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Archive for August 9th, 2007

Welcome to America : Dictator Country

Posted by musliminsuffer on August 9, 2007

bismi-lLahi-rRahmani-rRahiem
In the Name of Allah, the Compassionate, the Merciful

=== News Update ===

Welcome to America : Dictator Country

 

When writer Elena Lappin flew to LA, she dreamed of a sunkissed, laid-back city. But that was before airport officials decided to detain her as a threat to security …

Saturday June 5, 2004

The Guardian

Somewhere in central Los Angeles, about 20 miles from LAX airport, there is a nondescript building housing a detention facility for foreigners who have violated US immigration and customs laws. I was driven there around 11pm on May 3, my hands painfully handcuffed behind my back as I sat crammed in one of several small, locked cages inside a security van. I saw glimpses of night-time urban LA through the metal bars as we drove, and shadowy figures of armed security officers when we arrived, two of whom took me inside. The handcuffs came off just before I was locked in a cell behind a thick glass wall and a heavy door. No bed, no chair, only two steel benches about a foot wide. There was a toilet in full view of anyone passing by, and of the video camera watching my every move. No pillow or blanket. A permanent fluorescent light and a television in one corner of the ceiling. It stayed on all night, tuned into a shopping channel.

After 10 minutes in the hot, barely breathable air, I panicked. I don’t suffer from claustrophobia, but this enclosure triggered it. There was no guard in sight and no way of calling for help. I banged on the door and the glass wall. A male security officer finally approached and gave the newly arrived detainee a disinterested look. Our shouting voices were barely audible through the thick door. “What do you want?” he yelled. I said I didn’t feel well. He walked away. I forced myself to calm down. I forced myself to use that toilet. I figured out a way of sleeping on the bench, on my side, for five minutes at a time, until the pain became unbearable, then resting in a sitting position and sleeping for another five minutes. I told myself it was for only one night.

As it turned out, I was to spend 26 hours in detention. My crime: I had flown in earlier that day to research an innocuous freelance assignment for the Guardian, but did not have a journalist’s visa.

Since September 11 2001, any traveller to the US is treated as a potential security risk. The Patriot Act, introduced 45 days after 9/11, contains a chapter on Protecting The Border, with a detailed section on Enhanced Immigration Provision, in which the paragraph on Visa Security And Integrity follows those relating to protection against terrorism. In this spirit, the immigration and naturalisation service has been placed, since March 2003, under the jurisdiction of the new department of homeland security. One of its innovations was to revive a law that had been dormant since 1952, requiring journalists to apply for a special visa, known as I-visa, when visiting the US for professional reasons. Somewhere along the way, in the process of trying to develop a foolproof system of protecting itself against genuine threats, the US has lost the ability to distinguish between friend and foe. The price this powerful country is paying for living in fear is the price of its civil liberties.

None of this had been on my mind the night before, when I boarded my United Airlines flight from Heathrow. Sitting next to an intriguingly silent young man who could have been a porn star or a well camouflaged air marshal, I spent most of the 11-hour flight daydreaming about the city where he so clearly belonged and that I had never visited. My America had always been the east coast: as tourist, resident, journalist, novelist, I had never ventured much past the New York-Boston-Washington triangle. But I was glad that this brief assignment was taking me to sunkissed LA, and I was ready to succumb to LA’s laid-back charm.

The queue for passport control was short. I presented my British passport and the green visa waiver form I had signed on the plane. The immigration official began by asking the usual questions about where I was staying and why I was travelling to the US. It brought back memories of another trip there to write a series of articles about post 9/11 America for the German weekly Die Zeit. I had written about commuters who preferred the safety of train travel to flying, and about a wounded New York that had become a city of survivors. I had seen a traumatised, no longer cockily immortal America in a profound state of mourning. But it had seemed to me that its newly acknowledged vulnerability was becoming its strength: stunned by an act of war on its own soil, Americans had been shocked into a sudden hunger for information about the world beyond their borders.

“I’m here to do some interviews,” I said.

“With whom?” He wrote down the names, asked what the article was about and who had commissioned it. “So you’re a journalist,” he said, accusingly, and for the first time I sensed that, in his eyes, this was not a good thing to be. “I have to refer this to my supervisor,” he said ominously, and asked me to move to a separate, enclosed area, where I was to wait to be “processed”. Other travellers came, waited and went; I was beginning to feel my jetlag and some impatience. I asked how long I’d have to wait, but received no reply. Finally, an officer said, noncommittally, “It seems that we will probably have to deport you.”

I’m not sure, but I think I laughed. Deport? Me? “Why?” I asked, incredulously.

“You came here as a journalist, and you don’t have a journalist’s visa.” I had never heard of it. He swiftly produced the visa waiver (I-94W) I had signed on the plane, and pointed to what it said in tiny print: in addition to not being a drug smuggler, a Nazi or any other sort of criminal, I had inadvertently declared that I was not entering the US as a representative of foreign media (“You may not accept unauthorised employment or attend school or represent the foreign information media during your visit under this program”).

My protestations that I had not noticed this caveat, nor been alerted to it, that I had travelled to the US on many occasions, both for work and pleasure, that I had, in fact, lived there as a permanent resident and that my husband was a US citizen, as was my New York-born daughter, all fell on deaf ears. He grinned. “You don’t care, do you?” I said, with controlled anger. Then I backtracked, and assumed a begging, apologetic mode. In response, he told me I would have to be “interviewed”, and that a decision would then be taken by yet another superior. This sounded hopeful.

Finally, after much scurrying around by officers, I was invited into an office and asked if I needed anything before we began. I requested a glass of water, which the interrogating officer brought me himself. He was a gentle, intelligent interrogator: the interview lasted several hours and consisted of a complete appraisal of my life, past and present, personal and professional. He needed information as diverse as my parents’ names, the fee I would be paid for the article I was working on, what it was about, exactly, and, again, the names of people I was coming to interview. My biography was a confusing issue – I was born in one country, had lived in many others: who was I, exactly? For US immigration, my British passport was not enough of an identity. The officer said, pointedly, “You are Russian, yet you claim to be British”, an accusation based on the fact that I was born in Moscow (though I never lived there). Your governor, went my mental reply, is Austrian, yet he claims to be American. After about three hours, during which I tried hard to fight jetlag and stay alert, we had produced several pages that were supposed to provide the invisible person in charge with enough material to say yes or no to my request to be allowed entry. My interrogator asked one last obligatory question, “Do you understand?”

“Yes, I understand,” I sighed, and signed the form. The instant faxed response was an official, final refusal to enter the US for not having the appropriate visa. I’d have to go back to London to apply for it.

At this moment, the absurd but almost friendly banter between these men and myself underwent a sudden transformation. Their tone hardened as they said that their “rules” demanded that they now search my luggage. Before I could approach to observe them doing this, the officer who had originally referred me to his supervisor was unzipping my suitcase and rummaging inside. For the first time, I raised my voice: “How dare you touch my private things?”

“How dare you treat an American officer with disrespect?” he shouted back, indignantly. “Believe me, we have treated you with much more respect than other people. You should go to places like Iran, you’d see a big difference.” The irony is that it is only “countries like Iran” (for example, Cuba, North Korea, Saudi Arabia, Zimbabwe) that have a visa requirement for journalists. It is unheard of in open societies, and, in spite of now being enforced in the US, is still so obscure that most journalists are not familiar with it. Thirteen foreign journalists were detained and deported from the US last year, 12 of them from LAX.

After my luggage search, the officer took some mugshots of me, then proceeded to fingerprint me. In the middle of this, my husband rang from London; he had somehow managed to locate my whereabouts, and I was allowed briefly to wipe the ink off my hands to take the call. Hearing his voice was a reminder of the real world I was beginning to feel cut off from.

Three female officers arrived to do a body search. As they slipped on rubber gloves, I blenched: what were they going to do, and could I resist? They were armed, they claimed to have the law on their side. I was an anonymous foreigner who had committed a felony, and “those were the rules”. So I was groped, unpleasantly, though not as intimately as I had feared. Then came the next shock: two bulky, uniformed and armed security men handcuffed me, which they explained was the “rule when transporting detainees through the airport”. I was marched between the two giants through an empty terminal to a detention room, where I sat in the company of two other detainees (we were not allowed to communicate) and eight sleepy guards, all men. I would have been happy to spend the night watching TV with them, as they agreed to switch the channel from local news (highlight: a bear was loose in an affluent LA neighbourhood) to sitcoms and soaps. Their job was indescribably boring, they were overstaffed with nothing to do, and so making sure I didn’t extract a pen or my mobile phone from my luggage must have seemed a welcome break. I listened to their star-struck stories about actors they had recently seen at LAX. We laughed in the same places during Seinfeld, an eerie experience. I was beginning to think I could manage this: the trip was a write-off, of course, but I could easily survive a night and a day of this kind of discomfort before flying back. But then I was taken to the detention cell in downtown LA, where the discomfort became something worse.

Though my experience was far removed from the images of real torture and abuse at Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq, it was also, as one American friend put it, “conceptually related”, at distant ends of the same continuum and dictated by a disregard for the humanity of those deemed “in the wrong”. American bloggers and journalists would later see my experience as reflecting the current malaise in the country. Dennis Roddy wrote in the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette: “Our enemies are now more important to us than our friends … Much of the obsession with homeland security seems to turn on the idea of the world infecting the US.”

On a more practical level, this obsession, when practised with such extreme lack of intelligence (in both senses of the word), as in the case of my detention, must be misdirecting valuable money and manpower into fighting journalism rather than terrorism. Ordinary Americans, rather than the powers that be, are certainly able to make that distinction. According to an editor at the LA Times, there has been a “tremendous” response from readers to the reporting on my case, and I have received many emails expressing outrage and embarrassment. The novelist Jonathan Franzen wrote, “On behalf of the non-thuggish American majority, my sincere apologies.”

These would have been comforting thoughts the following morning when I was driven back (in handcuffs, of course) to the communal detention room at LAX, and spent hours waiting, without food, while the guards munched enormous breakfasts and slurped hot morning drinks (detainees are not allowed tea or coffee). I incurred the wrath of the boss when I insisted on edible food. “I’m in charge in here. Do you know who you are? Do you know where you are? This isn’t a hotel,” he screamed.

“Why are you yelling?” I asked. “I’m just asking for some decent food. I’ll pay for it myself.” A Burger King fishburger never tasted so good. And it occurred to me that a hotel or transit lounge would have been a better place to keep travellers waiting to return home.

As documented by Reporters Without Borders and by the American Society of Newspaper Editors (Asne) in letters to Colin Powell and Tom Ridge, cases such as mine are part of a systemic policy of harassing media representatives from 27 friendly countries whose citizens – not journalists! – can travel to the US without a visa, for 90 days. According to Asne, this policy “could lead to a degradation of the atmosphere of mutual trust that has traditionally been extended professional journalists in these nations”. Asne requested that the state department put pressure on customs and immigration to “repair the injustice that has been visited upon our colleagues”. Someone must have listened, because the press office at the department of homeland security recently issued a memo announcing that, although the I-visa is still needed (and I’ve just received mine), new guidelines now give the “Port Directors leeway when it comes to allowing journalists to enter the US who are clearly no threat to our security”. Well, fine, but doesn’t that imply some journalists are a threat?

Maybe we are. During my surreal interlude at LAX, I told the officer taking my fingerprints that I would be writing about it all. “No doubt,” he snorted. “And anything you’ll write won’t be the truth.”

source:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/usa/story/0,12271,1231089,00.html

===

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

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Senator Bob Graham received detailed warning pre 911 : A Video Must Watch

Posted by musliminsuffer on August 9, 2007

bismi-lLahi-rRahmani-rRahiem
In the Name of Allah, the Compassionate, the Merciful

=== News Update ===

Senator Bob Graham received detailed warning pre 911 : A Video Must Watch

Posted Aug 7, 2007 06:13 PM PST

Category: 911

source: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e1_nShdq6vc

===

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

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America Lost Their Brutal War : Those who ignore history …

Posted by musliminsuffer on August 9, 2007

bismi-lLahi-rRahmani-rRahiem
In the Name of Allah, the Compassionate, the Merciful

=== News Update ===

America Lost Their Brutal War

Those who ignore history …

by Leon Fisher, Unknown News

leonjfisher@webtv.net

April 30, 2007

We have heard much in recent years of the superiority of American military power. But the only surviving Cold War super power, with its state of the art weaponry, now finds itself once again in a life and death struggle with an enemy that uses mostly low-tech weapons and guerilla warfare.

It is obvious the arrogant buffoons who fancy themselves our leaders have learned nothing from the long and bloody conflict in Vietnam. The humiliating defeat of American military power and foreign policy, epitomized by the images of American helicopters taking off from the roof of the US embassy in Saigon with terrified Vietnamese clinging to their skids as the triumphant North Vietnamese Army closed in, was the last act in a war that’s conclusion had absolutely nothing to do with peace or honor as liars Richard Nixon and Henry Kissinger would have had us believe.

[]

The Vietnamese learned to avoid US military strength and to exploit its weakness successfully. The military forces which Lyndon Johnson ordered to Vietnam were trained and equipped for conventional warfare with the Soviets in Europe, not for a prolonged guerrilla war in terrain which favored the Viet Cong and the North Vietnamese Army. Ignorance of Vietnamese history and culture would further diminish any chance on the part of the US to win the hearts and minds of the people which was an absolute necessity in order to win such a conflict.

More important still was the winning of the political war, which ultimately turned the American public against the war. In the end, Johnson, Robert McNamara, Richard Nixon, and all the rest of the Washington Whiz Kids and Pentagon planners were outfoxed by Ho Chi Minh, a little old man with a nanny goat beard, who many years before had sent the French colonialists packing as well.

By the early 1970s America had had enough of the lies and deceptions of the Washington politicians and the horrendous violence which it had spawned. Civil unrest at home and the beginnings of mutiny within the military finally put an end to a war which had been fought with little or no benefit to anyone except that of the military industrial complex.

Having eaten their Vietnam war humble pie, Washington politicians would for the time being, avoid direct military intervention. Unfortunately this happy state of affairs would not last long, as Reagan, then the elder Bush, and to a lesser degree, Bill Clinton, would once more unleash the dogs of war.

Successful military campaigns against weak third world nations such as Grenada, Panama, Libya, and Serbia, would once more delude the American people into thinking military intervention was preferable to that of diplomacy. The successful conclusion of the first Gulf War would further bring about a mindset that the US military was invincible.

With the installation of GW Bush in the White House and 9/11, US intervention in the Middle East was begun in earnest. The speed in which the US military was able to overthrow the Taliban in Afghanistan, and the ground offensive which brought US mechanized forces to the gates of Baghdad in a matter of weeks, would seem to finally lay to rest the memory of America’s national nightmare of Vietnam.

Capitalizing on this initial success, warlord Bush, outfitted in military regalia and in the mother of all photo ops, would land on the deck of the USS Abraham Lincoln on May 3, 2003, to proudly proclaim victory and the end of military operations in Iraq. As it turns out, the crowing on the part of our illustrious Commander in Chief was somewhat premature, as the fighting in both Afghanistan and Iraq would continue and escalate with every passing day.

The Taliban, allegedly vanquished in October 2001, has re-emerged in ever increasing numbers from their safe havens in Pakistan, and are regaining control of large areas of Afghanistan. In Iraq, despite an increase of US military on the ground, or “surge” as the Pentagon calls it, the violence and deaths are increasing at an alarming rate with well over 3,000 US combat deaths to date, as well as Iraqi deaths which may well be into the hundreds of thousands.

It appears that the specter of Vietnam is once again rearing its ugly head. The Iraqi insurgency is becoming more sophisticated and deadly as the war drags on. A powerful roadside bomb, a mortar round, a rocket, or a burst of automatic weapons fire suddenly announces the presence of Iraqi insurgents, only to disappear just as quickly.

Feeding the growing resistance is the disrespect shown towards Iraq’s cultural and religious institutions by occupation forces, kicking in doors and arbitrarily arresting Iraqi citizens, who are then sent to prisons such as the infamous Abu Ghraib, to be humiliated and tortured. Iraqi women are treated almost as badly, having to watch as their family members are thrown to the floor and hog-tied while they themselves are humiliated in front of their husbands when subject to body searches. Mosques, suspected to harbor insurgents and weapons, have been regularly invaded and fired upon, or outright destroyed.

Contrary to the Bush regime’s minimizing the Iraqi insurgency as just a handful of Saddam loyalists and dead-enders, the insurgency consists of former Iraqi military, Shi’ite and Sunni militias, and average citizens outraged by the occupation, perhaps
seeking to avenge the death of a family member. Despite centuries-old hatred and distrust, both Sunni and Shi’ite want an end to the US/British occupation. Although foreign fighters are known to be operating in Iraq, the majority are ethnic Iraqis.

Bush’s claim that any withdrawal of US forces from Iraq would bring terrorism to America is as absurd as the Vietnam-era ‘Domino Theory’, that if America allowed South Vietnam to fall to the communists, all of Southeast Asia would follow.

If anything, the invasion of Afghani-
stan and Iraq has undermined the security of the entire region, handing militant Islamic fundamentalism a victory that by themselves they would never have been able to achieve.

[]

GW Bush and his Neocon advisers, like Lyndon Johnson 40 years before, are fighting a war which was lost even before the first shots were ever fired. The arrogance and corruption which pervades the Washington political establishment, dominated by corporate and Zionist influence, is once again setting up America for another military and foreign policy debacle, the negative consequences of which will be felt for decades.

source:
http://www.unknownnews.org/070430a-LeonF.html

===

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

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The Terror America Wrought : Atomic Bomb – the America Crime of Humanity

Posted by musliminsuffer on August 9, 2007

bismi-lLahi-rRahmani-rRahiem
In the Name of Allah, the Compassionate, the Merciful

=== News Update ===

The Terror America Wrought : Atomic Bomb – the America Crime of Humanity

By Robert Scheer

08/08/07 “Truthdig” — – During a week of mayhem in Iraq, in which terrorists have rightly been condemned for targeting schoolchildren, it is sobering to recall that this week is also the 62nd anniversary of a U.S. attack that deliberately took the lives of thousands of children on their way to school in the Japanese cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. As noted in the Strategic Bombing Survey conducted at President Harry Truman’s request, when the bomb hit Hiroshima on April 6, 1945, “nearly all the school children … were at work in the open,” to be exploded, irradiated or incinerated in the perfect firestorm that the planners back at the University of California-run Los Alamos lab had envisioned for the bomb’s maximum psychological impact.

The terror plot worked all too well, as Hiroshima’s Mayor Tadatoshi Akiba recalled this week: “That fateful summer, 8:15 a.m. The roar of a B-29 breaks the morning calm. A parachute opens in the blue sky. Then suddenly, a flash, an enormous blast­silence­hell on Earth. The eyes of young girls watching the parachute were melted. Their faces became giant charred blisters. The skin of people seeking help dangled from their fingernails. … Others died when their eyeballs and internal organs burst from their bodies­Hiroshima was a hell where those who somehow survived envied the dead.”

Like most of the others killed by the two American bombs, neither the children nor the adults had any role in Japan’s decision to go to war, but they were picked as the target instead of an isolated but fortified military base whose antiaircraft fire posed a higher risk. The target preferred by U.S. atomic scientists­a patch in the ocean or unpopulated terrain­was rejected, because the effect of hundreds of thousands of civilians dying would be all the more dramatic.

The victims in Hiroshima and Nagasaki were available soft targets, much like the children playing in Iraq, suddenly caught in the crossfire of battles waged beyond their control. In “White Light/Black Rain,” a devastating HBO documentary released this week, there is an interview with the sole survivor of a Japanese elementary school of 620 students. The murder of the other 619, and the 370,000 overall deaths attributed to the bombings, 85 percent of which were civilian deaths, has never compelled a widespread examination of the “end justifies the means” morality of our own state-sanctioned acts of terror. Indeed, the horrifying footage taken by Japanese and American cameramen soon after the devastation, and shown in the HBO film, was long kept secret by the U.S. government for fear that an informed American public might question this nation’s incipient nuclear arms race.

Just exactly what distinguishes the United States’ use of the ever-so-cutely-named “Fat Man” and “Little Boy” atomic bombs on cities in Japan from the car bombs of Baghdad or the planes that smashed into the World Trade Center? To even raise the question, as was found in one recent university case, can be a career-ending move.

Of course, we had our justifications, as terrorists always do. Truman defended his decision to drop the atomic bombs on civilians over the objection of leading atomic scientists on the grounds that it was a necessary military action to save lives by forcing a quick Japanese surrender. He insisted on that imperative despite the objections of top military figures, including Gen. Dwight Eisenhower, who contended that the war would end quickly without dropping the bomb.

The subsequent release of formerly secret documents makes a hash of Truman’s rationalization. His White House was fully informed that the Japanese were on the verge of collapse, and their surrender was made all the more likely by the Soviets’ imminent entry into the fight.

At most, the Japanese were asking for the face-saving gesture of retaining their emperor, and even that modest demand would likely have been abandoned with the shift of massive numbers of Allied troops and firepower from the battlefront of a defeated Germany to a confrontation with its deeply wounded Asian ally. Instead, the U.S. played midwife to the birth of the nuclear monster, the ultimate terrorist weapon that presents a continuing and growing threat to the survival of human life on Earth.

This is a lesson to be pondered at a time when President Bush plays power games with a nuclear-equipped Russia while coddling Pakistan, the main proliferator of nuclear weapons to rogue regimes, and Congress authorizes an expansion of the U.S. nuclear program to better fight the war on terror by “improving” the ultimate weapon of terror, which the U.S. alone stands guilty of using.

source:
http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article18142.htm

===

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

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Zionist War Crime : Occupation 101 – A Must Watch Video

Posted by musliminsuffer on August 9, 2007

bismi-lLahi-rRahmani-rRahiem
In the Name of Allah, the Compassionate, the Merciful

=== News Update ===

Zionist War Crime : Occupation 101

A Must Watch Video

Award-winning documentary film on the root causes of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. The film depicts life in occupied Palestine under Israeli military occupation.

Synopsis: A thought-provoking and powerful documentary film on the current and historical root causes of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Unlike any other film ever produced on the conflict — ‘Occupation 101′ presents a comprehensive analysis of the facts and hidden truths surrounding the never ending controversy and dispels many of its long-perceived myths and misconceptions.

The film also details life under Israeli military rule, the role of the United States in the conflict, and the major obstacles that stand in the way of a lasting and viable peace. The roots of the conflict are explained through first-hand on-the-ground experiences from leading Middle East scholars, peace activists, journalists, religious leaders and humanitarian workers whose voices have too often been suppressed in American media outlets.

More information http://www.occupation101.com/

source: http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article18145.htm

===

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

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America Drug Lord : It’s easy for soldiers to score heroin in Afghanistan

Posted by musliminsuffer on August 9, 2007

bismi-lLahi-rRahmani-rRahiem
In the Name of Allah, the Compassionate, the Merciful

=== News Update ===

America Drug Lord : It’s easy for soldiers to score heroin in Afghanistan

Simultaneously stressed and bored, U.S. soldiers are turning to the widely available drug for a quick escape

By Shaun McCanna

Just outside the main gate to Bagram airfield, a U.S. military installation in Afghanistan, sits a series of small makeshift shops known by locals as the Bagram Bazaar. For Afghans, it is the place to buy American goods, but the stalls that make up the heart of the bazaar are also well known for what they provide American soldiers stationed at Bagram. Walking through the bazaar it takes less than 10 minutes for a vendor in his early 20s to step out and ask, “You want whiskey?” “No, heroin,” I tell him. He ushers me into his store with a smile.

The shop is small, 9 feet wide by 14 feet deep, and dark. The walls at the front are lined with dusty cans of soda, padlocks and miscellaneous beauty supplies. As we enter, a teenager is visible at the back, seated in a chair next to a collection of American military knives and flashlights. The shopkeeper speaks to him in Dari. The teen stands and heads for the door, where he stops and asks my Afghan driver a question. My driver translates, “He wants to know how much you want? Twenty, 30, 50 dollars’ worth?” From past experience, for I have arranged this same transaction a dozen times in a dozen different Bagram Bazaar shops, I know that the $30 bag will contain enough pure to bring hundreds of dollars on the streets of any American city. Afghanistan, after all, is the source of 90 percent of the world’s heroin. I say 30 and the teen jogs off.

The true extent of the heroin problem among American soldiers now serving in Iraq and Afghanistan is unknown. At Bagram, according to a written statement provided by a spokesperson for the base, Army Maj. Chris Belcher, the “Military Police receive few reports of alcohol or drug issues.” The military has statistics on how many troops failed drug tests, but the best information on long-term addiction comes from the U.S. Veterans Administration. The VA is the world’s largest provider of substance abuse services, caring for more than 350,000 veterans per year, of whom about 30,000 are being treated for opiate addiction. Only preliminary information for Iraq and Afghanistan is available, however, and veterans of those conflicts are not yet showing up in the stats. According to the VA’s annual “Yellowbook” report on substance abuse, during Fiscal Year 2006, fewer than 9,000 veterans of Operation Iraqi Freedom and Operation Enduring Freedom (Afghanistan) sought treatment for substance abuse of all kinds at the VA; the report did not specify how many were treated for opiate abuse.

source:
http://www.salon.com/news/feature/2007/08/07/afghan_heroin/index_np.html

===

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

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The Zionist Lackey Riad Mansour : Qatar surprised over Abbas’s UN delegate’s position, Hamas calls for trying him

Posted by musliminsuffer on August 9, 2007

bismi-lLahi-rRahmani-rRahiem
In the Name of Allah, the Compassionate, the Merciful

=== News Update ===

The Zionist Lackey Riad Mansour

Qatar surprised over Abbas’s UN delegate’s position, Hamas calls for trying him

[]

Thursday, August 02, 2007

“DOHA, (PIC)– The chief Qatari delegation to the UN Security Council has expressed absolute surprise over the position of PA chief Mahmoud Abbas’s delegate to the UN who rejected a draft resolution calling for lifting the siege on Gaza.

The Qatari representative told Ashark Al-Awsat newspaper that he did not expect the Palestinian chief delegate Riad Mansour to object to that resolution in view of the deteriorating humanitarian conditions in the Strip.

For its part, Hamas, in a press release on Thursday, called for Mansour to be tried for foiling the international statement that was tabled by Qatar and Indonesia.

The Movement held Abbas and his illegitimate government responsible for the continued siege imposed on the Palestinian citizens in the Strip.

Hamas extended an apology to both Qatar and Indonesia over such an “irresponsible behavior” on the part of Mansour. It said that he only represented Abbas and his entourage and did not represent the Palestinian people.

For his part, a spokesman for Hamas in the West Bank denounced the “shameful stand” of the Palestinian diplomatic mission at the UN.

The Movement’s spokesman in Gaza said that the move proved Abbas’s responsibility for the continued closure of the Rafah crossing and the continued suffering of around 6,000 Palestinians stranded at the Egyptian side of the borders.”

source:
http://palestinianpundit.blogspot.com/2007/08/qatar-surprised-over-abbass-un.html

===

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______________________________________
BECAUSE YOU HAVE THE RIGHT TO KNOW

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DISCRIMINATION AT ISRAELI AIRPORT TO BECOME LESS SUBTLE

Posted by musliminsuffer on August 9, 2007

bismi-lLahi-rRahmani-rRahiem
In the Name of Allah, the Compassionate, the Merciful

=== News Update ===

DISCRIMINATION AT ISRAELI AIRPORT TO BECOME LESS SUBTLE

Palestinians will no longer have a different coloured tag put on their suitcase at Ben Gurion Airport. Instead there will be a number code to distinguish them from Jewish travelers. This, the Israeli authorities view as progress…. I view it as APARTHEID! No other word to describe it…

The following was just posted in HaAretz….

Colored tags for Arabs’ luggage at Ben Gurion airport discontinued

By Zohar Blumenkrantz and Yoav Stern, Haaretz Correspondents

Transportation Minister Shaul Mofaz announced on Tuesday that Ben Gurion International Airport security would no longer mark the luggage belonging to non-Jews with colored tags, in order to spare these passengers embarrassment.

Instead, Mofaz explained, the luggage of non-Jewish passengers will be stamped with the same color sticker as the Jewish passengers, only with a different number . In the past, the color of the sticker on the passenger’s luggage would indicate to airport security personnel the level of security check they must administer.

This practice mainly affected Arab passengers.

The security checks at Ben Gurion have been denounced by many in the Arab sector as degrading. “We’re talking about frequent degradation of Arab passengers, which causes great anger and frustration,” MK Nadia Hilou (Labor) said in January, adding, “I won’t leave this subject alone until it has been resolved.”

Though the colored stickers have been discontinued since the beginning of August, the luggage belonging to Arab passengers still undergoes a more thorough security check than that of Jews. The Arabs’ luggage is sent to an X-ray scanner with higher resolution.

According to Transportation Ministry spokesman Avner Ovadia, “the institution of uniformly colored stickers for all passengers aims to prevent a sense of discrimination among various sectors.”

Ovadia added that the numbers on the stickers indicating a more comprehensive security check will change periodically in order to prevent the identification of Arab passengers, and thus prevent a feeling of discrimination.

However, an Arab resident of Nazareth who frequently flies out of Ben Gurion airport said he had no trouble at all identifying the marked luggage. “This is the exact same system, with a slight change in stickers. In the past, an Arab passenger would receive a red sticker, and now the Arab passenger receives a sticker with the number 5 on it,” the man explained.

Mofaz presented to local authority heads from the Arab sector a plan to minimize the gap between the treatment of Jews and non-Jews and to promote equality. The plan was presented at a conference held at Haifa University.

The proposal was formulated by a public committee charged with examining the policies of the Transportation Ministry regarding the non-Jewish public. The proposal recommends cutting back the security check process applied to non-Jewish passengers, in accordance with general security instructions. The plan also suggests that over NIS 200 million be invested during each of the next five years in municipal projects involving the non-Jewish sector.

Mofaz also adopted a string of projects in the infrastructure realm, aimed at relieving hardships currently facing the non-Jewish population. These projects include the construction of a light train connecting Haifa and Nazareth, two cities with relatively high Arab populations.

The transportation minister intends to bring the committee’s proposal before the cabinet for approval.

Hilou, who vowed to remain in contact with the Transportation Ministry until the issue is resolved, welcomed on Tuesday the initiative aimed at improving the service provided to Arabs. “The trend toward dialogue is welcome, and it must continue. However, I am still receiving complaints. Not all the problems have been solved,” she said.

According to a report by the Nazareth-based Arab Association for Human Rights, security officials at airports often discriminate against Arab passengers.

source:
http://desertpeace.blogspot.com/2007/08/discrimination-at-israeli-airport-to.html

===

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

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26 U.S. Troops Killed In 1 Week In Iraq : Go to Hell America Terrorist

Posted by musliminsuffer on August 9, 2007

bismi-lLahi-rRahmani-rRahiem
In the Name of Allah, the Compassionate, the Merciful

=== News Update ===

26 U.S. Troops Killed In 1 Week In Iraq

Military Announces 4 More Deaths Around Baghdad

BAGHDAD, Iraq, Aug. 7, 2007

(CBS/AP) The U.S. military tells CBSNews.com that 26 American service members have been killed in action in Iraq in the past week alone, including three soldiers who were killed by a single roadside bomb attack reported Tuesday.

Most recently reported were the three Task Force Marne soldiers killed Saturday when a roadside bomb struck their convoy south of Baghdad, according to a brief statement that provided no more details.

One Multi-National Division – Baghdad soldier was killed and another wounded Monday when their vehicle was targeted by an armor-piercing explosively formed penetrator, or EFP, in a western section of the capital, the military said separately.

Lt. Col. Rudy Burwell, a military spokesman based at Camp Victory in Baghdad, told CBSNews.com that a total of six troops were killed in action Monday.

The U.S. military has accused Iran of supplying Shiite extremists with EFPs to step up attacks against American forces. Tehran denies the allegations.

The deaths raised to at least 3,678 members of the U.S. military have died since the Iraq war started in March 2003, according to an Associated Press count.

August has begun with a wave of U.S. troop deaths in Iraq, on the heels of a relatively low death toll in July, which was cited by commanders as an indication that that the build-up of American troops in and around Baghdad was reducing violence.

The military reported Monday that four U.S. soldiers had died from wounds suffered in a combat explosion in Diyala province north of Baghdad earlier that day. Twelve others had minor injuries and returned to duty.

The military statement announcing the deaths gave no other details and said identities of the victims were being withheld until family could be notified.

Earlier Monday the military said one soldier was killed during fighting in eastern Baghdad a day earlier. Two soldiers were wounded in the fighting.

source:
http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2007/08/07/iraq/main3140063.shtml?source=mostpop_story

===

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

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Danish batallion leaves Iraq : Victory for Iraqis Muslim Resistant

Posted by musliminsuffer on August 9, 2007

bismi-lLahi-rRahmani-rRahiem
In the Name of Allah, the Compassionate, the Merciful

=== News Update ===

Danish batallion leaves Iraq : Victory for Iraqis Muslim Resistant

Tue Aug 7, 9:30 AM ET

COPENHAGEN (AFP) – The Danish battalion of 450 ground troops has left Iraq, a Danish army spokesman said on Tuesday.

“The Danish battalion that has been deployed in southern Iraq is now out of Iraq,” Army Operational Command (AOC) spokesman Hans Vedholm told AFP.

He said the last men arrived in Kuwait on Sunday, and although some remained there, the majority had already returned home.

Denmark, a US ally in the war in Iraq, announced in February that it would pull out its troops in August. The battalion, stationed in the southern city of Basra since 2003, had been under British command.

But its departure does not mean a total pull-out of Iraq.

The Scandinavian country recently sent a unit of four helicopters and about 50 soldiers who will do aerial recognition to support the Iraqis and the British over the next five months.

source:
http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20070807/wl_mideast_afp/denmarkiraqunrest_070807133017

===

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BECAUSE YOU HAVE THE RIGHT TO KNOW

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Iraqi Christians were safer under Saddam, says Vatican official

Posted by musliminsuffer on August 9, 2007

bismi-lLahi-rRahmani-rRahiem
In the Name of Allah, the Compassionate, the Merciful

=== News Update ===

Iraqi Christians were safer under Saddam, says Vatican official

By Carol Glatz

Catholic News Service

IALOGUE-TAURAN Aug-7-2007 (660 words) xxxi

VATICAN CITY (CNS) — Although Iraq has a democratic government, Iraqi Christians were safer and had more protection under former Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein, said the future head of the Vatican’s interreligious dialogue council.

During the buildup to the U.S.-led invasion in 2003, French Cardinal Jean-Louis Tauran, who will become head of the Pontifical Council for Interreligious Dialogue Sept. 1, had criticized the U.S. government’s plan of preventative war and said a unilateral war against Iraq would be a “crime against peace.”

In a recent interview with the Italian magazine 30 Giorni, the cardinal said his early criticisms had been prophetic.

“The facts speak for themselves. Alienating the international community (with the U.S. push for war) was a mistake,” he said in the magazine’s Aug. 10 issue. A copy of the interview was released in advance to journalists.

He said an “unjust approach” was used to unseat Saddam from power, resulting in the mounting chaos in Iraq today.

“Power is in the hands of the strongest — the Shiites — and the country is sinking into a sectarian civil war (between Sunni and Shiite Muslims) in which not even Christians are spared,” he said.

Christians, “paradoxically, were more protected under the dictatorship,” he said.

Cardinal Tauran is a longtime veteran of the Vatican’s diplomatic service and a specialist in international affairs. He was Pope John Paul II’s “foreign minister,” the official who dealt with all aspects of the Vatican’s foreign policy from 1990 to 2003.

He said his new appointment as head of the interreligious dialogue council carries “great responsibility” but that he also sees it “as a new chapter in my service to the Holy See.” The cardinal will be responsible for overseeing the Vatican’s dialogue efforts with representatives of non-Christian religions, including Islam.

His June 25 appointment alleviated concerns that Pope Benedict XVI’s temporary merger of the presidencies of the Vatican’s interreligious dialogue council with the Pontifical Council for Culture indicated a downgrading of the Vatican’s interfaith efforts.

Cardinal Tauran told 30 Giorni, “We have to do everything so that religions spread brotherhood and not hatred.”

The Vatican’s efforts at bridge-building with Muslims hit a speed bump when the pope’s remarks on Islam in a September speech in Regensburg, Germany, prompted negative reactions across the Muslim world.

When asked if the pope’s Regensberg address had compromised the Vatican’s dialogue efforts with Muslims, the cardinal replied, “At first, yes.”

“But later, especially during his subsequent trip to Turkey, the pope explained himself very well,” the cardinal said.

He said Pope Benedict has great respect for Muslims.

The controversies that arose after Regensburg only highlighted the importance of having a specific Vatican department dedicated to dialogue with Islam and other religions, he said.

“Thank God the erroneous interpretations of the Regensburg speech did not stop the development of relations — diplomatic, too — with Islamic nations,” he said, giving the example of the recent establishment of full diplomatic relations between the United Arab Emirates and the Vatican.

Cardinal Tauran said that as head of the Vatican’s interreligious dialogue office he would use as his guide the Second Vatican Council’s declaration on relations with non-Christian religions, “Nostra Aetate.”

“To examine everything humanity has in common … and to appreciate how much truth and holiness there is in other religions” would be some of the council’s goals, he said.

But the quest to understand others will leave room to courageously pay witness to “the way, truth, and life” of Jesus, he said.

“In this sense,” he said, “our road map is obviously the declaration ‘Dominus Iesus,’” the 2000 document of the Vatican Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith which said Christ and the church are necessary for salvation.

Interreligious dialogue should not promote the idea that all religions are equal, he said, but that all religions “which are seeking God must be respected because they have the same dignity.”

source:
http://www.catholicnews.com/data/stories/cns/0704487.htm

===

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

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Iraqi Resistance Report for events of Tuesday, 7 August 2007

Posted by musliminsuffer on August 9, 2007

bismi-lLahi-rRahmani-rRahiem
In the Name of Allah, the Compassionate, the Merciful

=== News Update ===

Iraqi Resistance Report for events of Tuesday, 7 August 2007

Translated and/or compiled by Muhammad Abu Nasr, member, editorial board, the Free Arab Voice.

  • Resistance bomb destroys US Humvee northwest of al-Hadithah Monday morning.
  • Puppet police wounded in mortar barrage in eastern Baghdad Tuesday evening.
  • Shi‘i sectarian torture, murder spree continues: 16 more bodies found dumped around Baghdad on Tuesday.
  • US admits Tuesday: eight more American troops killed in Iraq.
  • US troops terrorize al-Ghazaliyah neighborhood in Baghdad, roughing up residents, arresting two men.
  • Bomb destroys US tank in ad-Diwaniyah midday Tuesday.
  • US troops terrorize al-Ghazaliyah neighborhood in Baghdad, roughing up residents, arresting two men.
  • London admits death of one more British occupation soldier in al-Basrah.

Al-Anbar Province.
Al-Hadithah.

Resistance bomb destroys US Humvee northwest of al-Hadithah Monday morning.

In a dispatch posted at 8:10am Makkah time Tuesday morning, Mafkarat al-Islam reported that an Iraqi Resistance bomb exploded by a US patrol in the al-Wadi al-Akhdar area between al-Hadithah (270km northwest of Baghdad) and ‘Anah (300km northwest of Baghdad) at 11am local time Monday morning.

Mafkarat al-Islam reported eyewitnesses as saying that the bomb, which had been planted by the side of a road in the area by the Iraqi Resistance, completely destroyed a US Humvee. One witness said that the Humvee burst into flame, indicating that he thought it likely that there were casualties among the Americans inside.

The witnesses said that the Americans rushed reinforcements into the area, which they then immediately sealed off, imposing stringent security measures on the area and making an accurate account of the nature and extent of US casualties impossible to ascertain.

Baghdad.

Puppet police wounded in mortar barrage in eastern Baghdad Tuesday evening.

In a dispatch posted at 10:30pm Baghdad time Tuesday night, the Association of Muslim Scholars of Iraq (AMSI) reported that the Iraqi Resistance fired a mortar barrage at the puppet police station in the al-Jaza’ir neighborhood of eastern Baghdad on Tuesday evening.

The AMSI reported a source in the puppet police as saying that the bombardment wounded three puppet policemen.

Shi‘i sectarian torture, murder spree continues: 16 more bodies found dumped around Baghdad on Tuesday.

In a dispatch posted at 10:30pm Baghdad time Tuesday night, the Association of Muslim Scholars of Iraq (AMSI) reported that the Iraqi puppet police had recovered the bodies of 16 more victims of sectarian murder that had been dumped in various parts of Baghdad on Tuesday.

The AMSI reported a source in the puppet police as saying that most of the bodies were bound and blindfolded and bore signs of torture – a trademark of the Shi‘i sectarian militias and the US-backed puppet regime security forces, most of whose members are drawn from those Shi‘i sectarian militias.

US admits Tuesday: eight more American troops killed in Iraq.

In a dispatch posted at 7:03pm Makkah time Tuesday afternoon, Mafkarat al-Islam reported that the US military issued two communiqués on Tuesday that admitting the deaths of eight more American troops in various attacks in Iraq in the previous couple of days.

Mafkarat al-Islam reported that the US military announced Tuesday in the last communiqué that four American troops had been killed in an Iraqi Resistance attack to the south of Baghdad.

An earlier American communiqué reported that three Americans had been killed when an Iraqi Resistance bomb went off by a US military vehicle on a road in southern Baghdad.

The same statement announced that an Iraqi Resistance anti-tank mine exploded to the west of Baghdad killing one US soldier to the west of Baghdad. Armor-piercing mines throw out fist-sized pieces of tempered steel that can rip through the armor of almost any military vehicle.

US troops terrorize al-Ghazaliyah neighborhood in Baghdad, roughing up residents, arresting two men.

In a dispatch posted at 12:09pm Baghdad time midday Tuesday, the Association of Muslim Scholars of Iraq (AMSI) reported that US occupation forces carried out a raid in the ar-Rafidayn section of the al-Ghazaliyah neighborhood of Baghdad on Monday night.

The AMSI reported that in the course of their raid, the Americans destroyed a private car and abducted two local residents. Eyewitnesses told AMSI that the US troops raided several houses in the ar-Rafidayn area, attacking the men and women in their homes and ordering the men to take off their clothes. The Americans treated the women with deliberate crudeness, not letting them put on their veils.

The witnesses said that the Americans were trying to intimidate, terrorize, and frighten the population, creating problems for them in order to prolong their stay. While there, the US troops threw one family out of their home, booby trapped a car, and blew it up inside the house.

Witnesses also said that puppet “Iraqi National Guards” opened fire indiscriminately on local residents near ‘Ablah Hall.

Al-Qadisiyah Province.
Ad-Diwaniyah.

Bomb destroys US tank in ad-Diwaniyah midday Tuesday.

In a dispatch posted at 10:14pm Baghdad time Tuesday night, the Association of Muslim Scholars of Iraq (AMSI) reported that a bomb exploded by a US patrol near the as-Sunniyah area of ad-Diwaniyah, 180km south of Baghdad, at 2pm local time Tuesday afternoon.

The AMSI reported that the bomb destroyed a US tank. The American troops then closed the road and opened fire indiscriminately at passers by and motorists driving along the main road running from ad-Diwaniyah to the north. No information was available on the nature or extent of casualties either among the Americans or local people targeted by US retaliatory fire.

Al-Basrah Province.
Al-Basrah.

London admits death of one more British occupation soldier in al-Basrah.

In a dispatch posted at 3:30pm Makkah time Tuesday afternoon, Mafkarat al-Islam reported that the British Ministry of Defence admitted Tuesday that one more of its troops had been killed in an attack in the southern city of al-Basrah on Monday evening.

Mafkarat al-Islam reported the British command as saying that the soldier was killed by individual gunfire in the course of a military operation in the “Farsi” area of the city.

http://www.albasrah.net/pages/mod.php?mod=art&lapage=../en_articles_2007/0807/iraqiresistancereport_070807.htm

Sources:

http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20070807/wl_afp/usiraqmilitaryforces_070807193620;_ylt=Av6eStrlIdtLNRgoG.qf.3IUewgF

http://www.qudspress.com/look/article.tpl?IdLanguage=17&IdPublication=1&NrArticle=22495&NrIssue=1&NrSection=3

http://www.qudspress.com/look/sarticle.tpl?IdLanguage=17&IdPublication=1&NrArticle=22492&NrIssue=1&NrSection=2

http://www.qudspress.com/look/sarticle.tpl?IdLanguage=17&IdPublication=1&NrArticle=22494&NrIssue=1&NrSection=1

http://www.qudspress.com/look/sarticle.tpl?IdLanguage=17&IdPublication=1&NrArticle=22494&NrIssue=1&NrSection=1

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/08/07/AR2007080701076.html?hpid=topnews

http://www.iraq-amsi.org/news.php?action=view&id=18800&3f0fa49a8c4a1bbb4531eaedd85b66ec

http://www.iraq-amsi.org/news.php?action=view&id=18799&ab78a9cb0d6d031806478024ab6e1407

http://www.iraq-amsi.org/news.php?action=view&id=18798&bfd0d2b9043e4ebf779920caca4c1818

http://www.iraq-amsi.org/news.php?action=view&id=18794&24f4e4446a6d402cf0ca8901ac3cf1c0

http://www.iraq-amsi.org/news.php?action=view&id=18793&780766a41050f1eec228053ebf90acc8

http://www.iraq-amsi.org/news.php?action=view&id=18790&08cbfb68b2b5e8ef9302e69b47432ad8

http://www.iraq-amsi.org/news.php?action=view&id=18786&775bc3c33ea25af9b9f807186c7dfe99

http://www.islammemo.cc/article1.aspx?id=48791

http://www.islammemo.cc/article1.aspx?id=48790

http://www.islammemo.cc/article1.aspx?id=48779

http://www.islammemo.cc/article1.aspx?id=48774

http://www.islammemo.cc/article1.aspx?id=48769

http://www.islammemo.cc/article1.aspx?id=48768

http://www.islammemo.cc/article1.aspx?id=48764

http://www.islammemo.cc/article1.aspx?id=48763

http://www.islammemo.cc/article1.aspx?id=48750

http://www.islammemo.cc/article1.aspx?id=48746

http://www.freearabvoice.org

http://www.albasrah.net/pages/mod.php?header=res1&mod=gis&rep=rep

===

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

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