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Archive for September 20th, 2006

The Guardian on the Pope: “A man with little sympathy for other faiths”

Posted by musliminsuffer on September 20, 2006

bismi-lLahi-rRahmani-rRahiem

In the Name of Allah, the Compassionate, the Merciful

=== News Update ===

The Guardian on the Pope:

‘A man with little sympathy for other faiths’

Pope Benedict is being portrayed as a naive, shy scholar who has accidentally antagonised two major world faiths in a matter of months. In fact he is a shrewd and ruthless operator, argues Madeleine Bunting – and he’s dangerous

Tuesday September 19, 2006
The Guardian

Only 18 months into his papacy and already Pope Benedict XVI has stirred up unprecedented controversy. As the explanations and apologies pour out of the Vatican – and thousands of Catholic churches around the world – the questions about what exactly this man intended by quoting a 14th-century Byzantine emperor’s insult of the Prophet Mohammed have only multiplied.

Some say this was a case of naivety, of a scholarly theologian stumbling into the glare of a global media storm, blinking with surprise at the outrage he had inadvertently triggered. The learned man’s thoughtful reasoning, say some, has been misconstrued and distorted by troublemakers, and the context ignored.

But such explanations are unconvincing. This is a man who has been at the heart of one of the world’s multinational institutions for a very long time. He has been privy to how pontifical messages get distorted and magnified by a global media. Shy he may be, but no one has ever before accused this pope of being a remote theologian sitting in an ivory tower. On the contrary, he is a determined, shrewd operator whose track record indicates a man who is not remotely afraid of controversy. He has long been famous for his bruising, ruthless condemnation of those he disagrees with. Senior Catholic theologians such as the German Hans Kung are well familiar with the sharpness of his judgments.

But in the 18 months since Benedict was elected, the wary critics who have always feared this man were lulled into believing that office might have softened his abrasive edges. His encyclical on love won widespread acclaim and the pronouncement on homosexuality being incompatible with the priesthood (and its inference that homosexuals were to blame for the child sex abuse problems in the church) were explained away as an inheritance from Pope John Paul II’s reign.

But while the Pope has tried to build a more appealing public image, what has become increasingly clear is that this is a man with little sympathy or imagination for other religious faiths. Famously, the then Cardinal Ratzinger once referred to Buddhism as a form of masturbation for the mind – a remark still repeated among deeply offended Buddhists more than a decade after he said it. Even his apology at the weekend managed to bring Jews into the row.

In fact, Pope Benedict XVI’s short papacy has marked a significant departure from the previous pope’s stance on interreligious dialogue. John Paul II made some dramatic gestures to rally world religious leaders, the most famous being a gathering in Assisi of every world faith, even African animists, to pray for world peace. He felt keenly the terrible history of Catholic-Jewish relations, and having fought with the Polish resistance to save Jews in the second world war, John Paul II made unprecedented efforts to begin to heal centuries of hostility and indifference on the part of the Catholic church to Europe’s Jews. John Paul II also addressed himself to the ancient enmity between Muslims and Catholics; he apologised for the Crusades and was the first Pope to visit a mosque during a visit to Syria in 2001.

In contrast, Pope Benedict has managed to antagonise two major world faiths within a few months. The current anger of Muslims is comparable to the anger and disappointment felt by Jews after his visit to Auschwitz in May. He gave a long address at the site of the former concentration camp and failed to mention anti-semitism, and offered no apology – whether on behalf of his own country, Germany, or on behalf of the Catholic Church. He acknowledged he was a “son of the German people” … “but not guilty on that account”; he then launched into a highly controversial claim that a “ring of criminals” were responsible for nazism and that the German people were as much their victims as anyone else. This is an argument that has long been discredited in Germany as utterly inadequate in explaining how millions supported the Nazis. Given his own involvement in the Hitler Youth movement as a boy, and his refusal to make a clean breast of the Vatican’s acquiescence in the horrors of Nazism by opening its archives to historians, this was a shabby moment in Catholic history. Not for this pope those dramatic, epoch-defining gestures that made the last Pope such a significant global figure.

Even worse, in his Auschwitz address, he managed to argue in a long theological exposition that the real victims of the Holocaust were God and Christianity. As one commentator put it, he managed to claim that Jews were the “themselves bit players – bystanders at their own extermination. The true victim was a metaphysical one.” This theological treatise bears the same characteristics as last week’s Regensburg lecture; put at its most charitable, they are too clever by half. More plainly speaking, they indicate a deep arrogance rooted in a blinkered Catholic triumphalism which is utterly out of place in the 21st century.

But if his visit to Auschwitz disappointed many and failed to resolve outstanding resentments about the murky role of German Catholicism, this latest incident seems even worse. Quoting Byzantine emperor Manuel II Paleologos, he said: “Show me just what Muhammad brought that was new and there you will find things only evil and inhuman, such as his command to spread by the sword the faith he preached.” It was a gratuitous reawakening of the most entrenched and self-serving of western prejudices – that Muslims have a unique proclivity to violence, a claim that has no basis in history or in current world events (a fact that still eludes too many westerners). Even more bewildering is the fact that his choice of quotation from Manuel II Paleologos, the 14th-century Byzantine emperor, was so insulting of the Prophet. Even the most cursory knowledge of dialogue with Islam teaches – and as a Vatican Cardinal, Pope Benedict XVI would have learned this long ago – that reverence for the Prophet is a non-negotiable. What unites all Muslims is a passionate devotion and commitment to protecting the honour of Muhammad. Given the scale of the offence, the carefully worded apology, actually, gives little ground; he recognises that Muslims have been offended and that he was only quoting, but there is no regret at using such an inappropriate comment or the deep historic resonances it stirs up.

By an uncanny coincidence the legendary Italian journalist Oriana Fallaci died last week. No one connected the two events, but the Pope had already run into controversy in Italy by inviting the rabid Islamophobe to a private audience just months ago. This is the journalist who published a bestseller in 2001 which amounted to a diatribe of invective against Islam. This is the woman who was only too happy to fling out comments such as “Muslims breed like rats” and “the increasing presence of Muslims in Italy and Europe is directly proportional to our loss of freedom.” At the time of her papal audience, Fallaci’s ranting against Islam had landed her in court and there was outrage at the Pope’s insensitive invitation. The Pope refused to backtrack and insisted the meeting was purely “pastoral”.

Put last week’s lecture in Bavaria and the Fallaci audience alongside his vocal opposition to Turkish membership of the EU, and the picture isn’t pretty. On one of the biggest and most volatile issues of our day – the perceived clash between the west and the Muslim world – the Pope seems to have abdicated his papal role of arbitrator, and taken up the arms in a rerun of a medieval fantasy.

An elderly Catholic nun has already been killed in Somalia, perhaps in retaliation for the Pope’s remarks; churches have been attacked in the West Bank. How is this papal stupidity going to play out in countries such as Nigeria, where the tensions between Catholics and Muslims frequently flare into riots and death? Or other countries such as Pakistan, where tiny Catholic communities are already beleaguered? Or the Muslim minorities in Catholic countries such as the Philippines – how comfortable do they feel this week?

Two lines of thought emerge from this mess. The first is that the Pope’s personal authority has been irrevocably damaged; how now could he ever present himself as a figure of global moral authority and a peacemaker after this? At the weekend, a message was read out from Cardinal Murphy O’Connor at all masses in Catholic churches in England; he spoke of the regret at any offence caused and urged good relations between Catholics and Muslims. For a church that prides itself on taking centuries to respond, this was unprecedented crisis management. It cannot but damage the pope’s authority with the faithful that such emergency measures were necessary, and it compromises not just this pope but the papal office itself. (This is a job, after all, that is supposed to be divinely guided and at all times beyond reproach: a claim that looks a bit threadbare after the past few days.)

The second is a more disturbing possibility: namely, that the Catholic church could be failing – yet again – to deal with the challenge of modernity. In the 19th and 20th centuries, it struggled to adapt to an increasingly educated and questioning faithful; now, in the 21st century, it is in danger of failing the great challenge of how we forge new ways of accommodating difference in a crowded, mobile world. The Catholic church has to make a dramatic break with its triumphalist, bigoted past if it is to contribute in any constructive way to chart this new course. John Paul II made some dramatic steps in this direction; but the fear now is that Pope Benedict XVI has no intention of following suit, and that he has another direction altogether in mind.

source:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/g2/story/0,,1875589,00.html

Related News:

Karen Armstrong: We cannot afford to maintain these ancient prejudices against Islam
http://www.guardian.co.uk/comment/story/0,,1874653,00.html

===

-muslim voice-
______________________________________
BECAUSE YOU HAVE THE RIGHT TO KNOW

Posted in Uncategorized | 2 Comments »

Islamophobia – Prejudice: Arar cleared at last

Posted by musliminsuffer on September 20, 2006

bismi-lLahi-rRahmani-rRahiem

In the Name of Allah, the Compassionate, the Merciful

=== News Update ===

Islamophobia – Prejudice:

Arar cleared at last – Looks forward to enjoying ‘normal life’

Janice Tibbetts and Neco Cockburn, The Ottawa Citizen; with a file from the Canadian Press

Tuesday, September 19, 2006

http://www.canada.com/ottawacitizen/news/story.html?id=a7d66769-ce98-4738-8cdc-38b29cb0156d

An inexperienced RCMP anti-terrorism squad gave false information to American authorities — tagging Maher Arar as an “Islamic extremist” — which very likely set off a chain of events leading to his deportation and torture in Syria, an exhaustive inquiry has found.

The inquiry’s report, made public yesterday, unequivocally cleared Mr. Arar, a 36-year-old Syrian-Canadian, of any “taint or suspicion” that he has terrorist ties and called for federal compensation for his one-year ordeal in a Syrian jail.

“I am able to say categorically that there is no evidence to indicate that Mr. Arar has committed any offence or that his activities constitute a threat to the security of Canada,” wrote Justice Dennis O’Connor, who led the inquiry.

The RCMP bore the brunt of blame in the 1,200-page report, crafted after a public inquiry was struck to get to the bottom of how Mr. Arar was arrested by U.S. authorities in September 2002 while travelling through New York’s JFK Airport and deported to Syria.

He was released a year later, without charges, and returned to his Ottawa home.

The report stressed there is no evidence Canadian officials “participated or acquiesced” in the U.S. decision to bundle Mr. Arar on a plane for Syria.

The Mounties, however, failed Mr. Arar, a former software engineer who recently moved to Kamloops, B.C., by advising American officials to put him and his wife, Monia Mazigh, on a U.S. watch list in October 2001.

“The requests indicated they were part of a group of Islamic extremist individuals suspected of being linked to al-Qaeda, a description that was inaccurate, without any basis and potentially extremely inflammatory in the United States in the fall of 2001,” the report said.

“The RCMP had no basis for this description, which had the potential to create serious consequences for Mr. Arar in light of American attitudes and practices at the time.”

Judge O’Connor went on to conclude that “it is very likely that, in making the decisions to detain and remove Mr. Arar, American authorities relied on information about Mr. Arar provided by the RCMP.”

Mr. Arar, who flew to Ottawa for the report’s release, said he is relieved that his name finally has been cleared.

“I call this the beginning of going back to a normal life,” he told a press conference, his voice often breaking with emotion.

Mr. Arar’s lawyer, Marlys Edwardh, denounced the RCMP investigation as “breath-takingly incompetent.”

Public Safety Minister Stockwell Day said yesterday that “the compensation question is a fair one” and that the government is open to the prospect in light of a lawsuit that Mr. Arar has already filed against the government.

Mr. Day stopped short, however, of apologizing to the former Ottawa engineer and father of two.

“The whole aspect of what happened to Mr. Arar is regrettable, there’s no question about that. We hope that with any future situations like this we will never see this again.”

The report found that RCMP told the U.S. to put Mr. Arar on a watch list even though the Mounties had identified him only as a “person of interest” as a result of a three-hour meeting with another Ottawa man who was a terrorist suspect.

Project A-O Canada, the Ottawa-area anti-terrorism team that the RCMP formed on the fly in the weeks following the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, was inexperienced, lacked training in national security, human rights and cultural sensitivity and even neglected to follow their own policies, the report found.

“In this regard, the RCMP failed completely, particularly in the critically important area of information sharing with American agencies,” he said.

While acknowledging the importance of the anti-terrorism squad, Judge O’Connor chastised the RCMP for not following the agency’s own rules, which required “lookout” alerts to U.S. border authorities to be accompanied by “caveats” on how the information was to be used.

“The fact that Project A-O Canada did not attach written caveats to the information about Mr. Arar provided to American agencies increased the risk that those agencies would use the information for purposes unacceptable to the RCMP, such as removing him to Syria.”

The RCMP also handed over to the Americans the entire contents of Project A-O’s investigative database, contained on three compact discs, without screening the information, the report notes.

The report made 23 recommendations, including training for RCMP involved in national security investigations, a new system for submitting “lookout” alerts to foreign countries about Canadian citizens, and a ban on CSIS and the RCMP sharing information internationally that could lead to torture.

Mr. Day said yesterday that there is already a new protocol in place with the United States on how to handle cases involving Canadians who are detained there, and that the government will consider all other recommendations.

Paul Cavalluzzo, the inquiry’s chief counsel, said the aim of the report is not to shut down collaboration with the police and security services of allied countries. Such exchanges of information are vital in the fight against global terrorism, he noted.

“But it has to be done in a principled way, it has to be accurate, it has to be relevant, it has to ensure that people’s human rights are protected.

“In this day and age, calling somebody a terrorist is like calling somebody a communist in the early ’50s. It has serious connotations.”

A significant part of the inquiry’s hearings were conducted behind closed doors, and some of the details in Judge O’Connor’s report were censored on national security grounds.

The judge, in a letter accompanying the report, objected to the deletions and asked the government to refer the matter to Federal Court to determine whether the deleted information should be made public.

The censored material amounted to less than one-half of one per cent of the report, said a source familiar with the process. But commission counsel Mr. Cavalluzzo said he’d like to see the matter resolved in court as a “matter of principle.”

******************

At last, some light for Arar

The Ottawa Citizen

Tuesday, September 19, 2006

http://www.canada.com/ottawacitizen/news/editorials/story.html?id=b0fe4389-2fc2-46c4-88fd-2127860f4f61

How easily, how quickly one’s life can totally change. For Maher Arar, his trip to a Syrian torture room began with what seemed to be an innocent meal in an Ottawa cafe that was watched by an RCMP counter-terrorism unit because the lunch date was a man under suspicion.

So Mr. Arar became a “person of interest,” in the language of the war on terror.

If that was where the words stopped, Mr. Justice Dennis O’Connor would not have issued a three-volume report yesterday that details, with some deletions for security reasons, why this innocent man from Ottawa became an international cause celebre for those who are concerned about the excesses of the war on terror.

But the words did not stop there. The RCMP, in a breach of its protocols, turned Mr. Arar and his wife, both of whom they knew to be no more than possible witnesses about the activities of others, into “Islamic extremists” on national-security warnings issued to Canadian and U.S. border services.

Judge O’Connor does not attack the RCMP’s rules of engagement surrounding the sharing of information with other security services. In fact, he says the procedures are fine and that it is proper to share information.

The problem in the Arar case is that the procedures weren’t followed and the information was in many instances wrong.

Many of the errors committed by the A-O Canada unit and the unit’s superiors at the RCMP’s A Division are understandable, but they are not acceptable. There was a great deal of pressure on the force to investigate possible terrorist plots because other attacks were expected. The Americans were pushing their old friends to hunt down any terror lead.

But, after being out of the national-security game for decades, the Mounties didn’t have investigators skilled in hunting terrorists — a task that is preventative, aimed at disrupting plots as much as it is about arresting the plotters.

Those under surveillance are not necessarily guilty. Therefore, rules that protect the innocent, especially when sharing information with other services, must be followed. In Maher Arar’s case they were not.

Some will say that the judge’s report shows that no Canadian official was directly involved in sending Mr. Arar to Syria. True. It was an American decision. But that does not excuse officials, especially in the RCMP, from culpability. The Americans based their decision upon faulty Canadian information.

Key in the 23 recommendations made by Judge O’Connor are ones that call for the absolute following of the force’s own protocols protecting human rights to the letter, and the establishment of an oversight body to review multi-force national security investigations.

There is also a call to compensate Mr. Arar, something the government seems to be already moving on. Mr. Arar was a citizen of this community, a neighbour. Wrongful treatment by police services often results in compensation.

There is a value in secrecy in matters of national security. Five years from 9/11, we need to push back the boundaries over what is secret to preserve our liberties, and also to learn from our mistakes. Judge O’Connor’s report helps us reach that kind of understanding.

******************

Related News:

APOLOGIZE NOW TO ARAR AND AGREE TO COMPENSATION, SAYS NDP
http://www.montrealmuslimnews.net

MMN Note: Here is the official press release from the Arar inquiry
http://www.ararcommission.ca/eng/ReleaseFinal_Sept18.pdf

And here is the full text of the inquiry report:
http://www.ararcommission.ca/eng/26.htm

Ottawa must learn from Arar fiasco
http://www.thestar.com/NASApp/cs/ContentServer?pagename=thestar/Layout/Article_Type1&c=Article&cid=1158617411766&call_page=TS_EditorialOpinion&call_pageid=968256290204&call_pagepath=Editorial/Opinion&pubid=968163964505

Arar inquiry calls for review of terror suspects’ cases
http://www.canada.com/nationalpost/news/story.html?id=bb0a167e-c8c1-4801-bf7a-ecc18cac0103&k=76116

How Canada failed to protect Maher Arar
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20060919.wearar19/BNStory/Front

MEDIA ADVISORY: Montreal Protest against Canadian complicity in all kidnap and torture, illegal and “legal” – Sept 21
http://www.montrealmuslimnews.net

An indictment of racial profiling
http://www.canada.com/reginaleaderpost/news/letters/story.html?id=461de6c6-e5be-47db-b288-bc80b5da730c

Others seek answers, too
http://www.montrealmuslimnews.net

===

-muslim voice-
______________________________________
BECAUSE YOU HAVE THE RIGHT TO KNOW

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a Comment »

Flash-News From Official US’s Senate Website: 9/11

Posted by musliminsuffer on September 20, 2006

bismi-lLahi-rRahmani-rRahiem

In the Name of Allah, the Compassionate, the Merciful

=== News Update ===

Flash-News From Official US’s Senate Website: 9/11

September 15, 2006

REID: THE SENATE IS WORKING TO FIX FAILED BUSH POLICIES

Washington, DCSenate Democratic Leader Harry Reid issued the following statement on President Bush’s press conference today:

“Five years after September 11, not a single terrorist has been brought to justice under the President’s flawed policy. There is a bipartisan process underway in the United States Senate to fix the failed Bush Administration system that was struck down by the Supreme Court. Instead of picking fights with Colin Powell, John McCain, and other military experts, President Bush should change course, do what the American people expect, and finally give them the real security they deserve.”

source:
http://democrats.senate.gov/newsroom/record.cfm?id=263124&

===

-muslim voice-
______________________________________
BECAUSE YOU HAVE THE RIGHT TO KNOW

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a Comment »

US Terrorize The World – 27 Shabaan 1427 H (20.9.06)

Posted by musliminsuffer on September 20, 2006

bismi-lLahi-rRahmani-rRahiem

In the Name of Allah, the Compassionate, the Merciful

=== News Update ===

Islamophobia and Prejudice : Arar cleared at last, Looks forward to enjoying ‘normal life’

An inexperienced RCMP anti-terrorism squad gave false information to American authorities — tagging Maher Arar as an “Islamic extremist” — which very likely set off a chain of events leading to his deportation and torture in Syria, an exhaustive inquiry has found.
http://www.canada.com/ottawacitizen/news/story.html?id=a7d66769-ce98-4738-8cdc-38b29cb0156d

MMN Note: Here is the official press release from the Arar inquiry
http://www.ararcommission.ca/eng/ReleaseFinal_Sept18.pdf

And here is the full text of the inquiry report:
http://www.ararcommission.ca/eng/26.htm

===

APOLOGIZE NOW TO ARAR AND AGREE TO COMPENSATION, SAYS NDP

OTTAWA – NDP Leader Jack Layton (Toronto Danforth) and Foreign Affairs Critic, Alexa McDonough (Halifax) today called on Prime Minister Stephen Harper to accept the findings of Mr. Justice Dennis O’Connor, apologize immediately to Maher Arar and his family, and agree to compensate them for their horrific ordeal.
http://www.montrealmuslimnews.net

===

Canadian Was Tortured and Falsely Accused, Panel Says

Canadian intelligence officials passed false warnings and bad information to American agents about a Muslim Canadian citizen, after which U.S. authorities secretly whisked him to Syria, where he was tortured, a judicial report found Monday.
http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article15021.htm

===

The Guardian on the Pope : ‘A man with little sympathy for other faiths’

Pope Benedict is being portrayed as a naive, shy scholar who has accidentally antagonised two major world faiths in a matter of months. In fact he is a shrewd and ruthless operator, argues Madeleine Bunting – and he’s dangerous
http://www.guardian.co.uk/g2/story/0,,1875589,00.html

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Racist : The Jihad Against Muslims – When does criticism of Islam devolve into bigotry?

see: http://www.reason.com/0606/co.cy.the.shtml

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RACIST : BUSH MEETS WITH RADIO HOST WHO CALLED ISLAM RELIGION OF ‘VIOLENT, BLOODTHIRSTY CRETINS’

SEE: http://mediamatters.org/items/200607200012

===

An indictment of racial profiling

With the threat of international terrorism continuing to be the front and centre of the security agenda, the paradigm of racial profiling has once again surfaced in the debate over national security.

This argument, though clearly flawed, is having some effect. A recent poll of Canadians conducted by the Innovative Research Group revealed some startling information. According to the poll, slightly more than two in five Canadians believe that racial profiling should be used in the fight against terrorism. It seems that some are convinced that racial profiling is an effective security tool.
http://www.canada.com/reginaleaderpost/news/letters/story.html?id=461de6c6-e5be-47db-b288-bc80b5da730c

===

Operation Gladio Expert Studies 9/11

Swiss security studies (at Eidgenössische Technische Hochschule Zürich (ETH)) researcher Daniele Ganser talks frankly about the possibilities of “Surprise”, LIHOP, and MIHOP theories about 911. He and another prestigious Swiss University Professor, Albert A. Stahel (Military Acadamy, ETH Zurich) have suggested that US government insiders are the true perpetrators of the 911 attacks.
http://portland.indymedia.org/en/2006/09/346111.shtml

===

Others seek answers, too

Justice O’Connor releases his report today, amid growing unease among Muslim and Arab citizens over allegations of Canadian complicity in detention abroad.

Since the tragic events of 9/11, many Muslims and Arabs have been living in a climate of fear and uncertainty. The draconian and hastily enacted Anti-Terrorism Act and questionable national security practices have had a profound effect on their psyche.
http://www.montrealmuslimnews.net

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Bush’s Bulldog Hughes Says Geneva Conventions Need Clarification. For 57 Years the World Has Understood them Just Fine

http://www.ostroyreport.blogspot.com/#91806A

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Judge, jury, and torturer

“TRUST US. You’re guilty. We’re going to execute you, but we can’t tell you why.” That is how Senator Lindsey Graham, Republican of South Carolina, characterized the Bush administration’s recent proposal for a draconian new trial system to deal with accused terrorists.
http://tinyurl.com/oxuop

===

Bush’s Cruel and Degrading Presidency

Washington is a moral swamp. When the chief executive can stand at the presidential podium and make an unabashed appeal for torture, then the American dream is dead.
http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article15026.htm

===

Rogue Nation – Time to change the course of U.S. history

It is time for the American people to take back their nation from irresponsible and lackluster special interest-motivated elected officials. Impeaching top members of the Bush administration may be in order.
http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article15028.htm

===

Senate Bills Would Allow for Lifelong Detention Without Trial, Torture Without Accountability

Both proposed bills in the Senate strip away the right to habeas corpus and cut back the ability of rape survivors of to hold their perpetrators accountable. We speak with Michael Ratner of the Center for Constitutional Rights.
http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article15027.htm

===

How Bush Rules: Torture and The Quest For Unfettered Power

The Bush administration’s new torture policy prompted the export of torture technique from Guantanamo to Abu Ghraib.
http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article15023.htm

===

Harry Reid : Not a single terrorist has been brought to justice

“Five years after September 11, not a single terrorist has been brought to justice under the President’s flawed policy.
http://democrats.senate.gov/newsroom/record.cfm?id=263124&

===

List of countries describes as “Terrorist breeding grounds” increases

“Fragile” countries, whose deepening poverty puts them at risk from terrorism, armed conflict and epidemic disease, have jumped to 26 from 17 since the report was last issued in 2003.
http://tinyurl.com/k9fed

===

Iraq : There is more than one triangle of resistance

What the occupiers of Iraq still refuse to accept is that the resistance is supported and protected by Iraqis.
http://tinyurl.com/lr4le

===

British soldier admits Iraqi war crime

The guilty plea was entered as seven British soldiers went on trial in connection with events in Iraq.
http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article15019.htm

===

Iraq : U.S. Resorting to ‘Collective Punishment’

Ahmad, a local doctor who withheld his last name for security purposes told IPS. “This city has been facing the worst of the American terror and destruction for more than two years now, and the world is silent.”
http://ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=34756

===

Kurdish party to get shut down in Iraq

The Iraqi government said Tuesday it will shut down all offices belonging to the Kurdistan Workers Party, or PKK, around the country.
http://tinyurl.com/pcjo7

===

At least 9 Killed As U.S. Occupation Continues

The United States military reported the deaths of two U.S. soldiers in two different attacks in Baghdad, one by small-arms fire and the other by a roadside bomb.
http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/newsdesk/KAM916348.htm

===

3 American Soldiers Killed in Baghdad

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20060919/ap_on_re_mi_ea/iraq

===

Iraqi Resistance Report for events of Monday, 18 September 2006.

  • Resistance source says six US Marines killed in three Resistance attacks in al-Hadithah on Monday.
  • Tribal leaders in al-Anbar pledge loyalty to the Resistance, deny report circulated by Reuters and New York Times claiming tribal support for US effort against Resistance.
  • Two US troops reported killed in bombing of US personnel carrier in Hit Monday.
  • Patriotic Iraqi journalist re-arrested hours after her release, as efforts to repress media, conceal truth of Resistance struggle continue.
  • Resistance bomb kills three foreign contractors, believed to be “Israelis” in ad-Durah Monday morning.
  • Resistance car bomber blasts puppet army recruiting center in ar-Ramadi late Monday afternoon.
  • Resistance bomb blasts US patrol in ‘Anah Monday morning.
  • Resistance bomb destroys US Humvee east of al-Qa’im Monday morning.
  • Resistance mounds intense mortar attack on puppet “Interior Ministry Shock Troops” in Baghdad’s al-Jihad district.
  • Resistance bombards US base in at-Taji Sunday evening.
  • Iraqi puppet police help Shi’i sectarian gunmen kidnap Sunnis from Baghdad mosque Sunday evening.
  • Resistance blasts US-occupied al-Bakr Base with Katyusha rockets at dawn Monday.
  • Resistance mortars blast US-Iraqi puppet army headquarters in al-Latifiyah.

http://www.albasrah.net/pages/mod.php?mod=art&lapage=../en_articles_2006/0906/iraqiresistancereport_180906.htm

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Afghanistan: Time for Truth

The respected European think-tank, Senlis Council, which focuses on Afghanistan, just reported the Taliban movement is “taking back Afghanistan” and now controls that nation’s southern half.

This is an amazing departure from claims by the US and its NATO allies that they are steadily winning the war in Afghanistan. Or, more precisely, winning it again, since the Bush Administration claimed to have won total victory in Afghanistan in 2001. At the time, this column predicted that victory was an illusion and the war would resume in force in 4-5 years.
http://www.lewrockwell.com/margolis/margolis50.html

===

Deepening catastrophe in Afghanistan

The Nato occupation of Afghanistan is facing growing resistance after almost five years. Jonathan Neale looks at the crisis facing US and British troops in the region
http://www.socialistworker.co.uk/article.php?article_id=9708

===

IAEA exposes US committee’s lies on Iran’s nuclear programs

PLEASE SEE: http://www.wsws.org/articles/2006/sep2006/iran-s19.shtml

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Outrageous and dishonest

The IAEA formal complaint refutes the report’s assertion that Iran is producing “weapons-grade” enriched uranium.
http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article15030.htm

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What Would War Look Like?

A flurry of military maneuvers in the Middle East increases speculation that conflict with Iran is no longer quite so unthinkable. Here’s how the U.S. would fight such a war–and the huge price it would have to pay to win it.
http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article15020.htm

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Retired U.S. Col. Says U.S. Are Conducting Military Operations Inside Iran

Air Force Col. Sam Gardiner (Ret.) said, “We are conducting military operations inside Iran right now. The evidence is overwhelming.”
http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article15022.htm

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Israeli Diplomat Carrying Large Quantity Of Explosives Arrested In Argentina

Last week, (mid August 2006) a very serious event transpired at the Buenos Aires international airport which the local mainstream press did not however bring to the attention of the public. Today, Red Kalki, relying on reliable sources, brings this matter into the open.
http://signs-of-the-times.org/signs/editorials/signs20060914_IsraeliDiplomatCarryingLargeQuantityOfExplosivesArrestedInArgentina.php

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UN condemns Israeli cluster bomb use

The UN says it estimates that 350,000 unexploded cluster bomblets remain in southern Lebanon, leaving a deadly legacy for civilians.
http://tinyurl.com/lwvfk

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Gaza: The children killed in a war the world doesn’t want to know about

Nayef Abu Snaima says his 14-year-old cousin Jihad had been sitting on the edge of an olive grove talking animatedly to him about what he would do when he grew up when he was killed instantly by an Israeli shell.
http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article15029.htm

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Poll: Most Palestinians think Hamas shouldn’t recognize Israel

According to a survey conducted by the Khalil Shikaki research institute in Ramallah at the end of last week, 67 percent of Palestinians believe Hamas should not recognize the state of Israel, while only 30 percent believe it should.

Of the 1,270 Palestinian adults that participated in the survey, 38 said they would vote for Hamas were elections held today, compared to the 39 percent who said they would vote for Hamas in a survey conducted by the institute three months ago.

Forty-one percent said they would vote for Fatah, compared to 39 percent three months ago.

Fifty-four percent of those polled said they were not pleased with the performance pf the Hamas government, while only 42 percent said they were satisfied.

Fifty-five percent said they were satisfied with Palestinian Chairman Mahmoud Abbas’ performance.

Montreal Muslim News Network – http://www.montrealmuslimnews.net

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U.S. assailed for `protecting terrorists’

“[That's] a strange way to remember the victims of Sept. 11,” Alarcón said at a news conference, noting both the plea bargain and bid to free Posada came on the fifth anniversary of the terrorist attacks on the United States.
http://tinyurl.com/oo7ck

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Church experts say Pope is ‘unrepentant’

Church experts have claimed that, far from having made a mistake, it is extremely unlikely that the Pope would have inflamed the feelings of so many Muslims without realising what he was doing.
http://tinyurl.com/pz4y7

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FBI triples its Capitol Hill corruption squads

There is so much political corruption on Capitol Hill that the FBI has had to triple the number of squads investigating lobbyists, lawmakers and influence peddlers, the New York Daily News has learned.
http://tinyurl.com/gzekj

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-muslim voice-
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BECAUSE YOU HAVE THE RIGHT TO KNOW

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