Saudi Wahhabi insult to Ayatollah Sistani outrages Iraq


Insulting remarks by a Saudi cleric about the most revered Shia cleric in Iraq, Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani, have strained relations between Baghdad and Riyadh.

In a Friday sermon in the Saudi capital of Riyadh, a leading Wahhabi cleric, Mohammad al-Ureifi, called Ayatollah al-Sistani an “atheist and debauched.”

He also launched an attack on Iraqi Shias accusing them of conspiring with Yemen’s Houthis against Saudi Arabia with Iran’s support.

Meanwhile, Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki strongly criticized the Saudi religious institutes after the cleric’s remarks.

He said Saudi religious institutes had a tendency to launch attacks on Shia clerics due to their hostile attitude towards Shia Muslims, AFP reported.

Iraq’s Parliament also condemned the remarks by calling on the Saudi government to take transparent position on the issue. In a statement, Iraqi lawmakers said the Saudi cleric had intended to create a rift among Muslims.

They called on the Saudi government to warn the clerics against making provocative statements.

The Iraqi Parliament also called on the Arab League, the Organization of Islamic Conference (OIC), the Association of Asian Parliaments and Iraqi President Jalal Talabani to condemn the remarks

Shiite Ulema’s warns to block the main streets of karachi on friday against the illegal apprehension of their youths


Jafaria news ulema-300x225Correspondent:
 Shiite ulema’s on thursday warned to block the main artilleries of Karachi to protest against the  illegal apprehension  by the police of the Shia youth.

While addressing the press conference at Karachi Press Club.Maulana Sheikh Hassan Salahuddin, Maulana Mukhtar Imami, Mirza Yousuf Hussain along with other Shiite Ulema’s said that, on Friday all the main roads of the city will be blocked and the squads of the Shiites will flagellate against the unlawful detainment of their innocent youths who were arrested in raids in different areas of the city on Wednesday.

They mentioned that the procession will pass through its old routes and if anyone tried to interfere or curtail the march they will protest on the country level.

They warned the high-ups to take effective measures upon this development otherwise the protests will be escalated in every part of the country adding that the blockage of the thoroughfares will be the first step.

During the conference a Shiite woman appealed the authorities to release her innocent brother Muntazar Naqvi who were arrested in a raid last night in the jurisdiction of Peoples Colony.

Shiite Ulema’s informed that about 86 people were arrested and accumulated in Darakhshan police station who belonged to different sects including Shiites and Sunnis last night.

They appealed the authorities to release the innocents and take immediate action against the terrorist elements who arson and ransacked the Boltan market instead of implicating the false cases on the Shiite youths.

Moreever, At least 6 more Shia youths were nabbed by the police in connection with riots and arson inflicted following Karachi bombing at Asuhra procession on M.A Jinnah Road.
The new arrests have been made from separate parts of metropolis including Ancholi(Saddat Colony), Samanabad, Peoples Chowrangi, Gulistan-e-Johar, Malir and Jafar Tayyar areas.

According to police sources, those apprehended were allegedly accused of triggering riots and setting ablaze many government and private vehicles, shops located in Bolton and Light House Markets, buildings and ransacking banks after bomb attack at main Ashura procession on M.A. Jinnah Road on 10th of Muharram.

However, denying any likeliness of torture on held alleged culprits, police said they will only be investigated but the families of detained youths alleged the brutal torture on their beloved by the police person.

Maulana Dr Aqeel Moosa, Maulana Abbas Waziri, Ghulam Muhammad Fakhruddin and others attended the conference.

Federal Minister express condolence with Shia leaders and demand judicial inquiry of Ashura blast


Federal Minister for Railways Ghulam Ahmed Bilour and Jaffaria Alliance President Allama Abbas Kumaili on Wednesday demanded the high level judicial probe of the Ashura bomb blast. They said that this was not the only a conspiracy against the people of metropolis but also a conspiracy against the country. They were addressing the joint press conference at Allama Abbas Kumaili House, followed by a meeting to express condolence to the Shia leaders regarding the bomb blast in Ashura. Awami National Party Sindh Chief Shahi Syed, Provincial Secretary General Ameen Khattak, ANP’s Provincial minister Ameer Nawab and others accompanied the Federal Minister.

Ghulam Ahmed Bilour underlined the need to crush the hands involved in the Ashura bomb blast saying that bomb blast on Ashura procession and arsons incidents were well-planned. He appealed to the Ulema’s and religious scholars to play their role to end the religious differences among the religious school of thoughts saying that this kind of situation was the threat for the stability of the country.

 

He said that the mourners were not involved in the fire and looting incidents saying that miscreants had involved in the looting and arsons incidents on Ashura.

 

Bilour said that holy Quran is prohibited the killing of innocent people saying that those who involved in the killing and bloodshed of innocent people are not to be called Muslims.

He said that ANP is the secular party but we are following the teachings of Islam saying that secularism gives the lesson to respect humanity and religions.

He said that we came here to express condolence to the community over the lost of precious lives.

 

He said that Pukhtoon community was suffering the decisions of former General and religious leaders, who used the Pukhtoon community for their vested interest in the name of Jihad in Afghanistan.

 

Allama Abbas Kumaili said that Ashura blast was a conspiracy against the country adding that there is no shia and sunni conflict in the country.

He said that some extremist’s elements were involved in the heinous acts to fulfill their vested interests.

He asked the religious parties to end their double views regarding the bomb blast and suicide incidents in the country saying that these are the enemy of Pakistan and Islam.

He demanded of the government to arrest the real culprits involved in the Ashura blast and denounced the arrest of Shia youths in the connection of arsons incidents saying that after the media revelations of facts the picture was cleared.

Earlier, the ANP leaders were held the meeting with the Jaffaria Alliance leaders at Allama Abbas Kumaili house. Allama Nisar Ahmed Qalandari, Allama Aftab Jafari, Maulana Hussain Masoodi, Salman Mujtaba, Shabar Raza, Ali Ahmar, Sabir Karbalai, Allama Ali Karar Naqvi and others were present on the occasion.

Egypt police injure 35 Palestinians


Egyptian forces injured at least 35 Palestinians on Wednesday when they clashed with protesters who staged rallies against Cairo’s steeling its border with the blockaded Gaza Strip.

The incident occurred when security forces confronted the protesters on the Egypt-Gaza border, Reuters reported. Two of the injured are in critical condition.

The Egyptian government is building a steel wall along the border to prevent the trafficking of any goods to the strip.

The coastal sliver continues to suffer from an all-out Israeli-imposed blockade which has deprived it of its basic necessities for over two years.

Cairo has also been keeping shut the Rafah border crossing — the Gaza Strip’s only border that bypasses Israel— claiming that the border post is an Egyptian-Israeli crossing and should not be used without the Tel Aviv’s permission.

The Egyptian riot police earlier injured 55 people in the port of El-Arish during clashes with the Gaza-bound human rights activists Viva Palestina.

The scuffles broke out after Egypt said it would not allow 59 humanitarian assistance trucks of Viva Palestina‘s relief convoy to enter Gaza.

The convoy is comprised of 210 trucks carrying basic food items and medical supplies.

The 450-strong group, led by British lawmaker George Galloway, set out for the port after being barred from taking the most direct route into Egypt by entering the country via the Red Sea.
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Saudi Wahhabis remove banners and signs of Imam Hussain (A.S)


On 2 January 2010 Saudi Wahhabi authorities have pulled down posters of the third Shia Imam in the coastal city of al-Qatif, which hosts the country’s largest community of Shia Muslims.

Municipality staff escorted by a security team and a police convoy removed all Hussaini signs and banners during the morning hours when the city’s residents were at work or school, leaving most streets fairly clear of any bystanders, then insensibility burned them in front of people .

The posters displayed Hadith (Arabic for narrations) of Prophet Mohammad (PBUH) about Imam Hussein (AS), as well as quotes by the Imam himself.

The posters had been put up in al-Qatif city and the road to al-Awamiyah, a town situated further south in the county.

In Saudi Arabia , any practices contrary to the Wahabi sect, are discouraged. The Government prohibits Shia public processions during the Islamic month of Muharram in the Shia cities as Dammam and al-Ahsa and restricts them in some cities as Qatif .

It is worth mentioning that it is not the first time in which the Saudi regime removed all Hussaini banners and signs , where on 26th of December 2009 the security authorities removed all banners and signs fixed on the streets of the town of Rumaila in al-Ahsa.

Pakistani Shia Women Demands Arrest of Ashura day bombing masterminds+ Pic


QUETTA, January 03rd, 2010:Shia women in Quetta have demanded of the Sindh government to impartially probe into Ashura day bombing and expose the elements behind the inhuman act.

 

QUETTA, January 03rd, 2010:Shia women in Quetta have demanded of the Sindh government to impartially probe into Ashura day bombing and expose the elements behind the inhuman act.

Speaking at a press conference in Hazara Nichari Imambargah, they criticized the Sindh government and its law enforcement agencies for their failure to check the gory incident and said the poor performance of Sindh government as well as federal government can judged from the fact that they could not ascertain the actual cause of the blast even after a week of the incident.

They categorically stated that the Ashura procession participants were not involved in arson and other violence which erupted after the blast on M.A Jinnah Road in Karachi as they were busy in shifting their bodies and injured to hospitals. They demanded of the Sindh government to release all mourners of Hazrat Imam Hussain (A.S) who have arrested in this connection.

They also demanded payment of compensation to legal heirs of the victims who have fallen prey to sectarian target killings.

Later, Quran Khuwani and Majlis were also held in the imambargah Hazara Nichari wherein special prayers were offered for departed souls of the Karachi blast martyrs.

World Shia Leader condolence message to demise of Ayatollah Ali Safi Golpaygani


Ayatollah Khamenei offered his condolences in a message to Grand Ayatollah Sheikh Lotfollah Safi Golpaygani the demise of his brother, Ayatollah Ali Safi.

 

Ayatollah Khamenei offered his condolences in a message to Grand Ayatollah Sheikh Lotfollah Safi Golpaygani the demise of his brother, Ayatollah Ali Safi.

Grand Ayatollah  Haj Shaikh Lotfollah Safi ;

“I condolence the demise of Ayatollah Ali Safi to you, his survivers and his companions, especially the believers of Golpaygan.
 
The senior jurisprudent Mr. Ali Safi, who was one of the outstanding students of Ayatollah Boroujerdi, spent his valuable life at the service of science and religion.

We hope bestow mercy and forgiveness on him.”

Iran bans contact with 60 groups including BBC, HRW


TEHRAN: Iran has banned its citizens from having contact with 60 organisations including the BBC, Human Rights Watch and opposition website Rahesabz as well as US-funded broadcasters, state media have reported.

The deputy intelligence minister in charge of external affairs said that the 60 blacklisted groups were suspected of being involved in efforts by Western governments to topple the Islamic regime as part of a “soft war” and that it was an offence to communicate with them.

“Any kind of contact by individuals or legal entities with those groups involved in the soft war is illegal and prohibited,” state media quoted the deputy minister as saying on Monday without giving his name.

The blacklisted organisations also included US government-funded Voice of America and Radio Farda as well as US-based pro-monarchist satellite channels, Israeli public radio and the outlawed rebel People’s Mujahedeen.

The deputy minister also called on the public to avoid “irregular contacts with embassies or foreign nationals or centres linked to them”.

Karachi blast: Bomb planted in sacred papers’ box


KARACHI: The chief of the Investigative Committee, probing the Karachi incident, Shafqat Malik has submitted the report to the IG Sindh.

According to the report, Karachi Ashura blast was not a suicide attack.

Talking to Geo News in Peshawar, AIG Bomb Disposal Squad Shafqat Malik said after examining the evidence recovered from the site of the blast, it is established that the Karachi blast was not a suicide attack but a 12 to 15 kilogram explosives was planted in a box meant for keeping sacred papers.

The bomb was exploded with the help of remote controlled device, he added.

Malik further said initial investigation revealed that the blast doest not seem to have the connection with the group carrying out blasts in the country but a new group is behind the Karachi Ashura blast, which seems to have experience of such activities.

“It is a new trend. Previously, vehicles were being used for such attacks but Karachi blast was carried out through a planted bomb, which was exploded through remote controlled device at a time when the Ashura procession was crossing the blast site,” he said.

Malik chairs high-level sitting over Karachi mayhem


ISLAMABAD: Interior Minister Rehman Malik has chaired a high-level meeting over the law and order situation in Sindh province especially in metropolis city of Karachi here in Islamabad on Monday morning, Geo news reported.

According to sources, Federal Secretary for Interior Affairs, the heads of Federal Investigation Agency (FIA) and National Crisis Management Cell (NCMC), Chief Secretary of Sindh, IG and Director General (DG) Rangers also attended the meeting.

At the beginning of the meeting, the attendees offered prays for the martyrs of Karachi debacle, following which, the investigation report over the Karachi terrorism, occurred after bomb blast on Ashura procession, was also submitted from investigation agencies and analysis over various evidences in regard to incident were tabled before meeting, sources privy to interior ministry claimed.

Meeting also mulled over the measures to thwart such tragedies in future and discussed steps necessary to be taken to bring to justice, the anti-state elements that are involved in plotting such attacks, sources added.

Talibani Terrorist Commander:We will Kill Shias again and again


We carried out the suicide bombing against Shias in Karachi,” Asmatullah Shaheen, one of the commanders of Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan Terrorist Group said”.

A spokesman threatened to carry out more such attacks in the coming days against Shia Muslims.

Dozens of people were injured in the bomb, which struck as Shias marked the climax of the holy month of Muharram.

After the explosion, marchers turned their anger on ambulance workers, security forces and journalists.

The death toll from a suicide bomber’s attack on a Shia religious procession in Karachi was reported to have risen to 43.

‘Our man’

“We carried out the suicide bombing in Karachi against Shia mourners,” the AFP news agency quoted Asmatullah Shaheen, one of the commanders of Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan Terrorist Group(TTP) as saying.

“He [the bomber] was our man. His name was Hasnain Muawia and we did it to remove Shias all over the world”, said Mr Shaheen whose name is on a government list of 20 most-wanted militants.

“We will carry out more such attacks on Shia Muslims and also target government installations just who are Shias,” he said.

Hundreds of Shia civilians have martyred in bomb attacks as Pakistan’s army concludes an offensive against Taliban Terrorist militants in South Waziristan and surrounding areas.

pakistan: Ashura blast not a suicide attack, says Malik


ISLAMABAD: Interior Minister Rehman Malik on Monday said the Karachi Ashura blast was not a suicide attack. He said the federal government has constituted a committee to investigate the arson attacks in Karachi.

The interior minister, after chairing a high level meeting at the interior ministry in Islamabad, announced the government’s decision to constitute a committee to investigate the issue. The committee will be headed by the ministry’s Additional Secretary Asif Nawaz.

Arson and rioting, which followed the Ashura procession blast, caused losses worth billions of rupees to the government and the private sector.

He said that the government had instructed law enforcement agencies to patrol the streets of Karachi. Rangers and Police will jointly conduct patrolling operations in the city, said Malik.

The interior minister also said that the government will not tolerate target killings anywhere in the country. — DawnNews

Zardari calls for national commitment against terror


However, he said “our desire for peace must not be taken as a sign of weakness and our armed forces are ready to meet all challenges”.

He said “we have full faith in our armed forces and the people to defend our country”.

The President said “our armed forces are ready to meet all the challenges and guard against all external and internal threats”.

He stated it was every Pakistani’s duty to fight against external and internal enemies who disrupt the country’s peace and progress.

Zardari also pointed out that the Pakistan People’s Party (PPP) would not disappoint the nation.

The president, at the occasion, emphasised that a strong navy was necessary to meet any challenge to Pakistan’s maritime security.

He said the recent induction of PNS Zulfiqar and helicopters was intended to strengthen the country’s naval fleet.

Zardari said he was pleased that Pakistan Navy was following the path of self-reliance and the construction of submarines in the country was a significant step forward in this direction.

Zardari urged that there should be optimum use of the national resources.

He said “the country is facing new challenges to its security…extremism is a big threat to our existence. We need a united national commitment to fight and defeat militancy.”

The President pointed out that the government has given political ownership to the fight against militancy and terrorism.

He said Pakistan Navy’s participation in the Coalition Maritime Campaign (CMCP) has enhanced the navy’s professional capabilities in checking arms, drugs and human smuggling.

President Zardari said it has also improved Pakistan’s capacity to fight the threat of militancy to our national security.

“It is reassuring that Pakistan Navy commanded the Maritime Task Force 150 thrice…it shows our resolve towards international peace,” he said.

On the occasion, President Zardari urged young naval officers to dedicate themselves to their profession and protect the sea lanes of the country’s communication.

He said he was pleased to learn that Pakistan Naval Academy was training cadets from the brotherly countries of Kazakhstan, Maldives, Palestine, Saudi Arabia, Yemen and Sudan.

The President also congratulated the passing out Midshipmen and the SSC Class cadets.

The President said he was particularly pleased to note that for the first time women officers were also part of this passing out parade.

He said the women officers’ presence at the ceremony reflected the policy of the government to encourage women to play their role in all areas of the national progress including defence.

The ceremony was also attended by the Sindh Chief Minister Syed Qaim Ali Shah, Chairman Joint Chiefs of Staff Committee General Tariq Majeed and Chief of the Naval Staff Admiral Noman Bashir. — APP

Ayatollah Ali Safi Golpayegani passes away


TEHRAN, Jan. 4 (MNA) – Ayatollah Ali Safi Golpayegani passed away late Sunday.

Ayatollah Golpayegani was the brother of Grand Ayatollah Sheikh Lotfollah Safi Golpayegani.

 

He was a student of top religious figures including the late Ayatollah Mohammad Hossein Broujerdi and the late Ayatollah Mohammad Taghi Bahjat.

 

Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, Majlis Speaker Ali Larijani, and Head of Islamic Propagation Organization Hojjatoleslam Mahdi Khamoushi, and Qom Seminary Teachers Society have issued separate statements expressing their condolences over the demise of Ayatollah Golpayegani.

Rehabilitation of arson-hit shops underway in Karachi


KARACHI: The contractors of the City District Government Karachi (CDGK) and Karachi Water and Sewerage Board (KWSB) are in the process of repairing and reconstructing the affected buildings of M.A.Jinnah Road, in response to the appeal of Nazim Karachi, Syed Mustafa Kamal.

The contractors have employed a work force comprising 1500 people with heavy machinery in the rehabilitation work and so far completed the work on 10 to 12 shops. Services of civil engineers have also been hired to oversee the work.

The contractors are trying to finish the work within a week so that the shops could be handed over to the traders for resumption of the business activities at the earliest.

Karachi Electric Supply Company (KESC) has restored electricity to the shops where rehabilitation work has been completed.

Meanwhile, over 3,000 survey forms have distributed for estimation of the losses.

Holy Kaaba washed


Governor of Makkah Prince Khaled Al-Faisal, on behalf of Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques King Abdullah, washed the Kaaba on Saturday.

A number of Muslim scholars, government officials, dignitaries and diplomats attended the event, which takes place twice a year on the 15th of Shabaan (the month preceding the fasting month of Ramadan) and in mid-Muharram (the month after Dhul Hijjah when Muslims perform Haj).

The House of God is given a new Kiswa (covering) on the 9th of Dhul Hijjah when pilgrims proceed to Arafat for the main event of the Haj.

The washing ritual of the Kaaba begins with the performance of two raka’hs inside the cuboidal structure. The interior walls will then be cleaned with rose, oud and musk perfumes using white cloth. Zamzam water mixed with rose perfume will then be splashed on the floor and then wiped with bare hands and palm leaves.

Before entering the Kaaba to do the washing, Prince Khaled circumambulated the Kaaba seven times (Tawaf) during which he will touch the Black Stone. He will then receive the key to the Kaaba presented in a bag made of green velvet from its custodian (Bani Shayba). On entering the House of God, the prince will perform two raka’hs on a marble sheet, the spot where it is believed that the Prophet Muhammad (peace be upon him) prayed.

The washing ceremony began after the guests have exited. The marble floor and the walls were washed with Zamzam water mixed with rose perfume.

After the cleaning, the floor and the walls were dried again with white cloth and tissues. The walls are then perfumed using large quantities of oud and rose perfume. The Kaaba was then be incensed.

The Kaaba is 14 meters high from the eastern side, 12.11 meters from the western and southern sides, and 11.28 meters from the northern side. Its inside floor is laid with colored marble. Its ceilings are supported by three wooden columns, each with a diameter of 44 cm.

The structure has two ceilings, a lower one and an upper one. Its inside walls are covered with curtains made of green velvet that are changed once every three years. The top of the upper roof has a vent, which is 127 cm long and 104 cm wide to allow sunlight to enter. This vent is covered with strengthened glass and is opened during the washing ceremony. The vent can be reached via a glass staircase of 50 steps.

The door of the Kaaba is made of wood and covered with 280 kg of pure gold. It is 310 cm in height and 190 cm in width. The length of the Kaaba’s key is 40 cm. The door is erected 225 cm above ground level.

Lakki Marvat suicide attack toll rises to 99


PESHAWAR: The death toll from a suicide attack at a volleyball game in Lakki Marvat rose to 99, police said Sunday, as authorities struggled to cope with one of the country’s bloodiest ever bombings.

“A total of 99 people have been killed. There are 87 injured who are being treated in three different hospitals,” Bannu district police chief Mohammad Ayub Khan told foreign media by telephone from the northwest region.

Another police officer in the area, Habib Ullah Khan, confirmed the toll.

There has been no claim of responsibility for the attack, but police said the bomber came from South Waziristan, the neighbouring district where Pakistan has been waging an offensive on Taliban militants since October.

The area also neighbours North Waziristan, where suspected US drone attacks have increasingly targeted Al-Qaeda fighters and the Haqqani network, which is known for staging attacks on foreign troops in Afghanistan.

The volleyball tournament in Shah Hasan Khan village had been arranged by a local anti-Taliban militia, whom police suspect may have been the target.

“We have arrested 41 suspects and are interrogating them… This village is adjacent to the Bhitni area of South Waziristan and the bomber came from that area,” the district police chief told media.

Medics at the hospital in the nearby town of Lakki Marwat said they were short of medicine and beds, overwhelmed with casualties.

“Even now the injured are under going treatment on the hospital floor. Some have brought their own beds,” Doctor Usman Ali told media by telephone.

“My daughter died because of the poor facilities in the hospital. There was no bed, no medicine and not even the X-ray machine was working,” shopkeeper Riaz Khatok told media from the hospital.

“There was nowhere else in Lakki Marwat to take the wounded. Most of the dead died because of bleeding,” he added.

Sleiman Confirms to Obama Lebanon’s Right to Defend Itself


Stressing on refusing to settle the Palestinian refugees in Lebanon and confirming the right of return, Lebanese President Michel Sleiman told his US counterpart President Barack Obama that Lebanon has the right to defend its territories and regain it from the occupation.

After a meeting with Obama at the White House, President Sleiman said said he had complained about “Israeli threats” against his country and urged Obama to press Israel to withdraw its forces from areas such as occupied Shebaa Farms. “We also discussed the Israeli threats against Lebanon which are taking place and place obstacles to the economic growth of the country,” Sleiman said.

“We asked President Obama and the US to exert further pressure on Israel to implement Resolution 1701.”

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu last week denounced the resolution, saying it had proven to be a failure.

Sleiman praised Obama’s landmark speech to the Muslim world in Cairo in June and the award of the Nobel Peace Prize to the US leader last week.

He also called on the United States to push for the resumption of the stalled Middle East peace process, which has so far defied Obama’s attempts to forge sweeping progress.

For his part, the US President told reporters that Lebanon was a “critical country, in a critical region,” and praised Sleiman for managing the swift-moving political currents threatening stability in his country. “We want to do everything we can to encourage a strong, independent and democratic Lebanon,” Obama said, noting that Washington was especially keen to strengthen Lebanese armed forces.

Despite vowing support for Lebanese democracy, Obama said there were some issues on which he and Sleiman would not agree, and noted they discussed the implementation of the UN resolution 1701 and Hezbollah’s arms. “President Sleiman and I are not going to agree on every issue with respect to… Israel, Lebanon, the Palestinians and Syria. What we do agree on is we can resolve these issues through dialogue and negotiations, rather than through violence.”

Lebanon has complained of Israeli surveillance overflights, but Israel claims such violations are needed to monitor what they called “the rearming of Hezbollah” and the movements of its resistance fighters.

Obama pressed Lebanon to crack down on arms smuggling into the country, saying the weapons posed a potential threat to Israeli security. “President Suleiman emphasized his concerns with respect to Israel. I emphasized our concerns about the extensive arms that are smuggled into Lebanon that potentially serve as a threat to Israel,” Obama told reporters. “It is in the interest of all parties concerned that enforcement is exerted with respect to such smuggling.”

Sleiman, who earlier met House of Representatives speaker Nancy Pelosi, also held in depth talks with Vice President Joe Biden.

Biden “stressed that our efforts to achieve our goals in the Middle East will not come at Lebanon’s expense,” his office said in a statement.

Iran invites Iraq to participate in security arrangements


Iranian Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki has called on Iraq to participate in regional and security arrangements.

Mottaki made the remarks here on Monday during a meeting with Sharif Ali Bin al-Hussein, the chairman of the Iraqi Constitutional Monarchy Movement.

“We believe Iran, along with Iraq and the Persian Gulf states, can establish and maintain regional security,” Mottaki stated.

He added that certain countries, which are undermining security and stability in Iraq by promoting terrorism, are actually helping the enemy.

He also denounced the recent terrorist acts in Iraq, saying, “Iraqis’ strong determination will overcome the evil intentions of terrorists.”

On December 8, 127 people were killed when a series of car bombs ripped through Baghdad in Iraq’s deadliest attack in six weeks, a brutal reminder of the threat still posed by an insurgency that has killed thousands since the 2003 U.S. invasion.

The attacks came hours before the government announced March 7 as the date for the parliamentary election, ending weeks of political bickering that had delayed the vote from mid-January.

Elsewhere in his remarks, the Iranian foreign minister said that Iraq has been able to establish legal institutions over the past seven years and added that Tehran has always supported these moves.

Sharif Ali said certain countries do not want to see democracy and the rule of law established in Iraq, but the Iraqi people are committed to democracy.

Subsidy reform bill requires cooperation: Ahmadinejad


President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad says that the subsidy reform plan can only be implemented through comprehensive cooperation between the administration and the Majlis.


If the subsidy reform bill is not implemented correctly, the country will suffer the consequences, he said here on Monday during a meeting with MPs of the Fars Province caucus of the parliament.

He went on to say that the plan is the best path for achieving the objectives envisaged in the 20-Year Outlook Plan.

The 20-Year Outlook Plan (2005-2025) defines a macro strategy for the country’s economic, social, and cultural development.

Ahmadinejad said the implementation of the subsidy reform plan will benefit the people and the country.

He also underlined the need to reduce the size of the government.

Fifteen killed in Dera Ghazi Khan blast


DERA GHAZI KHAN: A bomb exploded in Dera Ghazi Khan’s Khosa market on Tuesday, killing 15 and injuring at least 35, DawnNews reported.

The blast occurred at a taxi stand near the residence of provincial minister Dost Mohammad Khosa.

The blast in Dera Ghazi Khan was the latest in a series of suicide and other explosions that have killed more than 500 people in Pakistan since October. The bloodshed has been blamed on militants retaliating for an army offensive against the Taliban in the country’s northwest.

Local commissioner Hasan Iqbal said Tuesday’s explosion appeared to be a car bomb.

It left a massive crater and was heard from a half-a-mile away, he said. The home of Zulfiqar Khosa, senior adviser to the chief minister of Punjab province, was badly damaged in the blast, as were several shops in the market.

‘It is a terrorist activity,’ said Iqbal, who said a dozen wounded people were shifted to hospitals.

Zulfiqar Khosa was not believed to be at the house at the time of the explosion.

Raza Khan, a local resident at the scene, said people were panicking.

‘The whole market has collapsed,’ he told The Associated Press by phone. ‘There is smoke and people running here and there.’

Militants have staged several attacks in the eastern Punjab province to illustrate their reach across the country, far beyond the northwest tribal regions bordering Afghanistan.

Several hard-line religious schools operate in Dera Ghazi Khan. The town has also experienced sectarian attacks pitting Sunni and Shia Muslims against each other.

Saudi air raid kills 70 in northern Yemen


At least 70 villagers have been killed in a Saudi air raid on a Yemeni village near the border with Saudi Arabia, Houthi fighters said.

A spokesman for Yemen’s army, Askar Zuail, confirmed the air raids in the region but claimed they were carried out by Yemeni planes.

An Internet fighters’ statement said the attack was carried out Sunday morning against the village of Bani Maan in Razeh region of northern Sadaa province.

“Saudi aircraft committed a massacre … against the innocent residents of Bani Maan,” the statement said.

According to a preliminary count, it added, the raid killed at least 70 people and wounded more than 100.

It said that Saudi planes had carried out “more than 50 raids” during the course of Sunday.

Zuail confirmed deadly air raids on Sunday, but gave little other detail.

There was no immediate reaction by the Saudi authorities to the crime.

Yemeni government forces launched an all-out offensive against Shiite Muslims on August 11 in an attempt to end a five-year combat, cornering them near the border with Saudi Arabia.

Riyadh’s forces have been fighting the fighters since November 3.


Syria’s shia Community Prepares for Ashura


Between December 17 and 26 this year, Syria’s Shia community will mark Ashura, the anniversary of the passing of the Prophet’s grandson Hussein Ibn Ali (pbuh) who martyred during the Battle of Kerbala in 680 AD.

Between December 17 and 26 this year, Syria’s Shia community will mark Ashura, the anniversary of the passing of the Prophet’s grandson Hussein Ibn Ali (pbuh) who martyred during the Battle of Kerbala in 680 AD.

Ashura – which literally means “the tenth” – is celebrated during the first 10 days of Muharram, the first month of the Muslim calendar.

Sayyed Abdul Rasoul al-Musawi al-Kazemi, a history teacher and Islamic scholar at the Zaynabia Hawza in Saida Zeinab, explains that it is a period of immense grief and sadness for all Shias.

“Believers around the world express their sorrow through similar rituals,” Kazemi said. “They raise black flags and wear black clothes during the whole month.”

Kazemi, who is originally from Iraq and moved to Damascus 30 years ago, explained that the rituals and traditions associated with Ashura express not just sorrow at the death of Hussein, but also symbolise humility and express solidarity with the oppressed.

During special processions, known as Husseini processions, believers file through the streets to the tune of beating drums and the rhythmic chanting of ‘Ya Hussein’. Believers break down in tears as they remember the passing of Hussein and his family (pbut). Kazemi said that it is in fact a religious duty to cry during Ashura.

“Like slapping oneself, crying is an expression of the highest degree of human grief,” he said.

“These rituals must be carried out with the heart and the mind,” Kazemi explained. “They must balance reason and emotion, faith and sense.”

Other rituals during the month of Muharram include the performance of passion plays in which the life and death of Hussein (pbuh) are enacted. Believers also carry out ta’ziya, in which they pay their condolences to other believers marking the death of Hussein (pbuh).

“During the ta’ziya, which is held for the first 10 days of Muharram, believers gather to listen to poets eulogise Hussein (pbuh) , his family and their lives,” Kazemi said.

Believers also gather at Shia religious schools, known as a hawza, to listen to preachers narrate the story of Ashura, often via song or poetry, and draw lessons from Hussein’s life (pbuh).

Special foods are served during Ashura, with many believers also donating sweets and other foods to local mosques. One popular Ashura dish is al keyema, an Iraqi recipe made with crushed chickpeas, sliced meat, onions and tomatoes and served with rice. Believers usually serve water to their guests during this period to symbolise the thirst Hussein and his family (pbut) felt during the battle.

On the tenth day of Muharram, the commemorations reach their climax.

Four blasts rock Baghdad's Green Zone


A series of bomb attacks in close proximity to Baghdad’s Green Zone has killed at least four Iraqi people and injured fourteen others.

“Four explosions rocked the heavily fortified Green Zone in central Baghdad on Tuesday morning,” Press TV correspondent reported.

Three of the blasts were caused by car bombs and the other by a mortar shell, the report added.

Baghdad is currently reeling from multiple coordinated bombings on Tuesday, which killed 127 people and wounded more than 500 others. On Thursday al-Qaeda militants claimed responsibility for the bombings and warned of more strikes to come against the Iraqi government.

Iraqi security officials warn militants will probably continue high-profile attacks in an attempt to destabilize the Iraqi government in advance of the March 7 parliamentary elections.

Palestinians must unite'


Iranian Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki says unity among Palestinian groups is the only way to solve the problems of Palestine.

Iranian Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki says unity among Palestinian groups is the only way to solve the problems of Palestine.

The resistance of Hamas led to the defeat of the Zionist regime in the Gaza Strip, despite the Israelis’ barbarity toward the Gazans, Mottaki said in a meeting with Hamas Political Bureau chief Khaled Meshaal in Tehran on Monday.

The Israeli army launched a massive military offensive, known as Operation Cast Lead, against the Gaza Strip from December 2008 to January 2009. More than 1,400 Palestinians were killed during the three-week offensive, which inflicted $1.6 billion in damage on the Gaza economy.

Mottaki says the arrogant powers and Israel were trying to undermine Hamas but failed.

“The Zionist regime invalidated all Arab peace initiatives regarding the issues of refugees, (Jerusalem) Al-Quds, and borders,” Mottaki said.

Meshaal said that the so-called peace plans were futile and impracticable.

Resistance against Israel is the only way to restore the rights of the Palestinian people, the Hamas official added.

Meshaal also met with Iranian Parliament Speaker Ali Larijani on Monday.

Larijani described Hamas as “the symbol of resistance against the Zionist regime” and its expansionist policies.

He stressed that Iran has always supported the Palestinians since the victory of the Islamic Revolution in 1979.

The Majlis speaker added that there is no more effective weapon than resistance for restoring the Palestinians’ rights, adding that the enemies have not been able to eradicate the resistance.

Larijani criticized the US policy toward Palestine and said the United States has not recognized the Palestinians’ basic rights despite all the promises made.

Meshaal called Iran a true supporter of the Palestinian nation and stated that Hamas will persist in resistance.

'Nation supports way of late Imam Khomeini' + PIC


The Leader of Islamic Revolution, Ayatollah Sayyed Ali Khamenei receiving Islamic seminary students, scholars and leaders of Friday prayers, said true preaching illuminates minds in the time of political turmoil.

Ayatollah Khamenei said that certain individuals, through law-breaking attitudes, tried to encourage people to act against the Islamic Republic system.
The IR Leader reiterated that such a law-breaking approach resulted in insult to the Father of the Islamic Revolution, the late Imam Khomeini by the disappointed enemy.

Ayatollah Khamenei called on the people to be calm towards those who have insulted the late Imam Khomeini, adding they are people with no roots.
The IR Leader reiterated that the defeated presidential candidates, who have failed to prove their claims of vote fraud, should return to the right path as the election file has come to a close.

Ayatollah Khamenei pointed to enemies’ active role in what happened after the June election especially insulting the late Imam Khomeini and acknowledged the nation’s support of the late Imam Khomeini.
“This Administration has divine geometry, constructed by a divine man, and relying on people’s support,” Ayatollah Khamenei said while inviting people to be calm and prudent.

The Leader of Islamic Revolution slammed those who incite discord by blurring issues after they had broken the law.
“They pretend they respect the law while in practice they violate every law. They chant their support of Imam Khomeini, yet they set the scene for some to commit such sin and insult Imam to please enemies,” the IR Leader added.

The Leader of Islamic Revolution said those who had grown bold and stood against the revolution are small in numbers and spoke of the Islamic Administration as a divine system which had been protected by God in the past thirty years and would remain the same.
“One who works for Islam, the Revolution, and Imam Khomeini changes his course of action the moment he feels he has caused things to go against the principals,” Ayatollah Khamenei said.

The Leader of Islamic Revolution said some should reconsider their actions when they face those who advocate omission of Islam from the most important motto of the Revolution, or when they face some who chant in favor of the Zionist regime in the Quds day.
“Why don’t they open their eyes when they see the patriarchs of imperialism, America, France, and England, are supporting them,” Ayatollah Khamenei said.

The Leader of Revolution said it was more reasonable to acknowledge the truth and condemn the act of insulting to the late Imam instead of denying it.
Ayatollah Khamenei pointed to those who diverged from the path of Imam while Imam was alive and said that should be a lesson for everyone.

The Leader of Islamic Revolution added that he strongly believed that the administration should have tolerance, but when some insist on diverging from the principles nothing could be done.
Ayatollah Khamenei said the enemies of the Islamic Administration and those who seek to rule the world with their false logic would receive a hard slap from Iranians as well as free nations of the world.

Leader of the Islamic Revolution asserted that the main goal of unity among seminaries and universities is using spiritual and material capacities of these two parts and said main goal in this path is preaching divine messages and offering truth to the people.
Ayatollah Khamenei underlined on holding special ceremonies on Ashura event and said some people believe that there is no need to such ceremonies but elucidation of Ashura event is necessary.

He urges holding such customs and avoiding incorrect moves in this regard.
Pointing to the conditions the era of the Noblest Messenger of Allah, Hazrate Mohammad, Ayatollah Khamenei said in an atmosphere full of seditions, people can not distinguish between right and false issues and even certain individuals may face with hesitation in different cases.

The Leader of the Islamic Revolution reiterated that the enemy uses all its tools to confuse people including the certain individuals. Certain slogans such as law, supporting human rights and oppressed people are among such tools.
Referring to recent remarks by the American president over the lawbreaker governments, Ayatollah Khamenei said which government is more lawbreaker than the American government which occupied Iraq and imposed many difficulties on the country’s people.

“What rules have allowed the American government to occupy Iraq and Afghanistan and kill many innocent people?” The IR Leader asked.
“Promoting religious differences among different sects is another way to sow discord among Muslims,” Ayatollah Khamenei said, adding the only way to confront religious differences is insight, true preaching and avoiding the enemies’ plots.

Hariri Govt Wins Parliament Vote of Confidence with 121 Votes “with Reservation"


Lebanese Prime Minister Saad Hariri and his 30-member Government won the Parliament’s vote of confidence with the majority of 121 votes out of 128 despite the reservation of the March 14’s Christians.

The sixth and final session of debate on a vote of confidence resumed Thursday evening. After consulting PM Hariri in the morning session, Speaker Nabih Berri said: “The night will extend till its end,” signaling the session would remain open till MPs finish their debates and vote on confidence in government.

Because Lebanon’s new government backs the resistance’s right to keep its arms, it won the support of 121 “with reservation” of some. While in Lebanese constitution there is nothing called vote of confidence “with reservation”, the March 14’s Christians insisted on registering such stance because the policy statement’s sixth clause gives the Lebanese people, army and its resistance the right to defend the country.

FBI Probes Suspects Arrested in Pakistan


The FBI said it was probing the case of five ‘terror suspects’ arrested in Pakistan, one of whom made an “farewell” video before leaving his home in the United States.
The five were arrested in Sargodha, south of Islamabad, at the home of a member of the banned militant group Jaish-e-Mohammad, on suspicion of plotting an attack, Pakistani district police chief Usman Anwar told AFP Wednesday.

Pakistani officials said the men were two Yemenis, one Egyptian, one Swede and a Pakistani-American. Muslim leaders in Washington said the men had been living in northern Virginia, close to the US capital, with their families until they disappeared last month.
An official at the Pakistani embassy in Washington said they are “all of US origin,” but Federal Bureau of Investigations officials gave no confirmation of their nationalities.

Iran locates sites for 5 enrichment plants


President Ahmadinejad of Iran has announced that sites for construction of five new nuclear enrichment facilities are located.

The announcement came days after the president announced that his country is planning for ten new enrichment sites to provide for the needs of its growing population.

However, Ahmadinejad sought to play down speculations that the move is a confrontation with the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA).

The IAEA’s 35-member Board of Governors approved last week a resolution against Iran and demanded that construction of the Fordo nuclear site, south of the Iranian capital Tehran be halted.

Ahmadinejad explained that “since months ago we have tasked the Organization of Atomic Energy to specify the places for the facilities.”

He said Iran’s nuclear position is crystal clear and the country’s nuclear case was resolved two years ago.

The Iranian head of state also praised “countries like Turkey, Brazil and South Africa” for backing Iran’s peaceful nuclear activities.


Israel to allocate funds for settlements


The Israeli regime’s prime minister is to include some West Bank settlements on occupied Palestinian lands as priority zones and grant funds for their protection.

Benjamin Netanyahu’s office announced that some 28 million dollars in credits have been earmarked for the plan which would benefit 110,000 settlers.

The plan is to be submitted to the cabinet on Sunday

The prime minister’s spokesman Mark Regev denies reports that the plan “has nothing to do with the decision to suspend for 10 month housing construction in Judaea and Samaria.

The announcement came after the regime’s parliamentarians voted in favor of a controversial amendment requiring a referendum on any withdrawal from occupied territories.

Under the new amendment, any such agreement will need the support of 61-MP majority in the 120-member parliament (Knesset) before it is put to a public referendum.

The settlements are the core ssue in peace talks with Israelis. Palestinians have tied any peace deal with the occupying regime to a freeze settlement construction.

More Shias killed in Yemen clashes


Yemeni army has killed 17 Shia fighters and destroyed several vehicles that were carrying aid to the fighters, the official Saba news agency reports.

According to the agency, Yemeni troops killed 17 Zaidi local fighters and arrested four others in fighting late on Wednesday in the mountainous province of Saada, north of the country, as the army has stepped up its all-out offensive against the Zaidi Shias – also known as Houthis,Press TV reported.

Jet fighters hit posts of the Shia fighters as the troops were exchanging fire with Houthis, a local official told Saba.

The army has also destroyed several vehicles that were carrying aid to the fighters, he added.

The Yemeni military launched an offensive against the Shia Zaidis in Saada and Amran provinces three weeks ago, accusing the Zaidis of trying to restore a Zaidi imamate system, overthrown in a 1962 coup.

Zaidi Shias say they are defending themselves against religious oppression and they have vowed to retaliate against the attacks until their rights are achieved.

They also accuse Saudi Arabia and al-Qaeda of helping the Yemeni government in its crackdown on Houthis.

Yemen’s recent military offensive against Zaidi Shia fighters – dubbed ‘Operation Scorched Earth’ – has left scores of civilians dead and thousands of others displaced.

The UN High Commissioner for Refugees has warned about the dire humanitarian situation in Saada province since fighting has prevented emergency aid from reaching the crisis-hit area.

Al Qaeda group claims responsibility for Baghdad bombings


An Al-Qaeda group in Iraq claimed responsibility Wednesday for five coordinated bombings that killed 127 people in Baghdad, US-based monitors said.

An Al-Qaeda group in Iraq claimed responsibility Wednesday for five coordinated bombings that killed 127 people in Baghdad, US-based monitors said.
  
The Islamic State of Iraq (ISI) issued a statement on a jihadist forum saying it carried out Tuesday’s string of car and truck bombings at ministries and courthouses in the Iraqi capital that also wounded 450 people, SITE said.
  
The Al-Qaeda statement, translated by the US monitoring group, threatened more attacks and said they were a “third-wave” after earlier deadly bombings on August 19 and October 25 that killed over 100 people.
  
“The list of targets will not end, with permission from Allah, until the flag of monotheism is raised once against on the land of Baghdad and the sharia of Allah rules the land and the worshippers,” it said.
  
Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki sacked Baghdad’s security chief after the latest attacks, which police said were carried out by bombers backed by groups in Syria or Saudi Arabia.
  
Maliki’s intervention came as enraged MPs demanded answers from the country’s leaders over the blasts, which accounted for more dead than the total number killed by violence in all of November, and undermined the government’s claims of improved security ahead of March 7 elections.
  
Violence across Iraq dropped dramatically last month, with the fewest deaths in attacks recorded since the 2003 invasion. Official figures showed a total of 122 people were killed in November.
  
Both the Baghdad government and the US military have warned of a rise in attacks in the run-up to the election.
  
Despite Tuesday’s attacks, US forces remain on track to begin withdrawing from Iraq in large numbers next year, said Admiral Michael Mullen, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.
  
The Search for International Terrorist Entities (SITE) Intelligence Group is a US-based organization that monitors extremist websites.

New Uranium Units Not to Confront IAEA: Ahmadinejad


Iran President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said on Wednesday that Iran’s plan to build 10 new uranium enrichment plants was not aimed at confronting the UN atomic watchdog, which censured Tehran last month, state television website reported. He also said Iran will continue to build the new plants, adding that sites for five of the 10 units had been finalized.
  
“The news that we announced (about the new plants) was not to confront the board of the agency, as we had assigned the (Iranian) atomic energy organization to locate several sites (for the new plants) months ago,” the state television website quoted him as saying. “We recently even asked them (Iran’s atomic agency) about the delay” in identifying the sites, Ahmadinejad said, adding that Iran has always “acted on its decisions, which are definite.”

 

Yemen Shia rebels: Two women killed in Saudi air strike


Yemeni Shia rebels reported on Tuesday that two women were killed and a child was wounded in Saudi air strikes on Yemeni villages near the two countries’ border.

One of the raids “hit a house, martyring two women and wounding a child” in Shida, the rebels said in a statement posted on their website, adding that a government building was targeted in the village.

The Zaidi Shia rebels, known as Huthis, said Saudi aircraft also continued to bomb the Yemeni villages of Malaheez and Hassameh, as well as in Razeh and Wahidan.

With a long-running conflict between the Huthis and Sanaa spilling over, Saudi Arabia began attacks on Yemeni rebel positions on November 3. Riyadh said the strikes have been restricted to Saudi territory.

Riyadh also said it launched reprisals against the rebels after they attacked the Jabal al-Dukhan border area last week, killing one Saudi border guard and wounding 11 others.

The Yemeni government launched an all-out offensive called Operation Scorched Earth against the rebels on August 11.

Netanyahu: Today, Lebanon's Real Army is Hezbollah


Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu addressed the security situation along occupied Palestine’s border with Lebanon during a meeting of the Knesset Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee on Monday, saying that Hezbollah was taking the place of the Lebanese army as the country’s major military power.

“If in the past we viewed Lebanon as a secondary military power,” Netanyahu said, “today Hezbollah is the real Lebanese army, and it has replaced the actual Lebanese army as a major force that is arming itself and training like any other army.”

“The Lebanese government and Hezbollah are becoming intertwined,” he added. “They are the ones who would be held responsible for any attack on Israel.”

In regard to Israel’s indirect peace talks with Syria, which were suspended last winter after Israel’s offensive in the Gaza Strip, Netanyahu told the committee that Israel was ready to resume negotiations immediately and without preconditions. However, he added that he had told French President Nicolas Sarkozy that he preferred that France mediate the talks rather than Turkey, which previously served as mediator.

Washington's New Lebanon Policy


Beirut
“There is no obstacle to cooperation with any official in the new Lebanese unity government with the exception of Hezbollah,” Nicole Shampaine, Director of the US Department of State’s Near East Affairs Bureau Office for Egypt and the Levant 12/3/09.”

Lebanon’s first Sunday morning in December was cold, cloudy and rainy as this country’s’ new Prime Minister, Saad Eddine Hariri, donned a gray track suit, with Nike running shoes and joined hundreds of pro-Hezbollah runners, two dreamy Jordanian princesses and 33,000 others from 73 countries as well as all 18 Lebanese confessions for the annual ‘friendship first, competition second’, 42 km Beirut Marathon.  Despite the weather, the atmosphere was warm as Christmas decorations were being hung with care across Lebanon in Christian, Shia, Sunni and Druze neighborhoods.

Saad, telling race watchers on the sidewalks, “I know I won’t win but I want to participate anyway. We have to bring Lebanese together, and sport is a very important event that can bring them together” actually passed on the 42 km course in favor of  the 10 km event—but then, how many politicians anywhere, used to the good life, can even run two km these days?

To many Lebanese, their new Prime Minister’s openness and sports ethic, symbolizes a new and promising atmosphere at Lebanon’s  Grand Serail, also known as Government Palace, the Headquarters of the Prime Minister located a few blocks from Parliament. A positive and welcomed change from the tensions of the 2006-2007 ‘tent city’ days in Riad Solh Square when the opposition and the Bush administration- backed Fuad Siniora government faced each other for more than a year,separated by the Lebanese army, the former glaring up at their adversaries from scores of tents and the latter peeking down from behind pulled back office curtains.

Joy to the World!

At least in press releases and during TV interviews, Lebanon’s political factions appear more willing and able to work together than has been the case for decades.  The Deputies and Cabinet members in Lebanon’s new unity government are about to get to work, with the people of Lebanon and her friends wishing them well.  The intensely political and anti-Resistance Maronite Patriach Cardinal Nasrallah Sfeir, who declined an invitation to participate in the marathon, did use his pulpit this morning at early Mass to “Thank God almighty the atmosphere in Lebanon is tilted toward understanding between the feuding parties. We hope this spirit of understanding will continue and political leaders would pay attention to the poor.”

Meanwhile, Dr. Ali Fayyad, a charismatic Hezbollah Member of Parliament expressed his party’s “excitement and intension to work with all parties to improve the lives of all Lebanese.”

Even more encouraging to many Lebanese, but upsetting to  some in Washington and Tel Aviv, is that on 12/04/09  Saad Hariri’s US-Saudi backed Mustaqbal  ( Future) bloc (March 14), held a meeting at Hariri’s  downtown Beirut Center House and emphatically committed the party to “making the citizens priorities the priorities of the national unity cabinet. “ The bloc committed itself to “the political, economic and social aspects of the ministerial Policy Statement.”

This puts the March 14 coalition program in close conformity with much of Hezbollah’s new Political Manifesto. “There now appears to be the votes in Parliament to make some real changes around here” my motorcycle mechanic told me after replacing my windshield, following another fairly minor accident–my 4th in 2009 but down one from 2008.

Europe is expressing its support for Lebanon’s Unity Government as is Iran, Saudi Arabia, Syria and the whole region.  Plus the United Nations Sec-Gen Ban Key Moon and virtually the complete international community with two exceptions, the governments of Israel and the United States.

For its part, Israel predictably served up its usual fare of dire threats since the  new Cabinet’s Policy Statement recognizing the necessity of Hezbollah’s arms as a deterrent against Israeli attacks on Lebanon.  Through its lobby outlets Israel has been threatening that “the adoption of the resistance scheme by the Lebanese government and the major influence of Hezbollah in the Lebanese political scene means that Lebanon has declared that it is responsible for any attack by Hezbollah, and that acting against Lebanon will be easier for the army to win a battle against a state than to win it against a terrorist organization.”

On 12/2/09  Israel’s former deputy leader of the Israeli internal front during the July 2006 war, Ayal Ben Raufen  warned during an Israel Army Radio interview that “the Lebanese government gave legitimacy for the dangerous increase of Hezbollah’s political power and in case of war, Israel  now has a clear address: Lebanon. “

Perhaps Mr. Ben Raufen had not been advised by the much ballyhooed International Law Unit attached to Israeli army brigades whose  job it is to make sure all Israeli military attacks continue to be perfectly legal as in  Jenin, Lebanon and Gaza,  that the drumbeat of threats that he and other Israeli officials have been making against Lebanon are outlawed by Article 2 (4) of the UN Charter which provides: “All members shall refrain in their international relations from the threat or use of force against the territorial integrity or political independence of any state, or in any other manner inconsistent with the Purposes of the United Nations”.

Washington’s reaction to date has come mainly from two sources.  The first and most predictable was an AIPAC drafted letter sent out by 31 of Israel’s agents on the House side of the US Congress. The members forwarded the particularly obtuse and nearly incomprehensible letter to Secretary of State Clinton urging the Obama administration to work toward disarming Hezbollah by threatening the budgets of UNIFIL and Lebanon.

It reads in part:  “In light of the clear violations of UN Security Council resolutions, we ask what actions the Administration is taking to ensure the UN addresses these violations.” Presumably the reference is to UNSCR 1701 which according to the arithmetic contained in the seven UN Reports on UNSCR 1701 compliance, Israel has violated more than 1,600 times including near daily violations of Lebanese sovereignty, with cross border troop incursions and Lebanese airspace and territorial waters penetrations. If the members had in mind UNSCR 425, unanimously passed in 1978, demanding that “Israel immediately withdraw from all Lebanese territory”, it is true that this resolution has still not been complied with as Israeli troops still occupy Lebanese territory and it is doubtful the AIPAC language  (“we ask what actions the Administration is taking to ensure the UN addresses these violations”) is meant to apply to the Israeli forces occupying the  Lebanese territory of Ghajar, Kfar Khouba, and Shebaa Farms.

The letter, introduced by career Israeli legmen, Mark Kirk and Steve Israel also informs the White House that “We must seek to support stronger multilateral efforts to disarm Hezbollah and clear southern Lebanon of Iranian weapons,” despite the fact that international lawyers at the US Library of Congress Research Service recognize that the new Lebanese government’s acceptance of Resistance arms moots certain provisions of UNSRC 1701, and 1559. Some lawyers and scholars at the CRS have argued recently that the Resistance arms arrangements of Lebanon’s unity government constitute  a legitimate exercise of Lebanon’s right to self-defense and deterrent requirements especially given six decades of Israeli attacks. Moreover, as they have pointed out, Lebanon has every right to receive assistance from Iran and any other country. No doubt this subject will be raised when Lebanon’s President, Michel Suleiman, visits President Obama on December 14.

Another reaction from Washington  immediately followed Hassan Nasrallah’s  pledge of Hezbollah cooperation with the new Unity Government as part of the parity new political manifesto. Nicole Shampaine, appointed last year by the Bush Administration as the Director of the Department of State’s Near East Affairs Bureau Office for Egypt and the Levant weighed in.  She was not happy as she announced that the U.S. will cooperate with the Lebanese government but not with Hezbollah Cabinet ministers. “There is no obstacle to cooperation with any official in the Lebanese government with the exception of Hezbollah,” she said in an interview with the Beirut daily As-Safir.

Ms. Shampaine emphasized two problems.  “One is that the Hezbollah declaration puts a higher priority on the issue of an Islamic state in Lebanon.” Secondly, Hezbollah’s  new political manifesto is “more an attempt to show force in the face of the United States and Israel.”  Shampaine’s analysis left some in Lebanon scratching their heads.  Had she even read the document?  Or was she confusing it with the 1985 ‘Open letter’ which did mention the ideal of an Islamic Republic? Neither the manifesto nor Nasrallah made any mention of an Islamic Republic of Lebanon. What was she talking about?

Nasrallah read and commented on the 32 page document. it focused on the Unity government and Hezbollah’s social programs to develop a balanced economy across the regions based on the productive sectors; improving production; providing appropriate services to citizens including education, healthcare, housing, poverty reduction. Nothing about an Islamic Republic. The idea of an Islamic Republic is presumably one of the last subjects Hezbollah wants to talk about these unity days.

Checking the list and checking it twice!

The one positive comment about US policy Shampaine offered was Washington’s support for Prime Minister Saad Hariri’s unity government, the main pillar of which is Hezbollah and its political allies in Parliament and the Cabinet. Washington trusts him and will follow his lead.  So what happens when Saad hosts US officials with Hezbollah or pro Hezbollah cabinet ministers or meetings at which Hezbollah Parliamentary delegates are needed?

“Our hands are tied– Nicole (Sampaine) put us in one hell of a bind!” reported one Beirut Embassy political staffer on 12/4/09.  “We have the names of 128 Members of Parliament and 30 cabinet ministers and we will have to advise the Ambassador and visiting officials who they can and can’t meet with or even talk to?  Who supports Hezbollah and who does not—who is outed or closet Hezbollah and who it not?  My job reminds me of the dilemma of Justice Potter Stewart in the 1964 Jocabellis case when the Supreme Court tried to define what is and is not  hard core Pornography and the frustrated Judge just shrugged and explained “it’s hard to define but  I know it when I see it”. So I am to go through these names, bios and photos and know a Hezbollah supporter when I see one”

In the spirit of giving this holiday season some Beirut based Americans offer the following counsel to assist our Embassy’s  “we’ll know em when we see em” project. It is meant to aid and assist the current US policy of sniffing out contraband members of Lebanon’s new Cabinet.

First the easy cases:

· If the US States government should discover its Beirut Embassy or any visiting American officials have a reason to discuss any aspect of Foreign Affairs with Lebanon, forget about it!  Lebanon’s new unity government Foreign Minister is none other than the esteemed former Professor from Lebanese University, Ali Shami.  He’s a pro Hezbollah Shia and Amal Movement member. No way can American officials talk/meet with Dr. Shami. Maybe the Swiss will do it for us.

· Concerning any issues having to do with the unity government Cabinet post of State which deals with issues of Administrative Reform which the White House has expressed interest in, don’t even think about discussing them.  The new Cabinet Minister is the much respected Mohammad Fneish. He has a terrible record of being elected to Parliament on the Hezbollah ticket in 1992, 1996, 2000 and 2005.  He also served as Minister of Labor and Minister of Energy in previous governments.  He is one of those hard core types.

·  Matters concerning Agriculture and US AID projects which need to be discussed with the Lebanese Minister of Agriculture?  Absolument Verboten!  That Ministerial seat is his held by Hezbollah’s Hussein Hajj Hassan who was elected to Parliament in 1996, 2000 and 2005 on the Hezbollah slate. Even though Hassan is considered an expert on agriculture, having headed the Parliamentary Committee on Agriculture between 2000 and 2005, he cannot under the new US guidelines announced by Ms. Shampaine, be met or communicated with.

·  US-Lebanese joint efforts with AN1Hi flue, aids, all other Health issues.  Not in  your dreams because the new Minister of Health is none other than Dr. Mohammad Jawad Khalifeh, Director of the Lebanese Association for Organ Donors and former Head of General Surgeries at the American University of Beirut Medical Center.  His problem? Dr. Khalifeh, a Shia Muslim, is a member of the Amal Movement which is aligned with Hezbollah in the National Lebanese Resistance

·  Issues involving the Ministry of Youth and Sports that needs to be discussed?  Nope. The new unity government minister is surgeon Dr. Ali Abdullah.  First he practices in the Rayyak Hospital in the Hezbollah area of the Bekaa and he is Shia. He held the Youth and Sports portfolio since 2003 and while he is pretty independent the Embassy must not take a chance on him. He obviously has too many of the wrong patients, neighbors and friends maybe even relatives.

Slightly more difficult cases requiring intense vetting by the Department of Homeland Security and other security agencies are the new unity government ministers Ghazi Aridi (Public Works), Akram Chelayab (Displaced Persons) and Wael Abu Fasour (State).  The problem with these three is that they are Druze and all Members of Walid Jumblatt’s Progressive Socialist Party, and everyone in the State Department knows how that ingrate jumped ship and is now way too cozy with the Hezbollah led Resistance.  Surely the Embassy has read what Jumblatt has been saying about Israel being Lebanon’s only enemy, whereas the Embassy knows Israel is American’s only ‘friend’ these days.  These three are suspect for sure and under the Shampaine Doctrine are best dissed.

There is one Minister, Elias  el Murr, who holds the Defense Ministry post who should pass muster under this season’s “anyone but Hezbollah”  standard. Murr, the son of Michel, a long time Member of Parliament, is a Greek Orthodox independent and formerly headed the Interior Ministry. He is not part of the ‘suspect’ Christian bloc headed by Michel Aoun who is allied with Hezbollah. The only problem with this ‘clearance’ to hold discussions with the Defense Minister is that there is not a lot to talk about.  Everyone is pretty aware that without a ‘green light’ from Israel very little assistance having to do with military equipment, boots and shoelaces included, according to the US Military Attaché, serious aid  to defend Lebanon from Israel will not  be seriously discussed.  So in the case of the Defense Minister it’s not the Who but the What that is the problem for US-Lebanese relations.

Of the remaining Cabinet Members nearly all have been showing signs of being open to dialogue, willing to hold discussions with Hezbollah on the basis of mutual respect and willingness to solve Lebanon’s severe social, political and economic problems.  Most have  also expressed support for granting civil rights to the Palestinian Refugees, still wanting and waiting to return to their their country.

As the twelve days of Christmas rapidly approach, it’s not clear exactly who the Obama Administration is going to be able to talk and engage with here in Lebanon.   According to one Embassy staffer, “That’s what the American taxpayers pay their Beirut Embassy and State Department to figure out”.

Al-Manar.com.lb is not responsible for the content of this article or for any external internet sites. The views expressed are the author’s alone.

US: Fate of Occupied J’lem Should Be Decided Only by Israel, Palestinians


Shortly after European Union Ministers announced their support for the division of occupied Jerusalem between Israel and a future Palestinian state on Tuesday, the US State Department issued a statement saying that the fate of Jerusalem should only be determined by Israel and the Palestinians in talks.

“Our position on Jerusalem is clear. United States policy remains unaffected and unchanged: As has been stated by every previous administration which addressed this issue, the status of Jerusalem, and all other permanent status issues, must be resolved by the parties through negotiations,” the statement read.

The status of occupied Jerusalem is a sensitive issue for Israel, which considers the city to be its indivisible capital. Palestinians want the eastern part of Jerusalem to serve as the capital of a Palestinian state.

Jordanian Foreign Minister Nasser Judeh, however, welcomed the EU foreign ministers’ statement as an “extremely important attitude.”

“The EU ministerial council’s decision on the Middle East and Jerusalem in particular implies a landmark and extremely important attitude,” Judeh told the state-run television.

Last week, Sweden presented a draft document supporting the division of occupied Jerusalem and the recognition of East Jerusalem as the capital of a future Palestinian state.

Earlier Tuesday, Israeli Foreign Ministry officials responded with harsh criticism to the European declaration, saying that Sweden, which holds the EU’s rotating presidency, had failed.

“The peace process in the Middle East is not like IKEA furniture,” one official said, making a reference to the do-it-yourself Swedish furniture chain. “It takes more than a screw and a hammer, it takes a true understanding of the constraints and sensitivities of both sides, and in that Sweden failed miserably.”

The Israeli Foreign Ministry said that Tuesday’s EU statement was substantially softer than Sweden’s initial draft, once again demonstrating Sweden’s failure as the rotating president of the union. “Sweden has done nothing over recent months to advance the Middle East peace process,” the Foreign Ministry officials said. “The EU’s only saving grace is that some of its members are responsible and moderate nations that didn’t support the Swedish draft, which looked like something taken out of the Fatah platform at the Bethlehem conference.”

The senior officials added that a group of nations had “saved the European Union from itself, since any other decision would have dealt severe harm to the relations between Tel Aviv and Brussels, and would have prevented the EU from becoming an important partner in the peace process.”

Meanwhile, the Israeli Foreign Ministry issued an official response to the EU statement, saying that the “European Union ignores the primary obstacle to achieving a resolution between Israel and the Palestinians: the Palestinian refusal to return to the negotiating table.”

“Given the Israeli government’s efforts to renew the negotiations, Israel regrets that the EU has chosen to adopt a text that, although containing nothing new, does not contribute to the renewal of negotiations,” the statement continued.

“In light of the extreme draft originally presented by the Swedish presidency at the start of discussions, Israel does welcome the fact that at the end of the process the voices of the responsible and reasonable EU states prevailed, balancing and improving the text. We also welcome the recognition given to the measures and efforts taken by Israel to enable the resumption of negotiations,” it went on to say.

“We expect the EU to act to promote direct negotiations between the parties, while considering Israel’s security needs and understanding that Israel’s Jewish character must be preserved in any future agreement,” concluded the statement.

Meanwhile, occupied Jerusalem Mayor Nir Barkat also issued a statement, saying that he “completely rejects the decision of the EU to support the division of Jerusalem,” calling it a real danger for the future of Jerusalem and predicting that such a division would never work. Barkat noted that the recent celebration of the 20th anniversary of the reunification of Berlin reminds us that “no divided city in the history of the world has functioned properly.”

Why Pakistan Won't Help on Iran


Iran’s neighbors could play a decisive role in determining whether any sanctions aimed at curbing Tehran’s nuclear programs are effective – and one Iran neighbor from whom the US should expect little support on the issue is Pakistan. Ostensibly Washington’s key ally in the troubled region, Pakistan also maintains a longtime friendship with Tehran. And as President Asif Ali Zardari’s government moves to strengthen ties with its neighbor in a bid to enhance Pakistan’s economic prospects, Islamabad is keen to sit out the nuclear dispute. While Pakistan insists that it is not actively encouraging Iran to join it in the élite club of nuclear-weapons states, officials in Islamabad appear decidedly untroubled by developments across its southwestern border.

“The government of Pakistan, and the average Pakistani citizen, looks at Iran as a friendly nation,” Pakistan’s Deputy Foreign Minister, Malik Amad Khan, told TIME in an interview. After Iran, Pakistan has the second largest Shi’ite Muslim population; its 33 million Shi’ites constitute nearly double the number in Iraq. Before the 1979 Islamic revolution, both countries were members of the anti-Soviet CENTO security pact, and despite the Islamic Republic’s anti-US stance, Pakistan became one of the first countries to recognize Ayatollah Khomeini’s system.

Pakistan’s role in Iran’s nuclear development has been more than passive spectator, however; Abdul Qadeer Khan, the father of Pakistan’s atom bomb, admitted five years ago that he passed nuclear secrets to Tehran and Libya. The disclosures stung Islamabad and forced then President Pervez Musharraf to act against Khan, before issuing a pardon and confining the proliferator, who is still hailed as a national hero in Pakistan, to house arrest.

Last month, A.Q. Khan briefly emerged from his hillside villa in Islamabad after the Lahore High Court lifted restraints on his movement. (Those restrictions have since been discreetly reimposed.) Unrepentant about his role in leading the world’s largest proliferation network, Khan appeared in a rare television interview to cheer Iran’s nuclear program. “If Iran succeeds in acquiring nuclear technology, we will be a strong bloc in the region to counter international pressure,” Khan told the interviewer. “Iran’s nuclear capability will neutralize Israel’s power,” he added, adopting the pan-Islamist rhetoric that has endeared him to conservative opinion in Pakistan.

Amad Khan, Pakistan’s Deputy Foreign Minister, dismisses suggestions of lingering Pakistani support for Iran’s nuclear program. “We have a three-tier system that prevents proliferation,” he told TIME. But Islamabad is happy for Tehran to acquire nuclear capability for energy uses. “Since Iran is a signatory to the Non-Proliferation Treaty, if it requires capability for energy, we have no problems with that.” The Deputy Foreign Minister added that Pakistan sees Iran as a “responsible” nation and therefore “doesn’t expect Iran to pursue nuclear-weapons capability.”

The Deputy Foreign Minister declined to comment on how Islamabad would react in the event of sanctions or tougher forms of pressure on Iran. Instead, Islamabad’s focus remains on an “enhanced level of engagement” that can draw Iranian support for Pakistan’s “energy, trade and communications” sectors. The new relationship with Iran has already seen a 28% rise in trade, according to Deputy Minister Khan, and with chronic shortages of electricity supply, Islamabad is eagerly awaiting the construction of a decades-old proposed Iran-Pakistan gas pipeline – plans for which remain doubtful.

Pakistan’s weak civilian government also views Iranian influence as a potential foil to that of Saudi Arabia, which has stronger ties with the opposition. Government officials privately accuse the Saudis of being prejudiced toward Zardari because of his Shi’ite background. (Shi’ites are an embattled minority in Saudi Arabia, whose dominant Wahabi strand of Islam deems them heretics.) But Pakistan’s response to Iran will ultimately be determined by the all-powerful military establishment. And, analysts say, the army is a great deal more wary of Iran’s regional aspirations. “They are not really allies,” says Christine Fair of the RAND Corp. in Washington. “There is a misguided assumption that just because Pakistan gave Iran nuclear technology that they have some kind of strategic alliance.” That deal, analysts say, arose out of former army chief General Mirza Aslam Beg’s wish to “create problems for the U.S.”

“Since then,” says Fair, “Iran and Pakistan have been at loggerheads over a range of issues.” The Pakistani security establishment is wary of Tehran’s relationship with India, and it suspects Iran of allowing its territory to be used by Indian-backed Baluch separatist fighters in southwestern Pakistan. Tehran, for its part, has repeatedly complained to Islamabad about cross-border attacks mounted by Jundullah, a shadowy Baluch militant group that uses Pakistani Baluchistan as a staging ground for attacks inside Iran. On May 28, the group claimed responsibility for a bombing that killed at least 20 in the border town of Zahedan. Iran and Pakistan have also been at loggerheads over Afghanistan – Tehran has backed the Karzai government, and Pakistan is seen as continuing to covertly support the Taliban – and over the perception that Pakistan is not doing much to stem anti-Shi’ite sectarian terrorism by extremist groups on its own soil.

Even then, a number of different domestic political factors will keep Pakistan on the sidelines of any showdown over Iran’s nuclear program. With anti-Americanism running high – an August poll by the Pew Research Center revealed that 64% of Pakistanis “regard [the U.S.] as an enemy” – backing new sanctions against Iran could provoke a domestic backlash. “It would be seen as Pakistan against the Muslim world,” says analyst Fair.

A related but deeper fear is that Iran has the means to make life exceedingly unpleasant for Pakistan should it side with Tehran’s enemies. Already struggling with a militant campaign that has ravaged the northwest and the tribal areas and terrorized major cities, Pakistan, analysts say, can ill-afford a revival of sectarian violence that plagued the country during the 1980s, when Saudi-backed Sunni militant groups clashed with Iranian-backed Shi’ite ones as part of a regional proxy war. Says Ayesha Siddiqa, an independent security analyst: “it isn’t just Iraq, Lebanon and Afghanistan where Iran can create trouble if it wants.”

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Lahore blasts caused by suicide bombers: police


LAHORE: Blasts which killed 51 people and engulfed a busy market in flames in Lahore were caused by two suicide bombers, police and bomb disposal experts said Wednesday.

The two explosions hit within seconds of each other as shoppers and diners milled around the popular Moon Market on Monday evening, with government officials blaming Taliban fighters avenging military operations against them.

‘Now it has been confirmed that two suicide bombers carried out these attacks. We have made some arrests but as yet there is no major breakthrough,’ said Chaudhry Shafiq, a deputy police chief in Lahore.

He said that the death toll from the blast in the nation’s cultural capital had risen from 49 to 51, with the two bombers also killed and about 140 people wounded.

Mazhar Ahmad, who heads the bomb disposal squad in Lahore, said ball bearings and grenades were found at the blast site, indicating that the two attackers were wearing suicide vests packed with deadly explosives.

‘Both the blasts took place in a highly crowded area. The second blast was near an electricity pole causing an electric short circuit and triggering the fire,’ he told AFP.

‘The fire caused by the blasts and short-circuit engulfed the whole area and caused severe damage,’ he added. ‘Had we succeeded in controlling the fire in 10-15 minutes, the human loss would have been less.’

The Lahore blasts were part of a surge in militant strikes this week, with a suicide bombing in Peshawar on Monday killing 11 people, a senior hospital official said, updating the previous death toll of 10.

Then on Tuesday, two suicide attackers firing rockets and guns drove up to the offices of Pakistan’s main intelligence agency in Multan, before detonating their car bomb and killing 10 people.

‘Rescue workers have recovered another dead body of a woman. A total of 10 people were killed and 47 injured,’ said Multan police chief Saood Aziz, adding that four of the wounded were in critical condition

Israel razed 14 homes in Jerusalem Al-Quds in Nov.


Israel demolished 14 Palestinian homes in East Jerusalem Al-Quds last month as part of Tel Aviv’s Judaization campaign targeting the holy city.

According to the Land Research Center, the Jerusalem Al-Quds Municipality demolished 14 Palestinian homes in the city in November.

The municipality also issued 170 orders to demolish Palestinian homes in occupied East Jerusalem Al-Quds. The orders target 60 homes in the Jabal al-Mokabbir district, 34 homes and 10 structures in al-Esawiyya, 25 homes in Beit Hanina, 22 homes in Samir Amis, 3 homes in al-Thoury, 3 homes in the Old City, and one home in al-Tour, the International Middle East Media Center reported.

In addition, Israeli settlers forced three families out of their homes in Sheikh Jarrah in November.

The apartheid wall currently under construction in the environs of the sacred city is meant to annex more Palestinian land and isolate Palestinians from their hometown, the IMEMC report added.

Israel frequently demolishes houses in East Jerusalem Al-Quds on the pretext that they were built without construction permits. However, Palestinians living in the city say that such permits are nearly impossible to obtain.

Update + 118 killed, 197 injured in Baghdad blasts


At least 118 people have been killed and 197 others sustained injuries as multiple bomb-rigged cars exploded in quick succession ripped through Iraqi capital of Baghdad.

Three bomb-rigged cars exploded in quick succession on Tuesday, striking the Labor Ministry, a court complex and the new site of Iraq’s Finance Ministry whose previous building was destroyed in an August blast.

The first explosion in central Baghdad was heard at 10.25 a.m. (0725 GMT) with a second blast within seconds, and a third one minute later.

Sporadic gunfire then sounded and the sirens of emergency vehicles were also heard.

Meanwhile, an attacker rammed a vehicle into a police patrol at al-Dora neighborhood in southern Baghdad earlier on day.

An interior ministry official said 12 of those killed by the assailant in al-Dora were students at a nearby technical college. The remaining three victims were policemen working at the checkpoint.

Iraq has been witnessing violence-related incidents nearly on a daily basis since the US-led invasion of the oil-rich country in March 2003.

At least seven Iraqi children were killed and 41 people wounded in an explosion outside a school in Baghdad’s Sadr City on Monday, Iraqi police officials said.

Also on Monday, gunmen killed six members of an anti-al-Qaeda militia group in broad daylight near the Iraqi capital.

Anti-Taliban rallies held in Pakistan


Thousands of people have held rallies across the major cities in Pakistan to show their opposition to the ongoing militancy in the country.

About five thousand activists belonging to Muttahida Qaumi Movement (MQM), Pakistan’s third largest political party, marched in streets of Karachi to condemn what they called the “growing Talibanization” in the country, a Press TV correspondent reported on Tuesday.

The party activists demanded that the government chalk out a comprehensive strategy to root out militancy and terrorism from the nuclear-armed country.

In his telephonic address to rally from London, MQM chief Altaf Hussian urged the government to take strict action against the growing militancy which has spread to different parts of the country.

“Our women and children are being martyred in repeated terror incidents….but their boldness will not go in waste….we will fight with them until our last breath.”

Similar demonstrations were also held in other major Pakistani cities.

Militants in Pakistan have targeted universities, mosques and military headquarters over the past months, plunging the country into unending crises of instability.

Terrorists martyred Shia leader in Karachi


KARACHI – Central leader of Pasban-e-Aza, a Shiite organisation, Syed Shahid Hussain, was gunned down by some unidentified assailants within the jurisdiction of Brigade police station on Monday.
The area police officials quoted the statements of the eyewitnesses as saying that some 3 unidentified suspects barged into his apartment no 2/4 at Assistant Commissioner Apartments, and opened fire on him with 9mm pistols. Resultantly he sustained serious injuries and was being shifted to Civil Hospital Karachi but he died before reaching the hospital.
The victim was a married man and property dealer by profession. Soon after the incident the assailants fled away from the scene.
When contacted, Central Leader Pasban-e-Aza, Nayyer Zaidi said that the deceased was a non-controversial leader and had no personal enmity. He was affiliated with the PPP and also attached with Pasban-e-Aza. He pointed out that it was the incident of sectarian killing as he had been receiving threats from some banned outfits. Police have registered an FIR against unknown assailants. In another incident, a body was found near Ijtama ground in the limits of Mangopir police station.
Police said that the residents of the area informed the police about the body stink. Police found the body from the bushes near Ijtama ground and taken it to the hospital where doctors suggested that the deceased received head injuries.

At least 127 killed as five car bombs rock Baghdad


BAGHDAD: Five massive vehicle-borne bombs rocked Baghdad on Tuesday, killing 127 people, including women and students, and wounding hundreds in the third co-ordinated massacre to devastate the city since August.

The attacks shattered a month of calm in the Iraqi capital and came hours before an official said the war-torn country’s general election, the second since the US-led ouster of dictator Saddam Hussein, would be held on March 6.

A senior security spokesman said the attacks, four of which were conducted by suicide attackers driving cars or minibuses, and which targeted key government buildings, bore ‘the touch of Al-Qaeda.’

One of the suicide bombers detonated his payload at an office of the finance ministry, another attacker struck at a tunnel leading to the labour ministry, and a third drove a four-wheel-drive car into a court building.

‘The suicide bomber drove up to the court and the security forces tried to stop him by firing their Kalashnikovs, but they did not kill him before he exploded,’ police sergeant Emad Fadhil told AFP.

A fourth suicide bomber in a car struck a police patrol in Dora, in southern Baghdad, causing 15 deaths, 12 of them students at a nearby technical college, an interior ministry official said.
Another car bomb hit offices of the interior ministry in central Baghdad.

The first explosion in the centre of the capital was heard at 0725 GMT, another came within seconds and a third one minute later.

The bombing at the courthouse destroyed a large part of the building, with falling concrete killing several people, according to emergency service workers at the scene.

Mangled wrecks of cars, some of which had been flipped over, lined the street opposite the courthouse, and several vehicles in the parking lot were crushed by collapsed blast walls.

Although no group has yet claimed responsibility, the timing of the blasts and the fact that three of them targeted government buildings bears all the hallmarks of an Al-Qaeda operation.

The interior ministry official said 127 people had been killed and 448 wounded in the bombings, with the finger of blame pointed at Al-Qaeda.

‘The same black hand that was behind the attacks in August and October committed today’s bombings,’ Major General Qassim Atta, spokesman for security operations in Baghdad, told AFP.

‘This has the touch of Al-Qaeda and the Baathists,’ he said, referring to the outlawed Baath party of now executed dictator Saddam.

Both groups were blamed for bloody attacks, including truck bombings outside the finance, foreign and justice ministries, in Baghdad in August and October that killed more than 250 people and punctured confidence in the Iraqi security forces.

Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki said Tuesday’s attacks were a ‘cowardly’ attempt ‘to cause chaos… and hinder the election,’ and that the bombings were deliberately timed to come after MPs reached agreement on a law governing the election on Sunday.

He blamed ‘foreign elements’ who backed Al-Qaeda. Those caught up in Tuesday’s bombings described scenes of horror.

‘I heard the sound of the explosion, I fainted, then I found myself on this bed covered with blood,’ Um Saeed, whose arms and face were wounded in the court blast, told AFP at a local hospital, her clothes covered in blood.

An official at Medical City hospital in the centre of the capital said many of the 39 bodies they had received ‘had been blown apart,’ and some of them were women.

Violence across Iraq dropped dramatically last month, with the fewest deaths in attacks recorded since the US-led invasion of 2003. Official figures showed a total of 122 people were killed in November.

However the Baghdad government and the US military have warned of a rise in attacks in the run up to the election.

The presidency council, comprising President Jalal Talabani and his two deputies, are yet to officially announce the date but Qassim al-Abboudi of Iraq’s Independent High Electoral Commission said March 6 had been chosen.

US diplomats, most notably Christopher Hill, Washington’s ambassador to Baghdad, had pushed MPs to pass the law, seeking to avoid delays to the planned pullout of tens of thousands of American troops next year.

FBI sending team to Pakistan in terror probe


  ISLAMABAD: The US Embassy says the FBI is sending a team to Pakistan as part of an investigation into a Chicago terror suspect.

Embassy spokesman Rick Snelsire said Tuesday that the agents will brief Pakistani security officials about the probe into an alleged plot against Denmark and India.

David Coleman Headley, an American of Pakistani descent, was arrested in Chicago in October. US charges filed against him allege he conspired with Pakistan-based militant leaders and got help from a retired Pakistani army officer.

Snelsire says American investigators ‘have been consulting closely with Pakistani authorities on this case and are working with them on following up on leads related to Headley’s activities and connections in Pakistan.