FOOTBALL : HOME-GROWN PLAYER QUOTA COULD BE IN TROUBLE.

The News Review:

- FOOTBALL : HOME-GROWN PLAYER QUOTA COULD BE IN TROUBLE.
- Home-grown star Collingwood is part of England furniture.
- SCARBOROUGH COUNTRY for June 22, 2006 MSNBC - Part 1.
- Yorkshire suicide bombers dying for an idea, says Met police chief.
- Al Qaeda’s Hydra head in Iraq
- Meanwhile: In Nazareth, cheering Brazil

FOOTBALL : HOME-GROWN PLAYER QUOTA COULD BE IN TROUBLE.
Free with registration - European Report - AccessMyLibrary.com - Jun 22, 2006
–> COPYRIGHT 2006 Europe Information Service A new rule forcing football clubs to have more home-grown’ players could breach EU anti-discrimination law, a European Commission legal expert has said. While the rule does not impose quotas of non-nationals, it may discriminate indirectly, Mathieu Moreuil told a European Policy Centre (EPC) briefing on 20 June. The rule is European football governing body UEFA’s attempt to encourage all clubs to foster and keep more home-grown talent rather than go on spending sprees. Currently bigger clubs in particular are tempted to buy in talent rather than.

Home-grown star Collingwood is part of England furniture.
Free with registration - Europe Intelligence Wire - AccessMyLibrary.com - Jun 22, 2006
Home-grown star Collingwood is part of England furniture. | Europe Intelligence Wire (June, 2006).

SCARBOROUGH COUNTRY for June 22, 2006 MSNBC - Part 1.
Free with registration - America's Intelligence Wire - AccessMyLibrary.com - Jun 22, 2006
They never could have actually bombed anything because the FBI had them under such close surveillance, they would have stopped anything before it could have happened. There`s no connection, we believe, between this group and al Qaeda. This is — these are would-be home-grown terrorists, although we are told that one of the group members had actually pledged allegiance to bin Laden. So there`s no threat directly from this group. They were all arrested. The searches are going on in conjunction with the arrests earlier today. But nonetheless, what officials are stressing tonight is that while there was no imminent danger here, nonetheless, this was a group of people who were certainly intent on trying to carry out some kind of an attack, and they were doing what they could to try to move forward in that direction.

Yorkshire suicide bombers dying for an idea, says Met police chief.
Free with registration - Europe Intelligence Wire - AccessMyLibrary.com - Jun 22, 2006
–> COPYRIGHT 2006 Financial Times Ltd. (From Yorkshire Post) David Hogg BRITAIN’S most senior police officer said yesterday the four Yorkshire suicide bombers in last year’s London terror attacks were young men who were “dying for an idea”. Metropolitan Police Commissioner Sir Ian Blair also warned the threat of home-grown terrorism was “very real” in a keynote speech to a.

Al Qaeda’s Hydra head in Iraq
Christian Science Monitor - Jun 22, 2006
In the jihadist universe, it is unusual for militants to appear politically ambitious and make a public bid to be appointed emir, or commander. Both say they believe in Zarqawi’s extremist ideology and have reportedly vowed to complete what their predecessor has begun. Their split is along home-grown Iraqi vs. foreign-born lines; this subtle media dance only masks the struggle for the soul of Al Qaeda in Mesopotamia. According to Islamists, infighting is bound to wreck the organization unless bin Laden and his deputy, Zawahiri, intervene and appoint a new replacement, which is a likely scenario. However, it would be premature to assume Zarqawi’s death will cause the destruction of Al Qaeda or a waning of the Iraqi resistance. The umbilical cord of Zarqawi’s men is tied to the American military occupation of an Arab country, a former leader of Egyptian Islamic Jihad had told me earlier.

Meanwhile: In Nazareth, cheering Brazil
International Herald Tribune - Jun 22, 2006
Suddenly everyone watching on the giant open-air screen in Sammy's courtyard is an expert on Paraguay's top goal scorer or the previous form of Costa Rica's left-back. No one in Nazareth, the effective capital of Israel's more than one million Arab citizens, has been this engrossed in football since the surprise victory two years ago of a neighboring Arab town, Sakhnin, in the Israeli Cup. Sakhnin's practice ground was a clearing in an olive grove. At the best of times, Nazarenes admit to an identity crisis: they are citizens of Israel, the Jewish state, while belonging, historically at least, to the Palestinian people.

Leave a Reply