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London Bombing Victim's Parents Died at Hands of Taleban -- One of Last to be Buried

One of the last victims of the London bombings to be named by police was a young Afghan Muslim whose parents were killed by the Taleban.
Ateeque Sharifi, 24, who was living in Hounslow, West London, fled Kabul three years ago to seek refuge in Britain. He was the only male member of his family to escape death at the hands of the Taleban. He died in the explosion set off by bomber Jermaine Lindsay as their Piccadilly Line train approached the station at Russell Square.

Eight months after arriving in Britain, Mr Sharifi enrolled in West Thames College and began mastering the English language, working in his spare time at a take-away pizza restaurant. Most of his wages were sent to Afghanistan to his younger sister who still lives there.

“The deep irony of this tragic event is that Ateeque had left Afghanistan to seek safety in Britain, only to find his fate at the hands of extremists here,” Thalia Marriott, principal of West Thames College, said. Mr Sharifi had been one of the most popular students in the college, she added.

Mr Sharifi had been travelling home after spending the night with friends when he was caught in the blast, it was reported.

Mr Sharifi counted many British as well as Indians and Pakistanis people among his friends. He attended the mosque close to where he lived with three friends. He had hoped to pursue a career in IT, while following his dream of marrying and raising a family in Britain, his friends said.

Hamid Karzai, the Afghan President, laid flowers outside King’s Cross station yesterday in tribute to Mr Sharifi..

Earlier, he told an audience at Chatham House: “Afghanistan knows better perhaps than any other nation the pain of those families that suffered terrorist atrocity.”

(From the TIMESONLINE)

Solutions for Grandeur

By Marc Perelman

Nicolas Sarkozy has become the most popular French politician by diving headfirst into the country’s most explosive political issues. If he has his way, this hyperactive, pro-American, Gaullist, free marketer will transform French politics for good.

When Arnold Schwarzenegger was elected governor of California in 2003, all French politicians sneered, except one. For Nicolas Sarkozy, the leader of a center-right Gaullist party and the son of a Hungarian refugee, the rise to power of the Austrian-born Hollywood star was a sure sign of modernity. Commenting soon after Schwarzenegger’s election victory, Sarkozy said, “ [that] someone who’s a foreigner in his country, who has an unpronounceable name and can become governor of the biggest American state—that is not nothing!”  (MORE)

(From FOREIGN POLICY)

Schröder's challenger backs Blair

By Judy Dempsey

The woman viewed as the likely next German chancellor will take Tony Blair's side in Europe's rancorous debate over how to finance the European Union, senior party officials said.

Angela Merkel, leader of the Christian Democrats and the challenger of Chancellor Gerhard Schröder in elections expected this autumn, supports the British prime minister's call for changes to the EU budget, including a rethinking of agricultural subsidies, her aides said. (MORE)
 

(from International Herald Tribune)