Palestinian female captive on hunger strike for the third day running


JNN 30.10.10 The Mandela Foundation that caters for Palestinian captives said that Lanan Abu Ghalma who is detained at Hasharon prison has started a hunger strike three days ago to protest the prison’s administration refusal to unite her with her sister Tagrid who is detained in another Israeli occupation jail.

 

The Mandela Foundation that caters for Palestinian captives said that Lanan Abu Ghalma who is detained at Hasharon prison has started a hunger strike three days ago to protest the prison’s administration refusal to unite her with her sister Tagrid who is detained in another Israeli occupation jail.

Head of the foundation, lawyer Buthaina Duqmaq, said in a statement on Friday that Nada Derbas, another Palestinian female captive, went on hunger strike in solidarity with Lanan.

Daqmaq further called on local and international human rights organisation to pressure the Israeli occupation to release the two sisters Lanan and Tagrid Abu Ghalma.

Lanan was arrested last April and placed under administrative detention and a heavy fine was imposed on her sister Tagrid on top of her detention.

Lanan was one of twenty Palestinian female captives freed in October 2009 in return for a two and a half minute video of Gilad Shalit in which he appeared to be fit and well both mentally and physically.


Head of Al-Azhar to Meet Grand Ayatollah Sistani


JNN 30.10.10 The Kuwaiti daily Al-Jarida yesterday said that Sheikh Ahmed Al-Tayeb, president of Egypt’s Al-Azhar University plans to meet with Shia source of emulation grand Ayatollah Sayyed Ali Sistani.

The Kuwaiti daily Al-Jarida yesterday said that Sheikh Ahmed Al-Tayeb, president of Egypt’s Al-Azhar University plans to meet with Shia source of emulation grand Ayatollah Sayyed Ali Sistani.

According to Nun website, Al-Tayeb will visit Iraq after the new Iraqi government is formed.

He will also meet with other Shia sources of emulation to discuss ways for proximity among Shia and Sunni schools of thought.

His trip is expected to be a step towards holding an international conference of Shia and Sunni scholars and thinkers.

Located in Cairo, Egypt, Al-Azhar University is the main centre of Sunni Islamic learning in the world.


'Bahrain's Shia trials not to be fair'


A Bahraini activist says the trial of Shia opposition detainees in Bahrain will not be fair as the Judiciary is totally swayed by the kingdom’s ruling family.

“I do not think there is going to be a fair trial. You cannot have a fair trial when the judge is accused himself,” Saeed al-Shahabi from Bahrain Freedom Movement said in an interview with Press TV on Thursday.

“In Bahrain the judge is appointed by the ruling family and he could be one of them. So, he is charging and trying people who he thinks are enemies,” he further explained.

During the trial of 27 Shia opposition activists at Bahrain’s High Criminal Court on Thursday, defendants complained that they were tortured by Bahraini authorities while in detention.

Defense attorneys argued that defendants had been abused while in detention. They also faced beatings and electric shocks and kept in solitary confinement.

Al-Shahabi ruled out the possibility of a just and lawful hearing while at the same time the defendants have been subject to torture and abuse.

” … You have these serious allegations of torture, and today they have proved to be not just allegations but facts when people expose their bodies to show serious wounds and one of them, Jaafar al-Hasabi, has said explicitly that he was sexually assaulted,” al-Shahabi went on to say.

The trial comes less than one week after the country’s parliamentary elections, which saw thousands demonstrating against what they insist is discrimination by the Sunni-led government.

Shias say they are discriminated against in housing, health, and education, in addition to government sector jobs.

Shias comprise 70 percent of Bahrain’s population, yet hold only 17 of the 40 seats in the directly-elected lower house of parliament.

Additionally, the upper house, or Shura Council, also has 40 members that are entirely appointed by the Bahraini King, Shaikh Hamad bin Isa Al Khalifa, and has vetoing power.

Moreover, the Bahraini king appoints all the country’s ministers.

The government came down hard on the Shia opposition and human rights activists leading up to the elections in August and has arrested more than 250 dissidents that were protesting the election campaigns.


21 Shia Muslims Martyr by Suicide Bomber in North of Baghdad


BAGHDAD: A suicide bomber wearing an explosives belt martyred at least 21 people on Friday in a town north of Baghdad, shattering what had been weeks of relative calm, the town’s mayor said.

A suicide bomber wearing an explosives belt martyred at least 21 people on Friday in a town north of Baghdad, shattering what had been weeks of relative calm, the town’s mayor said.

The suicide bomber blew himself up inside a popular cafe in the town of Balad Ruz, 45 miles (70 kilometers) northeast of Baghdad, said the town’s mayor, Mohammed Maaruf. An additional 65 people were injured, he said.

The neighborhood where the explosion occurred is home to many Faili Kurds, a small sect of ethnic Kurds following the Shia branch of Islam, and many of the dead were Shias.

Feyli Kurds are largely a Shiite community living in Baghdad and Iraq around Khanaqin and Mandili. There are an estimated 2-3 million Feylis living in Iraq.


Ibrahimi mosque closed for Muslim worshipers as settlers celebrate "Chaye Sarah"


Scores of Jewish settlers converged on al-Khalil on Friday afternoon to celebrate “Chaye Sarah” closing the mosque in the face of Muslim worshipers for the length of the festivity.

Scores of Jewish settlers converged on al-Khalil on Friday afternoon to celebrate “Chaye Sarah” closing the mosque in the face of Muslim worshipers for the length of the festivity.

The festivity will last until Saturday evening, where both parts of the Mosque have been opened for the settlers.

IOF troops intensified their presence inside the city, especially the old city and roads leading to the Ibrahimi Mosque.

The Israeli occupation authorities had earlier informed the Islamic Awqaf department in al-Khalil of the intended closure of the mosque for Muslims on Friday and Saturday.

Although Chaye Sarah is not an official Jewish holiday, settlers made it a yearly celebration saying that as they read in the Torah the story of Ibrahim (PBUH) buying the caves of Machpela, as they are trying to gradually take over the Ibrahimi Mosque.


210 embrace Islam in two months in Dubai


DUBAI – The Information Centre of Dar Al Ber Society in Dubai registered conversion of 210 people into Islam in September and October.

The Information Centre of Dar Al Ber Society in Dubai registered conversion of 210 people into Islam in September and October.Yusuf Al Saeed, manager of the centre, said the new converts included individuals and families of different nationalities. “Their hearts are touched by the tolerance, greatness, mercy and consistency of Islam,” he added.

“Special programmes organised by the centre had attracted around 1100 people to Islam this year so far. Most of the conversions took place in Ramadan, with 250 new Muslims, basically due to the spirit of the holy month,” Al Saeed said. He noted thousands of people come to the centre willingly to know about Islam. “The information on teachings and principles of Islam, provided in the books being gifted to thousands of truth-seekers, quench their thirst for the true religion,” he said.

Dar Al Ber Society has always been very keen to spread the peaceful message of Islam without any coercion since its establishment in Dubai 30 years ago.

“The branches and offices of the society in the emirates of Dubai, Ajman and Ras Al Khaimah receive applications for conversion on a daily basis,” Saeed said.

The centre had distributed over 67,000 copies of the Holy Quran as well as 9,000 translated introductory books, audio cassettes and CDs on Islam in different languages, including Chinese, Russian, Tagalog, English, Urdu and others.

“The centre has further distributed more than 300,000 copies of Dar Al Ber editions of the Holy Quran to the masjids, Islamic centres and individuals inside the country and abroad this year,” Saeed said.

Millions of lives still at risk in Pakistan, warns Oxfam


Funds for the UN Pakistan disaster appeal are drying up and threatening millions of lives three months after floods devastated the country, international development agency Oxfam has warned

Funds for the UN Pakistan disaster appeal are drying up and threatening millions of lives three months after floods devastated the country, international development agency Oxfam has warned.

The British charity said that cases of disease are increasing with large areas of the worst-hit region, the southern province of Sindh, remaining underwater.

As winter approaches, seven million people are still without adequate shelter, it said.

The warning follows similar comments from the UK Disasters Emergency Committee and other development organisations, calling on the donor community to fund Pakistan generously in its time of need and help the emergency response across all flood-affected areas.

“The crisis is far from over. Parts of southern Sindh, the worst-hit area, still remain a disaster zone,” said Neva Khan, Oxfam’s director in Pakistan.

“When the world’s attention was focused on Pakistan’s flood victims there was a chance of seeing substantial aid being delivered. But as the worst of the flood waters have receded so has the promise of significant funding”, Khan said.

The slow response to the UN emergency appeal has been widely criticised and remains less than 40 per cent funded.

Oxfam said many of the world’s richest countries are “failing the flood victims, who are amongst the poorest and most vulnerable in the world.”

According to the United Nations, 10 million people are in need of immediate food assistance. The funding shortfall is so serious that existing regular food rations to 3.5 million people could be in jeopardy.


Interfaith Panel to Meet in Clearwater, US to Discuss Islam


The construction of an Islamic center near the site in New York City where the World Trade Center twin towers were toppled in the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks and a Gainesville minister’s threat to have a public burning of the Quran , both have sparked nationwide controversy about Islam in recent months

The construction of an Islamic center near the site in New York City where the World Trade Center twin towers were toppled in the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks and a Gainesville minister’s threat to have a public burning of the Quran , both have sparked nationwide controversy about Islam in recent months.

On Wednesday night, the Interfaith Coalition of Tampa Bay will host a panel discussion focusing on the Muslim religion titled “Can’t We All Just Get Along?” at the Unitarian Universalists of Clearwater, 2470 Nursery Road, Clearwater. The public is welcome to attend.

Featured speakers from different Islamic communities will discuss how Muslims practice their faith, organizers say. They will answer questions about Islam and address responses from other faith leaders.

It’s the first in a series of programs to promote interfaith understanding and cooperation.

“What we’ve seen over the years is that there is a hunger to learn more about others’ faith,” said the Rev. Abhi Janamanchi of Unitarian Universalists of Clearwater. “We held a series like this about three or four years ago and averaged 150 people.”

Janamanchi, 41, of Safety Harbor has been senior minister at Unitarian Universalists of Clearwater for 12 years and will serve as panel moderator.

After a question-and-answer period, participants will split into groups for discussions under the direction of Roy Kaplan, an associate professor of Africana studies at the University of South Florida.

From 1989 to 2004, Kaplan was executive director of the National Conference for Community and Justice Tampa Bay Region.


Israeli workers to go on general strike


Israeli public sector workers are set to go on a general strike next week, which will shut down all public services, including public transport.

“From next Tuesday we will embark on an open-ended public sector strike,” Israeli main trade union, the Histadrut labor federation, said on Thursday.

The union is demanding a 3.5 percent annual wage raise for all 750,000 public sector employees over three years, an almost 11 percent increase.

However, Head of the Finance Ministry’s Wage and Labor Agreements Department Ilan Levin has offered a 0.5 percent annual increase.

Israeli Finance Minister Yuval Steinitz and Ofer Eini, the chairman of the Histadrut labor federation, are scheduled to meet on Friday over the issue.

If the strike goes ahead, it would shut down all offices, companies, the seaports and airports, university administrations, and other public institutions.

The extent of the strike could also depend on the progress in the negotiations between the Histadrut and the treasury.


'Israel hogging Gaza water sources'


More than 1.5 million Palestinians living in the Gaza Strip lack access to basic humanitarian supplies such as shortage of water resources.

Many Palestinians are forced to purchase bottled water for their daily needs, as water coming from their taps has run dry, a Press TV correspondent reported on Thursday.

The Gaza aquifer is the only source of water for residents of Gaza. Reports show that 90 percent of its water is not suitable for human consumption due to high levels of nitrate and salinity.

In an interview with Press TV, public health coordinator Tracey Wise said, “Because of such limited amounts of water in Gaza that’s acceptable for human consumption, mostly this is the shallow, coastal aquifer, and this aquifer is being over-pumped, so much water is being taken out to supply the needs of Gazans, that you have much more intrusion of sea water.”

“And then also you have upwelling of this very, very old water that has high salinity and high concentrations of other pollutants,” she added.

Meanwhile, Israel has installed huge pumping stations all along the shared border, diverting water before it reaches the aquifer of Gaza.

Israel has imposed a blockade on the region since June 2007, preventing the entry of hundreds of items, including essential industrial materials needed to repair the water infrastructure.

During the Gaza war, bombs completely destroyed three water wells and much of the water system infrastructure in Gaza.

The Coastal Municipal Water Utility (CMWU) has reported Israel’s daily water consumption per capita at around 320 liters while the consumption of Palestinians in Gaza is less than 90 liters.

“We need to start to think about unconventional water sources, [such as] the sea, along with other solutions,” said CMWU Director Munzer Shuplaq.

According to recent statistics conducted by CMWU, residents of the coastal enclave will not find healthy water to drink by the year 2015.


'Bahraini Shia freedom only for praising govt.'


An activist says freedom in Bahrain is only for admiring the ruling monarchy and the Shia majority will face repression if they talk of the kingdom’s problems.

“Freedom is there only if you want to praise the regime … [But] when you want fairness and equal opportunities to all; when you want the stopping of denaturalization or retaining the land that is occupied by the ruling family, then you will become terrorist, enemy to the country and so on,” Saeed al-Shahabi from Bahrain Freedom Movement said.

“What you have is absolute monarchy which wants to rule, [as it] wants everybody to be silent towards these repressive policies,” he added.

Al-Shahabi described the elections in the Sheikhdom as “incidents that last for a week or so as we had before in 2004 and 2006 and nothing has changed.”

“The rule of law is absent. The constitution is imposed by the polls and there is direction in who will appear in front of the law and who is excluded from that law,” he opined.

Al-Shahabi also warned that as long as there is “discrimination against the majority who are Shia, we will continue to have this repression and oppression.”

Last week, parliamentary elections were held in Bahrain, which saw thousands demonstrating against what they insist is discrimination by the Sunni-led government.

Shias say they are discriminated against in housing, health, and education, in addition to government sector jobs.

Shias comprise 70 percent of Bahrain’s population, yet hold only 17 of the 40 seats in the directly-elected lower house of parliament.

Additionally, the upper house, or Shura Council, also has 40 members that are entirely appointed by King Hamad bin Isa al-Khalifathe and has vetoing power.

Moreover, the Bahraini king appoints all the country’s ministers.

The government came down hard on the Shia opposition and human rights activists leading up to the elections in August and has reportedly arrested more than 250 dissidents that were protesting the election campaigns.


'Brisk walking lowers breast cancer risk'


JNN 26.10.10 Women habitually brisk walking have a lower risk of developing breast cancer after they reach menopause, according to a new study.

Previous research has shown women who are active are at a lower risk of developing breast cancer than their calmer peers.

This is the first study on the effects of moderate exercise and in the consequence of whether or not less active females who start exercising can get similar results.

The study reported on 100,000 subjects who had reached postmenopausal period of their lives and followed their progress for a period of 20 years.

During this period, women told how active they were in their lives and the type of exercises they had.

A. Heather Eliassen and her team at Harvard reviewed data in the Archives of Internal Medicine and the many risk factors for breast cancer that women have no control on.

These included family history of the disease or the age at which they began menstruating, the researchers told Reuters Health.

The team believes physical activity “is one of the few breast cancer risk factors that women can do something about. And it’s never too late.”

Those women who had at least an hour of brisk walking every day, or the same amount of activity per day, were 15 percent less likely to develop breast cancer than those who walked less than one hour per week.

The group defined brisk walking as walking at about three to four miles per hour — a speed at which it is hard to keep a conversation while walking.

They also reported that even women who got no exercise before menopause but increased their activity afterwards are 10 percent less likely to develop breast cancer than those who didn’t.

Moscow Muslims Pray on Sidewalks for Want of Mosques


It is a typical Friday scene — worshippers kneeling in the rain outside Moscow’s biggest mosque, forced to use their shoes to anchor their prayer rugs to keep them from blowing away in the autumn winds.

It is a typical Friday scene — worshippers kneeling in the rain outside Moscow’s biggest mosque, forced to use their shoes to anchor their prayer rugs to keep them from blowing away in the autumn winds.

The scramble for a place inside is a weekly headache for Muslims in the Russian capital, a city with one of the biggest percentage of Muslims in Europe but with only four mosques.

And their plea for more space to worship is stirring tension with Russia’s resurgent nationalists.

“When I can get here early, I can find a place inside. Otherwise I need to stay outside,” said Abdyl Ashim Ibraimov, 30, a regular at the Sobornaya mosque, Moscow’s largest.

Thousands of faithful descend upon the site each Friday for the Islamic day of prayer, but the green building topped with gold crescents — wedged between blocks of apartments and an immense stadium in central Moscow — can only hold up to 800 people.

Once full, worshippers filter into its nearby administrative offices, then the interior courtyard and finally spill onto neighbouring sidewalks.

“Friday prayers are very important. That’s why we come here, whether it’s raining or snowing,” said Ashur Ashurov, a silver-haired man in his sixties.

Estimates vary for the number of Muslims in Moscow, a vast city of 10.5 million. Russian officials put it at about 1.2 million but the Council of Muftis, the official Muslim organisation in Russia, says it is closer to two million.

With only four mosques, “there is a catastrophic shortage of place,” said the Sobornaya mosque’s imam, Ildar Khazrat Alyautdinov. “It is not enough to accommodate those who want to come and pray.”

“We are asking, and even demanding, that there be a mosque in every borough, ideally in every neighbourhood,” Alyautdinov said.

According to Alyautdinov, a project to add a second building to enlarge the Sobornaya mosque site has been blocked by the absence of “one small signature from a bureaucrat” needed to finish the work.

And fierce protests from residents have thwarted other plans to build an enormous new mosque in the city’s southeast designed to hold up to 5,000 people. Moscow officials had promised to hand over land in a park to build this new facility.

Alexei Malashenko, an expert on Islam with the Moscow Carnegie Centre, a think-tank for nonpartisan research and analysis, said the root of the problem is a lack of tolerance among Moscow residents.

“Moscow is a cosmopolitan city… and the city with the biggest Muslim population in Europe. People need to get used to seeing mosques,” he said.


New Muslim school planned in fight against extremism in UK


MUSLIM leaders have announced plans to open a secondary school in Derby which would be at the vanguard of the fight against extremism.

MUSLIM leaders have announced plans to open a secondary school in Derby which would be at the vanguard of the fight against extremism.

The faith school could open by 2012. It would ensure children can pray facing Mecca and teach a GCSE in Islamic Studies.

A leader of Normanton’s Islamic community involved with the scheme said that, by stressing the peaceful nature of Islam, he believed the school could turn children away from extremism.

Community leader Shahban Rehmat said: “If you are teaching people the ways of Islam and the true cause of Islam, then it stops negativity and it stops people saying the wrong thing.”

He stressed that non-Muslim teenagers would be able to attend the school and would not have to pray if they did not want to.

The school would teach the National Curriculum “in a religious atmosphere”.

The idea is the brainchild of community education group An-Noor Institute and Normanton’s Jamia Mosque.

The institute has been running a successful nursery in a community room next to the mosque, in Whitaker Street, since 2008.

In July the Telegraph revealed the institute’s plans for a Muslim primary school in the mosque building.

Plans for the secondary school have now been announced, although that would be in another building in Rose Hill Street.

It wants both schools to be part of the coalition Government’s free school scheme which enables any group to start a school without permission from local councils, funded by the Department for Education.

Mosque secretary Mr Rehmat said anyone could attend the new secondary school and would not have to pray if they did not want to.

He said it would be “un-Islamic” to force them.

Mr Rehmat said children at faith schools often had more respect for their education and, in this case, would be more likely to become good Muslims.

He said: “Various different groups all over the UK believe in terrorism. The teachings at the school would show people what truth means.

“An education like this would put people off fundamentalism and terrorism.

“It’s the same at any religious school – Jewish, Christian – you often find the children are more respectful.”

Mr Rehmat said that plans to maintain small class sizes and have more one-to-one tuition at the school may also attract non-Muslims.

He said: “Currently you get classroom sizes of between 30 and 40 kids. We would be aiming for the new classrooms to be smaller – capped at about 20.”

He said the school would have between 200 and 300 pupils.

Ziad Amjad, the project organiser, said the school could be open by September 2012.

He said that the institute was now planning to send out its free school applications for the primary and secondary schools to the Department for Education together.

These will be alongside a petition, already signed by more than 1,000 mainly Muslim people, calling for the secondary and primary schools to be opened.

The Government believes the free-school scheme will give parents more choice, narrow the achievement gap between rich and poor youngsters and drive up standards because of the element of competition it will create.

These schools are not obliged to teach the national curriculum.


Gunmen Shoot Dead 4 Shia Muslims in Quetta


An unidentified gunman shot dead four people belonging to the Shia community on Masjid Road in Quetta on Thursday evening

An unidentified gunman shot dead four people belonging to the Shia community on Masjid Road in Quetta on Thursday evening.“The four Shiites had just closed their shop and left for home when an unknown gunman opened fire on their car and ran away,” killing two people on the spot, senior local police official Hamid Shakeel told AFP.

He said the other two people died of their injuries on the way to hospital.

No one had claimed responsibility for the attack, Shakeel added. A second police official, Shaukat Ali, confirmed the incident.

Meanwhile, heavy contingents of police cordoned off the area and started investigations.

Bahrain’s Shi’ite Opposition Gains in Elections, But Still in Minority and Pressure


Bahrain’s embattled Shi’ite opposition movement won big in the Persian Gulf island state’s parliamentary elections, according to results announced on Sunday.

Bahrain’s embattled Shi’ite opposition movement won big in the Persian Gulf island state’s parliamentary elections, according to results announced on Sunday.

The Shi’ite bloc called Al-Wefaq on Saturday won all 18 seats it had contested, a one-seat gain from 2006 elections, making it again the largest force in Bahrain’s 40-member Council of Representatives. No candidate secured a majority in nine districts, setting the stage for runoffs Saturday. Turnout was 67 percent, with more than 300,000 ballots cast.

“We were having difficulties yesterday because lots of names were dropped [from the voter rolls],” said Khalil Al-Marzooq, a returning Al-Wefaq member of parliament, in an interview Sunday. “However, because of the massive participation, we managed to win.”

The vote in the Sunni-led kingdom — a strategic base for the U.S. Navy’s Fifth Fleet — comes amid heightened tensions between the government and the Shi’ite majority.

On Thursday, 23 Shi’ite opposition members will go on trial for charges of plotting a coup. The men were arrested two months ago following weeks of escalating Shi’ite street riots. Human rights groups allege that hundreds more have been detained, deprived of due process, and in many cases tortured — claims the government vehemently denies. Authorities also shut down dozens of opposition websites, including Al-Wefaq’s.

Mr. Al-Marzooq said the crackdown was regrettable and that in addition to pursuing its priority of housing for low-income Shi’ites, Al-Wefaq would seek democratic reforms.

“We want more authority for the Council of Representatives — this is the main thing — and we are looking in the future to have a peaceful transition of power so that the prime minister is elected directly or indirectly from the people of Bahrain,” he said.

The prime minister and members of the Shura Council, the upper legislative body, are currently appointed by King Hamad ibn Isa Al Khalifa.

The election was the third since the king began his political-reform project nearly a decade ago, paving the way for Bahrain’s first elected parliament since the 1970s. While the reforms resulted in greater enfranchisement of the country’s Shi’ites — and of women, who were granted suffrage — it has led to an intra-Shia debate over whether the system is rigged to the point that participation is futile, with four opposition groups having called for an election boycott.

One common complaint of critics involves gerrymandering, which effectively ensures the majority Shi’ites — 60 percent to 70 percent of the population, estimates say — cannot win a parliamentary majority.

Hadi Al-Mosawi, a newly elected Al-Wefaq member of parliament (MP), stated that his bloc had conceded 22 districts, contesting “the only 18 which allow us to be competitive — the Shi’ite areas.” He said there were wide differences in the number of people across districts — differences that tended to favor Sunnis. “One MP can represent 16,000, and another can represent only 1,000,” he said, calling the discrepancy a violation of the “one-man, one-vote” principle.

Mr. Al-Marzooq said that despite the difficulties, Bahraini Shi’ites stood more to gain by working within the system, appearing to regret Al-Wefaq’s boycott of the 2002 elections.

“At least if you have a goalkeeper — even if he is standing against a very good opponent — at least he will defend the goal from lots of balls coming in,” he said.

“This is the situation in Bahrain. If you aren’t in the parliament, then there will be lots of [bad] laws — like what happened in 2002 without the presence of the opposition. The terrorism law, the political-societies law, the gathering law — all of the bad laws — have come from the [2002-2006] parliament, where the opposition was not there.”

“The massive participation,” Mr. Al-Marzooq said, “shows that the boycott debate is over.”


Shia Inhabitant in Parachinar/Afghanistan border blockaded


While the paths of the Shia region of Parachinar to the interior part of Pakistan are closed and insecure, Pakistan’s military has blockaded a strategically important district in the country’s north and because of that there is no way to enter the food, fuel and medicine to the region.

While the paths of the Shia region of Parachinar to the interior part of Pakistan are closed and insecure, Pakistan’s military has blockaded a strategically important district in the country’s north and because of that there is no way to enter the food, fuel and medicine to the region.

After Colonel Tausif Akhtar of the Pakistani security forces announced the move on Monday evening at a news conference in Parachinar, the main town in Kurram – Kurram tribal district, near the Afghan border-, five border crossing points- Terimangal, Spina Shaga, Khairlachi, Burki and Shahidano Dand- have been shut, with security beefed up.
“We have done this due to internal security concerns, because there have been sectarian clashes in Kurram and we do not want miscreants from outside to exploit the situation,” said Akhtar.

The blockade comes amid reports that the Turis have once again refused to allow the militants to enter Afghanistan via Kurram. But by this, the only way of entering the food, fuel and medicine to the region is blocked. Tausif Akhtar is notorious among Shia Muslim of the region; he has killed and kidnapped many Shia.

“Colonel Tausif Akhtar is a big liar. What he’s done is not to bring the security to the region, but to torture and hurt Shia in Parachinar. The government enters some amount of food to Parachinar, but it’s not enough for the people, so we have to get most of our food from Afghanistan. I believe the government blocked the border to bring Shia to their knees.” A Parachinari Shia told ABNA.

“By this, they blocked the only way to enter the food for Shia in Parachinar. After the victory of Shia over Taliban in Shaluzan and Khivas, it’s a trick by Colonel Tausif Akhtar for Shia to make them tired and bring them to their knees and do whatever he wants to, but we don’t.” Another Parachinari Shia said .

It should be mentioned that, it’s more than 4 years that all the paths to Parachinar is blocked and people have to use Afghanistan land to take to other cities of Pakistan. If the border remains blocked, by approaching the cold season in Kurram Agency, we should predict a new disaster against Shia in the region.

Dengue Virus has Killed 26 people till yet , No steps taken for its eradication by the Govt. of Pakistan.


JNN 27.10.10 AN outburst of mosquito-borne dengue fever has been reported in some parts of Pakistan. A total of 4,561 dengue cases have been reported, which are estimated to further increase from October to December.

Dengue, like malaria and other vector-borne diseases, is circulated by the reproduction of mosquitoes in stagnant water. With the recent flood outbreak and general poor hygiene conditions in various municipalities` pools of stagnant water have led to the increase and spread of this disease.

It is always the poor who suffer in silence, while the elite and the rich can afford better. Be it food, shelter or even expensive medical treatments and healthcare. Education is the key.

The government should step up efforts to save lives and to let these poor devastated people know the real dangers of their situation so that they can make simple changes in their day-to-day living to save themselves.

An acute shortage of platelet kits at public health institutions is aggravating the plight of patients tested positive for dengue, and private facilities have started cashing in on the situation by charging exorbitant rates for the kits.

According to medical experts, a dengue patient having platelet counts below 50,000 is declared critical and needs immediate platelets transfusion and any delay may prove fatal for the patient.

“A dengue patient or recipient requires six to seven platelet concentrates per day for at least two weeks to bring his platelet counts normal,” a senior doctor said.

“A kit worth Rs8,000 is being sold against Rs30,000 in the black market these days,” sources claimed. The situation has exposed the government’s tall claims of provision of free treatment to patients at public sector hospitals.

SYMPTOMS
High fever and severe body pain, itching and red spots,Then after some time bleeding from nose and teeth, severe pain behind eyes.

PRECAUTIONS
Promptly cover the pots having water, e.g. bath buckets and drums etc. Use coils, mats and special sprays.

FACTS
Dengue mosquitto attacks during 6am to 9am and from 4pm to 10pm.

TREATMENT
Patients should use paracetamol only, never use aspirin / dispirin.
And In case of  Fever , No Antibiotique Medicine should be taken prior to Blood test , as in case of infection by  Dengue Virus , if the person have already taken Antibiotique Medicine, then even the Dengue Virus Infected Person’s  test will report Negative, while in the presence of the virus, which is very lethal and can be life threatening ,so extra care should be taken during fever these days , as the Blood test is necessary , to check the infection of Dengue Virus.

Dengue virus Infection can be cured by grinding the PaPaya leaves on the conventional Stone grinders by Hand and its juice and grinded leaves should be administered to the patient once a day for atleast a week to fortnight , which instantly starts giving rise in the Plattlet level of  the patients.

JAP Point out Major security lapse at the Mazar of Lal Shahbaz Qalandar


JNN 26.10.10 Karachi : Jafaria Allilance Pakistan ‘s complete leadership in the presence of Allama Abbas Kumaili , Molana Hussain Masoodi , Furqan Haider Abdi , Nisar Qalandari , Salman Mujtaba & Shabbar Raza, in there Press conference have pointed out Major security lapses at the Mazar of Lal Shahbaz Qalandar at Sehwan , As the enemies of Pakistan and Islam , the banned Outfits like Sipah e Sahaba Pakistan, Tehrik e Taliban , Jundullah, Lashkar e Jhangvi , and similar outfits have been targeting  the Mazarat of Aulia Allah’s , As already 3 Mazarat , namely Data Darbar (Lahore ) , Mazar e Abdullah Shah Ghazi (Karachi ) , Mazar e Baba Fareed ud din Shakar Ganj , have already been bombed by these terrorist organisations. So extra measure should be taken to prevent any further such incidents at the holy premises of Mazarat of Aulia Allah’s

Leadership pointed out that when ever any incident is occured , for a couple of days the Security and other Government Departments are seen active and just after few days every thing is forgotten , and the same lapse are seen at the same points , were these tragic and horrible incidents have already occured, and because of these irresponsible attitude of the government departments the evil designs of enemies of Pakistan and Islam have boosted so much that they are challenging the faithful against there evil beliefs ‘

Government should take immediate action and replace the non working walk through gates from sehwan Lal Shahbaz Qalandar ‘s Mazar , before any untoward incident may happen , so it can be prevented , and the casualty can be saved before it happens.

Six people killed in Iraq violence


At least six people, including three security forces, have been killed in the new wave of bomb attacks in Iraq, interior ministry sources say.

In the first incident, three policemen lost their lives on Wednesday when a roadside bomb exploded in the Hamreen region of Baquba province, AFP reported.

An interior ministry source says another bomb went off near the Sunni Endowment’s headquarters in Baghdad and killed two guards and left four other people injured.

The source added that a magnetic “sticky bomb” targeted a car and claimed a live, wounding four other people.

The attacks came a day after seven people have been killed by bomb blasts in the Iraqi capital and the country’s eastern province of Diyala.

Seven years after US raid on Iraq, casualties from bomb attacks still remain part of daily life in the war-torn country.

The classified documents released by the whistleblower website Wikileaks have shed light on a spate of crimes and offences committed in Iraq over the past few years, including assassinations and murders.

The US invaded Iraq in 2003 under the pretext of having weapons of mass destruction, but such weapons were never found.

Saudi student punished for being Shia


Shia students at an elementary school in Saudi Arabia have been subject to physical punishment and insults over their faith by a Salafi teacher.

The report, which was first published by the Saudi Arabian Rasid News Network, said the punishments traumatized the students and inflicted emotional and psychological damage.

The teacher identified as Shaher al-Aatibi, is a hard-line member of the Salafi sect working at the Jafar ibn Abi Talib elementary school in Qatif in eastern Saudi Arabia.

Al-Aatibi repeatedly calls Shia students ‘infidels’ and ‘idolaters,’ saying they support Iran and the late founder of the Islamic Revolution, Ayatollah Rouhollah Khomeini.

According to the report, the teacher also physically punishes students over unwarranted issue such as wearing rings, causing a rift among the different tribes of the area.

A 2009 report by the New York-based Human Rights Watch (HRW) criticized the Saudi government over its “systemic state discrimination” against Shia Muslims across the Kingdom.

Jafar ibn Abi Talib elementary school has a total of 600 staff and students, a vast majority of whom are Shia.

Qatif has the largest concentration of Shia Muslims in Saudi Arabia.

Israel passes another discriminatory law


In another discriminatory move, an Israeli parliamentary committee has approved a bill which allows Israeli communities not to admit Palestinians.

The Knesset’s so-called Constitution, Law and Justice Committee on Wednesday unanimously approved the second and third readings of a bill which allows communities having less than 500 people to appoint admissions boards capable of rejecting residents if they do not meet the criteria of “suitability to the community’s fundamental outlook.”

The proposal provoked anger among Israeli-Arab lawmakers, who said the bill paves the way for Jews to reject Palestinians from their communities.

Many Arab lawmakers described the bill as discriminatory and racist and walked out of the Knesset debate in protest.

“This law allows the establishment of Jewish communities that want to prevent Arab residents from entering. All of the bill’s stipulations exist only in the Jewish sector,” said lawmaker Taleb El-Sana from the United Arab List — Ta’al.

“As a sign of protest, we are leaving. We will not be a part of a debate on this racist and fascist law. This is disgraceful — you have crossed the line,” he added.

The bill, which was proposed 10 years ago, is due to be presented before the Knesset in the coming weeks.

German Govt invests €10mn to buy off Taliban


JNN 26.10.10 The German government has earmarked 10 million euros annually to buy off the Taliban as part of a Western plan to “reintegrate” the militant group in Afghanistan.

Berlin has set aside an overall 50 million euros for the five-year-long project.

The plan hopes to convince up to 36,000 militants to set aside their weapons by the year 2014. The cash will only be paid to militants who disarm.

German Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle on Tuesday stressed that reintegrating former Taliban militants into the Afghan social and political fabric was key to ensuring long-term peace and stability in the war-stricken country.

The development comes months after senior NATO officials floated the idea of making peace with the Taliban — the militant group whose uprooting was one of the main objectives of the 2001 invasion.

As a member of the military alliance, Germany joined the US-led war in Afghanistan violating its constitution which forbids it from military involvement in any wars.

Now, the European country has about 5,000 soldiers in the relatively peaceful northern Afghanistan, making it the third-largest foreign contingent after the United States and the UK.

This is while the majority of Germans oppose any involvement in the Afghan war.

Israeli troops burn Qur'an: Report


JNN 25.101.10 Israeli soldiers have reportedly burnt the Muslim holy book of Qur’an during an overnight attack on a Palestinian family in the occupied West Bank.

Sahar Beida said on Monday that she and her daughter had been confined in different rooms by Israeli soldiers who were there to arrest her husband Ismail.

“When I came out I was shocked to find our Qur’ans were on the front step and had been burned,” she told AFP.

“They took the Qur’ans from the house and burned them in the alley,” the 40-year-old mother added.

Charred pages from the holy book were shown to an AFP photographer who visited the Palestinian family’s home.

The Israeli military has not commented on the report so far.

Earlier this month, vandals in southern West Bank spray-painted graffiti on a mosque and set it ablaze along with several Qur’ans and prayer rugs.

This is while in September, the plan by US pastor Terry Jones to burn a pile of Qur’ans sparked international outrage and was condemned across the Muslim world.

Iran: US behind Wikileaks revelations


JNN 25.10.10 A senior Iranian diplomat says recent revelations by whistleblower website Wikileaks are Washington’s ploy to cover up human rights violations by the US.

In the largest-ever revelation of secret US military documents, Wikileaks released nearly 400,000 classified reports about the US-led war in Iraq.

The leaked documents, which cover the period between January 1, 2004, and January 1, 2010, have shed light on a myriad of crimes and offences committed in Iraq over the past few years, including assassinations, murders, torture and rape.

“It seems that these [revelations] are made upon the order of the US,” Secretary-General of Iran’s High Council for Human Rights Mohammad-Javad Larijani said on Monday at the summit for reviewing the human rights situation in the US.

“The message of Wikileaks documents is that the Iraqi people have been tortured by Iraq’s security forces, and the only wrongdoing of Americans is that they witnessed the incidents and remained silent,” IRNA quoted Larijani as saying.

“This is while the US had the main role in these incidents and is the defendant,” the Iranian diplomat added.

Larijani said unfortunately the Internet, which was supposed to provide all people with vast information, is being used for publishing anti-information in the world.

Head of Iran’s human rights council stressed that the US and certain Western countries take advantage of human rights violations and “it is necessary to prevent and resist these political abuses.”

The new Wikileaks documents comprise the second such release from the controversial website, which accused the United States of “war crimes” after earlier releasing some 92,000 similar secret military files detailing operations in Afghanistan.

These documents charge the United States Defense Department with instructing American troops to ignore reports recounting torture; they also suggest “hundreds” of civilians have been killed at US military checkpoints since the beginning of the war.

Refusing to discus the Wikikeaks disclosures, US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton merely condemned the leak of any document “putting Americans at risk.”

“We should condemn in the most clear terms the disclosure of any information by individuals and or organizations which puts the lives of United States and its partners’ service members and civilians at risk,” she said.

Russian Muslims go on Hajj


Russian Muslims have set off for Hajj. First flights delivered hundreds of pilgrims to the Saudi Arabia on Saturday, while those who prefer surface transport are leaving on Monday.

A quota for Russian pilgrims, who are due to cross the Saudi Arabian border on 12 November, remains unchanged: 20,500 people.

Traditionally, residents of the Russian southern republic of Dagestan make the bulk of pilgrims travelling to Mecca.

Slave children found working on farms in England


JNN 25.10.10 A labor regulating agency has found seven Romanian children slaves who were forced to work on farms in harsh cold weather in Worcester.

The children, aged 9 to 15, were among the 50 Romanians working on spring onion fields in Kempsey area of Worcester.

The Independent reported that inspectors working for the Gangmasters Licensing Authority (GLA) noticed the child slaves last week while they were forced to work from dawn to dusk without proper clothing in freezing weather conditions.

The GLA investigators said they even found boots fit for five-year-olds which indicated children even at younger ages have been exploited on the fields.

The local authorities have taken into care six of the children, some of whom were working as onion pickers on their own and some who worked alongside their parents.

Slavery charges were confirmed when intelligence suggested some 40 workers were paid just up to £100 for one week’s labor.

The investigations are underway by the GLA, West Mercia Police and the UK Border Agency.

“In 2007 we celebrated the 200th anniversary of the end of the slave trade, but in 2010 we’ve got people working in appalling conditions who, while not actually being slaves, are very close to it,” GLA chairman Paul Whitehouse said.

This comes as critics say victims of human trafficking in Britain have no choice but to continue in their tormenting conditions as even if they can escape their tormentor masters they will have to tolerate a ‘ruthless and unjust’ asylum system.

One of such high-profile activists, actress Juliet Stevenson, said “if you’re talking about the ‘great’ in Great Britain, let’s look at having some moral leadership.”

This is while the government is coming under growing pressure to sign up to the EU directive on human trafficking which facilitates the prosecution of the guilty and protection of victims.

The coalition has so far refused to heed the calls.

British snooker coach embraces Islam


JNN 25.10.10 British head coach of Iran’s National Snooker Team David John has embraced Islam during an official ceremony held in the capital city of Tehran.

Chairman of Iran’s Physical Education Organization Ali Saeedlou and the Head of the Friday Prayer Leaders’ Policymaking Council Reza Taqavi attended a ceremony on Monday to congratulate John on his new faith.

John, who changed his name to Davoud (the Islamic pronunciation of David), said he decided to convert to Islam after he came to Iran and visited the shrine of the 8th Shia Imam in the city of Mashhad.

“I was very excited to visit Mashhad,” he said after the ceremony.

“I used to be a coach in Dubai, Qatar and Bahrain for several years and I was familiar with Islam, but it was the Iranian culture and the holy shrine of Imam Reza which encouraged me to embrace Islam.”

Saeedlou promised to send John on his first Hajj pilgrimage and Taqavi offered him a number of books on Islam as well as a Holy Quran with English translation

Imam Reza (AS) Cultural Artistic Festival Underway in Lahore


Organized by Iran Cultural House in Lahore, Imam Reza (AS) Cultural Artistic Festival is now underway at the center.

Organized by Iran Cultural House in Lahore, Imam Reza (AS) Cultural Artistic Festival is now underway at the center.

The 5-day festival includes the Razavi Exhibition as well as poetry recitation ceremonies.

The opening ceremony which was held on Wednesday, October 20, started with the recitation of a few verses of the Quran followed by eulogies for the Ahl-ul-Bayt (AS) by a number of religious poets from Lahore.

Mehran Eskandarian, cultural expert of Iran Cultural House, also presented his supplication and poems.

Abbas Famuri, Iran’s cultural attaché and head of the country’s cultural house, was the next speaker who, congratulating Imam Reza’s (AS) birth anniversary, said that Imam Reza’s real name and epithet are Ali and Abu-Al-Hassan respectively, while his most well-known title is Reza meaning ‘contentment’.

He further referred to Imam’s ethical and virtuous characteristics adding that he treated all people with respect and kindness in a way that even his enemies stood in awe of him.

Another speaker was Ghahraman Soleimani, head of Persian Language and Literature Development Center, who referred to the extensive cultural relations between Iran and Pakistan noting that Persian speakers do not have much difficulty understanding the words and grammatical structures in Urdu since the two languages have many rules in common.

People of the Subcontinent used to narrate their life stories in poems and that’s why poetry has always been the voice of spirituality especially in Shia communities, he added.

Poetry had also a lofty status at the time of Prophet Mohammad (PBUH) when poets had a grand responsibility to serve Islam through their poems, he went on to say.

Muslim students try to clear misconceptions through Islam Awareness Week


In light of the recent controversy over a planned mosque near the site of Ground Zero, MU’s Muslim Student Organization is prepared to set the record straight with Islam Awareness Week.

COLUMBIA

– In light of the recent controversy over a planned mosque near the site of Ground Zero, MU’s Muslim Student Organization is prepared to set the record straight with Islam Awareness Week.

From Oct. 25 through Oct. 28, the organization will host multiple events to spread the word about the religion of Islam and its practices.

Islam Awareness Week is an annual event, typically held in the spring. Because of recent mosque burnings nationally and negative discussion about American Muslims in relation to Ground Zero, however, the group made the decision to move the date of the event.

“We really just want to educate people about what Islam in America really is, especially because nowadays people get the wrong impression of Islam when they only watch 30-second clips on Fox News or CNBC,” said Mahir Khan, the Muslim Student Organization’s public relations chair. “Islam and America are not that conflicting, they are actually more hand-in-hand than most people understand.”

Mark Scott, a religious professor at MU, teaches a class on major world religions.

“It’s important to cultivate appreciation of all world religions,” Scott said. “Every religion has the capacity for peace and the capacity for violence.”

The first event, “Muslims in the Media,” will include a panel of Muslim community members hosting a discussion about the portrayal of Muslims in the news. The event will be held on the MU campus in 110 Memorial Union South.

“Conceptions about Islam are so widespread and often relate to terrorism,” Scott said. “I can see why this event would be very valuable.”

On Tuesday, the group will screen the film “Billal’s Stand,” a Sundance Film Festival selection.It tells the story of Bilal, a young black Muslim, living in Detroit.

“We picked this movie because it portrays a story that a lot of American Muslims go through when they struggle to keep their faith in this environment,” Khan said.

The film will play at 7:30 pm in Ellis Auditorium.

In addition to promoting Islam awareness, the Muslim Student Organization plans to support another cause at its third event on Wednesday. The organization will host a Women in Islam panel, which comprises Muslim women within the Columbia community.

The panelists will discuss their stories of adjusting to Islamic life in the U.S., especially in the context of common stereotypes and negative images that surround Islamic women in America.

Khan said each Muslim woman will be encouraged to wear a pink hijab, in honor of breast cancer awareness. This tradition started in Columbia a few years ago, and has now become a national phenomenon. Each attendee will also be encouraged to wear pink and contribute to the Susan G. Komen Breast Cancer Foundation.

The event will be held at 7 p.m. Wednesday in Mumford Hall, room 133.

The final event for Islam Awareness Week will feature Suhaib Weeb, a former gang member who converted to Islam. Webb is now a prominent Islamic figure, who Khan described as a “huge force in the American Muslim community.”

“He embodies the American values of fixing yourself, getting out of a bad situation and pulling yourself up from your bootstraps,” Khan said. “He also embodies Islamic ideals like dedicating yourself to your religion, and the more you learn about him the more you fall in love with him.”

The Muslim Student Organization expects this to be the most popular event of Islam Awareness Week, and anticipates a crowd of about 100 people.

Khan said he hopes that these events raise awareness and understanding of Muslims as regular people.

German companies offer housing units in holy Karbala


German companies offered to implement 1,000 low-cost housing units within an integrated housing neighborhood project for a total cost of $16.5 million, a local spokesman said on Saturday.

German companies offered to implement 1,000 low-cost housing units within an integrated housing neighborhood project for a total cost of $16.5 million, a local spokesman said on Saturday.

“A delegation representing a German consortium offered to Karbala Governor Amal al-Din al-Hirr and Provincial Council Chief Muhammad Hameed al-Moussawi a project of 1,000 low-cost housing units, each consisting of three rooms,” Emad Muhammad

Hussein, the Karbala Province’s information director, told Aswat al-Iraq news agency.

For his part, the chairman of the board of the German consortium said the delegation was acquainted on conditions in the city and was encouraged to offer readiness to implement the project, which would take place near the green belt southwest of Karbala city.

“The contract will be signed during the next few days to start the project by German technicians while the working hands will be Iraqi,” he added.

The holy Shiite city of Karbala lies 180 km south of the Iraqi capital Baghdad.

Italy exhibits Islamic artworks


Italy has mounted an exhibition of Islamic artworks in the city of Milan, which features pieces from the dawn of Islam until the modern era.

Italy has mounted an exhibition of Islamic artworks in the city of Milan, which features pieces from the dawn of Islam until the modern era.

Organized by Milan Municipality, the event displays Islamic artworks from Egypt, Iran, India and Spain.

The exhibition aims to provide those living outside the Islamic community with a better understanding of the Muslim world.

Muslim immigrants of Italy were provided with the chance to “show their art and go proud saying that we had and we have a very big civilization and we can show it,” director of the exhibition Giovanni Curatola told Press TV.

Over one million Muslims currently live in Italy where Islam is the second largest faith after Catholicism in the European country.

In recent years many Muslims have immigrated to Italy from Morocco, Egypt and Tunisia.

In 2005, the Italian Minister of Interior founded the Council for Italian Islam composed of Muslim people.

“We tend to learn about other people, other religions and other civilizations through our own prejudices and stereotypes,” cultural assessor Massimiliano Finazzer Flory said.

“This is wrong,” he added, saying “Culture is all about questioning our convictions and this exhibition offers people a look at a civilization from a geographical, historical and anthropological point of view but without involving ideologies.”

Milan’s Islamic Art Exhibition will run until the end of January 2011 at the city’s Palazzo Reale.

Translation of “Embryology and Quran” Published in Tajikistan


Written by Hojat-ol-Islam Abdul-Karim Biazar Shirazi, the book “Quran, Embryology and Conversion of Some Embryologists to Islam” was translated into Tajik language and published in Tajikistan.

Written by Hojat-ol-Islam Abdul-Karim Biazar Shirazi, the book “Quran, Embryology and Conversion of Some Embryologists to Islam” was translated into Tajik language and published in Tajikistan.

The book has been translated by Seifollah Monajanov and published in Tajik Cyrillic alphabet by Iran Cultural Center in Tajikistan.

The introduction of the book, which has been published in 1000 copies, is in both Persian and Cyrillic scripts.

Hojat-ol-Islam Shirazi has got a PhD in Quran and Hadith Sciences, an MA in Islamic History and Civilization from McGill University in Canada, as well as an Ijtihad certificate from the Ministry of Science and Higher Education.

His other published works include the 8-volume collection of “Kashef Exegesis” in Persian and Arabic, “Islamic Sects’ Solidarity”, and “Islam; Religion of Solidarity”.

Bahraini Shia Muslim party wins 18 seats in vote


The opposition has won nearly half of the parliamentary seats in the Saturday’s elections in thePersian Gulf state of Bahrain, the electoral commission says.

The opposition has won nearly half of the parliamentary seats in the Saturday’s elections in the Persian Gulf state of Bahrain, the electoral commission says.

Election authorities said on Sunday that Bahrain’s main Shia opposition group, the Islamic National Accord Association (INAA), won 18 of the parliament’s 40 seats.

The 18 candidates of INAA were elected in the first round of the legislative polls, electoral commission chairman Abdullah al-Buainain told AFP.

Nine seats remain up for grabs in the second round of voting which is to take place on October 30, he went on to say.

Earlier, the opposition had criticized the process, saying Shia voters had been turned away from polling booths. The head of the largest Shia bloc lodged allegations of irregularities just less than an hour before voting closed.

Manama rejects the charges, amid concerns that even small numbers of votes could influence the results in a country with fewer than 319,000 eligible voters.

Head of the al-Wefaq party Sheik Ali Salman said that at least 890 voters were turned away from polling stations in mostly Shia areas because their names were not on electoral lists.

“This is not the full number,” Salman said at a news conference. “We expect it to be higher.”

Nabeel Rajab, the director of the Bahrain Center for Human Rights, said the government intended to make sure the country’s Shia majority would not gain power.

Hundreds of Shia people have been arrested since August, and at least 23 top opposition figures have been charged with plotting against Bahrain’s Sunni-dominated government.

Bahrain authorities have not allowed international election monitors, adding to worries among Shias of possible fraud and vote rigging.


Tony Blair's sister-in-law converts to Shia Islam after a 'holy experience' in Iran


JNN 25.10.10 Broadcaster and journalist Lauren Booth, 43 – Cherie Blair’s half-sister – said she now wears a hijab head covering whenever she leaves her home, prays five times a day and visits her local mosque ‘when I can’. She decided to become a Muslim six weeks ago after visiting the shrine of Fatima al-Masumeh in the city of Qom.

Broadcaster and journalist Lauren Booth, 43 – Cherie Blair’s half-sister – said she now wears a hijab head covering whenever she leaves her home, prays five times a day and visits her local mosque ‘when I can’.

She decided to become a Muslim six weeks ago after visiting the shrine of Fatima al-Masumeh in the city of Qom.

‘It was a Tuesday evening and I sat down and felt this shot of spiritual morphine, just absolute bliss and joy,’ she told The Mail on Sunday.

When she returned to Britain, she decided to convert immediately.

‘Now I don’t eat pork and I read the Koran every day. I’m on page 60.

‘I also haven’t had a drink in 45 days, the longest period in 25 years. The strange thing is that since I decided to convert I haven’t wanted to touch alcohol, and I was someone who craved a glass of wine or two at the end of a day.’

Refusing to discount the possibility that she might wear a burka, she said: ‘Who knows where my spiritual journey will take me?’

Before her awakening in Iran, she had been ‘sympathetic’ to Islam and has spent considerable time working in Palestine. ‘I was always impressed with the strength and comfort it gave,’ she said of the religion.

Miss Booth, who works for Press TV, the English-language Iranian news channel, has been a vocal opponent of the war in Iraq.

In August 2008 she travelled to Gaza by ship from Cyprus, along with 46 other activists, to highlight Israel’s blockade of the territory. She was subsequently refused entry into both Israel and Egypt.

Before her awakening in Iran, she had been ‘sympathetic’ to Islam and has spent considerable time working in Palestine. ‘I was always impressed with the strength and comfort it gave,’ she said of the religion.

Miss Booth, who works for Press TV, the English-language Iranian news channel, has been a vocal opponent of the war in Iraq.

In August 2008 she travelled to Gaza by ship from Cyprus, along with 46 other activists, to highlight Israel’s blockade of the territory.

She was subsequently refused entry into both Israel and Egypt.

Booth moved to France with her family – husband Craig Darby and two daughters Alexandra and Holly in 2004.

Her husband was seriously injured in a motorcycle accident in April 2009 when he wasd not wearing a helmet.

He suffered a severe brain injury, a fractured neck, damage to his spine and several broken ribs and was in a deep coma for two weeks.

The 42-year-old had to learn how to walk and talk again. He lost much of his memory, has sight problem and cannot work.

The couple decided to move back to Britain to help his recovery and reduce the amount of time Booth has to work away from home.

In 2006 she was a contestant on the ITV reality show I’m A Celebrity .  .  . Get Me Out Of Here!, donating her fee to the Palestinian relief charity Interpal.

She said she hoped her conversion would help Mr Blair change his presumptions about Islam.

Is Google spying on us ? :Google says Street View cars got e-mail, passwords


Search giant says its Wi-Fi equipment gathered info inadvertently

SAN FRANCISCO — Google admitted for the first time its “Street View” cars around the world accidentally collected more personal data than previously disclosed — including complete e-mails and passwords —potentially breathing new life into probes in various countries.

The disclosure comes just days after Canada’s privacy watchdog said Google had collected complete e-mails and accused Google of violating the rights of thousands of Canadians.

“If in fact laws were broken…then there’s some serious question of culpability and Google may need to face significant fines,” said Marc Rotenberg, the executive director of the Electronic Privacy Information Center, a Washington D..C-based privacy advocacy group.

Regulators in France, Germany and Spain, among others, have opened investigations into the matter.

A coalition of more than 30 state attorneys general in the United States also have launched a joint probe.

It remains unclear how many people may have been affected by the privacy breach.

Connecticut Attorney General Richard Blumenthal, who is leading the multi-state investigation, said in a statement on Friday that Google’s disclosure about the types of data it collected “validates and heightens our significant concerns,” and noted that the investigation is continuing.

Anti-Human Rights Bahraini Government Arrests Family of Shia Activists


Bahraini security forces have arrested the family members of opposition activists who have spoken out against the government’s growing violence against the country’s Shia community.

Bahraini security forces have arrested the family members of opposition activists who have spoken out against the government’s growing violence against the country’s Shia community.

According to the Bahrain Center for Human Rights (BCHR), Bahraini security forces raided the house of Hasan Mushaima — one of the leaders of Shia Haq political party — last week and arrested his son Mohammed Mushaimea without any specific charge.

The arrest came a few hours after his father, who is currently in the UK for medical treatment, appeared on a TV channel and criticized the deteriorating situation of human rights in Bahrain.

Mushaimea’s family said security forces entered their house and searched everywhere without holding a search warrant. Security forces also confiscated their computer.

In another incident, Bahraini security forces arrested football player Mahdi Sa’ad and banned him from traveling abroad after her sister appeared on the BBC Arabic and slammed Manama’s aggressive approach toward detained opposition activists.

Sa’ad’s sister had also criticized Bahraini authorities for failing to inform her family about the condition of her blind brother, Ali Sa’ad, who was arrested in September. She said it is not clear where he is being held and that her family has not been given permission to visit him.

The BCHR argues that arresting and harassing the relatives and family members of those who criticize the government on TV channels or news agencies abroad demonstrate the authorities’ intolerance toward criticism. It is also an attempt by Manama to hide the reality of what is happening in Bahrain from the world’s public opinion.

Imam Khamenei Meets With Top Shia Clerics in Holy Qom


World Shia Leader, Ayatollah Seyyed Ali Khamenei, has met with a number of top religious figures during his visit to the holy city of Qom in central Iran.

Leader of the Islamic Revolution Ayatollah Seyyed Ali Khamenei has met with a number of top religious figures during his visit to the holy city of Qom in central Iran.

The Leader, who is on a 9-day tour of the city, sat down with Grand Ayatollahs Lotfollah Safi Golpaygani, Hossein Nouri Hamedani, Naser Makarem Shirazi, Mousa Shobeiri Zanjani, Jafar Sobhani and Abdollah Javadi Amoli.

Imam Khamenei also visited the families of three martyrs of the 1980-1988 Iraqi imposed war on Iran late Thursday, and paid tribute to the fallen men as well as their next of kin. He offered prayers to their souls and prayed to God to grant their families patience and forbearance.

The Imam arrived in Qom on Tuesday and received a rapturous welcome upon his arrival. Thousands of people, including foreigners studying at Qom’s theology schools, poured into the streets to welcome him.

Imam Khamenei also addressed tens of thousands of clerics and students of the Qom Islamic Seminary early on Thursday.

Shia Leader In Bahrain Demands Authority Not Be Monopolized By Ruling Family


Sheikh Ali Salman, the secretary general of the Society of National Islamic Unity, which is considered the principal Shi’ite organization in Bahrain, has demanded that the government authority in the country not be monopolized by the ruling family.

He says that he would like to see someone from outside that family to become prime minister.

In an election rally for the Bahraini parliament, Salman declared: “We seek, through a long-term program, that one day, the government will be in the hands of the children of the people.”

The Al-Khalifa family has ruled Bahrain since 1783.

Imam Khamenei Holds Morning Prayers at Holy Mosque of Jamkaran


4 dead, 22 hurt in Peshawar mosque attack


PESHAWAR: At least four people were killed and 22 others wounded in a remote-controlled bomb blast at Pashta Khara Mosque in Peshawar on Friday.

The bomb targeted worshipers who were coming out of the mosque after offering Friday prayers.

The injured were shifted to Hayatabad Medical Complex, where an emergency was declared.

Following the blast, law enforcement agencies cordoned off the area and started a search operation.

Speaking to SAMAA, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa’s Information Minister Mian Iftikhar Hussain confirmed the blast.

Condemning the bombing, he said that such attacks will continue to take place in Pakistan unless the situation improves in neighboring Afghanistan.

Leader addresses a large gathering of clerics, scholars in Qom


The Leader of Islamic Revolution, Ayatollah Seyed Ali Khamenei, has said that the holy city of Qom has never been as effective as today toward the global developments and policies, and due to this distinguished status it has never had the friends and enemies as it currently has.
The Leader of Islamic Revolution addressed a large gathering of Ulema, lecturers, and scholars of the Qom Seminary on Thursday morning, while hailing the efforts of tens of thousands of scholars in the holy city of Qom for learning and promoting Islamic teachings as an unprecedented phenomenon.
The Leader further rejected the fallacious reasoning that calls for separation of the Seminary from politics and international topics of importance and noted that neutrality and lack of movement does not stop the enemy and in fact encourages the foes to intensify their hostilities.
The Leader of Islamic Revolution further elaborated on the goals of the enemies of Islam in promoting two diversionary concepts of the “rule of clerics” and “division of the clergy into the ones within the ruling system and those outside the ruling system”, while emphasizing that: “The foes want to deprive the sacred Islamic establishment from the huge ideological support of Ulema, and the enemies have in fact launched a futile bid to somehow isolate and disrepute revolutionary clerics. Meanwhile, one should vigilantly stand against these sinister and ominous aims.”
The Leader further pointed out that the sacred Islamic system is in fact the rule of sacred religion of Islam and religious values; and is not the rule of clerics.
In further remarks, the Leader referred to a few, who issue fatwa to mainly comply with the materialistic norms and tendencies and even for the sake of Global Arrogance. The Leader went on to add: “Someone has issued a fatwa that Iran’s peaceful nuclear activities are illegitimate because the world powers have been suspicious about it. But, we say that the Global Arrogance has made a major mistake and is wrongful and should not dare to be suspicious toward the Iranian nation.”
Furthermore, the Leader reiterated that within the seminaries’ ethical and behavioral system, the revolutionary sentiments and tendencies should be fully attended because the enemies and their followers are intent on pursuing their ominous goals through shattering the revolutionary atmosphere.
The Leader of Islamic Revolution enumerated efforts to isolate revolutionary and Basiji clerics; disregard for martyrdom and martyrs; and questioning of the sacred defense of the Iranian nation as parts of the approaches adopted by the foes of Islam to undermine the revolutionary atmosphere in the seminaries, while calling on the clerics of seminaries to be fully sensitive and cautious in this regard.

More Americans depend on food stamps


JNN 22.10.10 The use of food stamps has become more common among American families as Hawaii and other US states offer the coupons to more members of the working class.

Data from the US Department of Agriculture shows that 32 US states have adopted rules, which pave the way for food stamp qualification since 2007.

Hawaii has gone farther than most, allowing a family to earn up to USD 59,328 per year and still get food stamps.

For example, a Hawaii citizen, Lillie Gonzales does whatever it takes to provide for her three sons who live under the same roof with her. She grows her own vegetables at home on Kauai, runs her own small business and like a record 42 million other Americans, she relies on food stamps.

Gonzales and her husband consistently qualify for food stamps now that Hawaii and other states are quietly expanding eligibility and offering the benefit to more working and moderate income families.

Prior to an October 1 increase, the income eligibility limit for a Hawaiian family of five was USD 38,568 a year, but now it has increased to USD 59,328.

“If I didn’t have food stamps, I would be buying white rice and Spam every day,” said Gonzales, whose Island Angels business makes Hawaiian-style fabric angel ornaments, quilts, aprons and purses.

Eligibility for food stamps varies from state to state, with the 11 most generous states allowing families to apply if their gross income is less than double the federal poverty line of USD 22,050 for a family of four on US mainland. The threshold is higher in Alaska and Hawaii.

Scholars and Teachers of Qom meet Rahbar e Moazzam


Rehber e Inqalaab at Qom


NATO transfer Taliban leaders to Kabul


JNN 20.10.10 US-led forces have provided transportation for Taliban leaders to cross Pakistan’s border as secret talks begin between the Afghan government and the Taliban, Afghan officials say.

According to the officials, Taliban leaders have crossed the Afghanistan-Pakistan border and boarded a NATO aircraft bound for the Afghan capital city, Kabul, the New York Times reported.

NATO troops have reportedly secured roads to allow Taliban leaders to reach Afghan and NATO-controlled areas.

The report also says many top Taliban leaders that reside in Pakistan enjoy official protection.

Afghanistan recently set up a new peace council to negotiate with the Taliban militants to help end the war in Afghanistan.

Commander of US and NATO forces in Afghanistan General David Petraeus confirmed on Friday that Taliban representatives had been given safe passage by the coalition forces.

“There have been several very senior Taliban leaders who have reached out to the Afghan government at the highest levels, and also in some cases have reached out to other countries involved in Afghanistan,” Petraeus told reporters at the Royal United Services Institute in London.

Earlier, US officials said that coalition forces had “facilitated” contacts between the militants and the Kabul government.

Meanwhile, amid the reports of peace talks with the Taliban, the United States said last week that it is ready to remove more Taliban militants from a UN sanctions list. Washington said it can support an adjustment to the list to facilitate the Afghan government peace talks with the Taliban.

US, Afghan and Taliban sources all declined to give details of the secret “peace talks.”

The Taliban have so far denied any involvement in talks with Kabul. The militants insist that there will be no talks with the Karzai government until all foreign troops leave the war-torn country.

The US invaded Afghanistan in 2001 with the aim of toppling the Taliban regime and dismantling al-Qaeda network. After nine years, foreign forces have failed to bring security to Afghanistan and contain militancy.