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Politics : Attack Iraq? -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: GROUND ZERO™ who wrote (7641)8/25/2003 8:14:41 PM
From: lorne  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 8683
 
GZ. Maybe Prez Buss is one smart dude, he has managed to get a good portion of the moslum crazies coming to one place. So at least the crazy mislum terrorists will be shooting at soldiers who can shoot back instead of shooting infants while they sleep in their cribs or innocent citizens going about their daily lives. Shooting at American or British soldiers is not good but they can shoot back.

Militants Eyed in India Blasts; 44 Killed
Aug 25, 3:32 PM (ET)
By RAMOLA TALWAR BADAM
apnews.excite.com

BOMBAY, India (AP) - A pair of car bombs ripped through lunchtime crowds in India's financial capital, Bombay, on Monday, killing 44 people and wreaking havoc at a crowded jewelry market and a popular historic landmark. More than 150 people were wounded.

Police were focusing their investigation on Muslim militant groups. But victims from the explosions were almost certain to include both Muslims and Hindus.

In a cramped shoe store in a corner of the jewelry market, Hindu shopowner Tilak Raj mourned the death of his Muslim employee, Abdul Mullah.

"He had just left the shop and was sitting under a tree when the buildings shook," Raj said. Like many witnesses, he described torn and dismembered limbs strewn by the blast in the narrow road lined with shops. The street was littered with shattered glass and metal and the slippers left by crowds trampling each other to flee.

The bombs were hidden in the trunks of two taxis and exploded within five minutes of each other, police said. Several people were being interrogated, including one taxi driver. No one immediately claimed responsibility for the bombings.

The timing raised concerns the blasts was linked to a dispute over a religious site in the northern city of Ayodhya claimed by both Hindus and Muslims that has been the source of much bloodshed in the past. The bombings came hours after the release of a long-awaited archaeological report on the site that itself showed divisions over the site's history.

Ranjit Sharma, a police commissioner, also put blame on India's longtime rival, Pakistan, saying suspicion in the blast fell on Islamic militant groups "let loose by the enemy country."

He specifically mentioned the Students Islamic Movement of India, or SIMI, a militant Muslim students' group outlawed in 2001, and Lashkar-e-Tayyaba, one of more than a dozen Islamic rebel groups fighting Indian security forces in Kashmir since 1989, seeking independence for the Himalayan province or its merger with Muslim-dominated Pakistan.

The reference to Pakistan could increase tension between the nuclear-armed neighbors at a time when the two countries are taking steps to improve relations. Pakistan - which has fought three wars with India and came close to a fourth last year - quickly condemned the attacks as "an act of terrorism."

"We deplore these attacks and we sympathize with the victims and their families," Pakistan Foreign Ministry spokesman Masood Khan said. "I think that such wanton targeting of civilians should be condemned in the strongest possible terms."

New Delhi accuses Pakistan of supporting militants, which Islamabad denies. Indian police said there was no direct evidence linking those groups, or Pakistan, to Monday's bombings.

The attacks appeared aimed more at the city itself than at members of a particular religion.

One of the bombs exploded at the Gateway of India, a historic landmark and tourist attraction built by India's former British colonizers to commemorate the 1911 visit of King George V. The massive arch is often host to outdoor concerts and is a popular lunchtime eating spot for both Hindus and Muslims. The other blast was at the crowded neighborhood of jewelry stores, where many shops are owned by Hindus but where many of the artisans are Muslims.

"All kinds of people work here - Hindus, Muslims and Christians," said Ali Asghar, 24, a student whose father works in a bank near the jewelry market. "This is not about religion."

But his father feared Muslims would be blamed - and that anti-Muslim riots could follow.

"I don't want to leave Bombay. Where would we go? We feel safe here," said Mohammed Asghar.

Sushil Kumar Shinde, chief minister of Maharashtra, the state where Bombay is located, said the explosions had targeted the city's economy. "The blasts have thrown up a challenge to the resilience of this city," he told a news conference.

The death toll totaled 44 by early evening, Sharma said. Javed Ahmed, a police commissioner for Bombay, said at least 150 people were injured. Stock prices plunged after the blast reports. The benchmark index of Bombay Stock Exchange, the Sensex, closed at 4,005, down 119 points or 3 percent.

The blasts came just hours after the release of the archaeological report on the religious site in Ayodhya, where in 1992 Hindu mobs tore down the 16th-century Babri mosque, which they say was built on a temple marking the birthplace of their supreme god, Rama. More than 2,000 died in the nationwide violence that followed.

In March, a bomb attack on a Bombay train, which police blamed on Islamic militants, killed 11 people and wounded 64 others. That explosion came a day after the 10th anniversary of a series of bombings in Bombay that killed more than 250 people and were blamed on Islamic militants seeking to avenge Muslim deaths in the riots that followed the mosque's razing.

The report issued Monday by government archaeologists indicated there had been an ancient structure at the site, lawyers for both sides said, though they disagreed on whether it said there had actually been a temple.



To: GROUND ZERO™ who wrote (7641)8/25/2003 8:18:37 PM
From: lorne  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 8683
 
GZ. Not a good thing to read just before bedtime ...but what the hack.........

France: No proof Hamas is terror group
Official fingers only 'military wing' of organization for violence
August 25, 2003
worldnetdaily.com

The French government is once again bucking the United States-led international war on terrorism and urging fellow Europeans to follow suit by not classifying Hamas and Islamic Jihad as terror organizations.

While the U.S. State Department lists the groups as sponsors of terror, the European Union has only flagged what it calls a "military wing" of Hamas – Izzedine al-Qassam. The terror designation allows the freezing of assets and the imposition of sanctions.

Following last week's suicide bombing on a crowded Jerusalem bus in which 20 people were killed, including several children, the U.S. froze the assets of six Hamas leaders and those of mostly European-based Palestinian charities it accused of fund-raising for Hamas.

Both Hamas and Islamic Jihad claimed responsibility for the attack and Hamas released video of the 29-year-old Hebron man it said was the bomber. After Israel launched retaliatory missile strikes in which a senior Hamas leader was killed Thursday, both groups pronounced an end to their seven-week cease-fire.

Hamas and Israeli leaders traded accusations over this latest road block to the "road map" to Mideast peace.

"The assassination of Abu Shanab ... means that the Zionist enemy has assassinated the truce, and the Hamas movement holds the Zionist enemy fully responsible for the consequences of its crime," Hamas spokesman Ismail Haniyah told reporters in Gaza.

Last night, the EU joined the diplomatic frenzy to put the "road map" back on course. The Associated Press reports Italian Foreign Minister Franco Frattini, whose country holds the EU presidency, held telephone talks last night with Secretary of State Colin Powell, Israeli Foreign Minister Sylvan Shalom and Palestinian Foreign Minister Nabil Shaath on "the tragic events in Iraq and the Middle East.

Frattini reportedly stressed the struggle against terrorism must "continue to be among the international community's top priorities."

To that end, Frattini said EU foreign ministers will discuss "the problem of Hamas" at a Sept. 5-6 meeting in northern Italy, ostensibly to review its classification of the group.

According to the news wire, Frattini said that while Shalom called for "the immediate dismantling" of Hamas, Shaath pleaded for European understanding of the "particularly delicate phase the [Palestinian] government of Mahmoud Abbas is experiencing at the moment."

The Jerusalem Post reports an adviser to President Chirac, Maurice Gourdault-Montagne, is lobbying the EU to resist Israel's pressure to add the full Hamas organization to its terror list.

"If we find that Hamas and Islamic Jihad are indeed terror groups opposed to peace, we may have to change the EU's stand," Gourdault-Montagne reportedly told the Israeli ambassador in France, Nissim Zvilli. "However, we mustn't limit ourselves to one, clear cut, position."

According to the Post, Gourdault-Montagne's assertion drew outrage at Israel's foreign ministry.

"Such an attitude is one of criminal negligence. It refuses to assume responsibility over the war against – and thus legitimizes – terrorism," an official is quoted by the paper as saying.

In March, a threatened veto by France forced the U.S. and Britain to abandon efforts to secure a new United Nations Security Council resolution authorizing the use of military force to disarm Saddam Hussein of suspected weapons of mass destruction. A coalition of some 40 countries subsequently invaded Iraq over continued pleas for diplomacy from a handful of council members, including France.

Paradoxically, France subsequently offered its military expertise with weapons of mass destruction to the coalition effort, despite its fierce opposition. French ambassador Jean-David Levitte told CNN days before the launch of the war that the use of biological and chemical weapons by Saddam Hussein's forces would "change completely the perception and the situation for us." He said the French military had equipment to fight "under these circumstances" and could join the coalition if forces came under such attack.

French officials, who have consistently objected to placing Hezbollah on the EU terror list, claim there is insufficient proof the entire organizations of Hamas and Islamic Jihad, not just their "military wings," are involved in terrorism.

Israel and the U.S. argue no such distinction can be made.

"There's no question that there is a direct link between the heads of Hamas and the terrorists on the ground," Gideon Meir, an Israeli foreign ministry official, told the Jerusalem Post.

Meanwhile today, Izzedine al-Qassam leaders again vowed revenge after Israeli missile strikes killed another four members in Gaza City last night.

"Our response will be painful and quick," officials pledged in a statement.