Thursday, September 30, 2010

Central Bank of Lebanon Governor Riad Salame Honored on Oct 6 in Dearborn; Chairman of BLOM Bank, Saad Azhari, among other Banking Executives to attend

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Distributed by the www.ArabAmericanNewsWire.com


PRESS RELEASE:
Contact: Suehaila Amen                                                      Email: libcusa@yahoo.com
LIBC Vice President; Banquet Chairwoman                                     
Event Details:  Wed. Oct. 6, 2010 - - Hyatt Regency Hotel; Dearborn, MI  48126
Press Conference Time: 5:30 pm ; Banquet Event Program 7:00 pm
Dearborn, Michigan USA

Central Bank of Lebanon Governor Riad Salame Honored on Oct 6 in Dearborn; Chairman of BLOM Bank, Saad Azhari, among other Banking Executives to attend

It is with great pleasure that I extend an invitation to you to join us for a very special dinner reception, which will take place at 6 pm on October 6, 2010 at the Hyatt Regency Hotel in Dearborn, Michigan, USA.  The Lebanese International Business Council (LIBC) will be honoring the renowned Governor of the Central Bank of Lebanon, His Excellency, Mr. Riad Salame.

Central Bank 1st Vice Governor, HE Dr. Raed Charafeddine and Central Bank 2nd Vice Governor HE Dr. Haroutin Samuelian will join HE Governor Salame, as well.  Several Banking and Business Executives will honor us with their presence, including, but not limited to, six department directors from Central Bank and the following financial institution executives:  

BLOM BANK; Mr. Saad Azhari, CEO/Chairman
BANK OF KUWAIT AND ARAB WORLD; Mr. Abdul Razzak Achour, Chairman
LEBANESE CANADIAN BANK; Mr. Abdo Jeffi, General Manager
FFA PRIVATE BANK; [NAME REMOVED], Senior Manager
CENTRAL BANK; Mr. Sami Sfeir, Director of Media Dept.
CENTRAL BANK; Mr. Salem Beydoun
MIDDLE EAST AIRLINES; Mr. Adib Kassis, USA Manager

As you may be aware, during the global financial crisis most banks around the world have experienced difficulties in keeping up their revenue and profit and have tried to prevent catastrophe for themselves and their countries, however, the banks in Lebanon have not faced any problems.  As a matter of fact, they have increased their revenue, deposits and profit.  This is due to the wise judgment and the supervision of the governor of the Central Bank of Lebanon, HE Mr. Riad Salame, which prevents any possible financial problems in the country.  HE Mr. Salame is well known throughout the international banking world as the most successful central bank governor.

The Lebanese International Business Council (LIBC), an organization that facilitates networking among business people and professionals, is pleased to invite you to attend this gala and to listen to the keynote speech by HE Mr. Riad Salame.  There may also be an opportunity to ask questions.

Please plan to attend the gala dinner and please review the brochure about this important event, which will be attended by the most important Arab American business leaders as well as many American business leaders.  We hope you are able to join us.  ####

New Film coming: Yemeni Voices in America

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New Film coming: Yemeni Voices in America

Dearborn, August 17, 2010 

The Yemeni American Net in its fourth year, is producing its first documentary film titled ‘Yemeni Voices in America’. Movie expected to premier the 22nd of October at the National Arab American Museum.


The 60-Minutes film is produced to capture the historic moments in the life of Yemeni Americans and their contributions to the American society. The United States is a country of immigrants, and Yemeni immigrants have their own slice of contribution to the American society such as the American auto revolution.

Those who have contributed to the American society from Yemeni descents have all the right to take the credit. According to Rasheed Alnozili, director of the film, this movie is dedicated to those Yemeni Americans who were able to contribute to the American society.

“This documentary film comes to confirm that the Yemeni American community lives in harmony with other communities; dispelling the myths that Yemenis are backward and terrorists.” Alnozili added.


Alnozili concluded that the Yemeni American Net took this giant step to reach out to the American people, telling the World the real story of Yemen and Yemenis. The film is to be shown in libraries, museums, and cinemas around the states starting the 22nd of October, 2010. The first debut of the film will be at the National Arab American Museum in Dearborn and will be open to journalists, critics, businessmen, community leaders, community activists, college students. Tickets will be available soon online.

For sponsorship, please contact Adel Mozip, director of marketing at adel@yemeniamerican.com or. 
# # #

Wednesday, September 29, 2010

US4ARABS -- The Arab Americans' Home Away From Home

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US4ARABS -- The Arab Americans' Home Away From Home

San Francisco , California , US4Arabs.com – (US 4 Arabs - Your Home Away From Home)™ was established by a group of young Arab American students who were researching information about the middle east and Arabs in the United States, they were very amazed at the lack of factual information and the wealth of misinformation about Arab Americans. They established this website as the ultimate resource for Arabs and non-Arabs to better understand the Arab Americans point of view. The site is intended for all the people who like to know the facts about Arab Americans, Arab countries, Arab people as a culture and a race. http://www.us4arabs.com bridges the gap between not only Arab Americans but also the Arabs as a whole and the west; it brings their points of view closer together, it preaches understanding and communication between all Arabs and the west.

Us4arabs.com is a website by the people for the people, the idea behind it is to give the right and correct information to any person around the world who is interested in gathering information about the Arabs, it is intended for the scholar and researcher to have all the information he needs at their disposal. The website has information about individual countries history, population , economy, and topography. It has a listing for all Arab embassies by address and contact information where anyone can obtain information about individual countries economy, industry and social life.

Us4arabs.com has news that is updated daily that keeps in touch with the community and the Arab world, news that is trusted and unbiased. it covers Arab Americans news and politics, as well as culture, business, and health related issues. In the article section a selection of variant articles by written by many writers, thinkers, and educators. Many issues that are beneficial to the Arab American community is addressed and discussed here.

The Us4arabs.com is one of the very few websites that allows businesses and individuals to list their business in its free directory at no charge to the owner, it allows an employer, a seller, or a buyer to list his product for free and to search listings at no cost. An employer can post jobs and services he provides for both Arabs and non-Arabs.

The most popular and comprehensive section at the us4arabs.com is the events section. Here you can list, or update information about an event that relates to the Arab American community nation wide.  Anyone from coast to coast can search the events section in his state or a state he is visiting no matter how small or large of an event it is always listed and covered  you can find at Us4arabs.com

Since its inception visitors of the us4arabs website has grown in numbers dramatically in the united states and around the world, many of them visit the site on a daily basis, everyone, Arab and none Arab is free to enter the ever growing forums and chat rooms. They are free to post their views and  information on any topic of interest to the community.

"us4arabs.com website is the leading reference for Arab American news , events , and information.
We have immediate plans to add more relevant content and expand our services to the community" says Baraa Sarsour president and co-founder of us4arabs.com .

# # #

A CPJ Special Report: In Yemen, brutal repression cloaked in law

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Committee to Protect Journalists
330 Seventh Avenue, 11th Fl., New York, NY 10001 Phone: +1 (212) 465-1004 Fax: +1 (212) 465-9568

Contact: Mohamed Abdel Dayem, program coordinator. Phone: (212) 465-1004, x103; E-mail: m.abdel.dayem@cpj.org   
A CPJ Special Report:
In Yemen, brutal repression cloaked in law

 
New York, September 29, 2010--
Extrajudicial abductions, intimidation, and crude censorship have marked the Yemeni government's record of repression for years, but President Ali Abdullah Saleh's administration is now erecting an elaborate legal structure intended to further restrict news coverage and provide a veneer of legitimacy for its brutal actions, the Committee to Protect Journalists finds in a new report.
 
"Taken together, the government's longstanding practice of violent repression and its new legalistic tactics are creating the worst climate for press freedom since the country's unification in 1990," CPJ's Mohamed Abdel Dayem writes. And in a strategically important country where international extremists have found safe haven, that is an alarming prospect.
 
The creation of an exceptional court to prosecute so-called press offenses has been the centerpiece of the government's escalating campaign of repression. The effort continues today with an array of legislative proposals that would set prohibitive financial barriers for broadcast and online news outlets, expand the definition of criminal defamation to include virtually any form of criticism of the president, and increase prison terms for critical news coverage to 10 years.
 
Ø  Click here for the full report
Ø  For the Arabic-language version, click here
Ø  And click here for a podcast with CPJ's Mohamed Abdel Dayem

Media Advisory: CPJ's Mohamed Abdel Dayem is available for media interviews in English and Arabic.
 
Contact information:
Mohamed Abdel Dayem
Program Coordinator, Middle East and North Africa
Phone: (212) 465-1004 x103
E-mail: m.abdel.dayem@cpj.org
 
Magnus Ag
Communications Assistant
Phone: (212) 465-1004 x128
Cell: (347) 279-5575
E-mail: mag@cpj.org


تقرير خاص صادر عن لجنة حماية الصحفيين
قمع وحشي مقنع بالقانون في اليمن
 

نيويورك، 29 أيلول/سبتمبر 2010 -- خلصت لجنة حماية الصحفيين في تقرير جديد أصدرته أن عمليات الاختطاف خارج نطاق القانون، والتخويف، والتهديد، والرقابة الفجّة قد وسمت سجل الحكومة اليمنية القمعي منذ سنوات عديدة، ولكن حكومة الرئيس علي عبد الله صالح تعمل حالياً على إرساء بنية قانونية مسهبة تهدف إلى تقييد التغطية الإخبارية بشكل أكبر وإلى إضفاء مظاهر الشرعية على تصرفاتها القمعية.

وكتب محمد عبد الدايم من لجنة حماية الصحفيين، "إن تلاقي الممارسات الحكومية القائمة منذ فترة طويلة في القمع العنيف مع الأساليب القانونية الجديدة التي أخذت الحكومة تتبعها يُسفر عن أسوأ مناخ لحرية الصحافة في البلاد منذ الوحدة في 1990". ويمثل هذا الأمر شأناً مثيراً للقلق في هذا البلد المهم إستراتيجياً الذي وجد فيه المتطرفون الدوليون ملاذاً لهم.

لقد كان إنشاء محكمة استثنائية للنظر في ما يُسمى جرائم الصحافة محور حملة القمع الحكومية المتصاعدة. وتتواصل الجهود الحكومية حتى اليوم وفي جعبتها مجموعة من المقترحات التشريعية التي من شأنها وضع عوائق مالية مانعة أمام وسائل الإعلام الإخبارية السمعية والبصرية والإلكترونية، وتوسيع نطاق مفهوم التشهير الجنائي ليشمل فعلياً أي شكل من أشكال الانتقاد الموجه لرئيس الجمهورية، وزيادة مدة عقوبة الحبس بسبب التغطية الإخبارية الناقدة لتصل في بعض الحالات إلى 10 سنوات.


للاطلاع على النسخة العربية من التقرير،اضغط هنا

Tuesday, September 28, 2010

Arab Journalists Launch News, Feature and Press Release Wire Service

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Distributed by the www.ArabAmericanNewsWire.com


Arab Journalists Launch News, Feature and Press Release Wire Service
Radio Baladi and NAAJA.com have partnered to launch the new Arab American News Wire
AANW will feature news stories, feature stories and press releases that you can reprint free of charge with attribution to the original sources. All material is copyright the authors.
We are hoping that through the National Arab American Journalists Association (which is establishing a not-for-profit foundation) to begin paying individual writers around the country to contribute original content news and features.
We accept all press releases related to the American Arab and Muslim American community.
We do not publish opinion commentary or columns on the site and we review and accept or reject news and features based on professional journalism writing styles.
You can submit a news or feature from your newspaper or magazine for distribution. Include the TITLE, BYLINE, BODY of the story and a shirttail (final line that identifies you in under 3 lines in parenthesis). You can add a contact email and web site at the end of the story also.
It’s a great way to promote your publication and media.
We met with leaders of two dozen American Arab organizations in Dearborn this past week where we received their support and their endorsement for this project. We will be hosting a journalism conference in MARCH 2011 in Dearborn. We will provide all the details in upcoming emails.
Please visit the web site and contribute news, features and your community press releases to the site.
RAY HANANIA
www.RadioChicagoland.com
rayhanania@comcast.net
eFax 708-575-9078

Thursday, September 23, 2010

REMARKS BY PRESIDENT OBAMA TO THE UNITED NATIONS GENERAL ASSEMBLY

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THE WHITE HOUSE
Office of the Press Secretary
For Immediate Release                    September 23, 2010

REMARKS BY PRESIDENT OBAMA
TO THE UNITED NATIONS GENERAL ASSEMBLY

United Nations Building
New York, New York

10:01 A.M. EDT

     THE PRESIDENT:  Mr. President, Mr. Secretary-General, my fellow delegates, ladies and gentlemen.  It is a great honor to address this Assembly for the second time, nearly two years after my election as President of the United States.

     We know this is no ordinary time for our people.  Each of us comes here with our own problems and priorities.  But there are also challenges that we share in common as leaders and as nations.

     We meet within an institution built from the rubble of war, designed to unite the world in pursuit of peace.  And we meet within a city that for centuries has welcomed people from across the globe, demonstrating that individuals of every color, faith and station can come together to pursue opportunity, build a community, and live with the blessing of human liberty.

     Outside the doors of this hall, the blocks and neighborhoods of this great city tell the story of a difficult decade.  Nine years ago, the destruction of the World Trade Center signaled a threat that respected no boundary of dignity or decency.  Two years ago this month, a financial crisis on Wall Street devastated American families on Main Street.  These separate challenges have affected people around the globe.  Men and women and children have been murdered by extremists from Casablanca to London; from Jalalabad to Jakarta.  The global economy suffered an enormous blow during the financial crisis, crippling markets and deferring the dreams of millions on every continent.  Underneath these challenges to our security and prosperity lie deeper fears:  that ancient hatreds and religious divides are once again ascendant; that a world which has grown more interconnected has somehow slipped beyond our control.

     These are some of the challenges that my administration has confronted since we came into office.  And today, I’d like to talk to you about what we’ve done over the last 20 months to meet these challenges; what our responsibility is to pursue peace in the Middle East; and what kind of world we are trying to build in this 21st century.

     Let me begin with what we have done.  I have had no greater focus as President than rescuing our economy from potential catastrophe.  And in an age when prosperity is shared, we could not do this alone.  So America has joined with nations around the world to spur growth, and the renewed demand that could restart job creation.

We are reforming our system of global finance, beginning with Wall Street reform here at home, so that a crisis like this never happens again.  And we made the G20 the focal point for international coordination, because in a world where prosperity is more diffuse, we must broaden our circle of cooperation to include emerging economies -- economies from every corner of the globe.

     There is much to show for our efforts, even as there is much work to be done.  The global economy has been pulled back from the brink of a depression, and is growing once more.  We have resisted protectionism, and are exploring ways to expand trade and commerce among nations.  But we cannot -- and will not -- rest until these seeds of progress grow into a broader prosperity, not only for all Americans, but for peoples around the globe.

     As for our common security, America is waging a more effective fight against al Qaeda, while winding down the war in Iraq.  Since I took office, the United States has removed nearly 100,000 troops from Iraq.  We have done so responsibly, as Iraqis have transitioned to lead responsibility for the security of their country.

We are now focused on building a lasting partnership with the Iraqi people, while keeping our commitment to remove the rest of our troops by the end of next year.

     While drawing down in Iraq, we have refocused on defeating al Qaeda and denying its affiliates a safe haven.  In Afghanistan, the United States and our allies are pursuing a strategy to break the Taliban’s momentum and build the capacity of Afghanistan’s government and security forces, so that a transition to Afghan responsibility can begin next July.  And from South Asia to the Horn of Africa, we are moving toward a more targeted approach -- one that strengthens our partners and dismantles terrorist networks without deploying large American armies.

     As we pursue the world’s most dangerous extremists, we’re also denying them the world’s most dangerous weapons, and pursuing the peace and security of a world without nuclear weapons.

Earlier this year, 47 nations embraced a work-plan to secure all vulnerable nuclear materials within four years.  We have joined with Russia to sign the most comprehensive arms control treaty in decades.  We have reduced the role of nuclear weapons in our security strategy.  And here, at the United Nations, we came together to strengthen the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty.

     As part of our effort on non-proliferation, I offered the Islamic Republic of Iran an extended hand last year, and underscored that it has both rights and responsibilities as a member of the international community.  I also said -- in this hall -- that Iran must be held accountable if it failed to meet those responsibilities.  And that is what we have done.

Iran is the only party to the NPT that cannot demonstrate the peaceful intentions of its nuclear program, and those actions have consequences.  Through U.N. Security Council Resolution 1929, we made it clear that international law is not an empty promise.

     Now let me be clear once more:  The United States and the international community seek a resolution to our differences with Iran, and the door remains open to diplomacy should Iran choose to walk through it.  But the Iranian government must demonstrate a clear and credible commitment and confirm to the world the peaceful intent of its nuclear program.

     As we combat the spread of deadly weapons, we’re also confronting the specter of climate change.  After making historic investments in clean energy and efficiency at home, we helped forge an accord in Copenhagen that -- for the first time -- commits all major economies to reduce their emissions.  We are keenly aware this is just a first step.  And going forward, we will support a process in which all major economies meet our responsibilities to protect the planet while unleashing the power of clean energy to serve as an engine of growth and development.

     America has also embraced unique responsibilities with come -- that come with our power.  Since the rains came and the floodwaters rose in Pakistan, we have pledged our assistance, and we should all support the Pakistani people as they recover and rebuild.  And when the earth shook and Haiti was devastated by loss, we joined a coalition of nations in response.  Today, we honor those from the U.N. family who lost their lives in the earthquake, and commit ourselves to stand with the people of Haiti until they can stand on their own two feet.

     Amidst this upheaval, we have also been persistent in our pursuit of peace.  Last year, I pledged my best efforts to support the goal of two states, Israel and Palestine, living side by side in peace and security, as part of a comprehensive peace between Israel and all of its neighbors.  We have travelled a winding road over the last 12 months, with few peaks and many valleys.  But this month, I am pleased that we have pursued direct negotiations between Israelis and Palestinians in Washington, Sharm el Sheikh and Jerusalem.

     Now I recognize many are pessimistic about this process.  The cynics say that Israelis and Palestinians are too distrustful of each other, and too divided internally, to forge lasting peace.  Rejectionists on both sides will try to disrupt the process, with bitter words and with bombs and with gunfire.  Some say that the gaps between the parties are too big; the potential for talks to break down is too great; and that after decades of failure, peace is simply not possible.

     I hear those voices of skepticism.  But I ask you to consider the alternative.  If an agreement is not reached, Palestinians will never know the pride and dignity that comes with their own state.  Israelis will never know the certainty and security that comes with sovereign and stable neighbors who are committed to coexistence.  The hard realities of demography will take hold.  More blood will be shed.  This Holy Land will remain a symbol of our differences, instead of our common humanity. 

     I refuse to accept that future.  And we all have a choice to make.  Each of us must choose the path of peace.  Of course, that responsibility begins with the parties themselves, who must answer the call of history.  Earlier this month at the White House, I was struck by the words of both the Israeli and Palestinian leaders.  Prime Minister Netanyahu said, “I came here today to find a historic compromise that will enable both people to live in peace, security, and dignity.”  And President Abbas said, “We will spare no effort and we will work diligently and tirelessly to ensure these negotiations achieve their cause.”

     These words must now be followed by action and I believe that both leaders have the courage to do so.  But the road that they have to travel is exceedingly difficult, which is why I call upon Israelis and Palestinians -- and the world -- to rally behind the goal that these leaders now share.  We know that there will be tests along the way and that one test is fast approaching.  Israel’s settlement moratorium has made a difference on the ground and improved the atmosphere for talks. 

     And our position on this issue is well known.  We believe that the moratorium should be extended.  We also believe that talks should press on until completed.  Now is the time for the parties to help each other overcome this obstacle.  Now is the time to build the trust -- and provide the time -- for substantial progress to be made.  Now is the time for this opportunity to be seized, so that it does not slip away.

     Now, peace must be made by Israelis and Palestinians, but each of us has a responsibility to do our part as well.  Those of us who are friends of Israel must understand that true security for the Jewish state requires an independent Palestine -- one that allows the Palestinian people to live with dignity and opportunity.  And those of us who are friends of the Palestinians must understand that the rights of the Palestinian people will be won only through peaceful means -- including genuine reconciliation with a secure Israel.

     I know many in this hall count themselves as friends of the Palestinians.  But these pledges of friendship must now be supported by deeds.  Those who have signed on to the Arab Peace Initiative should seize this opportunity to make it real by taking tangible steps towards the normalization that it promises Israel. 

And those who speak on behalf of Palestinian self-government should help the Palestinian Authority politically and financially, and in doing so help the Palestinians build the institutions of their state. 

Those who long to see an independent Palestine must also stop trying to tear down Israel.  After thousands of years, Jews and Arabs are not strangers in a strange land.  After 60 years in the community of nations, Israel’s existence must not be a subject for debate.

Israel is a sovereign state, and the historic homeland of the Jewish people.  It should be clear to all that efforts to chip away at Israel’s legitimacy will only be met by the unshakeable opposition of the United States.  And efforts to threaten or kill Israelis will do nothing to help the Palestinian people.  The slaughter of innocent Israelis is not resistance -- it’s injustice.  And make no mistake:  The courage of a man like President Abbas, who stands up for his people in front of the world under very difficult circumstances, is far greater than those who fire rockets at innocent women and children.

     The conflict between Israelis and Arabs is as old as this institution.  And we can come back here next year, as we have for the last 60 years, and make long speeches about it.  We can read familiar lists of grievances.  We can table the same resolutions.  We can further empower the forces of rejectionism and hate.  And we can waste more time by carrying forward an argument that will not help a single Israeli or Palestinian child achieve a better life.  We can do that. 

     Or, we can say that this time will be different -- that this time we will not let terror, or turbulence, or posturing, or petty politics stand in the way.  This time, we will think not of ourselves, but of the young girl in Gaza who wants to have no ceiling on her dreams, or the young boy in Sderot who wants to sleep without the nightmare of rocket fire.

This time, we should draw upon the teachings of tolerance that lie at the heart of three great religions that see Jerusalem’s soil as sacred.  This time we should reach for what’s best within ourselves.  If we do, when we come back here next year, we can have an agreement that will lead to a new member of the United Nations -- an independent, sovereign state of Palestine, living in peace with Israel.  (Applause.)

     It is our destiny to bear the burdens of the challenges that I’ve addressed -- recession and war and conflict.  And there is always a sense of urgency -- even emergency -- that drives most of our foreign policies.  Indeed, after millennia marked by wars, this very institution reflects the desire of human beings to create a forum to deal with emergencies that will inevitably come.

     But even as we confront immediate challenges, we must also summon the foresight to look beyond them, and consider what we are trying to build over the long term?  What is the world that awaits us when today’s battles are brought to an end?  And that is what I would like to talk about with the remainder of my time today.

     One of the first actions of this General Assembly was to adopt a Universal Declaration of Human Rights in 1948. That Declaration begins by stating that, “recognition of the inherent dignity and of the equal and inalienable rights of all members of the human family is the foundation of freedom, justice, and peace in the world.”

     The idea is a simple one -- that freedom, justice and peace for the world must begin with freedom, justice, and peace in the lives of individual human beings.  And for the United States, this is a matter of moral and pragmatic necessity.  As Robert Kennedy said, “the individual man, the child of God, is the touchstone of value, and all society, groups, the state, exist for his benefit.”  So we stand up for universal values because it’s the right thing to do.  But we also know from experience that those who defend these values for their people have been our closest friends and allies, while those who have denied those rights -- whether terrorist groups or tyrannical governments -- have chosen to be our adversaries.

     Human rights have never gone unchallenged -- not in any of our nations, and not in our world.  Tyranny is still with us -- whether it manifests itself in the Taliban killing girls who try to go to school, a North Korean regime that enslaves its own people, or an armed group in Congo-Kinshasa that use rape as a weapon of war.

     In times of economic unease, there can also be an anxiety about human rights.  Today, as in past times of economic downturn, some put human rights aside for the promise of short term stability or the false notion that economic growth can come at the expense of freedom.  We see leaders abolishing term limits.  We see crackdowns on civil society.  We see corruption smothering entrepreneurship and good governance.  We see democratic reforms deferred indefinitely.

     As I said last year, each country will pursue a path rooted in the culture of its own people.  Yet experience shows us that history is on the side of liberty; that the strongest foundation for human progress lies in open economies, open societies, and open governments.  To put it simply, democracy, more than any other form of government, delivers for our citizens.  And I believe that truth will only grow stronger in a world where the borders between nations are blurred. 

     America is working to shape a world that fosters this openness, for the rot of a closed or corrupt economy must never eclipse the energy and innovation of human beings.  All of us want the right to educate our children, to make a decent wage, to care for the sick, and to be carried as far as our dreams and our deeds will take us.  But that depends upon economies that tap the power of our people, including the potential of women and girls.  That means letting entrepreneurs start a business without paying a bribe and governments that support opportunity instead of stealing from their people.  And that means rewarding hard work, instead of reckless risk-taking.

     Yesterday, I put forward a new development policy that will pursue these goals, recognizing that dignity is a human right and global development is in our common interest.  America will partner with nations that offer their people a path out of poverty.  And together, we must unleash growth that powers by individuals and emerging markets in all parts of the globe.

     There is no reason why Africa should not be an exporter of agriculture, which is why our food security initiative is empowering farmers.  There is no reason why entrepreneurs shouldn’t be able to build new markets in every society, which is why I hosted a summit on entrepreneurship earlier this spring, because the obligation of government is to empower individuals, not to impede them.

     The same holds true for civil society.  The arc of human progress has been shaped by individuals with the freedom to assemble and by organizations outside of government that insisted upon democratic change and by free media that held the powerful accountable.  We have seen that from the South Africans who stood up to apartheid, to the Poles of Solidarity, to the mothers of the disappeared who spoke out against the Dirty War, to Americans who marched for the rights of all races, including my own.

     Civil society is the conscience of our communities and America will always extend our engagement abroad with citizens beyond the halls of government.  And we will call out those who suppress ideas and serve as a voice for those who are voiceless.  We will promote new tools of communication so people are empowered to connect with one another and, in repressive societies, to do so with security.  We will support a free and open Internet, so individuals have the information to make up their own minds.  And it is time to embrace and effectively monitor norms that advance the rights of civil society and guarantee its expansion within and across borders.

     Open society supports open government, but it cannot substitute for it.  There is no right more fundamental than the ability to choose your leaders and determine your destiny.  Now, make no mistake:  The ultimate success of democracy in the world won’t come because the United States dictates it; it will come because individual citizens demand a say in how they are governed. 

     There is no soil where this notion cannot take root, just as every democracy reflects the uniqueness of a nation.  Later this fall, I will travel to Asia.  And I will visit India, which peacefully threw off colonialism and established a thriving democracy of over a billion people.

I’ll continue to Indonesia, the world’s largest Muslim-majority country, which binds together thousands of islands through the glue of representative government and civil society.  I’ll join the G20 meeting on the Korean Peninsula, which provides the world’s clearest contrast between a society that is dynamic and open and free, and one that is imprisoned and closed.  And I will conclude my trip in Japan, an ancient culture that found peace and extraordinary development through democracy.

     Each of these countries gives life to democratic principles in their own way.  And even as some governments roll back reform, we also celebrate the courage of a President in Colombia who willingly stepped aside, or the promise of a new constitution in Kenya.

The common thread of progress is the principle that government is accountable to its citizens.  And the diversity in this room makes clear -- no one country has all the answers, but all of us must answer to our own people.

In all parts of the world, we see the promise of innovation to make government more open and accountable.  And now, we must build on that progress.  And when we gather back here next year, we should bring specific commitments to promote transparency; to fight corruption; to energize civic engagement; to leverage new technologies so that we strengthen the foundations of freedom in our own countries, while living up to the ideals that can light the world.

     This institution can still play an indispensable role in the advance of human rights.  It’s time to welcome the efforts of U.N. Women to protect the rights of women around the globe.  (Applause.)

It’s time for every member state to open its elections to international monitors and increase the U.N. Democracy Fund.  It’s time to reinvigorate U.N. peacekeeping, so that missions have the resources necessary to succeed, and so atrocities like sexual violence are prevented and justice is enforced -- because neither dignity nor democracy can thrive without basic security.

And it’s time to make this institution more accountable as well, because the challenges of a new century demand new ways of serving our common interests.

     The world that America seeks is not one we can build on our own.  For human rights to reach those who suffer the boot of oppression, we need your voices to speak out.  In particular, I appeal to those nations who emerged from tyranny and inspired the world in the second half of the last century -- from South Africa to South Asia; from Eastern Europe to South America.  Don’t stand idly by, don’t be silent, when dissidents elsewhere are imprisoned and protesters are beaten.  Recall your own history.  Because part of the price of our own freedom is standing up for the freedom of others.

     That belief will guide America’s leadership in this 21st century.  It is a belief that has seen us through more than two centuries of trial, and it will see us through the challenges we face today -- be it war or recession; conflict or division.

So even as we have come through a difficult decade, I stand here before you confident in the future -- a future where Iraq is governed by neither tyrant nor a foreign power, and Afghanistan is freed from the turmoil of war; a future where the children of Israel and Palestine can build the peace that was not possible for their parents; a world where the promise of development reaches into the prisons of poverty and disease; a future where the cloud of recession gives way to the light of renewal and the dream of opportunity is available to all.

     This future will not be easy to reach.  It will not come without setbacks, nor will it be quickly claimed.  But the founding of the United Nations itself is a testament to human progress.  Remember, in times that were far more trying than our own, our predecessors chose the hope of unity over the ease of division and made a promise to future generations that the dignity and equality of human beings would be our common cause.
                                               
     It falls to us to fulfill that promise.  And though we will be met by dark forces that will test our resolve, Americans have always had cause to believe that we can choose a better history; that we need only to look outside the walls around us.  For through the citizens of every conceivable ancestry who make this city their own, we see living proof that opportunity can be accessed by all, that what unites us as human beings is far greater than what divides us, and that people from every part of this world can live together in peace. 

     Thank you very much.  (Applause.) 

END           10:34 A.M. EDT

Wednesday, September 22, 2010

J Street Ads in NYT, WSJ Push for Bold Peace Moves

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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
September 22, 2010
CONTACT: Amy Spitalnick
202.248.5868 (o) / 516.521.0128 (c)
amy@jstreet.org
J Street Ads in NYT, WSJ Push for Bold Peace Moves
Why is it that when Israel goes to war, its friends in America rally to its side - but when it makes moves for peace, support is much harder to come by?  With the settlement deadline approaching, J Street is making clear that broad support exists for bold moves toward peace.
A full-page ad in today's New York Times, as well as ads in the Wall Street Journal and in Jewish newspapers around the country, urge Israeli, Palestinian and American leaders to seize the moment and "Make History Now" by freezing settlement growth and giving talks a chance to succeed.
Responding to Ambassador Oren's call for greater American Jewish support when Israel takes hard steps for peace, J Street's campaign also highlights broad support for bold Israeli moves.  Petitions to Oren, as well as to Prime Minister Netanyahu, President Abbas, and President Obama, urge the leaders to make the necessary and difficult choices to keep talks alive.
The campaign also features a telephone town hall on Monday, September 27th (details to follow) and an op-ed by J Street President and founder Jeremy Ben-Ami in JTA.
Here's the full text of the ad:
Prime Minister Netanyahu has said he seeks to reach an historic compromise that enables Israelis and Palestinians to live in peace, security and dignity.
President Obama has set the bar appropriately high: A two-state solution within the coming year leading to comprehensive regional peace.
Israel's long-term security and its survival as the democratic, national home of the Jewish people depend on the success of these talks. Success will require leadership, hard decisions and sacrifice - from all the parties.
Extremists will seek to derail the new effort; cynics and pessimists will seek to dismiss it.
We are standing up to say: It is time to end this conflict now.
Join J Street's 160,000 supporters in telling the leaders in the region and here at home to seize this moment.
Freeze settlement growth.
Give these new talks a chance to succeed.

Tuesday, September 21, 2010

Helen Thomas to be Honored on November 18, 2010

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Helen Thomas to be Honored on November 18, 2010


Washington, DC | www.adc.org | September 21, 2010 - The American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee (ADC) is proud to announce that it will be hosting a gala in honor of the great Helen Thomas. The gala will take place Thursday, November 18, 2010, at the Washington Marriott Wardman Park Hotel, 2660 Woodley Road, Washington, DC 20008. ADC invites members and friends to join in the celebration honoring Helen’s dedicated service to our country as a journalism trailblazer, and her legendary front row coverage of the White House for over sixty years.

Helen was born in Winchester, Kentucky, on August 4, 1920. She graduated from Wayne State University, and in 1943 started work for United Press International (UPI). As a member of the UPI White House Team, she covered every single U.S. President since President John F. Kennedy. From 2000 - 2010, Helen was a columnist for the Hearst News Service. In addition, Helen also served as President of the Women's National Press Club in 1959 -60, and was the first woman officer of the National Press Club; she became the first woman officer of the White House Correspondents Association in its 50 years of existence, and served as its first woman president in 1975-76. Helen is the author of a number of outstanding books, including Front Row at the White House, Watchdogs of Democracy?, and Listen Up, Mr. President. For more biographical information, please click here.

Become a sponsor of this special celebration or purchase individual tickets.
For more information, please call ADC at 202-244-2990 or email nmohamad@adc.org

###

Contact: adc@adc.org
202-244-2990
NOTE TO EDITORS: The American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee (ADC), which is non-profit, non-sectarian and non-partisan, is the largest grassroots Arab-American civil rights and civil liberties organization in the United States. It was founded in 1980 by former Senator James Abourezk. ADC has a national network of chapters and members in all 50 states.

The ADC Research Institute (ADCRI) is a Section 501(c)(3) educational affiliate. ADCRI programs include research studies, seminars, conferences and publications that document and analyze the discrimination faced by Arab Americans in the workplace, schools, media, and governmental agencies and institutions. ADC and ADCRI celebrate the rich cultural heritage of Arabs and Arab-Americans.

Monday, September 20, 2010

Chicago Man Arrested in Attempted Bombing Plot

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Chicago Man Arrested in Attempted Bombing Plot
A 22-year-old Chicago man was arrested early Sunday morning, immediately after placing a backpack which he thought contained an explosive device into a curbside trash receptacle near a crowded North Side street corner, announced Robert D. Grant, Special Agent-in-Charge of the Chicago office of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), and Patrick J. Fitzgerald, U.S. Attorney for the Northern District of Illinois.

SAMI SAMIR HASSOUN, who lives in the 4700 block of North Kedzie in Chicago, was arrested just after midnight Saturday, without incident, on Seminary Avenue near the 3500 block of North Clark Street, by members of the Chicago FBI’s Joint Terrorism Task Force (JTTF). The arrest followed an investigation that accelerated in June of this year. HASSOUN was charged in a criminal complaint filed today in U.S. District Court in Chicago with one count each of attempted use of a weapon of mass destruction and attempted use of an explosive device, both of which are felony offenses.

In announcing this arrest, Mr. Grant and Mr. Fitzgerald wish to emphasize that at no time was the public in danger during this investigation. The supposed explosive device was inert and provided to HASSOUN by an undercover agent. In addition, HASSOUN was under intermittent surveillance as the plot developed and the undercover agents were in regular contact with HASSOUN, monitoring his activities. There was no indication that any foreign or domestic terror groups were in any way connected to this plot or inspired HASSOUN.

According to the complaint, starting in June of this year, HASSOUN, who is a Lebanese citizen and permanent resident alien, began expressing to an associate the desire to commit acts of violence in the city for both monetary gain and to cause political transformation in Chicago. Unbeknownst to HASSOUN, his associate was secretly cooperating with the FBI and assisted with the investigation of these alleged threats.

Throughout the summer, HASSOUN allegedly discussed with this associate a number of possible targets and plots, including a biological attack on the city, poisoning Lake Michigan, attacking police officers, bombing the Sears (Willis) Tower, and assassinating the mayor. Eventually, HASSOUN is alleged to have selected the Wrigleyville area of Chicago as his target, utilizing an explosive device which he would detonate on a weekend night to inflict maximum damage.

Because of HASSOUN’s stated desire to carry out this attack, an undercover agent (UCA) was introduced to him in July by his associate. The UCA indicated that he was from California and that he had access to explosives and the expertise necessary to construct an explosive device which HASSOUN could use to carry out his plot. During this and subsequent meetings with the UCA, at which time a second UCA was also introduced, HASSOUN allegedly discussed several possible plots and scenarios in which he could dramatically impact the city and force the mayor to resign. HASSOUN eventually settled on a bombing outside a crowded Wrigleyville nightclub as the first step in his plan.

The complaint indicates that HASSOUN met with the UCA late on Saturday night, at which time he was provided a backpack which he thought contained a high powered explosive device. HASSOUN was shown the various components of the device and instructed on its operation. Although the explosive device was designed to look real, it in fact was constructed by the FBI of inert materials and was incapable of detonating.

HASSOUN and the UCA then left together in a rented vehicle, en route to the Wrigleyville area, where the bombing would take place. HASSOUN was under constant surveillance and agents watched as he placed the fake explosive device into a trash receptacle, after which he was arrested and the fake device recovered.

The complaint indicates that HASSOUN’s motivation for planning this attack was a combination of personal greed and political motivation.

HASSOUN is scheduled to appear today at 2:40 p.m. before Magistrate Judge Susan Cox in Chicago, at which time he will be formally charged. HASSOUN has been held at the Metropolitan Correctional Center (MCC) in Chicago, since his arrest on Sunday. If convicted of the charges filed against him, HASSOUN faces a mandatory minimum sentence of five (5) years to a maximum of life in prison.

This case was investigated by the Chicago FBI’s Joint Terrorism Task Force (JTTF) which is comprised of FBI special agents, officers from the Chicago Police Department, and representatives from 20 federal, state, and local law enforcement agencies.

The public is reminded that a complaint is not evidence of guilt and that all defendants in a criminal case are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law.

EDITOR’S NOTE: Copies of the criminal complaint filed in this case are available from the Chicago FBI’s press office at (312) 829-1199.

COLUMN: Mayor Daley’s retirement gives American Arabs a chance

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COLUMN: Mayor Daley’s retirement gives American Arabs a chance
By Ray Hanania

American Arabs in Chicagoland can be a potent electoral force if they can rise up above their petty politics and bickering, and come together for a local cause that in the long run could help them address the cause that is closest to our hearts, the tragedy of Palestine.

The decision by Mayor Richard M. Daley to retire and not seek re-election next February gives the American Arab community one chance to overcome the handicaps that have weakened our community and rally behind one candidate and elect that candidate mayor.

The candidate has to be someone that appeals to Americans but has a heart fair to the Middle East peace process, someone who is not one of the small group of extremists who control the “community microphone” bully pulpit but who represent in reality a very small segment of our community.

There are more than 450,000 American Arabs in Chicagoland, with many still living in Chicago. But this candidate would not run as an “Arab” candidate but rather as a candidate for the people.

I understand the egos that separate our people, though, and I know that even if we found the best candidate, getting the American Arab community to set aside their bickering to back one candidate would be difficult. But, I don’t believe we even need all of the American Arabs backing. What the candidate would need, though, would be the backing of the American Arabs who count.

Those who have focused on building their presence as Americans first and identifying with the American public, not the activists who claim to support Palestine and embrace extremism and are silent on violence, but who benefit personally from local power plays.

The American Arab community has seen what has happened to that selfish cadre of American Arab activists, many of them have been brought down by the scandal surrounding Tony Rezko. Rezko was a great person who supported many great causes. But he was brought down by the greed of the activists who suffocated him with their selfish interests and weak political ties.

How can our candidate win?

I have covered Chicago politics more than 34 years beginning with my first assignment interviewing the late Mayor Richard J. Daley in 1976 during a meeting he had with the Ambassador from Morocco. I have worked with several American Arabs who sought to run for public office in the suburbs, where anti-Arab hysteria is at its worse.

Among the strongest candidates was Miriam Zayed, who had the best qualifications to serve on the District 230 School board. But the community never united behind her campaign, with many turning away because she was a woman. Tragically, Miriam Zayed would have become a force in protecting the interests of our young people who continue to suffer in the suburban education systems. Till this day, decades after those election fights, we still have far few teachers who speak Arabic and most of the regional high schools refuse to offer Arabic as a language despite the large number of Arab students in their classes and the significance of the Arab World on American politics and its future.

We need someone who can help change the education system in Chicago and give American Arabs a chance. We need someone who has the looks and feel of an American who can connect with Americans and identify with the moderate voice that represents that silent majority of American Arabs in Chicagoland. We need someone who will win because they will offer themselves as an alternative to the divisions and racial politics that will soon rise as a focus on the battle to succeed Mayor Daley, someone who instills confidence and leadership and creative thought.

The filing deadline to become a candidate for mayor in Nov. 22. Petitions must be filed beginning Nov. 15.

There are three large voting constituencies in Chicago, African Americans, Hispanics and Whites mainly Irish. Each will have a long list of contenders diluting their voter strength. It is impossible, despite all the talk, for each constituency to find one candidate to represent the majority of African Americans, for example, or Hispanics or White Machine Democrats mainly of Irish background. There will be many and those many will divide the votes in the election. With as many as 30 candidates on the ballot, an outsider who doesn’t identify with the pack or dominant ethnic groups but who appeals to all of them can win the election.

In Chicago, the election is an open primary meaning you do not have to declare your party any more. To win the February election, you must get 1 vote more than 50 percent of all votes cast. In the event that one candidate does not obtain that majority, the top two candidates will face each other in a run-off election in April.

That means with 30 candidates dividing the vote, the successful candidate will only need about 18-22 percent of all votes cast.

That is something that one candidate can achieve if they have the right strategy. If they appeal to a broad constituency. If they are moderate in their views but wedded to justice and fairness. If they avoid the extremist rhetoric of the fanatics who drown out our community in their moronic rantings.

But that candidate needs to step up to the plate today and our community needs to come out of the woodwork where the good people have been hiding afraid to move to the front of the line and fight for our rights.

It is time we fought for our rights as Americans first. Because if we are successful as Americans in this country, we can then do even more to help our people back home in Palestine and other Arab countries. We can fight and standup to bigotry more successfully and confront the racists like the Pastor in Florida who says he wants to burn a Quran (Koran). That would be a hate crime if it involved any other religion but because it involves burning an Islamic Holy Book, no one will dare to charge the so-called “Christian” leader with a hate crime as he should be charged.

We need to stop being the victim and the only way we can do that is to recognize that we are Arabs, be proud of that heritage. Work from within the system. Distance ourselves from those who drag us to ineffective street protests that do absolutely nothing but make some feel good, changing nothing for our people. We need to develop ideas that speak to the needs of all the people outside of the American Arab community, issues that Americans of all walks of life will embrace as good.

We can do it.

The question though, is there anyone with the courage to standup and change our community from the ragtag collection of apathetic silence led through fear mongering by a small handful of extremists into one of pride, courage and empowerment?

I believe that candidate is out there.

I hope they come forward to make a difference.

(Ray Hanania is an award winning columnist distributed by Creators Syndicate and weekday morning radio talk show host. He can be reached att www.RadioChicagoland.com.)

Friday, September 17, 2010

Mayor Daley’s retirement gives American Arabs a chance

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Mayor Daley’s retirement gives American Arabs a chance
By Ray Hanania

American Arabs in Chicagoland can be a potent electoral force if they can rise up above their petty politics and bickering, and come together for a local cause that in the long run could help them address the cause that is closest to our hearts, the tragedy of Palestine.

The decision by Mayor Richard M. Daley to retire and not seek re-election next February gives the American Arab community one chance to overcome the handicaps that have weakened our community and rally behind one candidate and elect that candidate mayor.

The candidate has to be someone that appeals to Americans but has a heart fair to the Middle East peace process, someone who is not one of the small group of extremists who control the “community microphone” bully pulpit but who represent in reality a very small segment of our community.

There are more than 450,000 American Arabs in Chicagoland, with many still living in Chicago. But this candidate would not run as an “Arab” candidate but rather as a candidate for the people.

I understand the egos that separate our people, though, and I know that even if we found the best candidate, getting the American Arab community to set aside their bickering to back one candidate would be difficult. But, I don’t believe we even need all of the American Arabs backing. What the candidate would need, though, would be the backing of the American Arabs who count.

Those who have focused on building their presence as Americans first and identifying with the American public, not the activists who claim to support Palestine and embrace extremism and are silent on violence, but who benefit personally from local power plays.

The American Arab community has seen what has happened to that selfish cadre of American Arab activists, many of them have been brought down by the scandal surrounding Tony Rezko. Rezko was a great person who supported many great causes. But he was brought down by the greed of the activists who suffocated him with their selfish interests and weak political ties.

How can our candidate win?

I have covered Chicago politics more than 34 years beginning with my first assignment interviewing the late Mayor Richard J. Daley in 1976 during a meeting he had with the Ambassador from Morocco. I have worked with several American Arabs who sought to run for public office in the suburbs, where anti-Arab hysteria is at its worse.

Among the strongest candidates was Miriam Zayed, who had the best qualifications to serve on the District 230 School board. But the community never united behind her campaign, with many turning away because she was a woman. Tragically, Miriam Zayed would have become a force in protecting the interests of our young people who continue to suffer in the suburban education systems. Till this day, decades after those election fights, we still have far few teachers who speak Arabic and most of the regional high schools refuse to offer Arabic as a language despite the large number of Arab students in their classes and the significance of the Arab World on American politics and its future.

We need someone who can help change the education system in Chicago and give American Arabs a chance. We need someone who has the looks and feel of an American who can connect with Americans and identify with the moderate voice that represents that silent majority of American Arabs in Chicagoland. We need someone who will win because they will offer themselves as an alternative to the divisions and racial politics that will soon rise as a focus on the battle to succeed Mayor Daley, someone who instills confidence and leadership and creative thought.

The filing deadline to become a candidate for mayor in Nov. 22. Petitions must be filed beginning Nov. 15.

There are three large voting constituencies in Chicago, African Americans, Hispanics and Whites mainly Irish. Each will have a long list of contenders diluting their voter strength. It is impossible, despite all the talk, for each constituency to find one candidate to represent the majority of African Americans, for example, or Hispanics or White Machine Democrats mainly of Irish background. There will be many and those many will divide the votes in the election. With as many as 30 candidates on the ballot, an outsider who doesn’t identify with the pack or dominant ethnic groups but who appeals to all of them can win the election.

In Chicago, the election is an open primary meaning you do not have to declare your party any more. To win the February election, you must get 1 vote more than 50 percent of all votes cast. In the event that one candidate does not obtain that majority, the top two candidates will face each other in a run-off election in April.

That means with 30 candidates dividing the vote, the successful candidate will only need about 18-22 percent of all votes cast.

That is something that one candidate can achieve if they have the right strategy. If they appeal to a broad constituency. If they are moderate in their views but wedded to justice and fairness. If they avoid the extremist rhetoric of the fanatics who drown out our community in their moronic rantings.

But that candidate needs to step up to the plate today and our community needs to come out of the woodwork where the good people have been hiding afraid to move to the front of the line and fight for our rights.

It is time we fought for our rights as Americans first. Because if we are successful as Americans in this country, we can then do even more to help our people back home in Palestine and other Arab countries. We can fight and standup to bigotry more successfully and confront the racists like the Pastor in Florida who says he wants to burn a Quran (Koran). That would be a hate crime if it involved any other religion but because it involves burning an Islamic Holy Book, no one will dare to charge the so-called “Christian” leader with a hate crime as he should be charged.

We need to stop being the victim and the only way we can do that is to recognize that we are Arabs, be proud of that heritage. Work from within the system. Distance ourselves from those who drag us to ineffective street protests that do absolutely nothing but make some feel good, changing nothing for our people. We need to develop ideas that speak to the needs of all the people outside of the American Arab community, issues that Americans of all walks of life will embrace as good.

We can do it.

The question though, is there anyone with the courage to standup and change our community from the ragtag collection of apathetic silence led through fear mongering by a small handful of extremists into one of pride, courage and empowerment?

I believe that candidate is out there.

I hope they come forward to make a difference.

(Ray Hanania is an award winning columnist distributed by Creators Syndicate and weekday morning radio talk show host. He can be reached at www.RadioChicagoland.com.)