Political Chit Chat

March 30, 2008

Toronto 18 Terror Suspects

Filed under: toronto 18 — orion2007 @ 3:42 pm

I came across this article at www.criticalmood.com and thought to publish it here. It gives me great hope to see yet another young mind standing up against the injustice done towards Toronto18. MashaAllah, keep up your efforts.

Toronto 18 Terror Suspects
The New Rule of Thumb for Treating Torture and Abuse


Four hundred heavily armed officers — including snipers — arrested seventeen Canadian Muslim youth and young men, who were mostly under the age of 25, for charges of plotting a terrorist attack on Canada. Of course, the scenario of a heavily armed fortress could be found every single day that the accused enter the courtroom. The scene of the arrest was definitely grand, which fuelled reports from the media culminating into such stupidity as showing the public the specific addresses of the suspects. Soon thereafter, the public was bombarded with such sensationalist reports claiming that an “Islamist” terrorist conspiracy has been smashed and the police, government and the many political observers putting this up as proof that Canada is smack down the middle of this “war on terror”.

Today, there has been a media ban, prohibiting all parties involved to refrain from speaking about the case; imposed after the entire public has been given ample time to condemn and demonize the accused. Despite what the media ban claimed to be aiming to achieve (a fair and just trial), it came far too late; under the sensationalist reactions of a shortsighted and hysterical media, the damage is already evident. The ban only now serves to cut the ability for the accused and their family to communicate their side of the story to a disinterested media. No longer are they able to counter and comment on the many idiotic actions major news outlets took because if there is nothing to sensationalize, there is nothing to report on. The media took its jabs, made its millions and left the ring calling an end to an exchange which has not even begun.

Posting the specific street addresses of the suspects was complete and utter irresponsibility (if not stupidity) on the parts of all news network that did it – the pioneer being CTV. CTV officially cited that it was in the public’s safety interest to know where these people lived. They also stressed that their addresses can be found in phone books anyway, overlooking the fact that there has never once been an instance of an accused party being condemned as criminals without the right to a fair trial under the due process of law. Also, the logic of making the addresses available to the public because they are available anyway in phonebooks eliminates the possibility of the families asking themselves to be unlisted (for good reasons). In addition, the last names of the families are quite common and CTV is absolutely delusional if they think that people will look into their phonebook to contact every single one of them to see which belonged to the family of the accused. The media did nothing but instill paranoia throughout the public, in an attempt to justify their bout of sensationalism. The reporting of the addresses held no public value and did nothing but create fear and paranoia from local residents. Such idiocy also threatened the public safety of the residents residing in those homes and they have been harassed and more.

Another issue of interest for the media at the time (for some, continues to do so), was the wife of one of the accused, Nada Amara. She was immediately attacked in the media for ‘hateful’ internet postings she made in 2004. She was not even given a chance to explain her side of the story once reports began to air. How many of us have made statements in the past which we do not agree with today? I know far too many people, including myself who have regretted what they have said, wishing to take harsh words back. Instead, the public was bombarded by an image of a woman who was overtaken with hateful rhetoric at a young age. Yes, an angry, emo teenager, that is far from being a recent phenomenon.

Of course, the capacity for public compassion and understanding has been diluted and distorted by a society which is constantly preoccupied with sensationalized reporting. I still remember when an event called “Muslim Youth Speak Out” was held by the University of Toronto Students’ Union a couple of weeks after the arrests. One of the additions to the panel of Muslim speakers was Nada Amara. Before the event began the ‘breaking news’ from the Globe and Mail was broadcasted throughout Canada and her appearance was abruptly cancelled. The purpose of her appearance was to ask for help from the Canadian public, since the arrests left many families in financial difficulties while the primary breadwinners of each family were held in custody — this was in addition to having their credit cards and bank cards confiscated by the RCMP. To those people who agree with this course of action, where is your humanity?

More importantly, where is your penchant for critical thinking and in seeing the line between accused and convicted, providing justice and prejudice, humane treatment and cruelty, and punishing the family of the accused and, again, providing justice. Not surprisingly, ALL the major media outlets that came to the event were only concerned about Nada Amara’s message board statements in 2004. When she did not appear, only a single, 2-minute report was aired, which did not even focus on any of the main focal points brought up during the event — primarily, what young Muslims had to say regarding these circumstances and all the insightful statements that were made by prominent and representative individuals for the wider Muslim community like Professor Jasmine Zine and Faisal Kutty from CAIR-CAN (Canadian Council On American-Islamic Relations). Instead, there it was again, Tarek Fatah and Irshad Manji — unrepresentative individuals for the larger Muslim community — jumping at the opportunity to strengthen their agenda and the media was more than happy to jump on their backs for a quick tour of the Muslim community.

Today, there is a far more serious concern regarding the treatment of terror suspects in Canadian prisons. There have been many complaints put forth by the lawyers of the accused and there is definitely a lack of interest from the media and the government to pick up on this issue the same way they drooled all over it when four hundred heavily armed RCMP officers arrested all the suspects. All of this is not surprising because they are just reflecting a common attitude that is rampant within the Canadian government — primarily, those in charge of Canadian security.

Martin Collacott, a senior fellow from Fraser Institute and a former federal foreign affairs official who was responsible for the coordination of counter-terrorism policy commented on the case. He argued that it is “fairly standard” to make claims of torture according to al-Queda training manuals and that is exactly what the prisoners are doing. Of course, only an incompetent individual would not detect the far from subtle insinuation that the group was guilty already of succumbing to al-Queda training and influence. To individuals such as himself, this is definitely a great rule of thumb when it comes to treating prisoners (guilty or not) who are pleading for help from torture or abuse. It is useful to argue that: anyone who makes such a claim must have received pointers from some training manual of a terrorist organization who’s name and existence could be utilized to stifle any criticism of the state apparatus and to throw prejudiced opinions regarding anyone with an opposing viewpoint by the wayside – in this case, “Islamist Muslims”, “Traditional Muslims” or whatever other vague term the media have come to love when spouted out by people like Fatah and Manji who, again, are totally unrepresentative of the large portion of the Muslim community.

Therefore, according to Collacott, being locked in a room with three concrete walls and a door with a tiny slit that opens when food is given to the inmate, an 11 feet by six feet cell, no windows, with lights on 24-7 (sleep deprivation), only being allowed for 15-30 minutes a day (perhaps even less) does not merit any inquiry or investigation, nor should it be classified as cruel and unusual punishment designed to psychologically break down the “accused” for the years following up to the possible trial. Lock yourself in a room for a couple of days and block off your windows and see how you feel. Of course, there have been other charges as well which I do not want to get into here.

To accept this stance as the simple “routine procedure” of handling an inmate, despite claims of abuse is not only completely neglectful, cruel and a total disrespect to many people who have been imprisoned before in North American and beyond, mistreated and later released or died in prison, but it is also stunningly hypocritical. It calls for selectively applying a policy to some as opposed to others in a blatant double standard — of course, that is to say the policy is to be accepted as a fundamental Canadian value. Surely we are supposed to make a connection that barely stands the scrutiny of closer inspection for factual basis, to some sort of training manual of a “terrorist organization” to justify prisoner torture and abuse. The examples are endless and one only needs to point at recent examples which I will not go into here.

Is it possible that the RCMP and the government are wrong? Is it possible that the accusations are real? While both may be feasible, the former possibility cannot be overlooked, it has happened before. It was not long ago when 19 foreign students, mostly from Pakistan, was arrested in 2003 in Toronto. They were accused and arrested for plotting to blow up the nuclear reactors at Pickering or the CN Tower. It was claimed that an “al Qaeda sleeper cell” had been uncovered. In the end, all charges were dropped within two weeks of the arrest.

Even those who noticed the inherent flaws and the outright prejudice this entire issue has been plagued with have taken the reactionary stance of “better to be safe than sorry” to justify this otherwise unorthodox treatment of Canadian citizens. As a result, any avenue to ask questions regarding the case has been closed off. Questions such as: “How exactly did the group come into the possession of the Ammonium Nitrate Fertilizer? How did the RCMP conduct its sting operation? How did the media conduct themselves throughout all this? Are the ‘accused’ being treated humanely in prison?” and so forth have all been buried under the sheer amount of sensationalism that was and continues to be pumped out by the media. Even Stephen Harper, David Miller and many other leaders jumped at the chance of congratulating the RCMP for its successful capture of a dangerous threat to Canada, convicting the accused before a fair and just trial was even set. Of course, the RCMP and the media never failed to embrace personalities like Tarek Fatah who quickly utilized this issue in order to push his agenda and demonize a large part of the Muslim community that he does not represent whatsoever — quickly throwing around vague and undefined terms (or when defined, the media has a particular spin on what it is which is far from being fair) such as Islamists, Fundamentalists, Shariah, Muslim Extremists, Moderate Muslims, Democratic Muslims and so forth.

If the media had any genuine concerns regarding the accurate portrayal of sentiments within the Muslim community, they would have approached more representative personalities within the wider Muslim community such as those from the CAIR-CAN or many other mosques within the GTA area starting with an event such as the “Muslim Youth Speak Out” that was held last year. Instead, in addition to message board posts made in 2004, they take one readily available personality who is always ready to spout a perspective the media has grown accustomed to and, sadly, the large part of the Canadian population finds easy to listen to regardless of what this man’s standing is in the Muslim community. It is far from dialogue, far from relation building, it is outright alienation. Most important, this is far from justice. The only beneficiaries of such hysteria, irresponsibility and outright stupidity are the state security apparatus and the party in power

March 28, 2008

Iraq’s Green Zone under Fire

Filed under: Iraq — orion2007 @ 3:58 pm

Peace and Blessings Everyone

So, Iraq’s green zone is under fire by the “militants”…hmm! couple of questions to ponder upon!

1-Who are these so called “militants” really? Are they really Al-Qaeda or are they people of Iraq who have banded up against the puppet Iraqi government and the Bush administration. Think about it, the later is also possible.
2-Why does the Green Zone include only the “foreign embassies” and “the Iraqi government”? I mean what about the People of Iraq? Where are They located, the rightful owners of this land? In the Red Zone!!!! Ridiculous! Just looking at this setting, the words imperialism and colonization jump into my head..To think its happening in a post-imperialistic society, right in front of all these educated minds…our leaders really belittle our intellect so easily, don’t they? Or rather, we choose to let them!

Mortars Hit Iraqi Sunni VP’s Office, Two Wounded
2 hours, 27 minutes ago

BAGHDAD (AFP) – Mortar rounds struck the office of Iraq’s Sunni Vice-President Tareq al-Hashemi in Baghdad’s heavily fortified Green Zone, wounding two of his guards, security officials said Friday.

Five rounds struck the office of Hashemi, the officials said, but the politician was unhurt.

Militants have regularly bombarded the Green Zone in recent days, killing two Americans and wounding four others.

The area is the seat of the Iraqi government and many foreign embassies, including the US mission.

Source

March 27, 2008

Toronto 18

Filed under: toronto 18 — orion2007 @ 10:03 pm
Tags:

A while ago, I happened to come across the movie called “Unfair Dealings“…. It was quite an eye opener…Jazakallah Khair to whoever made this…It cleared a lot of doubts that had entered my brain due to the media lies that were bombarded everywhere around me…After watching the movie, doubts still circulated my brain: What can I (one person) do about it? I hardly get time on my hand–how can I help? So, I let the matter be and just prayed to God to help out…A couple of other things happened, the details of which I don`t wish to publish but eventually, I decided to make this humble post.

I am going to make a humble effort to all the information and online petitions together…Alone, one is fragile…Together, we are Strong….there are some petitions here which require more signatures..one of them had only 24 signatures on it…So sign them all and spread the word inshaAllah.

Make sure to join the mailing list of “Presumption of Innocence`project at presumptionofinnocence@gma il.com

So, let`s begin inshaAllah.

Well, let`s first watch the movie “Unfair Dealings“ to remove any doubts the media has established inside us…

Part 1 Part 2 Part 3 Part 4 Part 5 Part 6

Hear the families out yourself…

The Families of Toronto18 Speak Out

It was a packed house last month, on the evening of January 16, when the University of Toronto Mississauga (UTM) Muslim Students Association hosted one of the first opportunities for the family and lawyers of the “Toronto 18″ to tell the general public their story.

The Toronto 18 is the name given to 18 men and boys who were arrested on June 2, 2006 and accused of terror-related activity. Out of the 18 men and boys, three boys have had their charges stayed; four men and four boys have been granted bail under strict conditions. Out of the remaining seven in prison, four are at Maplehurst Correctional Complex in Brampton, while three remain in Toronto’s Don Jail in solitary confinement. Preliminary trials were abruptly cancelled in September 2007, and no trial date has been set as of yet.

At the forum on January 16, nearly 600 people heard the stories of the Toronto 18, for the first time, from the mouths of a sister and a spouse, Fatma Khaled and Nada Amara.

Khaled’s story, regarding her brother Saad, was graphic. She related the treatment of the inmates and the conditions in which they were kept. Khaled described cold cells, one inch mattresses, 24 hour lighting and wake up calls every 20 minutes. She described the treatment her brother received, from having a heavily armed guard watching him in the shower to being ordered by guards to run in shackles and handcuffs while looking at the ground.

Khaled described the first day in court, the day after her brother was arrested. She recalled seeing snipers on the rooftop of the court and surrounding buildings and heavily armed security guards inside the court. When the suspects entered they were handcuffed, their feet shackled. Furthermore, they were made to enter with their backs bent nearly 90 degrees to the ground, with their heads down.

Khaled ended her speech by recalling that her brother was 19-years-old when he was arrested. He was a student of business at UTM with no criminal record. Now he is 22-years-old. When she visits him, it is behind bulletproof glass. “Even convicted criminals have touch visits,” she exclaimed.

The next speaker was Nada Amara, the wife of Zakaria Amara, one of the men who is still in solitary confinement at the Don Jail. She told the audience the sentimental story of their last night together, playing Xbox with each other. Amara went into detail about the day of her husband’s arrest. The police stormed into the house, and shattered a glass door. Amara’s baby daughter was crying as the policeman grabbed her out of her mother’s arms. Her brother and sister, both minors, were handcuffed and sent to the garage.

Amara then conveyed the humiliation the families went through as a result of the constant media attention. She spoke of the media at the courts, the media in front of their home, the doorbell ringing every five minutes and the one reporter who jumped the backyard fence to come to the back door. All this media attention was outside their home, she explained, while the front door was smashed, with a mere piece of cardboard fixed in position as a replacement.

Two of the lawyers for the Toronto 18 also spoke at this groundbreaking forum. They outlined the difficulty in fighting this case, because in many ways the principle of “innocent until proven guilty” in regards to this case has been thrown out. The lawyers argued that before the publication ban on details of the case, the Crown was able to label the Toronto 18 guilty through the media, setting the stage of the trial.

Nevertheless, the lawyers expressed the hope of those in attendance that, in the end, the truth would prevail.

Arsheen Devjee is in her last year at the University of Toronto completing a Bachelor of Arts degree in Religion and Near Middle Eastern Civilizations. She plans to pursue graduate degrees in Islamic Studies in the coming years. Arsheen is part of a newly formed activist group called Presumption of Innocence Project (PIP) which supports and defends civil liberties, the right to a fair trial and the presumption of innocence. PIP’s current focus is on the Toronto 18.

Source

Locked Away

Saad’s sister’s Newsclip boomp3.com

Toronto 18–Voice of the Families

Petitions

Go Petition-Toronto 18-End Solitary Confinement

Go Petition-End Solitary Confinement: Respect the rights of detainees

Go Petition–Presumption of Innocence and Humane Treatment

Other Ways to Take Action

Write and talk to your MP

See Action Alerts by Toronto18.com

See Presumption of Innocence Project at Toronto18.com

Online Resources

Toronto 18

Night`s Lantern

Toronto Paintball 18

UmmTayab

Captive In Canada

Critical Mood (A Toronto Based Artist)

New ’sheriff’ in Pakistan, US told

Filed under: Pakistan — orion2007 @ 2:01 am
Tags:

Finally, someone is talking some sense….I wonder what`s next….Would Pakistan continue to be on the side of the America or would they shift sides..perhaps Pakistan would decide not to participate at all…Tut! there is no good ruler left. Quite frankly, I have no faith left in any of today`s political leaders….There are some good guys but in small number…I think the change can be made by the people but the question is “How to bell the cats?“


WASHINGTON‘S two top policy planners on Pakistan were given a “public dressing down” in Islamabad yesterday and left in little doubt that the country’s involvement in the war against terrorism was set to change.

US President George W. Bush phoned Pakistan’s new Prime Minister, Yousaf Raza Gilani, after he was sworn in on Tuesday to express a willingness to work with him and extend an invitation to visit the White House.

Despite the friendly overture, Pakistan’s new civilian rulers made it clear in a series of meetings with US Deputy Secretary of State John Negroponte and Assistant Secretary of State for South Asia Richard Boucher that major changes were under way in relations between Washington and a country many regard as a linchpin in the war on terror.

“To use an American expression, there is a new sheriff in town,” Pakistan People’s Party foreign policy spokesman Hussain Haqqani said yesterday, after the two US envoys met PPP leader Asif Ali Zardari.

“The Americans have realised that they have perhaps talked with one man (president Pervez Musharraf) for too long.”

Former prime minister Nawaz Sharif, leader of the Pakistan Muslim League (N), which is a major component in the new coalition, was more forthright.

Mr Sharif said he told the US envoys there was “no longer a one-man show in Pakistan” and the new parliament – elected in February polls that dealt a crushing defeat to Mr Musharraf’s allies – would decide how Pakistan should approach Islamic extremism.

“I have told (the) US officials that the Government wants to see peace in the world but does not want to turn Pakistan into a murder house. Pakistan cannot be made a killing field for the interest of others,” he said.

“If America wants to see itself clean of terrorism, we also want our villages and towns not to be bombed,” he said, alluding to recent airstrikes near the Afghan border apparently carried out by US and allied forces.

Last night, commentators in Islamabad said there was no doubt the US envoys had been given “what amounts to a public dressing down” by Mr Sharif.

Even the timing of the visit has caused widespread resentment in Islamabad. The two men flew into the capital on day one of the new government, arriving only hours before Mr Gilani was formally sworn in.

Yesterday, Mr Sharif described the diplomatic visit as “ham-handed” while English-language newspaper The News, in an editorial headlined “Hands off please, Uncle Sam”, said: “Washington must realise it has no moral or political right to attempt to intervene in the internal decisions made within any other country. Its belief that it can eliminate the militants by moving in on a larger scale into Pakistan is dangerous.”

The US envoys also met Mr Musharraf and army chief Ashfaq Kayani.

Many Pakistani analysts say the anti-American feeling sweeping Pakistan – including among urban, educated people – is born of years of close collaboration with the Musharraf regime and Washington’s refusal to dump the dictator.

Even yesterday, Mr Negroponte and Mr Boucher were said to be arguing for the new democratic leadership to work with Mr Musharraf rather than force him to quit.

“They put all their eggs in one basket. They treated Nawaz Sharif with contempt while he was in exile and disregarded him. They attempted to seduce Benazir Bhutto into supporting Musharraf. When the entire country was in uproar, supporting the reinstatement of the chief justice and the judges, Washington remained silent,” local commentator Ahmed Khan said last night.

Meanwhile, Mr Gilani’s new Government announced yesterday it would formally ask the UN to launch an investigation into the assassination of Benazir Bhutto similar to the probe into the killing of former Lebanese prime minister Rafik Hariri.

The new Government believes the inquiry could uncover evidence of the involvement of the former regime’s intelligence agencies.

Mr Gilani also announced the new parliament would pass a resolution apologising for the “judicial murder” in April, 1979, of Ms Bhutto’s father, the former prime minister Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto.

Source 

 

More Lies to Start a New WAR!!!

Filed under: Iran — orion2007 @ 1:33 am
Tags: ,

First they said Iraq has WMDs, then when they didn`t find any WMDs they said that the “Òh goodie, at least Saddam`s gone“. Using that as an excuse, they kept occupying Iraq…Now, they are after Iran…where is their evidence for stating this? How come they are always unable to provide us with credible evidence? They so valiantly belittle our intelligence, let`s do the same to them…Let`s not believe in any lies they tell us from here on because they have lost their credibility…such a bad track record! And let`s give it our best to stop any future wars inshaAllah…

US Military Says Iran Behind Latest Voilence in Iran–AFP BAGHDAD (AFP)–Iran is behind the violence raging in Iraq by providing training to those firing rockets in Baghdad and by not doing enough to rein in lawless gunmen in Basra, the U.S. military charged Wednesday.

“There is no question that the government of Iran has significant influence in Basra, in the province and in southeastern Iraq in general,” said U.S. military spokesman Major General Kevin Bergner.

“We would love to see the government of Iran fulfill its commitments to help improve security and stability (in Basra)…and reduce the activities of those operating outside the law,” Bergner told a news conference in Baghdad.

He was speaking a day after Iraqi security forces launched a massive sweep in the southern oil hub aimed, according to Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki, at ” lawless gangs” which have taken over parts of city.

He said Iraqi security forces have moved around 2,000 additional troops and police into Basra to assist in the operation to quell the armed groups.

Witnesses have said the troops are moving into areas controlled by the Mahdi Army of radical cleric Muqtada al-Sadr but Bergner said the militia isn’t being targeted in particular.

“The actions are not against (the Mahdi Army). It is the government of Iraq taking responsibility and acting to deal with criminals on the streets,” he said.

In Sadr City, the Mahdi Army bastion in eastern Baghdad, the general said the target of raids by U.S. and Iraqi forces since Tuesday has been those firing rockets and mortars into the highly fortified Green Zone and surrounding suburbs.

“Much of the indirect fire…has emanated from east Baghdad and Sadr City,” he said, using the term the U.S. military employs for rocket and mortar attacks.

“We have a responsibility to work with the Iraqi security forces and interdict the ability of indirect fire cells to continue doing what they are doing…and to enforce the rule of law against the criminal actions of armed groups.”

Bergner blamed “Special Groups” for mortar and rocket attacks and said Iraqi and U.S. forces weren’t targeting the Mahdi Army in particular, but only those members ignoring al-Sadr’s ceasefire pledge “and who are breaking the law.”

“We are not targeting individuals because of their political affiliation,” Bergner said.

U.S. commanders say Special Groups are made up of disaffected Mahdi Army fighters who have allegedly been trained in Iran by members of the elite Quds Force unit in the use of sophisticated weaponry, including rockets, mortars and lethal roadside bombs known as explosively formed penetrators.

Source


Latest violence leaves 55 dead across Iraq

Filed under: Iraq — orion2007 @ 12:57 am
Tags:

Ok, when is this gonna end? Looks like that one of Prophet Mohammad`s prophecy is coming true…

Sahih Bukhari, Book 041, Number 7035:Umm Sharik reported: I heard Allah’s Messenger (may peace be upon him) as saying: The people would run away from the Dajjal seeking shelter in the mountains. She said: Where would be the Arabs then in that day? He said: They would be small in number

Latest violence leaves 55 dead across Iraq

Wednesday, March 26, 2008 5:12 AM

Associated Press

BAGHDAD—At least 55 people have died in two days of fighting between Shiite militias and U.S.-Iraqi forces in Baghdad and the southern city of Basra, officials said today. Some 300 people were reported wounded in the clashes, which present the gravest challenge to the Iraqi government in months.

The biggest toll was in Basra, the oil-rich, Shiite-majority city where an Iraqi military spokesman said 40 people were killed and 200 wounded. Col. Karim al-Zaidi did not say how many were militiamen, Iraqi soldiers or civilians caught up in the fighting.

Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki has taken personal charge of the effort to rid Basra of militias, some of whom have ties to nearby Iran. Followers of Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr have been fighting U.S. and Iraqi forces in Baghdad and other cities in reaction to the Basra crackdown.

According to an Iraqi Interior Ministry official, at least 15 people were killed and 100 wounded in clashes in Baghdad’s Sadr City district. The ministry official spoke on condition of anonymity because of operational security. A breakdown of who was killed was not given.

The burgeoning crisis — part of an intense power struggle among Shiite political factions — has major implications for the United States. An escalation could unravel the cease-fire which al-Sadr proclaimed last August. A resumption of fighting by his militia could kill more U.S. soldiers and threaten — at least in the short run — the security gains Washington has hailed as a sign that Iraq is on the road to recovery.

The confrontation will also test the skill and resolve of Iraq’s Shiite-led government in dealing with Shiite militias, with whom the national leadership had maintained close ties.

Source

US airstrike kills 5, including Iraqi judge

Filed under: Iraq — orion2007 @ 12:40 am
Tags: ,

This is totally ridiculous!! As if attacking Sadr city wasn`t enough……I wonder when these people are going to stop hurting the innocents….If they didn`t go in Iraq, millions of Iraqi civilians would still have been alive and relatively more well off than now…Shame on Bush and his friends!

A US Airstrike has killed five Iraqi civilians including a judge in the northern town of Tikrit..

US forces acknowledged that civilians had been struck during a battle with suspected al Qaeda Sunni Arab militants which included strikes from fixed-wing aircraft.

“After the airstrike, coalition forces continued to receive heavy enemy fire as armed terrorists ran from the target and attempted to hide in neighbouring homes using the occupants as human shields,” they said in a statement.

“Preliminary assessment indicates that despite coalition forces’ efforts to protect them, several civilians were injured or killed during the ensuing gunbattle,” it said.

Iraqi police said five civilians were killed and 10 wounded in the air strike. The dead included Munaf Mehdi, a judge in the town.

Source

Clashes Claim 14 Lives in Sadr City

Filed under: Iraq — orion2007 @ 12:37 am
Tags:

More innocent lives were taken again by this dirty war in Iraq….What gives?

Clashes claim 14 lives in Sadr City
Wed, 26 Mar 2008 12:53:39

 

Fourteen people have been killed and more than 140 wounded in clashes between security forces and Sadrists in Baghdad’s Sadr City.

A medical source in the health office for the eastern half of Baghdad said the figures came from the Sadr and Imam Ali hospitals in Sadr City and the Kindi hospital in central Baghdad, Reuters reported.

He said the casualties included women and children caught in the crossfire in the clashes, which broke out on Tuesday and continued overnight.

Source

March 23, 2008

US strike kills six in Iraq

Filed under: Iraq — orion2007 @ 6:17 am

This is hilarious….the lies US constructs…amazing at the speed these lies are crafted….

This time they killed six members of the anti-Qaeda fighers (apparently on the side of US) who were wearing reflective vests..and all US has to say is that these people were spotted conducting suspicious terrorist activities….hah! what exactly do suspicious terrorist activities look like? What a vague phrae to use…at least lie properly! Isn`t this disgusting?

US Air Strike Kills Six in Iraq 

A US helicopter gunship fired on and killed six Iraqis near the central Iraq city of Samarra on Saturday, an anti-Qaeda leader and the American military said.

Abu Faruq, leader of an anti-Qaeda “Awakening” front in Samarra, said those killed were members of his group who had been manning a checkpoint when they came under attack. Two others were wounded.

The US military, however, said the assault had been launched after five people “were spotted conducting suspicious terrorist activity” in an area known for roadside bomb attacks near Samarra, 125 kilometres (80 miles) north of Baghdad.

Spokesman Captain Stephen Bomar told AFP that while initial reports indicated that an Awakening checkpoint had been attacked, later investigation found that those killed had been near the site of a recent roadside bombing.

Abu Faruq insisted that the victims had all been Awakening members who had been wearing reflective vests — the distinctive clothing of anti-Qaeda fighters — and had been manning a checkpoint at the time of the attack.

“At 5:00 am today I got a call from the Awakening fighters to say that a helicopter had fired flares above their checkpoint and had then launched an attack.

“Six of the members were killed and two others were wounded,” Abu Faruq said, adding that he had accompanied police and ambulances when they ferried the casualties to hospital.

Awakening groups, comprising mainly Sunni Arabs who turned against their one-time allies Al-Qaeda, have been set up by the US military across Iraq and are credited with having been a key factor in the reduction of violence since last June.

The US military also reported Saturday that a woman and two children were injured in a US air strike in restive Diyala province that was targeting a “high value” insurgent.

The air strike came after the insurgent on Friday barricaded himself in a house and refused to come out despite “escalation of force measures,” a military statement said.

“After several tactical call-out attempts failed, the decision was made to use close air support against the High Value Individual,” it said.

Afterwards, a woman and two children, aged five and seven, were discovered inside the house. The children were treated for minor injuries and their mother for non-life threatening head injuries.

A man was detained.

The US military meanwhile announced Saturday the deaths of four soldiers, including three who were killed in a roadside bombing in Baghdad that also left two Iraqis dead.

Two soldiers were killed when their vehicle was struck while on patrol in Baghdad while a third injured in the attack died later of his wounds, the military said in a series of statements.

It also reported the death on Friday of another soldier, who sustained injuries in a rocket or mortar attack south of Baghdad.

The latest death brings the military’s losses in Iraq since the March 2003 invasion close to the 4,000 mark, at 3,996, according to an AFP tally based on independent website icasualties.org.

In other violence on Saturday, a roadside bomb attack on a police patrol escorting a school bus to an antiquity site in northern Iraq killed a bystander and wounded two policemen and two students, police said.

The attack occurred when the convoy was travelling from the oil-rich city of Kirkuk to the tourist town of Dibis, which contains an antiquity site, according to assistant police chief Major General Torhan Yussef.

“One civilian was killed and four policemen and two students were wounded,” Yussef said.

In southeastern Baghdad, a roadside bomb attack on a bus killed one civilian and wounded three, an interior ministry official said.

Source

March 21, 2008

Stop this Abuse of Tibetan Protestors

Filed under: Tibet — orion2007 @ 6:16 pm
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Hi, Peace and Blessings

You must have read about how the Chinese government is trying to suppress the protests in Tibet and nearby provinces. This violence is quickly increasing, causing the death of more than 100 people and detentions and beatings of several others. This week, Dalai Lama announced that he will resign as the leader of the Tibetan government in-exile “if things become out of control.” :-(

Please stand up for the people of Tibet. These people should not be abused just for expressing their viewpoints. And they have every right to demand and have a Free Tibet. Don`t you agree?

You can make a difference by signing this petition to the Olympic Games Officials and the United Nations to make sure something is done against this wrongdoing…

Care2 Petition

Thank You
Kind Regards
Take care
Peace Out

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