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Politics : Formerly About Advanced Micro Devices -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: steve harris who wrote (284072)4/14/2006 12:06:07 PM
From: paret  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1574006
 
VERY BRUTAL RAPE

freerepublic.com

The 17 year old Somalian has several serious crimes on his conscience, but the worst is probably the rape of a young girl at Hoybraaten (Oslo suburb) one year ago. Oslo Court states that the rape was unusually brutal, and lasted for several hours. The young girl was threatened with a knife and beaten. The Somalian choked the girl so brutally and for so long, that the medical doctor who afterwards treated the girl, said that she could have died. Her voice has changed. She was raped without a condom in a very humiliating way. The girl is now suffering from severe psychological problems in the aftermath of the attack.
The Youth was sentenced to four and half years in prison, where three years was made conditionally, which means he will serve only one and a half years. The sentence also included another rape, where his Norwegian-Moroccan friend raped a 13 year old girl, whilst the Somalian helped to threaten her and keep guard. She was also brutally treated, and is experiencing serious problems after the experience.
The Court states that the girl was harassed by the family of the Norwegian-Moroccan and his friends. It went so far that the girl was angry at her own mother for giving the name of the rapists to the police. The girl wanted to pay the offenders to make them leave her alone. Her psychological condition became so bad she had to be forcibly sent to a psychological institution. Her schooling is destroyed.
SENTENCED AGAIN
The Norwegian-Moroccan was on trip with city social services when he raped another 13 year old girl in the toilet at a major Oslo Cinema. Also this girl was raped in a very humiliating manner, and is suffering from serious problems in the aftermath.
The Norwegian-Moroccan was sentenced to the same punishment as his Somalian friend. The Court showed leniency because the youths were young, and that both have had a difficult childhood with domestic violence. Recently, both of them appeared again in the Oslo court February this year. This time as well, the Norwegian-Moroccan told the court about difficulties growing up, and added that he had attended for three years a quranic-scool in Morocco where he was frequently beaten. This case primarily involved the robbery of a young girl, where the Norwegian-Moroccan and three others beat the girl to the ground and robbed her of her purse and her cell phone. In addition, the Norwegian-Moroccan participated when the Somalian and some others robbed three young men in Strommen, outside Oslo, last summer.



To: steve harris who wrote (284072)4/14/2006 1:13:30 PM
From: paret  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1574006
 
U.N. Furor Erupts on Passover
BY BENNY AVNI - Staff Reporter of the NEW YORK SUN
April 14, 2006 Edition > Section: Foreign

URL: nysun.com
UNITED NATIONS - When the American ambassador to the United Nations, John Bolton, asked the members of the Security Council yesterday whether they thought it appropriate on Passover, a major Jewish holy day, to debate a motion denouncing Israel, most of the 15 ambassadors failed to grasp what was wrong, according to diplomats present at the meeting, held behind closed doors.
The council scheduled yesterday's meeting after a few days of consultations, hoping to reach an agreement on a statement regarding Israel and the Palestinian Arab territories. No agreement was reached because, according to Mr. Bolton, the text proposed by Qatar, the Arab member of the council, was "not fair and balanced."
The council instead will meet Monday for an open meeting, in which dozens of U.N. members will deliver speeches in what one diplomat described as a "group therapy session."
Non-members of the council do not take part in closed-door consultations like the one that took place yesterday. But diplomats from countries whose affairs are being discussed wait in a room near the council, where they are briefed on the goings-on by friendly council members and where they try to lobby council members.
Israeli diplomats are always present during such consultations, but yesterday they were conspicuous in their absence. A diplomat, who asked for anonymity because Israeli officials are supposed to decline interviews during the first 24 hours of Passover, told The New York Sun that the council had been notified in advance that no Israelis would come to Turtle Bay during the holiday.
The request for a council meeting by Qatar's ambassador, Nassir Abdulaziz al-Nasser, "was made several days ago," Chinese ambassador Wang Guangya, who is the council's president for the month of April, told the Sun. Qatar declined to delay the consultations any further, as today the United Nations is closed as it is Good Friday.
Russian ambassador, Andrey Denisov, who usually carries a lot of influence with the Arab group, told the Sun he had tried to dissuade the Palestinian Arab U.N. observer, Riyad Mansour, from calling consultations on Passover. "Now we are at a deadlock," he said.
Secretary-General Annan's spokesman, Stephane Dujarric, said that it was not a secretariat issue. "The council is master of its own schedule," he said, and wished the Sun a happy Passover.
As consultations began, Mr. Bolton asked for what he later described as "consistency about observing religious holidays." He said that he was told that "we work on everybody's religious holidays." From now on, he said, "never again can anybody say, 'But it's a religious holiday, therefore I can't work.'"
Which holidays are observed by the United Nations "is something which is decided every year," said French ambassador Jean Marc de la Sabliere, adding that the United Nations cannot afford to stop work" whenever there is a religious feast" anywhere around the world.
The Israeli diplomat said that the issue is not working days, but a council meeting that specifically had to do with Israel. Two years ago, after a flare up on the Syrian-Israeli border, a more acute open meeting of the council took place on the eve of Yom Kippur, the diplomat noted. Ambassador Dan Gillerman had to deliver a speech, and after making special arrangement to schedule the speech early, he literally ran out of Turtle Bay just before sundown, when Jewish observance begins.
"The essence of Jewish holidays would require a moral basis," said the Palestinian Arab observer, Mr. Mansour. "These are holy days for Muslims, Jews, and Christians. And the tradition we are familiar with, during religious holidays there should not be killing of civilian and innocent individuals."
An Arab resident was murdered yesterday in East Jerusalem, a week after selling his house to a Jew. The Israeli Web site Y-Net reported from Palestinian Arab sources that the killing was claimed by operatives of the Al-Aqsa Brigades, which are the militant faction of Fatah.
But the discussion in yesterday's Security Council meeting was about the Gaza Strip, where in the last few days Israeli air and cannon strikes have been taking place against Palestinian Arab targets. Israel has tried to stop a barrage of rocket attacks on its southern towns from inside Gaza, which began immediately after Israel left the strip last August, but intensified earlier this year, when Hamas won a parliamentary election. Israeli troops infiltrated Gaza after sundown last night for the first time since the August pullout.
While yesterday's proposed council statement called on the Palestinian Authority to conduct "firm measures to halt rocket attacks and suicide bombings," it concentrated mostly on Israel's "excessive use of force."
"What were these consultations about?" the Israeli diplomat said. "Were they on Israel's response, or on the terror that led to it?"
Mr. Mansour said that yesterday only America was "shielding and protecting Israeli activities and aggression" from the condemnation of all other 14 council members, but members of the council said that several other ambassadors also had reservations about the Arab text.
"If I were the only holdout, I would be proud of the fact," Mr. Bolton told the Sun.

April 14, 2006 Edition > Section: Foreign >



To: steve harris who wrote (284072)4/14/2006 3:26:58 PM
From: paret  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1574006
 
I have seen the enemy ...

---------------------------------------------------------------April 14, 2006 WorldNetDaily.com
By Franklin Raff

An Iraqi officer of significant rank approached my translator as I quietly took notes near the banks of the Euphrates River, at a combat observation post named COP Dunlop. He knew I was an embedded American. He had a sense, perhaps, that I was a sympathetic soul, and he wanted to pass along an urgent message.

We shook hands and exchanged pleasantries. I learned he was an educated and successful man, an accomplished soldier, and quite knowledgeable about the affairs of the world. He had served under Saddam. He openly spoke about the likelihood of corruption in the new Iraqi Ministry of Defense. We spoke about black-market arms trading, ancient smuggling routes, and the problem of porous borders.

We even discussed personal matters, and the question of his taking a second wife. (I told him the one about a thousand pair of panty-hose hanging from King Solomon's shower-curtain.) We had a reasonably long and genuine conversation about matters of importance to all men. And at a certain moment, he grew a little uneasy and blurted out what he had wanted to say from the beginning:

Why do you people not tell our story? Why do you not say what is going on? Why do you come to our country and see what is happening, you see the schools and the hospitals and you see the markets and you eat with Sunni and Shia soldiers – everybody eats together, everybody works together –you see that Saddam is gone forever and we are free to speak and complain.

You see we are working and eating together and fighting together – Sunni and Shia – you see what we are building here, you see the votes we make as one people. Then you say to the world about a great war and horrible things and how we are all killing each other? We are not animals! We are Iraqis. Look around you! Look!

Non-English speaking Iraqis are distressed and disheartened by American media bias. Many feel personally offended by what they read in translation and hear of in the foreign press. I am not talking about press information and public affairs officers. I am not talking about coalition soldiers (though every one I spoke with on the subject was equally frustrated.) I am talking about Arabic-speaking Iraqis. They see a difference between what we're seeing and what we're saying. What does that tell you about the extent of our problem?