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


To: Tenchusatsu who wrote (606209)4/2/2011 11:46:36 AM
From: bentway  Read Replies (6) | Respond to of 1580053
 
Koran-Burning Pastor Calls Afghan Killings 'Tragic'

BUT TERRY JONES ISN'T APOLOGETIC THAT HIS STUNT SET OFF DEADLY RIOT

By John Johnson, Newser Staff
newser.com
( YOUR people! )
Posted Apr 1, 2011 4:44 PM CDT

(NEWSER) – The Florida pastor whose burning of a Koran last month set off a deadly protest in Afghanistan today called the deaths "very tragic" but expressed no remorse about his stunt, reports the Los Angeles Times. In fact, Terry Jones said the mob's attack on a UN compound showed that "Islam is not a religion of peace" and called on the US and UN to "hold these people accountable." Read his full statement here. At least a dozen people were killed—some reports have the toll at 20—when demonstrators outraged by the actions of Jones' Dove World Outreach Center stormed the UN building in the northern city of Mazar-e Sharif, reports CNN.

Among the dead were eight UN workers, including four Nepalese security guards. Two people were reportedly beheaded. Meanwhile, one of the participants who attended Jones' March 20 mock trial of the Koran, after which it was burned, brushed off blame. "I keep up with what's going on and I know that [Muslims] are constantly killing people, burning churches and killing Christians," she said. "Whether some guy in the US burns a Koran or not, it doesn't make any difference."



To: Tenchusatsu who wrote (606209)4/2/2011 12:00:47 PM
From: bentway  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1580053
 
Deadly Protests Over Koran Burning Reach Kandahar

By TAIMOOR SHAH and ROD NORDLAND
nytimes.com
( I'm pulling for some Mooslims to kill this pastor! Mooslims believe the Koran was WRITTEN by God, and is LITERALLY a Holy book. )

KANDAHAR, Afghanistan — Violent protests over the burning of a Koran in Florida flared for a second straight day, with young men rampaging through the streets of this southern capital, flying Taliban flags and wielding sticks.

Nine people were killed and 81 injured in the disturbances, all from bullet wounds, said Abdul Qayoum Pakhla, head of the provincial health department. One of the dead was a police officer. Kandahar has long been the heartland of the Taliban insurgency but has been relatively quiet in recent months since a surge of additional American troops arrived here.

The protests here came a day after a mob overran the headquarters of the United Nations in Mazar-i-Sharif, killing 12 people, 7 of them international staff members. The mob gathered after three mullahs at Friday Prayer urged action in response to the Koran burning by a pastor, Terry Jones, in Florida on March 20.

In Kandahar, several thousand young men, shouting slogans calling for death to Americans and to the government of President Hamid Karzai, were still rioting after several hours on Saturday, setting tires on fire throughout the city, burning cars and attacking journalists trying to cover the disorder. Shops and businesses were closed, and most people stayed off the street. Many of the protesters were waving the white flag of the Taliban.

The police said that some of the protesters were armed, and Afghan authorities used live ammunition on occasion to quell the disturbances, which continued all day. Of the 16 arrested, 7 were armed, officials said. Kandahar’s provincial governor, Tooryalai Wesa, said the police had been patient with the protesters on Saturday, even when some used hand grenades and other weapons against them. “The security forces have tolerated much,” he said. “If it continues for another day, the security forces will take action against them.” Zalmai Ayoubi, spokesman for the provincial governor, said the rioters attacked the Zarghona Ana High School for Girls, burning some classrooms and a school bus. The school is supported by the United States Agency for International Development. The Taliban have opposed education for girls.

A spokesman for the American military in Kandahar, Lt. Col. Web Wright, said relatively small crowds were involved in the disturbances, with the biggest group, about 100 demonstrators, gathered outside the governor’s offices. So far, no coalition military forces had been made the target of protests. “If we need to get involved we will, but now we’re content to let the Afghan national security forces handle it,” he said.

Although Mazar-i-Sharif has little or no Taliban presence, Kandahar has a significant number of residents who sympathize with the insurgents.

There were also demonstrations over the Koran burning on Friday and Saturday in Kabul, and on Friday in Herat, in eastern Afghanistan. Both were peaceful and lightly attended.

The latest protests were set off by sermons at Friday Prayer last week over the Koran burning. The previous week’s Friday Prayer had not provoked such reactions, even though the Koran burning had already taken place.

Both Afghan and international news media had initially played down or ignored the actions of Mr. Jones, the Florida pastor. On Thursday, however, President Karzai made a speech and issued statements condemning the Koran burning and calling for the arrest of Mr. Jones for his actions. On Friday, that theme was picked up in mosques throughout Afghanistan.

There is no provision in American law for arresting anyone for burning a Koran, or for that matter a Bible, which courts would be likely to consider protected free speech.

“Karzai brought this issue back to life, and he has to take some responsibility for starting this up,” said a prominent Afghan businessman, who spoke on the condition of anonymity for fear of retribution if he was identified as a critic of the president.

“Karzai’s speech itself provoked people to take such actions,” said Qayum Baabak, a political analyst in Mazar-i-Sharif. “Karzai should have called on people to be patient rather than making people more angry.”

Officials in Mazar-i-Sharif blamed Taliban agitators from other provinces for stirring up violence in the Friday protests there. Zemarai Bashary, the spokesman for the Interior Ministry in Kabul, said a delegation had been sent to Mazar-i-Sharif to investigate the cause of the attack, including whether the Taliban were involved and why the police were unable to prevent the bloodshed inside the United Nations compound.

A Taliban spokesman, however, denied that the insurgents had any role in the disturbances in either Mazar-i-Sharif or Kandahar. “This was the reaction of the people of Afghanistan,” the spokesman, Zabiullah Mujahid, said.

Also on Saturday, a team of suicide bombers tried to breach the front gate at an American military base in Kabul, Camp Phoenix, said Mohammed Zahir, chief of the criminal investigation division of the Kabul Police. Two of them were disguised as women, wearing full-length burqas, and two others were carrying small arms, he said. One of the burqa-clad bombers detonated his explosives at the gate of the camp, and the other managed to get about five yards inside the gate before setting off his device. The other two attackers were shot and killed by guards before they could enter, he said.

None of the defenders were killed or wounded, the authorities said.

Enayat Najafizada contributed reporting from Mazar-i-Sharif, Afghanistan.



To: Tenchusatsu who wrote (606209)4/2/2011 12:14:10 PM
From: bentway  Respond to of 1580053
 
The Truth About American Muslims

nytimes.com
( Unlike Peter King's fear-mongering, other than this, it attracted no press..)

At the Justice Department, it’s called the post-Sept. 11 backlash — the steady stream of more than 800 cases of violence and discrimination suffered by American Muslims at the hands of know-nothing abusers. These continuing hate crimes were laid bare at a valuable but barely noticed Senate hearing last week that provided welcome contrast to Representative Peter King’s airing of his xenophobic allegation that the Muslim-American community has been radicalized.

Offering federal data rather than mythic scapegoating of an easy political target, the Senate hearing focused on the fact that while Muslims make up 1 percent of the population, they are victims in 14 percent of religious discrimination cases. These range from homicides and mosque burnings to job, school and zoning law abuses, according to the Justice Department.

In running the hearing, Senator Richard Durbin tried to set the record straight about the patriotism of a vast majority of American-Muslim citizens and the continuing assaults on their civil rights. He warned against the “guilt by association” whipped up by Mr. King’s broadsides — that there are “too many mosques” in the nation, that most of them are extremist, and that American Muslim leaders have failed to cooperate with law enforcement against home-grown terrorism.

It was former President George W. Bush who first warned against turning on Muslim Americans after Sept. 11, 2001, stressing the fact that Islam is “a faith based upon love, not hate,” regardless of the religious veneer the fanatics of 9/11 tried to attach to their atrocities. Since then, American Muslims have served as the largest source of tips to authorities tracking terror suspects, according to a recent university study.

The Senate hearing was not designed as a full refutation of Representative King’s wild thesis, but it put a more human and factual face on a community that has been badly slurred. Mr. King is promising more committee haymakers. This is unfortunate. At least Mr. Durbin’s hearing made clear that the nation’s struggle against terrorism is best served by information, not dark generalizations.