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Today: 52 articles and 168 comments as of 17:17.
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Syrian VP resigns, sez Assad 'threatened' Hariri
Today's Headlines
Headline Comments [Views]
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-Short Attention Span Theater-
‘Giant asteroid to hit earth in 2006’
PARIS: In 2006, Arnold Schwarzenegger will be re-elected governor of California, Internet giant Google will suffer a setback — and Brazil will hang on to the World Cup. If a giant comet doesn’t wipe out Earth first, that is.
That does it. I'm leaving.
Maybe it will all come true and maybe not, but a legion of soothsayers — from business gurus to Bible decoders — is full of predictions for the year to come. Some use elaborate computer programs like “Torah4U” to ferret out remarkably precise predictions allegedly hidden within the Hebrew text of the Old Testament and the Torah. One website complete with diagrammed excerpts from Holy scripture, exodus2006.com, foresees the November re-election of Schwarzenegger along with the re-establishment of a military draft in the United States. It also predicts that August 3, 2006 will be a blood-drenched day — yet just a mere shadow of the calamity that will befall us in 2010..
The bad thing about sites like Rantburg is that we keep this stuff around. I'll make a not to have a look at this next August 4th...
Annie Stanton, one of countless psychics plying her trade on the Internet, predicts that catastrophe will come this year in the form of a massive asteroid crashing into the planet.
I saw that movie. Part of it, anyway...
Another mystic seer, Anita Nigam from India, has extended her powers of the paranormal into another realm — sports betting. For a mere 50 pounds a week, you can get her insights into the outcomes of English football’s Premier League matches. World Cup rates are yet to be announced, but rumor has it she’s keen on Brazil. Bill Gray of Colorado University uses turbo-charged computer models that crunch data on global sea-surface temperatures and atmospheric conditions to forecast the number and intensity of hurricanes that will hit the US each year. Gray, whose track record is startlingly good, says 2006 will be no picnic — 17 named tropical storms, nine hurricanes and five major, high-wind hurricanes, nearly twice the historical average in all categories.
Piece of cake after this year, I'd say...
Meanwhile “Wired” magazine co-founder John Battelle, whose crystal ball is closely watched by the Internet technology faithful, says “Google will stumble” due to a bad partnership or a legal setback. He also predicts legislators in the United States and elsewhere will take steps to protect citizens against “the perils of unprotected Internet data mining” into their personal lives, including credit and health histories. Like many of his high-tech colleagues, he thinks 2006 will be the year when mobile technologies plug into the Web — so get ready for the first truly usable electroniic newspaper.
Once I figure how to rap fish in Rantburg I'm rich beyond my wildest dreams...
Posted by: Fred || 12/31/2005 00:26 || Comments || Link || [2 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Killer graphic, Fred.

ROFLMAO!! :-D
Posted by: Barbara Skolaut || 12/31/2005 1:29 Comments || Top||

#2  Once I figure how to rap fish in Rantburg I'm rich beyond my wildest dreams...

How much is Rantburg worth to you, per pixel? ...just wonderin'.
Posted by: Rafael || 12/31/2005 3:33 Comments || Top||

#3  You know in the old days they stoned* false prophets. Maybe that needs to be looked into.

*not to be confused with using a controlled substance, which appearently some of those prophets may have been on in the first place.
Posted by: Angong Snainter9885 || 12/31/2005 8:58 Comments || Top||

#4  I'm starting to think that *prophets* oughtta be the controlled substance. The History Network on cable has been hosting Armageddon Week. It's pretty funny stuff...prophets and prophecies as far as the eye can see.
Posted by: Seafarious || 12/31/2005 10:05 Comments || Top||

#5  Annie Stanton, one of countless psychics plying her trade on the Internet

I just spit my Skoal all over the keyboard. No, really. I did. (Pornographers "ply" thier trade on the Internet. Psychics should be forced to buy time on PBS.)

Seafarious:
I'm starting to think that *prophets* oughtta be the controlled substance.

Please don't sully the good name of controlled substances. Now, if could just grind them down fine enough, I could mix them with my Skoal. :-)
Posted by: Florida Gators (DragonFly) || 12/31/2005 10:44 Comments || Top||

#6  You have been warned, Iran.
Posted by: Halliburton, Comet Division || 12/31/2005 10:55 Comments || Top||

#7  ... predicts that catastrophe will come this year in the form of a massive asteroid crashing into the planet.

Duuuude! That's gonna be a killer light show.
Posted by: xbalanke || 12/31/2005 11:12 Comments || Top||

#8  lmao haliburton
Posted by: Jerelet Thineling2988 || 12/31/2005 11:35 Comments || Top||

#9  Well hear is my prediction for 2006. Cindy Sheehan takes up a mad affair with.... Prince Charles!
Posted by: TomAnon || 12/31/2005 11:38 Comments || Top||

#10  What?
Nobody predicting the impact of the asteriod is in Mecca?
Nobody predicting that Iran will be bombed by somebody?
Nobody predicting a team will win and another lose the world series?
What a bunch of whimpy soothsayers.
Posted by: 3dc || 12/31/2005 11:52 Comments || Top||

#11  ASTEROIDS, ASSHATS, AND THE PERILS OF TEACHING

I used to joke about this crap in class, taking a cue from George Carlin, and then some ass-munch believed it true and went home crying to her squatty-headed, fat-assed mum. Now it's one thing to keep it there, but to go on a communist website (indymedia.org) and post your stupidity for all to see -- that's priceless.
Posted by: The Happy Fliegerabwehrkanonen || 12/31/2005 12:10 Comments || Top||

#12  Don't buy any green bananas.
Posted by: Omins Flavilet6908 || 12/31/2005 12:16 Comments || Top||

#13  I went to a year ago to check out the predictions from last year. Unfortunately there weren't any on Page 2. (Remember when the WSJ was only one section?) Any way, there weren't any, but there was a listing at the top of the page for 12/32/2004. When I clicked it, 12/31/2004 turned into 1/0/2005. A new year's challenge for Fred.
Posted by: Nimble Spemble || 12/31/2005 12:36 Comments || Top||

#14  I knew you'd say that, Dragonfly
Posted by: Annie Stanton || 12/31/2005 14:09 Comments || Top||

#15  Predictions aren't worth the Rantburg they're wrapped in.
Posted by: mjslack || 12/31/2005 15:00 Comments || Top||

#16  I knew you'd say that, DragonflyWell, you don't expect me to chew Red Man, do you? It stains your teeth. :-P
Posted by: Florida Gators (DragonFly) || 12/31/2005 15:39 Comments || Top||

#17 
Annie Stanton, one of countless psychics plying her trade on the Internet, predicts that catastrophe will come this year in the form of a massive a$$teroid crashing into the planet.

Annie speaks truth to woids on this, no shit.

screen shot late last nite using the RB multi mirror magnifier thingy

a$$teroid:

sorta looks like a troll who hangs around here

Halliburton save us...



Posted by: Red Dog || 12/31/2005 15:51 Comments || Top||


Africa Subsaharan
Peacekeepers Leave a Calm Sierra Leone
A rare success story for the UN, such as it is.
Posted by: Steve White || 12/31/2005 00:00 || Comments || Link || [8 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Success, even by UN standards, is pretty debatable. Here are some key excerpts from the article:
Fighting ended here in 2002 and elections that year led to a U.N.-guarded peace, but the roots of conflict that have sparked wars in many parts of the region, including corruption and poverty, remain firmly planted in Sierra Leone.

The U.N. peacekeeping force, which was authorized by the Security Council in late 1999, stumbled at first. Through a series of errors, hundreds of peacekeepers were kidnapped in 2000 and the rebels then used U.N. weapons and uniforms to fight.

West African and British intervention forces helped impose an end to fighting, which U.N. troops - numbering 17,500 at the deployment's height - have largely kept a lid on. Aside from a small detachment staying to guard the war crimes tribunal, the peacekeepers are going home.

Mwakawago, the U.N. envoy, called the mission an "outstanding success."

The diamond fields of the east, where shirtless workers sift and dig in mud pits, are now yielding tens of millions of dollars annually to state coffers, not rebel forces. But over half the mining is still illegal.

In a country with 70 percent unemployment, and where many people live on less than $1 a day, rising prices for fuel oil, gas and the staple food, rice, are causing concern that desperate people might again take up weapons to obtain basic needs.
Posted by: Scooter McGruder || 12/31/2005 19:09 Comments || Top||


Arabia
Yemen kidnap deal fails
A deal for the release of a former German politician and his family fell through after officials of the tribe that kidnapped them backed out of the agreement. The hostages were being driven to the negotiating site in the Rafadh district of Shabwa province in eastern Yemen, where the abduction occurred, when the deal fell apart, according to Nasser Ba'oum, the provincial deputy governor, early on Saturday. There was no information on when negotiations might resume or where the hostages had been taken to spend the night.
Now *there's* a slide show to bore the relatives with at the next BBQ...
The agreement had called for Yemeni negotiators to exchange themselves, according to Sheik Awadh Bin al-Wazir, a member of parliament and a member of the negotiating team. After the deal fell through, he could not be reached for comment. Al-Wazir had said the exchange was expected on Friday night. The tribesmen, who abducted Juergen Chrobog, his wife and their three children as they toured the mountains of eastern Yemen on Wednesday, demanded the release of five members of their al-Abdullah bin Dahha clan who are in jail awaiting trial for the alleged murder of two members of a rival tribe in October. Ba'oum said the tribal leaders were now also calling for the arrest of members of a rival clan.
This clown was actually the German Ambassador to the US for six years. Dummkopf.
Posted by: Fred || 12/31/2005 00:00 || Comments || Link || [7 views] Top|| File under:


Caribbean-Latin America
Haitian elections to be postponed
PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti - Haiti will postpone national elections set for Jan. 8 amid disorganization and security threats including the kidnapping of three Organization of American States election workers.

Delays in distributing 3.5 million voter ID cards, chaotic voting centers and problems with the voter database were the main reasons for the elections being postponed a fourth time, Rosemond Pradel, secretary general of Haiti’s Provisional Electoral Council, told The Associated Press on Friday.
Have things ever been not chaotic in Haiti?
The presidential and legislative elections - the first since a rebellion ousted President Jean-Bertrand Aristide nearly two years ago - were originally to have been held in November.

There was no immediate official announcement of the latest postponement. “In public, the date is still Jan. 8, but in private, everybody knows that this won’t be the case, and that we probably won’t even be able to announce a new date for the elections by then,” Pradel said in a telephone interview.

Max Mathurin, chairman of the Provisional Electoral Council, said the council would meet with political leaders to explain the situation and consider a new date. “My goal is to clarify the calendar,” Mathurin told AP. He said he would hold elections “as soon as is realistically possible,” but could not predict when that will be.

The United Nations and the Organization of American States - which are providing most of the logistics for the vote - declined to comment ahead of an official announcement by the electoral council.

There are 35 candidates for president and hundreds for 129 legislative seats in the elections, which are being funded by the international community. The winners will replace an interim government installed after Aristide’s ouster in February 2004.

The three kidnapped OAS representatives - a Peruvian, a Guatemalan and a Haitian - were abducted Thursday as they drove near the volatile slum of Cite Soleil, said police Chief Mario Andresol. He said he did not know their names. “I am convinced this is politically motivated,” Andresol said in a telephone interview, without elaborating.
Brilliant, chief, brilliant.
Posted by: Steve White || 12/31/2005 00:00 || Comments || Link || [3 views] Top|| File under:


Europe
Steyn: Like It Is: Tookie goes to Austria
Posted as is - I can't add to Mark Steyn
Many of the most heartwarming tales come out of Austria. One thinks of Oberndorf and the little parish church where the organ broke down on Christmas Eve 1818 and so Father Mohr and his organist Franz Gruber wrote a simple song that could be sung with only the accompaniment of a guitar: "Silent Night."

One thinks of the von Trapp family saying so long, farewell, auf wiedersehn, adieu to yieu and yieu and yieu and scramming Nazi Salzburg for a new life in Vermont.

And now we have a third inspirational story from little Austria. One day, a few years after the Trapps skedaddled outta there, a young man was born near Graz. His name was Arnold and he worked out every day and went to America and became Governor of California, and one morning he had to make a decision on whether or not to commute the death sentence of a multiple murderer called Tookie Williams. And he decided instead to let Tookie's execution go ahead.

And back in his old stomping grounds of Graz the politicians went bananas. In the old days, when some local lad made good and became Fuhrer of another state and started killing people, the hometown crowd couldn't wait to have a big ol' Anschluss with him. But times change, and contemplating Arnold's reign of terror his fellow Grazis decided they wanted to disAnschluss themselves from him. Outraged by Tookie's demise, Social Democratic and Green councilors and MPs immediately took action. Or what passes for "action" in European politics these days.
They demanded that Arnold's name be removed from the Arnold Schwarzenegger football stadium. They proposed that it should be renamed the Tookie Williams football stadium. They launched moves to strip Arnold of his Austrian citizenship on the grounds that the death penalty is illegal in Europe, which is why a barbaric nation like the United States is ineligible for membership in the EU. ("What a tragedy," as Americans always say when you point this out to them.)

"People have had enough of him," Peter Pilz, an MP in the Steiermark regional parliament, told The Guardian. "For us, he has committed a state crime."

Personally I have no feelings one way or another on the death penalty. But I'm strongly in favor of sovereign jurisdictions having the right to run their own criminal justice systems. Which is why I rejoice at Arnold's reaction to the "threat" from Graz.

Writing to the mayor of his old town, Schwarzenegger noted that in the course of his gubernatorial term he'd have to make decisions on other death-row inmates, too - the next one comes up in January. So, wrote the governor, "in order to spare the responsible politicians of the city of Graz further concern, I withdraw from them as of this day the right to use my name in association with the Liebenauer Stadium... I expect the lettering to be removed by the end of 2005" - and, given that most European municipal workers are on vacation till the second week of January, that means the mayor may have had to sub-contract the job to any obliging Albanian Muslim refugees he could round up.

"The use of my name to advertise or promote the city of Graz in any way is no longer allowed," continued Arnold. "Graz will not have any problems in the future with my decisions as governor of California, because officially nothing connects us any more."

And just for good measure he returned the "Ring of Honor" he was given in 1999 for the "pride and recognition" he brought Graz.

THAT WOULD seem to suit everybody. Graz will be free to rename its stadium after Tookie Williams on New Year's Day and the "state criminal" Schwarzenegger no longer has to live in dread of being formally stripped of his "Ring of Honor" in a humiliating resolution of the Graz council.

But mysteriously the governor's severing of ties with his home town seemed to distress them. The mayor, Siegfried Nagl, begged Arnold to reconsider, only to be told that the ring was already in the mail. It seems that, aside from Kurt Waldheim, there haven't been a lot of internationally marketable Austrians in recent years, and somehow the campaign to rename the football stadium has lost its momentum. The former Crip gang leader would certainly look very fetching on a souvenir dirndl or baggy gangsta-style lederhosen, and no doubt you could have a range of commemorative dishes on the cafeteria menu - say, a 7-Eleven schnitzel, to mark Tookie's murder of 26-year old store clerk Albert Lewis Owens, followed by a Brookhaven strudel, to honor the motel at which he murdered an elderly Taiwanese family for a hundred bucks, all washed down with a Muthaf--ka apfelsaft, named for the term he used to threaten the jurors who convicted him. Should do wonders for the Austrian tourism industry.

Schwarzenegger is no conservative, and has been a disappointing governor. But his letter is magnificent, and the pleasure it affords was only heightened by the hilarious Guardian headline to its report on the "controversy": "Schwarzenegger Faces 'Tookie' Backlash In Austria."
No, he doesn't. With one typewritten sheet, he's ended the whole damn backlash, and usefully offered a good basic template for US-EU relations that recognizes the basic differences between the two: Americans have responsibilities, Europeans have attitudes. Indeed, the EU has attitudes in inverse proportion to its ability to act on them. It's able to strut and preen on the world stage secure in the knowledge that nobody expects it to do anything about anything. If entire nations want to embrace self-congratulatory, holier-than-thou gesture politics as a way of life, why not give them a hand? The politicians of Graz want Tookie to be a domestic political issue? Now he is, if only for the tourist industry.

So, like the von Trapps, Arnold is singing as he goes:
Green Party poseurs

And posturing mayors

Renaming stadia

For multiple slayers

Dull civic honors of cheap cheesy rings

These are a few of my least fav'rite things...

Arnold to Graz: Don't ring me, I'll ring you
Posted by: Frank G || 12/31/2005 16:46 || Comments || Link || [4 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Note to Austria: This American finds your condemnation of our death penalty rather humorous in light of other mass murderers who found great popularity in your nation several decades ago. Your sympathy for Tookie Williams is duely noted and sneered at appropriately.

Note to Tookie: If you lick Arafat's nutsack just right he might let you wear some of that Nobel bling you just didn't manage to snag. That is, if it hasn't melted in the brimstone yet.
Posted by: Zenster || 12/31/2005 21:22 Comments || Top||

#2  I don;t think Arnie has been a bad Gov in fact he has been pretty good as far as straightening up the state financial picture. If anything he has tried to do too much too quick. He took on the thre most powerful organizations in one election. While he remains popular he can't beat the Unions, Liberals, and the CalDems at the same time. I only hope that Graz learna VALUABLE lesson from this episode and BEGS to re-honor a man that truely deserves to be honored here and there. I aint holnding my breath.
Posted by: Cyber Sarge || 12/31/2005 23:40 Comments || Top||

#3  This is the Euro version of the Cause => Effect cognitive dissonance. They're not much better (any?) at it than Paleos or Caliphatists.

I have followed Arnold a little - and he has tried to do some BIG things - solo against the Big Machine of the Laficornia Legislature and Big Machine Unions. That he hasn't swept them from the field of battle is simply because he's alone - the Laficornia Pubs are the most disorganized lot imaginable. If they ever pull their heads out of their asses, put forward decent candidate slates, and put their money behind the desires of the average Caliphornian, heh, then they'll get somewhere. Most citizens there, or at least my 3 year residency (97-99) there indicated to me, aren't raving moonbats, they just have no one to turn to. I was hopeful Arnold would organize them, whip them into shape, but I guess he's been busy fighting the good fight while they play golf - or whatever it is that distracts them so badly.

This is a Blue State just begging to go Red - if the right people were to step forward and get everyone on the same page, methinks.
Posted by: .com || 12/31/2005 23:52 Comments || Top||


German finance minister urges fairer tax competition within EU
Posted on the off-chance Europe still matters.
German finance minister Peer Steinbruck has urged new EU member states to raise their taxes and ensure "fair tax competition" among the 25 members of the bloc.
Oh. For a moment there I thought Peer was announcing that Germany was going to allow its economy to become competitive by reducing the tax burden on its businesses and citizens. I shoulda known better. Sigh. What a shame. We actually *do* need a Europe. Too bad we don't have one anymore.
Tax cuts in many of the new EU member countries have "nothing to do with fair tax competition and place a burden on German jobs", the minister said in an interview with German daily Die Welt. The problem must be seriously discussed and a solution found, he added. The German minister said the tax cuts in some EU countries were partly financed by Berlin’s contribution to the EU's coffers.

EU heads of state and governments agreed earlier this month on how to finance the EU from 2007-2013. Germany will continue to contribute large amounts to the common coffers, from which the eastern EU member states benefit. "It cannot be, that some countries demand more funds from the EU budget while on the other hand failing to improve their own tax basis", Mr Steinbruck said.

The combined corporate tax rate in Germany is almost 40 percent, while it is much lower in a number of countries. Slovakia has imposed a 19 percent flat tax in order to attract business and create more jobs.
Lower taxes = more prosperity. No wonder the EU doesn't get it.
Germany’s new coalition government had planned to raise VAT to 19 percent in 2007 in a bid to narrow the country’s budget deficit which is exceeding the levels set by euro zone criteria. The coalition of Social Democrats and Christian Democrats have also agreed, that EU member states competing on lower taxes should have their funds from EU regional funds cut.

But German industry did not back the minister in his crusade to ensure what he considers fair tax competition in the EU. Tax expert Klaus Braunig from the Federation of German Industries (BDI) said the government would do better by ensuring that German tax rates are internationally competitive. "There is no guarantee that business will stay in Germany or move in, if other EU countries were forced to raise their tax levels", he noted.
Posted by: Steve White || 12/31/2005 00:00 || Comments || Link || [1 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Never trust any statement containing the word 'fair'.
Posted by: phil_b || 12/31/2005 0:56 Comments || Top||

#2  "Jawohl, ve vish to force our economy deeper into ze toilet.

"Ve vish to excel at zomezing, even it's simply driving our economy into ze grund!"
Posted by: Barbara Skolaut || 12/31/2005 1:27 Comments || Top||

#3  It's true that money and I have never gotten on, but it does seem fair to me that countries with such low tax structures that they aren't actually self-supporting should not be given large handouts from EU coffers. On the other hand, in my ignorance it seems to me that countries with high tax structures coupled with even higher payouts should also not receive large handouts from EU coffers, in order to encourage consequential behaviour. Perhaps then France will stop supporting its farmers, Beurs, and the healthy unemployed in a style to which I would be very pleased to become accustomed (except for gang raping modernly dressed girls -- I don't think I would be very good at that bit); and perhaps then the Germans would not consider the proper age for going to university to be the entire period between 19 and 35 years of age, with 50 or so being the proper age at which to retire.
Posted by: trailing wife || 12/31/2005 1:45 Comments || Top||

#4  "It cannot be, that some countries demand more funds from the EU budget while on the other hand failing to improve their own tax basis", Mr Steinbruck said.

Very cleverly worded, but also quite disingenuous because I'm sure Mr. Steinbruck is aware that average incomes in the new EU member states are, what, twenty times lower than in Germany. With a Euro manager making 300,000 euros/year, only someone at the very top of the corporate heirarchy can match that sort of salary in a country such as Poland, for example.

If you raise taxes for workers and small businesses, you will drive these countries into recession, or even worse. Poland is already on the brink (though the latest figures are optimistic).

This is a classic "oh shit" moment on the part of the Germans. They've let these countries in to their club, with hopes of new markets opening up, and for the most part, that's exactly what happened. But now they've discovered that some things can be produced more cheaply just across the border, and with the same quality. Some things are even better, an example being Polish meat that is now streaming into Germany (and bread, dairy products, etc produced by the highly inefficient Polish farmer...efficiency be damned! It just tastes better and the market reflects this).

So what to do, what to do. Well, demand that these new miscreants raise their taxes!! To prevent dear old Porsche from even thinking about opening that new plant in Bratislava.

While the new member states do get a net payment from the EU budget, paid for by rich members like Germany, it is precisely because these new members are playing catch-up to the rest of western Europe. When they do catch-up to the Euro manager's 300,000/year salary, I imagine these net payments will cease. So stop complaining, Mr. Steinbruck! You got what you wanted.
Posted by: Rafael || 12/31/2005 3:05 Comments || Top||

#5  Must have caught a case of that STD "taxing ourselves to prosperity" from the US Democrat party. That is a deadly disease. I hope it doesn't spread to the new EU members.
Posted by: Mahou Sensei Negi-bozu || 12/31/2005 15:04 Comments || Top||

#6  If only, if only. Aw well. There will be another round for the EU Constitution. Perhaps this time it won't be left up to Gallic whims.
Posted by: Leon Clavin || 12/31/2005 16:04 Comments || Top||

#7  Leon, you keep on trying to inject the EU Constitution in threads that have little to nothing to do with it.
Posted by: Aris Katsaris || 12/31/2005 16:46 Comments || Top||


India-Pakistan
Robbers gun down 2 passengers, loot train in Western India
Two people were killed and four injured when robbers went on a shooting spree inside a train near west India's Valsad Friday night, Indo-Asian News Service reported here Saturday.

It is reported that the incident occurred in the general compartment of the Mumbai-Jaipur Aravali Express. The robbers went looting people and started firing at passengers inside the train. The train had left Mumbai for Ahmedabad.

This is the second incident in the last ten days. Earlier, on December 22, robbers struck Mumbai-Lucknow Pushpak Express, raped a woman and threw out three others who resisted their attempts.
Posted by: john || 12/31/2005 09:56 || Comments || Link || [5 views] Top|| File under:


Christians fleeing Sangla Hill
LAHORE: Panic has gripped the Christian community of Sangla Hill and several Christians have fled town after their community activists received threatening phone calls and religious organisations on Thursday threatened to demonstrate against the arrest of their colleagues after the November 12 incident. Police had detained about 88 people after a mob attacked and burned down four churches, a Christian school and two pastor residences last month. “There was lots of panic in the area from last night till today afternoon, as several Christians fled the locality after the threatening calls and demonstration plans,” Father Samson Dilawar said on Friday. “But this time round police acted swiftly and cordoned off the area with the help of hundreds of security personnel and therefore the demonstration plans had to be abandoned,” he added. “If the situation continues to remain calm, I think most Christians will return home tonight,” he said.

Local religious organisations led by Malik Muhammad Azam, tehsil nazim, on Thursday threatened to demonstrate against the detention of their activists. The demonstration call was followed by a series of threatening calls to various Christian community activists in which the callers threatened to kill Christians if cases against their activists were not withdrawn. Nasir Gill, a local, said the situation was tense amidst flaring tempers. “There were fears of another attack on the Christian community, as local religious leaders delivered fiery sermons during Friday prayers, but police did not allow them to demonstrate,” he added.

Nankana Sahib District Police Officer (DPO) Zulfiqar Hameed said the situation in the town was under control. “We spoke to the tehsil nazim and other religious leaders of the area and told them that any attempt to demonstrate won’t be tolerated,” he said. “We have deployed about 12 police platoons around the town and I don’t see any violence taking place. We are also trying to trace the anonymous callers who are threatening Christians,” he added.
Posted by: Fred || 12/31/2005 00:23 || Comments || Link || [2 views] Top|| File under:

#1  More of the "Peace of Islam" in action.
Posted by: Mahou Sensei Negi-bozu || 12/31/2005 3:20 Comments || Top||

#2  Even worse than the antics of the ROP is the absolute apathy of the West where most libs could care less what happens to Christians unless they're anti-Israel and anti-war activists.
Posted by: The Happy Fliegerabwehrkanonen || 12/31/2005 12:12 Comments || Top||


Southeast Asia
Malaysia moves to defuse burial row
Malaysia has moved to cool anger among non-Muslims over a legal dispute that saw a mountaineering hero buried as a Muslim over his Hindu widow's protests, with a minister saying civil courts should decide such matters.
How they gonna do that? Tell 'em to shut up?
Former army commando M Moorthy's death last week touched off ethnic and religious tensions when Islamic authorities claimed the body, saying he had converted to Islam. The Sharia religious court confirmed the conversion and the High Court said it could not overrule its verdict, meaning that Moorthy's widow Kaliammal Sinnasamy had no chance to argue her case. Nazri Aziz, minister in the Prime Minister's Department, told the New Straits Times on Friday that when there was a dispute over conversions, the case should be heard in a civil court where all sides can be represented. "When a person's faith is in question, the civil court should be allowed to hear it. Let evidence from both sides be produced," he told the daily. If we let the Muslim court decide this, justice might not be served because it would decide in favour of Islam."
Without fail, in fact...
Kaliammal has said she was stunned when the army informed her of Moorthy's "conversion", after he lapsed into a coma on 11 November at the age of 36. Islamic authorities and army colleagues said Moorthy, who rose to fame after scaling Mount Everest in 1997 as part of a Malaysian mountaineering team, converted to Islam last year and changed his name to Mohammad Abdullah. But Kaliammal denied the claim, saying he was not circumcised, ate pork and celebrated the Hindu festivals.
Posted by: Fred || 12/31/2005 00:00 || Comments || Link || [3 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Wherever he's been buried is now consecrated to Allan, and subject to Waqf oversight and tax collection. I'm not sure if that means Mt. Everest reverts to the Caliphate or not...
Posted by: Seafarious || 12/31/2005 0:17 Comments || Top||



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