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Archive for January 3rd, 2010

Report: Cartoonist attacker targeted Clinton in Nairobi

Posted by jambonewspot on January 3, 2010

COPENHAGEN – A Somali man charged in connection with an attack on a Danish cartoonist was arrested last year over an alleged terror plot targeting Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, according to reports.

Quoting the Danish newspaper Politiken, Britain’s Sky News reported that the 28-year-old was among four other suspects who were held over a foiled attack on a bus station and two hotels in Nairobi, Kenya.

The alleged plot coincided with Clinton’s visit to the country during an 11-day tour of Africa, Sky News said. The suspect was reportedly released from custody the following month due to a lack of evidence and returned to Denmark.

The Somali man was charged with two counts of attempted murder on Saturday after allegedly breaking into the home of a Danish artist Kurt Westergaard, whose Prophet Muhammad cartoon outraged the Muslim world three years ago.

Stretcher
The suspect, who was shot twice by a police officer responding to the scene, was rolled into a Danish court on a stretcher Saturday, his face covered. He was ordered held for four weeks on preliminary charges of attempting to murder the cartoonist, as well as the police officer who shot him.

Efforts to protect Westergaard, 74, were immediately stepped up, as he was moved to an undisclosed location.

The suspect, described by authorities as a 28-year-old Somali with ties to al-Qaida, allegedly broke into the house late Friday armed with an ax and a knife. The house is in Aarhus, Denmark’s second largest city, 125 miles northwest of Copenhagen.

Jakob Scharf, head of Denmark’s PET intelligence agency, said Saturday the man might have attacked spontaneously.

“It seems that he acted alone, and maybe it was a sudden decision,” Scharf told Danish broadcaster TV2. He was not immediately available for further comment.

Westergaard, who has been the target of several death threats since depicting the Prophet Muhammad with a bomb-shaped turban, has been under round-the-clock protection by Danish police since February 2008.

When he heard someone trying to break into his home, he pressed an alarm and fled to a specially made safe room. His five-year-old granddaughter was also in the house at the time.

Officers arrived two minutes later and tried to arrest the assailant. He threatened the officers with the ax, and one officer then shot him in the hand and knee, Preben Nielsen of the Aarhus police said.

Nielsen said the man’s wounds were serious but not life-threatening.

‘Revenge!’
Westergaard could not be reached for comment, but he told his employer — the Jyllands-Posten newspaper — that the assailant shouted “Revenge!” and “Blood!” as he tried to enter the bathroom where Westergaard had sought shelter.

“It was scary. It was close — really close,” he said, according to the newspaper’s Web site.

The Somali man, whose name cannot be released because of a court order, was accompanied by a lawyer. He arrived at the court in Aarhus from the hospital where he is being treated, and denied the charges.

“He will be in custody for four weeks, and in isolation for two (of those),” said Chief Superintendent Ole Madsen in Aarhus. He said the suspect would be moved to a prison in Aarhus, which has medical facilities.

Defense lawyer Niels Christian Strauss told reporters outside the court he had urged his client to remain silent to allow more time to examine the evidence.

Danish Prime Minister Lars Loekke Rasmussen called the attack “despicable.”

“This is not only an attack on Kurt Westergaard but also an attack on our open society and our democracy,” he said in a statement.

In 2005, Jyllands-Posten had asked Danish cartoonists to draw Muhammad as a challenge to a perceived self-censorship. Westergaard and 11 other artists did so. Danish and other Western embassies in several Muslim countries were torched in early 2006 by angry protesters who felt the cartoons had profoundly insulted Islam.

Islamic law generally opposes any depiction of the prophet, even favorable, for fear it could lead to idolatry.

Westergaard remains a potential target for extremists nearly five years later: His cartoon is viewed as the most provocative, and he is the only of the twelve cartoonists to live under round-the-clock protection.

Authorities declined comment on whether security for other cartoonists had been tightened.

The Somali man had won an asylum case and received a residency permit to stay in Denmark, Scharf said. He called the Friday attack terror-related.

“The arrested man has, according to PET’s information, close relations to the Somali terrorist group al-Shabab and al-Qaida leaders in eastern Africa,” Scharf said. “(The attack) again confirms the terror threat that is directed at Denmark and against the cartoonist Kurt Westergaard in particular.”

Scharf said the man is suspected of having been involved in terror-related activities in east Africa and had been under PET’s surveillance, but not in connection with Westergaard.

In Somalia, Sheikh Ali Mohamud Rage, a spokesman for the Somali group al-Shabab, denied the man was member of the group, but supported his alleged attack on the cartoonist.

“We welcome the brave action he did,” Rage said. “It was a good and brave step taken by that Somali man against the criminal cartoonist — we liked it.”

He described Westergaard as “the devil who abused our Prophet Muhammad” and called on “all Somalis in Denmark and around the world to target him and the people like him, too.”

Westergaard has received previous death threats and was the subject of an alleged assassination plot.

In October, terrorism charges were brought against two Chicago men who allegedly planned to kill him and newspaper’s former cultural editor. That trial has not yet begun.

In 2008, Danish police arrested two Tunisian men suspected of plotting to kill Westergaard. Police failed to substantiate the charges and neither suspect was prosecuted. One was deported and the other was released Monday after an immigration board rejected PET’s efforts to expel him from Denmark.

Throughout the crisis three years ago, then-Prime Minister Anders Fogh Rasmussen distanced himself from the cartoons but resisted calls to apologize for them, citing freedom of speech and saying his government could not be held responsible for the actions of Denmark’s press.

An umbrella organization for moderate Muslims in Denmark condemned the Friday attack.

“The Danish Muslim Union strongly distances itself from the attack and any kind of extremism that leads to such acts,” the group said in a statement.

The Associated Press and msnbc.com staff contributed to this report.

URL: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/34671593/ns/world_news-europe/

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Kenya slum electrician puts his life on the line

Posted by jambonewspot on January 3, 2010

Francis Otieno, 36, freelance slum electrician, is a hero to his neighbors, always there when the electricity goes off. (Robyn Dixon / Los Angeles Times)

Francis Otieno, 36, freelance slum electrician, is a hero to his neighbors, always there when the electricity goes off. (Robyn Dixon / Los Angeles Times)

In a year as a “freelance” slum electrician, Francis Otieno has been shocked five times. Three of the accidents were “not so bad,” just enough to throw him across the room. Two nearly killed him.

“I just cried out. I didn’t know what was going on. I passed out,” he says. “For two days, I didn’t know where I was.”

But he was luckier than his best friend, who had the job before him: He was killed when he jumped on a roof to fix a short, unaware that the roof was live because a rat had nibbled at a wire.

If people here in the Kibera slum outside Nairobi, the capital, waited for the government to connect every mud hut and corrugated iron shack to electricity, they’d never have light.

It’s DIY or do without.

Here’s how it works: Otieno’s boss gets electricity legally from Kenya’s power authority, then sells it to Otieno and two others.

From there, it gets a little less legal. He supplies Otieno with wire to connect any of the 40 households in his patch.

Otieno collects a monthly payment of about $5 per house, skimming off a small commission and delivering the rest to his boss.

Otieno, 36, is a hero to his neighbors. Electrical problems are frequent. He gets calls from dawn until after dark. If he’s sitting down to dinner, he abandons his plate and goes to investigate.

“I leave my dish of food and go to serve them first,” he says.

But the dangers are many.

“Sometimes children or mothers died when they have a short,” says Otieno, a father of three. “Sometimes people’s houses burn down.” He speaks slowly, searching for words, pausing frequently.

The main problem for a freelance electrician is rats. There are millions of the rodents in Kibera, creeping into people’s shacks, chewing through electrical wires.

The other danger is the rainy season, which turns Kibera into a slippery, muddy swamp — particularly “downtown,” as the bottom of the hill where Otieno lives is known.

The water trickles through shack roofs as leaky as colanders, dripping into electrical wiring and sometimes shocking the person trying to fix the damage.

Out in the rain, struggling to fix wiring with wet shoes and sopping clothes, Otieno has had a couple of shocks that way.

Sometimes the problems are caused by people hanging clothing on the electrical wires to dry.

Sometimes someone switches the power on, just when he’s trying to make a repair. (That happened when he was connecting two wires, and it nearly cost him his life.)

Sometimes the money Otieno collects doesn’t cover the power used in his area. There are people who can’t pay.

“Not all the neighbors pay their money on time. Some can go three or four months without having money to give us,” Otieno says.

He gives them three months’ grace before cutting them off.

Another reason the books don’t balance is the thieves who hack into the wires, connect up their houses and draw off power without paying.

“They just come at night,” Otieno says.

“They might not be using their lights, just the radio, so no one knows.

“I tell them, ‘You’re a human being just like me. Just come to me, because you’ve got problems. Even me, I’ve got problems. We can just talk and work it out.’ “

Otieno’s dream is to save enough capital to start his own welding workshop, so as not to rely on bosses for pay. But it’s an elusive one. So, for $12 a month, he risks his life as an electrician.

“It’s a risk, I know, it’s a risk. That risk isn’t good,” he says. “But life is hard.”

robyn.dixon@latimes.com

Copyright © 2010, The Los Angeles Times

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