Thursday, December 22, 2011

Egypt's ultraconservatives support Israel treaty

A veiled Egyptian woman casts her vote at a polling center in Giza, Egypt Wednesday, Dec. 21, 2011. Voting in election runoffs for Egypt's first parliament since Hosni Mubarak's ouster resumed on Wednesday without the long lines outside polling centers seen in previous rounds of the staggered vote.(AP Photo/Nasser Nasser)

A veiled Egyptian woman casts her vote at a polling center in Giza, Egypt Wednesday, Dec. 21, 2011. Voting in election runoffs for Egypt's first parliament since Hosni Mubarak's ouster resumed on Wednesday without the long lines outside polling centers seen in previous rounds of the staggered vote.(AP Photo/Nasser Nasser)

An Egyptian woman registers to vote while others are lining up at a polling center in Giza, Egypt Wednesday, Dec. 21, 2011. Voting in election runoffs for Egypt's first parliament since Hosni Mubarak's ouster resumed on Wednesday without the long lines outside polling centers seen in previous rounds of the staggered vote. (AP Photo/Nasser Nasser)

(AP) ? The spokesman of Egypt's ultraconservative Islamist party told Israeli Army Radio in unprecedented remarks broadcast Wednesday that the group is not opposed to the country's historic peace treaty with Israel.

Yousseri Hamad's interview with the Israeli broadcaster is unusual for followers of the Salafi Islamic trend, who typically shun Israel for its policies toward Palestinians and its annexation of east Jerusalem, home to Islam's third-holiest site.

The interview countered Israeli fears that Islamist parties would seek to cut ties with Israel.

In his remarks to the Israeli station, Hamad said the Salafi Nour Party is committed to agreements signed by previous Egyptian governments, including the 1979 peace treaty with Israel.

"We are not opposed to the agreement, and we are saying that Egypt is committed to the agreements that previous Egyptian government have signed," he said, noting that if Egyptians want changes on the treaty, "the place for that is the negotiation table."

In response to the interview, Israeli Foreign Ministry spokesman Yigal Palmor said the comments were worth considering.

"This is certainly food for thought and we will of course keep observing very attentively developments in Egypt," he said.

Many Israelis are concerned that Islamist parties are looking to cancel the peace treaty, the first between Israel and an Arab nation. The agreement is a pillar of security for both countries. For Israel, it has allowed diversion of military resources to other fronts. Egypt has benefited from billions of dollars in U.S. military aid.

Salafi Muslims follow a strict interpretation of Islam similar to that practiced in Saudi Arabia. The Salafi Nour Party in Egypt has so far won a quarter of the seats in Egypt's parliamentary elections, placing it second only to the more moderate Muslim Brotherhood.

After the interview aired, Hamad told The Associated Press that he did not know he was talking to Israeli Army Radio, and he was told only it was for an Israeli broadcaster. He claimed that had he known, he would not have agreed to the Army Radio interview because "they occupy our Palestinian brothers."

He also said that his party "without doubt" supports changes to the agreement, including raising troop levels in the Sinai Peninsula, which borders Israel. He also said that there need to be guarantees for Palestinians.

"We call for full Sinai rights for Egypt and for our brothers in Palestine and occupied lands, and we see this as directly related to the agreement," he told the AP.

Israel withdrew from Sinai under the 1979 peace treaty.

The peace agreement defines that area of Sinai along Israel's border as a demilitarized zone, allowing only for Egyptian border guards, not troops. However, Israel has accepted temporary entry of several thousand Egyptian troops into Sinai to counter a surge of extremist Islamic activity there, including some violence, since the fall of Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak in February.

Relations between Israel and Egypt, soured after one of the incidents, when Israeli forces killed six Egyptian soldiers while pursuing Palestinian militants who killed eight Israelis September. Egyptian protesters then tore down a security wall around the building housing the Israeli Embassy in Cairo, storming it and trashing one of its offices.

Despite the tense relations, Hamad said his party had no objections to Israeli tourists.

"There is no doubt, any tourist who wants to come to Egypt is welcome," he told the Israeli station.

____

Aron Heller contributed from Jerusalem.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2011-12-21-ML-Egypt-Israel/id-276b63e9af5c4fa88dbcc228eb229149

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Friday, December 16, 2011

Panetta said intel operations will go on (AP)

KABUL, Afghanistan ? Defense Secretary Leon Panetta says the U.S. will continue to conduct intelligence operations like the recent one that led to the loss of a drone over Iran.

Speaking at a press conference Wednesday with Afghan President Hamid Karzai, Panetta said he would not publicly discuss the secret surveillance missions that the drone incident has highlighted. But he added that part of U.S. efforts to defend both Afghanistan and the U.S. homeland involve what he termed "important intelligence operations which we will continue to pursue."

Karzai, meanwhile, says Afghanistan doesn't want to be involved in any "adversarial relations" between the U.S. and Iran.

The RQ-170 drone ? known as the Sentinel ? was lost over Iran two weeks ago. Iranian state television broadcast video of Iranians inspecting the aircraft, which was largely intact.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/asia/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111214/ap_on_re_as/as_us_panetta_drone

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Monday, December 5, 2011

iFaith v1.4 allows downgrade to iOS 5.0, jailbreaker's dream come true


In the game of Apple versus the jailbreakers, Cupertino threw the community a curveball with iOS 5's newly restricted downgrade system which blocks devices from restoring to old 5.x firmware. With the help of his noble steed iFaith (a custom Windows tool), hacker iH8sn0w has found a way around the firmware block, making it possible for dumped iOS 5 signature hash blobs (SHSH blobs) to permit unsigned restores. Why all the fuss about downgrading to prohibited firmware? Prominent iOS hackers MuscleNerd and pod2g have stated that the first untethered jailbreak will arrive on iOS 5.0 and, as such, may require iFaith's downgrade process to facilitate user restores. While the jailbreak is still under construction, iFaith should assure disheartened users in the community that all is not lost. Want to learn about blobs, blobs, and more blobs? Continue past the break to view iH8sn0w's informative video.

Continue reading iFaith v1.4 allows downgrade to iOS 5.0, jailbreaker's dream come true

iFaith v1.4 allows downgrade to iOS 5.0, jailbreaker's dream come true originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 05 Dec 2011 07:54:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Monday, November 28, 2011

Libyans recover looted Roman antiquities

Recovered stone heads, ancient Roman artifacts, are seen on display in Tripoli, Libya, Saturday, Nov. 26, 2011. Moammar Gadhafi's forces tried to flee Tripoli with a sack of ancient Roman artifacts in hopes of selling them abroad to help fund their doomed fight, Libya's new leaders said Saturday as they displayed the recovered objects for the first time. The director of the state antiquities department, Saleh Algabe, hailed the find of 17 pieces, mostly small stone heads, as an important recovery of national treasures. (AP Photo/Abdel Magid al-Fergany)

Recovered stone heads, ancient Roman artifacts, are seen on display in Tripoli, Libya, Saturday, Nov. 26, 2011. Moammar Gadhafi's forces tried to flee Tripoli with a sack of ancient Roman artifacts in hopes of selling them abroad to help fund their doomed fight, Libya's new leaders said Saturday as they displayed the recovered objects for the first time. The director of the state antiquities department, Saleh Algabe, hailed the find of 17 pieces, mostly small stone heads, as an important recovery of national treasures. (AP Photo/Abdel Magid al-Fergany)

Recovered stone heads, ancient Roman artifacts, are seen on display in Tripoli, Libya, Saturday, Nov. 26, 2011. Moammar Gadhafi's forces tried to flee Tripoli with a sack of ancient Roman artifacts in hopes of selling them abroad to help fund their doomed fight, Libya's new leaders said Saturday as they displayed the recovered objects for the first time. The director of the state antiquities department, Saleh Algabe, hailed the find of 17 pieces, mostly small stone heads, as an important recovery of national treasures. (AP Photo/Abdel Magid al-Fergany)

(AP) ? Moammar Gadhafi's forces tried to flee Tripoli with a sack of ancient Roman artifacts in hopes of selling them abroad to help fund their doomed fight, Libya's new leaders said Saturday as they displayed the recovered objects for the first time.

The director of the state antiquities department, Saleh Algabe, hailed the find of 17 pieces, mostly small stone heads, as an important recovery of national treasures.

The pieces included a female figurine evocative of ancient fertility symmbols, several small stone human heads and two ornate terracotta fragments. Algabe said the figurines were likely used in pagan worship and dated back to the second and third centuries A.D., when a swathe of North Africa belonged to the Roman Empire.

Algabe said the pieces were seized from a car on the road to Tripoli's airport in August as revolutionary forces were sweeping into the capital. It appeared Gadhafi's forces wanted to smuggle them out of the country and sell them at auction to fund their fight, he said. Officials did not know how much the objects were worth.

The pieces probably do not represent a major component of Libya's wealth of artifacts from the Roman era. Still, officials played up their recovery as significant.

Khalid Alturjman, a representative from the country's National Transitional Council, said the anti-Gadhafi's fighters' seizure of them stands as "a great example of the sacrifice of these revolutionary men for this country."

He formally handed them over to the antiquities department Saturday.

Algabe stressed that although they dated to the Roman era, they exhibited clear signs of local influence.

"This confirms the role of Libyans in civilization," he said.

The conference was held in Tripoli's main archaeological museum, which boasts a collection of ancient Roman statues and mosaics. The museum is housed within the Red Castle, a medieval fort that faces the Mediterranean Sea.

A museum employee said the recovered objects had once been part of the institution's collection. However, members of Gadhafi's regime had taken them, saying they were to be exhibited in European museums ? and never returned them.

Libya boasts many ancient Roman structures, including the famed seaside ruins of Leptis Magna, east of Tripoli.

Almost all of Libya's ancient archaeological sites and museums were spared damage during the recent civil war. NATO made a point of avoiding them during its bombing campaign, and Agabe said that the revolutionaries also made an effort to protect them.

"The Libyan people decided to protect their heritage," Algabe said.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2011-11-26-ML-Libya-Recovered-Antiquities/id-918fbeb88b8a47f4a382d936af19553e

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