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Politics : Bush Administration's Media Manipulation--MediaGate? -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Skywatcher who wrote (8276)8/24/2006 6:46:38 PM
From: 10K a day  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 9838
 
he read all the sports illustrated in the pentagon toilet.



To: Skywatcher who wrote (8276)8/25/2006 9:01:15 AM
From: Proud_Infidel  Respond to of 9838
 
Denmark Charges 4 With Plotting Attack
Townhall ^ | Aug. 24, 2006

A Danish prosecutor on Thursday charged four young Muslims with helping to supply weapons and explosives for a planned terror attack in Europe.

Five other suspects in the case have been charged in Bosnia, including two men accused of preparing to blow up an unidentified European target. Three other suspects have been charged in Britain.

Prosecutor Henning Fode said the four men arrested in Denmark last October helped the two main suspects in Bosnia get hold of "weapons and explosives with the aim of committing a terror act."

All four, who cannot be named under a court order, have denied wrongdoing. Danish investigators have released little information about the suspects, but said two of them are 17, and the others are aged 20 and 21.

If convicted they could face life in prison, although such sentences are commuted after 16 years under Danish law. A trial date has not yet been set.

The probe stems from the Oct. 19 arrests in Sarajevo of Swedish national Mirsad Bektasevic, 19, and Abdulkadir Cesur, an 18-year-old Turkish national living in Denmark.

Bosnian prosecutors said Bektasevic and Cesur were planning an attack in Bosnia-Herzegovina or at some other unidentified site in Europe with the aim of forcing the withdrawal of foreign troops from Iraq and Afghanistan.

Police raiding their Sarajevo apartment allegedly found a suicide bomber belt, explosives, firearms and other military equipment, as well as a videotape showing masked men asking for God's forgiveness.

Bektasevic and Cesur have pleaded innocent.

Three others have been charged with helping them obtain explosives.

The four suspects in Denmark were arrested Oct. 27 after a tip from the Bosnian police. Three other suspects were arrested in Denmark, but have been released. It was not immediately clear whether they also faced charges.

Danish intelligence agents wiretapped their telephones, and said three of them had telephone contacts with Bektasevic and met with him three times in Denmark.

Authorities in Denmark, Sweden, Bosnia and Britain have been cooperating in the investigation.

In Britain, Younis Tsouli and Waseem Mughal are charged with conspiracy to murder and cause an explosion in an alleged plot to mount a terrorist bomb attack. The third defendant, Tariq Al-Daour, faces less serious charges, including conspiracy to obtain money by deception and possession of money for terrorist purposes.

The three, all in their early 20s, are due to stand trial next year.



To: Skywatcher who wrote (8276)8/25/2006 2:17:17 PM
From: Proud_Infidel  Respond to of 9838
 
AP Interview: Islamic leader in key Somali town says 'the world better learn who we are'
Santa Barbara News Press ^ | August 25, 2006 | ELIZABETH A. KENNEDY

newspress.com

LET WEYNE, Somalia (AP) - An Islamic militia that controls most of southern Somalia is now expanding into the center of this Horn of Africa country, imposing order after years of anarchy but also sparking worries of an emerging Taliban-style regime.

One of its Islamic courts has been governing this central town for less than a week, operating out of a crumbling stone building furnished with green plastic chairs, but already its leader is envisioning greater things.

''The world better learn who we are,'' Sheik Farah Moalim told The Associated Press in an interview this week at his headquarters in Belet Weyne, capital of the Hiran region. ''This is just the beginning stage.''

Just 25 miles from the Ethiopian border, Belet Weyne is among the most important towns seized this month by militiamen loyal to the Supreme Islamic Courts Council, which is setting up regional courts to rule based on the Muslim holy book, the Quran.

The group's strict and often severe interpretation of Islam raises memories of Afghanistan's Taliban regime, which was ousted by a U.S.-led campaign for harboring Osama bin Laden and al-Qaida fighters. U.S. officials accuse the Somali group of harboring al-Qaida bombers.

But here and in other parts of Somalia, many people credit the Islamic courts with restoring order to a nation that had seen little more than violence and lawlessness for 15 years.

Moalim said the Islamic council will eventually set up courts throughout Somalia and warned it will not tolerate foreign interference - particularly from Ethiopia. The latter has vowed to ''crush'' the Islamists if they threaten Somalia's feeble, U.N.-backed interim government.

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We're learning......we may be slow, but we're definitely learning.......


















To: Skywatcher who wrote (8276)8/25/2006 3:36:03 PM
From: Brasco One  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 9838
 
go away Cancerdine.



To: Skywatcher who wrote (8276)8/26/2006 8:47:18 AM
From: Proud_Infidel  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 9838
 
When Muslims kill Muslims
Toronto Sun (Canada) ^ | Saturday, August 26, 2006 | SALIM MANSUR

torontosun.com

In the marketplace of ideas, the Arab-Muslim world is presently a relatively barren region. Thinking is a perilous venture where dictators, demagogues and mob passion rule.

But when it comes to maiming and killing, the Arab-Muslim world holds a place of prominence. In particular, the ancient land between two rivers, now Iraq, has proven to be greatly fertile as killing fields.

The most famous massacre in Muslim history by armed might of the state took place at Karbala on the banks of the Euphrates in 680. On that terribly bloody day, Husayn bin Ali -- grandson of Muhammad, the prophet of Islam, by his daughter Fatima -- was brutally killed and decapitated as he was offering his mid-afternoon prayers.

Husayn's male companions were slaughtered by the army of Yazid, the caliph (Islam's supreme ruler), while women and children in the company of Husayn, including his wife and daughter, were abused and carried as war trophies to the capital of the expanding Arab-Islamic empire in Damascus.

The people of Karbala and surrounding areas passively watched as Muhammad's family and its claim to leadership of Muslims ended in tragedy. But belated grief tore the Arab-Muslim world apart, and its wounds continue to torment in countless ways a people for whom the massacre in Karbala has become the template of their history.

Karbala is a necessary reminder of Muslims being unequalled tormentors and killers of Muslims. Saddam Hussein as the ruling tyrant in Baghdad was only the most recent incarnation of an Arab Macbeth and the Mongol Genghis Khan rolled into one megalomaniacal killer.

It also illuminates the sheer hypocrisy of Arabs and Muslims who selectively and for political purposes rage against the United States and Israel (and not, for instance, against Russia or China despite the brutal suppression of their respective Muslim minorities) for Arab-Muslim casualties in conflicts that have been, almost without exception, precipitated by Arab-Muslim dictators and demagogues.


This past July was grisly, and not just because of the war in Lebanon unleashed by Hezbollah terrorists against Israel.

Iraq's health ministry reported July was the deadliest month for Iraqi casualties since March 2003. The figures provided were 3,438 Iraqis killed -- 1,855 of those as a result of sectarian violence and 1,583 from bombings and shootings carried out by insurgents. Some 3,600 were wounded during the same period.

These figures followed a UN estimate of nearly 6,000 Iraqis killed during May and June. The killings in Iraq have been indiscriminate, and the killers are mostly Arabs, belonging to Sunni or Shiite sects. It is noteworthy that Iraqi Kurds, who suffered Saddam's genocidal violence, are uninvolved in this sectarian savagery.

There has been no organized protest within the Arab-Muslim world or in the West against the daily toll of Iraqi deaths due to this hate-driven insurgency.

Nor is Iraq the only place where Muslim violence against Muslims rages unabated. There is Darfur in Sudan, Somalia, Afghanistan, Kashmir, Algeria until recently, and hotspots in Iran, Bangladesh, Pakistan, Indonesia and Nigeria, Uzbekistan, Palestine, Morocco, Egypt, Saudi Arabia and Lebanon.

How, then, might we explain why Muslim deaths seem only to matter to Arabs and Muslims -- and to apologists of Arab-Muslim politics in the West -- when they occur as a result of conflicts with the U.S. or Israel?

In witnessing worldwide protests over Lebanese deaths resulting from the recent Hezbollah-Israeli fighting, we might conclude it is politically acceptable when Muslims murder untold numbers of Muslims, but entirely unacceptable when they are collateral casualties of Israeli bombings.

This is the Orwellian reality of much of the Arab-Muslim world today, where Muslim and non-Muslim lives are too often seen as readily and contemptuously disposable -- except when they become handy tools of propaganda against Jews, Hindus and Americans.