Fight4TheTruth

Wednesday, June 9, 2010

Marie Stopes opening abortion clinics in China



Marie Stopes International already has five clinics open in China.


Abortion provider Marie Stopes International (MSI) is facing criticism for using UK taxpayers’ money to fund the opening of abortion clinics in China.

Last month MSI was behind the UK’s first television abortion advert and was widely cricitised for attempting to normalise terminations.

The organisation carries out 65,000 abortions a year in Britain, most of them through NHS contracts for which it receives £30m a year, according to media reports.
Grotesque

Money left over from the NHS cash is used in the group’s international division.

Labour MP Kate Hoey said: “I don’t see why British taxpayers’ money via the NHS should in any way be supporting Chinese government policies.

MPs criticise Marie Stopes over abortion commercial




A group of MPs has criticised the nation’s first ever abortion advert which aired on national television last month.

The 30-second commercial by abortion provider Marie Stopes International (MSI) outraged pro-lifers who warned that the ad “trivialises human life”.

But now a group of MPs has called on the Government to find out if any women have ever chosen to have their babies after being counselled by MSI, and how many of their patients are now suffering from post-abortion trauma.

Women aborting babies conceived through IVF












The figures show some women are undergoing IVF and then aborting the child.

Dozens of women are aborting their children after having IVF to conceive them, statistics show.

One obstetrics Professor expressed shock at the news, saying each abortion was a “tragedy”.

The figures, released after a Freedom of Information request, come from the Human Fertilisation and Embryology Authority (HFEA) and show around 80 abortions a year are carried out on women who conceived by IVF.

Dozens of women are aborting their children after having IVF to conceive them, statistics show.
One obstetrics Professor expressed shock at the news, saying each abortion was a “tragedy”.
The figures, released after a Freedom of Information request, come from the Human Fertilisation and Embryology Authority (HFEA) and show around 80 abortions a year are carried out on women who conceived by IVF.

Church of England to allow divorcees to be bishops











Dr Rowan Williams is in favour of allowing divorcees to become bishops.

The Church of England is planning to allow divorced clergy to become bishops for the first time, but critics have branded the move as “utterly unacceptable”.

The Church of England currently has a ban on divorced clergy, and those married to divorcees, becoming bishops.

But a report in The Sunday Telegraph has revealed the Church’s change of stance following last month’s meeting of the House of Bishops.


Inmates are converting to Islam for the perks and protection from gangs.-Better food in Ramadan and more time outside cells for Friday Prayers.






















Inmates convert to Islam for perks and protection.

Prisoners are converting to Islam to gain better food and the protection of fellow Muslims, according to an official report released today.

The document, entitled Muslim Prisoners’ Experiences: A thematic review, follows a poll earlier this week which indicated that many Britons are suspicious of Islam.

Muslim Prisoners’ Experiences, which is written by Dame Ann Owers the Chief Inspector of Prisons, reveals that 30 per cent of the nation’s 10,300 Muslim inmates have taken up the faith whilst in prison.
Protection

Flight etiquette for Evangelicals


Jonathan Mayne internationally acclaimed canoe and rowing commentator tells a story of sitting next to someone in his interview on the Australian Missionary News IPTV

The Sydney Morning Herald recently ran a travel story on the ‘dos’ and ‘don'ts’ of airline travel. Etiquette expert Anna Post wrote a set of rules one should follow to ensure a pleasant flight for yourself and your fellow passengers.

In her article, she asks such questions as, who owns the middle seat arm rests on an airplane, really? How do you break away from the marathon talker in seat 12E? And what do you do, if anything, about the angelic-looking child kicking the back of your seat?

returns to pulpit, preaches to 160 people - Nearly four years after being fired from his previous church, Ted Haggard returned to the pulpit on Sunday as a "changed" man and with a new church.


Some 160 people gathered in a barn next to Haggard's home in Colorado Springs, for the first service of St. James Church, according to The Gazette.

Haggard called it his "Easter morning" as he resurrected into a pastoral role.

Since 2006 when a former male prostitute claimed the well-known pastor had paid him for sex and had also taken methamphetamines, Haggard has been rebuilding his life with his wife, Gayle, and his family.

He told Joy Behar on CNN last week that he has experienced embarrassment, shame, and suffering as well as love, compassion and understanding.

And he has come out of it "a better man, a changed man," he said.

Mission can succeed in spite of divisions, says theologian














Professor Dana Robert addresses delegates at Edinburgh 2010, 3 June 2010


The church and the world may be more plural than ever before, but that should not hold Christians back from proclaiming the love of God revealed through Jesus Christ, says one university professor.

Professor Dana Robert, of Boston University School of Theology, told some 300 Christian leaders at the Edinburgh 2010 conference that the greater plurality of the world church today made united witness “urgent for the integrity of the gospel message”.

“We must not allow difficult theological, socio-cultural, and political issues, or disagreements over theologies of religion, to discourage us from sharing God’s love and salvation through Jesus Christ with all the world,” she said.

Australia Legalising NT brothels a green light to harm and trafficking of women


The Northern Territory Government should not be beguiled by sex industry lobbies with benign sounding names into legalising brothels in the Top End, the Australian Christian Lobby (ACL) said today.

Responding to a call from the NT Sex Workers Outreach Program for brothels to be opened, ACL Managing Director Jim Wallace said this has been a clear policy failure in other jurisdictions and that, instead, the NT Government should look at better ways of protecting women – such as the successful ‘Swedish model’ of managing prostitution.

Tuesday, June 8, 2010

Christian network planning for worldwide protest for Muslim’s right to convert

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A network of individuals, churches and organizations are planning for a worldwide protest march on August 28, 2010 in Sydney, Australia.

Set My People Free is a new network of individuals, churches and organizations working for the freedom of religious converts to live and practice their faith, to experience equality and justice in their home countries.

Set My People Free is an interdenominational, non-violent human rights movement that is seeking freedom, justice, equality and reconciliation for religious converts. And aim to advocate that all peoples especially Muslim peoples have the freedom to change faith, to live out and practice their new beliefs.

The Numbers on Porn



I came across a interesting graphic chart called “The Numbers Behind Pornography”. It was pretty eye opening. And since a lot of parents are in the dark about what’s happening in the world of porn I thought this might be helpful. I’ve provided a link to the chart (below) but here are some of the numbers:

Most Christians Cannot Explain their Faith, Says Apologist

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The faith of most Christians, even that of many pastors, will not stand up to intellectual scrutiny, according to renowned apologist Josh McDowell.

This is a concern because pastors’ inability to present biblical truth comprehensibly and relevantly has led to children from Christian families leaving the church, research has shown.

In the United States, the age at which nearly all such children leave church has decreased to 18 years.

Not even the children of many successful ministers are spared.

XXXChurch.com Releases Mobile App for Recovering Porn Addicts


XXXChurch.com has released a mobile version of a software program that helps recovering porn addicts stay accountable.

The release of the X3watch app for the iPhone, iPad and Android was announced Tuesday by the community-based website, founded by “Porn Pastor” Craig Gross.

“Unlike filters that just block specific websites all together, X3watch was intentionally designed to give users the freedom and power to show their friends, parents and spouses that they can be held accountable and make good choices,” said Gross, who founded XXXChurch.com in 2002 after noticing that pornography was a common struggle and addiction among many young people.

Opponents of Jesus Cartoon Take Protest to Advertisers- New JC cartoon from Comedy Centre.

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A coalition opposed to a potential Comedy Central cartoon about Jesus Christ is taking the fight to where the money is – advertisers.

The newly formed Citizens Against Religious Bigotry on Thursday denounced the animated series in development called “JC” about God and his son, Jesus Christ. Leaders of CARB plan to send letters to companies that have advertised on Comedy Central in the past, urging them to resist from advertising on “JC.”

“Why does Comedy Central give such deference to Islam while mocking Christianity,” asked Tony Perkins, president of Family Research Council, in a teleconference Thursday. “Is it because they confuse the civility of Christianity with weakness?”

Thousands Rally Against Ground Zero 'Mega Mosque'-Near New York Zero ground where 9 11 occurs.

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Thousands of protesters gathered around the corner of Liberty and Church Streets on Sunday to voice their opposition to a proposed “mega mosque” near New York City’s Ground Zero.

The protest, organized by Stop Islamization of America (SIOA), kicked off at noon and rallied support behind efforts to stop construction of the Cordoba House – a 15-story facility that project leaders claim will promote tolerance and serve as a platform for people of all backgrounds to come together.

Demoted Employee for NASA Mission Fights Discrimination

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David Coppedge, who was demoted from the "team lead" position on Jet Propulsion Laboratory's Cassini mission to Saturn, filed suit against JPL. He was demoted for discussing his beliefs on intelligent design with co-workers.

Since his demotion last year, David Coppedge, who had served as a "team lead" technical specialist on Jet Propulsion Laboratory's Cassini mission to Saturn, has been "stigmatized in such a way that career advancement opportunities have been foreclosed to him," the complaint reads.

Saturday, June 5, 2010

John Piper on Getting the Gospel Right

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Pastor John Piper speaks at the "Back to the Cross" conference in the Dominican Republic, June 4, 2010

"Infinitely important!" said Pastor John Piper as he addressed thousands of people Friday in the Dominican Republic.

The Minneapolis, Minn., pastor was the featured guest speaker at a conference called "Back to the Cross." Organized by Wisdom & Integrity Ministries, the June 3-5 event was aimed at recovering and reinforcing the true essence of the Christian faith among believers throughout Latin America.

"We have to get this right if we're going to be the means of anyone's salvation, including our own," Piper underscored, as his address was translated into Spanish for the listeners.

"We need to be saved because we are all sinners," he said. "There isn't any other way to be saved from hell into everlasting joy than ... [by] hearing and believing the Gospel."

Piper, who is known for his expository preaching, outlined six aspects of the Gospel for the attendees at the free conference. If one is missing, there is no Gospel, he stressed.

Ted Haggard plants new church in Colorado Springs, welcome sinners-“Everybody is welcome: Democrats, Republican, Independents, gays, straights, tall, short, addicts and recovering addicts,” he said.

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Ted Haggard, second from right, the former megachurch pastor who fell from grace amid a sex scandal, his wife Gayle, right, and their children leave their house for a news conference in their yard in..


With his wife, Gayle, and three of his sons by his side, Haggard told reporters that the St. James Church that he incorporated three weeks ago will soon be an active church.

Initially, Haggard said he incorporated St. James for accounting purposes to organize payments he and his wife receive from talks at churches. He explained that they pay for their own traveling expenses and St. James would help organize reimbursements.

But about two weeks ago Haggard decided to turn St. James into a real church.

Christian Leaders Admit Church Unity Still Long Way Off

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Ecumenical, evangelical and Roman Catholic leaders have conceded that there are still many obstacles to unity in the body of Christ but stress they remain committed to the journey.

Dr. Olav Fykse Tveit, general secretary of the World Council of Churches, Dr. Geoff Tunnicliffe, international director of the World Evangelical Alliance, and the Most Rev. Brian Farrell, secretary of the Pontifical Council for Promoting Christian Unity, were speaking to journalists on Saturday at Edinburgh 2010, a major conference taking place this week to mark 100 years since the World Missionary Conference was held in the Scottish capital in 1910.

Bishop Farrell was the least optimistic about efforts towards unity.

Gulf Coast Churches Seek God to Stop Oil Flow

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With a third of federal waters in the Gulf of Mexico now closed to fishing and leaked oil continuing to spread, local churches are banding together Sunday for a day of prayer.

They're calling it the Oil Spill Day of Prayer and participants include The Wesleyan Church, the Church of Nazarene and Southern Baptists.

"The current oil spill is not only causing harm to the coast, marsh lands, the gulf and the future of oil exploration but to the economic future of many [states]," said Dr. Dan Berry, the South Coastal district superintendent of The Wesleyan Church. "This is a case of denominations coming together, saying we are desperate."

Some 23 million to 47 million gallons of oil have spilled into the Gulf since the Deepwater Horizon drilling rig exploded April 20 and sank. It is the worst oil leak in U.S. history.

Opposition against Comedy Central JC cartoon take fight to advertisers

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According to Comedy Central, the series under development would depict God as “an apathetic man who would rather play video games than listen to his son talk about his new life [in New York City].”

The newly formed Citizens Against Religious Bigotry on Thursday denounced the animated series in development called “JC” about God and his son, Jesus Christ. Leaders of CARB plan to send letters to companies that have advertised on Comedy Central in the past, urging them to resist from advertising on “JC.”

“Why does Comedy Central give such deference to Islam while mocking Christianity,” asked Tony Perkins, president of Family Research Council, in a teleconference Thursday. “Is it because they confuse the civility of Christianity with weakness?”

Netanyahu:Today we saw the differences betwn a ftotilla of peace activities-with whom we disagree but whose right to a different opinion we respect - and a flotilla of hate organized by violent ,terrorism-supporting extremists-Isreal Navy takeover Rachel Corrie without accident.

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"Today we saw the difference between a flotilla of peace activists - with whom we disagree, but whose right to a different opinion we respect - and a flotilla of hate organized by violent, terrorism-supporting extremists," Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said on Saturday following the takeover.

The operation was personally overseen by Israel Navy Commander Eliezer Marom and the commander of the Shayetet 13, Col. A, who traveled in a boat alongside the Rachel Corrie. The IDF jammed all signals coming from the ship and its passengers.

The Israel Navy first contacted the Rachel Corrie on Friday, trying to convince its passengers not to sail on to the Gaza Strip. Speaking to the activists through the Irish government, Israel attempted to persuade them to dock in Ashdod, where their cargo would be inspected and then they would accompany it to the ground border crossings to the Gaza Strip.

Before he was Reverend Kong Hee


SINGAPORE - At a Raffles Institution Class of 1980 reunion five years ago, he was on the receiving end of friendly jibes. "Never knew you could do this, man," former schoolmates kidded Reverend Kong Hee (picture), who by then had established City Harvest Church as a rapidly growing entity.

"Most of us were very happy for him, and he extended an invitation for every one of us to go to his church to listen to him. All we needed to do was call his secretary, and he would arrange the seats for us," said an ex-schoolmate who attended RI and Raffles Junior College with Rev Kong from 1977 to 1982.

Before he became the face of one of Singapore's megachurches, Rev Kong was just one of the boys in a top school. But it was not as a bookworm that buddies remembered him

According to two former schoolmates, he was easygoing, playful and enjoyed sports and life. He was in RI's swimming and water polo team, and sported chlorine-bleached hair.

"He fell into the tall, dark and chlorinated-hair category," one schoolmate quipped, a stark contrast with Rev Kong's description of himself during a 2005 media interview as having been short, fat and ugly in secondary school.

After graduating in 1988 with a degree in computer science from the National University of Singapore, the young man who planned to be a missionary in the Philippines, worked for a short stint at a local Anglican church, according to the biography on his website.

But then he started City Harvest with 20 people in 1989 and was ordained at Bethany Christian Centre two years later. It was as a Christian youth leader working with students, that Rev Kong met his future wife Ho Yeow Sun, then a student at Anglican High. They married in 1992 and now have a son, Dayan, five.

She went on to become a pop singer in the media limelight, crossing over from church music director to chart-topper in the Chinese and American markets, while her sexy outfits set tongues wagging.

In contrast to the reams written about her, little can be found in local news archives about Rev Kong, though in the Christian community he made a impact with laser shows, blog and cable television programme.

Over the years, church members came to regard him as "visionary" and "passionate". Himself a businessman - in 2005, he took himself off the City Harvest payroll when he and his wife set up Skin Couture, and later added two more boutiques - he connected with followers like Elim Chew.

The 77th Street founder recounted how, when she was at her "lowest point", drained by the challenges of expanding her streetwear company into the unfamiliar China business environment, Rev Kong was constantly in touch and encouraging her.

Though frequently overseas - whether speaking at churches overseas, or visiting his wife and son in the US - he would call bereaved members of his flock. Ms Chew, who has known him for 20 years, said he recently postponed a flight to Los Angeles so as to pray for her friend's sick grandmother.

At services, church members say, his family seems a picture of intergenerational bliss, with his parents and in-laws in attendance. "When you look at them, you feel like they're the ideal family," said Mr Kelvin Chew, 38, a cell group leader.



WORKING FOR A PERFECTIONIST

Nonetheless, Mr Chew admitted: "He's a perfectionist. Working with him is not at all easy. You have to work even harder because he's so sharp. A slight mistake and he'll be upset, and that's how he moulds most of us to be sharper."

There was the church's anniversary celebration at the Singapore Indoor Stadium a few years ago, when the sound crew could not get things right and the backup vocalists could not hit the right tone. The crew had to rehearse "again and again", with the session ending close to midnight.

But Mr Chew also insisted, it was in this same vein that Rev Kong spurred many in his congregation, like himself, to further their studies and improve themselves.

While some have criticised Rev Kong's approach to Christianity as too extravagant or aggressive, supporters argue that it is refreshing and relevant to the young. Lasers, projectors and lights are used at services, and the recent five-day Asia Conference hosted by the church included a beauty pageant.

The youths "really like him", said a church member of two years. "They really take his words to heart ... they would thank him for believing in them, enabling them to excel in their studies."

Might this adoration verge on idolatry?

"It could veer toward (being) unhealthy," said the member. "Maybe they idolise him, but in my opinion, if you idolise a good role model, I don't see anything wrong with that. I would say they respect him."

The spotlight on both the church and its founder has been intensifying in recent months - for example, when he announced in March its indirect purchase of a stake in Suntec Singapore's convention centre. Then came murmurs from netizens accusing him of plagiarising other authors' words in his daily devotionals.

Rev Kong has since explained on his blog that the devotions consist of notes recorded over the years "as well as select readings of other Christian authors who inspire me", and that the oversight in crediting these sources was because the devotions were originally meant for internal circulation.

Then came news on Monday of the investigation into individuals and companies linked to City Harvest for alleged misuse of funds. Seventeen individuals, including Rev Kong, were questioned by the Commercial Affairs Department.

According to Ms Chew, the pastor has since been uncontactable. But church members have rallied behind him, remembering how his words had spurred them on.

When Ms Nanz Chong-Komo's retail venture failed in 2003, it was Rev Kong who inspired her to write a book. "The moment he knew my One.99 shop was going to close, he asked me, 'What have you learned? Write it down! Take this as tuition lesson of a lifetime!'" she said.

Are Singapore Mega Church Or Money Making



A couple sold their condo so they could contribute to “a new home for God”, but the arrival of ultra-modern, high-tech, mega-bucks religion has also left many Singaporeans uneasy.

AS SINGAPORE was waking up one recent morning, investigators were swooping on the homes of a senior pastor and 16 others related to a charismatic church.

The commercial crime officers searched the office of the controversial City Harvest Church (CHC) and carted away a large amount of financial records and computers.

The 17, including 45-year-old Senior Pastor Kong Lee, were taken away for questioning as part of a government investigation into complaints of misuse of church funds.

It is one of the biggest investigations of a religious institution here in recent years. No one, however, has been arrested.

CHC is the latest of a series of controversies involving high-profile leaders of religious or charity bodies in Singapore.

Since 2004, three of them – a Catholic priest, a top Buddhist monk, and a national charity figure – had been convicted and jailed. This has made the Kong Lee investigation a top story here.

CHC, which has 33,000 followers, shocked the country in April when it announced that it had bought a S$310mil stake in the premier Suntec Singapore building.

The authorities said the raids had nothing to do with that, and an official of the Council of Churches said the inquiry was neither “related nor initiated due to the Suntec deal”.

The central figure of the mega-church is the evangelistic Kong Lee, a type of Christian preacher that long flourished in America but is only now appearing in predominantly Buddhist Singapore.

These preachers conduct services in ultra-modern surroundings with high-tech lights and rock music to spread their faith, and in the process have turned religion into a mega show-business.


The controversy over CHC is the latest of several in recent years involving money collected by religious and charity organisations.

Details of the raids were sparse, but unconfirmed reports said that Kong Lee was picked up in his posh Somerset condo at 6 am on Monday and questioned for 18 hours.

The office premises at Suntek were raided at 7am as soon as a staff opened the door. It was searched and a large number of documents and computers taken away.

How can a 45-year-old man raise so much money and do such a mega-deal, something that even tycoons cannot?

Has economic pressure pushed more Singaporeans towards religion for spiritual solace or is it the hypnotic environment and the sleek preaching? No one really knows for sure.

For an answer, I watched several videos of how the man worked his magic on the crowd as he appealed for building funds.

In a plush auditorium equipped with state-of-the-art audiovisual systems, he mesmerised his followers.

Amid colourful lights and loud music that resembled a pop concert rather than a religious gathering, Kong Lee appealed to housewives and families to help him build “a new home for God”.

Schoolchildren were asked to donate their Lunar New Year ang pows. In the background a giant screen flashed photographs of people putting money into a box.

The pastor took the microphone to thank recent contributors, who included a couple selling their 5-room public flat to downgrade to a 3-roomer, to offer S$20,000 to the church building.

Another was a young man who sold his favourite motorcycle and donated the entire proceedings. With each name mentioned, the audience cheered.

It led a cynic to comment: “They have turned religion into show business, like America’s TV evangelism.”

There are several other mega-churches with evangelical and fund-raising abilities, posing potential problems for this multi-religious country.


One is The New Creation Church, which plans to invest S$280mil to build a mega-complex with a lifestyle-entertainment-cultural theme.

With some 22,000 members, the church raised eyebrows when it was reported that its charismatic preacher was paid a salary of S$500,000 in the last financial year.

The investigation into CHC came seven months after a top Buddhist monk, Venerable Shi Ming Yi, was convicted of misusing donated money and sentenced to nine months’ imprisonment (reduced to six on appeal).

The 2009 trial of the English-educated, high-living Buddhist monk who owned three properties and loved luxurious cars showed how far the money culture had spread in Singapore.

In his trial, the 48-year-old monk told the Court that “we live in a modern world ... no longer like what it was in the past”.

When asked to elaborate, the monk said: “If people earn more, they will spend more. Many religious people, not just myself, are very different now.”

Other high profile prosecutions were:

> Catholic priest Father Joachim Kang was sentenced to seven-and-half years’ jail in 2004 for embezzling S$5.1mil in church funds.

> T.T. Durai, former National Kidney Foundation CEO, a public charity, was jailed for three months for falsifying invoices.

Singaporeans blame the greed on a materialistic society rather than just the priests and monks, who are also humans like us.

However, some call for a strict separation between religion and business.

One writer had a message for entrepreneurial pastors: “If you want to make money, go and become a businessman; don’t do it by pretending to offer your parishioners a service. It will destroy their trust.”

Friday, June 4, 2010

A New Holy Oil? Searching for Petroleum in Israel

NORTHERN ISRAEL -- Israel is a part of the oil-rich Middle East, but it needs to import most of its oil and gasoline.

Yet one company believes there is plenty of oil in the Holy Land and they intend to find it. A potential discovery could change the dynamics of the Middle East and Israel's future.

John Brown is the founder of Zion Oil and Gas. He started the company on what he said is a God-given, 30-year-old mission to discover oil in Israel.

"I was an alcoholic and God saved me and delivered me from alcohol," Brown said. "That was in '81. Jim Spillman came to the church that God took me to in Clausen, Mich. And Jim Spillman - that was before the book the Great Treasure Hunt was written - he explained to the congregation that there was oil in Israel and it was in the Bible. That absolutely amazed me."


Since then Brown has pursued his vision to explore for oil -- based on the Scriptures and specifically on the promises to the tribes of Israel.

"We have Biblical evidence of what God said the blessings of the deep that lies beneath and there's also a scripture in Deuteronomy chapter 33, I think it's verse 24 where He talks about Asher dipping his foot in oil," Brown added.

While some said that scripture in Deuteronomy means olive oil, not petroleum, Brown believes it can be translated both ways. But it is not only the Bible that keeps Brown drilling, it is the science.

"We like to say it's the geology confirming the theology," he said.

Zion Oil and Gas's second well is one of the deepest ever drilled in Israel. From the top of the rig to the bottom of the well, it is 18,000 feet, about three and a half miles.

They are currently testing the results of the second well while they start on a third well. Richard Rinberg, Zion Oil and Gas CEO, said they are cautiously optimistic.

"We have seen certain things and we have announced to the world that we have seen certain results that lead us to believe and we've had it independently confirmed that there are seven zones within this well that may, and I underline the word 'may,' contain hydrocarbons and the word 'hydrocarbons' is a family name for oil and gas," Rinberg said.

"There's definitely some chance in finding oil and I have not mentioned yet the chance which is there in the offshore," said Yaakov Mimran, Israel's petroleum commissioner.

One discovery in January 2009 did add some optimism. For the first time in Israel's history, Nobel Drilling, an oil company, announced they had discovered a natural gas field some 60 to 90 miles offshore of Israel. They estimated it contained enough volume to supply Israel's natural gas needs for 10 to 20 years.

"We've been very, very careful not to claim any direct geological connection," Rinberg said. "In my mind what it does show is that the joke that's been around Israel since 1948 that Moses went the wrong way and turned left instead of turning right to Saudi Arabia, frankly may be wrong."

Zion Oil and Gas holds a license to drill on more than 300,000 acres within Israel. If they discover oil they hope to both help make Israel energy independent and bless the people of Israel with their charitable foundation. For now, the company continues to dig deep and look up.

"Only the Lord can grant the success," Rinberg said. "I believe He will, that's the faith belief. And when He does I'll take to my book of Psalms and I'll look at this particular comment. It says, 'From the depths I called You, O Lord.' And I'll say we called to you from 18,000 feet down underneath Israel and you answered us."

Flotilla Choir presents: We Con the World

JERUSALEM, Israel - A group of Israelis released a music video mocking the crew of the Mavi Mamara, the Turkish-owned flagship that led the "blockade busting" Gaza flotilla at the beginning of the week.

Produced by Latma, which creates Hebrew-language political satire for the Internet, the video features the Mavi Marmar's captain and crew singing about how they "con the world."

"We think this is an important Israeli contribution to the discussion of recent events," Caroline Glick said on her website," and we hope you distribute it far and wide."

Here the latest Video


Meanwhile on Friday morning, Israel Radio reported that the IDF (Israel Defense Forces) had uncovered more evidence confirming the flagship's lethal intent.

Further investigation of the ship revealed gun-sights and ammunition clips not compatible with IDF weapons, along with coded messages about kidnapping and killing soldiers.

Passenger recordings of their intent to become shahids (martyrs for the cause of Islam) were also discovered.

The findings confirmed statements by al-Jazerra cameraman Andre Abu Khalil, a passenger on the ship, who gave Reuters an eyewitness account.

Khalil said about 20 Turkish men, using metal pipes, slingshots and clubs, bludgeoned four soldiers sufficiently to drag them to a lower deck.

According to Khalil, when the soldiers finally received permission to use live ammunition against the attackers, one of the "activists" announced by megaphone that they would release the four soldiers in exchange for emergency medical treatment for wounded passengers.

Khalil said an Israeli Knesset member, likely Arab MK Haneen Zoabi, served as mediator.

The wounded soldiers were brought to the upper deck and transported by helicopter to hospitals.

Here the lyrics the song enjoy it




There comes a time
When we need to make a show
For the world, the Web and CNN
There's no people dying,
so the best that we can do
Is create the greatest bluff of all

We must go on pretending day by day
That in Gaza, there's crisis, hunger and plague
Coz the billion bucks in aid won't buy their basic needs
Like some cheese and missiles for the kids

We'll make the world
Abandon reason
We'll make them all believe that the Hamas
Is Momma Theresa
We are peaceful travelers
With guns and our own knives
The truth will never find its way to your TV

Ooooh, we'll stab them at heart
They are soldiers, no one cares
We are small, and we took some pictures with doves
As Allah showed us, for facts there's no demand
So we will always gain the upper hand

We'll make the world
Abandon reason
We'll make them all believe that the Hamas
Is Momma Theresa
We are peaceful travelers
we're waving our own knives
The truth will never find its way to your TV

If Islam and terror brighten up your mood
But you worry that it may not look so good
Well well well well don't you realize
You just gotta call yourself
An activist for peace and human aid

We'll make the world
Abandon reason
We'll make them all believe that the Hamas
Is Momma Theresa
We are peaceful travelers
We're waving our own knives
The truth will never find its way to your TV

We con the world
We con the people
We'll make them all believe the IDF is Jack the Ripper
We are peaceful travelers
We're waving our own knives
The truth will never find its way to your TV
We con the world (Bruce: we con the world...)
We con the people (Bruce: we con the people...)
We'll make them all believe the IDF is Jack the Ripper
We are peaceful travelers
We're waving our own knives
The truth will never find its way to your TV
The truth will never find its way to your TV

Thursday, June 3, 2010

Individuals, firms linked to City Harvest Church under probe





SINGAPORE : The founder of City Harvest Church and 16 other individuals and staff involved in the handling of the church’s financial affairs are being investigated by the Commercial Affairs Department (CAD).



Police confirmed on Monday evening that Reverend Kong Hee and 16 others are assisting in an on—going investigation arising from complaints made to the Commissioner of Charities (COC) on the misuse of church funds.


CAD officers in the morning visited various premises, including the homes and offices of the individuals involved. They secured items such as financial records and computers for their investigation.

As to how long the investigation will take, the police have given the assurance that while it will be thorough, it will be without undue delay.

Earlier in the afternoon, the COC and CAD said in a joint statement that they were investigating some financial transactions involving several individuals and companies related or connected to the church.

They assured the public that despite ongoing investigations, the normal services and religious activities of the City Harvest need not be disrupted.

City Harvest is one of the largest churches in Singapore, with a congregation of over 30,000 who regularly pack its venues at Jurong West and the Singapore Expo during sermons.

The church’s reach online is even greater — through live webcasts, podcasts and its own broadcast channel. Much of it is driven by its charismatic founder, Reverend Kong.

The pastor keeps a Facebook page that has over 30,000 fans, and has his own YouTube channel. He lives in the US with his son and wife, Sun Ho, a successful pop singer.

This is not the first time City Harvest Church has made headlines. It was just in March that eyebrows were raised over the church’s S$310 million stake in Suntec City Convention Centre, and the Commissioner of Charities was called in to investigate.

In a statement to MediaCorp, the charities watchdog stressed that this round of investigations is not related to the earlier Suntec case.

It added that the case involved more than just City Harvest — it included companies and individuals connected either directly or indirectly with the church. That is why, it said, the police have to be involved.

Depending on the findings, the charity’s trustee may be suspended.

The statement continued: "While there was a governance review conducted on City Harvest Church in 2007, the objective and the scope are different from that of an inquiry.

"The governance review essentially looks at the organisation’s corporate governance with the objective of assessing and helping the charities to improve the way they are run.

"The inquiry on the other hand is a formal investigation into allegations and complaints received to ascertain that there is no mismanagement or misconduct in the administration of a charity."

When asked to comment, the National Council of Churches of Singapore, of which City Harvest is a member, said it was too premature to do so at this point.

On the City Harvest’s website, a notice to members by Executive Pastor Reverend Derek Dunn stated that the church was "cooperating fully" with investigations, and that services and operations would continue as usual.

MediaCorp understands the church has engaged Christina Ng from law firm Rajah and Tann to represent it.

Steve Jobs says Apple is 'all over' Foxconn suicides


Steve Jobs, the chief executive of Apple, said he finds a string of suicides at Foxconn, the Chinese manufacturer of the iPad, "troubling". At least 16 people have attempted suicide at Foxconn so far this year, with 12 succeeding in killing themselves.

The company, which assembles iPhones, iPods and iPads for Apple, as well as working for HP, Dell, Sony, Nokia and Nintendo, said it has managed to prevent a further 30 deaths through its counselling service.

Mr Jobs did not offer any immediate solution to the problem. "It is a difficult situation," he said, in his first public comment on the suicides.

"We are trying to understand right now, before we go in and say we know the solution."

The reasons for the sudden spate of suicides remain unclear. However, the military-style working regime at Foxconn's Longhua plant, in which more than 300,000 people work, has been heavily criticised.

Workers are forbidden to talk on the production line, even in their short breaks, and many have complained of feeling lonely and alienated inside the giant factory.

In addition, the enormous demand for some products – including the 2m unit-selling iPad – appears to have placed an intolerable strain on Foxconn workers, who are quitting the Longhua factory at the rate of 15,000 a month.

On the production line, workers have routinely worked more than 70 hours a week – above Apple's own guidelines – to fill orders. Nevertheless, Mr Jobs insisted that Foxconn, which is one of Apple's most important suppliers, was "not a sweatshop".

Foxconn yesterday agreed to immediately raise the basic salaries of its workers by a third. Wages are expected to rise from 900 yuan (£90) a month to 1,200 yuan.

The company, which employs more than 800,000 workers in China but is originally Taiwanese, said the decision to raise wages was not a direct response to the suicides. It maintains that the spate of deaths is not work-related or above the average rate for young people, and that the suicides were mainly caused by personal problems among the victims.

Foxconn said the pay rise would help it to attract better-qualified workers at a time when there are labour shortages across China's manufacturing belts.

Steve Jobs on the New iPhone and How 'It Began With the Tablet


Less than one week before formally debuting Apple's (Nasdaq: AAPL - News) new iPhone at the company's Worldwide Developers Conference, Steve Jobs opened up about apps, the future of media and what to expect from the iPad, iPhone and other Apple devices during the 8th Annual All Things Digital Conference.

"I'll tell you a secret," said Jobs during a Q&A session with D8 hosts Kara Swisher and Walt Mossberg. "It began with the tablet."


So the iPhone, arguably the most significant technological device of the 21st Century, was actually an afterthought that came into being while Apple was drawing up plans for the iPad.

"My God, I said, this would make a great phone," Jobs recalled. "So we shelved the tablet and built the iPhone."

Nice move.

While D8 marks the first of two occasions when Steve Jobs will speak publicly this week, it is not every day when the founder and CEO of the world's most valuable technology company shares his thoughts with a worldwide audience.

What else did Steve have to say?

Why he defends Apple and its pursuit of the "lost iPhone"

"When this whole thing with Gizmodo happened, I got a lot of advice from people who said you've got to just let it slide. You shouldn't go after a journalist because they bought stolen property and tried to extort you. I thought about that, and I decided that Apple can't afford to change its core values and simply let it slide. We have the same core values as when we started, and we come into work wanting to do the same thing today that we wanted to do five years ago."

On the reality of a world with 200,000 apps

"People are using apps way more than they are using search. So if you want to make developers more money, you've got to get the ads into apps. But the mobile ads we've got today rip you out of the app ... . That sucks."

How the iPad represents the "post-PC-era"

"The transformation of PC to new form factors like the tablet is going to make some people uneasy because the PC has taken us a long ways. The PC is brilliant, and we like to talk about the post-PC era, but it's uncomfortable."

Defending AT&T

"They're doing pretty good in some ways and in others they could do better. We meet with them once a quarter. Remember, they deal with way more data traffic than anyone else. And they're having trouble. But they have the fastest 3G network, and they're improving. I wish they were improving faster. I'm convinced that any other network, had you put the iPhone on it, would have had the same problems."

Apple's rivalry with Google and Microsoft

"(Google) (Nasdaq: GOOG - News) decided to compete with us and got more and more serious. Right now, we have the better product."

"We never saw ourselves in a platform war with Microsoft (Nasdaq: MSFT - News). Maybe that's why we lost. But we never thought of ourselves in a platform war, we just wanted to make good products."

A soft spot for traditional media?

"I don't want to see us descend into a nation of bloggers. I think we need editorial oversight now more than ever. Anything we can do to help newspapers find new ways of expression that will help them get paid, I am all for."

The future of television

The television industry fundamentally has a subsidized business model that gives everyone a set-top box, and that pretty much undermines innovation in the sector. The only way this is going to change is if you start from scratch, tear up the box, redesign and get it to the consumer in a way that they want to buy it. But right now, there's no way to do that.

Why he still loves Apple's culture

"I have one of the best jobs in the world. I get to hang out with some of the most talented, committed people around, and together we get to play in this sandbox and build these cool products. Apple is an incredibly collaborative company. You know how many committees we have at Apple? Zero. We're structured like a start-up. We're the biggest start-up on the planet. And we all meet once a week to discuss our business."

Wednesday, June 2, 2010

Turkey is proud of you!" the crowd chanted as they shouted "Down with Israel


ISTANBUL – The head of an Islamic charity group that organized the pro-Palestinian aid flotilla to Gaza claimed Thursday the beating of some Israeli soldiers during a deadly raid was self defense.

Bulent Yildirim, who arrived in Istanbul early Thursday after being deported from Israel along with hundreds of others from the boats, said activists also had seized weapons from some Israeli soldiers, but threw them into the sea. He said the activists attacked the Israeli commandos with chairs and sticks in self defense.

"Even if we had used the guns that would be still a legitimate self defense," said Yildirim, a lawyer, accusing Israel of raiding the ships in international waters on Monday.

The activists maintain their flotilla aimed to break a three-year blockade that Israel has imposed on the Gaza Strip to carry food and other supplies to the Palestinians who live there.

Israel has contested that, saying the sticks, iron bars and knives that the passengers allegedly used in the shipdeck battle showed their purpose was not humanitarian.

Yildirim vowed to organize bigger convoys by land and sea if Israel does not end the blockade of Gaza.

Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu late Wednesday hotly rejected calls to lift the blockade on Hamas-ruled Gaza, insisting the ban prevents missile attacks on Israel. He labeled worldwide criticism of his country's raid on the flotilla as "hypocrisy."

"This was not the 'Love Boat,'" Netanyahu said in an address to the nation. "It was a hate boat."

Serkan Nergis, a spokesman for the charity group, the IHH, said Thursday that charity workers and relatives were now trying to identify five of the bodies of those killed in the raid at an Istanbul morgue. Four of them have been officially confirmed to be Turks.

A total of 466 activists, including more than 50 foreigners, returned to a hero's welcome with thousands of supporters waving Palestinian flags and chanting "God is Great!" in Istanbul.

"Turkey is proud of you!" the crowd chanted as they shouted "Down with Israel!"

Deputy Prime Minister Bulent Arinc welcomed the activists at the Istanbul airport after Turkey pressured Israel to release the detainees, most of whom are Turkish. Others were from Arab countries, Europe and the United States.

"They faced barbarism and oppression but returned with pride," Arinc said.

Turkish Ambassador Oguz Celikkol, whom Turkey recalled to protest the Israeli raid on the Turkish ship, also returned to Istanbul on Thursday.

The activists were taken to a state forensic institute to be questioned and undergo medical tests, to ensure the activists were not harmed and to collect evidence for possible legal action against Israel.

"We felt it necessary. Because we may seek justice within international laws and we may need certain evidence in doing so," Arinc said. "It may be possible that they (the activists) may have been given certain medicines or similar substances while in Israel. The test results will determine this."

Turkey's state-run Anatolia news agency said prosecutors were expected to question 19 injured activists who were being treated in a hospital in the capital, Ankara.

Chinese iPad clones hit the streets



a website dedicated to all thing shanzai (faked goods), recently went to Computex to see what kind of tablets were rolling out of Chinese factories, giving the iPad (which is technically not available in China yet) some competition. They clearly went to the right place. “Everybody and their dog is announcing, showing off or actually selling tablets,” says Shanzai.com. iPad magic on the streets of Tokyo probably delighted Steve Jobs, but here's some manufacturing magic Apple is likely to be much less happy about.

iPad clone no. 1: C7One particularly good tablet they found was one from Cynovo called the C7 tablet How the C7 stacks up against the iPad:

•Memory: 1-2 GB of memory vs. 1 GB
•OS: Windows vs. iPhone OS
•Webcam: 1.3 megapexels vs. none
•Mulitasking: Yes vs. none
Shanghai tech fans can also get excited that this tech start-up impressed enough people in Silicon Valley that they’ve gotten the funding to move their factory to Wuxi, much closer to Shanghai’s electronic’s markets.

Unfortunately the C7 and similar clones will be selling close to the iPad’s market price (woefully out of range of most Chinese tech consumers), but thankfully Shenzhaiben.com is reporting that Fengda Hardware Products Co. will soon be producing a new a new tablet chassis with a magnesium alloy shell making it much easier for local companies to produce clones for the local market (and offer local market prices). The shanzhai bonus: the screens will be 10 inches to Apple’s 9.7 inches.


“The general feeling is that these tablet products will of course continue to improve throughout 2010,” writes Shanzhai.com, “and it's not just the manufacturing curve that will steepen over time either. The maturity of the Android and iPhone OS platforms and the ability of Shanzhai players to manipulate and optimize the Google phone OS into a mature, smooth and vibrant tablet experience will also be a key area for improvement as the year progresses. Android 2.1 and above on these tablets should be with us in a few months. By that time we really should start seeing some seriously slick iPad clonage.”

iPad clone no. 2: the iPed
The iPhone has all sorts of similar-sounding knock offs, so it makes sense that the iPad would too. Enter the iPed.

See a video from Japanese News Network (JNN) below:

Youtube video


Made by Orphan Electronics, the device runs Android 1.5 instead of iPhone OS. The main thing that’s catching consumer’s attention though is the price. While top-of-the-line gadgets like the C7 are placing themselves in the same price range as the iPad, the iPed is on average US$150 which includes 1GB of RAM, a 600Mhz processor and WiFi connectivity. The iPed’s only downside? A seven inch screen.

Not too shabby for a poor man’s tablet in a country where the iPad isn’t technically on the market yet.

These are far from the only iPad clones to hit the markets, but two that had definitely caught the Chinese iPad-lacking, tech-hungry consumer’s eye in Shanghai. We’ll keep our eyes out for the next round of clones the local electronics markets are offering. With the real iPad still some way off, we’re sure to see more shanzhai ones around soon.

Lady Gaga In Larry King Show

It’s not every day that you have the opportunity to meet a global sensation. I traveled to London this week for Larry King’s interview with superstar Lady Gaga.

Arranging this special one-on-one – part of our celebration of Larry’s 25th anniversary with CNN – was no easy task. Lady Gaga is in the midst of her sold-out world tour, The Monster’s Ball. To say her schedule is jam-packed is to understate the case.

Still, her team carved out the time. The venue was a designated room in the backstage area of the O2 Arena, where Lady Gaga would thrill (and I do mean THRILL!) her fans with a brilliant concert performance just hours later.

Right on time – to the minute – Lady Gaga walked in, accompanied by just three people.

“Hi everyone, I’m Gaga,” she introduced herself to our CNN crew – which was more than three times as large as her modest entourage. She then proceeded to shake hands with everybody. She could not have been more gracious.

I – and everybody else on the crew – had wondered what she was going to wear. She did not disappoint. Just the opposite. Lady Gaga paid a witty tribute to Larry by donning a white silk shirt and unique black suspenders. To add to the visual punch, Larry took his seat on our New York set sporting a black shirt and white suspenders! Was this study in sartorial opposites planned ahead of time? No. Absolutely not. It was serendipity. And it added a terrific touch to a unique show.

Lady Gaga was as candid as she was articulate throughout the interview. Her frankness extended to her very honest comments about growing up in the Roman Catholic Church

Mavi Marmara - THE TRUTH - "Peace Activists" Attack Israelis

Mavi Marmara - THE TRUTH - "Peace Activists" Attack Israelis
New video has been reveled.Check out this latest video

We face international hypocrisy


Israel won’t apologize for defending itself,” Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu said Wednesday night, as he urged the international community to stop condemning the IDF for its Monday raid on the Gaza-bound flotilla.

He spoke both in Hebrew and then in English at a special press conference in his office, called to address the wave of harsh international criticism against the raid, in which nine people were killed.
“Once again Israel faces hypocrisy and a biased rush to judgment,” Netanyahu said.

In his conversations with international world leaders, Netanyahu said, he had asked them a basic question.

“What would you do? How would your soldiers behave in similar circumstances? In your heart, you all know the truth,” said Netanyahu.

“This might sound like an impossible plea, request or demand,” he continued, adding, “Israel should not be held to a double standard. The Jewish state has a right to defend itself like any other state.”

If ships were allowed to sail to Gaza without inspection as flotilla organizers have demanded, nothing could stop Iran from sending high-level weapons to Hamas in Gaza, said Netanyahu.

Already, he said, Hamas has missiles that can hit major Israeli cities such as Ashkelon, Beersheba and even Tel Aviv. Very soon, their missiles will also be able to reach the outskirts of Jerusalem.

“Israel can not permit Iran to develop a Mediterranean port a few dozen kilometers from Tel Aviv,” said Netanyahu. He added that missiles could also be launched from there toward Europe.

“The same countries that are criticizing us today should know that they will be targeted tomorrow,” he said.

Under international law, Israel had every right to intercept the ship, he said.

When it did so, he added, those on board viciously attacked the soldiers with knives and rods and in some cases they fired guns.

On the tape it is possible to hear them chanting “battle cries against the Jews,” said the prime minister. He said he regretted the loss of life, but that the soldiers had had a right to defend themselves and their country.

“This was not a love boat, this was a hate boat. These were not peace activists, there were supporters of terrorism,” he said.

Videotapes of the raid reflect these details, but for “many in the international community, no evidence is needed. Israel is guilty until it is proven guilty. Israel is told it has a right to defend itself, but it is condemned every time it exercises that right,” said Netanyahu.

He did not address the calls by the international community for an independent investigation into the incident, but government sources have said that Israel has no intention of complying with that demand.

On Wednesday, the United Nations Human Rights Council passed a resolution calling for such an independent probe.

Government sources said the IDF investigation would meet the highest international standards.

Speaking in Ra’anana at an event organized by the Samaria Regional Council, Vice Premier Moshe Ya’alon said, “We will know how to investigate all the elements of this operation. We will know how to learn lessons and implement them.

“The process of learning lessons must not turn into a festival of self-guilt or of self-blame,” he continued. “Those from outside who are calling for the formation of an international committee or investigation must be told without hesitation that Israel is an independent democracy and not a banana republic.”

Israel also stood firm against demands by the international community that it fully open the three crossings into Gaza, which have been closed to all but humanitarian supplies since Hamas’s violent takeover of the Strip in 2007.

In London, British Prime Minister David Cameron said the closure had done nothing to dislodge Hamas from power.

“Friends of Israel – and I count myself a friend of Israel – should be saying to the Israelis that the blockade actually strengthens Hamas’s grip on the economy and on Gaza, and it’s in their own interests to lift it and allow these vital supplies to get through,” he said.

In Brussels, a spokesman for EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton said EU leaders wanted all crossings into Gaza “opened immediately for humanitarian aid, commercial goods and persons. Keeping Gaza closed is unsustainable.”

Government sources said in response, “We will continue to engage with the international community” on the issue of the crossings.

They added that Israel had increased the volume of goods entering Gaza in an effort to facilitate humanitarian assistance.

Turkey, which recalled its ambassador to Israel to protest the flotilla raid, has insisted that Israel must fully open the crossings. Nicaragua, meanwhile, cut its ties with Israel altogether.

Turkey’s parliament on Wednesday called on the government to review its ties with Israel, as hundreds of Turks protested Israel’s commando raid for a third day, and Israeli diplomats’ families in Ankara began packing to leave at the behest of the Israeli government.

The Turkish Parliament in Ankara held a heated debate on whether to impose military and economic sanctions on Israel. Lawmakers of Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s ruling Justice and Development Party objected to the measures, apparently anxious to avoid aggravating the situation, but eventually agreed on a declaration that was approved by a show of hands.

The lawmakers said Israel must formally apologize for the raid, pay compensation to the victims and bring those responsible to justice.

Even as its diplomats railed against Israel, Turkey prepared to welcome the activists from the flotilla, many of whom were flown in from Israel, as well as to receive the bodies of the nine killed.

Four of the bodies have been identified as being Turkish citizens. The other five were flown to Turkey even though their identities were unknown.

Attorney-General Yehuda Weinstein said Israel had decided not to prosecute the activists, claiming Wednesday that “keeping them here would do more damage to the country’s vital interests than good.”

By Wednesday evening, the Interior Ministry said 165 activists had already been deported and another 505 were at Ben-Gurion Airport waiting to be cleared for flights abroad.


Three more activists, two of them Turks, were seriously wounded and will remain in Israeli hospitals until they can be moved. The Turkish government said 15 wounded Turks would be flown to Ankara, where they will be questioned by state prosecutors who may press charges against those responsible for their injuries, the semi-official Anatolian News Agency reported.

Turkish and Greek protesters were to fly home on special planes sent by their respective governments, while others from the nearly 20 nationalities on the ships were traveling on commercial flights. More than 120 activists from a dozen Muslim nations without diplomatic relations with Israel were deported to Jordan before sunrise.

The Interior Ministry said all those on board the aid convoy had been accounted for.

Haggard Defends Decision to Pastor Church


Former mega-church pastor Ted Haggard announced Wednesday that he is starting a new church in Colorado.

Haggard, who resigned after admitting to an affair with a gay prostitute, made the announcement with his family beside him.

"Though many believe that I'm not qualified, nor will I ever be qualified again to be a pastor, (I believe) that because of what we've been through, I may be qualified to help other people in need," Haggard said.

Haggard's new church will be in Colorado Springs, the same city where his former church, New Life Fellowship, is located.

Leaders from his old church told CBN News: “New Life Church will always be grateful for the many years of dedicated leadership from Ted and Gayle Haggard, and we wish their family only the best."

Japanese PM Steps Down


TOKYO - Embattled Japanese Prime Minister Yukio Hatoyama resigned Wednesday to improve his party's chances in an election next month, after his own popularity plunged over his broken campaign promise to move a U.S. Marine base.

Hatoyama's bungled handling of the relocation of the Marine Air Station Futenma on the southern island of Okinawa reinforced his public image as an indecisive leader, causing him to step down just eight months after his party swept to power on promises to bring change and accountability to government.

Hatoyama, a professor-like millionaire with a Ph.D in engineering from Stanford University, is the fourth Japanese prime minister to resign in four years. Viewed as somewhat aloof and eccentric by the Japanese public, he earned the nickname "alien."

Make People the 'Main Actors'

"Since last year's elections, I tried to change politics in which the people of Japan would be the main actors," Hatoyama told a news conference broadcast nationwide. But he conceded his efforts fell short and people stopped listening to him.

"That's mainly because of my failings," he said.

The Democratic Party of Japan's powerful No. 2, Secretary General Ichiro Ozawa - seen by many as a "shadow shogun" - also stepped down in a desperate attempt to bolster the DPJ's sagging reputation ahead of upper house elections that will likely be held July 11.

His party said it would hold a meeting Friday to select a new leader, who will officially become the next prime minister after mandatory parliamentary votes expected early next week.

Analysts said Finance Minister Naoto Kan or Foreign Minister Katsuya Okada were the most likely candidates to succeed Hatoyama.

Kan, seen as outspoken and independent-minded, gained prominence for exposing a 1996 government cover-up of HIV-tainted blood products that caused thousands of hemophilia patients to contract the virus that causes AIDS.

'Working Relationship' with Hillary Clinton

Okada, considered a level-headed politician, has developed a working relationship with U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton, but his involvement in discussions over Futenma might make him unpopular with voters.

Hatoyama, 63, cited two main reasons for his resignation: the Marine base issue and a political funding scandal, in which two of his aides were convicted of falsifying political contribution reports and sentenced to suspended prison terms. Hatoyama himself did not face charges in the case, but it tainted his image.

"Our politics must break with money," he said. "We must become completely clean in order to revitalize our party."

Hatoyama's government came to power amid high hopes in September - promising to make politics more transparent and rein in the power of bureaucrats - after his party soundly defeated the long-ruling conservatives in lower house elections.

'More Equal' U.S. Relationship

He also had promised to forge a "more equal" relationship with the United States and to move Futenma off Okinawa, which hosts more than half the 47,000 U.S. troops in Japan under a security pact.

But last week, he said he would go along with the 2006 agreement to move the base to a northern part of the island, infuriating residents who want it off Okinawa entirely.

Hatoyama said Wednesday that recent tensions in the Korean peninsula surrounding the sinking of a South Korean warship reminded him of the potential instability in Northeast Asia and drove home the importance of the U.S.-Japan security pact.

"There was no choice but to keep the base on Okinawa," he said.

His three-way coalition was cut to two members over the weekend when a junior partner, the Social Democrats, withdrew after the prime minister expelled its leader Mizuho Fukushima, who rejected the Futenma decision, from the Cabinet.

Neglected the People's Voice

"His resignation is clearly because he has neglected the voices of Okinawa and the people," she said.

Fukushima's dismissal enhanced her public standing as a politician who stood up for her convictions and reinforced perceptions of Hatoyama's wishy-washiness and sending his Cabinet's approval ratings below 20 percent.

"I had such high expectations when he took power, but now I'm really disappointed, because he simply lacks leadership," said Mieko Ohashi, a 42-year-old company employee in Tokyo.

On Futenma, she said Hatoyama should have studied the issue more before making promises to move it off Okinawa.

"In the end, nothing has really changed in Okinawa," Ohashi said, adding that she wouldn't vote for the DPJ in the upcoming upper house election even though she backed the party in the previous election.

Liability to the Party

After Hatoyama's flip-flop on the base issue, some of his own party members began to see him as a liability in July's elections and urged him to step down.

Opposition Liberal Democratic Party executive Tadamori Oshima criticized the resignation, calling it "a makeover to gloss over their image with voters."

"If this is their answer to the votes that the people gave them last year expecting a change, they should dissolve parliament and seek a new public mandate," he said.

Hatoyama's party did win some public praise for its attempts to cut back on huge public works projects, a major plank of the previous LDP administrations that ruled Japan for most of the previous 50 years. But they were also criticized for being slow to implement other campaign promises, such as making expressways toll-free.

Perceptions of his aloofness increased after investigators found that Hatoyama had received 15 million yen ($170,000) a month from his mother to support his political activities - although he said he had no knowledge of the contributions until the prosecutors' investigation.

Al-Jazeera Anchors Quit Over Dress Code


Five female news anchors at the Al-Jazeera television network have quit their jobs after being criticized for their on-air appearance.

Joumana Nammour, Lina Zahr al-Din, Jullinar Mousa, Luna al-Shibl, and Nawfar Afli said the Arab network made "offensive remarks" about them wearing pant suits and make-up, and for not covering their hair.

Al-Jazeera told the UK Daily Mail they enforce a dress code that reflects their "spirit and principles."

Critics of the network accuse it of being an outlet for Islamic extremists.

Flotilla 'Peace Activists' Linked to al-Qaeda

JERUSALEM, Israel - Forty armed al-Qaeda terrorists, equipped with bulletproof vests and night-vision goggles, executed a coordinated effort on the 'freedom' flotilla's Mavi Marmara to attack Israeli forces attempting to intercept the ship, Israeli military officials said Wednesday.

The terrorists attacked the soldiers with chains, metal pipes and stun grenades.

Military investigators believe the quasi-Turkish humanitarian relief fund, IHH, recruited most of the jihadists from Turkey, though a few hailed from Yemen and Indonesia. Investigators are tracing some detainees to previous terror attacks.

None of them carried any form of identity, and each had the same large amount of cash in an envelope.

Here for the latest video footage of the attack.


Late Tuesday, the government approved the deportation of 124 detainees to Jordan where they will be sent to their home countries, which include Pakistan, Indonesia, Syria, Morocco, Kuwait, Jordan, and Mauritania.

"This was no peace flotilla, but a violent and planned force," Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu told the security Cabinet on Wednesday.

"We have film and pictures that underscore what our soldiers faced, and the last thing that could possibly be said about that ship is that it was a peace ship," he said.

Wounded soldiers who Netanyahu visited earlier in the day explained to him what awaited them on deck.

"Our soldiers acted against them with equanimity and heroism. We regret the loss of life, but give full backing to the soldiers and to the IDF [Israel Defense Forces] regarding this action," he said.

Netanyahu said Israel will not lift the naval blockade of the Gaza Strip.

Here The Link http://www.slate.com/id/2255572/> to read an analysis of the Gaza blockade by Shmuel Rosner.

"Opening a sea route to Gaza would constitute a great danger to the security of our citizens. Therefore we persist with a naval blockade and check the ships. There is no possibility of maintaining this policy without checking ships' cargoes," he said.

Despite international pressure and criticism, the policy is based on "Israel's right to defend itself," he said.

Meanwhile, at an emergency meeting of the 47-member UN Human Rights Council in Geneva Tuesday, called by a coalition of Arab and Islamic states, Israeli Ambassador Aharon Leshno Yaar said Israel acted within provisions of international law.

"The attack on Israeli soldiers was beyond all doubt premeditated," he said. "The weapons used had been prepared in advance. They were not on a humanitarian mission, but one of provocation and incitement. Israeli forces had no choice but to defend themselves," Yaar said.

The Turkish-based IHH, which organized the flotilla, "has publicly professed connections to Egypt's Islamic Brotherhood and Hamas and has been a central actor of fundraising for Hamas around the world," Yaar said.

The council is expected to issue a joint resolution Wednesday condemning Israel and calling for an independent inquiry of "the attack," which Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan said "deserves every kind of curse."

Israel Prepared to Stop Next 'Freedom Flotilla'

JERUSALEM, Israel -- Israeli officials say they are prepared to stop another "freedom flotilla" if it tries to break through its blockade of the Gaza Strip. However, some military officials are concerned about the possibility that the next flotilla could be escorted by the Turkish Navy.

A Turkish Navy escort for another flotilla is a remote, but serious consideration for Israel's military. In the meantime, Israel plans to release more than 100 people who were on board the ships they detained with more expected to be released in the next few days.

Dozens of the passengers have been suspected of having connections to global jihadist organizations like the Muslim Brotherhood. The main organizer behind the flotilla - IHH, or the Foundation for Human Rights and Freedoms and Humanitarian Relief (Insani Yardim Vakfi) - has connections to Hamas and al Qaeda. A Kuwaiti paper reported many had prepared for martyrdom and were even asked to write out their wills.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu visited some of the soldiers who took part in the raid. The soldiers said they fought for their lives once they landed on the deck of the Mavi Marmara and did not harm any unarmed civilians.

Read Netanyahu's statement here.

Demonstrations continued in Turkey on Tuesday and Turkish Prime Minister Erdowaan called the incident a "massacre." He warned Israel not to test Turkey's patience and said Israel must answer for its deeds.

"I think the big tragedy in the Middle East this year if you want a headline is Turkey," Erdowaan said.

Former Israeli ambassador to the U.N. Dore Gold instead said the spotlight should be on the increasingly Islamist government of Turkish Prime Minister Erdowaan.

"The question that should be asked is not why did Israel board these ships," Gold said. "The question that should be asked is why is someone in the Turkish government giving support to an organization that connected with global jihadi terrorism. That's the question the U.N. should be inquiring about but instead the lights are on Israel."

The White House said it supported a U.N. Security Council resolution calling for an investigation into Israel's raid. But it has stopped short of condemning Israel's actions.   

4 THINGS YOU PROBABLY NEVER KNEW


There are a few things that can be
done in times of grave emergencies.

Your mobile phone can actually be a
life saver or an emergency tool for survival.

Check out the things that you can do with it:

FIRST



Emergency

The Emergency Number worldwide for Mobile is 112.

If you find yourself out of the coverage area of
your mobile; network and there is an emergency,

dial 112 and the mobile will search any existing

network to establish the emergency number for you,

and interestingly this number 112 can be dialled

even if the keypad is locked. Try it out.

SECOND

Have you locked your keys in the car?

Does your car have remote keyless entry?
This may come in handy someday.
Good reason to own a cell phone: If you lock your
keys in the car and the spare keys are at home,
call someone at home on their mobile phone
from your cell phone.

Hold your cell phone about a foot from
your car door and have the person
at your home press the unlock button,
holding it near the mobile phone on their end.

Your car will unlock.

Saves someone from having to
drive your keys to you.

Distance is no object.
You could be hundreds of miles away,
and if you can reach someone who has
the other 'remote' for your car, you can
unlock the doors (or the trunk).

Editor's Note: It works fine! We tried it out and

it unlocked our car over a mobile phone!'

THIRD

Hidden Battery Power

Imagine your mobile battery is very low.

To activate, press the keys *3370#

Your mobile will restart with this reserve and the
instrument will show a 50% increase in battery.

This reserve will get charged when
you charge your mobile next time.

FOURTH How to disable a

STOLEN mobile phone?

To check your Mobile phone's serial number,

key in the following digits on your phone: * # 0 6 #

A 15 digit code will appear on the screen.

This number is unique to your handset.

Write it down and keep it somewhere safe.

When your phone get stolen, you can phone
your service provider and give them this code.

They will then be able to block your handset

so even if the thief changes the SIM card,

your phone will be totally useless.

You probably won't get your phone back,
but at least you know that whoever stole it
can't use/sell it either.

If everybody does this, there would be
no point in people stealing mobile phones.



ATM - PIN Number Reversal - Good to Know

If you should ever be forced by a robber to
withdraw money from an ATM machine, you can
notify the police by entering your PIN # in reverse.

For example, if your pin number is 1234,
then you would put in 4321.

The ATM system recognizes that your PIN number is
backwards from the ATM card you placed in the machine.

The machine will still give you the money you requested,
but unknown to the robber, the police will be
immediately dispatched to the location.

Indonesian baby on 40 cigarettes a day


It's not such a small world after all. One only need check out the video that surfaced this week of an overweight Indonesian toddler dragging on a cigarette with all the practiced aplomb of Don Draper -- and the horrified reactions it spawned across the world -- to get a textbook lesson in cultural divides.

A reporter visiting the 2-year-old boy's Sumatran village shot the footage, which was posted on the UK Sun's website Saturday. But it was a follow-up on Wednesday, with the accompanying revelations that his father gave the child his first smoke when he was just 18 months old and his mother's lamentations that the boy, who allegedly smokes up to 40 cigarettes a day, is "totally addicted. If he doesn't get cigarettes, he gets angry and screams and batters his head against the wall," that sent the clip into the viral zone.

Anyone familiar with British tabloids knows that nicotine-addicted tykes are their idea of a headline jackpot. The accompanying caption, "Tar baby," was certainly an inspired touch of "us vs. them" provocation. Isn't this wrong how they treat kids over there? Don't you feel angry, readers? Fish, meet barrel. And sure enough, extending far beyond the comments section of the Sun, the Internet quickly lit up like a gaggle of Indonesian toddlers over the "disgusting" and "disgraceful" situation.

Those of us used to moving in social circles where giving your kid access to a doughnut or a Bratz doll will get you a rep as a child abuser, where anti-smoking campaigns are enthusiastic to the point of stomach-turning, were naturally boggled by the clip. But that disturbing video doesn't just represent an easy opportunity for parents with high-speed Internet access to feel smug about their own child-rearing practices.

It's a snapshot of a country where over 60 percent of all adult men smoke, a place where, unsurprisingly, the tobacco industry rides roughshod over the public health interest. While smoking rates continue to dip in places like the U.S., they've actually risen in Indonesia. The World Bank estimates that one-third of the world's adult population smokes -- an astonishing 80 percent of whom live in "low- and middle-income countries." And that number just keeps growing-- in places like Indonesia, where a smoking household will spend about 11 percent of its income on cigarettes and the rate of smokers between the tender age of 5 and 9 has dramatically risen since 2001. A place where there are no bans on public smoking, no age limit on who can buy cigarettes, and a deep-pocketed, largely unregulated tobacco industry that can advertise on television and sponsor huge entertainment events seemingly at will. A part of the world where smoking is the leading cause of premature death.

A child's welfare is still first and foremost his parents' responsibility. But before we get too comfortable in the knowledge that we'd never even expose our own babies to cigarettes, let alone hand them a pack, maybe we can redirect a little of that indignation toward a profitable industry that's worked so hard to pour smoke down those little lungs.
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