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Politics : America Under Siege: The End of Innocence -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: DeplorableIrredeemableRedneck who wrote (14282)3/22/2002 12:46:17 PM
From: lorne  Respond to of 27714
 
Darren. The muzzies are just going to keep messing about till they get themselves all killed...Damm shame.. :o)
52 Wounded in Grenade Explosions in Unusual Attack on Civilians in Indian-Controlled Kashmir
By Mujtaba Ali Ahmad Associated Press Writer
Published: Mar 22, 2002
SRINAGAR, India (AP) - Attackers hurled grenades at a bus stand and marketplace Friday, wounding 52 people in a rare attack on civilian targets in Indian-controlled Kashmir.
Police blamed Islamic separatists for the attacks, and army officers said three militants were killed in gunbattles in two other places in Kashmir on Friday.

Civilians are killed or wounded in Kashmir mostly when they are caught in cross fire, or a grenade aimed at security forces misses its target, or when Islamic militants kill people they suspect to be police and army informers, a senior paramilitary official in Kashmir said on condition of anonymity.

The civilian casualties in Friday's attacks were the highest since the Oct. 1 bombing of the Jammu-Kashmir state assembly building in Srinagar, in which 38 people were killed and approximately 60 wounded - mostly civilians. In December, 41 people, mostly civilians, were wounded when grenades thrown at security forces exploded on civilians.

On Friday, attackers threw four or five grenades into a busy market at midmorning, wounding 35 civilians in Shopiyan, about 30 miles south of Srinagar, the summer capital of Jammu-Kashmir state, said an officer at the state's police control room.

"There were no security forces present. We were going about our daily market routine," said Mohammed Shaban, 55, one of the wounded, who was hospitalized in Srinagar.

About five hours later, at least two grenades exploded at a busy bus stand in Anantnag, about 35 miles south of Srinagar, wounding 17 people. They were all civilians except for two paramilitary troopers from the Central Reserve Police Force, said the police control room officer, who spoke on condition of anonymity.

No one has claimed responsibility for the attacks.

The police officer said Islamic militants fighting to separate Kashmir from India were suspected.

The Indian government says more than 30,000 people have died since a dozen Islamic militant groups began fighting in 1989 to make the Himalayan region of Kashmir independent or join it with Pakistan. Human rights groups say the number killed is more than 60,000.

In a 14-hour gunbattle in Quimoh village, near Anantnag, about 35 miles south of Srinagar, one militant holed up in a house was killed while an accomplice escaped, said Border Security Force spokesman Tirath Acharya.

Paramilitary police attacked a hide-out of Islamic guerrillas in the woods of Badipathri in Kangan, about 25 miles northeast of Srinagar, killing two guerillas while a third escaped, said Col. G.S. Mann, commander of the paramilitary force in Kangan.

He said the man who escaped was a local commander of Tehrik-e-Jihad-e-Islami from Pakistan, and one of the dead was a Pakistani. The other dead man, Mann said, was a member of the Hezb-ul-Mujahedeen, the largest Kashmiri militant group in Jammu-Kashmir.

An Indian army camp came under rocket attack on Friday, but there were no injuries or damage, said Army Maj. Ajay Pal.

Police have said that militant groups have begun joint operations against the Indian security forces.

"Reorganizing groups is perhaps a reaction to the pressure within Pakistan on Islamic militant outfits," said R.S. Bhullar, deputy inspector-general of the Border Security Force.

India accuses Pakistan of aiding the Islamic militants who cross the frontier to make attacks. The Pakistan government supports their cause, but denies helping them. In January, the government of Pakistan's President Gen. Pervez Musharraf began arresting militants, and banned some groups, but in recent weeks, there have been newspaper reports that thousands have been released.
ap.tbo.com



To: DeplorableIrredeemableRedneck who wrote (14282)3/22/2002 11:38:56 PM
From: lorne  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 27714
 
Algeria says Israelis are like Nazis
march 22, 2002
Canada sits and listens: Invective unleashed at UN rights meeting
Steven Edwards
National Post
UNITED NATIONS - Repeated comparisons to Nazi Germany punctuated a vicious verbal attack on Israel yesterday at the annual meeting of the United Nations Human Rights Commission.

Algeria's ambassador compared every night in a Palestinian town to a new Kristallnacht, wondered when Israel will open its own concentration camps and spoke in German to cite a Nazi death decree he said the Israelis invoke against Palestinians.

The commission is the UN's principal human rights organ. Its 53 members include countries with poor human rights records, although the United States found itself ejected last May.

Year after year, the commission has approved Arab-sponsored resolutions slamming Israel, but the United States had until now demanded ballots on the measures, thereby preventing them from appearing to be universally endorsed. As yesterday's assault unfolded, Canada remained uncommitted to using its seat on the commission to demanding such a vote on a series of expected anti-Israel resolutions being prepared by Arab states.

But the ambassador for the small Central American state of Guatemala told the National Post his country will call for a ballot if Canada does not step in.

"We hope that a bigger country like Canada will ask for a vote, but we will call for a vote if necessary," said Antonio Arenales, Guatemala's ambassador to the UN in Geneva, where the commission meets. "We have seen drafts of [the anti-Israel] resolutions, and they are unacceptable. They represent an unfair politicization of the commission."

A former member of Guatemala's constitutional assembly, Mr. Arenales, 51, barely speaks above a whisper, the result of an attack by political opponents who kidnapped him in 1985, shot him in the head and left him for dead.

He told the commission yesterday it must recognize Israel's right to exist as much as the Palestinians' right to statehood.

"The Palestinian Authority has to guarantee and respect the right of self-determination of the Jewish people in addition to their own rights," Mr. Arenales told the Post.

"There are United Nations Security Council resolutions that call on Israel to withdraw from the territories while also saying that Arab countries must recognize Israel's right to exist. Many Arab countries refer to the first part but forget the second part."

Guatemala joined the United States in opposing three measures criticizing Israel last year, while Canada abstained. Israel has never been a member of the commission.

"We will vote the same again this year even if no other country joins us," said Mr. Arenales.

Ottawa had no comment yesterday on the day's speeches.

"We will be making a statement to the commission about the Middle East next week," said Nancy Bergeron, a spokeswoman for the Department of Foreign Affairs.

Bill Graham, the Minister of Foreign Affairs, said after addressing the commission on Tuesday that Canada will consult with Israel before deciding how to react to the resolutions.

"We have never had to face this before because the U.S. has always been there," said an official. "It is a file from Hell ... you are damned if you do and damned if you don't."

Yesterday's debate centred on territories under occupation, with Mohamed Salah Denbri, ambassador for Algeria, acknowledging Israel should have "secure and recognized frontiers" after withdrawing from the West Bank and Gaza.

But Jews will be outraged by his comparisons between Israel's administration of the territories and the Nazi occupation.

He referred to a "daily repetition of the Night of the Broken Glass and Masadas." The former, also known as Kristallnacht, occurred on Nov. 9, 1938, when the Nazis encouraged window-smashing of synagogues and Jewish businesses, and the beating of Jews. The latter was the stand of Jewish zealots who committed mass suicide rather than fall into the hands of the Romans in the 1st century AD.

Mr. Denbri said Israel had inflicted a new "nacht und nebel" on the Palestinians, a reference to the Nazis' "night and fog" decree that generally spelled death for people who committed crimes against Germans in occupied lands.

He called Israeli soldiers who recently wrote numbers on Palestinian prisoners for identification "disciples of Goebbels and Himmler." The Israeli army said the marking was not military policy.

In a reference to the Holocaust, Mr. Denbri asked, "Should we wait in silence for the establishment of new extermination camps, or new massacres like Babi Yar?" He was referring to the ravine near Kiev where German troops shot 30,000 Jews over two days in September, 1941.

Andrew Srulevitch, executive director of UN Watch, a monitoring group, responded by saying: "With his demonization of Israel and trivialization of the Holocaust, the Algerian ambassador proved that Arab anti-Semitism, so prevalent in the Arab media, continues to plague the United Nations."

At yesterday's meetings in Geneva, the Palestinian delegate blamed the Sept. 11 attacks on the United States and Israel's presence in the West Bank and Gaza, which Palestinians claim as a homeland.

Nabil Ramlawi, ambassador for the Palestinians, who do not sit on the rights commission, said the war against terrorism was rooted in neglect of the Palestinian plight.

"The right of self-determination and the right to free their land ... are the root causes of those wars, the scope of which expanded lately to include regions of the world that have never thought before that they would be menaced," he said, referring to the Sept. 11 attacks.

But Islamic extremists themselves cite many other reasons for the attacks, including the presence of U.S. troops in Saudi Arabia, home to Muslim holy sites, and UN sanctions against Iraq.
nationalpost.com