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Alastair Sloan

Alastair Sloan tweets and writes on international affairs, terrorism and Westminster politics and is author of the upcoming book, “What Does Michael Gove Really Think?” You can also read his work in Al Jazeera English and Newsweek.

 

Items by Alastair Sloan

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    Britain’s Jews shouldn’t worry – Ed Miliband will back Israel

    The Jewish Chronicle has commissioned a fascinating political poll of British Jews’ voting intentions at the upcoming election. The results must be frightening for Labour strategists – showing mass approval for Prime Minister David Cameron, and the opposition leader Ed Miliband as a figure few British Jews trust. All this…

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    The war in Yemen will be fought with Western arms

    Yemen has become a textbook example of how selling Western arms to unstable countries has always been, and will always remain, a thoroughly stupid idea. As the Saudi and UAE air forces attempt to zero in their strikes on Houthi positions, the regional fall guys in Tehran have taken the…

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    The UK Foreign Office is flying blind

    You might, very reasonably, expect the UK’s Foreign & Commonwealth Office (FCO) to speak the language of the countries their policy affects. Or that when they brief politicians on crucial issues, that they have “immersed” themselves deep within foreign populations to understand fully the impact any new measures might have.…

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    Will a British court deliver justice for Bahraini torture victims?

    Campaigners are continuing with their attempt to hold a member of the Bahraini royal family to account over his alleged torture of pro-democracy protesters during the Pearl Roundabout uprising in February 2011. Their persistence is admirable and, it seems, they are making progress, step by step. In 2012, a dossier…

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    UK: Championing human rights while creating conflict?

    Last week, the small English town of Farnborough hosted the Security and Policing Event. It was a commercial festival for human rights abusers wanting to get their hands on weapons for state repression – with previous attendees including delegations from Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, the UAE, Libya and Algeria, amongst others.…

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    The US should think again about arming Ukraine via Abu Dhabi

    Over five thousand civilians have now died in eastern Ukraine, and one and a half million people have been displaced, through no fault of their own. They are the victims of the stand-off between the West and Russia’s Vladimir Putin. Though the Kremlin’s accusations of a “Western-backed neo-Nazi coup” in…

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    Inside Conservative Friends of Israel

    A wine-spattered copy of the parliamentary guest list for the Conservative Friends of Israel’s “Annual Business Lunch”, which took place in December last year, has made it onto my desk. For those of you who don’t know, CFI is a pressure group for pro-Israel interests in Westminster; between two-thirds and…

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    Advocating violence through silence: the anti-Islamist West

    Last Sunday, three UAE citizens, sisters Asma Khalifa Al-Suwaidi, Mariam Khalifa Al-Suwaidi and Alyaziyah Khalifa Al-Suwaidi, were told to report to an Abu Dhabi police station. The trio had been campaigning for the release of Dr Issa Al-Suwaidi, their brother, who is serving a ten-year sentence on what are believed…

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    How Britain’s pro-Israel lobby invests in young parliamentary candidates

    On Friday, human rights activist and Labour Party political candidate, Mick Bowman, was beaten, tear-gassed and arrested by Israeli soldiers while protesting in the West Bank, just north of Ramallah. Aged 57, Bowman was detained without charge for 24 hours, interrogated by various officials and military staff, and then released.…

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    Bahraini exiles test Britain’s policy on statelessness

    The Al-Khalifa monarchy in Bahrain recently stripped over 70 exiled activists of their citizenship, eight of whom live in Britain. In 2012, they did something similar, stripping 31 human rights and pro-democracy activists of Bahraini citizenship, 11 of them living in the UK. These new exiles are testing Britain’s policy…

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    Israel values cattle more than its foreign workers

    The Israeli government has come under fire for allowing the abuse of 25,000 Thai migrant workers, who make up almost the entire agricultural workforce. According to a recent report by Human Rights Watch (HRW), reforms to the system agreed on in 2011 that sought to protect the rights of migrant…

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    King Abdullah: A missed opportunity

    The passing of King Abdullah last week saw a sense of despondency amongst many reformist Saudis, many of whom feel the reign of King Abdullah represented a (now lost) opportunity for reform. In education, King Abdullah introduced a generous scholarship programme to send Saudis overseas to universities in Western Europe,…

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    From Westminster to Riyadh, British arms deals stink of corruption

    This week, Campaign Against Arms Trade (CAAT) released new figures which reveal the £3.8 billion in arms sales that the British government has approved for export to Saudi Arabia since 2010. The bulk of this has come from Britain’s largest arms company, BAE Systems. Whether it’s cowardice, laziness or, as…

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    How did the House of Saud respond to revolutionary spirit sweeping the Arab world?

    How did the House of Saud respond to the revolutionary spirit sweeping the Arab world in 2011? Just like their playboy sons dancing in the nightclubs of London, who would be otherwise stultified by life in the kingdom wherein Islam’s two holiest sites are situated, they threw money at the…

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    The perfect year for a deal with Iran

    This is the Chinese year of the sheep; the UN’s International Year of Soil; and the year that NASA plans to land a spacecraft on a planet called Ceres, wherever that is. It’s also the year that the West should make a deal with Iran. Although it’s mentioned far too…

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    Why does Washington always ignore the best advice?

    In 2009, the Central Intelligence Agency warned senior US policy-makers that their controversial drone strike programme might backfire. Washington ignored the CIA; the following year, the frequency of drone strikes increased rapidly. In Pakistan, a record 751 people were killed, including 84 civilians. Neither the hundreds dying in the bomb…

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    Islamophobia and Europe’s refugee crisis

    How long does it take a continent to forget its past? Three generations – if Europe’s attitude to Middle Eastern war refugees is any indicator. The Secretary-General of the Norwegian Refugee Council Jan Egeland believes the numbers fleeing conflict are at their worst since 1945. Yet, with some exceptions –…

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    Ignoring human rights: another fawning pawn for the UAE

    Lawyer Mohammed Al-Roken, from the United Arab Emirates, is in trouble. He is serving his second year of a 10-year jail term. He is a prisoner of conscience, say Amnesty International, imprisoned solely for his work as a lawyer and activist, defending others whose rights have been denied, and for…

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    When will Arab states step up and face ISIS?

    Saudi Arabia, with nearly $60 billion in defence spending each year, is the world’s fourth largest military spender after the United States, China and Russia. In the Middle East, its arsenal is second only to Israel. Their military has over a thousand tanks; its top-of-the-range air force boasts over 650…

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    Western academics OK human rights abuses in the Gulf

    Mass abuse of migrant workers by the Gulf monarchies and sheikhdoms has a fan-club in the West; a clique of academics, lawyers and ideologues who think that exploitative labour is OK. The last few months have seen a major push from this group to help the GCC states get off…

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    The London lobbyists spinning for UAE

    Last month, the UK Defence Secretary called the United Arab Emirates “one of our closest allies and partners.” His statement comes from a long tradition of sucking up to the oil rich Kingdom. But why is the UK partnering so closely with what Nick McGeehan, Human Rights Watch researcher on…

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    Gold smuggling increases to beat new tariffs

    It looks like any of the other independent jewellery shops in the coastal city of Ernakalum, southern Kerala. The glass shop front sits within Broadway Market: three hundred wholesale outlets selling spices, electronics, jewellery and textiles. I’m here to meet the owner, who runs a seemingly respectable retail outfit, with…

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    Yemen’s former President Saleh and the language of terror

    One day you are America’s closest ally on the war on terror, the next you find yourself on their hit list. And so the mad circus of this endless war gyrates on. This year it’s the ex-President of Yemen Ali Abdullah Saleh. Despite years as an ally of Washington, he…

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    Kuwait is failing its most loyal residents

    The Kuwaiti government have offered citizenship to more than 100,000 Bidoon (short for the Arabic bidoon jinsiya, meaning “without nationality”). Not Kuwaiti citizenship – but citizenship from the Comoros islands. A flickering light bulb of a nation, strung out across several islands between Madagascar and the east African coast –…