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Today's News From Around The World Monday 27 March 2006

 

US kafirs helicopter shot down my Mujahideen in Afghanistan In Asadkhel area of Spin Ghar district of Nangarhar province, on Monday. Mujahideen shot down a US kafirs helicopter with a air to ground rocket. The attack was carried out as the helicopter was coming from Kabul to Nangarhar province and was conducting an aerial patrol when it was hit with a rocket fired by a mujahid. US kafir soldiers immediately sealed off the area from reporters, how many killed or wounded could not be confirmed at this time.

 

Mujahideen kill 3 British kafir soldiers and wounded one in Helmand On Hirat-Kandahar highway, in Lashkargah district of Helmand province at 11 am local time on Monday, Mujahideen blew up a British kafir military vehicle with a remote control bomb, killing three British kafir soldiers and wounded one, destroyed the military vehicle, about 4,000 Britain kafir soldiers have come to die in Afghanistan at the hands of Mujahideen.

 

40 US kafirs and Iraq munafiqs soldiers killed and 30 wounded in a martyrdom operation in Mosul military base At least 40 US kafir and Iraq munafiq army soldiers were killed and 30 wounded in a bomb blast inside a joint US kafirs and Iraq army munafiqs base in Mosul on Monday. A mujahid carried out a martyrdom operation by entering the facility and detonated his belt with explosives in the midst of candidates waiting at an Iraq munafiq army recruitment centre in northwest Iraq.

 

Iraq Shia kafir minister says U.S., Iraqi troops killed 37 Abd al-Karim al-Enzi, Iraq’s minister of state for national security and a Shia kafir political ally of Prime Minister Ibrahim al-Jaafari, Monday accused U.S. and Iraqi munafiq troops of killing 37 unarmed people in an attack on a mosque complex a day earlier. "At evening prayers, American kafir soldiers accompanied by Iraqi troops raided the Mustafa mosque and killed 37 people," he said. "They were all unarmed. Nobody fired a single shot at the troops. They went in, tied up the people and shot them all. They did not leave any wounded behind," he told reporters.

 

Pakistan munafiq government agents blow up a remote control Land mine injuring six school children in Pakistani tribal region to start a new propaganda against the Mujahideen Pakistan government munafiq agents planted remote control land mine and then detonated targeting a school bus carrying 70 children on a road in Shakai valley in South Waziristan tribal area on Monday, injuring six children, two of them seriously, witnesses said. The injured children, aged between and 5 to 12, were taken to three hospitals in Wana, the main town in South Waziristan, south of Shakai.

 

Mujahideen launch rockets on the Pakistan munafiq army post in Hamrang On Monday, in a mountainous area northwest of Shakai, triggered a half-hour exchange of fire at dawn between Pakistan munafiq troops and Mujahideen, there were no reported injuries.

 

Worshipers of Idols Indian army troops martyr 5 more Muslim Kashmiri youths In occupied Kashmir, the Indian troops, in their fresh acts of state-terrorism, martyred five more Kashmiri youth, four of them at two places in Kupwara district and one at Bagwa in Doda.

 

Kashmiris in Indian state of Goa being maltreated Like other states of India, Goa is also not friendly to Kashmiris, who are here to earn their livelihoods, after migrating from occupied Kashmir in the wake of Indian troops heightened state-terrorism in the held territory.

 

At least nine dead, more than 20 injured in Philippine bomb blast At least nine people were killed and more than 20 seriously wounded Monday in a bomb blast in the restive southern island of Jolo, witnesses said. The bomb was planted on the ground floor of a two-storey building along a busy street in the centre of Jolo town.

 

North Korea’s top leader Kim Jong spurns US North Korea’s top leader Kim Jong has spoken of his Stalinist nation’s "burning hatred" towards the United States amid ongoing US-South Korean war games. Kim’s comments were made during his inspection of an army unit, the official Korean Central News Agency said late on Saturday. "Our army and people are turning out as one in the sacred anti-US struggle with burning hatred for the US imperialist aggressors and the unshakable resolution to take revenge upon them," Kim was quoted as saying. "No force on earth can match the single-mindedly united forces in the DPRK (North Korea) which no weapon can ever frighten or destroy."

 

Russia calls US charge of helping Iraq 'politically-motivated' Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov on Monday dismissed as "politically motivated" reports in the United States suggesting that Moscow provided intelligence to Saddam Hussein at the start of the 2003 invasion of Iraq.

 

Ahmadinejad vows to pursue nuclear programme despite pressure Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad on Monday vowed again to push ahead with his country's nuclear programme despite international warnings that it should halt sensitive atomic activities, the Iranian state news agency IRNA reported. "Today the Iranian nation is standing firm against the world's bullies and oppressors, and the people will not back down even one step from its right in seeking nuclear technology," Ahmadinejad told crowds in the city of Dehdasht, in Kohgiluyeh-Boyerahmad province. "With the people's support, the government will do its best to seek the nuclear technology," he added.

 

Hizbullah fighters The United Nations said on Sunday it did not expect Lebanon to disarm Hibzullah guerrillas by force but hoped they would join the Lebanese army. "We don’t believe that it is indeed possible to go down south or into the Bekaa Valley and take away the weapons of Hizbullah," UN envoy Terje Roed-Larsen told a news conference. "Our goal is to integrate Hizbullah into the Lebanese army." Roed-Larsen will present a report in April on progress in the implementation of Security Council resolution 1559, which demands foreign troops leave Lebanon and militias there disarm.

 

Russian President Vladimir Putin plagiarized US textbook Russian President Vladimir Putin plagiarized sections of an American management textbook in writing an economics dissertation a decade ago, The Washington Times newspaper reported. Putin, who wrote a 218-page paper on planning in the natural resources sector, reportedly lifted numerous passages directly from a management text published by two University of Pittsburgh academics, the Times said late on Saturday, citing research by two scholars at the respected Brookings Institution think tank in Washington. Putin, who obtained a doctorate degree in economics in 1997 from the St. Petersburg Mining Institute wrote his thesis on "The Strategic Planning of Regional Resources Under the Formation of Market Relations." After reviewing the document, Brookings researchers Clifford Gaddy and Igor Danchenko concluded that large sections of Putin’s dissertation were copied almost word-for-word from the 1978 management text "Strategic Planning and Policy," by University of Pittsburgh professors William King and David Cleland.

 

PSL warns- Zionist storming of Aqsa would entail disastrous consequences

 

Palestinian mujahid martyred, two others wounded in Israeli shelling

 

Parliament delays Hamas government vote until Tuesday The Palestinian parliament has delayed until Tuesday a confidence vote in the incoming Hamas government because of a large number of lawmakers wishing to comment.

 

Iraqi's Shia kafir flay US over mosque raid Iraq's dominant Shia kafirs political bloc accused the United States Monday of trying to provoke a civil war after a US kafirs backed raid in Baghdad left at least 16 Shia kafirs dead. The United Iraqi Alliance (UIA), which holds the largest number of seats in the parliament, issued a statement vehemently condemning Sunday night's raid led by Iraqi special forces in northeast Baghdad. "US kafirs forces and Iraqi munafiq special forces committed a heinous crime by attacking the Mustafa mosque in the neighborhood of Ur," Jawad Maliki, the number two of Prime Minister Ibrahim Jaafari's Dawa Party, said reading from the statement.

"It is a serious crime with grave political and security implications which aims to provoke civil war in the country," Maliki said. The Shia kafirs maintain the night raid targeted peaceful worshippers in a mosque while the US kafir military said the operation targeted an insurgent cell and denied any mosque was breached. "Killing a large number of followers of the Shia kafirs after having bound and tortured them is unjustifiable. It is an attack on the dignity of the Iraqis and destroys the credibility of slogans of liberty and democratic and pluralism brandished by the US kafirs administration," the statement read.

The Shia kafirs demanded the government immediately open an investigation into the raid and to take "measures to end this manipulation of the political process." They also demanded that Iraq's security services take responsibility for all of the country's security. "The government must also find out the truth about these special units in the Iraqi army that function outside the control of the government and perpetrate massacres with support from the US army," the statement added. "The existence of these forces, if it is confirmed, is another element contributing to civil war." 

Iraq's US-trained special forces are controlled by the defense ministry, which is run by a Sunni Arab. The country's Shia kafirs majority have been accused by Iraq's Sunni Muslims minority of sending out hit squads against their community, which ruled Iraq until Saddam Hussein's fall in April 2003. The statement also criticized comments by US kafirs ambassador Zalmay Khalilzad which it said looked to "expose Iraq, it's people, and the democratic process to serious danger." ministry.

 

Haniya lays out Palestinian government programme Incoming Palestinian prime minister Ismail Haniya on Monday laid out his Hamas-led government's programme in a wide-ranging speech to lawmakers. Following are the main points from the speech, made ahead of a vote of confidence in the new government that is now scheduled to take place on Tuesday.

ON PEACE PROCESS Haniya made clear that he welcomed international involvement in attempts to revive the moribund peace process, citing the sponsors of the troubled roadmap peace plan which has been previously rejected by the Islamists.

"Our government will be prepared to hold dialogue with the international quartet (Russia, United States, United Nations and European Union) about the ways to end the conflict and install calm in the region." "Our government will spare no effort to reach a just peace in the region, putting an end to the occupation and restoring out rights." "We have never been supporters of war, terrorism or bloodletting, instead it is the Israeli occupation that waged all forms of terrorism against our people in chasing them out of their homeland, besieging it and starving it."

ON PREVIOUS AGREEMENTS Palestinian Authority president Mahmud Abbas, who needs to give the final seal of approval to the government, has demanded that Hamas respects past agreements reached with Israel such as the 1993 Oslo autonomy accords. Haniya said that Hamas would adopt "an extremely responsible attitude" which would "serve the best interests of the Palestinian people."

ON UNITED STATES The United States regards Hamas as a terrorist organisation and its victory in the elections has already prompted Washington to ask the Palestinian Authority to repay a multi-million dollar loan.
"We believe it is necessary for the United States to revise its policy with regard to the Palestinian people and to prove fair and responsible, and stop supporting the occupation and its policy of double standards so that peace, stability and prosperty can be established in the region," said Haniya.

ON ISRAEL Haniya rejected the unilateral separation plan drawn up by Israeli acting premier Ehud Olmert, centred around an attempt to fix the Jewish state's final borders saying it would "turn our country into isolated cantons." A Hamas government would continue to assert "the right of our people to defend themselves in the face of the occupation, the elimination of the settlements, the apartheid wall (Israel's West Bank barrier) and the right to continue the struggle for the creation of an independent Palestinian state with Jerusalem as its capital."

ON FOREIGN AID The European Union and United States have both threatened to slash funding unless Hamas commits itself to non-violence and recognises Israel's right to exist. "The Palestinian people should not be punished for exercising their right to choose their leaders in free and democratic elections," said Haniya. "Those who think that economic pressure is going to make our government collapse or undermine the determination of our people are very much mistaken."
"The government will seek to speak with all countries, including those of the European Union, to ensure the continuation of aid to our people and to the (Palestinian) Authority." All aid received would be spent "in complete transparency".

 

One killed, 15 wounded as explosions rock Ethiopian capital One person was killed and 15 injured, four of them seriously, on Monday when four explosions rocked the Ethiopian capital, police said. The first blast, whose origin is still undetermined, occurred about one km south of Addis Abeba's central Meskel Square, police spokesman Demsach Hailu told media. "An explosion occurred in a minibus at around 9:00 am local time. One person died," he told media. Demsach said a second explosion had rocked a government-owned slaughterhouse in the capital but there had been no casualties or damage. A third blast damaged a restaurant in the Mexico area, west of Addis Ababa, where police said 13 people had been injured. Police said a fourth explosion had occurred in the capital's northeastern Teklehaimanot district but had not caused any injuries.

 

March 26 2006

 

Taliban reject present education system of Afghanistan Taliban leadership rejected the present curricula in Afghanistan’s educational institutions and said the system was evolved under the influence of invading foreign forces. The statement was issued on Friday (24-03-2006) and read by Taliban spokesman, Dr. Muhammad Hanif, to Afghan Islamic Press on phone. It said that present curriculum being taught in school and colleges of Afghanistan has been prepared under the political influence of foreign imperialist forces. The education system has turned a tool that promote the political activities of puppet government and the foreign invading forces, the statement said, adding that the teachers of primary and middle schools have been given the task to resent people struggling for  independence instead of education.

 

Mujahideen destroy a truck and abducted the driver in Helmand Mujahideen burnt a truck of a foreign road construction company in the Greshk district of the southern Helmand province and kidnapped the driver, on Sunday.  The car was burnt when it was on its way from Kandahar to the Sangin district of Helmand. It was set on fire near Nawroz village of the district. The identity of the abducted driver is not known at this time.

 

Afghan convert may be freed after Karzai’s intervention There is a "strong possibility" an Afghan man facing execution for converting to Christianity will be freed on Sunday after intervention by President Hamid Karzai, a senior government official said. Karzai held a raft of meetings on Saturday to try to resolve the crisis that developed after the Supreme Court said the convert should be put to death according to Islamic Sharia law, prompting an outcry in the West.

 

Who cares what the West thinks or any one else, what has the West created or any one else that a free human should be concern about their opinions, are they giver of life or take of it? Is it them who makes rain fall? Or bring the night and day? Or is it them who have created the universe and everything in it? Why then should a free human be concern about any ones opinion when following the path of Allaah swt, specially when Allaah swt has already sent a decree on this issue, yet they follow their caprice. What kind of humans would obey humans rather then Almighty Allaah swt, the Creator of everything which has ever existed and will ever exists, such people condition is of slaves, who are seeking anything from any one else other then Allaah swt, these people need help and may Allaah swt give them guidance, may He emancipate them from the greatest ignorance of all, to not being able to recognize Allaah swt their Creator and the Creator of everything, but those who Allaah swt has already bless with the light of truth, should work hard and should not let anything come between following the commandments of Allaah swt, If the the whole of mankind try to hurt you or try to do good to you, it can not unless Allaah swt wishes.

 

Pope Benedict XVI joined the storm of protest on Saturday by asking Karzai in a letter to pardon 41-year-old Abdul Rahman, the Italian news agency Ansa said, quoting "informed sources." The Supreme Court, meanwhile, insisted it was independent and would not be swayed by the diplomatic furor. The government official said the matter had become a "serious crisis" and Karzai was "very upset". "The president has been meeting different people and organizations to find a peaceful resolution to this crisis," the official said. However, there could be a solution that would see Rahman walk free by Sunday, he said. "There’s a strong possibility," he told reporters. "We can’t separate ourselves from the international community," he added. The Supreme Court judge handling the case, Ansarullah Mawlawizada, insisted on Saturday the court would not be influenced. "We have nothing to do with diplomatic issues," he told AFP. "We’ll do our job independently." The case has angered religious clerics, with leading Mulla Enayatullah Baligh saying in an address in one of the capital’s largest mosques on Friday: "We respect other religions but we will allow no one to interfere in our religion."

 

Death the only sentence for apostate in Islam, says Kandahar ulema chief Chief of Kandahar Uelma (clerics) Council on Sunday said death is the only sentence for an apostate in Islam. In an interview to Afghan Islamic Press, Chief of Kandahar Uelm Council, Maulvi Ghulam Muhammad said, “A person who becomes apostate if male should be awarded death punishment and in case the person is female should be awarded with life imprisonment in Islam.” Islam gives three-day time to an apostate to become Muslim again and if he does not do so, the above Islamic laws will apply on him, the Ulema Council Chief said.

 

About Abdur Rahman, who converted from Islam to Christianity and was jailed in Kabul, Maulvi Ghulam Muhammad said, “In this regard the laws of Islam are clear. He should once again become a Muslim or if it is proved that Abdur Rahman is mentally ill.” He said there is no other way out except these two.

 

He strongly condemned foreign pressure and said, “Government and Supreme Court should not bow to foreign pressure and follow the principles of Islam and if any foreign pressure was accepted then it will means that foreign interference is being carried out in religious affairs which, he said, “will not be tolerated.”

 

About religious freedom he said, “It is false propaganda that Islam does not allow religious freedom. Sikh, Hindu and people of other religions have been living in Afghanistan and they have full freedom of worship but once a person become a Muslim and then change his religion, becomes apostate and his only sentence is death.”

 

If Islamic laws were not fully brought into effect then this country will become a weapon into the hand of enemies which they will always use in the future, he said.

 

About issue of divorce he said, “When a man become apostate his Nikah (Bound) with wife automatically becomes annul.”  He said Abdur Rahman’s wife no more remains in his Nikah. Maulvi Abdur Rahman is a renowned cleric of Kandahar and a few months back Afghan President Hamid Karzai showered praises on him.

 

Afghan court drops case against Christian convert An Afghan court on Sunday dismissed a case against a man who converted from Islam to Christianity because of a lack of evidence and he will be released soon, officials said.

The announcement came as U.S.-backed President Hamid Karzai faced mounting foreign pressure to free Abdul Rahman, a move that risked angering Muslim clerics here who have called for him to be killed. An official closely involved with the case told media that it had been returned to the prosecutors for more investigation, but that in the meantime, Rahman would be released. "The court dismissed today the case against Abdul Rahman for a lack of information and a lot of legal gaps in the case," the official said Sunday, speaking on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak publicly on the matter. "The decision about his release will be taken possibly tomorrow," the official added. "They don't have to keep him in jail while the attorney general is looking into the case." Abdul Wakil Omeri, a spokesman for the Supreme Court, confirmed that the case had been dismissed because of "problems with the prosecutors' evidence." 

 

Abdul Rahman comes from the Panjshir Valley, people of the area are coming down to Kabul to show their dissent against him and demand that the court execute him "Western countries have occupied nations, destroyed their political and social systems and killed thousands of people so that people would conform to their civilization or their pattern of thinking ... While doing so, why did they not bother about 'honoring the universal principle of freedom'?"

 

"Pope Urban II, while standing in a church in 1095, called Islam a satanic religion. He called the followers of Islam wicked and then called that those wicked people should be eliminated. That sermon was the start of the crusade to eliminate Muslims and continued for 200 years in which Muslim territories were attacked and people were massacred. Why was that?

 

US kafir troop drawdown in Iraq "entirely probable:" Rice A "significant" drawdown of US kafir troops in Iraq is "entirely probable" within the next year as Iraqi security forces gain strength, US kafir Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said Sunday. This woman is on something, whatever it is that she is on, does not make her see things as they really are, she is telling the world that the munafiq Iraq government hand picked by the US kafir is gaining strength against the Mujahideen, yet every month since the occupation of Iraq, Iraq Mujahideen operations have gone up. There is no security any where is Iraq, those who are in the government, live under the heavily fortified security barracks, in order for them to travel within the cities of Iraq, they need police and army escorts all this and Rice is telling the world that Iraqi security forces gain strength.

 

Police, religious official report 18 killed Baghdad clash Police and an a top aide to Shia kafir leader Muqtada al-Sadr reported Sunday that 18 people were killed in a clash involving US kafir and Iraqi army munafiq forces at a mosque in eastern Baghdad. Sgt. First Class Keith Robinson, a spokesman for the 4th Infantry Division, which has responsibility for Baghdad, said late Sunday his office had no information on the reported violence. Abdul-Zahra al-Suaidi, head of al-Sadr's office in Baghdad, said U.S. forces and Iraqi army soldiers opened fire at the al-Moustafa Shiite mosque in the Ur neighborhood, killing 18 people in what he called an unprovoked attack. Separately, Iraqi police Lt. Hassan Hmoud said 18 people were killed in the mosque. He said he had no other details.

 

Thirty decapitated bodies found north of Baghdad Thirty decapitated bodies were found Sunday on a highway near the restive Iraqi city of Baquba, northeast of Baghdad, said police. The bodies, which have not been identified, were tossed out on the side of the road near the village of Mullah Eid, about 30 kilometers southwest of the Baquba.

 

CIA Bomb in southeast Iraq kills 13-year-old student in front of school  A 13-year-old Iraqi student was killed after a CIA agents planted roadside bomb exploded in front of a school Sunday in the city of Basra in southeast Iraq. The explosion hit at 7:30 in the morning as children were arriving at school. The school week begins Sunday and runs through Thursday in Iraq, where Friday is the day of prayer for Muslims.

 

U.S. forces arrest government forces, find bunker US kafir troops on Sunday arrested at least 40 Iraqi munafiq Interior Ministry forces who were holding 17 foreigners in a secret bunker complex, political sources said. A media reporter who approached the bunker complex on Sunday was turned away by Shia kafir militiamen. US kafir troops last year found 173 mostly Sunni Muslims prisoners held in a secret Interior Ministry bunker. They showed signs of torture and malnourishment.

 

Worshipers of Idols India army soldiers martyred 3 Muslim youths, soldier killed in shootout In occupied Kashmir, the Indian troops, in their fresh acts of state-terrorism, martyred three more Kashmiri youth.

 

Mothers still wait for their sons disappeared in custody In occupied Kashmir, a large number of elderly Kashmiri women gathered in downtown Srinagar to protest against disappearances in custody of their loved ones during the past several decades. 

 

Troops, tribal militants clash in Pakistan, Tribal militants clash with Pakistani security forces in the troubled province of Balochistan on Sunday, an official said. The exchange of gunfire took place near Loti town, where a natural gas field run by the state-owned Oil and Gas Development Co Ltd., is located. The militants also attacked a natural gas pipeline near Loti, the top administration official in the area, Abdul Samad Lasi, told reporters. He said he didn't have any more details on the attack or if any soldiers were wounded or killed in the gunfire.

 

Palestinian Muslim youth martyred by Israeli kafir forces A Palestinian Muslim youth was martyred by Israeli kafir soldiers fire in the Gaza Strip near the Israeli border overnight, Palestinian security sources said Sunday. Hamed Hamdan Maslah, 16, died in the central Gaza Strip's Deir El Balah area. An Israeli kafir spokesman confirmed that soldiers "opened fire at a suspect who was crawling toward the barrier" which runs along the border. Hamed Hamdan Maslah had no weapons on him, when he was barbarically martyred by Israeli kafir soldiers.

 

Jewish fanatic group calls for storming Aqsa on the eve of Israeli elections

 

Israel kafirs army to cut ties with Palestinians once Hamas sworn in The Israeli kafirs army will sever all ties with the Palestinian Authority, even at the local level, once a Hamas government is sworn in on Wednesday, an officer told media on Sunday.

 

Arab ministers reject Israeli border plan Arab foreign ministers on Sunday rejected Israeli plans to unilaterally demarcate its borders, saying such a move would make the establishment of an independent Palestinian state impossible. Ministers have agreed "to reject partial solutions and unilateral Israeli measures including... the unilateral demarcation of Israel's borders," according to a draft resolution agreed at a preparatory meeting for a two-day Arab summit opening Tuesday. "This fulfills Israel's expansionist greed and renders impossible (all plans) to establish a sovereign and independent Palestinian state," said a copy of the draft seen by a news agency.

 

Hamas seeks 170 million dollars per month from Arabs Hamas has asked Arab countries to donate 170 million dollars per month to the cash-strapped Palestinian Authority in order to counter Western threats to slash aid,  Hamas said Sunday. "The needed monthly spending is 170 million dollars, including 115 million dollars for wages," Hamas' political supremo Khaled Meshaal told a press conference in Kuwait. The amount is three times the 55 million dollars pledged at last year's Arab summit in Algeria and is practically double the 100 million dollars demanded by a Palestinian delegation at a preparatory meeting for Tuesday's Arab summit in Khartoum. "We are confident of the Arab position and God willing the Arab summit will issue a clear resolution to determine the size of the financial aid," he said.  He added that some European countries "gave us signals they will continue supporting projects," in the Palestinian territories.

 

Abbas tells Hamas to act if Palestinians' interests hurt Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas told Hamas he was prepared to act if the incoming Hamas government damaged the interests of the Palestinian people, according to reports. 

He warned prime minister-designate Ismail Haniya that he would "exercise his authority" if the need arose. A Hamas spokesman said it was wrong to assume the party's policies would harm the Palestinians. The Palestinian Legislative Council convenes on Monday for a confidence vote on the Hamas-dominated cabinet. In a letter to Mr Haniya, Mr Abbas said "I will exercise my mandate and authority where and when they are needed to protect the higher interests of the Palestinian people." Mr Abbas has previously called on Hamas to recognise Israel and respect previous commitments made by the Palestinian Authority, which Hamas has so far refused to do.  "Once your government assumes its responsibilities I ask you again to...make the necessary corrections to your programme," the Palestinian leader said in his letter. 

Mr Haniya played down the prospect of a disagreement with Mr Abbas, according to the news agency. "We do not seek to cause a constitutional crisis," he said. Under current legislation, the Palestinian president is empowered by law to fire Mr Haniya if his policies are considered harmful to the national interest. In January, Hamas won a landslide victory in the Palestinian parliamentary elections, winning 76 seats out of 132. On Friday, Mr Abbas had suggested he could hold peace talks with Israel without the need for Hamas to be involved. Israel has vowed not to deal with any Palestinian government that includes Hamas, and has called Mr Abbas irrelevant following Hamas' election victory. 

 

Arabs say UN troop move needs Sudan's approval Arab nations are refusing to endorse any deployment of UN troops in Sudan's troubled Darfur region without the approval of the Khartoum government, according to a draft summit resolution debated Sunday. But the stance, being drawn up before an Arab summit in the Sudanese capital opening Tuesday, nevertheless falls short of Khartoum's demands for full Arab backing for its rejection of any international forces in Darfur.

 

Half a million march against US immigration reform Half a million protesters paralyzed downtown Los Angeles on Saturday, demanding amnesty for undocumented immigrants and rejection of a proposed law that would drastically tighten US immigration rules. "We have got to stop the approval of anti-immigrant reforms, demand a migration reform that is humane and fair, and not racist," said Javier Rodriguez of the March 25 Coalition, which organized the event. The Coalition represents dozens of pro-immigrant groups as well as farmer, labour, religious and student groups. At the height of the rally there were "at least 500,000 people," said Sarah Faden with the Los Angeles Police Department.

 

March 25 2006

 

Mujahideen clash with the enemies of Islam In Sangin district of province Helmand on Saturday morning, Mujahideen attack a check post of munafiq Afghan police, a clash erupted after Mujahideen attacked the check post, US kafir led coalition forces and Afghan National Army soldiers later joined the fighting. The clash erupted this morning and continued till afternoon.

 

Our source informed us that Mujahideen killed a number of US kafir led coalition soldiers and Afghan Nation Army munafiq soldiers and munafiq Afghan policemen in the attack and the ensuing fight but he would not give an exact figure, one was wounded.

 

Latest Update on the morning clash between Mujahideen and the Kafirs and munafiqs in Afghanistan local time 10:50 pm Mujahideen killed four US kafir led coalition kafir soldiers and wounded two, six Afghan National Army munafiq soldiers were killed and five wounded, one military tank and three military jeeps were destroyed, Mujahideen used remote control road bombs and rockets in the attack two Mujahideen were wounded.

 

The US kafir led coalition forces have issued the following press release. BAGRAM AIRFIELD, Afghanistan One U.S. service member was killed in action, and one U.S. service member and one Afghan National Army soldier were wounded as ANA and Coalition forces conducted joint offensive operations in the Sangin District of Helmand Province today. ANA and Coalition ground forces engaged an estimated 20 enemy with small-arms fire. In addition, close-air support aircraft delivered 11 Joint Direct Attack Munitions on enemy positions. Battle-damage assessment is continuing.

 

12 kafirs and munafiqs eliminated, wounded in Chechnya According to France-Press source inside the pro-Moscow puppet administration 5 Russian kafirs were eliminated and 7 wounded by Chechen Mujahideen in latest fighting in Chechnya over the 24-hour period of last Thursday to Friday.
 

Custodial disappearance- India asked to produce culprits  In occupied Kashmir, the so-called State Human Rights Commission (SHRC) has asked India that a Major of Rashtriya Rifles (RR) and two army agents, be produced before the Kupwara Senior Superintendent of Police. The Major and Indian army agents have got an innocent civilian disappeared in custody. 

 

Anti-India protests in Kupwara40 protesters injured in brute force In occupied Kashmir, forceful anti-India protest demonstration was held in Kupwara area. The protest was triggered when Indian troops besieged Shumriyal village in the area and subjected people to torture and harassment. People of the area were not allowed to take a pregnant woman to hospital, who died instantly.

 

Israeli forces storm Qalqilia, arrest two youths Israeli occupation forces (IOF) last night stormed the West Bank city of Qalqilia and provocatively searched houses prompting youths to threw stones and empty bottles at them.

 

Palestinian child wounded in explosion of Israeli army ordnance

 

Al-Manar TV shrugs off US asset freeze A Lebanese television station belonging to the anti-Israeli Hizbullah guerrillas on Friday shrugged off a US freeze on its assets and said it could still beam its programmes to US homes. The US Treasury froze the assets of al-Manar satellite television, al-Nour Radio and their parent company, the Lebanese Media Group, on Thursday, saying they facilitated the activities of Hizbullah, which the US State Department considers a terrorist organisation. The Treasury’s action bans transactions between Americans and groups designated as terrorist in addition to freezing any assets they may have under US jurisdiction. "We consider this an assault on an objective and professional media group.

‘Deeply shocked’ Chirac explains EU summit walkout President Jacques Chirac said on Friday he had stormed out EU summit talks because he was "deeply shocked" to hear the French head of Europe’s employers federation speak English. "I was deeply shocked that a Frenchman would speak at the council table in English," he told journalists, explaining for the first time his abrupt walkout when the summit opened on Thursday. "That’s the reason why the French delegation and myself left-so as not to have to listen to that," he added. "We are not going to found the world of tomorrow on a single language and a single culture," he insisted. Chirac raised eyebrows when, with two senior ministers in tow, he walked out of the room when Ernest-Antoine Seilliere, who leads the UNICE employers group, addressed the assembled EU leaders in English. When Seilliere, head of the UNICE employers federation, started his speech to the bloc’s 25 leaders, Chirac interrupted and asked why he was speaking in English.

Russia denies giving US intelligence to Iraq Russia's Foreign Intelligence Service on Saturday denied that Moscow provided information on U.S. troop movements and plans to Baghdad during the 2003 invasion of Iraq. ``Similar, baseless accusations concerning Russia's intelligence have been made more than once,'' Foreign Intelligence Service spokesman Boris Labusov said, according to a duty officer in his department. ``We don't consider it necessary to comment on such fabrications.'' An unclassified Pentagon report released Friday cited two captured Iraqi documents that say the Russians collected information from sources ``inside the American Central Command'' and that battlefield intelligence was provided to then-Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein through the Russian ambassador in Baghdad.

 

Ayatollah Khamenei Shia kafir leader calls for withdrawal of US kafir and UK kafir troops from Iraq Iran's supreme Shia kafir leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei has slammed presence of US and Britain kafir troops in Iraq, demanding withdrawal of them. While addressing to a public gathering in southern Dehlavieh, he said may Almighty Allah help impoverished Iraqi people and lead the people of Iraq and Iran to way of righteousness. In his address, he terming presence of the US and Britain troops of as oppressive. On this occasion the masses were chanting slogans against use of power. 

 

March 24 2006

 

Israel to pass new racist laws against Non-Jews The kafir Israeli government is seeking to rush a new law through parliament before the forthcoming elections on 28 March, which would empower the General Security Service (GSS) to detain anyone classified as a non-resident of Israel without access to legal counsel for up to 50 days after arrest.

 

Afghanistan Mujahideen Thursday and Friday Mujahideen kill 11 Afghan munafiq soldiers and wounded 10 In Kohistan district of Kapisa province on Friday, Mujahideen blew up a Afghan National Army check post with a remote control bomb, killing eleven Afghan National Army soldiers and wounded ten, destroyed the check post and three military jeeps.

 

Mujahideen blow up a tanker supplying oil to US kafir led coalition forces in Afghanistan On Friday afternoon, a tanker bring oil for US kafir led coalition forces from Pakistan to Afghanistan was blown up by Mujahideen, who had planted a bomb in the truck which was detonated with a remote control in Torkham, two kilometers inside Afghan border. The tanker was destroyed completely, there were no casualties reported.

 

A mujahid disguised as a Afghan policeman in Afghanistan takes out the district police chief on Thursday A mujahid disguised as a policeman fired a burst of bullets from his Kalashnikov on Abdul Manan, the head of police in southern Helmand province's Musa Qala district, at around 4:00 am killing him on the spot.

 

Two other operations carried out by Mujahideen in Helmand province on Thursday First operation in Nad Ali district, Mujahideen attack a US kafir led coalition forces convoy with rockets and machine guns, a small fight started between Mujahideen and the enemies of Islam, in which one mujahid was martyred, two US kafir led coalitions kafir soldiers were killed and one military jeep was destroyed. Second operation in Kajaki district, Mujahideen attack Afghan National Army patrol with rockets and machine guns killing three Afghan National Army munafiq soldiers, one military jeep was also destroyed.

 

Iraq Mujahideen for Thursday and Friday In the western town of Fallujah on Friday, a mujahid on a martyrdom operation, drove his a car in to a US military patrol, how many US kafir soldiers killed or wounded could not be confirm, but the vehicle was destroyed.

 

2 US kafir soldiers killed in Anbar province Two US kafir soldiers were killed in combat in Iraq's insurgent-ridden Anbar province, the American kafir military reported Friday.

 

Danish kafir soldier killed in Iraq On Friday, a Danish kafir soldier was killed and another serious wounded in a bomb attack on their patrol near the town of Al Harta in southern Iraq.

 

In the south of the capital, a roadside bomb exploded killing one Iraq munafiq police officer and wounding another, Mujahideen also ambushed Iraq munafiq police in the west of the city, gunning down two more and wounding one on Friday.

 

A car bomb explosion at a Iraq munafiq police unit in downtown Baghdad Thursday kills at least 23 Iraq policemen wounded 25 On Thursday, a mujahid on martyrdom mission drove up to the entrance of the Karradah building housing the special police crime unit, which is run by the Interior Ministry before detonating the vehicle.
 

Mujahideen detonated road side bombs targeting police patrols across the capital, killing at least six Iraq munafiq policemen and wounding a dozen on Thursday The roadside blast in Baghdad's neighborhood of Azamiyah killed four Iraq munafiq policemen and wounded seven. In Iskandariyah, 50 kilometers south of Baghdad, a roadside bomb killed two Iraq munafiq policemen and wounded five. Back in the capital, one civilian was seriously wounded by an Iraqi munafiq army patrol that was shooting in the air to clear traffic in the western neighborhood of Yarmouk.

 

Pakistan and Afghanistan munafiq government propaganda exposed .....

 

20 Mujahideen martyred claming the munafiq Pakistan Government in clashes, just like Afghan government was claiming to have martyred 16 Taliban Mujahideen few days back Pakistani forces using helicopter gun ships martyred around 20 pro-Taliban Mujahideen near the Afghan border early Friday after an attack on a security post left one soldier dead, an official said. "Around 20 Mujahideen, including some foreigners, were killed when security forces struck their hideout with gunship helicopters and artillery after the attack on a security post which killed one soldier and injured two others," a Pakistan military official said on condition of anonymity. The Mujahideen fired rockets before attacking the security forces post with small arms in Datakhel village, near Miranshah, the main town in North Waziristan, a local official said.

 

Pakistan Mujahideen 3 Pakistan munafiq soldiers and four wounded in N Waziristan attack Pakistan Mujahideen fired rockets at a security post in Datakhel area of North Waziristan, killing three Pakistan munafiq security soliders and wounding four. The attack took place before dawn on Friday in the area of Tut Naray, 50 kilometers west of Miran Shah in North Waziristan.

 

Pakistan munafiq Military drops leaflets in Waziristan Planes dropped leaflets in both South Waziristan and North Waziristan on Thursday on the occasion of Pakistan Day to urge the tribesmen to beware of foreigners and their local supporters who had allied themselves with the "Yahood Aur Hanood" (Jews and Hindus). The leaflets, in Urdu and Pashto, carried the title "warning". The Pakistan Army produced and dropped the leaflets. There was a prayer at the end of the leaflets for the tribespeople. The leaflets, dropped in Wana, Makeen, Tiarza and other places in South Waziristan and in Miramshah and Mir Ali tehsils in North Waziristan, argued that the war on terror in Waziristans was not against the people of the tribal areas. The statement said it was a war against foreigners and their local harbourers "who were standing shoulder to shoulder with the Yahood Aur Hanood" and were posing threats to Pakistan’s integrity and causing harm to the tribal society. The leaflets asked the tribespeople to keep out the troublemakers from their areas and defend their land against intruders. Tribesmen who read the leaflets were wondering over the use of the word "Yahood Aur Hanood" to describe the enemy in the leaflets. Most thought it meant the Jews worldwide and the dominant Hindus of India. Meanwhile, the Pakistan Day celebrations in South Waziristan were marred by rocket attack on a military outpost in Ganj Takray area in Shakai.

 

Munafiq Afghan National Army martyred civilians and then claimed them to be Taliban Mujahideen Afghans living in the border town of Chaman say that 17 people, killed by security forces in Kandahar, were civilians and not Taliban Mujahideen and they had differences with commander of Spin Boldak These 17 people were arrested by commander of Spin Boldak from Parwan Seh area of Kabul on 20th March on their return from Mazar-e-Sharif  after they attended Gul-e-Surkh Fair, said an elder of Nourzi tribe, Kiramatullah Sharodi while talking to Afghan Islamic Press from Pakistan’s border town of Chaman last night. He said the arrested people including Muhammad Alam alias Sheen were brought to Spin Bold and were killed later by declaring them as Taliban Muajhideen. Kiramatullah repeatedly said that they were not Taliban but civilians. He continued that Muhammad Alam alias Sheen had an old personal enmity with Commander Abdur Raziq as the brother of Abdur Raziq was killed in Chaman six months back and he accused Muhammad Alam alias of the killing of his brother. He said Muhammad Alam alias Sheen repeatedly denied these allegations, adding that the killing of these 17 people is also the outcome of these differences. Tension existing between the Nourzi and Achakzi tribes in Spin Boldak and Chaman after the incident and there is always the possibility of cash, he said. He disclosed that a delegation had arrived from Kandahar to probe the incident but Nourzi tribe did not accepted this delegation and another delegation including Muhammad Arif Nourzi will arrive from Kabul and Nourzi tribe will hold talks with that delegation. He alleged that Commander Abdur Raziq had demolished the house of people in Shoro Obou and they were force to migrate to Chaman. Asked whether among the killed people were any Pakistan nationals, he replied, “These people live on both sides of the border as they have dual nationality. For six months they live on one side of the borer and for six months another.” Last night a minister of Balochistan province of Pakistan told a news agency that the killed people were Pakistan civilians and not Taliban. It seems that this issue will spark more tension in the area and a member of Nourzi tribe told Afghan Islamic Press that it may cause small clashes between the two tribes.

 

Pakistanis killed in Afghanistan Situation tense at Pak-Afghan border were not Taliban but civilians Thousands of people escorted the dead bodies to Chamman while hundreds of equipped persons from Noorzai tribe were protesting against the heinous murder of innocent Pakistanis.

 

Troops torture residents in Sopore town In occupied Kashmir, Indian troops cordoned off several areas of Sopore Town and conducted violent house-to-house search operations, subjecting residents to agonizing identification parades and torture. 

 

Palestinians condemn exoneration of Jewish child-killer Both the outgoing Palestinian Authority (PA) government and the incoming Hamas-led administration have strongly condemned the exoneration by an Israeli military court of the alleged killer of a 13-year-old Palestinian school girl, calling the decision “incitement to murder.”

 

The trial of four US Marines charged with raping a woman in the Philippines last year was postponed on Thursday after the judge said he was voluntarily withdrawing from the case The trial, due to start on Friday with the arraignment of the accused, will be delayed until a new judge is picked. The four sailors, being held in the custody of the US embassy in Manila. A person convicted of rape in the Philippines can be sentenced to death. Judge Renato Dilag of the regional trial court in Olongapo City, northwest of Manila, said he decided to withdraw from the trial after the lawyer for the alleged victim filed a petition asking him to step aside.

 

U.S., Bulgaria agree on military bases Bulgaria and the United States have reached an agreement allowing the U.S. military to use several military bases in Bulgaria, officials said Friday. Ambassador Lyubomir Ivanov, Bulgaria's chief negotiator, and U.S. Ambassador to Sofia John Beyrle told reporters that "the negotiations between the two sides are finished and the agreement will go for a last review at both governments."

 

Japanese court orders nuclear reactor shutdown in ruling on lawsuit A court on Friday ordered the shutdown of Japan's second-largest nuclear reactor in response to a lawsuit by local residents who were worried it may not be able to withstand earthquakes, a foreign news agency reported. The Kanazawa district court in northwestern Japan ordered the shutdown of the Number 2 Shiga reactor in its ruling on demands by local residents that the reactor be shut down, Kyodo said. Kanazawa is about 295 kilometers (180 miles) northwest of Tokyo.

 

French PM-trade unions talks over job row end in deadlock Talks between French Prime Minister Dominique de Villepin and trade unions ended in deadlock after Villepin refused to withdraw his contested youth jobs contract.

 

Two killed as explosion rips through French university building At least two persons were killed and several others injured as a huge explosion ripped through a French university building in the eastern city of Mulhouse on Friday, sources reported. The explosion at the institute of chemistry on the university campus was heard across much of the city, witnesses said. The cause of the blast was not immediately known. The fire engulfed a building of the Institute of Chemistry at the university, according to the fire brigades. “We are however struggling to extinguish the fire”, they added.
 

China says EU shoe tariffs discriminatory China said Friday Europe's decision to impose anti-dumping tariffs on Chinese leather shoes was discriminatory and breached fair trade principles.

 

Nuclear an integral part of China's 15-year energy plan China's State Council, or cabinet, Thursday approved the energy blueprint for 2005-2020 envisaging the country's nuclear power generation capacity to reach 40,000 Megawatts, or four percent of China's total power output, by the year 2020, the English language China Daily reported citing government think-tank China Atomic Information Network. China's current nuclear generating capacity is 8,700 megawatts, just under two percent of total output. To reach the target, China has to build at least one nuclear power station with a capacity of 1,800 megawatts per year, the network said. China already has 11 nuclear reactors in operation and had previously announced plans to build dozens more.

 

EU plays down discord on second day of energy summit European Union leaders opened a second day of summit talks Friday, downplaying discord over resurgent protectionism in the 25-nation bloc whilst trumpeting agreement on a new joint energy policy. The heads of state and government were in Brussels for their annual spring economic summit aimed at redynamizing reforms to help revive Europe's long-flagging economy. But tensions mounted in the run-up to the talks over bids by certain countries to protect their own national enterprises, in defiance of the principles of Europe's single market. A string of cases has underlined this, including Spanish efforts to block a German energy giant E.ON's hostile takeover bid for Endesa, and French machinations to protect Suez from Italian group Enel.

 

'Deeply shocked' Chirac explains his EU summit walkout French President Jacques Chirac said Friday he had stormed out EU summit talks because he was "deeply shocked" to hear the French head of Europe's employers federation speak English.
 

Pope discusses Church challenges with cardinals Leaders of the Roman Catholic Church were locked in debate Thursday over relations with the Muslim world in the wake of recent anti-Christian violence and other challenges facing the Church, on the eve of the first consistory of Pope Benedict XVI's pontificate.

Benedict called his more than 100 cardinals and cardinals-elect to a special day of "reflection and prayer" at the Vatican ahead of Friday's consistory, in which he will elevate 15 new cardinals.

Important cultural challenges facing the Church, not least its relationship with the Islamic world, as well as long-term rifts with the Orthodox Church and the Chinese government over the question of religious freedom were expected to dominate the day of behind-closed-door discussions.
"We will most likely discuss the urgent question of relations with the Muslim world, whether it be the situation of Christians which live in countries with an Islamic majority, or the emigration which is bringing the Middle East to Europe," German Cardinal Walter Kasper said Wednesday.

Though they were inevitable absences among a group in which many prelates are well into their 80s, the rare gathering of the Church leadership began just a few minutes behind schedule when the 78-year-old pontiff chanted a prayer for guidance, answered by his cardinals.
  The opening of the day of "prayer and reflection" was shown to journalists via closed-circuit television but the debate itself is being held in secret. Following the opening prayer, Vatican Secretary of State, Cardinal Angelo Sodano reminded cardinals that the pope had specifically called the meeting to discuss "the great pastoral challenges of the present time."

 


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