INTREVIEW – Philippines’ Marcos fights to get wealth back

Former Philippine first lady Imelda Marcos, who won a seat in the lower house of Congress in this week’s elections, said on Thursday she was confident of winning back much of the wealth seized from her family.

Marcos, known for her large collection of jewellery and 1,200 pairs of shoes, said she would not accept a compromise deal but would pursue her claims through the courts.

“I am sure that the things that are ours and truly ours will come back,” the 80-year-old told Reuters by phone from the northern Ilocos Norte province. “Truth and justice sometimes grind exceedingly slow, but grind exceedingly well.”

Imelda’s late husband Ferdinand was president for nearly two decades, ruling with an iron fist before he was ousted in an army-backed popular uprising in 1986. He was accused of amassing more than $10 billion while in office.

His successor, democracy icon Corazon “Cory” Aquino set up a search and recover agency which seized more than $5 billion worth of Marcos’ alleged ill-gotten assets. The government also offered deals to the Marcoses to settle litigation over some of the remaining wealth.

“Marcos was not a thief,” said Imelda, who is returning to Congress after serving one term in 1995-1998.

“I never wanted any compromise agreement. There will be no compromise because truth, honour and justice are non-negotiable,” she said. “The truth will set us free because we are on the side of the truth and of God. And, if you are on the side of truth and God, nobody can touch you.”

Imelda said she decided to run for public office because she does not want to enter into any compromise with government on the allegedly ill-gotten wealth and on the family’s demand for a hero’s burial for the deposed dictator.

“The number one role and responsibility of government is justice,” she said. “Even in the case of the Marcoses, there is no justice. Even the dead Marcos is still waiting for an honourable burial. I think it’s about time they do the right thing.”

Imelda’s eldest daughter, Imee, also won the Ilocos Norte governorship, and her only son, Ferdinand Jr, is likely to win a seat in the upper house of Congress.

Powerful clans continue to play a key role in politics in the Philippines. Senator Benigno “Noynoy” Aquino, who is set to succeed President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo, belongs to a political family that has ruled the northern Tarlac province for decades.

Imelda said she would pray for Aquino’s success “for the sake of the Filipino people”.

“You need a real expert there who has done a lot of public service,” she said. “I’ll also pray harder that he succeeds in his campaign of eliminating corruption because then, truth will come out and we’ll be vindicated.”

(Editing by Andrew Marshall and Krittivas Mukherjee)

Zardari says he is not ‘powerless’, derives strength from ‘democracy’

Islamabad, Apr.20 (ANI): Presenting a brave face after signing the 18th Constitutional Amendment bill into law, which would subsequently clip his key powers, Pakistan President Asif Ali Zardari has said democracy is his strength and that he is not ‘powerless.’

“I believe in democracy and seek my strength from democracy as I think democratically,” Zardari told media persons after the signing the bill.

“Despite enjoying all the powers, I never thought of using these powers as I am not fond of keeping powers,” he added.

Responding to a question, Zardari said ‘doors to dictatorship’ have been shut, but hinted that possibility of another military rule in the country remains.

“I am fully confident that no dictator would dare step in now, but then, who can rule out mishaps,” The Daily Times quoted Zardari, as saying.

Zardari stressed that he had never misused his powers, and added that he took all decisions in consultation with the Pakistan People’s Party (PPP)

“I have never misused my authority in the capacity of the country’s head of state and would not do so in future,” he said.

Later, interacting with reporters, Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani said the enactment of the 18th Amendment has increased the responsibilities of both the federal and provincial governments.

When asked about cutting the size of the cabinet, Gilani replied: “Everything will be done in accordance with the Constitution.” (ANI)

Russia, Poland remember Katyn massacre

The Russian and Polish prime ministers have together marked the 1940 Katyn massacre of 22,000 Polish troops.

The killings were carried out by the Soviet secret police on the orders of dictator Joseph Stalin, however the Soviets blamed it on the Nazis for decades.

At a sombre ceremony in Katyn forest, Russian prime minister Vladimir Putin urged Poles not to blame the Russian people for the massacre and asked them to look to the future, not just the past.

In what has been described as an unprecedented move, Mr Putin invited Poland’s Donald Tusk to the ceremony commemorating the massacre.

As expected, Mr Putin, a former agent in the KGB, a successor organisation to Stalin’s NKVD, did not apologise for the Katyn murders and he stressed the common suffering of Russians, Poles and other ethnic groups under Stalin’s rule.

“With decades of cynical lies, they tried to blot out the truth about the Katyn shootings. It would be a similar kind of falsehood to … place the blame for these crimes on the Russian people,” Mr Putin said.

“However hard it may be, we must try to … come to terms with a common historical truth and realise that we cannot go on living in the past alone.”

Obama identified with Hitler, Stalin

Washington, Sep.19 (ANI): Even as thousands of people packed the streets of Washington on Friday to protest against government spending, some of the agitators likened President Barack Obama to Nazi dictator Adolf Hitler.

According to a CBS report, most of those would have called themselves “patriots” arguing that their government was betraying traditional principles.

Steve Butler, a physician from Indiana was handing out copies of the Constitution. “If you read the quotes of Thomas Jefferson, these guys were conservatives and they said that the control should be with the people and not with the big government.”

There were plenty of signs identifying Obama with Hitler, or Stalin, that questions his citizenship, that seems to celebrate the death of a famous liberal.

But perhaps what most united these protesters was a broader discontent: a sense that they are not being heard, that their interests, and the national interests, are in the hands of a few. (ANI)

Arnie, Sly and Willis to star in The Expendables

London, Sept 14 (ANI): The toughest men of Hollywood – Arnold Schwarzenegger, Sylvester Stallone and Bruce Willis – will unite for a total non-stop-action-packed flick called The Expendables.

The movie will see hardman Stallone – who is also directing the film- take on a South American dictator with his mercenary team.

The film will see the trio together for the first time after their flop restaurant venture Planet Hollywood, in 1991.

“I wanted to do a film that was more about men, just doing things that we did back in the 80s and 90s with films that were a little bit more men on men,” the Telegraph quoted Stallone as saying in the Venice film festival.

The 63-year-old star added that his cast was a “dream team” and his aim was “to find certain personalities that never would ever work together normally and put them all together”.

He said: “Arnold, Bruce and I will be working together for the first time, maybe in two weeks, so I had to grow back my beard and get ready to film it in Los Angeles,” he said at the festival where he is receiving a special award.

“It’s very difficult to get us all together at the same time. It’s impossible to get all those egos in the same room.”

Stallone has also roped in action man Mickey Rourke for the movie and it is believed Randy Couture and Chinese martial artist Jet Li will also join him in the new film.

The movie will be released in the summer of 2010. (ANI)

Zia, Yahya and Ayub should be exhumed and hanged like Cromwell: PML-N leader

Karachi, Sep.11 (ANI): Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) leader Javed Hashmi has said that all dictators including General Ayub Khan, General Yahya Khan and General Zia-ul-Haq should be tried and their bodies should be exhumed and hanged.

Talking to media persons at the Karachi Airport, Hashmi said the autocratic rulers should be treated in the same way the British treated Oliver Cromwell in 1661 to prevent the emergence of any dictator in future.

“The judiciary should try all the people in the country who had violated the constitution,” The Daily Times quoted Hashmi, as saying.

Oliver Cromwell’s, an English military and political leader,body was exhumed from Westminster Abbey, and was subjected to the ritual of a posthumous execution.

Symbolically, this took place on 30 January 1661 the same date that Charles I was executed. His body was hanged in chains at Tyburn. Finally, his disintegrated body was thrown into a pit, while his severed head was displayed on a pole outside Westminster Hall until 1685.

Afterwards the head changed hands several times, including the sale in 1814 to a man named Josiah Henry Wilkinson, before eventually being buried in the grounds of Sidney Sussex College, Cambridge, in 1960.(ANI)

US Army Nurse reveals ‘humane’ side of Saddam Hussein

Washington, Sep. 11 (ANI): Saddam Hussein might be remembered as a brutal international criminal by the rest of the world; but to retired U.S. Army Nurse Robert Ellis, who spent more time with the dictator than any other American, he was a patient with a humane side.

Ellis worked as the senior American medical advisor at Baghdad’s Camp Cropper, where Hussein was held for eight months until his execution in December 2006, Fox News reports.

During this period, Hussein who went by the code name “Victor” grew close to his caregiver, who was known to him by the code name “Alice.”

The report quoted Ellis as saying that when he told Hussein that he had to return to St. Louis to see his dying brother, Hussein hugged him and said: “I will be your brother.”

Ellis’ new book, “Caring for Victor,” is a record of his time with the ruthless tyrant.

For Ellis, the mission caused serious internal conflict.

“I was always conflicted throughout the whole mission. My job was to keep these people alive and healthy so they could be interrogated,” he said.

Ellis says that by remaining “non-judgmental,” he was able to see another side of a human who was considered to be a brutal killer.

“By me spending time with him, I got to see his other side, a side that you don’t hear about. They play by a different set of rules over there,” he added. (ANI)

PML-N blames PPP for ‘not being interested’ in Musharraf’s trial

Islamabad, Sep. 9 (ANI): PML-N Information Secretary Ahsan Iqbal has said that the PPP backed out of its promise on trying former President Pervez Musharraf.

The Dawn quoted Iqbal as saying that the PPP had agreed to prosecute Musharraf in the past but now it seemed that the PPP is not interested bringing the former dictator to book.

Rejecting claims that the PML-N was taking a soft stance on the issue, Iqbal said PML-N Chief Nawaz Sharif on Monday renewed his demand for Musharraf’s trial under Article-6 of the Constitution.

Responding to a question on Saudi Arabia’s role in Musharraf’s prosecution, Iqbal said: “It is better not to involve Saudi Arabia in this issue.” (ANI)

Musharraf must be prosecuted to end Army’s interference in country’s politics: Sharif

Lahore, Sep.5 (ANI): Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) chief Nawaz Sharif has said that prosecuting former President General Pervez Musharraf under high treason charges for taking ‘extrajudicial’ actions on November 3, 2007 would help resolve all crises facing the country currently.

Interacting with party workers at his Raiwind residence, Sharif said trying Musharraf would ensure that the door to military interference in the country’s politics would be closed for good.

“Today’s Constitutional crisis is the result of the military coup on October 12, 1999,” The News quoted Sharif, as saying.

“If common people and former prime ministers can face trials then why a military dictator, who violated the Constitution twice, should not be prosecuted?” the former Prime Minister asked.

Meanwhile, senior PML-N leader Ghous Ali Shah has rebutted reports regarding Sharif being involved in the ‘secret’ deal which saw Musharraf stepping down from the Presidency.

Shah said if Musharraf is not prosecuted under Article Six of the Constitution, then it will have a serious effect on the country’s democratic set-up.

“A military dictator contested elections in uniform with the permission of the courts and abrogated the constitution twice but if he was pardoned, then democracy would never consolidate,” Shah said.

He said the current infighting between the PML-N and MQM was temporary and situation would normalize soon.

“Nothing is final in politics and doors are not closed. Situation and time compel parties to talk to each other,” Shah added. (ANI)

Free A Q Khan, a vulnerable man to foreign agencies

Islamabad, Sep 1(ANI): A Q Khan, Pakistani nuclear scientist, widely regarded as the founder of Pakistan’s nuclear program, is a free man again and many consider that he may share the secrets with establishments around the world.

In January 2004, Khan had confessed to having been involved in a secret international network of nuclear weapons technology proliferation from Pakistan to Libya, Iran and North Korea.

It is believed that Khan and his network were one of the worst proliferators of nuclear technology that could be used to develop nuclear weapons.

Though Khan had been pardoned by Musharraf, the difficulty arises on the question that Khan was involved in a network and supplying blueprints for various parts of a nuclear programme for sale onwards to other countries.

Certainly, it becomes a cause of worry that Khan can go beyond his bitterness towards a former dictator and perhaps start to talk about the many, many secrets he undoubtedly keeps regarding the country’s nuclear programme, The Dawn reports.

In an August, 2005, Musharraf had confirmed that Khan had supplied gas centrifuges and gas centrifuge parts to North Korea and, possibly, an amount of uranium hexafluoride, which can make agencies around the world to try and get their hands on a free A.Q. Khan. (ANI)

No personal grudge against Musharraf but trial a ‘must’: Sharif

Islamabad, Aug. 22 (ANI): Former Pakistan Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif has said his party, the Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N), had no personal grudge against former President General Pervez Musharraf, but that it was a unanimous call of the country to try the former general under Article 6 for disregarding the Constitution.

Interacting with media persons at Punjab House here, Sharif said Musharraf’s trial is ‘must’ to ensure supremacy of law.

“It is a golden opportunity to block the path of military interventions and if the government does not move against the dictator, it would be a great disappointment for the nation,” Sharif said.

He said with the Supreme Court declaring Musharraf’s November 3, 2007 acts as ‘illegal’ and ‘extrajudicial’, the Government had no option but to try the former military ruler.

Sharif also threatened that the PML-N would come out of the Parliamentary Committee on Constitutional Reforms if the PPP government fails to revoke the 17th Constitutional Amendment as soon as possible.

He also regretted the delay in implementation of the Charter of Democracy (CoD) in true letter and spirit.

Earlier, in a meeting with his close associates and party workers, Sharif expressed disappointment at Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani’s decision not to try Musharraf for high treason.

Referring to Gilani’s statement in the National Assembly where he asked the opposition to come up with a unanimous resolution for Musharraf’s trial, Sharif said he never expected this from Gilani.

“I was not expecting this kind of statement from Gilani. He broke my heart,” The News quoted Sharif, as saying.

He said Gilani’s statement suggests that he supports Musharraf’s illegal acts.

During the meeting, Sharif also clarified that he was never approached by any foreign diplomat asking him to ‘forgive’ Musharraf.

Responding to a question, Sharif said British diplomat Mark Lyall Grant had never discussed any deal with him before the resignation of Musharraf.

“Grant never asked anything more and informed him that he is going to the United Nations as the new British envoy,” he said. (ANI)

Sly ropes in Bruce Willis for The Expendables

Washington, Aug 20 (ANI): Sylvestor Stallone has roped in action man Bruce Willis for his upcoming action blockbuster The Expendables.

Willis, who was long rumoured to be a part of the eagerly awaited film, has confirmed that he’s part of the flick now. He said he was waiting for Stallone to call for him to film some action packed sequences, reports Contactmusic.

Willis told MTV.com, “Not yet (filmed his scenes), I haven’t united with them. I’m waiting for a call from Sly about when we’re going to try and make that happen.”

“I don’t know anything about (my character) yet, haven’t seen any pages yet. But I’m excited about it,” he added.

Stallone has successfully managed to rope in some of Hollywood’s toughest and most popular hardmen for his movie. His star cast includes Jet Li, Mickey Rourke, Jason Statham, Eric Roberts, and Arnold Schwarzenegger in a cameo role.

The Expendables is a story of mercenaries rising in a coup against a South American dictator and overthrowing him. (ANI)

Gilani rules out Musharraf’s high treason trial

Islamabad, Aug.20 (ANI): Pakistan Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani has virtually ruled out the trial of former President General Pervez Musharraf for high treason, saying such step a could trigger political imbalance in the country.

Responding to opposition leader Chaudhry Nisar Ali Khan’s demand in the National Assembly, Gilani questioned the ‘feasibility’ of a Musharraf trial.

“We should do what is doable,” Gilani said in what was an apparent turnaround from his earlier statement where he said the former Army chief would be tried for violating the Constitution if Parliament unanimously passes a resolution for it.

“We should not take any action that can’t be reversed. Our (PPP) chairman has already said that democracy is the best revenge. And we have taken our revenge through democracy. We have come to parliament. Now we should try to strengthen democracy. We should not play to galleries,” Gilani said.

Earlier, Khan told the National Assembly that a draft of resolution regarding Musharraf’s trial has already been prepared and he would move it in the house if the Prime Minister agreed to charge Musharraf under Article 6 of the Consitution.

Khan had raised the issue in the house earlier this month, but it subsequently died down following former Prime Minister and Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) chief Nawaz Sharif statement that a parliamentary resolution was not needed and that government should invoke Article 6 on its own after the Supreme Court declared the November 3 emergency and other related decrees as ‘unconstitutional’ and ‘extra judicial’.

During Khan’s speech, PML-N members chanted slogans in protest against MQM’s protest shouts against his criticism of the Karachi-based party’s association first with Pakistan’s third military dictator late General Zia-ul-Haq and then with General Musharraf, the Dawn reports.

“Whoever is friend of Musharraf is traitor,” PML-N leaders shouted.

MQM deputy parliamentary leader Haider Abbas Rizvi criticised both the PPP and the PML-N, saying his party has been used by both whenever they needed its support, and was ignored afterwards and even subjected to military operations. (ANI)

Clinton meets Obama, discusses release of two American journalists

Washington, Aug.19 (ANI): Former U.S. President Bill Clinton went to the White House on Tuesday and briefed incumbent Barack Obama and his top aides about his recent trip to North Korea, which resulted in the release of two American women journalists-Laura Ling and Euna Lee.

According to the New York Times, the 40-minute session took place in the White House Situation Room. Before the meeting, Clinton spoke to the president by phone and briefed his national security adviser, Gen. James L. Jones.

The paper said that the meeting was rich in symbolism. The president invited Clinton to the Oval Office to talk further.

The White House said little about what the men discussed, beyond noting that Obama had wanted to thank Clinton for winning the release of Ling and Lee.

The paper also revealed that Clinton’s visit to North Korea would not have materialized had not been for the role played by veteran North Korean hand and intelligence officer, Joseph R. DeTrani.

DeTrani is the government’s senior officer responsible for collecting and analyzing intelligence on North Korea. His efforts to pave the way for Clinton’s visit offer a glimpse into how the administration was forced to use unorthodox methods to overcome the lack of formal communications between Washington and Pyongyang.

The visit was arranged under a veil of secrecy with the help of De Trani, who has spent much of his career trying to unlock the mysteries of North Korea.

His role in the whole episode allowed Clinton to land in Pyongyang on August 4 to win the release of two imprisoned American journalists.

Clinton was determined not to extend a public-relations coup to North Korean dictator Kim Jong-il, who feted him over a long dinner that night, even proposing to stay up afterward.Kim was flanked by two longtime aides – a surprise to Americans who had suspected that both men had been pushed aside – and he gave no hint that North Korea was in the throes of a succession struggle, despite the widespread questions over how long he might live.

Kim expressed a desire for better relations with the United States. De Traini and John Podesta, a trusted adviser to him and Obama, assisted Clinton.

The details about Mr. Clinton’s visit came from interviews with multiple government officials, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak publicly.

Before taking the job of North Korea mission manager in the Office of the Director of National Intelligence in 2006, DeTrani served in the State Department as the special envoy to the six-party talks with North Korea, holding the rank of ambassador.

In that job, he got to know key North Korean officials, including Kim Kye-gwan, the chief nuclear negotiator, who greeted Clinton. DeTrani also worked with David Straub, a former head of the State Department’s Korea desk, who was a member of Clinton’s delegation.

More than anything else, Clinton’s visit served to clear up some of the shadows surrounding Kim Jong-il’s health.

The former American president did not engage in a substantive discussion about North Korea’s nuclear program. Nor did the North Korean leader give Clinton any indication that his nation would relinquish its nuclear ambitions – a condition the United States has set for resuming negotiations, officials said. (ANI)

‘Pak Govt. should take initiative for Musharraf’s trial’

Karachi, Aug. 9 (ANI): A prominent Pakistani legal expert has said the PPP-led government should take the initiative to prosecute former president Pervez Musharraf for violating the constitution.

The Dawn quoted former Supreme Court Bar Association President Aitzaz Ahsan, as saying that the apex court had declared Musharraf’s as actions as illegal, but it could not try the former dictator since it was not a trial court.

Speaking at a general body meeting of the Karachi Bar Association, Ahsan praised the neutrality of the judges, who were affected by Musharraf’s November 3 emergency declaration.

Although Musharraf’s steps had affected all judges of the bench, they did not lodge any case against him and his associates for unlawfully detaining them with their children for around five months, he said.

At a time when nobody was ready to raise his voice against Musharraf, it was the legal community which forced him to doff his uniform, and allowed the exiled political leaders to return to the country, Ahsan said. (ANI)

Brit soldiers ‘made Iraqis dance like Jacko

London, July 14 (ANI): British soldiers manipulated the cries of pain of Iraqi prisoners and made them dance like Michael Jackson, an inquiry into the death of Baha Mousa has heard.

The men claim they were also verbally abused, burned, stamped and urinated on and forced to lie face down over full latrines during the time they were held by the Queen’s Lancashire Regiment in Basra in September 2003.

One of those detained, hotel worker Baha Mousa, 26, died from 93 separate injuries inflicted on him over a 36-hour period while other prisoners examined by a doctor suffered “extensive and serious” injuries.

Much of their treatment was meted out in a bid to soften the men up for interrogation.

An inquiry into the abuse which opened in London on Monday heard that it may have provided extremists with a “rallying cry” to incite further attacks on UK forces in the war torn country.

According to Gerard Elias QC, the Counsel to the Inquiry, it also undermined the sacrifices made by other members of the Armed Forces working to improve security and rebuild the infrastructure following the fall of dictator Saddam Hussein.

The men were held in custody for as long as 56 hours, during which time conditioning techniques such as hooding and the use of stress techniques, outlawed in 1972 as a result of abuse in Northern Ireland, were used on them.

The Baha Mousa Inquiry is expected to last into next year and will hear evidence from soldiers involved as well as the detainees. (ANI)

Ecclestone says his comments on Hitler have been misunderstood

London, July 7 (ANI): Formula One commercial rights holder Bernie Ecclestone has claimed that there has been a “big misunderstanding” over his comments about Nazi dictator Hitler that appeared in the press over the weekend.

Ecclestone had said that Hitler was a “man who could get things done” during an interview in which he expressed strong views on dictators.

His comments were met with widespread negative reaction, particularly from the Jewish community. He now insists that he never meant to hurt anybody and added: “Many of my closest friends are Jews.”

Speaking to German newspaper Bild, Ecclestone said: “This was all a big misunderstanding. I did not put Hitler forward as a positive example, but simply noted that, before his appalling crimes, he acted successfully against unemployment and the economic crisis.”

According to The Guardian, Ecclestone claimed that it was never his intention to “hurt the feelings of a community, and added that many of his closest friends are Jews.

Jewish groups worldwide have called on Ecclestone to resign, and he faces further trouble this Sunday at the German grand prix at the Nürburgring circuit.

A senior German Jewish official was quoted by the Handelsblatt daily as calling for a boycott of Ecclestone by Formula One teams. (ANI)

Sandra Bullock not approached for ‘The Expendables’

Washington, July 6 (ANI): Actress Sandra Bullock has denied that she was to star in Sylvester Stallone’s action movie ‘The Expendables’.

The ‘Speed’ star insists that she was never approached for the film.

She even said that she did not even know whether the film was being made.

“I don’t know where that came from. I never read the script, I didn’t even know what the script was about,” Contactmusic quoted Bullock as telling EmpireOnline.com.

The film is also said to have Mickey Rourke, Jet Li, Jason Statham, and Eric Roberts.

The plot of the film revolves around a group of mercenaries who set out to overthrow a South American dictator. (ANI)

F-1 chief Ecclestone likes the way Hitler got things done!

London, July 4 (ANI): Formula One chief Bernie Ecclestone has said that he preferred totalitarian regimes to democracies and praised Adolf Hitler for his ability to “get things done”.

In an outspoken interview with The Times, the 78-year-old billionaire chastised contemporary politicians for their weakness and extolled the virtues of strong leadership.
Ecclestone said: “In a lot of ways, terrible to say this I suppose, but apart from the fact that Hitler got taken away and persuaded to do things that I have no idea whether he wanted to do or not, he was in the way that he could command a lot of people, able to get things done.”
“In the end he got lost, so he wasn’t a very good dictator because either he had all these things and knew what was going on and insisted, or he just went along with it . . . so either way he wasn’t a dictator,” Ecclestone added.

Ecclestone endorsed the concept of a government based on tyranny.

“Politicians are too worried about elections,” he said.

His latest comments could prove deeply damaging, says the paper.

His remarks have already drawn a strong reaction from Jewish groups and politicians.

A spokesman for the Board of Deputies of British Jews said: “Mr. Ecclestone’s comments regarding Hitler, female, black and Jewish racing drivers, and dictatorships are quite bizarre. He says [in the interview], ‘Politics is not for me’, and we are inclined to agree.”
Stephen Pollard, Editor of the Jewish Chronicle, said: “Mr. Ecclestone is either an idiot or morally repulsive. Either he has no idea how stupid and offensive his views are or he does and deserves to be held in contempt by all decent people.”

Denis MacShane, the Labour MP and chairman of the all-party inquiry into anti-Semitism, and chairman of the European Institute for the Study of Contemporary Anti-Semitism, condemned Ecclestone’s decision to align himself to a “growing” anti-democracy movement.

“If Mr. Ecclestone seriously thinks Hitler had to be persuaded to kill six million Jews, invade every European country and bomb London then he knows neither history and shows a complete lack of judgment,” MacShane added.
John Whittingdale, the Tory chairman of the Culture, Media and Sport Select Committee, said: “These are extraordinary views and I’m appalled that anybody could hold them.” (ANI)

Pak National Assembly wants to quiz AQ Khan over proliferation confession

Islamabad, June 27 (ANI): The Speaker of Pakistan’s National Assembly has been urged to call Pak’s disgraced nuclear scientist, Dr. Abdul Qadir Khan, to seek an explanation from him on his confession of being involved in nuclear proliferation.

PML-N MNA Sheikh Rohail Asghar urged the Speaker to give a ruling demanding Dr. Khan to be present in the house and disclose the reason behind his confession.

Asghar said the nuclear scientist would be able to explain how dictator General (r) Pervez Musharraf forced him to confess this on state-run television channel.

He also said that the whole nation was proud of Dr AQ Khan, who made the country an atomic power.

He also said Dr Khan could play a pivotal role in steering the country out of energy crisis. (ANI)