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Moussaoui asks for death sentence
Today's Headlines
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Arabia
Bahrain MPs shoot down anti-terror law
A new law to combat terrorism, proposed by the Bahraini Cabinet, is being opposed by senior lawmakers who say the parliament should change all articles that could be used to restrict constitutional freedoms. The country's political societies also voiced concern over the proposed legislation and said they will meet this week to discuss alternative versions. "The draft will be radically amended to scrap all points that are sources of concern or resemble the abolished State Security Law," Adel Al Mawdah, Second Deputy Speaker of the Council of Representatives, told reporters at his office.

He said His Majesty King Hamad Bin Eisa Al Khalifa has stressed, during a recent a meeting with the MPs, the importance of the new law but he also called on them to amend it in order to protect personal freedoms and constitutional privileges. During the meeting, the king was quoted as saying the proposed law was prompted by the rise of terrorism regionally and globally. The terrorist attacks "result in casualties and people are frightened," the King told the MPs. "Our responsibility before God and the nation is to protect Bahrainis and residents from these threats of terrorism which is directed from abroad and which is alien to our peaceful societies," he said.
Posted by: Fred || 04/19/2005 00:00:00 AM || Comments || Link || [4 views] Top|| File under:


Britain
Trots In Burkas
Posted by: tipper || 04/19/2005 10:48 || Comments || Link || [3 views] Top|| File under:

#1  I hope she beats George. Literally, with a cricket bat. Please leave him brain dammaged. He is a worthless git and is carpet bagging.
Posted by: Sock Puppet 0’ Doom || 04/19/2005 19:22 Comments || Top||


Caucasus/Russia/Central Asia
Who's next?
WASHINGTON, April 19 (UPI) -- Insider notes from United Press International for April 19 ...

With all bettors focusing their gambling skills on the papal conclave, those with a taste for the more exotic might be willing to bet on where the next "velvet revolution" will occur. Georgian President Mikhail Saakashvili is upping the speculation; during a meeting with the Georgian prosecutor general's office staff Saakashvili discussed the recent regime changes in Ukraine and Kyrgyzstan and added, "We have defeated our enemies in these two countries, but there is one more country on our list." Saakashvili then promised to reveal the country at the GUUAM summit in Chisinau on April 22, attended by the leaders of Georgia, Ukraine, Uzbekistan, Azerbaijan and Moldova.
Saakashvili's comments undoubtedly blindsided U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, currently in Moscow seeking Russian assistance on derailing Iran's nuclear programs. If Saakashvili delivers on his promise and "names names," then President George W. Bush's trip to Moscow for the May 9 victory celebrations could well be less warm then expected, especially as he is due to visit Georgia afterward.
Posted by: Steve || 04/19/2005 3:54:51 PM || Comments || Link || [2 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Belarus
Posted by: phil_b || 04/19/2005 16:28 Comments || Top||

#2  Azerbaijan
Posted by: True German Ally || 04/19/2005 16:42 Comments || Top||

#3  Sacramento
Posted by: .com || 04/19/2005 16:46 Comments || Top||

#4  If oil prices fall 30% or more in the next 2 years-- as happened in the mid-80s and again in 1997-- then Moscow's next.
Posted by: thibaud (aka lex) || 04/19/2005 16:51 Comments || Top||

#5  I'll play...Turtle Bay.
Posted by: Seafarious || 04/19/2005 16:53 Comments || Top||

#6  France
Posted by: Glins Thomomble7923 || 04/19/2005 19:15 Comments || Top||

#7  Lebanon
Posted by: Frank G || 04/19/2005 19:17 Comments || Top||


Russian jets reported in Abkhazia
ISN SECURITY WATCH (19/04/05) - An unspecified number of Russian SU-27 Flanker fighter jets were among the various military hardware displayed by the Abkhaz army during exercises that took place on Monday in Georgia's breakaway republic, Russia's daily Kommersant reported. Abkhazia's de facto military chief-of-staff, Anatoly Zaytsev, said the exercises - which began on Monday and will run until Thursday - were an attempt to "improve command and perfect the skills of the troops". He said 1'500 soldiers and 2'500 reservists took part in the exercises with 10 tanks, artillery installations, warships, and the SU-27 fighter jets.
This participation of SU-27 Flanker jets would seem to confirm claims often made by the Georgian side that Russia continues to assist provide separatist Abkhazia with military assistance. Georgia's conflict resolution minister told Kommersant that "there are definitely Russian military instructors who are training pilots in Abkhazia", adding that the Georgian side was closely watching the maneuvers to determine Abkhazia's "real intentions" with the exercises.
While Russia has stood firm behind its claim that it plays only a peacekeeping role in the region, it is not the first time that reports have emerged about Russia military support to the region. In 1993, an SU-27 Flanker piloted by a Russian air force major was downed by the Georgian military, forcing the Russian side to admit that the plane had been dispatched to the region to "protect Russian facilities".
This latest incident comes at a critical period in Georgian-Russian relations, as recent talks in Tbilisi have failed to result in the two sides reaching an agreement over the terms for the withdrawal of two Russian military bases on Georgian soil. A third base, the Gudauta base situated in Abkhazia, also serves as a catalyst for tensions between the two sides, as Russia claims it has closed the base, as it agreed to do at a 1999 Istanbul summit, while Georgia insists that an international observation mission be allowed to monitor it.
The Gudauta base would serve as the most convenient location to service the SU-27 Flanker jets.
Posted by: Steve || 04/19/2005 9:53:06 AM || Comments || Link || [2 views] Top|| File under:


Europe
Nuggets from the Urdu Oslo Press
The headline was just begging for a change, heh.
OSLO, Norway, April 19 (UPI) -- A book believed to have been written by an Islamic cleric and circulating among Norway's Muslim community refers to Norwegians as the sons of Satan. The book was published by a group called the All Pakistan Muslim Society, the Aftenposten newspaper reported Tuesday. A copy of the book, written in the Pakistani language of Urdu, is in the hands of Oslo police.
Who would have thought the infidels could translate the sacred language of Urdu?
The unknown author also attacks Norwegian ethics and morality, saying Norwegians don't have legitimate children. Besides calling Norwegians the "sons of Satan," the author calls Norwegians "barbarians" and "poisonous snakes" who have poisoned humanity. "These white men have set off a devilish spiral in the whole world ... to plague people," the book says.
Yeah, that reads like the Urdu Nuggets
Some Muslim politicians in the country condemned the book, the newspaper said.
Condemmed the fact that it slipped out at least
"I can't accept that this author pretends he's speaking on behalf of all Muslims or Pakistanis," Kamil Azhar of the Labor Party told a local newspaper.
Just the ones that read Urdu
Posted by: Steve || 04/19/2005 3:59:50 PM || Comments || Link || [4 views] Top|| File under:

#1  "Not only that, but they are frequently drunk, eat foul and disgusting things, dance funny and listen to weird glacial music."
Posted by: Anonymoose || 04/19/2005 16:14 Comments || Top||

#2  The Sons of Satan sound like a motorcycle club.
Posted by: Alaska Paul || 04/19/2005 17:00 Comments || Top||

#3  Once again the true face of Islam shows it's self. They can't even behave as decent guests.
Posted by: Sock Puppet 0’ Doom || 04/19/2005 17:06 Comments || Top||

#4  Wanna join my fanclub Anonymoose?
Posted by: Bjork || 04/19/2005 17:20 Comments || Top||

#5  wait'll they find out they're getting bussed back to pakistan
Posted by: Frank G || 04/19/2005 18:13 Comments || Top||

#6  "who have poisoned humanity..."

I think the author is just saying that he doesn't like lutefisk-- and I gotta tell you, he may have a point there.
Posted by: Matt || 04/19/2005 19:11 Comments || Top||


Serb recruits refuse allegiance to Bosnia
ISN SECURITY WATCH (19/04/05) - The first generation of Bosnian-Serb army recruits asked to swear loyalty to Bosnia refused to do so and booed the national anthem during a weekend swearing-in ceremony. Over 500 Bosnian Serb army recruits were asked to swear an oath of allegiance to Bosnia and Herzegovina. However, when an officer read the oath intended to be repeated by the recruits, they instead swore loyalty only to the country's Serb-dominated entity of Republika Srpska (RS). The Bosnian Serbs' refusal to swear allegiance to Bosnia deals a harsh blow to the country, which in 2003 took historical steps to unify the country's armed forces.
The country was divided into two separate entities after the 1992-1995 war. Until now, the country's two separate armies swore allegiance only to their respective entities: the RS and the Bosniak- and Bosnian Croat-dominated Federation entity. The text of the pledge states: "[
]I will protect the territorial integrity and independence of B&H...". The recruits changed the text, replacing Bosnia with Republika Srpska, to the applause of their relatives and friends gathered at their barracks for the swearing in ceremony.
Bosnian Defense Minister Nikola Radovanovic, who is also a Serb, ordered an investigation into whether the incident had been organized by higher-ranking authorities. He said if that were proven to be the case, he would ask the defense minister of RS and other high-ranking military officers to resign. Radovanovic said he would press for a repeat of the ceremony.
Bosnian Serb politicians defended the soldiers' refusal to pledge allegiance to Bosnia, saying there had been too much pressure to form a joint army in Bosnia and that the soldiers had only expressed their personal opinions. Branko Trkulja, spokesman for the RS Defense Ministry, told media that the incident sent "a clear message to the international community that a unified army is not possible".
The international community condemned the soldiers' actions. The NATO commander in Bosnia, US General Steven Schook, called it "an illegal act", adding that the Bosnian Serb military was still influenced by opponents of reconciliation. He gave RS authorities until Wednesday to hand over the names of those responsible. The EU, the US embassy, NATO, and the international community's high representative to Bosnia, Paddy Ashdown, issued a statement saying that the incident should "be taken very seriously" because it indicated a "deeper problem". The creation of a joint command over the country's armed forces is one of the conditions for Bosnia to begin EU and NATO membership talks.
Posted by: Steve || 04/19/2005 10:02:26 AM || Comments || Link || [2 views] Top|| File under:

#1  The Bosnian Serbs’ refusal to swear allegiance to Bosnia deals a harsh blow to the country, which in 2003 took historical steps to unify the country’s armed forces.

There's a reason why "Balkans" is spoken of the way it is in the West...
Posted by: Bomb-a-rama || 04/19/2005 10:09 Comments || Top||


Fifth Column
Jihad at Manchester Community College
Earlier this year, Michael Abdelmessih was hired by Manchester Community College (MCC) in Connecticut to teach a noncredit course titled "Understanding Militant Islamic Fundamentalism." As of last Friday, however, Abdelmessih, a Coptic Christian who holds an MS degree in Political Science from Southern Connecticut State University, is out of a job, replaced by a Muslim professor.

That MCC moved so quickly to replace Abdelmessih reveals the disturbing effectiveness that apologists for radical Islam are having in stifling opposing viewpoints on college campuses across the United States. Six students originally signed up to take the course. Two of them were Muslim women serving on MCC's faculty. In an interview with Frontpagemag, Abdelmessih identified one of the women as Fatma Antar and the other as Dianne Hussein.
Rest at link.
Posted by: ed || 04/19/2005 00:00:00 AM || Comments || Link || [0 views] Top|| File under:

#1  You missed the jucey bits....

He continued:
"When I started talking about jihad, I was constantly interrupted because these two faculty members, Fatma and Dianne,
[who are both muslims and part of the 'middle eastern' faculty members who signed up for the course even when they obviously did not need it] claimed that jihad doesn't mean attacking non-Muslims, but means 'protecting Islam' Then, in the middle of the class, in Arabic no less, I received threats from Fatma…and she made it clear that she would 'contact the Egyptian government.' She said, 'believe me, you will not continue this course.'"

And she did not stop there. Abdelmessih says Fatma also threatened his family in Egypt, where Copts are brutally persecuted. He says that Anne Bonney, in turn, told him she feared for his and his family’s safety so much that she decided to station campus police at the classroom door to admit only enrolled students. "I asked Fatma in class if she intended to do the course work and homework in the class I had prepared before criticizing the course. She replied, 'No, I'm only here to watch you, '" Abdelmessih said.

"A week later, after the MCC class was over, I went on a trip to Washington, D.C. and while eating dinner was called by Anne Bonney of Manchester Community College,” he continued. “I was told I no longer will teach the course because of 'a few grammatical errors in the notes' (Abdelmessih was born overseas) I handed out to students."

and...
The threats, intimidation and ultimate removal of Abdelmessih's course, only to replace it with a Muslim professor as the instructor, shows that practices common in the Middle East are now making their way onto American college campuses. Abdelmessih is also supposed to teach Arabic this summer at Manchester Community College. At this point, however, he doesn't know if he will still have a job with the school, where dhimmitude has apparently become law.
Posted by: CrazyFool || 04/19/2005 3:55 Comments || Top||

#2  Violence and the Sacred in Islam
Colleen Keyes, Islamic Scholar, Hartford Seminary
Wednesday, April 13
7:30 p.m.
Andover Newton Theological School
Stoddard Hall
Posted by: sea cruise || 04/19/2005 7:10 Comments || Top||

#3  It really is a nutty world in academia. That Fatima sounds like a real charmer. Do the taxpayers in Connecticut actually pay for this type of circus?
Posted by: Tkat || 04/19/2005 9:20 Comments || Top||

#4  We are ALL paying for this stuff. Time to mail and phone your congress critters, local officials and alumni associations folks. This stuff sounds funny, but it's scary how pervasive it has become -- and how much the kids they talk to believe them.
Posted by: too true || 04/19/2005 9:26 Comments || Top||

#5  # 3 YEs! The tax payer's really PAY for this.
I went to college there several year's ago
for Occupational Therapy- they had a real bad director of their program-she finally left on her own, or was suggested to MOVE ON~~I never found out the scoop on that teacher. MUM is usually the word.

Andrea Jackson
Posted by: Andrea Jackson || 04/19/2005 9:52 Comments || Top||

#6  Community Colleges are a whole nother animal in the academic world. Often their instructors (not full professors, in general, unless the CC is an official feeder into a nearby university) are part timers with real jobs elsewhere. They tend to come and go anyway, as the needs of their real lives cause changes in personal priorities. So there is even less of a barrier to this kind of nonsense than at a proper university.

Andrea, you are an OT? My mother was an OTR :-)
Posted by: trailing wife || 04/19/2005 10:28 Comments || Top||

#7  Abdelmessih must have an even better understanding of militant Islamic fundamentalism now that he met those two lovely ladies. ;)
Posted by: Gir || 04/19/2005 14:25 Comments || Top||

#8  It is indeed a huge problem for the nation. The presence of so many nutjobs and anti-semitic conspiracy-mongers from Juan Cole on down the line is the major reason that this country's intel services have so few capable, clear-eyed middle eastern specialists. Intelligent students want no part of it; aspiring scholars who are inclined not to blame Israel for the arabs' problems are pushed out of the field.

But it's a long struggle. I've written repeatedly to the U-Michigan regents, president, head of history dept, about Cole's idiotic conspiracy-mongering and have yet to get a reply.
Posted by: thibaud (aka lex) || 04/19/2005 15:07 Comments || Top||

#9  Lex
Have you caught up with Efraim Karsh's article on Juan Cole?
Posted by: tipper || 04/19/2005 20:17 Comments || Top||


Home Front: Politix
Rehearing refused for threatened reporters
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit Tuesday refused to rehear the case of two journalists threatened with jail for protecting sources. The reporters and their news organizations can still ask the U.S. Supreme Court for review. At the request of special counsel Patrick Fitzgerald, a federal judge issued contempt citations against reporters for The New York Times and Time magazine for refusing to identify their sources. Fitzgerald, the U.S. attorney in Chicago, was appointed by the Justice Department to see if any administration officials broke the law by revealing the name of a covert CIA official to reporters.
Sigh, once again, she wasn't a covert agent, she was a analyst.
The wife of former ambassador Joseph Wilson was identified in an article by columnist Robert Novak. Wilson said the move was in retaliation for his contradicting President George W. Bush's claim that Saddam Hussein sought nuclear materials in Africa.
You mean the bogus story you came up with after your tea party in Niger? The one you had to retract later when the facts came out? That story?
An appeals panel approved the judge's order, and the reporters asked the full appeals court for a rehearing.
Posted by: Steve || 04/19/2005 3:41:10 PM || Comments || Link || [2 views] Top|| File under:


Home Front: WoT
A Rabbi and a Nazi walk into a airport....
KANSAS CITY, Mo., April 19 (UPI) -- A rabbi has reportedly assaulted a man wearing swastikas on his shirt and boots at the Kansas City, Mo., International Airport. Police officers told KCTV5 News that Rabbi David Fine initially told Steven Boswell he should be ashamed of himself for wearing the symbols at the airport's Expedia.com cafe.
When Boswell retorted he did not consider Fine to be a human, the rabbi threw his coffee on the man and punched him.
Never forgive, never forget, never again.
Boswell then struck Fine, who was wearing his yarmulke. Both men are in their late 30s and will appear in court charged with disorderly conduct.
Posted by: Steve || 04/19/2005 3:20:43 PM || Comments || Link || [2 views] Top|| File under:

#1  This should be interesting...

If you fuck with the bull, eventually you get the horn. So save the surprised look for somebody else, heh. I'd say the judge will prolly slap down the Rabbi, in this PC World he may have to, but I'll check to see if there's a way to contribute to him to help pay the tab, I like his guts.

Mebbe in KC they'll realize that advertising sometimes gets results, what else did he expect?
Posted by: .com || 04/19/2005 16:27 Comments || Top||

#2  More info here. I wonder if Boswell is the POS who has been posting NSM cards on the bulletin board at the Olathe Borders.
Posted by: BH || 04/19/2005 17:51 Comments || Top||

#3  well, now Boswell's address will be in court records....do with it what you will
Posted by: Frank G || 04/19/2005 18:25 Comments || Top||

#4  If anyone finds a way to donate to the good rabbit, count me in for twenty.
Posted by: Steve White || 04/19/2005 22:11 Comments || Top||

#5  Arrrggghhh! There must a hundred Rabbi David Fines out there!
Posted by: .com || 04/19/2005 22:28 Comments || Top||

#6  BH - BugMeNot doesn't cover KansasCity.com. If you see any info which further ID's David Fine, so followup can be located on him, please post it.
Posted by: .com || 04/19/2005 22:31 Comments || Top||

#7  What happens if Boswell falls off the top of a 5 story building and dies Doesn't show up for court?

I my book the wearing of swastikas is an incitement to violence equal to "fighting words" with a certain segment of our population. Comming to blows over it should not be considered an unprovoked attack and at best to be mutual combat at the worse. It's not a felony in any case.
Posted by: Sock Puppet 0’ Doom || 04/19/2005 22:39 Comments || Top||

#8  "Let me take its water."
-Stilgar
Posted by: .com || 04/19/2005 22:43 Comments || Top||

#9  Yea but that "water" might put up a pretty good fight, heh.
Posted by: Sock Puppet 0’ Doom || 04/19/2005 22:50 Comments || Top||


No Terrorists on the Left
Immediately after Timothy McVeigh was arrested for blowing up the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma City on a beautiful April morning 10 years ago, the media were atwitter with the talk of "right-wing militias" and the threat they posed to the republic.
McVeigh, unapologetic, defiant, and awash in hatred for the government, was presented as the poster boy of the government-hating, gun-loving, right-wing nuts. And we were told ad nauseam that McVeigh was the product of conservative talk radio and irresponsible Republican politicians who talked about revolution. It was all the fault of Rush Limbaugh and Newt Gingrich. (Rarely mentioned was the real motivator of McVeigh's actions: Janet Reno's attack on the Branch Davidians in Waco, Texas. But I digress.)

What happened to the great threat from the organized and armed radical right? The so-called militias dissipated, as most of their members were regular guys who didn't want to be painted as terrorist sympathizers. There were militia members who really did want to copy McVeigh, and they slunk back into the darkness to avoid the glare of the TV lights. But they were a fraction of the militia movement, and they have remained mostly underground since, isolated by their own crackpot radicalism.

In the decade since the Oklahoma City bombing, the media have remained interested in the right-wing crazies, but have almost entirely ignored the left-wing ones -- those committing most of the terrorist acts inside the United States. Left-wing terrorist groups have been responsible for almost all of the recent domestic terrorism. The National Memorial Institute for the Prevention of Terrorism maintains a terrorism database. According to its files, as the Baltimore Sun reported on Sunday, fully 22 of the 25 terrorist attacks inside the United States since 2003 are believed to have been the work of environmental extremists.

This is not a recent development. Left-wing terrorists have always been the major terrorist threat in the United States. In the FBI's 1996 report on terrorism in the U.S., the bureau mentions both right-wing and left-wing terrorists, but notes: "Over the last three decades, leftist-oriented extremist groups posed the predominant domestic terrorist threat in the United States."
The report went on to state that the collapse of the Soviet Union and the bureau's success in breaking up some of those groups had reduced the threat. But within five years the assessment was different. In its official terrorism report for 2000/2001, the FBI singled out environmental radicals as a major source of domestic terrorism, but did not mention right-wing groups at all.

"During the past several years, the violence and destructive activities perpetrated by animal rights and environmental extremists in the United States and elsewhere have increased in frequency and intensity," the report stated.
Separately google "left-wing terrorist" and "right-wing terrorist" and you will find a much longer list of hits for the latter, though the former is the more long-standing and persistent threat.

It is true that right-wing nuts such as Eric Rudolph, Matt Hale, and Timothy McVeigh have earned notoriety by attacking or planning to attack people instead of housing developments or Hummer dealerships. But the Unabomer attacked people. And it appears that some ecological terrorism avoided harming innocent people only by virtue of good timing.

Even as left-wing terrorism is on the rise, the media still focus on terrorists who lean to the right, or what they call the right. And the 10th anniversary of the Oklahoma City bombing is another opportunity for the media to discuss the threat from "right-wing" crazies. "10 years after terror, radical right still a threat," read an MSNBC headline on Monday. The threat to democracy posed by the "radical right" is a constant theme in the press, whether those radicals be Rush Limbaugh, George W. Bush, abortion opponents, born-again Christians, mythical legions of "angry white men," or gun-toting survivalists.

And while some right-wing radicals are a danger, the media's fixation is letting left-wing terror groups operate largely unnoticed. If the media turned up the heat on these environmental radicals as they turned up the heat on militias after Oklahoma City, the public scrutiny might help to break their ranks just as it did with the militias 10 years ago. It would be a great public service.

Too bad it won't happen.


Andrew Cline is editorial page editor of the New Hampshire Union Leader.
Posted by: Steve || 04/19/2005 12:48:26 PM || Comments || Link || [1 views] Top|| File under:


International-UN-NGOs
Kofi's Man Tied To Oily Korean's Raft Of Graft
An aide to U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan yesterday acknowledged ties with a shady South Korean man indicted Thursday for bribery in the oil-for-food scandal. Maurice Strong, a Canadian businessman who serves as Annan's special adviser for North Korea, said Tongsun Park invested in an energy company with which he was associated in 1997. Park, 70, who admitted to paying bribes to more than 30 U.S. congressmen during the "Koreagate" influence-peddling scandal of the 1970s, was accused last week of helping to steer payoffs from Saddam Hussein to two high-ranking U.N. officials. He is living in South Korea as a fugitive.

Strong, who was also a senior adviser to the World Bank, said he "continued to maintain a relationship" with Park, who he claimed advised him on North Korean issues. But Strong insisted he had "no connection whatsoever with the U.N.'s Iraq oil-for-food program." A government witness has said Park told him he had invested about $1 million of Saddam's money in a Canadian company established by the son of a U.N. official in 1997 or 1998. He also claimed he used $5 million in Iraqi money to fund the official's business dealings. But there is no proof that the official was Strong, although the probe is continuing.
Posted by: Fred || 04/19/2005 1:29:47 PM || Comments || Link || [0 views] Top|| File under:

#1  The UN - it just gets better everyday!
Posted by: Tkat || 04/19/2005 15:46 Comments || Top||

#2  It's someone connected to Strong, who's Canada's kingmaker and who's connected to the TotalFinaElf scamsters as well.
Posted by: thibaud (aka lex) || 04/19/2005 16:56 Comments || Top||


Organised crime, terrorism among top threats: UN
Brilliant! Simply brilliant! So what's the next step?
Organised crime is one of the world's leading threats to peace and security, and more must be done to counter terrorism and prevent transnational threats, a UN crime prevention congress heard Monday.
Like what? Got any ideas? Oooh! Oooh! I've got one!
Some 3,000 delegates attending the opening of the 11th United Nations congress on crime prevention and criminal justice were also urged to "conspire" against organised crime and terrorism by agreeing to international legal standards and helping fund poorer countries' efforts to meet such standards.
Ummm... That wasn't the idea I had...
"Organised crime is a leading threat to international peace and security in the 21st century," United Nations chief Kofi Annan said in a statement to the congress read out by top UN crime fighter Antonio Maria Costa. "This congress is an opportunity for the international community to stand firmly, united against the threats of crime - ensuring that those threats that are distant do not become imminent, and that those that are imminent do not actually become destructive," Annan said. The global strategy, he added, must include the ratification and implementation of UN conventions against transnational organised crime and corruption, and the dozen universal counter-terrorism instruments. Costa, head of the UN Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC), also said the once-remote risk of threats such as terrorism could mushroom in several countries if governments did not strengthen their criminal justice systems. "I recommend that the world community demonstrates courage by advancing the aims and the instruments against both terrorism and organised crime," Costa said.
Y'know they pay these guys good per diem rates to go to conferences and spout this stuff?
Posted by: Fred || 04/19/2005 00:00:00 || Comments || Link || [0 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Lol! The UN Secretariat is probably the perfect model of Dis-Organized Crime. The only aspects in which they're transparent are in taking credit for the work of others, raw unbridled greed, and top-down corruption.

Who keeps sticking a mike in front of this mook? Wotta fool. Kofi's like the World Jester.
Posted by: .com || 04/19/2005 1:54 Comments || Top||

#2  Someone call Websters - We've find the perfect example of the phrase "Pot calling the Kettle black".

The UN is the second largest crime organization in the world. (The first was started by an arab 'profit'....)
Posted by: CrazyFool || 04/19/2005 3:40 Comments || Top||

#3  Kofi talking about "organized crime"? As opposed to the "disorganized crime" shop he's running over there? What's he looking for, management tips?
Posted by: tu3031 || 04/19/2005 8:46 Comments || Top||

#4  Official corruption is a bigger problem. In effect many third-world countries are run by organized crime: their governments. Prime example is Zim-Bob-we. What is the UN going to do about that, huh Kofi, huh, huh? Wanker.
Posted by: Spot || 04/19/2005 8:53 Comments || Top||

#5  "Organised crime, terrorism among top threats: UN"

Top threats to whom, Kofi? I assume you mean your own DIS-organized crime racket?
Posted by: BA || 04/19/2005 9:39 Comments || Top||

#6  the same f*ckwits who couldn't agree on the definition of "terrorist" will get to bat around the definition of "organized crime". Whadya wanna bet it involves Zionism and Jooooos?
Posted by: Frank G || 04/19/2005 9:56 Comments || Top||


Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Iran investigates cause of clashes
After two days of violent demonstrations, the situation in the largely Arab Iranian southern city of Ahwaz was back to normal yesterday. The situation in the city was chaotic after a "fabricated" letter calling for a decrease in its Arab population was circulated, Iranian journalists said. "Practically, the (tense) situation is almost over," said Musaib Al Nueimi, Editor-in-Chief of Al Wefaq newspaper in the Iranian capital. "However, its aftermath is still there," he added in a telephone interview with Gulf News from Tehran.

In reference to the violent demonstrations that hit the oil-rich area near the Iraqi border, Al Nueimi added the timing of the development "is not in the interest of the region. Secondly, there are many Arabs based in the Khuzestan who had no role whatsoever in the riots." But, according to Al Nueimi, what makes the issue suspicious and shows it was a "conspiracy" is the way it erupted and ended, as well as the fact that the "letter which was distributed in the city from the Presidential office carried a name of an official who left his post some two years earlier," he said. The violence was sparked after a copy of a letter allegedly signed by former Vice-President Mohammad Ali Abtahi was circulated in Ahvaz and other cities in Khuzestan. The letter describes a plan to relocate non-Arabs to the city to make them the majority population. Violence erupted on Friday after hundreds of Arab residents of Ahvaz, the capital of Khuzestan province, gathered to chant slogans against an alleged government plan to move more non-Arabs into the city. However, Abtahi denied writing such a letter.
Posted by: Fred || 04/19/2005 00:00:00 AM || Comments || Link || [0 views] Top|| File under:


Home Front: Economy
Border Patrol Watch To Expand To Other States
The leaders of the volunteer "Minuteman" border patrol are planning expansion. They say they will not only continue watching the Arizona-Mexico border into the summer, but hope to have volunteers along the border from Texas to California by October. They also say they plan to pursue legal action against large U.S. companies that knowingly employ illegals.
A good argument can be made that such businesses are in violation of the RICO statutes, but the federal courts have determined that illegals have no right to sue these companies to force compliance of minimum wage, labor and health laws, or even for forbidding illegals to unionize. That is, using them as near-slave labor. So the Minutemen will actually have to prove "standing" against these companies to sue them for violating laws the authorities refuse to enforce. 'Statutory Neglect' is hard to get around.
Posted by: Anonymoose || 04/19/2005 10:35:17 AM || Comments || Link || [3 views] Top|| File under:

#1  keep the spotlight on!
Posted by: Frank G || 04/19/2005 10:41 Comments || Top||

#2  Amen. Shame the Govt into action.

The MSM will switch sides if the ACLU quietly crawls away (the blogosphere will notice it's with their tails tucked) - and they think they can bash Bush with it, of course. The ACLU Moonbats won't give up their precious DC lifestyle of lattes and long lunches for long and they'll run out of pot-smoking legal aides willing to sit on highway shoulders in the desert. Mebbe we can speed that up by telling them about rattlesnakes, scorpions, and gila monsters.

Just a couple more of these fantastic displays of civil citizen power, with similar restraint, and the shoe will be on the other foot. Single-handedly, these people are beating the snot out of the ACLU, lol! The Minutemen rock.
Posted by: .com || 04/19/2005 10:53 Comments || Top||

#3  So the Minutemen will actually have to prove "standing" against these companies to sue them for violating laws the authorities refuse to enforce. ’Statutory Neglect’ is hard to get around.

My answer: File in the 9th Circus in S.F. Heck, Michael Newdow got "standing" and he wasn't even the kids' legal guardian. Besides, they hate businesses and love the illegals, so the Minutemen just might win in that Circuit under RICO.
Posted by: BA || 04/19/2005 13:57 Comments || Top||

#4  There is no doubt that the heat is really getting cranked up on this issue. There is going to be a series of rallies in DC next week spearheaded by MoveAmericaForward.org They are calling the rally Hold Their Feet to the Fire. Learn more at http://www.nomoreamnesty.com/ It will include a large group of talk show hosts and others who are focused on the topic.

Regardless of what happens, there has to be a change to the status quo. There were some great comments on yesterday's thread on the topic. Hopefully, cool enough heads can prevail to permit serious discussion of the issues rather than name calling. This, I know, is a naive wish.
Posted by: Remoteman || 04/19/2005 18:28 Comments || Top||

#5  What the F*&k do you mean by ....er .....LOL . cooler heads indeed :-)
Posted by: Frank G || 04/19/2005 18:47 Comments || Top||

#6  Hee hee.... Just keep it away from the Militia boys.
Posted by: Shipman || 04/19/2005 19:39 Comments || Top||


Economists: Current Oil Prices Don't Threaten Recession
EFL. Tabular data and other articles linked in the original

Just how high would oil prices have to rise in order to tip the U.S. economy into recession?

Last summer, one-third of economists who participated in The Wall Street Journal Online's economic forecasting survey said a recession would follow if crude-oil stuck in between $50 and $59 a barrel -- exactly where futures prices have traded since late February.

But the economy isn't in peril today and, in the latest forecasting survey, the economists have changed their minds. None feel that $50 oil will trigger a recession. Thirty-one percent said they feel oil would have to be sustained at $80-89 a barrel to snuff out growth, while 48% believe crude would have to top $90.

Despite some recent spikes in oil prices, the economists don't expect energy prices to reach levels that would endanger the economy. In crafting their forecasts for growth this year, the economists, on average, say they have assumed that oil would remain at around $47.46 a barrel.

Indeed, the economists have kept their forecasts for economic growth relatively stable over recent months, even as oil has hit new nominal highs. This month, their forecasts for gross domestic product growth in the first quarter were nudged higher to an average 4.1%, up from the 4.0% rate they predicted when asked last month. For the balance of 2005, they put growth at an average 3.6% rate.

"Economists and others are perhaps still struggling to understand how oil prices affect the economy," says John Lonski of Moody's Investors Service, who was among the economists who said in August that oil in the range of $50 to $59 could provoke a recession, but who now say it would take oil prices of more than $80 to slow economic growth.

He says that one reason that high oil prices haven't had as detrimental an impact on the economy as initially predicted is that there is a "plentiful amount of liquidity" in the economy thanks to the Federal Reserve's accommodative monetary policy. Despite rate increases over the past 10 months, borrowing costs for business and consumers remain low relative to historical standards.

Several economists say that the absolute level of crude oil isn't as important as the rate at which it climbs. Sudden spikes — that are sustained — can have a big psychological effect on consumers and businesses, causing them to restrain spending. "The economy adjusts more easily to higher prices when they occur gradually," says Richard D. Rippe, chief economist at Prudential Equity Group.


Continued on Page 49
Posted by: too true || 04/19/2005 10:26:36 AM || Comments || Link || [1 views] Top|| File under:

#1  As the Economist points out on a regular basis, economists have a terrible record in forecasting recessions. Not surprising since they are non-lineal events. The stock market is generally considered the best forward indicator of a recession since it is driven by the same force that causes recessions (generally referred to as sentiment).
Posted by: phil_b || 04/19/2005 15:47 Comments || Top||

#2  Next year we will dream about oil trading at 50$
Posted by: True German Ally || 04/19/2005 16:12 Comments || Top||


Home Front: Culture Wars
Far Left Violent Extremists Complain Far Right Violent Extremists Didn't Make List Also
The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) does not list right-wing domestic terrorists and terrorist groups on a document that appears to be an internal list of threats to the nation's security.
According to the list — part of a draft planning document obtained by CQ Homeland Security — between now and 2011 DHS expects to contend primarily with adversaries such as al Qaeda and other foreign entities affiliated with the Islamic Jihad movement, as well as domestic radical Islamist groups.
It also lists left-wing domestic groups, such as the Animal Liberation Front (ALF) and the Earth Liberation Front (ELF), as terrorist threats, but it does not mention anti-government groups, white supremacists and other radical right-wing movements, which have staged numerous terrorist attacks that have killed scores of Americans. Recent attacks on cars, businesses and property in Virginia, Oregon and California have been attributed to ELF...
Granted, there should be four levels of terrorist-agitator group classifications: (1) Openly violent as a group; (2) Advocating violence as a group; (3) Individual members acting violently of their own volition; and, (4) Non-violent organizations that advocate non-violent methods, but endorse or support other, violent organizations. Violence can be against individuals, or against property that creates a situation of "reckless or willful endangerment" to people. This leaves broad areas for legal protest, legal petition, and non-violent activities that interfere with others, that by themselves are not terroristic, menacing, or endangering.
Posted by: Anonymoose || 04/19/2005 10:14:26 AM || Comments || Link || [3 views] Top|| File under:

#1  This, of course, comes a few days after the Atlanta/abortion clinic bomber gets 4 life terms. Certainly wasn't a member of the LLL.
Posted by: Chomose Spomoger7331 || 04/19/2005 11:09 Comments || Top||

#2  See, the key difference here is that while Lefties are a threat to the nation, the right wing nuts are only a threat to various neighbors. It's the lefty groups that want to destroy the economy, wipe out humanity and other more...grandiose things.
Posted by: Silentbrick || 04/19/2005 16:37 Comments || Top||

#3  Maybe it's my failing memory, but I don't recall the government doing a Waco or a Ruby Ridge on any left-wing groups...
Posted by: Pappy || 04/19/2005 20:54 Comments || Top||


Afghanistan/South Asia
Islamofascists attack Ahmadiyyas again in Bangladesh
50 hurt as bigots attack Ahmadiyyas in Satkhira
10 houses looted
Our Correspondent, Satkhira

[Islamofascists have been gaining strength in Bangladesh for years and now make up at least 10% of the population]
Religious bigots led by the International Khatme Nabuwat Movement Bangladesh (IKNMB) yesterday attacked the Ahmadiyya
[the Ahmadiyya believe the nasty medinan verses of the Koran only applied when people in Arabia worshipped idols; thus they do not believe in violent jihad]
community, injuring over 50 people including women and children, and looted at least 10 houses at Sundarban Bazar of Shyamnagar upazila.
"Hrarrr! Loot the infidels! Hrarrr!"
Supporters of the anti-Ahmadiyya outfit, which has long been campaigning for a government move to declare the sect non-Muslim, had a signboard posted on the local Ahmadiyya complex. It reads 'A place of worship for the Ahmadiyya Community, Sundarban Bazar' and it advises Muslims not to mistake the place as a mosque. Ahmadiyyas in Sundarban Bazar were in a panic, as the police did not yet take any measures to ward off further attacks on the sect, said locals. They also alleged that physicians did not attend in a timely manner to the injured, who were undergoing treatment at Shymnagar Hospital.

Witnesses said that nearly 15,000 IKNMB members brandishing sticks, machetes and darts started marching towards the Sundarban Bazar at about 1:00pm. IKNM Nayeb-e-Amir Mufti Nur Hossain Nurani and central leader Mohammed Muntasir Ahmed led the procession.......Money in cash, ornaments and other valuables were taken away from the houses of GM Sabbir, GM Mobarak Ahmed, SM Wahid, Abdul Mazid Sardar, SM Matiar Rahman, GM Abu Daud, GM Rois Ahmed
[these are, I think, all Ahmadiyya elders] and many others. ...Earlier at about 10:00am, the IKNMB held a rally at the Haringar High School premises.
no doubt our Islamic apologist experts will say that were it not for the US invasion of Iraq and the Israeli administration of the west bank, this violence would surely cease.
Posted by: mhw || 04/19/2005 9:23:46 AM || Comments || Link || [3 views] Top|| File under:


New book claims 9/11 hijackers spoke Balochi
Not sure what to make of this, maybe the hijackers picked up some Baluchi when they were in South Western Afghanistan and used it as a code language. At the end is an excerpt from the book with a strange claim by former CIA operative Bob Baer. Hat tip Bharat Rakshak

Some of the 9/11 hijackers are said to have spoken in Balochi in the run-up to that tragedy that grabbed world headlines in 2001. According to Parick Keefe, the author of a new book on how the United States intercepts electronic communications worldwide, terrorists whose conversations are picked up by the National Security Agency, the most secret of American spying establishments, often use slang, obscure references and sometimes speak languages such as Balochi, a language shared by the 9/11 hijackers. Keefe, according to the Daily Times, believes that no one at the National Security Agency speaks Balochi. The world's chatter, as such intercepts are known in the spying trade, has grown so dramatically as to overwhelm the capabilities of the eavesdroppers. Keefe says it is not humanly possible for the millions of intercepts the US makes to be deciphered and interpreted.

Bob Baer told me, "You've got to have the linguists. Look at the guys who brought down the World Trade Center. They were all Baluch. Christ, I don't know anyone who speaks Baluch. " (Baluchi is an Iranian branch of the Indo-European language family, spoken by the Baluch people, of whom there are only an estimated 100,000 in the world, mostly in Pakistan.). "The fact is that [Mohammad] Atta and his cousin were both Baluch and who knows who else they had in a support network working out of Karachi." Baer continued. "And NSA barely had any Dari speakers."(Dari is the Afghan dialect of Farsi.) ."I think they just had one when the war started in October. So I can't imagine they trained any Baluch speakers."
Posted by: Paul Moloney || 04/19/2005 1:09:48 AM || Comments || Link || [1 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Don't some accounts of KSM's shifting ethnicities say he's a Baluch?
Posted by: Dan Darling || 04/19/2005 1:40 Comments || Top||

#2  Balochi Jooos. Wow, who'da thunk it?
Posted by: .com || 04/19/2005 1:40 Comments || Top||

#3  That connection is the only reason I posted this Dan, but I had thought that the Arab ethnicity of Mohammad Atta and the rest of the Hamburg Cell had been well established, so I'm not sure how being Baluchi could tie in with that.

Unless some of the Saudi muscle used in the hijackings were of Baluchi descent, but again I think their Arab Tribal links are well known. Still I thought it was worth posting.
Posted by: Paul Moloney || 04/19/2005 1:47 Comments || Top||

#4  I meant that KSM (and his nephews?) could have taught them Baluchi, though I don't think that interpretation is in the spirit of Baer's remarks.
Posted by: Dan Darling || 04/19/2005 2:18 Comments || Top||

#5  That would be interesting, it makes sense that Arab terrorists would be taught languages that they know intelligence agencies have no experience with.
Posted by: Paul Moloney || 04/19/2005 2:22 Comments || Top||

#6  No real mystery. Its common for people to switch to a language that they believe any listeners don't understand. Ever been around parents who speak a language their kids don't understand?
Posted by: phil_b || 04/19/2005 3:44 Comments || Top||

#7  Or illegals on a jobsite.
Posted by: raptor || 04/19/2005 7:56 Comments || Top||

#8  The significance is the key role Baluchistan plays in the area. It's wild, the locals are fighting both Iran and the Afghan government and Iran's proposed natural gas pipeline through the area to India is being held up by them (good for us).

If Atta et al have strong ties there, it underscores the roots al Qaeda has put down in places like this.
Posted by: too true || 04/19/2005 8:48 Comments || Top||

#9  But do they speak Bocce?
Posted by: BH || 04/19/2005 10:24 Comments || Top||

#10  Of course they do, it's like a second language - Shutting up sir.
Posted by: rjschwarz || 04/19/2005 11:10 Comments || Top||


India warns Bangladesh against "unprovoked attacks" on border
India warned Bangladesh on Monday not to escalate border tensions by ``unprovoked attacks'' following a weekend skirmish that left two persons dead. ``Unprovoked attack and escalation of tension in the border areas is not healthy for a friendly atmosphere,'' said Ranjit Shekhar Mooshahary, Director-General of the Border Security Force (BSF). "We have adequate BSF soldiers on the border to meet any challenge." The warning followed an exchange of fire on Saturday between Bangladeshi and Indian border forces that officials said killed an Indian BSF assistant commandant and a young Bangladeshi girl. Both sides have blamed each other for starting the firing. The weekend gunbattle along Bangladesh's eastern Akhaura border erupted as talks between Bangladeshi and Indian officials in Dhaka on ending rows over New Delhi's fencing of their common 4,095-km frontier and other security issues ended without resolution. India says it is building the fence to prevent rebels, illegal migrants and smugglers from sneaking across the frontier. Bangladesh does not object to the fence, but it has asked India not to build it within 150 metres of the so-called ``zero line,'' saying it violates a 1974 agreement between the two countries.

Both countries also routinely charge each other with sheltering rebels and criminals. ``During our Dhaka meeting, we did not get a positive response in resolving important issues like handing over Indian militant leaders, destroying militant camps, and checking illegal migration from across the border,'' the BSF official said. The Indian side has alleged Bangladesh has 190 camps run by north-eastern Indian separatist groups on its soil. Bangladesh rejects such charges and has said there are Bangladeshi criminals hiding in India.
Posted by: Paul Moloney || 04/19/2005 12:41:07 AM || Comments || Link || [0 views] Top|| File under:


Iraq-Jordan
Talabani rules out signing Saddam's death warrant
Iraq's new President Jalal Talabani said he would refuse to sign Saddam Hussein's death warrant if the former dictator was convicted of war crimes. In an interview on Monday with the British Broadcasting Corp, Talabani said he opposed capital punishment on principle. "Personally, no, I won't sign," he said in an online BBC report of the interview. "But you know, the presidency of Iraq are three people. These three must decide. So I can be absent. I can go on holiday and let the two others (the vice-presidents) decide."
Posted by: Fred || 04/19/2005 00:00:00 || Comments || Link || [0 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Bawk, bawk, bawk, bawk bawwwwwk!!.....
Posted by: Bomb-a-rama || 04/19/2005 1:41 Comments || Top||

#2  I will not sign the order. I will just send an e-mail. Talabani
Posted by: JFM || 04/19/2005 8:04 Comments || Top||

#3  Hell. For the cost of a six pack, roasted chicken, and the airfare, I will conduct the trial, convict fairly, and sign the order to off him all before 5pm on Friday!
Posted by: Tkat || 04/19/2005 10:36 Comments || Top||

#4  Well, he may not be "leading," but he IS "getting out of the way" ...
Posted by: Edward Yee || 04/19/2005 11:19 Comments || Top||

#5  It's fourth and 4, Talabani's back to punt... and it's a beauty!
Posted by: Raj || 04/19/2005 12:39 Comments || Top||


Afghanistan/South Asia
Militant groups criticise India-Pakistan agreement
Several Kashmiri militant groups on Monday accused Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf of abandoning the cause of the Kashmiri people by conceding too much during weekend talks with Indian leaders in New Delhi. "President Musharraf has sold out Kashmir for trade and tourism," said a statement signed by a spokesman of the four militant groups and faxed to The Associated Press in Srinagar.
"And we ain't gonna stand for it!"
The comment referred to a joint statement issued earlier on Monday by President Musharraf and Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh at the end of the Pakistani president's visit to India. In the statement, both countries agreed to ease restrictions along their heavily militarised border and promote more trade and tourism in Kashmir. "This is the first time in Pakistan's history that a head of state has given in to India," the militant statement said, adding, "We will not give up jihad until Kashmir becomes free."
"... and we run it!"
The militant groups signatories to the statement are: Al-Nasireen (The Helpers), Save Kashmir Movement, Al-Arifeen (The Pious) and Farzandan-e-Millat (Sons of the Community). Separately, people in Jammu and Kashmir on Monday welcomed the announcement of more bus and transport links for trade across the heavily militarised Line of Control (LoC).
These aren't the groups we see in our periodic Kashmir Korpse Kounts. Presumably, identifying themselves as Hizbul or Jaish would be a little too obvious for the locals. I'd guess they already have a pretty good idea who they really are, though.
Posted by: Fred || 04/19/2005 00:00:00 AM || Comments || Link || [1 views] Top|| File under:

#1  MITP Terrorism Knowledge Base

Al-Nasireen is believed to be a front for the Pakistan-based Lashkar-e-Tayyaba militant group. The group claims responsibility for two grenades fired at the Srinigar residence of Mufti Muhammad Sayeed, Chief Minister of Jammu and Kashmir

According to the Indian intelligence service, Al-Arifeen is a front for the Pakistan-based militant group Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT), while the US State Department calls them an offshoot group.
Posted by: john || 04/19/2005 19:39 Comments || Top||


Terror Networks & Islam
MEMRI Updates
Hamas Political Head: Calming Down is Just a Trick Within the Resistance Plan; Hamas Does Not Object to the '67 Borders as an Interim Solution
What's after the Interim Solution?
The "Final Solution"

Arab League Ambassador to Britain in Talk to Conservative MPs: 9/11 Was Not a Good Justification For Enmity Towards Arabs and Muslims; Israel's Hand in the Matter is Clear
Posted by: ed || 04/19/2005 00:00:00 AM || Comments || Link || [0 views] Top|| File under:


Afghanistan/South Asia
PPP will continue talks with govt, says Zardari
The Pakistan People's Party (PPP) will continue talks with the government and keep up other efforts to restore democracy, Asif Ali Zardari said on Monday night. Talking to reporters at a reception hosted by Azizur Rehman Chan, PPP Lahore president, Zardari said emissaries from the establishment were in contact with him. He said that his Benazir Bhutto would return to Pakistan soon and become prime minister again. Several PPP activists, chanting "Jiye Bhutto" attended the reception. Zardari later attended the wedding of Sahibzada Nazir Sultan's son at his Zafar Ali Road residence. Since food was not served at the function because of the ban on meals at weddings, Zardari and Chaudhry Ahmad Mukhtar had dinner at McDonalds in Defence.
Posted by: Fred || 04/19/2005 00:00:00 || Comments || Link || [1 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Now that's a nice moustache, although it does seem glued-on to me. Does he have a rug, too?
Posted by: Spot || 04/19/2005 8:44 Comments || Top||

#2  swarthy Gomez Addams
Posted by: Frank G || 04/19/2005 9:10 Comments || Top||

#3  I guess Morticia Benazir has an interesting love life, when he's not in jug...
Posted by: Fred || 04/19/2005 9:59 Comments || Top||

#4  "Tish! You spoke Baluch!"
Posted by: Frank G || 04/19/2005 10:02 Comments || Top||

#5  Frank: I thought of that one, but decided not to.

Anyway, I wonder if he has a Setback With The Cheez Whiz scheduled anytime soon.
Posted by: Phil Fraering || 04/19/2005 10:13 Comments || Top||

#6  Since food was not served at the function because of the ban on meals at weddings, Zardari and Chaudhry Ahmad Mukhtar had dinner at McDonalds in Defence.

No comment necessary.
Posted by: trailing wife || 04/19/2005 10:18 Comments || Top||

#7  LOL Frank.
Posted by: Shipman || 04/19/2005 11:21 Comments || Top||

#8  sings: "you deserve a break today....."
Posted by: Liberalhawk || 04/19/2005 11:31 Comments || Top||

#9  That moustache - somewhere between '70's porn star' and Snidely Whiplash.
Posted by: Raj || 04/19/2005 12:31 Comments || Top||


500 PPPP workers released
Posted by: Fred || 04/19/2005 00:00:00 || Comments || Link || [0 views] Top|| File under:


Extremism threatens foundations of Pakistani state: ICG report
While each and every recommendation in this thing makes sense, I can't see any of it happening — none, zero, zip, nada, zilch. It simply goes against the grain of the way Pakland's evolved from the day it received independence. A much more useful set of recommendations would to to dispatch hunter-killer teams to bump off Qazi, Sami, Fazl, Hamid Gul, and Hafiz Saeed, and from there to go after the next level of terror down, starting with Syed Salahuddin, Liaquat Baloch and probably half the Pak corps commanders. ICG is proposing political solutions to what are in fact military problems: Pakland is home to a hard core of terrorism's leading lights. Not until they are removed from the scene will there be the slightest chance of reforming a country where the definition of success is based on jihad.
A report issued on Monday sees Sectarian conflict in Pakistan as having reached alarming proportions as a direct consequence of Islamisation and the policy of marginalising democratic forces.
I hate to say I told you so, but that's exactly what we did...
The report issued by the International Crisis Group (ICG) finds that co-option and patronage of religious parties by successive military governments have brought Pakistan to a point where religious extremism threatens to erode the foundations of the state and society.
Religious extremism is attempting to become the foundation of Pak society. Nothing less is acceptable to Qazi, Fazl, Sami, Hamid Gul, and Hafiz Saeed. It shows in virtually every pronouncement of the MMA. It shows in the fact that respected Pakistani politicians would be candidates for canvas jackets in most other countries, to include Afghanistan.
The frequency and viciousness of sectarian terrorism continues to increase while the world showers praise on President Pervez Musharraf. The report says, "Instead of empowering liberal, democratic voices, the government has co-opted the religious right and continues to rely on it to counter civilian opposition. By depriving democratic forces of an even playing field and continuing to ignore the need for state policies that would encourage and indeed reflect the country's religious diversity, the government has allowed religious extremist organisations and jihadi groups, and madrasas that provide them an endless stream of recruits, to flourish. It has failed to protect a vulnerable judiciary and equip its law-enforcement agencies with the tools they need to eliminate sectarian terrorism.
The military-religious alliance has been a feature of Pak politix for too many years. But at this stage they really are stuck between a rock and a hard place, with the military unable to toss the turbans without themselves being tossed by a more liberal regime. And there's no guarantee whatsoever that a civilian regime would be more liberal — it's entirely likely, given the past three years' experience, that the fundos would end up being the ones to take power. The corruption that's been a characteristic of the civilian regimes doesn't help matters, either...

Continued on Page 49
Posted by: Fred || 04/19/2005 00:00:00 AM || Comments || Link || [9 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Nice comments, Fred.

At this point I think Pakistan is a deadend; the scary thing is that it's disastrous mix of Jihadi militias, Pious Holy Men leading the cannon fodder, and military/intelligence services with the hands in all sort of dirty dealings has become increasingly prevelent in other countries like Bangladesh and Indonesia.

Hopefully something can still be done to arrest the slide in those countries, and many of the ICG's recommendations are easily transferrable to other countries.
Posted by: Paul Moloney || 04/19/2005 0:35 Comments || Top||

#2  Not to mention the Pak legislators don't know each other by face; they see each other only from behind as they walk out on the sessions day after day after day...
Posted by: Seafarious || 04/19/2005 0:45 Comments || Top||

#3  Most of them need all the exercise they can get
Posted by: Paul Moloney || 04/19/2005 0:49 Comments || Top||

#4  Minor edit, then:

they see each other only from behind as they waddle out on the sessions day after day after day...
Posted by: Seafarious || 04/19/2005 0:59 Comments || Top||

#5  The Pak legislators have wintered well. They are big enough to burn diesel.
Posted by: Alaska Paul || 04/19/2005 2:04 Comments || Top||

#6  I thought extremism was one of the foundations of the "land of the pure".
Posted by: Robert Crawford || 04/19/2005 7:42 Comments || Top||

#7  One reason it's important to cultivate India.
Posted by: too true || 04/19/2005 8:45 Comments || Top||

#8  What about my man, Akbar Bugti? Isn't he worth wasting too? (please?)
Posted by: Spot || 04/19/2005 8:47 Comments || Top||

#9  Foster Brooks? He's part of the feudal setup, a slightly different flavor of repression. He'd be on my second-string kill list. The sardars are part of Pak's problem, but a separate part; they'd probably eventually be controllable, if the other parts weren't there. As it is, they're just one string in the Gordian knot.

Because of its peculiar evolution, Pakland may be the most screwed-up country in the world. What theoretical prescriptions like this one miss is that the holy men enforce and maintain their power only secondarily through their influence on the devout. Their primary instruments of influence are their fascisti. Banging heads with them are other bands of fascisti, of course, like the MQM. This leads to one of those chicken and egg situations, where you can't quite make out whether the holy men rely on the brownshirts because everybody else has them, or everybody else has brownshirts because the holy men are so free with their use. But every time you see the word "activist" you can translate it to "brownshirt."
Posted by: Fred || 04/19/2005 9:31 Comments || Top||

#10  so what's the answer? Hope for a losing nuke exchange with India? A plague that strikes turban-wearers? What a shit hole
Posted by: Frank G || 04/19/2005 9:54 Comments || Top||

#11  Prob'ly the best solution would be a sustained program of destabilization, since stabilization seems to be out of the question. If Perv falls off his tightrope that would seem to be the only solution -- to set them all to fighting among themselves and then deal with any survivors once they've gotten it out of their system. The danger there is the Islamic nukes. Hafiz Saeed wouldn't hesitate to use them, would in fact look for an excuse. But the right pushes, in the right places, would break the country into five or six pieces, with at least three or four of them having much the same aspect as Somalia.
Posted by: Fred || 04/19/2005 10:09 Comments || Top||

#12  We dealt with Pakistan because we needed the access to Afghanistan. Dealing with them since the beginning of the war in Afghanistan has been a pain in the butt. It is like dealing with a person with multiple personalities (that has them all activated at the same time). Our big concern is with the nukes. Nuke, nuke, who has the nuke? If it was not for the nukes, this land where reason and logic was forgotten could rot, as long as we could make a deal with the local warlord for access to good olde Afghanistan.
Posted by: Alaska Paul || 04/19/2005 11:48 Comments || Top||

#13  ahhh but think of the crash in the world's supply of forged documents should Pak disappear...
Posted by: Frank G || 04/19/2005 12:07 Comments || Top||

#14  “Instead of empowering liberal, democratic voices, the government has co-opted the religious right and continues to rely on it to counter civilian opposition.'

I was wondering where Chuck Schumer got his talking points...
Posted by: Raj || 04/19/2005 12:24 Comments || Top||

#15  Frank, I thought all the passports in Pakiwakiland had to have a religion column...
Posted by: Spot || 04/19/2005 15:39 Comments || Top||

#16  just the small percentage that are real
Posted by: Frank G || 04/19/2005 15:42 Comments || Top||

#17  Hmmmmmm.... realpakipassports.com is available. I see an RB growth industry.
Posted by: Shipman || 04/19/2005 16:56 Comments || Top||


Iraq-Jordan
Kidnappings aim to spark sectarian strife, says Allawi
Iraq's Al Qaida wing said yesterday a hostage crisis in Madaen near Baghdad had been fabricated to give Iraqi forces a pretext to raid the town and attack Sunnis, according to an Internet statement. Meanwhile, Iraq's caretaker prime minister blamed the kidnappings Al Qaida's wing and said it was part of a plan to spread sectarian strife.
Gee, golly. Y'think?
"The infidels fabricated the case of the hostages. They are lying," the Sunni group led by Jordanian militant Abu Musab Al Zarqawi said in the statement on a web site.
"Wudn't us."
"The infidels and apostates incited them (Shiites) to lie so that they can invade Madaen as they did Falluja ... and other cities," it said, referring to last year's US-led military offensive against the Sunni city west of Baghdad. Iraqi forces, backed by US troops, surrounded Madaen yesterday to prepare to rescue Shiite hostages. A senior Shiite official in Baghdad said up to 150 hostages were being held, including women and children. But a police official has said the number of hostages could be as few as three.
Slight discrepancy in numbers there, though it wouldn't really matter to you if you happened to be one of the three...
Al Qaida Organisation for Holy War in Iraq said the standoff in Madaen was triggered by Iraqi troops raiding Sunni homes. "The enemies of God, the pagan guards and police helped by the crusaders and Jews raided Sunni homes, beat up Sunnis in front their families, arrested them and took them to (the southeastern city) Kut for no reason or crime," it said. On other hand, Allawi said in a statement "unfortunately, evil powers are trying to disturb the peace of our country, stop progress, destroy Iraq, keep killing innocent civilians and planning for the start of ethnic, sectarian and religious division."
Posted by: Fred || 04/19/2005 00:00:00 AM || Comments || Link || [2 views] Top|| File under:



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Two weeks of WOT
Tue 2005-04-19
  Moussaoui asks for death sentence
Mon 2005-04-18
  400 Algerian gunmen to surrender
Sun 2005-04-17
  2 Pakistanis arrested in Cyprus on al-Qaeda links
Sat 2005-04-16
  2 Iraq graves may hold remains of 7,000
Fri 2005-04-15
  Basayev nearly busted, fake leg seized
Thu 2005-04-14
  Eleven Paks charged with Spanish terror plot
Wed 2005-04-13
  10 dead in Mosul suicide bombings
Tue 2005-04-12
  3 charged with plot to attack US targets
Mon 2005-04-11
  U.S.-Iraqi Raid Nets 65 Suspected Terrs
Sun 2005-04-10
  Tater thugs protest US presence in Iraq
Sat 2005-04-09
  Scores dead as Yemeni Army seizes rebel outposts
Fri 2005-04-08
  2 killed, 18 injured in explosion at major Cairo tourist bazaar
Thu 2005-04-07
  Hard Boyz shoot up Srinagar bus station
Wed 2005-04-06
  Final count, 18 dead in al-Ras shoot-out
Tue 2005-04-05
  Turkey Seeks Life For Caliph of Cologne


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