Hezbollah: Israel will Find '06 war was Bit of Fun if It Repeats Stupid Mistake


Hezbollah’s Executive Council Chief Sayyed Hashem Safiyyeddine warned Israeli Defense Minister Ehud Barak that he will discover that the 2006 war on Lebanon was nothing but a bit of fun if the Israeli occupation army made the stupid mistake of attacking Lebanon again.
“If Barak’s threats are serious — and I don’t think they are — he should be aware that if he commits an error or stupid act against Lebanon… he will discover that the months of July and August 2006 were just a bit of fun,” his eminence said.
Speaking a ceremony in south Lebanon, Sayyed Safiyyeddine said: “We have never, and we will never seek war. However the rule that we’ve adopted to keep the war away from our country is that we have to be strong.”
Barak said on Thursday that the Jewish state would use “all necessary force” if there was a fresh conflict on its northern border with Lebanon. He charged that Hezbollah has stockpiled 40,000 rockets.
Lieutenant General Gaby Ashkenazi, head of Israel’s armed forces, warned last month against a military conflict with Lebanon, saying Hezbollah’s weapons stockpile poses a “serious” threat to Israel.
“Based on the fact that we are strong today and we have been living on the formula and the victory of the 2006 war, we believe that all of the Israeli threats are hollow and meaningless. On the other hand, what is happening in the region and in Lebanon in particular, pertaining to the attempts to target the resistance and its position, it has been proven that of those schemes have fallen down…All of the United States’ political projects to curb the resistance and take vengeance on it have also fallen down and therefore, there is no need to be worried…For some political players in Lebanon who do not want to perceive this fat, this is their problem not the problem of most of the Lebanese who have reached a political agreement that can be founded on in order to pull Lebanon out of its problems and crises. The Lebanese must differentiate between their friend and their enemy and they have to know how to set their political priorities,” Sayyed Safiyyeddine said.

Terrorists on the run; to be eliminated soon; Gilani


SWAT, Aug 10 (APP): Prime Minister Syed Yusuf Raza Gilani on Monday said that the terrorists were on the run, the differences between them are widening and they will soon be eliminated. Addressing a large gathering of elders here, the prime minister said that government had to ensure its writ and resorted to the use of military to counter the miscreants.

“No one will any longer be allowed to dishonour our women, deny education to them, make their lives miserable, create lawlessness,” Gilani said in his first visit since the return of the displaced people.

He asked the people of Swat and Malakand to be wary of “blacksheep” who mislead them and create problems for them and the country.

Governor NWFP Owais Ghani, Chief minister NWFP Ameer Haider Khan Hoti and Chief Minister Punjab Mian Shahbaz Sharif attended the public meeting.

The prime minister who made an unannounced visit to the scenic Swat valley, that was forcefully vacated from groups of militants, said the valley as more beautiful than Switzerland and vowed to revive its main tourism industry.

He urged the locals to come up with suggestions so as to revive the business activities that grounded to a halt and assured full government support.

The Prime Minister said the government would soon introduce a special package for Swat that includes its reconstruction, rehabilitation of affected people besides initiating new development projects for the areas’ uplift.

He said the federal government would provide as much financial assistance for Swat and the rehabilitation of locals.

“Money does not matter before your safety and development,” he said while addressing to the Swat locals.

He said the government had already allocated Rs 50 billion for rehabilitation of Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs), so as to continue the development projects.

Gilani announced setting up of Navtec in Swat besides relaxing the age limit to 28 and lowering the qualification to Bachelors so as to enable the local youth get skilled training with a stipend of Rs 10,000.

The prime minister also announced construction of Dargai-Mingora dual carriageway and said funds for the project will be sought through the Friends of Democratic Pakistan.

Terrorists have neither any religion nor any conscience and the people are witness that they turned their guns towards their own people.

He said the of people of Swat and Malakand have sacrificed their today for a bright and prosperous future of the country.

“I salute you all on behalf of the nation,” Gilani said.

He asked all the four chief ministers to nominate a minister each to represent at the flag hoisting ceremony on 14th August in Swat.

He also paid rich tributes to all those who participated in this operation to rid the country of the elements who were bent upon creating chaos.

The prime minister said the people who hosted hundreds of thousands of displaced families deserve rich tributes as they exhibited the spirit of Ansaar-e-Madinah.

He assured the people of Swat, Malakand and adjoining areas that the government will extend full support to the people and take all necessary measures to provide best possible facilities to these people.

He hoped peace and tranquility will soon return to the affected areas as the government gears up its machinery to rebuild the devastated areas.

The prime minister said it was vital that the new generation be enlightened enough to differentiate between what is right and wrong and the real message of Islam, that is against violence and preaches tolerance.

Earlier the Prime Minister and the Chief of the Army Staff General Ashfaq Parvaiz Kayani were also briefed about the measures taken for return of the Internally Displaced Persons and reconstruction and rehabilitation efforts.

Terrorists kidnap, torture boy to bully Iraqi policeman


FALLUJA, Iraq (CNN) — Like many young boys, Khidir loves playing with toy cars and wants to be a policeman like his father when he grows up. But it was his father’s very job that caused the tiny child to suffer the unimaginable.Khidir was just 6 years old when he was savagely ripped away from his family, kidnapped by al Qaeda operatives in Iraq.

“They beat me with a shovel, they pulled my teeth out with pliers, they would go like this and pull it,” said Khidir, now 8, demonstrating with his hands. “And they would make me work on the farm gathering carrots.”

What followed was even more horrific, an ordeal that would last for two years in captivity. Khidir and his father spoke to CNN recently, more than half a year after his rescue by Iraqi police. Video Watch boy describe torture »

“This is where they hammered a nail into my leg and then they pulled it out,” he says, lifting up his pant leg to show a tiny wound.

He says his captors also pulled out each of his tiny fingernails, broke both his arms, and beat him repeatedly on the side of the head with a shovel. He still suffers chronic headaches. He remembers them laughing as they inflicted the pain.

“I would think about my mommy and daddy,” he replies, when asked how he managed to get through the agony.

His father, Abdul Qader, struggles for words. “When he tells me about how they would torture him, I can’t tolerate it. I start crying,” he says. “What hurts me the most is when they hammered a nail into his leg.”

The father, a police officer, was sleeping at the police station in Falluja when his son was kidnapped. It was too dangerous to go home regularly. Although Falluja was no longer controlled by insurgents, assassinations against police were common.

“I woke up to the sound of a huge explosion … and then I heard my name on the radio. I ran outside and they came to me saying your house was blown up,” he says.”When the police patrol came back, they all started kissing and comforting me,” he continues. “I was asking, ‘What’s going on? Where is my family?’ They told me that they took my son. This was a disaster. I went mad that day, I wasn’t normal, I was hysterical.”

Khidir’s grandmother was at home with the family at the time.

“The kidnappers climbed the fence and kicked in the door,” she says.”They were screaming for Abdul Qader. I told them he’s not here. They called me a liar and said we want his son. His son was hiding behind me, clutching my clothes. I said this is not his son. They hit me on the back with a rifle and ripped him out of my arms.”

The last thing she remembers were his screams of “Granny, Granny!”

The attackers rigged the house with explosives and demolished it before taking off with the 6-year-old. The boy’s grandmother and seven other family members rushed out of the home before it exploded.

“The kidnappers called me on the phone and demanded that some prisoners that we had be released or they would slit his throat,” Khidir’s father says. “But I said no to the release. I would not put killers back out on the street that would hurt other Muslims. So I thought to myself, ‘Let my son be a martyr.’ ”

He even held a secret funeral for his little boy. He didn’t want to tell the rest of the family that he had refused the kidnappers’ ultimatum, allowing them to hope that he was still alive.

Last December, nearly two years later, police in Taji, about 45 miles (70 kilometers) away, received a tip that terrorists were holding kidnapped children.

“We thought that it was just a tip to ambush us, but we considered the mission as a sacrifice,” said Iraqi police Capt. Khalib Ali. “Either we find the children and free them or face the danger and take the risk.”

The tip led the Iraqi police to a rundown farm and a series of mud huts. Khidir’s tiny body was twisted abnormally. And in another hut, they found another child. Two children are still believed to be with the kidnappers.

Al Qaeda in Iraq has historically kidnapped children for money, to pressure officials, and even to use in terrorist attacks.

For Khidir’s father, it was as if his son had come back from the dead.

“He didn’t recognize his mother or his grandmother,” Abdul Qader says. “But then he saw me in uniform and ran to me. I went flying toward him to hug him. People said be careful; both his arms are broken. So I held him from his waist, and he hugged me, kissed me, smelled me, and then broke into a smile.”

Israel bombs Gaza tunnel in retaliatory strike


GAZA (Reuters) – Israeli warplanes bombed a tunnel under the Gaza Strip border with Egypt on Monday, the first such attack in almost two months, the Israeli military said.

Witnesses and officials of the Islamist group Hamas which rules the enclave confirmed the pre-dawn strike. There were no reports of casualties.

Gaza’s smuggling tunnels, which still number in the hundreds despite air attacks and an Egyptian crackdown in which some have been blown up or flooded, are a frequent target for Israeli retaliation for attacks by Gaza’s armed Palestinian groups.

Monday’s raid was launched in response to recent mortar and rocket attacks, an Israeli military spokeswoman said. It was the first aerial bombardment of the Gaza Strip since June 18.

The aircraft had targeted a tunnel under the border at Rafah which was suspected of being used to smuggle explosives into Gaza from Egypt, she added.

On Sunday, two mortar rounds were fired near Israel’s fortified Erez border crossing as a number of medical patients going for treatment in Israel were being ferried out by ambulance.

The rounds exploded about 300 meters from the Erez wall in Palestinian territory and no one was hurt.

On the day before, a rocket fired from Gaza exploded in open ground on the Israeli side of the border.

Some smaller Gaza militant groups say Hamas has been trying to stop them firing rockets and mortars at Israel, which has control of the delivery of fuel and food aid to the 1.5 million Palestinians living in the enclave.

Hamas wants Israel to lift its blockade and open the border crossings. Israel says Hamas must first release captured Israeli soldier Gilad Shalit, whom it has held for three years.

Israel launched a ground and air offensive in Gaza in December, in which some 1,400 Palestinians were killed. Israel said it was a response to daily rocket fire by Gaza militants directed at southern Israeli towns.

Thirteen Israelis were killed in the 22-day conflict.

Israel has frequently attacked tunnels it says are used to bring in weapons or materials to build weapons, though such raids have been fewer in the past couple of months.

The spokeswoman said some 240 rockets had been fired by Gaza fighters since the end of the offensive on January 18.

String of bombings kill 40 in Iraq


BAGHDAD: A double truck bombing tore through a Shiite community near the northern city of Mosul, while a series of blasts struck Baghdad Monday in a wave of predawn violence that killed at least 40 people, according to Iraqi officials.
The deadliest blast on Monday was a double truck bombing in Khazna village, just east of Mosul, as the members of a Shiite minority ethnic group called the Shabak, who live there, were still sleeping.

Two explosives-laden trucks went off nearly simultaneously and less than 500 yards (meters) apart, killing at least 23 people and wounding 138, according to police and hospital officials.
Those killed were all civilians because the trucks were parked in an alley and not near such targets as a police station.
Nobody claimed responsibility for the attack, but it bore the hallmarks of al-Qaida in Iraq and other Sunni insurgents who remain active in Mosul and surrounding areas.
Witnesses described a chaotic scene where rescuers searched through rubble of at least 15 houses that were destroyed. Many of the dead and wounded were sleeping on their roofs because lack of electricity and the heat made it to hot to sleep inside.
The first bomb Monday was hidden in a pile of trash when it exploded about 5:50 a.m. near a group of construction workers drinking tea and looking for day jobs in the religiously mixed neighborhood of Amil, killing at least seven people and wounding 46, officials said.
About 10 minutes later a car bomb targeting construction workers elsewhere in western Baghdad, killing at least 10 people and wounding 35, according to police.
Three bombs also exploded in the mainly Sunni neighborhood of Azamiyah shortly before 7 a.m., wounding a member of a government-backed paramilitary group, an army official said.
The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they weren’t authorized to release the information.

1 million evacuated as typhoon hits China


BEIJING: A powerful typhoon toppled houses, flooded villages and forced nearly 1 million people to flee to safety on China’s eastern coast before weakening into a tropical storm Monday.
Named Morakot, the storm struck after triggering the worst flooding in Taiwan in 50 years, leaving dozens missing and bringing down a six-story hotel. It earlier lashed the Philippines, killing at least 22 people.
Morakot, or emerald in Thai, slammed into China’s Fujian province Sunday afternoon as a typhoon carrying heavy rain and winds of 74 miles (119 kilometers) per hour, according the China Meteorological Administration. At least one child died after a house collapsed in Zhejiang province.
By early Monday, the storm packed winds of 52 miles per hour (83 kilometers per hour) and churned at about 6 mph (10 kph), it said.
Hundreds of villages and towns were flooded and more than 2,000 houses collapsed, the official Xinhua News Agency said.
People stumbled with flashlights as the storm enveloped the town of Beibi in Fujian in darkness, Xinhua said. Strong winds uprooted trees or snapped them apart, while farmers used buckets to catch fish swept out of fish farms by high waves.
Village officials in Zhejiang rode bicycles to hand out drinking water and instant noodles to residents stranded by deep floods, while rescuers tried to reach eight sailors on a cargo ship blown onto a reef off Fujian, Xinhua reported.
About 1 million people were evacuated from China’s eastern coastal provinces.

Morakot hit Taiwan late Friday and crossed the island Saturday causing the worst flooding in half a century.
Authorities used helicopters to drop food Monday at a mountainous village in southern Kaohsiung county, which was hit by a massive landslide. Official Yang Chiu-hsing said rescuers failed to reach the 1,300 villagers because bridges and roads were damaged by floods.
Taiwan’s Disaster Relief Center said Morakot killed 12 people and another 52 were missing, including 14 people whose makeshift home was swept away. Two policemen were washed away while helping to evacuate villagers in southeastern Taitung county.
The government set up a task force to coordinate relief work in the worst-hit counties in the south, where many towns and villages remained inundated by floodwaters, officials said.
In Japan, meanwhile, Typhoon Etau slammed into the western coast Monday. Nine people were killed in raging floodwaters and landslides and nine others were missing, police said.
In the northern Philippines, the death toll from Morakot rose to 22 Monday with 18 injured and four missing, including three European tourists who were swept away.

Renovation of 100 religious sites in Najaf


According to Ahlul Bayt News Agency – ABNA.IR – “In recent year more than 100 religious sites which it was impossible in Saddam era to work on them have renovated” the engineer “Kamal alFazli” in a news section in Najaf said.

He pointed out: “These centers and religious sites are of the cultural heritages of the city.”

AlFazli furthered that: “Imam Ali (AS) Holy Shrine, Howza Elmiya, Mosques and Husainiyas are some of the renovated places of the city.”

In recent years Iraqi government authorities in cooperation with Najaf Governor General designed plans for renovation of the city which Iran, Kuwait and Lebanon have participated in it.

In these plans Najaf will has more facilities for the pilgrims and has some town in modern style around the city.

IRGC dismisses reports commander commented on defeated candidates


TEHRAN, Aug. 10 (MNA) — The Islamic Revolution Guards Corps has dismissed reports disseminated by certain foreign media outlets claiming that IRGC Commander Major General Mohammad Ali Jafari has commented about putting certain defeated presidential candidates on trial.

“What certain foreign media outlets have quoted the IRGC commander as saying… is totally baseless,” the IRGC Public Relations Department said in a statement issued on Sunday.

In the Islamic Republic system, there are legal channels for dealing with wrongdoers and the Judiciary will fulfill its responsibility, the statement added.

The statement was issued shortly after certain foreign media outlets quoted senior IRGC commander Yadollah Javani, who is also the director of the IRGC Political Office, on Sunday as saying, “If Mousavi, (defeated candidate Mahdi) Karoubi, and (former president Mohammad) Khatami are main suspects behind the soft revolution in Iran, which they are, we expect the Judiciary… to go after them, arrest them, put them on trial, and punish them.”