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Politics : The Truth About Islam -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Cage Rattler who wrote (10957)11/29/2007 10:11:11 AM
From: lorne  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 20106
 
Cage Rattler...."I guess these folks are still incapable of noticing their own absurdity or they would join in the laughter -- cartoons to teddy bears. Uch!".....

Agreed..But IMO what is required is for EVERY civilized country of the world to send whatever military power they possess and surround a moslum country like Sudan and demand they change their stupid islam laws and become a civilized people or exit planet Earth. This fight against the advance of islam should not be left to the USA and a few allies there should be a united front by all civilized countries to stop this advance.... so far it appears that terror works for islam, just look at how the free world bends over backwards to appease islam...France burns and this is a gift from the so called " moderate " moslums ".



To: Cage Rattler who wrote (10957)11/29/2007 10:29:42 AM
From: DeplorableIrredeemableRedneck  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 20106
 
U.K. teacher charged in teddy bear case in court for trial
Associated Press

November 29, 2007 at 6:40 AM EST

KHARTOUM — Riot police surrounded a Sudanese court as proceedings began Thursday against a British teacher charged with inciting religious hatred over letting her pupils name a teddy bear Mohammed.

A tired-looking Gillian Gibbons, in a dark jacket and blue skirt, was not handcuffed when she walked into the courtroom in Khartoum, according to reporters who were briefly allowed inside but were subsequently dismissed.

"It's up to the judge, but from a consular point of view, we would like to be present," British Consul Russell Philipps said amid a crowd of about 100 people, mostly media, trying to get in.

Ms. Gibbons' chief defense lawyer, Kamal Djizouri, scuffled with a tight police cordon before he was allowed in.


This undated and unlocated portrait taken from the profile webpage of Gillian Gibbons on Friendsreunited.co.uk website shows the British teacher who was held Monday in Sudan for allegedly insulting Islam's prophet by allowing children to call a teddy bear Mohammed. (AFP/Getty Images)

Sudan charges U.K. teacher with insulting Islam
British teacher held in Sudan over teddy bear's name
The case set up an escalating diplomatic dispute with Britain, Sudan's former colonial ruler. If convicted, Ms. Gibbons faces up to 40 lashes, six months in jail and a fine, Sudanese officials have said, with the verdict and any sentence up to the “discretionary power of the judge.”

Prosecutor-General Salah Eddin Abu Zaid told The Associated Press earlier Thursday that the British teacher can expect a “swift and fair trial” under the Sudanese judicial system and that she had been provided with a legal defense team, as well as a private cell, mattress and blanket in detention.

“We don't think this will be a long trial, because there is only one article of the penal code to handle,” Mr. Abu Zaid said.

Prosecutors have previously said Ms. Gibbons, 54, was being charged under article 125, under charges of inciting religious hatred.

The country's top Muslim clerics pressed the government to ensure that she is punished, comparing her action to author Salman Rushdie's “blasphemies” against the Prophet Mohammed.

The charges against Ms. Gibbons angered the British government, which urgently summoned the Sudanese ambassador to discuss the case. British and American Muslim groups also criticized the decision.

Ms. Gibbons was arrested at her home in Khartoum on Sunday after some parents of her students accused her of naming the bear after Islam's prophet. Mohammed is a common name among Muslim men, but the parents saw applying it to a toy animal as an insult.

Mr. Abu Zaid said that he met with Ms. Gibbons on Wednesday and that “the lady was fine.”

Officials in Sudan's Foreign Ministry have tried to play down the case, calling it an isolated incident and predicting Ms. Gibbons could be released without charge.

But hard-liners have considerable weight in the government of President Omar al-Bashir, which came to power in a 1989 military coup that touted itself as creating an Islamic state.

The north of the country bases its legal code on Islamic Sharia law, and Mr. al-Bashir often seeks to burnish his religious credentials.

Last year, he vowed to lead a jihad, or holy war, against UN peacekeepers if they deployed in the Darfur region of western Sudan. He relented this year to allow a UN-African Union force there — but this month said he would bar Scandinavian peacekeepers from participating because newspapers in their countries ran caricatures of Prophet Mohammed last year.

Officials at Unity High School, where Ms. Gibbons taught, say she was teaching her 7-year-old students about animals and in September asked one girl to bring in her teddy bear. Ms. Gibbons then asked the students to pick names for the bear and they voted to name it Mohammed.

Each student then took the bear for a weekend to write a diary entry about what they did with the bear, and the entries were compiled into a book with the bear's photo on the cover and the title “My Name is Mohammed,” in what teachers in Britain said was a common exercise.

The school, founded in 1902 to provide British-style education to about 750 students from elementary through high school, has been closed since Ms. Gibbon's arrest. Most students are Muslims from affluent Sudanese families.

In Britain, the Gibbons family declined to speak with The Associated Press, saying the British government had advised them not to comment.

In Khartoum, the British Embassy said that diplomats were allowed to visit Ms. Gibbons on Wednesday and that she was being treated well.

Sudan's top clerics, known as the Assembly of the Ulemas, said in a statement Wednesday that parents at the school had handed them a book that the teacher was assembling about the bear.

The assembly, a semiofficial body generally viewed as moderate and close to the government, called on authorities to apply the full measure of the law against Ms. Gibbons. It called the incident part of a broader Western “plot” against Muslims.



To: Cage Rattler who wrote (10957)11/29/2007 6:54:52 PM
From: Proud_Infidel  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 20106
 
More atrocities in South Thailand (brought to you by the ROP)
Bangkok Post ^ | November 29 2007

bangkokpost.com

Islamic insurgents shot, hacked and crucified a Muslim man for cooperating with the military, and then drove home their intimidation attempt by beheading two Buddhist fish sellers.

Police said the separatists left a note on the body of the Muslim man, identified as assistant village headman Abdulloh Malohsae of Rueso district, Narathiwat province: "This is what the infidels deserve. The soldier dogs must meet this end."

Rebels shot and hacked the man with knives in an apparent attempt to cut off his head. Then they drove six-inch nails through his head, arms and legs to attach him to two pieces of wood, which were laid out like a cross in the middle of a road in Rueso district of Narathiwat province.

"They knew he was a military informant. This is to terrify the people," Pol Lt Khanchitthol Kreunor told the news agency AFP.

Two hours later, the insurgents or other members of the gang went to a market in an adjoining district and abducted two fishmongers, Sanguan Kaikuan, 61, and Annupong Pomvian, 21, both natives of the Northeast.

They shot and killed the two men, aged 20 and 61, then cut off their heads, police said.

The killings brought to at least 35 the number of decapitations by the self-styled separatists since they stepped up their attacks in the South in January, 2004. The violence has killed more than 2,700, the majority Muslims.



To: Cage Rattler who wrote (10957)11/30/2007 9:56:43 AM
From: DeplorableIrredeemableRedneck  Respond to of 20106
 
Thousands in Sudan Call for British Teddy Bear Teacher's Execution
Friday, November 30, 2007

foxnews.com

Gillian Gibbons
KHARTOUM, Sudan — Thousands of Sudanese, many armed with clubs and knives, rallied Friday in a central square and demanded the execution of a British teacher convicted of insulting Islam for allowing her students to name a teddy bear "Muhammad."

The protesters streamed out of mosques after Friday sermons, as pickup trucks with loudspeakers blared messages against Gillian Gibbons, the teacher who was sentenced Thursday to 15 days in prison and deportation. She avoided the more serious punishment of 40 lashes.

They massed in central Martyrs Square outside the presidential palace, where hundreds of riot police were deployed. They did not try to stop the rally, which lasted about an hour.

"Shame, shame on the U.K.," protesters chanted.

Click here to view photos.

Calls by FOXNews.com to Sudan's permanent mission to the United Nations were not returned Friday.

The protesters called for Gibbons' execution, saying, "No tolerance: Execution," and "Kill her, kill her by firing squad."

The women's prison where Gibbons is being held is far from the square.

RelatedStories
Teddy Bear Teacher Sentenced to 15 Days in Jail, Deportation Video
Wait and See? Several hundred protesters, not openly carrying weapons, marched about a mile away to Unity High School, where Gibbons worked. They chanted slogans outside the school, which is closed and under heavy security, then marched toward the nearby British Embassy. They were stopped by security forces two blocks away from the embassy.

The protest arose despite vows by Sudanese security officials the day before, during Gibbons' trial, that threatened demonstrations after Friday prayers would not take place. Some of the protesters carried green banners with the name of the Society for Support of the Prophet Muhammad, a previously unknown group.

Many protesters carried clubs, knives and axes — but not automatic weapons, which some have brandished at past government-condoned demonstrations. That suggested Friday's rally was not organized by the government.

A Muslim cleric at Khartoum's main Martyrs Mosque denounced Gibbons during one sermon, saying she intentionally insulted Islam. He did not call for protests, however.

"Imprisoning this lady does not satisfy the thirst of Muslims in Sudan. But we welcome imprisonment and expulsion," the cleric, Abdul-Jalil Nazeer al-Karouri, a well-known hard-liner, told worshippers.

"This an arrogant woman who came to our country, cashing her salary in dollars, teaching our children hatred of our Prophet Muhammad," he said.

Britain, meanwhile, pursued diplomatic moves to free Gibbons. Prime Minister Gordon Brown spoke with a member of her family to convey his regret, his spokeswoman said.

"He set out his concern and the fact that we were doing all we could to secure her release," spokeswoman Emily Hands told reporters.

Most Britons expressed shock at the verdict by a court in Khartoum, alongside hope it would not raise tensions between Muslims and non-Muslims in Britain.

"One of the good things is the U.K. Muslims who've condemned the charge as completely out of proportion," said Paul Wishart, 37, a student in London.

"In the past, people have been a bit upset when different atrocities have happened and there hasn't been much voice in the U.K. Islamic population, whereas with this, they've quickly condemned it."

Muhammad Abdul Bari, secretary-general of the Muslim Council of Britain, accused the Sudanese authorities of "gross overreaction."

"This case should have required only simple common sense to resolve. It is unfortunate that the Sudanese authorities were found wanting in this most basic of qualities," he said.

The Muslim Public Affairs Committee, a political advocacy group, said the prosecution was "abominable and defies common sense."

Archbishop of Canterbury Rowan Williams, spiritual leader of the world's 77 million Anglicans, said Gibbons' prosecution and conviction was "an absurdly disproportionate response to what is at worst a cultural faux pas."

Foreign Secretary David Miliband summoned the Sudanese ambassador late Thursday to express Britain's disappointment with the verdict. The Foreign Office said Britain would continue diplomatic efforts to achieve "a swift resolution" to the crisis.

Gibbons was arrested Sunday after another staff member at the school complained that she had allowed her 7-year-old students to name a teddy bear Muhammad. Giving the name of the Muslim prophet to an animal or a toy could be considered insulting.

The case put Sudan's government in an embarrassing position — facing the anger of Britain on one side and potential trouble from powerful Islamic hard-liners on the other. Many saw the 15-day sentence as an attempt to appease both sides.

In The Times, columnist Bronwen Maddox said the verdict was "something of a fudge ... designed to give a nod to British reproof but also to appease the street."

Britain's response — applying diplomatic pressure while extolling ties with Sudan and affirming respect for Islam — had produced mixed results, British commentators concluded.

In an editorial, The Daily Telegraph said Miliband "has tiptoed around the case, avoiding a threat to cut aid and asserting that respect for Islam runs deep in Britain. Given that much of the government's financial support goes to the wretched refugees in Darfur and neighboring Chad, Mr. Miliband's caution is understandable."

Now, however, the newspaper said, Britain should recall its ambassador in Khartoum and impose sanctions on the Sudanese regime.