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Muslims, Jews and the free speech debate

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Muslims, Jews and the free speech debate

By Sarah El Sirgany

Last year, a Spanish court found two cartoonists guilty of offending the royal family by drawing a caricature of the Spanish crown prince having sex with his wife. They were fined €3,000 each.

“I don’t see the world up in arms defending freedom of expression,” my editor told me after listening to the news on the radio.

Throughout this year, nothing substantial happened to defend this cartoonist, condemn the Spanish royal family for trying to muffle the press, or any reprints of the caricature in defense of the paper’s courageous decision to run it. And no Muslim demonstrations were held to condemn double standards.

A year later, the world is actually up in arms to defend another cartoonist, this time in France. Before you hold your breath in anticipation, it isn’t another cartoon attacking Islam; it’s a satirical editorial about French President Nicolas Sarkozy’s son, which espoused what critics called “anti-Semitic” sentiments.

French daily Le Monde ran a letter condemning the editorial, in which 20 writers and politicians said that Maurice Sinet, known as Sine (who was convicted for racism in 1985) “crossed the line between humorous insult and hateful caricature,” in his column in the satirical weekly Charlie Hebdo. 

The magazine’s editor Philippe Val said Sine was sacked for remarks that “could be interpreted as drawing a link between conversion to Judaism and social success” relaying the old stereotype linking Jews and money, the Agence France-Presse said in its report. 

Val is the very same editor who decided to reprint the infamous Danish cartoons — described by politicians as “unnecessary provocation” — and who later won a case against French Muslims who had accused him of inciting hatred against Muslims.

Val, who was backed by a group of international writers and politicians in defense of freedom of expression, had said at the time that it would be racist to “imagine that they [Muslims] can’t understand a joke.”

Even for someone like me, who believes that the Danish cartoon saga is a product of ignorance and lack of communication rather than a deliberate campaign against Islam, the comparison between the two cases imposes itself, triggering debate, not about conspiracy theories, but about double standards.

Muslims, particularly those living in Europe, are accustomed to court rulings convicting historians for Holocaust denial — a crime in 13 countries which is often confused with historical revisionism. And if it weren’t for the ongoing sensitivity of the issue, these crimes/historical papers would have been confined to the realm of scientific debate, rather than court rooms.

This is but one of many anti-Semitic “criminal violations” that stand in contrast to Muslims’ futile attempts to stop the negative representation of Islamic symbols which reinforces the notion that Islam is synonymous to violence — a notion propagated by a vocal minority of extremists. 

And Muslim communities are bound to compare themselves to their Jewish counterparts. The Israeli-Palestinian conflict is the hallmark of our era, the preoccupation of both our generation and that of our parents’. It’s at the core of every discussion and debate that remotely relates to both communities and faiths.

An Indian Hindu friend, who explained to me that his initial hatred towards Muslims was a result of the Indian-Pakistani conflict, was surprised to learn that this conflict doesn’t receive much attention in the Arab World; people here are too consumed by the Israeli-Palestinian issue to take notice of other international conflicts involving Muslims. 

These comparisons can be found in both the literature and cultural products of the Arab World and of the West. In one Dutch film about multicultural societies, a teenager asks why Jewish youngsters who go to Israel to join the army are considered heroes, while their Muslim counterparts who consider going to Iraq or Palestine are automatically branded as terrorists.

“Why should it be possible to criticize Islam but not Judaism?”

It wasn’t anyone in the Muslim community who said this, but Sine’s own supporters in an online petition against firing the writer for refusing to apologize for the article.

It is ironic that the editor who was once lauded for winning one of the most important court cases about freedom of expression — publishing cartoons depicting Prophet Mohamed wearing a bomb-shaped turban among others — has fired one of his own veteran writers for making indirect links between Judaism and upward social mobility.

Jean Sarkozy “has just said he intends to convert to Judaism before marrying his fiancée, who is Jewish, and the heiress to the founders of Darty [a French retail giant]. … He’ll go far, that lad,” was what Sine had written to get into all that trouble.

It is these double standards — especially within such short time frames — that fuel social unrest and feelings of frustration and injustice among citizens of any community, not to mention the international community.

It’s no surprise that “conspiracy theories” come up in many conversations.

Sarah El-Sirgany is the Deputy Editor of Daily News Egypt.

Written by eldib

August 20, 2008 at 12:10 pm

Lieberman says terrorist attack likely

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Lieberman says terrorist attack likely

From CNN Ticker Producer Alexander Mooney

Lieberman is a backer of McCain.
(CNN) — Sen. Joe Lieberman, the Democrat-turned-Independent who is a strong supporter of Republican John McCain’s White House bid, suggested Sunday the United States will likely face a terrorist attack in 2009.

The controversial comments followed remarks by top John McCain adviser Charlie Black late last week that a terrorist attack leading up the the general election would probably help the Arizona senator’s White House hopes.

Watch: McCain adviser apologizes for comments

“Our enemies will test the new president early,” Lieberman told CBS Sunday. “Remember that the truck bombing of the World Trade Center happened in the first year of the Clinton administration. 9/11 happened in the first year of the Bush administration.”

McCain and his supporters have long argued the presumptive Republican presidential nominee is better-suited to handle the country’s foreign policy challenges than Barack Obama.

Watch: Lieberman touts McCain

McCain knows the world,” Lieberman said. “He’s been tested. He’s ready to protect the security of the American people.”

But Lieberman, who served as the Democratic vice presidential nominee in 2000, distanced himself from Black’s contention that a terrorist attack would boost McCain’s chances of winning the Oval Office.

“Sometimes even the best of them say things that are not what they intended to say,” Lieberman said. “Certainly the implications there I know were not what Charlie intended. And he apologized for it. Senator McCain said he didn’t agree. And, of course, I feel the same way.

Lieberman, who calls himself an “independent Democrat,” endorsed McCain in early December.

Link

Written by eldib

July 1, 2008 at 7:36 am

Anti Islam Islamophobia Italy Demolishes Verona Mosque

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Anti Islam Islamophobia Italy Demolishes Verona Mosque

 

The europe takes the path of fascism,
starting with Italy (The Laboratory),
 Welcome to the age of darkness…

 

 

Italy’s far-right, anti-immigrant Northern League party has started its mission in the new government with bringing down a mosque in the northern city of Verona.

“[The mosque destruction] reinforces Muslim fears of seeing the League in the ruling coalition,” Ali Abu Shwaima, the head of Milan-based Islamic Centre, told.

Bulldozers brought down last week a building housing a Muslim prayer room in the city.

“I never felt at ease with this mosque,” Elisonder Antonneli, the head of Verona city council, said.

“This place will be turned into a park and a car parking space and will be named after (Italian writer) Oriana Fallaci.”

Fallaci, who died in 2006, was notorious for anti-Islam stances.

Following the 9/11 attacks, the far-right writer published a book entitled “Rage and Pride” in which she ridiculed the Noble Qur’an.

She has also authored another book “The Force of Reason” in which she warned that Europe was turning into “an Islamic province, an Islamic colony” and that “to believe that a good Islam and a bad Islam exist goes against all reason.”

The Northern League has four ministers in Silovio Berlusconi’s government, including the portfolio of the Interior.

The League grabbed 8 percent of the vote in last month’s general elections, securing Berlusconi’s right-wing coalition a comfortable majority in the parliament.

The party has nearly doubled its parliamentary strength from 4.5 percent two years ago.

The Northern League is widely accused of racism with many critics calling it the BNP of Italy, a reference to the British right-wing party.

Its election campaign played on issues such as immigration crime and economic and cultural fears from immigration.

Hard Time

Abu Shwaima, the Muslim leader, said Italian Muslims will face hard times under the far-right league.

“We believe the life of Italian Muslims will get more complicated,” he said.

He said Muslims in the city of Verona used to find spiritual comfort at the razed mosque.

“The mosque destruction is sign of spiraling Islamophobia in many European countries,” he said.

There are nearly 20,000 Muslims in Verona.

“I used to pray in the mosque for years,” an Italian Muslim in Verona told IOL, requesting anonymity.

“But this Friday I went to the mosque for prayers but I could not as it was razed.

“We live in a state of anticipation and fear after the mosque was destroyed and we want Arab and Muslim governments to pile pressures on Italy to stop anti-immigrant and anti-Islam policies.”

Abu Shwaima, the Muslim leader, has a similar message.

“We want to tell the Muslim world that mosques’ construction in Italy is almost a mission impossible.

“Except for the Milan-based Islamic Center and the Rome mosque, there are no real mosques in Italy.”

Last November, former Italian deputy Education Minister and League member Mariella Mazzetto angered Muslims after parading a pig on the site of a planned mosque in the northern city of Padua.

Two months earlier, League senator Roberto Calderoli called for a “Pig Day” protest against the mosque construction in the northern city of Bologna.

In 2006, protesters left a pig’s head at a mosque building site in the central Italian city of Tuscany.

Italy has a Muslim population of some 1.2 million, including 20,000 reverts, according to unofficial estimates.

source:
http://www.daily.pk/world/europe/81-europe/3940-anti-islam-islamophobia-italy-demolishes-verona-mosque.html

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Written by eldib

May 27, 2008 at 9:47 am

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U.S. Bush apologizes over Quran shooting in Iraq

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U.S. Bush apologizes over Quran shooting in Iraq

 

BAGHDAD, May 20 (Xinhua) — U.S. President George W. Bush has apologized to Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki over the shooting of the holy Quran by an American soldier, Iraqi official television reported on Tuesday.

“The prime minister received an apology from U.S. President George W. Bush on the incident of shooting of a Quran by a U.S. soldier,” the state-run television al-Iraqia said.

On May 11, the Iraqi police found the desecrated copy of the Islamic holy book at a small shooting range near a police station in Radwaniyah. The volume was riddled with bullets and had graffiti inside the cover.

Later, the U.S. military apologized to the local community leaders in Radwaniyah, a mostly Sunni district on Baghdad’s southwestern outskirts.

A U.S. military spokesman viewed the incident as both “serious and deeply troubling” but stressed that it was an “isolated incident and a result of one soldier’s action.”

U.S. commanders have undertaken disciplinary action against the soldier who was involved, and he has been removed from Iraq to the United States, he said without releasing the name of the shooter or how he would be disciplined.

On Monday, the Iraqi Islamic Party, headed by Vice President Tariq al-Hashimi, said apology by U.S. commanders in Iraq is not enough.

“Such offences have occurred frequently during the past few years and apology is no more enough and the U.S. military has to take stronger measures to honor values of Muslims,” the party said in a statement.

http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/2008-05/20/content_8215439.htm

Written by eldib

May 20, 2008 at 11:09 pm

Posted in Irak, USA

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Boy named ‘Islam’ banned from French TV show: report

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Boy named ‘Islam’ banned from French TV show: report

 

 

  • 9-year-old told his name ‘represented a religion not liked in France’

The parents of a nine-year-old boy named Islam are to press charges for discrimination after a French television production company allegedly excluded their son from its programmes because of his name, said a report on Wednesday.

His mother, Farah Alaouchiche, told Le Parisien newspaper that the boy had been told in the offices of Angel Productions that his name “represented a religion that was not liked in France”. The comment was made after Islam went with his parents, who have Algerian nationality, to the company’s offices in February for the final stage in a selection process to take part in a youth programme called ‘In ze boite’ (In the box). But he was told there that he could not use his name if he wanted to be in the programme because “being called Islam if you are a boy is like a girl wearing the (Islamic) veil”, his mother told Le Parisien. The casting agents suggested Islam use “another Arab name” such as Mohammed or Sofiane.

But Farah Alaouchiche refused. The family left the premises to return to their home near Paris and never heard from the company again. Angel Productions told the newspaper that “if Islam wasn’t selected, it was not because of his name, but because there were more candidates than places available.”

But the company did admit “the casting agent did not react as she should have. There were words that hurt a little boy”. It promised to let Islam take part in a future edition of the programme, said the paper. French Urban Affairs Minister Fadela Amara, who is a Muslim, told Le Parisien she was “scandalised” by the incident, which she described as “disgusting”. afp

Link

 

Written by eldib

April 17, 2008 at 9:55 am

Posted in France

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Human Rights Abuses & The Demonisation of ‘The Enemy’ in Secret Britain

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Human Rights Abuses & The Demonisation of ‘The Enemy’ in Secret Britain

 

The most elementary requirement of legal certainty demands that you know the case against you. And yet considerable numbers of young men, and some women, are being held in our prisons without any idea of why they are there. They are detained under yet more provisions, for the present deemed lawful, which either forbid or demand no meaningful explanation being given to the accused. The concept of secret evidence and accusations so vague and undefined as to be meaningless has now bedded down in our system of justice.”

Gareth Peirce, human rights lawyer, December 2007

 

 

Mention the words ‘Guantanamo Bay’ to anyone, and it is virtually guaranteed that they won’t be picturing a coastal town located in the Guantanamo province of Cuba in the far south east corner of the Island which, among other things, is home to one of Cuba’s national parks. Originally valued by the United States Government as a point of strategic value to its Navy in protecting the Panama Canal, the US took control of Camp X-Ray, the naval base at Guantanamo Bay in 1903; control which it has retained ever since. However, since the 1990s, the US has utilised the naval base as a ‘holding camp’; first for Cuban refugees and from January 2002, as a detention camp for Muslim prisoners, judged by the US to be “illegal enemy combatants”, which enables it to employ practices that would be illegal were the prisoners detained in the USA. This is the image that will come to mind for most, upon hearing the words “Guantanamo Bay”.

The United Kingdom government has often murmured that it would like to see the detention camps at Guantanamo Bay closed down. In a letter responding to the concerns of a J7 researcher, Home Office Minister Tony McNulty said:

We have made it clear that we think Guantanamo Bay should be closed; President Bush said that he would like to close Guantanamo Bay as soon as practicable……the UK has played an active role in this process and we secured the release and return of all British nationals held at the detention facility in 2004 and 2005; last year we secured the release and return of four detainees who were previously legally resident in the UK.

Source: J7 People’s Investigation Forum

What is not apparent from this statement is that in 2006 the UK government, in response to the US government’s offer to return nearly all remaining UK residents, refused to accept them, with ministers stating that they had no legal right to return to the UK. Additionally, according to this report:

Documents obtained by the Guardian show US authorities are demanding that the detainees be kept under 24-hour surveillance if set free – restrictions that are dismissed by the British as unnecessary and unworkable.

Although all are accused of terrorist involvement, Britain says there is no intelligence to warrant the measures Washington wants, and it lacks the resources to implement them. “They do not pose a sufficient threat,” said the head of counter-terrorism at the Home Office.

Source: The Guardian

It was only in August 2007, after Gordon Brown was handed Tony Blair’s prime ministerial position, that the government performed a volte-face and formally requested the return of the remaining men held at the detention facility.

For the purposes of this article it is important to note that the Home Office did not consider the Guantanamo detainees a “sufficient threat”. It is also interesting to note that the Home Office refused to issue passports to four former Guantanamo detainees, namely Martin Mubanga, Feroz Abbasi, Richard Belmar and Moazzam Begg. The decisions to revoke the passports of these men was taken under the Royal Prerogative power which enables decisions to be taken without any parliamentary consultation or scrutiny. The Royal Prerogative power was also used to revoke the passport of Canadian Abdurahman Khadr.

Furthermore, the Home Office regularly, and with impunity, impounds innocent Muslims in UK prisons pending deportation to countries where they face almost certain torture – and in some cases death – on the vague basis of an alleged ‘threat to national security’. The Home Office does this in the total absence of any evidence that could actually convict them in a UK court. In addition, innocent Muslims are regularly impounded and interned in UK prisons, not because the government considers them to be a ‘threat to national security’ but because another country might consider them to be a threat to theirs. In Long Lartin prison in Worcestershire alone, just one of many prisons in the UK holding innocent Muslim detainees, against many of whom the State has not a jot of evidence, there are at least six men facing deportation, and at least five appealing against extradition orders to the United States. In each situation, captives face a very different process with the same potential outcome.

One only has to consider the soaring rate of attacks against Muslims – and indeed anyone of Asian appearance – in the wake of the explosions in London on July 7th 2005 to imagine what life is like in prison for a Muslim.

Prisoner abuses at HMP Frankland include Eesa ‘Dhiren’ Barot suffering horrifically painful injuries from having boiling oil poured over him by another inmate (he later requested that the charges against the perpetrator be dropped), whose solicitor wrote of terrible examples of Islamophobia and racism facing Muslim inmates and detainees. Muslims in other prisons suffer the same kind of treatment. Whereas it seems to be a policy in the UK prison service to move prisoners who come under attack from other inmates, when Omar Khyam, a Muslim inmate at Frankland who had been involved in an extremely high profile trial came under attack, he was simply kept in isolation at the same prison. Later, the Daily Mail would twist the situation completely, claiming that these particular prisoners demanded to be moved because their fellow inmates were “too white”, rather than citing the genuine reason; that they were living in fear of their own safety and had merely asked to be treated in the same manner as other prisoners at risk of attack. Mr. Barot’s solicitor made the point at the time he was attacked, “We are not asking for preferential treatment for Muslim prisoners – what we are requesting is that Muslim prisoners should be afforded the same protection as other prisoners”.

Incredibly, other media coverage turns the worrying situation of Muslim prisoners coming under attack into one where prisons are under threat from ‘al-Qaeda’.

In Long Lartin prison, the Muslim detainees are kept in a separate wing from other prisoners. The wing has come in for bitter criticism by convicts elsewhere in the prison who feel that the detainees have a “good deal”. However, the detainees face the same restrictions as Category A prisoners, despite the fact that they have never been convicted of any crime in the UK, terrorism-related or otherwise. They are not allowed to receive magazines or books from ‘outside’, for instance and in Belmarsh, it is prohibited to send just about any item to a detainee other than a letter – which cannot include a stamped addressed envelope for return, as detainees are not allowed to receive items of stationary. Faraj Hassan, a former prison detainee now living under a control order, has told of the human rights violations and abuse which he regularly experienced in Belmarsh and Brixton prisons. Shockingly, on one occasion, he was shown a fatwa at Belmarsh, signed by the Muslim Council of Britain, giving permission for staff to perform humiliating and unnecessary strip searches on Muslim detainees.

In August 2005, solicitors Birnberg Peirce & Partners stated of Full Sutton that the so-called secure unit was covered in cobwebs and that it remained unfit for humans. Ten years previously the Special Secure Unit at Full Sutton had been closed down on the basis that it was unfit for human habitation. A Council of Europe investigation team who visited Long Lartin and Full Sutton prisons warned that the restrictive, isolated conditions under which prisoners were held placed their mental and physical health in danger, even cautioning that a mass suicide would not be a surprising outcome.

‘SPECIAL’ COURTS , ‘SPECIAL ADVOCATES’ AND SECRET EVIDENCE

Anyone with a social conscience would agree that detaining people without giving them a specific reason and giving them no opportunity to prove their innocence goes against all the principles of democracy and freedom that this government proudly tells its citizens they will not let ‘the terrorists’ destroy. No evidence to support the allegations is required to be shown, in the cases of both those facing deportation and those facing extradition – either to the accused themselves or their legal representatives. In the case of the detainees threatened with deportation to face torture, this luxury is only afforded to appointed ‘special advocates’ in an extraordinary secret court procedure known as the Special Immigration Appeals Commission (SIAC), who are not permitted to have contact with the appellant or his lawyers. In essence, the defence has no possibility of presenting any sort of argument because the State simply refuses to allow them to know the charges they face. How, exactly, can any kind of defence argument be formed when the person concerned has no right to know what evidence the precise case against them rests on? It can’t.

The men in question came to the UK in desperation, many having already suffered torture in their countries of origin. One Algerian detainee, Mustapha Taleb – also known as Detainee Y, arrived in the UK in March 2000 to claim political asylum. After being exonerated of all charges relating to the now infamous ‘Ricin case’ along with his co-defendants, he had a mere five months to recover from the trauma of being imprisoned for 28 months for a crime he did not commit (indeed, a ‘crime’ which appears to have existed solely for the convenient purpose of making the case for the illegal invasion of Iraq) before finding himself manhandled back into jail for allegedly being a threat to UK security. He discovered during a SIAC hearing that the very same ‘evidence’ that was used in an attempt to convict him of involvement in the Ricin case was being used to justify his imprisonment and deportation, despite the fact that this absurd case had collapsed in a UK criminal court. Two of the jurors in the Ricin case were so horrified to discover what had happened to a man that they had cleared in a court of law that they now campaign on his behalf, along with organisations such as Amnesty International and Cageprisoners. Mr. Taleb remains incarcerated in the UK, despite one of his co-defendants in the same case escaping deportation.

Even a short visit to the Cageprisoners website will discover many other similar cases, all of which are a gross affront to human rights. One case is that of Hussain Al-Samamra, who faces deportation to Jordan, where he will almost certainly face the torture that he escaped from in desperation in 2001, the very reason he claimed asylum in the first place. Mr. Al-Samamra had no access to the evidence used to form the case against him and therefore had no opportunity to construct a defence. It is evident from a number of other similarly outrageous cases on the SIAC website that the SIAC process is heavily weighted in favour of the State. It is this legislative framework that facilitates the State acting out whatever its pre-determined political will might be, against whomever it so chooses.

The British government is no stranger to deporting asylum seekers under inhumane circumstances, but those arrested on suspicion of involvement in terrorism and jailed immediately, are treated exceptionally harshly. Hussain Al-Samamra was not permitted to see his wife and child for a year; many friends and family members ‘fail’ the vetting process to obtain clearance for visits during their incarceration so not only is liberty lost, there is no opportunity to have contact with loved ones. Wives and families are often left to struggle alone, too fearful of the stigma of their circumstances to allow themselves to be helped. Some detainees have wished for death as a release from the purgatory of living in perpetual, imprisoned limbo.

Detainee H, an Algerian granted refugee status by the UK authorities in 1993, who had been arrested in 2002 and detained in Belmarsh without trial until March 2005, had only five short months in which to enjoy his ‘freedom’ under control orders. In the immediate aftermath of the July 7th 2005 attacks, he – along with the eight other men also released from Belmarsh in March 2005 – was dragged from his bed in the early hours and taken away by police and Immigration Officials with no word to their families regarding where they were being taken and why. When supporters of the detainees acting on the behalf of their distraught families were finally able to access the relevant Home Office department, they were first told that the solicitors for the men would know where they were – even though they did not. When this was communicated to the Immigration Department the response was that the captives would be taken care of – with the spectacularly unreassuring and these days quite sinister qualification, “This is Britain, you know.” The Home Office finally responded…..naming captives and advising the families to contact the Salvation Army’s missing person’s service in order to find out where they had been taken.

Detainee H finally left Britain for Algeria in January 2007, despite attempts by Amnesty International to prevent this, leaving his wife and baby daughter behind. Upon arrival in Algeria Detainee H was detained almost immediately despite assurances from the UK and Algeria that this would not happen. He is now serving a three year sentence in an Algerian prison, with the UK and Algerian authorities denying he was ever given amnesty – a SIAC judge putting this down to “a muddle rather than deceit”. His wife has been refused a visa to visit him. When Detainee H gave a statement detailing his treatment upon returning to Algeria, as part of defence case for another detainee facing the same process, it was dismissed in a SIAC ruling.

Given the use of the Special Advocate process against foreign nationals, British nationals might think they need not worry about such a thing, However, the government also has other uses for ’special advocates’, Special Advocates were primarily created to represent foreign nationals appealing against immigration and later, after the introduction of the Anti-terrorism, Crime and Security Act 2001, foreign terror suspects detained without charge or trial. Harry Roberts, who was convicted in 1966 for the murders of three policemen and sentenced to thirty years imprisonment, is still behind bars twelve years after his tariff expired on the basis of ’secret evidence’. Neither Mr. Roberts nor his solicitors have been allowed access. The parole board employed the use of a special advocate to examine this secret evidence. Of course, the special advocate is not allowed to speak to either Mr. Roberts nor his legal representatives about ‘the evidence’ that is keeping Mr Roberts in jail.

In February 2008, news broke of conversations between Tooting MP Sadiq Khan and Babar Ahmad being bugged whilst Mr. Ahmad was detained at Woodhill Prison. Ahmad and Khan were being covertly recorded by anti-terror operatives, allegedly without government knowledge. At the time, much was made of how terrible it was that anyone might dare to bug an MP, thereby contravening the Wilson Doctrine which dictates that MPs and peers not be bugged. At least, not without the express permission from the Prime Minister. Mr Khan was not pleased and threatened to take his evidence of bugged meetings, phone taps, and being followed, to the European Court of Human Rights. Levels of left, right, liberal and libertarian outrage were raised by the idea that an MP might be treated as a common criminal, or a ‘terrorist’ by association, yet barely a murmur was heard about the other focus of the story, prisoner Babar Ahmad. As if further evidence were required to suggest that, while the bugging of an MP might be a rare exception, the bugging of prisoners is a rather more routine function of the State, Harry Roberts’ solicitor, Simon Creighton, said that a government lawyer had inadvertently sent two transcripts of covertly recorded telephone conversations between he and his client. This was in addition to revelations that hundreds of lawyers and prison visitors had been secretly recorded, cases which didn’t feature MPs and therefore didn’t warrant similar levels of outrage.

The same day that 56 people lost their lives in London, Harry Roberts suffered his own personal catastrophe. On 7th July 2005 his appeal against the use of secret evidence to block his long overdue release was rejected and he remains imprisoned to this day, still prohibited from knowing why he remains to this day deprived of his freedom. Roberts, a British citizen who served his country as a Lance Corporal during the Malayan ‘Emergency’, continues to be detained long after his sentence ended through the use of the same loaded methods created for use against foreign nationals. Roberts’ extended detention on the basis of “national security” was used to set, and continues to set, a legal precedent that paves the way for routine use of the special advocate process in cases brought against British citizens. Mr. Roberts himself is certainly aware of the dangers of extending secret hearings and the hypocrisy of the UK government’s use of such procedures, observing, “Surely this is ‘double standards’ – to castigate the Americans for something we are doing in England”. And therein lies the rub – or rather, one of the rubs.

HYPOCRISY, SECRECY & STEALTH

It is somewhat ironic that the Government’s reasoning for originally refusing the return of Guantanamo detainees under the conditions demanded by the US was that the captives did not pose a “sufficient threat” to warrant surveillance – or apparently even a common judicial process. However, they must have been considered “sufficient threat” for the UK to deem it acceptable for them to moulder away in a prison camp with no access to legal representation that would enable them to find out and defend against the crimes of which they stood accused. What meets the criteria for a “sufficient” threat is anybody’s guess in a country where men are manhandled away from their families to be spirited off by the Home Office and where five men had their convictions under the Terrorism Act 2000 quashed for the exact same non-offence for which only a month later another man was jailed. That the UK won’t consider individuals ’suspected’ of terrorism involvement a “sufficient” enough threat to actually warrant an open, legal trial, but will certainly consider them a “sufficient” enough threat to act as judge, jury and executioner on their suspicions is doubly ironic.

Tony Blair used the concept of “sufficiency” in a slightly different context in an article written for The Times in May 2007, where he primarily defended control orders as a “much milder remedy” than detention in jail, describing them as “imposing some limits on the individual’s freedom”. Control orders, for those not familiar, came about after the Law Lords’ ruling in December 2004 that the detention of the nine men – of which Detainee H, mentioned earlier in this article was one – at Belmarsh prison without trial, breached fundamental human rights. Mr. Blair bitterly recalled the judgement made at the time, that there was “a greater risk to Britain through the abrogation of the foreign suspect’s civil liberties than through terrorism.”

Control Orders do not merely impose “some” limits on an individual’s freedom; the individual is effectively imprisoned in his own home, which makes family life extremely difficult, and for single men, a supportive social life impossible. At any given time, with no notice, they are to expect (among other things) to allow “officials” to search their homes, have their phone, internet access and contact with other people in general restricted, their own home restricted, a 24 hour ban on all movements and requirements to be at specified places or in a particular area at certain times on certain days. In the light of this, it is virtually incomprehensible that Mr. Blair then says that control orders were “much weaker than we wanted, perpetually diluted by opposition amendments, constantly attacked on civil liberty grounds.”

Mr. Blair goes on to give away the rules of the game that he had changed, stating:

After September 11, 2001, in common with many other nations, we passed new antiterror laws. In the aftermath of such an outrage it was relatively easy to do. We gave ourselves the ability, in exceptional circumstances, to detain foreign nationals who we believed were plotting terrorism but against whom there was insufficient evidence to prosecute. It was an important power. They were, of course, free to leave Britain. But we wouldn’t let them be free here. The ability to detain foreign nationals gave our services the ability to focus even more resources on the surveillance of British nationals who were a threat. It also sent out a strong signal of intent.

Source: The Times

Where there is “insufficient evidence” to prosecute, or there is not enough of a “sufficient threat” posed, then in the eyes of the law, detainees are innocent and should be protected by habeus corpus. However, despite the grave concerns raised in 2005 by the Director of Public Prosecutions that secret courts would pave the way for miscarriages of justice, ingrained traditions of ‘British Justice’ continue to be turned on their heads. Judicial processes have become ever more covert, including the existence of secret family courts along with recent proposals to hold criminal trials without juries and to hold secret inquests – the latter of which has caused concern to the bereaved families of those killed on July 7th 2005 but also to UK Parliamentary Joint Committee on Human Rights.

Such processes are, of course, in addition to the Inquiries Act 2005; legislation which was rushed through parliament exactly one month before the July 7th atrocities, effectively ending the concept of independent and/or public inquiries. In times when the public most require answers about matters of great import, the State instead affects less transparency and plumbs greater depths of secrecy, allowing the public to know as little as possible about its actions and operations. All on the catch-all basis of “national security”.

Recent legislative proposals pushed by the State also have the inquest process in their sights and the State is seeking to legislate itself ultimate control over inquests and coroners. Once again, the sole reason given is ‘national security’. Already it has been suggested that the 7/7 inquests — an event from which much political capital has been made by all parties — and the extra-judicial execution by the State of Jean Charles de Menezes will be held in secret.

EXTRADITIONS, RENDITIONS AND LIES

Another piece of legislation which gives rise to justifiable concerns is the Extradition Act 2003; in particular Part 2 of the Act, which covers extradition to Category 2 territories. As the wording of the Act states, this part deals with extradition from the United Kingdom to the territories designated for the purposes of this Part by order made by the Secretary of State. As the Crown Prosecution Service guidelines state in bold text, the district judge in a given case must be satisfied that the request contains admissible evidence of the offence sufficient to establish a prima facie case against the person. This requirement does not apply in respect of extradition requests from the USA, Canada, Australia and New Zealand.

Here is the crux of the matter, and the reasoning behind the controversy that this Act has engendered. In the first place, these four named nations, only three of which are part of the Commonwealth, are not obliged or required to submit prima facie evidence when requesting the extradition of British citizens or foreign nationals residing in Britain. In other words, at present, the United States is able to request any amount of British individuals to be sent over and don’t even need to say why. Even worse, there is no reciprocal arrangement between the two countries; if Britain wishes to extradite a US citizen or resident, the government is required by the US to provide evidence justifying the request.

In the case of Haroon Aswat, the US Justice Department blocked attempts by Seattle prosecutors to charge him in relation to suspected ‘terrorist activity’ in Oregon in 2002. Yet, in the aftermath of the July 7th 2005 attacks in London, amid a flurry of hysterical and groundless media coverage of his alleged and unproven connection to the July 7th suspects, he was arrested in late July 2005, in Zambia, having previously resided in South Africa. It was reported that the US wanted to render Mr. Aswat to a third, undisclosed country, as opposed to directly to the US from Africa, several weeks before he was arrested, but were unable to do so due to his British citizenship and possession of UK papers. It was allegedly whilst this diplomatic argument occurred that Mr. Aswat left South Africa for Zambia, where he was then arrested under Zambian immigration laws. He was deported, rather than extradited to Britain, and the UK authorities have never arrested or charged Mr. Aswat either in connection with the events of July 7th 2005 or any other suspected terrorist activity. A ’source’ at Scotland Yard said rather dismissively, “He may be of interest to us in the future but he is not our priority at the moment”.

It is completely unclear therefore, at which point Mr. Aswat was supposed to have been arrested in Pakistan – the Pakistani authorities denied that this had happened and according to one report, men with identical names may have been detained. A point extremely worthy of note, especially as it was also reported that the man detained in Pakistan was in fact a ceramics salesman from London with a “similar” name.

At present, Mr. Aswat is detained in a UK prison appealing against his extradition order to the United States. His solicitor, Gareth Pierce, stated on the same day as the original extradition ruling that the US had provided no evidence of Mr. Aswat’s involvement in terrorist activity:

She said: “The only witness against him in the United States was threatened that if he didn’t plead guilty and co-operate he would be put under military detention.

“It shows the extent to which the United States is manipulating evidence and pressuring witnesses. All that is said about Haroon Aswat is that in 1999 he travelled to a farm in the US which was considering setting up a Muslim community and, after a few days, left. That’s it — that’s the evidence.”

Source: The Times

In an earlier hearing, a lawyer for the US had stated that the accusations made against Mr. Aswat by the US meant that he faces up to fifteen years in jail, but also that “the charges could change and he could face a longer term of imprisonment.”

Other cases not involving the US, but where equally flimsy allegations are all that is required by the UK to approve extraditions are just as concerning; such as that of Farid Hilali, extradited to Spain in February 2008 to face charges of being a member of a terrorist group – despite the fact that the UK courts expressly said that it would be illegal for Spain to extradite him on those grounds. Mr. Hilali’s so-called co-conspirator had previously had his conviction quashed for involvement in the same case, the Spanish Supreme court had ruled telephone intercept evidence as inadmissable because not only had it been obtained unlawfully but did not, in any case, support the inference that the two had been conspiring together and the Spanish Prosecutor attempted to mislead the UK courts by alleging Mr. Hilali’s involvement in the ‘Hamburg Cell’, which had already been refuted by German courts. Yet off to Spain Mr. Hilali has gone, making a mockery of the “trust” accorded to European countries in such cases.

Other men facing extradition to the United States along with Haroon Aswat include Babar Ahmad, the victim of bugging in Woodhill prison mentioned above and human rights campaigner Syed Talha Ahsan, both of whom face charges of providing ‘material’ to terrorists. The charges have been brought by the US purely on the basis of alleged Internet activity; neither man has ever set foot on US soil. In 2004, a US attorney made the quite mind boggling statement in relation to Mr. Ahmad’s case, “If you’re supporting the Taleban and the Taleban is killing American soldiers, we’re alleging you’re conspiring to kill American citizens abroad.” Perhaps one day the Iraqi people might apply this type of logic to UK taxpayers; it would certainly be interesting to see the outcome of such a case.

QUIS CUSTODIET IPSOS CUSTODES?

Given the appalling human rights record of the United States of America, of which prison camps such as Camp X-Ray and Abu Ghraib are only a part, this is unsurprisingly a terrifying prospect for captives facing extradition. As with deportations, diplomatic notes are often used as assurance of human rights, but there are no guarantees that these will be adhered to. For instance, there is nothing to stop the CIA advising the U.S government to change its position and designate a given individual as an enemy combatant, where he would, of course, face the kind of treatment that the Home Office condemns at detention camps, where incidences of maltreatment and torture of the detainees are well documented.

The recent admittance by the US authorities that it had employed the use of torture to interrogate terrorism suspects and the news that the US president has vetoed a Congressional Bill that would have prohibited the employment of torture during the interrogation of terrorism suspects, shows that it is clear that there is no guarantee whatsoever that detainees will be treated objectively and humanely. The CIA director Michael Hayden’s supposedly ‘reassuring’ statement that the CIA will “continue to operate within the law” carries very little weight when the ‘law’ states that torture and inhumane methods are acceptable. No one should forget that it isn’t so long ago that the practices employed by the US against terror suspects; hypothermia, long periods of standing, sleep deprivation and multiple sessions of waterboarding — cleverly renamed, with its former nomenclature of ‘water torture’ all but forgotten — among others, were classified by the US as war crimes when perpetuated by the Nazis. The United States has a history of convicting others of torture in cases where the practice of water torture was used. After World War II, the US organised and participated in the International Military Tribunal where senior members of the Japanese government and military were charged and convicted largely upon the basis that they practised water torture. In 1983, the county sheriff of San Jacinto, Texas, was convicted of civil rights violations for using water torture on suspects. Upon sentencing, the District Judge told the former sheriff, “The operation down there would embarrass the dictator of a country.”

Adopting as your own the characteristics of the very thing you profess to despise in no way confers any kind of moral superiority. This applies to both the UK and US governments’ hypocrisy in their imperialistic actions of warfare for peace and democracy by death in the Middle East. It includes the hypocrisy of the UK government, media and senior legal figures for ‘attacking’ George Bush’s detention camps when the liberty, safety and fundamental rights of UK residents are breached in the same unacceptable manner – sanctioned and imposed by the State itself. The UK government has demonstrated a breathtaking lack of regard for human life and liberty with its ‘anti-terror’ measures. In November 2004, a Special Advocate before SIAC publicly resigned, making his reasons for doing so abundantly clear:

The detainees have not been targeted simply as a group of foreigners suspected of involvement in international terrorism. The overwhelming focus has been on the fact that they are Muslim…..this is how the war against terrorism is often portrayed. It produces hatred and attacks not just on Muslims, but on the whole Asian community. It has already eroded the confidence of British Muslims and must, in the longer term, affect social cohesion. More importantly this kind of law alienates Britain in the international arena. The solution to the perceived threat of international terrorism is not, in my view, to pass new laws, which apply arbitrary arrest and indefinite detention without trial to every terrorist suspect, British and foreign alike.The point was trenchantly made by Lord Hoffman in his speech:

“I said that the power of detention is at present confined to foreigners and I would not like to give the impression that all that was necessary was to extend the power to UK citizens as well. The real threat to the life of the nation, in the sense of people living in accordance with its traditional laws and political values comes not from terrorism but from laws like these.”

Thursday’s judgement in the House of Lords supports and vindicates my view. I now feel that whatever difference I might make as a special advocate on the inside is outweighed by the operation of a law, fundamentally flawed and contrary to our deepest notions of justice. My role has been altered to provide a false legitimacy to indefinite detention without knowledge of the accusations being made and without any kind of criminal charge or trial. For me this is untenable. No other country in Europe has felt it necessary to follow this course and derogate from Article 5 of the European Convention. Britain should not stand apart from the rest of Europe on this issue.

Such a law is an odious blot on our legal landscape and for reasons of conscience I feel that I must resign.

Source: Ian Macdonald QC via Garden Court Chambers

The Law Lords’ decision in December 2005 that ‘evidence’ extracted under torture was inadmissable in SIAC courts – countermanding a previous ruling that such evidence could be used provided that Britain itself was not involved in the torture process – should have saved the Belmarsh detainees from being sent back to countries which employed the use of torture. It didn’t.

No ‘terror threat’ to this country justifies detention without trial and condemnation to torture abroad – the government is clearly correct to assert that it won’t let ‘the terrorists’ destroy ‘our way of life’. It’s far too busy doing the destroying itself with the added propaganda coup value of fostering fear and suspicion of Muslims.

Daniel Guedella, a legal representative for some of the individuals mentioned in this article makes the stark observation,

This government cannot parade itself on the international stage with its claimed commitments to democracy and the rule of law whilst at home its contempt for such principles has never been more evident than in its treatment of these men and their families. The Prime Minister is wrong. The rules of the game have not changed. The rules cannot be changed for the purposes of political grandstanding at the expense of the most vulnerable and innocent amongst us.

Daniel Guedella, Birnberg Peirce and Partners

Imagine a day in your life – of no particular value purely due to its sheer availability and mass quantity. Then imagine it was the last day you knew freedom. Imagine being Detainee H, who went to bed on a summer’s evening and didn’t wake up in his own home again. Imagine being Hussain Al-Samamra who spent an entire year waiting to see his daughter who’d been only three days old the last time he’d held her in his arms; the realisation of nine months of future plans, who now can only mourn all the precious days he assumed he’d spend caring for her with his wife. Imagine your own home being not a place of safety and sanctuary, but your own personal prison, where you couldn’t even arrange something as simple as meeting a friend for a coffee or doing the shopping when you wanted. Imagine optimistically applying and being accepted onto a college course, then having to give it up when you realised that everyone on the course would have to know you were a ‘terror suspect’. Imagine how it feels to stumble blindly through a closed ‘court’ process, unable to speak to the person who has the luxury of knowing what you don’t; the grounds on which you’ve been taken away from everything that you knew, whilst the judge sits sighing, having the privilege of knowing exactly what the outcome will be. Imagine being arrested and thrown into jail in one country because another country has demanded your presence, conferring ’suspect’ status upon you immediately. Imagine how it would feel to sit alone in a small cell day after day and year after year, knowing that you don’t even have the option or means to prove your innocence beyond doubt because there is “insufficient evidence” to charge you with a crime – and because of this, knowing that the general assumption is likely to be that ‘there’s no smoke without fire’. Especially when there’s a ‘war on terror’ to win.

In September 2006, Tony Blair described the “global struggle against terrorism” as being “without mercy or limit”.

Without limit….what’s happening to Harry Roberts, and the incalculable amount of people in the UK who have anti-terrrorism legislation used against them every day for actions as terrifying and criminal as wearing a T-shirt and peacefully protesting against the legislation itself, illustrates that we all need to consider that as a warning. Many still have no idea exactly how deleterious the situation is. As one supporter of the Muslim detainees in Britain puts it,

Many British Muslims only woke up when Babar Ahmad was taken – even Babar himself has said since that he did not take any notice when the men were detained indefinitely in 2001. He just assumed they were all terrorists.

Source: Cageprisoners Via Algeria Watch

For the majority of UK citizens, it’s not dark yet, but it’s getting there; for the many Muslims incarcerated in legal limbo in the UK and their terrified families and friends, darkness began to fall almost as soon as the first news about the events of September 11th and World Trade Centre broke, initiating America’s latest incarnation of its ‘War on Terror’. The shadow hasn’t lifted since.

link

Written by eldib

April 17, 2008 at 9:52 am

3 poids 3 mesures : Raedeker, Guigue, Badjeck

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3 poids 3 mesures : Raedeker, Guigue, Badjeck

 


Déblatérez contre les musulmans, et vous serez le chouchou des « merdias » Déblatérez contre Israël, et vous serez le chouchou des dissidents Vous gagnez seul des batailles judiciaires contre ceux qui font tout pour israéliser la société française ? :

tout le monde s’en tape … sauf l’ARMADA des sans-œillères !



A.R.M.A.D.A
Agir pour les Réparations Maintenant pour les Africains et Descendants d’Africains assoc.armada@yahoo.fr

3 poids 3 mesures : Raedeker, Guigue, Badjeck

1. Le divorce entre les élites et le peuple L’affaire Bruno Guigue vient de nous le rappeler : un honnête fonctionnaire modéré dit tout haut sur Israël ce que pensent 90% des Français : au placard, et que ça saute ! Il y a un an, l’affaire Raedecker avait déjà montré les réflexes du Parti Unifié des Elites (PUE) : le gouvernement donne une protection policière aux fonctionnaires qui ont le « bon goût » de dire du mal de l’islam, et les « merdias » leur sont acquis, ils renchérissent.
La règle du jeu reste donc la même, mais le divorce entre le peuple et les élites s’approfondit de jour en jour …

2. L’école au service des esclavagistes
Les lycéens se battent pour que l’enseignement secondaire reste l’école de tous, avec la transmission d’une réelle culture générale pour tous. Au même moment, d’autres sur France Inter expliquent qu’il ne faut pas gâcher l’argent des contribuables pour donner une formation générale à des gens qui vont passer toute leur vie à remplir des distributeurs de boisson. Ils avouent là leur vision de la société : d’un côté les robots qu’on fera tout pour rendre idiots, de l’autre les gens qui « méritent » une bonne éducation. Pas un organisme soi-disant antiraciste de « défense des droits de l’homme » ne proteste contre cette émission scandaleuse…C’est normal: on peut parier sans aucun risque d’erreur, avec statistiques raciales ou sans elles, que les gens qui feront les métiers les plus déshumanisants seront aussi des gens plutôt sombres de peau : on ne les tolère que pour faire les pires boulots et financer les retraites des autres sans broncher….

3. Thierry Badjeck dénonce une discrimination bénéficiant de la complicité de la Halde et de Canal + Thierry Badjeck gagne des procès importants contre la discrimination à l’emploi. Il ne reçoit le soutien ni des associations antiracistes, ni des syndicats, ni des politiciens dits de gauche, ni des associations censées représenter les noirs, ni des associations censées représenter les « indigènes » ex-colonisés. Les « merdias » cachent sa victoire comme s’ils s’étaient concertés ! Et Canal + déroule le tapis rouge pour le président de La Halde, qui s’est démasqué à cette occasion et une fois de plus comme le chien de garde des élites qui organisent l’israélisation de la France sur trois plans à la fois :

- dépénalisation des délits financiers
- encouragement à l’apartheid de fait par le démantèlement des lois sociales et la discrimination par l’argent dans l’accès à la justice
- investissement militaire néocolonial tous azimuts, et utilisation de la police pour mater le tiers- monde globalisé dans chaque banlieue

Par leur combat à la base, sur leur lieu de travail, là où le patronat organise l’évacuation de la résistance par la menace de licenciements et/ou de sanctions, Thierry Badjeck et les 4 d’ADP donnent l’exemple (voir :
www.dailymotion.com/video/x2c4jx_les-4-contre-adp20607 et www.alterinfo.net/Racisme-4-Contre-ADP-et-un-Collectif-CGT_a10495.html

4. Joss Rovélas attaque La Poste au Tribunal Administratif pour discrimination Après avoir gagné un premier procès en 2006 contre son employeur qui espérait se débarrasser de lui avec une fausse accusation d’antisémitisme, un Guadeloupéen employé à la Poste dénonce à nouveau un complot patronal pour bafouer la justice et l’égalité des citoyens devant la loi. Une fois de plus, ses adversaires espèrent que les coûts de la justice et la négrophobie qui sévit à droite comme à gauche, vont le décourager d’aller jusqu’au bout…

5. L’antisionisme des sourds qui ne veulent rien entendre Peut-on plaindre les Palestiniens et ne pas voir la souffrance de ses voisins traités systématiquement comme des nuisibles ? L’antisionisme le plus généreux et le plus vigoureux est pourtant celui des associations martiniquaises et guadeloupéennes. Où sont les antisionistes parisiens qui le reconnaissent ?
Les élites aux ordres ne se trompent pas, elles savent où est le danger pour elles : dans la base qui ose dénoncer devant les tribunaux leur forfaiture, au cas par cas. Le silence complice des « merdias » comme des « dissidents » écoutés dans les médias alternatifs est un signe de leur désorientation volontaire et solidaire : ils partagent le plus complet mépris de la résistance noire !

6. Sé lè ou mété difé an boukan ou ka tann langaj a kriket * Un groupe humain, en France comme aux Etats-Unis, semble attirer sur lui une féroce injustice : les Africains et descendants d’Africains. En France comme aux Etats-Unis, ce groupe humain est justement celui qui départage et qui démasque les usurpateurs que sont les escrocs à l’antiracisme de façade. La peur des immigrants noirs rend sourds, aveugles et paralytiques les ténors de l’antisionisme en France : et voilà pourquoi les antisionistes ne font plus peur à personne…

La communauté noire mondiale a tendu la main aux Palestiniens et au monde arabe progressiste à Durban en 2001 lors de la Conférence Mondiale contre le Racisme. Durant cette conférence exceptionnelle elle a conduit une action salvatrice pour le peuple palestinien. Elle n’était nullement obligée de le faire au moment où elle essayait de faire reconnaître laborieusement et contre tous comme crime contre l’humanité le Méga-Crime perpétré contre l’Afrique et les Africains durant 5 siècles, par l’Occident, et par les 3 religions du livre coalisées. Les adversaires visibles les plus acharnés de Durban I étaient Israël, les USA et la France dirigée par le Premier Ministre Lionel Jospin… La suite est connue, puisque
3 jours après la fin de la conférence les attentats du 11 septembre 2001 tombaient à point nommé pour étouffer cette conférence contre le racisme réel subi par les _ de l’humanité.

Nous préparons avec l’Afrique et les Africains Durban II. L’humanité ne remportera de victoire que si ceux qui se veulent l’élite morale savent écouter et respecter la base africaine globalisée de l’humanité.

Non au colonialisme interne !
Non à la tartufferie négrophobe !
Soutenons la résistance
contre le 3 poids 3 mesures !

assoc.armada@yahoo.fr

Paris le 30 mars 2008

* «Quand on va trop loin des ripostes sévères sont à redouter»

Lundi 31 Mars 2008

Written by eldib

April 1, 2008 at 11:12 am

World War #III

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World War #III
 

By: ILYANA_ROZUMOVA

nuclear_holocaust.jpg

(Last kick of a dying horse)

I am walking. I was walking all day. Looking around, not believing my own eyes.

People are laying everywhere. Women man and children. Sleeping. Nobody is moving. I feel that I am in enchanted kingdom. Nobody is building shelters. Nobody is stocking up with canned food. I want to cry out, to wake everybody up. But the times are different now. Nobody anymore believes boy who is crying “wolf”. What is the chance they would believe a girl.

I still keep on walking, then I see theatre and I walk in. People there are sleeping too.

The stagehands have just finished their work. Actors are prepared. They are only touching up their make up, and combing their hair. The curtain is now opening for the final act.

I am trying to peek thru the gap.

Then I am starting to doubt myself. Maybe I am the one who is sleeping and dreaming.
Still, I am not giving up, so I am walking ahead to have a better view.
I am curious!
Then I look down. In front of my feet there is the script of the play.
I pick it up and I am starting to read it.

Do you want to read it with me?

The WW3 has now become not anymore of an “if” but more like only a “when”. And even “when” can now be determined with reasonable accuracy. I have to only introduce a few “why……?

I have noticed that most of you “folks” do not like voluminous introduction, so I will go
straight to the points, which will demand of course explanation.

Here they are!

1.Why shortly after Iranian revolution Iraq switched sides from being the friend of
Soviet bloc to USA. On whose initiative it happened Iraq, or US?

2.Why Iraq had no claim on Iran’s territory up to that moment, and why claim came up?
Why no negotiations but immediately go to war?

3.Why there was daily contact of Iraqi government with US embassy during war?

4.Why after prolonged war, after no visible results, Iraq went on to occupy Kuwait?
Was Kuwait actually promised gift from US for a job done?
Was there an argument that job was really not done right?

5.Why in US media in a week before Iraq invading Kuwait, there was justification
of the Iraqi action, in a sense that it was always Iraqi territory, and Iraq allowed
Bedouins to settle there, and British made mistake drawing the borders for independent
Kuwait.

6.Why US needed world opinion uproar, and $250Bl from Germany, Japanese, and
Saudis to liberate Kuwait? Was this liberation of Kuwait actually act of treachery
on a friend?

7.Why after end of first “Gulf war” there was great hullabaloo about dreaded elite
Republican guards “ with thousands of tanks, who escaped?
Was it already preparation of excuse for second (this time properly planed) invasion?

8.Did 9/11 made this excuse redundant?

9.Why after only one day after 9/11 we had all the information about the terrorist?

10.Why there is a claim that most of them were from Saudi Arabia?
Is it really true or only preparation for next excuse?
Oops! We have invaded a wrong country, now we have to invade the right one?

11.Why there was necessity to parade long time dead Ben Laden and keep scaring
Everybody? (Did they get the idea from movie “Weekend at Bernie’s”?)

12.Why there was necessity to invade Iraq, at this time when Sadam was now
like wet dog with tail between his legs?
Why to build a permanent bases and largest US embassy in the word? Is this embassy?
Really only for purpose of serving only US and Iraqi affairs?

13. Where is the 2.1 billion dollars weekly revenue from Iraqi oil going?
To Iraqi people, or it is going straight to US banks?

14.Why the US army after 5 years of occupation is not showing any signs of leaving?

15.Why Mc Cain said “Al-Queda is coming from Iran? (Than Lieberman needed to
Correct him?)
Why he also said “We will stay in Iraq 100 years? (Liberman was not there to
Correct him: No! No! No! We will stay there only until we suck out the last drop of
oil from their land.)

16.Why republicans are choosing for their candidates, these people with advanced
stage of Alzheimer disease? (Regan could not recognize even his own wife.)

17.Why would be other nations interested in this “beautiful shiny best system called
Democracy” if it take 100 years to install?

12.Why after invasion of Iraq, Russians and Chinese conducted joint military exercises?

13. Why were these colored revolutions on the southern border of Russia?
Was it only to keep CIA busy or create buffer zones?

14.Why was there invasion of Afghanistan? Was it really because of Al-Queda?
Or to officially involve NATO and create the second buffer zone and this time defense
line to stop (mountainous terren) coming Russian and Chinese armies?

15. Why is there this hysteria about nonexistent Iran’s nuclear weapons, when there is
no proof that they ever produced an ounce of weapons grade uranium?

16. Why is so urgent to create in Poland missile shield for NATO to protect them from
nonexistent Iranian NUCLEAR TIPPED missiles?

17. Even If Iran would be capable of nuking Western Europe why would they do it?

18. If not Iran, than, why Russia would want to nuke Western Europe now when they
have mutualy beneficial economic relations?

19.Why suddenly is necessary to build another missile shield in Turkey?

20.A few months ago Bush visited Middle East Sheikdoms (not very much publicized)
Was it a courtesy visit? Or was it a visit to let them know that US economy will be
going now thru some tough time, and to tell them that US economy is “resilient” and
they do not have to worry about their investments?

21. Why Rice and Gates visited Russia with no clear publicized purpose, and returned
with very somber faces?

Why? Why? Why? Why?

I was getting headaches trying to figure them out one by one.

I couldn’t, so they have remained in the back of my mind for a long time!
Then it dawned on me!
There is no answer for each question.
There is one answer for all of them!!!!!!!!!
The eternal truth!

“IT’S THE ECONOMY STUPID”

The demise of US economy was already concluded by academics with whose knowledge I cannot compete, and was described with eloquence that I cannot even dream of achieving.

So for me remains only with utmost humility to add an only a few footnotes.

Some optimistic economist find advantage in everything. So what if economy collapses, so what if dollar folds two or maybe three times, so what if stock market will nosedive.

A few traders will jump out the windows; also everything will be in ashes. But then from ashes, US economy will rise as Phoenix and will assume again its rightful place in the word.

It will be good for US economy. The US goods will be cheaper oversees employment will increase and economy will balance out itself.

In my opinion it is actually truth in the long run. The problem now is in the short run.
The nosedive of the stock market will hit the investors such way, that the will get probably 10 cent on the dollar, but who cares about them anyway, that is not a problem.

But the serious problem is with SWF.

Te Arab sheiks who were up to now busy with overwhelming problems, like for example staffing theirs harems, they will now start to pay attention to their funds.

If they find out that they were throwing their money for 35 years in the bottomless pit called “US economy” and now they are not retrieving very much, they will in the words of queen Victoria “not be very pleased.”

In their eyes the US credit rating will fall overnight from one hundred to zero.
They will figure out that it is actually better to leave their oil in the ground than to give it away for free.

Lack of Arab oil will not hurt US economy.
It will bring life in the US, as we know it to a standstill.

And here we are:
US government will have only one option on the table:
To invade all Arab peninsula!

Now Saudi royal family and all sheiks will find out themselves how it feels, (like Sadam must have felt) to change from best pal to enemy #1.

From here on the events will develop in logical interlocking chain.
By act of invading Saudi Arabia together with all the sheikdoms around USA will push Russians and Chinese in the corner. Both of them will realize (they are not stupid) that if they do not act, they will be on their knees until the judgment day.
So they will have now two options on the table fight or to bow their head to “the lord of the word”. I am inclined to think that they will fight.

They will be coming, you can bet your ass on it.
Chinese from the east, and Russians from the north.

The buffer zones in the color republics and the defense line in Afghanistan will not even slow them down.
Even if the Chinese would not be coming, the Russian forces themselves will be able to crush US forces in Arabia. Although Russians left 40 000 tanks in Germany thanks to the traitor Gorbachev it does not matter.

They still certainly have their U.Ns. (Sorry I cannot tell you what it is.) But in comparison to them 40 000 old tanks is like spit.
So they will be coming. And US forces will be finding out how the Russians are waging war.
I definitely would not wont to be in US soldier skin. I have seen Russians waging war.

Although every word below is truth it is not very relevant, so if you are impatient reader as you can just jump over it.

I have seen Russians wage war.

There was no great military tactic. No brilliant maneuvering. They were just coming,
The endless columns of horse drown carriages with supplies. We knew that they were coming and we were waiting for them with big god sharpened knives, waiting for our moment. Than it happened. The column stopped and we were looking for the gap in cavalcade. We saw it and were running there.
Already four Russian soldiers were unhooking one of the horses, pushing him of the rod and shooting him. Our moment came. We descended on the corpse as crows, pushing each other to get to position above legs and carving out two big slices of horsemeat.
And then running home. Next day one of the officers waved to us and when we came he lifted the cover of the carriage and he gave to each of us two sausages.
I never forged that officers face sad and the same time the sympathetic smile on it,
But also proud that he could help us. He is of course long dead now, but his face lives in my memory.

And then the cavalcade stopped. All sleepy soldiers become alive unhooking the horses pulling canons aligning them, unloading the munitions stocking them besides cannons. Then there were these kids like we were. In uniforms with binoculars holding the telephones and unwinding the wires, and claiming on the tallest trees.

Then all activities stopped and there was standing the commander and he jerked his hand, as he would be splashing the toilet.ogony! he shouted. The explosions were so noisy that we had to run back and watch from there.

On the horizon there was this rising smoke and dust. We did not see much movement only few German trucks and a few running soldiers. Than we did not see anything.

On the third day they left, not much signs of the war remained, only scattered concrete balls (we called them Hitler’s eggs) we looked inside them, and in each one of them was German solder with blood soaked uniform lying there holding in his hand crimpled picture of a girl. Some of them had picture of their families in their hand.

(I bet you did not know that Germans had many times more “kamikaze” fighters than Japanese.)

We jumped in holding our noses, thru out machine gun rifle and the attack knife and whatever ammunition we found.
We played soldiers for a few weeks but then accident happened. (One of us got shot right between the eyes. We newer find out who was the shooter.) Than police came and we had to show where we were hiding our guns.)

There is no doubt in my mind that combine Russian and Chinese forces without any additional help will squash in relatively short time anything what US and NATO forces will place on Arabian peninsula.

Than of course next step is inevitably nuclear exchange. Even here US forces will have no advantage, because of the location. All Asian states are actually on the same ship, and radioactive fall-aut will affect all of them. So even Pakistan and India will join Russians and Chinese targeting US.

Russians will of course first level New York and that will be like killing two birds with one stone. Because they will get also Mr. general secretary Gorbachev, for the treason committed on Russian people.

Well, that is the way I see it.

On the other hand -I do not know!

Maybe all this is only fruit of my sick overheated mind.
But then maybe not!

Although this time I will not be calling on you to be judge.

The events, which will follow, will be the ultimate judge.

(And now you know)

P.s.

Mc Cain’s speech last Wednesday March 26, 2008 (on US foreign relations) was already de facto declaration of war on Russia, all Moslem world, and on any country (like Venezuela) which will not willingly submit its natural resources to a “New World Order”. Curiously he embraced all other Asian countries, including China as friendly democracies. Of course it is not McCain’s view, moron like Mc Cain has no views, he was just reading the teleprompter. It is the view of some American “think tank” like American enterprise institute” or others. And this view is the “bible” will be implemented, and doesn’t really matter who will eventually be the next president of US.

By Ilyana Rozumova

Une nouvelle victime de la campagne de haine contre les musulmans au Danemark

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Une nouvelle victime de la campagne de haine contre les musulmans au Danemark

  

 turc.jpg

Les campagnes de haine et de diabolisation des musulmans au Danemark et à travers l’Europe, n’ont que cet objectif, semer la zizanie, détourner les regards des vrais problèmes et créer de faux ennemis qui se détruisent mutuellement ! Copenhague : Un jeune turc tué dans un possible attentat raciste 

 ÖZgür Dennis Uzun, un jeune turc de 16 ans livreur de journaux, a été brutalement attaqué dans Amager à Copenhague ce mercredi passé par trois garçons danois, âgés de 15, 17 et 18 ans. Ces derniers dans une voiture se sont approchés d’Uzun, qui roulait sur un vélo. Ils l’ont alors frappé avec une batte de base-ball, provoquant sa perte de connaissance et puis sa mort le lendemain suite à ses blessures.

L’attaque aurait peut-être été motivée par des raisons racistes, même si le mobile est encore inconnu. Un cousin de la victime qui se trouvait avec lui en même temps, dit que les gens dans la voiture leur ont crié « qu’est-ce que vous regardez, vous Paki (un terme insultant désignant notamment les Pakistanais vivant en Grande Bretagne, ndt) cochons. » Ensuite, ils ont sauté par la fenêtre et ont attaqué Uzun. Ali, le père d’Uzun, est certain que le meurtre était raciste. Sinon, pourquoi auraient-ils des armes dans leur voiture ?, demande-t-il. Il dit que les trois dans la voiture sont passés à plusieurs reprises devant son fils et son ami.

Ils ont baissé les fenêtres et leur ont lancé des insultes comme « singes noirs », mais son fils n’a pas réagi. La mère de deux des suspects (15 et 17) a demandé pardon et a dit qu’elle ne pensait pas que c’était une attaque raciste. Elle a critiqué les autorités pour ne pas intervenir jusqu’à maintenant. Son fils âgé de 15 ans n’est pas allé à l’école pendant une demi année et a échoué son passage dans les différentes institutions. Son frère de 17 ans a aussi abandonné cette année. Les trois, qui sont connus de la police, nie les soupçons contre eux. Le garçon de 15 ans est considéré comme le chef, et il a déjà eu des démêlés avec la police depuis qu’il avait dix ans.

Toutefois, il ne pouvait pas être puni jusqu’à présent en raison de son jeune âge (dans un autre pays démocratique au Moyen Orient, l’âge des enfants n’est pas un motif valable pour qu’ils croupissent en prisons, voire de payer de leur vie d’avoir jeté un caillou, ndt). 

Le cas a été signalé par la presse en Turquie. Le journal Sabah, a indiqué que les 60000 résidents turcs qui vivent au Danemark, étaient choqués par le meurtre du jeune garçon dans une attaque raciste.Le journal Milliyet l’a également décrit comme une attaque à motivation raciste.

Zaman (http://www.todayszaman.com/tz-web/detaylar.do?load=detay&link=137019) a écrit sur un horrible attentat contre un Turc.

On apporte aussi que le premier ministre turc, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, a appelé la famille du jeune homme http://islamineurope.blogspot.com/2008/03/copenhagen-turkish-boy-killed-in.html

 


Link

 

Written by eldib

March 25, 2008 at 8:46 am

Éradiquer l’Islam, un programme pour McCain

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Éradiquer l’Islam, un programme pour McCain

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Rod Parsley, un évangéliste prêchant à la télévision (photo de droite), conseiller spirituel de McCain et son allié clef dans l’Ohio, a appelé à l’éradication de l’islam en tant que « fausse religion. »

​​​​Le sénateur John McCain a acclamé Parsley, tandis que le pasteur de la géniale église de l’Ohio appelait les chrétiens à « guerroyer » contre l’Islam pour le détruire.

​​​​Le 26 février, McCain apparaissait à un rassemblement de sa campagne à Cincinnati en compagnie de Rod Parsley, un pasteur de la World Harvest Church (Église des moissons mondiales) de Colombus. Au cours de la manifestation, McCain a qualifié de « guide spirituel » le ministre évangélique.

​​​​Parsley, meneur d’une congrégation forte de 12.000 membres, a pondu plusieurs livres décrivant ses vues fondamentalistes religieuses.

​​​​Dans le chapitre Islam: The Deception d’Allah de son livre The 2005 Silent No More, Parsley informe d’une « guerre entre l’islam et la civilisation chrétienne. »

​​​​Il traite aussi l’Islam de « religion de l’anté-Christ, » en exhortant les États-Unis à lancer une nouvelle croisade pour l’éradiquer.

​​​​Dans le passé, l’église de Parsley a été accusé de participer à des activités partisanes pro-républicaines en violation à son statut d’exemption fiscale.

​​​​Les relations entre McCain et Persil sont sensible politiquement. En 2004, l’église de Parsley a été crédité de rabattage aux urnes pour George W. Bush des électeurs chrétiens fondamentalistes.

Original : http://www.presstv.com/detail.aspx?id=47232

Traduction libre de Pétrus Lombard pour Alter Info

Une phrase pour résumer : McCain est soutenu par quelqu’un qu’il considère comme un guide spirituel, un individu présentant bien et beau parleur, qui dispense, au grès de ses aigreurs d’estomac et des causes politicardes, la version des évangiles de sa secte — la fameuse église des moissons mondiales, forte de 12.000 gugusses diabétiques –, aux mangeurs devant leur plateau-télé, de manière à les zombifier pour les rendre haineux contre l’Islam et en faire les faucheurs de la fin des temps (des États-Unis), afin sans doute de mettre en application le commandement phare de son évangile :

« Aimez-vous les uns et trucidez les autres au bonheur du festoiement de Moloch Jéhovah. »

 

 

Written by eldib

March 18, 2008 at 9:49 am

Posted in USA

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