing summits and greeting foreign dignitaries. "The person should be a co-ordinator rather than a president," said Jerzy Buzek, speaker of the European Parliament. Smaller EU nations loathe the idea of being led by Blair, whose strong support for the Iraq war angered many Europeans. They also want a president from a country that uses the EU's common euro currency and participates in its passport-free travel zone. Britain has opted out of those EU projects. Other possibilities for president include Dutch Prime Minister Jan-Peter Balkenende, Luxembourg Premier Jean-Claude Juncker, Estonian President Toomas Ilves.


Out of 24 Russia-EU summits over 12 years, the last one may be called “successful,” many observers believe. Despite the fact that no significant decisions were taken at the meeting, the participants called the summit in Stockholm “one of the most successful during the last years,” Kommersant daily said. “We discussed the development of major economic projects, issues of energy cooperation, and developing and ensuring energy security in Europe,” Russian President Dmitry Medvedev said, adding that “a good mutual understanding” was reached. Medvedev also raised the issue of easing visa regulations for travel between Russia and the EU and stressed the need to agree on measures to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. In particular, Russia may reduce emissions to 25% below the 1990 level by 2020, the aim which European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso welcomed as “encouraging.” Nobody has expected “anything good, nor anything bad” from such summits for a long time, the daily noted. But the meeting in Stockholm “suddenly turned out to be different from previous ones,” it added. It was the last summit in the current format, the media said, adding that in the future the main contacts will be held for the most part with the EU’s president and foreign minister. The Russian president stressed that whoever is elected president or foreign minister of the European Union, they “will understand the importance of developing relations between the EU and Russia.”


Cyprus' president says a deal to reunify the ethnically split island is still not within sight despite more than a year of peace talks with the breakaway Turkish Cypriots. Dimitris Christofias, a Greek Cypriot, says "important differences" still divide the two sides. He said Thursday that Turkish Cypriot positions conflict with an envisioned federation between a Turkish Cypriot north and a Greek Cypriot south, but that he remains "cautiously optimistic" that an accord can be reached. Christofias and Turkish Cypriot leader Mehmet Ali Talat have met over 50 times, but have made little real progress.


Israeli aircraft struck a weapons-manufacturing facility and two smuggling tunnels in the southern Gaza Strip on Thursday, in response to recent rocket attacks on Israel, the military said. Palestinian security officials reported no injuries. Israel went to war against militants in Hamas-ruled Gaza last winter to quash eight years of rocket and mortar fire that terrorized southern Israel and killed 18 civilians. More than 1,400 Palestinians were killed in the war, and since it ended on Jan. 18, the attacks have decreased sharply. According to the military's count, 270 rockets and mortars have been fired at Israel since the three-week offensive ended on Jan. 18, compared with more than 3,300 in 2008. But Israel says weapons and weapons-making components still reach militants through tunnels under Gaza's border with Egypt. And sporadic fire continues, including a rocket attack Wednesday that caused no injuries. The Israeli military said in a statement that it would "respond to any attempt to disrupt the calm in Israel's southern communities."


Drinking alcohol every day cuts the risk of heart disease in men by more than a third, a major study suggests. The Spanish research involving more than 15,500 men and 26,000 women found large quantities of alcohol could be even more beneficial for men. Female drinkers did not benefit to the same extent, the study in Heart found. Experts are critical, warning heavy drinking can increase the risk of other diseases, with alcohol responsible for 1.8 million deaths globally per year. The study was conducted in Spain, a country with relatively high rates of alcohol consumption and low rates of coronary heart disease. The research involved men and women aged between 29 and 69, who were asked to document their lifetime drinking habits and followed for 10 years. The researchers, led by the Basque Public Health Department, placed the participants into six categories - from never having drunk to drinking more than 90g of alcohol each day. This would be the equivalent of consuming about eight bottles of wine a week, or 28 pints of lager. For those drinking little - less than a shot of vodka a day for instance - the risk was reduced by 35%. And for those who drank anything from three shots to more than 11 shots each day, the risk worked out an average of 50% less. The same benefits were not seen in women, who suffer fewer heart problems than men to start with. Researchers speculated this difference could be down to the fact that women process alcohol differently, and that female hormones protect against the disease in younger age groups. The type of alcohol drunk did not seem to make a difference, but protection was greater for those drinking moderate to high amounts of varied drinks. The exact mechanisms are as yet unclear, but it is known that alcohol helps to raise high-density lipoproteins, sometimes known as good cholesterol, which helps stop so-called bad cholesterol from building up in the arteries.


Several local administrations and organizations financed by the Serbian government have organized the arrival of Serbs from Kosovo to Patriarch Pavle’s funeral. A large number of Kosovo Serbs was set to leave last night from Gračanica and the enclave's surrounding villages. Free transportation for Serbs from Gračanica and other areas in central Kosovo to Belgrade was provided the Priština City Assembly now located in Gračanica. Several hundred people signed up for the trip. An organized trip to Belgrade was also provided by the Priština City Transportation Company with the headquarters in Gračanica, the Gračanica Health Center and some privately owned transportation companies. Monks and priests of the Raška-Prizren Eparchy led by Bishop Artemije also traveled to the funeral. Numerous citizens from central Kosovo traveled on their own to Belgrade in order to pay their respects. A large number of citizens have been lighting candles in Gračanica Monastery and in other Serb churches in Kosovo. Patriarch Pavle spent 34 years in Kosovo as a bishop and arch-shepherd of the Serb Orthodox population in the province.


Half a million people from Serbia and neighbouring countries attended the funeral on Thursday of Serbian Orthodox Patriarch Pavle. Bishops and top clergy in ornate white robes led the funeral procession. Serbian army guard in ceremonial blue uniforms flanked the hearse carrying Pavle's body in an open casket, covered by a gold-embroidered green cloth. Some schools and offices were closed in both Serbia and in neighbouring Bosnia's Serb Republic. Most of Serbia's seven million people are of Orthodox heritage, and the church, which casts an important influence over Serbian society and tradition, has large dioceses abroad. Born in 1914 into the Austro-Hungarian empire in what is today Croatia, Pavle lived through the end of that empire and the creation and eventual collapse of Yugoslavia. The fate of Kosovo, where 90 percent of the population is ethnic Albanian, was at the top of Pavle's agenda. Serbian President Boris Tadic, the Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew, top clergy and dignitaries from Russia, Czech Republic, Albania and other countries including Pope Benedict's envoy, Cardinal Angelo Sodano, attended the ceremony. On November 15, 2009, at 10.45 at the Military Medical Academy in Belgrade, after receiving the Sacrament, Archbishop of Pec, Metropolitan of Belgrade and Karlovac , Patriarch Pavle of Serbia reposed in the Lord. To view photos and video of today's services, click here and to view additional photos, click here.

Wednesday, November 18, 2009

Michael's 7 Things - 18 November



More than $98 billion in taxpayer dollars spent by government agencies was wasted, much of it on questionable claims for tax credits and Medicare benefits, representing an increase of $26 billion from the previous year. In all, about 5 percent of spending in federal programs in fiscal year 2009 was improper, according to new details of a government financial report that were released Tuesday. Saying the overall error rate was similar in 2008, officials attributed the $26 billion jump to some changes in how to define improper spending as well as an increase in overall spending due to the recession. President Barack Obama is expected to sign an executive order within the next week aimed at cracking down on government waste and fraud, particularly in Medicare and other benefit programs. In the 2009 report, the government officially reported questionable Medicare payments of roughly $36 billion, but that amount will be revised upward to about $48 billion next year as the Health and Human Services Department fully converts to a new methodology that imposes stricter documentation requirements. Under the executive order, every federal agency would have to maintain a Web site that tracks improper payments, error rates and outstanding payments. If an agency doesn't meet targets for reducing error rates for two years in a row, the agency director and responsible official will have to directly report to OMB to explain the delinquency and new actions they will take. Among the reported waste: Agriculture: $4.3 billion in improper payments, or 5.9 percent of total department spending. Defense: $849 million, or 0.5 percent. Education: $599 million, or 2.1 percent. Health and Human Services: $55.1 billion, or 9.4 percent. Homeland Security: $644.5 million, or 3.7 percent.Housing and Urban Development: $1 billion, or 3.5 percent. Labor: $12.3 billion, or 9.9 percent. Treasury: $12.3 billion, or 25.5 percent. Transportation: $1.5 billion, or 3 percent. Veterans Affairs: $1.2 billion, or 2.7 percent. Social Security Administration: $8.0 billion, or 1.2 percent.


Mounting evidence that independent voters have soured on the Democrats is prompting a debate among party officials about what rhetorical and substantive changes are needed to halt the damage. Following serious setbacks with independents in off-year elections earlier this month, White House officials attributed the defeats to local factors and said President Barack Obama sees no need to reposition his own image or the Democratic message. Since then, however, a flurry of new polls makes clear that Democrats are facing deeper problems with independents. A Gallup Poll released last week offered a disturbing glimpse about the state of play: just 14 percent of independents approve of the job Congress is doing, the lowest figure all year. In just the past few days alone, surveys have shown Democratic incumbents trailing Republicans among independent voters by double-digit margins in competitive statewide contests in places as varied as Connecticut, Ohio and Iowa. Obama’s own popularity among independents has fallen significantly, too. A CBS News poll Tuesday showed the president’s approval rating among unaligned voters falling to 45 percent — down from 63 percent in April. Andrew Myers, who polled for Democrats in Virginia House of Delegates races this year, said his analysis of exit polls indicated that voters had come to see Democrats as a party of high spending — too willing to make a rush for the pocketbooks and unable to effectively articulate how their health care reform push benefited independents, many of whom already have insurance plans. Nowhere was that more obvious than in Virginia and New Jersey, where GOP candidates captured governorships on Nov. 3 on the strength of landslide margins among independent voters. In Virginia, Republican Bob McDonnell won a 65 percent to 34 percent victory over Democrat Creigh Deeds among independents in a state where President Barack Obama split the independent vote 49 percent to 48 percent against Republican John McCain just one year earlier. In New Jersey, Republican Chris Christie won a 58 percent to 31 percent victory over Democratic incumbent Jon Corzine among independents — a stark contrast to Obama’s 51 percent to 47 percent win among independents in 2008. “The perception of what’s happening in Congress is polluting what’s happening down below,” Myers said. Michael Dimock, a pollster for the Pew Research Center — which reported in a new survey that only 45 percent of independents want their own representative to return to Congress — also believes Democrats have suffered for their inability to move the ball on key agenda items such as health care.


European Union leaders are due to discuss key issues such as trade and energy with their Russian counterparts at a summit in Stockholm. Moscow and Brussels are still rebuilding relations after falling out over last year's Georgia-Russia war. The EU will also seek assurances there will be no repeat of last winter's disruption of gas exports to the West. And Brussels wants to know if Russia is still interested in joining the World Trade Organization. The EU, which represents 500 million people, is Moscow's biggest trading partner and depends heavily on Russian gas. Moscow, meanwhile, is seeking more foreign investment. Wednesday's talks are taking place in Stockholm because Sweden holds the EU's rotating six-month presidency.
On Monday, Moscow and Brussels agreed to notify each other in advance of any problems affecting energy supplies, and to work together to fix them. A quarter of the gas consumed in the EU comes from Russia, most of it transported via Ukraine, which has often had fuel disputes with Moscow. In January, Russia cut off gas supplies to more than a dozen European countries for two weeks, amid a row with Kiev. Earlier this week, Finnish Foreign Minister Alexander Stubb said the EU needed to work closely with Russia. "There is a level of mutual dependence - we depend on them for energy supplies and we are energy consumers for them," he said. Other issues expected on the summit agenda include global warming, security and Iran's nuclear programme.


One could argue that this is not a rhetorical question, but to be bluntly frank the establishment in London is naïve as well as biased and our people in Nicosia are simply incapable of doing anything about it. It’s just that in this world of giants and small players, we are expected to behave properly while the U.K. government is not. The British High Commissioner’s decision to attend the inauguration in the north of a memorial to the Colonial troops who died during the EOKA struggle was a faux pas of gross dimensions that was played down by the Cyprus government for reasons beyond logic. Surely, President Christofias and his Foreign Minister should have seen this coming, considering that the noisy British expats who live on stolen refugee property in the north far differ in their colonial attitudes from the expats who have chosen to live or retire in the Republic. Would it not have been better for the High Commissioner to ask the Foreign Office in London to politely ask Ankara to gently remove its guard post from the hilltop above Wayne’s Keep near the old Nicosia airport? That is, after all, where there is a memorial to all the fallen, including those who lost their lives defending the Empire in 1955-59. It just happens to be within the UN-patrolled neutral zone and nobody has access to it, ironically, not even the British, simply because Turkey refuses to withdraw its troops from there. It is unfortunate that those in government in London continue to ignore the opinion of the vast majority of Britons who want to see a fair solution to the Cyprus problem, where all European citizens will be able to live and move freely. They remain blinded by their military and economic obligations to Turkey and are misguided by the advice of some biased analysts. Which brings us to the second misguided event of the week and the Nicosia government’s inability to respond. In an otherwise well-written column by Max Watson that appeared in the Financial Times Cyprus Report on Monday, the Chatham House analyst said, naïvely, that “Economy is key that will unlock barriers.” He seems to have reached a foregone conclusion that Christofias is to blame for the stalemate (and subsequent delay of Turkey’s EU accession) and the solution lies in a unified economy for Cyprus. Despite having advised the UN team during the run-up to the Annan Plan in all its variants, Watson insists that Turkish Cypriots will be overrun in a prospective solution and seems to have forgotten that the main issue of discontent is that of return and compensation of occupied properties, without which one cannot even discuss issues related to a federal economy. How naïve, and how stupid of us to let these comments get away.


Serge Brammertz is not satisfied with the investigations regarding Croatia's 1995 military onslaught against the country's Serb areas, reports say. Zagreb daily Jutarnji List wrote on Tuesday that the chief Hague prosecutor was unhappy about the probes into the whereabouts of the Operation Storm artillery logs. The daily stated that according to the diplomatic sources Brammertz had already sent his written report to the UN Security Council and that he would also address this UN body on December 3. The report spells "more bad news for Croatia’s efforts and efforts of some countries members of the EU to unblock the judiciary system chapter [in negotiations with EU] as soon as possible, blocked by the Hague Tribunal prosecutor’s position, now more unfavorable than before", said the newspaper. Jutarnji List added that its EU sources had seen the contents of Brammertz’s report and pointed out that the Office of the Chief Prosecutor considered that the results of the working group formed by the Croatian government were limited, and that none of the requested artillery logs had been found.
The Hague Prosecutor’s Office pointed out that they expect the Croatian authorities to continue the investigations so the documents could be found ,and handed over before the trial of Ante Gotovina is finished. This former general is being tried at the Hague Tribunal for Operation Storm war crimes along with two others: Ivan Čermak and Mladen Markač. The logs concern the Croatian military's attacks against Serb civilian areas. The Hague believes that the documents offer key proof of the excessive shelling of Knin during the offensive that was led by Gotovina. The Croatian authorities, however, claim that the logs either do not exist, or were lost.


The high church officials that shall attend the funeral service are Bartolomew, the Patriarch of Constantinople, Anastasi, the Patriarch of the Albanian Orthodox Church and Christian, the Archbishop of the Czech Republic and Slovakia. The Russian delegation shall be led by Filaret, the Metropolitan of Minsk and Slutsk. The Russian Patriarch Cyril shall not come due to illness. The Pope Benedict XVI has appointed Cardinal Angelo Sodano, Dean of the Cardinal Collegium as his representative at the funeral of the Patriarch Pavle. High state delegations of Greece and the Republic of Srpska are expected to come as well as the President of Macedonia Djordje Ivanov. Since the Monastery in Rakovica cannot host all of the people that shall attend the ceremony, Bishop Irinej yesterday expressed regret over that fact and asked the people to part from the Patriarch at the St. Sava Dome. He also asked them not to buy flowers and wreaths but instead to give money for completion of the Dome since that was the Patriarch’s wish. After the funeral service at the St. Sava Dome, Metropolitan Amfilohije, Concierge of the Throne of the Serbian Patriarch shall deliver a speech. The Patriarch of Constantinople Bartolomew and Serbia President Boris Tadic shall also deliver a speech.


Nativity Fast starts as of today [November 15] and runs for 40 days. The main spiritual significance of the fast is passion purification. Fasting is to purify the main function of human life. The fast is observed from November 15 to December 24, inclusively. In the Eastern Orthodox Church, the fast traditionally entails fasting from red meat, poultry, meat products, eggs, dairy products, fish, oil, and wine. Fish, wine and oil are allowed on Saturdays and Sundays, and oil and wine are allowed on Tuesdays and Thursdays. The fasting rules permit fish, and wine and oil on certain feast days that occur during the course of the fast such as the St. Nicholas Day (December 6). The Nativity Fast is not as severe as Great Lent or the Dormition Fast. Sea foods like clams, shrimp and other seafood are also allowed.