Tuesday, June 18, 2013

Egypt seen to give nod toward jihadis on Syria

In this image released by the Egyptian Presidency, Egyptian President Mohammed Morsi waves as he arrives at a rally called for by hardline Islamists loyal to the Egyptian president to show solidarity with the people of Syria, in a stadium in Cairo, Egypt, Sunday, June 15, 2013. Egypt's Islamist president announced Saturday that he was cutting off diplomatic relations with Syria and closing Damascus' embassy in Cairo, decisions made amid growing calls from hard-line Sunni clerics in Egypt and elsewhere to launch a "holy war" against Syria's embattled regime. (AP Photo/Egyptian Presidency)

In this image released by the Egyptian Presidency, Egyptian President Mohammed Morsi waves as he arrives at a rally called for by hardline Islamists loyal to the Egyptian president to show solidarity with the people of Syria, in a stadium in Cairo, Egypt, Sunday, June 15, 2013. Egypt's Islamist president announced Saturday that he was cutting off diplomatic relations with Syria and closing Damascus' embassy in Cairo, decisions made amid growing calls from hard-line Sunni clerics in Egypt and elsewhere to launch a "holy war" against Syria's embattled regime. (AP Photo/Egyptian Presidency)

In this image released by the Egyptian Presidency, Egyptian President Mohammed Morsi addresses a rally called for by hardline Islamists loyal to the Egyptian president to show solidarity with the people of Syria, in a stadium in Cairo, Egypt, Sunday, June 15, 2013. Egypt's Islamist president announced Saturday that he was cutting off diplomatic relations with Syria and closing Damascus' embassy in Cairo, decisions made amid growing calls from hard-line Sunni clerics in Egypt and elsewhere to launch a "holy war" against Syria's embattled regime. (AP Photo/Egyptian Presidency)

In this image released by the Egyptian Presidency, Egyptian President Mohammed Morsi listens to a speaker at a rally called for by hardline Islamists loyal to the Egyptian president to show solidarity with the people of Syria, in a stadium in Cairo, Egypt, Sunday, June 15, 2013. Egypt's Islamist president announced Saturday that he was cutting off diplomatic relations with Syria and closing Damascus' embassy in Cairo, decisions made amid growing calls from hard-line Sunni clerics in Egypt and elsewhere to launch a "holy war" against Syria's embattled regime. (AP Photo/Egyptian Presidency)

In this image released by the Egyptian Presidency, Egyptian President Mohammed Morsi addresses a rally called for by hardline Islamists loyal to the Egyptian president to show solidarity with the people of Syria, in a stadium in Cairo, Egypt, Sunday, June 15, 2013. Egypt's Islamist president announced Saturday that he was cutting off diplomatic relations with Syria and closing Damascus' embassy in Cairo, decisions made amid growing calls from hard-line Sunni clerics in Egypt and elsewhere to launch a "holy war" against Syria's embattled regime. (AP Photo/Egyptian Presidency)

In this image released by the Egyptian Presidency, Egyptian President Mohammed Morsi addresses a rally called for by hardline Islamists loyal to the Egyptian president to show solidarity with the people of Syria, in a stadium in Cairo, Egypt, Sunday, June 15, 2013. Egypt's Islamist president announced Saturday that he was cutting off diplomatic relations with Syria and closing Damascus' embassy in Cairo, decisions made amid growing calls from hard-line Sunni clerics in Egypt and elsewhere to launch a "holy war" against Syria's embattled regime. (AP Photo/Egyptian Presidency)

CAIRO (AP) ? Under Hosni Mubarak's rule, Egypt's authorities took a tough line on Egyptians coming home after waging "jihad" in places like Afghanistan, Chechnya or the Balkans, fearing they would bring back extremist ideology, combat experience and a thirst for regime change. In most cases, they were imprisoned and tortured.

But after Mubarak's overthrow and his replacement by an elected Islamist president, jihad has gained a degree of legitimacy in Egypt, and the country has become a source of fighters heading to the war in Syria.

Egyptian militants are known to have been travelling to Syria to fight alongside Sunni rebels for more than year ? but their movements were done quietly. But in recent days, a string of clerics have called for jihad in Syria, with some calling for volunteers to go fight against President Bashar Assad's regime.

On Saturday, Morsi attended a rally by hard-line clerics who have called for jihad and spoke before a cheering crowd at a Cairo stadium, mainly Islamists. Waving a flag of Egypt and the Syrian opposition, he ripped into the Syrian regime, announced Egypt was cutting ties with Damascus and denounced Lebanon's Shiite Hezbollah guerrillas for fighting alongside Assad's forces.

Clerics at the rally urged Morsi to back their calls for jihad to support rebels. Morsi did not address their calls and did not mention jihad. But his appearance was seen as in implicit backing of the clerics' message. It came after a senior presidential aide last week said that while Egypt was not encouraging citizens to travel to Syria to help rebels, they were free to do so and the state would take no action against them.

Khalil el-Anani, an Egyptian expert on Islamist groups, called the move "Morsi's endorsement of jihad in Syria" and warned it was "a strategic mistake that will create a new Afghanistan in the Middle East."

"He is pushing Egypt into a sectarian war in which we have no interest," he said.

The new tone in Egypt risks fueling the flow of Egyptian jihadi fighters to Syria, where the conflict is already increasingly defined by the sectarian divide, with the mostly Sunni rebels fighting a regime rooted in the minority Alawite sect, an off-shoot of Shiite Islam, and backed by Shiite Iran and Hezbollah.

The conflict is also becoming more regional after Hezbollah intervened to help Assad defeat rebels in a strategic western town this month. Since then, hard-liners around the region have hiked calls for Sunnis to join the rebels in the fight. There are already believed to be several thousand foreign fighters among the rebel ranks, largely Islamist extremists some with al-Qaida ties.

The United States last week hardened its own position on Assad's regime, agreeing to provide the rebels with lethal weapons.

Damascus on Sunday lashed out at Morsi for his speech a day earlier, saying he "joins a choir of conspiracy and incitement led by the United States and Israel against Syria."

It accused him of endorsing calls by hardline clerics for people to fight in Syria.

Egypt's powerful military also seemed to distance itself from Morsi speech, in which he pledged that Egypt's government and military are behind the struggle of the Syrian people against Assad.

On Sunday, the state news agency quoted an unidentified military official underlining that "the Egyptian army will not interfere in the internal affairs of other countries. It will not be dragged or be used in any of the regional struggles."

There are no official figures on how many Egyptians have gone to Syria to fight. Security officials monitoring the movement of militants estimate as many as 2,500 have gone, and their numbers are likely to significantly pick up after Hezbollah's intervention.

The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak to the media.

Organizations associated with Egypt's ultraconservative Salafi movement are believed to help organize movements for Egyptians to Syria. Islamist websites have reported that up to several dozen Egyptians have been killed while fighting in Syria the past two years, though the number has not been independently confirmed. The conflict, now in its third year, has killed nearly 93,000 people, according to new figures released by the United Nations.

Under Mubarak's 29-year rule, Egypt was a major Mideast bulwark against religious militancy. Mubarak closely cooperated with the United States and other Western nations in the hunt for extremists wanted in connection with terror attacks and dismantling the financial networks for militant groups. His regime was also notorious for rights abuses and torture against militants and other opponents

In the 1990s, militants who gained combat experience fighting the Russians in Afghanistan staged an anti-government insurgency that took the lives of more than 1,000 people, mostly civilians. Mubarak's security forces crushed the insurgency, and in the years that followed the groups involved renounced violence, though they maintained a hard-line ideology.

The fall of Mubarak in early 2011 and Morsi's election nearly a year ago allowed many of the former militants to come in from the cold.

Morsi and the Muslim Brotherhood, from which he hails, gets key backing from one of the main former Islamic militant groups, Gamaa Islamiya, as well as from several political parties of the Salafi movement.

A senior official at the Interior Ministry, which is in charge of police and internal security, said the names of at least 3,000 militants have in recent months been removed from the wanted list posted at the country's points of entry over the past two years.

Many of the 3,000 have since Morsi taken office returned to Egypt from exile and are now freely participating in the country's Islamist-dominated politics, said the official.

Those who returned home included individuals tried and convicted in connection to the 1981 assassination of President Anwar Sadat, the attempted assassination against Mubarak in Ethiopia in 1995 or militants who have been involved in wars abroad, said the official, who also spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak to the media.

Morsi's turning up the heat on Assad's regime appeared to be a concession to his ultraconservative allies, who have been unhappy with his government's moves to improve ties with Shiite Iran, Assad's main regional backer.

It also strengthens their backing for him ahead of giant anti-Morsi demonstrations planned by his opponents on June 30.

"This is a terrible idea," said Michael W. Hanna, an Egypt expert from the New York-based Century Foundation. "He is refocusing the anger of Egyptians over his policies away toward foreign issues instead of the domestic mess he is presiding over at home."

The security official said there are worries in the security establishment that sanctioning travel to Syria for Egyptians could later embolden jihadi groups to set up their training camps and political parties to create their own militias. Armed militant groups have become increasingly active in lawless parts of the Sinai Peninsula, where there has been a flood of weapons smuggled from Libya.

The change in Egypt's approach has not gone unnoticed in the West.

Last week, Germany's Interior Ministry issued its 2012 report on domestic security in which it noted an increase in the travel to Egypt by suspected Islamic extremists, ostensibly because they wanted to live in Muslim countries or study Arabic but in some specific cases may have been really interested in joining jihadi training camps.

The report doesn't specify where these training camps are located, whether in Egypt or elsewhere in the Middle East, North Africa or South Asia.

___

AP correspondent Robert H. Reid in Berlin contributed to this reports.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2013-06-16-Egypt-Jihadi%20Shift/id-d126d259b624427cbc413af82a3fed1b

helicon zac efron and taylor swift real housewives of orange county bloom energy franklin graham jambalaya taylor swift and zac efron

Monday, June 17, 2013

Outlook.com drops linked email accounts in favor of aliases

Outlook.com email attachments

Hotmail and Outlook.com have long supported linked email accounts for organizing messages. However, Microsoft now sees connected accounts as tempting targets for hackers -- so tempting, in fact, that the company is severing those links as a safety measure. Within the next two months, Outlook.com will move to using its alias system as the only way to handle multiple accounts. Users will have options to forward email and send messages from other addresses, but they won't get to control multiple accounts through one sign-in. Microsoft will start unlinking accounts in late July, so those who'd like a more orderly transition to the safer (if less convenient) approach will want to act quickly.

Filed under: ,

Comments

Source: Outlook Blog

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/06/17/outlook-com-drops-linked-email-accounts-in-favor-of-aliases/?utm_medium=feed&utm_source=Feed_Classic&utm_campaign=Engadget

michael buble michael buble Jenni Rivera Alive Facebook Down bo jackson bo jackson hanukkah

IRL: Mophie Juice Pack Plus for iPhone 5 and testing Solavei's MVNO

Welcome to IRL, an ongoing feature where we talk about the gadgets, apps and toys we're using in real life and take a second look at products that already got the formal review treatment.

IRL: Mophie Juice Pack Plus for iPhone 5 and testing Solavei's MVNO

Welcome back, and happy Monday. After a week of getting hands-on with all manner of laptops, we thought we'd spare you our thoughts on Ultrabooks this time around. Tablets, too. Fortunately, we've got lots of other stuff to wax on about, from a battery-packing iPhone case to Solavei's new MVNO, which piggybacks on T-Mobile. Head on past the break to read more.

Filed under:

Comments

Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/-nKCfa-sxjo/

Sandy Hook conspiracy Stuart Scott Holly Rowe Chief Keef FRANK ZAMBONI Tiffany Six aaliyah

Saturday, June 8, 2013

North Sea cod stocks 'are recovering'

How Cod stocks in the North Sea are thought to be recovering

North Sea cod stocks are on the road to sustainability, according to Marine Stewardship Council (MSC) research.

The council, which certifies whether fish are being caught sustainably, says it is too soon to tell exactly when the North Sea fishery will be sustainable.

But a spokesman said on current trends, it will be ready for certification within years rather than decades.

Stocks would still be in recovery then, James Simpson said, but they would have passed an acceptable level.

MSC certification is determined by the state of the stocks, the environmental impact of the fishery, and if there is a management system in place to maintain sustainability if circumstances change.

The latter two were already in place, Mr Simpson said.

Continue reading the main story

?Start Quote

This is really great news?

End Quote James Simpson Marine Stewardship Council

"This is really great news," he said. "We have done an assessment of the entire inshore industry and it's clear that cod is on the way back."

The recovery was thanks to strict catch limits aided by a massive public campaign for sustainable fish, he said.

Barrie Deas, the chief executive of the National Federation of Fishermen's Organisations, which represents fisherman in England, Wales and Northern Ireland, told Radio 4's Today programme it was a "dramatic turnaround".

"I think a major part of it is there are fewer vessels out there. There have been big decommissioning schemes.

"There's also been a change in the mindset in the industry. We work very closely with the scientists now."

Despite the positives, the MSC admits to an unwanted side-effect to the campaign against cod-eating.

Some celebrity chefs have pointed people towards red gurnard as an alternative.

This used to be caught as a bycatch, but so many fishermen are now hunting red gurnard that it is possible stocks of that might run low.

The data on red gurnard was so poor that it is impossible to tell whether it's sustainable or not, the report says.

Brown crab falls into the same category.

The report calls for investment in stocks, such as red gurnard, to ensure they are sustainably managed.

The MSC's Claire Pescod said: "There's been a significant interest in underutilised species over the past few years.

"When those fish suddenly become commercially popular, we need to put a lot more effort into providing the appropriate information for their management to make sure that they are managed sustainably."

Follow Roger on Twitter

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-22820162#sa-ns_mchannel=rss&ns_source=PublicRSS20-sa

sound of music Peter Billingsley festivus festivus nfl playoff picture nfl playoff picture Larry King

East German artist Willi Sitte dead at 92

BERLIN (AP) ? Willi Sitte, one of East Germany's most eminent artists and a key representative of Communism's preferred socialist realism painting style, has died at 92.

The head of the Willi Sitte Foundation, Hans-Hubert Werner, told German news agency dpa that Sitte died on Saturday morning after a long illness.

Sitte's paintings depicted factory workers or farmers as glamorized ideals of Communist heroes. Among his famous works are voluptuous, often nude women.

He was the president of East Germany's association of visual artists from 1974 to 1988 and also a member of the ruling party's central committee. After the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989 and Germany's unification, Sitte was seen in a more controversial light because of his closeness to the Communist regime.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/east-german-artist-willi-sitte-dead-92-154105303.html

donald payne elizabeth berkley lenny dykstra mlb 12 the show sabu franchise tag lesotho

Unusual Outdoor Swimming Pool Designs - Homedit

As the weather starts to improve through springtime, so the call of the outdoor swimming pool becomes more and more alluring. Both indoor and outdoor pools have, for many years, been little more than rectangular dug outs with some ceramic tiling around the outside. If you are thinking about an external swimming pool to make the perfect addition to your garden, or upgrading the one you already have, then don?t feel restricted by a conventional design.

Unusual styling, that reflects something of the rest of the architecture of your home, will be much better than a conventionally designed pool since these often feel like they have been stuck in place, rather like an afterthought. Indeed, the more individual the choice of design, the more it can look like it has been designed to work with the home in the first place.

Pools With Edge.

Swimming pools, just because they are outside, do not need to be dug into the ground, involving unsightly earth works. Why not place your pool on the edge of the building itself? So long as the structure is sound enough to take the weight of the water, a raised pool can make for a truly magnificent addition to a home.

Imagine swimming in a pool that affords you views over the rest of the grounds. If you like the idea of raised pool, go for an infinity edge, so that the water runs over the top, at least on one side. This creates the illusion that the pool?s surface itself is structural and creates a stunning look, particularly when the water is calm.

Terrace Pools.

Connect your swimming pool to the home with a terrace. Having a seating area next to the pool is hardly unusual, however a terrace that creates a visual connection between pool and home is an underused design technique.

Why not use sun loungers as an integral part of the pool?s design, even defining one side of the pool with them? If you have young children, which would make installing a pool adjacent to the living spaces of your home impractical, then break the zones up in the least visually impactful way you can. Glazed balustrades are a great way of splitting the pool from the home to keep little ones safe, but achieving the connected terrace-look.

Luxury Lap Pools.

Lap pools are increasingly popular both inside and outside. They are not just for fitness fanatics, however. Lap pools can be as much fun as regular pools, if you like to take a dip in the early evening to cool down. Just because one dimension of the pool has been reduced, to make it a more practical proposition in terms of maintenance and heating, there is no need to skimp on the visual look.

Lap pools still provide a calming, oasis like feel and they allow the light to bounce around just like their larger cousins. Install a lap pool in a thin, walled garden which would be hard to make work as a planted garden. If earthworks are impractical, the reduced water weight involved in a lap pool makes them ideal as raised lagoon. And if you have a regular pool already, why not install a pool-canal to connect it to a lap pool, elsewhere in the garden?

Kidney Shaped Pools And The Beach Look.

Everyone smiles when they encounter a pool that does away with right angles. Round pools, and ones with curved edges, seem to look more settled in their surroundings somehow. Kidney shaped pools are trendy at the moment. Curved edges are the way to go if you want a naturalistic feel to the pool, with sloped edges rather than steps that emulate a beach.

Integral Lighting.

Once you have chosen the location, size and shape of your pool that will best suit your home?s exterior, think about lighting it. Overheard lighting is all well and good, but under water light fittings can create more unusual and dramatic looks. Consult a lighting designer who can help integrate the choice of fittings with the rest of the home?s exterior lighting.

Picture sources: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, and 11.

Subscribe to get free updates via RSS!

Source: http://www.homedit.com/unusual-outdoor-swimming-pool-designs/

MLB Draft 2013 Brian Hallisay Deacon Jones Mel B Gordon Gee National Hurricane Center Google Glass

Wednesday, May 22, 2013

Search All ? A Windows 8 App to search anything right from the Metro Screen

Topics: software, Windows 8

Have you ever wondered searching for any item right from the Windows 8 metro Interface? With the launch of Windows 8, the metro interface has come to limelight and is well appreciated by many users. There are lots of stuffs that we search around in Internet and most essentially searching is what commonly done in web. Users might be wondering for an app that will search all your needs directly from the Modern interface itself, especially the Windows 8 tab users. Keeping that in mind developers have developed a freeware which allows you to search for any item right from the metro screen.

search all

Search All is what we are talking about. This Modern UI App can be downloaded for free from the Windows 8 Apps Store and allows you to search many web services like Google, Yahoo, IMDB, Amazon, Twitter, Facebook and many more, directly from the metro screen.

To get started with the search with Search All in Windows 8, firstly install. Once the App is launched, you can see a unified search box with different online app icons lined up one after another below it.

Next, type in your search and hit the corresponding service icons that are lined up below the search box. For instance, you want to read movie reviews, type in the name of the movie and click on IMDB.

searchall idmb

The app will start searching IMDB and displays the search results itself. More interestingly you don?t have to open browser to read reviews and if further if you are interested to see the trailer for the movie you can click on YouTube along with the related videos and all this can be accomplished in one interface.

search all youtube

Additionally, this app doesn?t stores any of your search history, so there is no risk to your privacy. This App search irrespective of what the item typed is.

If you are Windows 8 tablets user then you got to try this out, desktop users too can enjoy the app to search anything from anywhere directly from the start screen or say metro screen with Search All in Windows 8.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/SolidBlogger/~3/GJbz1s8szYU/

how to cook a turkey emma stone Frys tryptophan BestBuy.com Kohls Black Friday www.walmart.com