Photobucket
SPO | Nordwave Florida
Apr
30
2009
0

Muslim teacher hands out anti-Semitic leaflets to students

Viennese school authorities are checking Muslim teachers’ German following a scandal over a Muslim teacher who handed out anti-Semitic leaflets to students.

The checks are part of a recently introduced five-point plan by Social Democrat (SPÖ) Education Minister Claudia Schmied checking teaching standards, including a directive that all Muslim teachers have to be fluent German speakers.

Vienna’s Stadtschulrat city school council said today (Weds) small language deficits were found in the checks of the capital’s 169 Islamic teachers conducted over the last few days.

Vienna authorities had a close look at eleven teachers who do not hold a German degree. Three of them were ordered to sit additional German classes while the others proved to have excellent German, it was announced.

The five-point plan was introduced after Education Minister Schmied banned a Muslim man in February from teaching his religion at a Vienna secondary school after he distributed anti-Semitic leaflets to pupils.

Schmied ordered the city’s school authorities to take action against the man who had been teaching at the Cooperative Secondary School (KMS) in Brüßlgasse in the district of Ottakring.

He reportedly distributed anti-Semitic leaflets to his students. The flyers contained a list of allegedly “Jewish” firms from which, the man told the students, they should not buy anything.

http://austriantimes.at/index.php?id=12919

Mar
02
2009
0

Haider effect launch BZÖ to Carinthia landslide

It was a dramatic Sunday for Austria’s western provinces with the Alliance for the Future of Austria party (BZÖ) defying the doom mongers to claim a landslide Victory in Carinthia, and Social Democrats (SPÖ) pipping the People’s party (ÖVP) to the post in Salzburg.

With the death of firebrand governor Jörg Haider last October, critics had predicted the BZÖ’s iron grip on Carinthia to slip but they came home with an astonishing 45.25 per cent of the vote.

Just a week before the election, pollsters had the BZÖ tied neck and neck with the SPÖ, who before Haider’s rise to prominence had been dominant in the province.

Political analysts had observed that the Carinthia result was impossible to predict as it all depended on how strongly the province had identified with Haider. But the 40 per cent of voters still undecided at that point appear to have swung heavily towards the BZÖ, suggesting either that Haider was not as central to the party’s success as many had thought.

BZÖ Carinthia leader Gerhard Dörfler dedicated his party’s win to its late leader: “This is also a victory for Jörg Haider.”

As she handed a framed photo of her deceased husband to Dörfler, Haider’s widow Claudia said: “I am really impressed with the result. It is a major acknowledgment of my husband’s work and of his politics.”

SPÖ Carinthia leader Reinhart Rohr however believed the result showed Carinthia had voted for the BZÖ in remembrance of their beloved former governor.

“The results clearly show that a lot of people have voted in memory of Jörg haider,” he said, continuing:

“Before we can talk about a crisis in the SPÖ we first need to analyze the individual results and see where there were problems and what the causes were, then we can look at our path for the future.”

The SPÖ was left nursing its biggest ever margin loss in the province. Coming in second with 28.64 per cent of the vote, the party was down 9.76 per cent on the provinces last election in 2004. Rohr was reluctant to talk about a possible resignation though, stating: “Reinhart Rohr is not somebody who jumps ship when times get hard.”

The pollsters had had an easier time predicting the Salzburg result. The SPÖ were favourites to claim a second successive victory in the province, which traditionally has been black (ÖVP). But few had predicted such a close battle with the ÖVP coming in as runners up just 3.3 per cent behind the Democrats.

The Freedom party (FPÖ) were arguably the biggest winners in Salzburg though, claiming third place with 13.23 per cent of the vote, at the top end of the pollsters predicted 7-16 per cent.

SPÖ Salzburg leader Gabi Burgstaller was aware how much the ÖVP cut into her party’s margin. “Of course I am happy we have remained number one, but on the other hand there are our considerable loses to consider,” she said.

Burgstaller said that they would start coalition talks with the ÖVP on Monday, and they were now her priority. “I am of the same opinion I was before the election, we want to start talks immediately with the second strongest party in the election,” she said.

Burgstaller appeared to reject the idea of a coalition with the Freedom party. “Even if a red-blue coalition were in theory possible, the first point of call for discussions could only be with the ÖVP and [ÖVP Salzburg leader] Wilfried Haslauer.”

Results:

Salzburg

Social Democrats (SPÖ) – 39.5%, down 5.5% (on 2004 election)
People’s Party (ÖVP) – 36.21%, down 1.7%.
Freedom Party (FPÖ) – 13.23%, down 4.5%.
Greens – 7.24%, down 0.8%.
Alliance for the Future of Austria (BZÖ) – 3.76 % (Didn’t exist in 2004)

Carinthia

BZÖ – 45%, up 6% (before split from Freedom party)
SPÖ – 28.8%, down 10%.
ÖVP – 16.7%, up 5%
Greens – 5%, down 1.7%.

http://www.austriantimes.at/index.php?id=11498

Dec
26
2008
0

SPÖ make gains in Carinthia poll

The results of a Sora poll made public on Saturday give the SPÖ 38 per cent in Carinthia – up from 33 per cent in April – slightly more than two months before the 1 March provincial election.

The poll gives the BZÖ 41 per cent (down from 44 in April), the ÖVP 11 cent, the Greens six per cent and the FPÖ only two per cent.

New SPÖ Carinthian leader Reinhar Rohr said yesterday (Mon): “The poll results show that our course has been the right one.”

Rohr added the SPÖ would continue to focus on the themes of jobs, education, affordable housing, guaranteed pensions and health.

Poll results come at a time of uproar between the FPÖ and the BZÖ. FPÖ Heinz-Christian Strache called for Claudia Haider, the widow of late Carinthian Governor and BZÖ leader Jörg Haider, to become FPÖ president of the Carinthian parliament over the weekend.

Strache claimed that Haider’s widow was the only politician capable of following in her late husband’s footsteps.

The FPÖ leader’s proposal has enraged the BZÖ. Its General Secretary Martin Strutz said: “We reject in the Haider family’s name the FPÖ’s attempted exploitation of Claudia Haider.”

Strutz, who noted she had already said she did not want to become active in politics, claimed Strache’s comments had constituted an attempt “to attract attention to himself through the use of strong language.”

The BZÖ general secretary added the FPÖ would not cross the five-per-cent threshold necessary for representation in the Carinthian parliament in the March election. Instead of hoping for the impossible, Strutz added, the FPÖ should support BZÖ candidates in the election.

The Sora poll resuls support Strutz’ assertion. Results of another poll do not. An ÖGM poll commissioned by the BZÖ gives the BZÖ 42 per cent, the SPÖ 29 per cent, the ÖVP 12 per cent, the Greens 10 per cent and the FPÖ five per cent.

http://www.austriantimes.at/index.php?id=10258

Powered by WordPress | Aeros Theme | TheBuckmaker.com WordPress Themes