Tag Archives: Muslim

Iraq’s most senior cleric voices opposition to a proposed security deal with the US, saying such a deal would threaten Iraq’s sovereignty.

In a meeting with Iraqi national security adviser Muwaffaq Al-Rubaie on Tuesday, Grand Ayatollah Ali Sistani expressed his concerns over the security deal by calling it an excuse that will justify the presence of US forces in Iraq.

Ayatollah Sistani had earlier noted that any long-term pact with the US should observe four key terms: safeguarding Iraqis’ interests, national sovereignty, national consensus, and parliament approval.

On Monday, Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki suggested a timetable for the departure of US forces from Iraq.

However, Washington played down calls for a firm withdrawal deadline, saying any pullout will be based on the conditions on the ground.

“We’re looking at conditions, not calendars here,” State Department spokesman Gonzalo Gallegos said on Tuesday.

Baghdad and Washington are negotiating a treaty that would allow the American troops to stay in Iraq after their mandate under the UN expires in December 2008.

The controversial security deal has faced fierce opposition from Iraqi religious and political figures who believe the deal would turn the country into a US colony.

MMS/PA

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Israelis are to step up operations against civilian infrastructure belonging to Hamas in West Bank in breach of a truce already agreed on.

According to Ha’aretz, Israeli forces will soon shut down a large number of Hamas-affiliated charities, confiscate their property, and search computers and documents that detail their activity.

The forces have been carrying out similar raids in the al-Khalil, Qalqilyah and Ramallah areas since the beginning of the year, but the operations will now be expanded to additional parts of the West Bank.

Israeli authorities including prime minister Ehud Olmert and war minister Ehud Barak have approved the plan to target Hamas civilian infrastructure.

Hamas-affiliated institutions that were targeted so far include schools, health centers, charities, and even soup kitchens and orphanages. Dozens of associations were shut down and the food confiscated.

An Egypt mediated truce between Israel and Gaza fighters came into effect on June 19, under which Israel promised to stop attacks on Gaza and ease the blockade in exchange for an end to the retaliatory homemade rocket attacks on Israelis.

But Palestinians say the Israeli regime has broken the Gaza truce more than 28 times since it went into force two weeks ago.

MSH/BGH

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Hezbollah

Two contradicting views have been floating recently between Lebanon and occupied Palestine over an anticipated exchange deal between Hezbollah and Israel.
 
There are some who believe that a swap deal will take place before the end of this month, while others don’t rule out such deal, but believe that it will not be implemented in the near future.  
 
“The prisoner exchange between Israel and Hezbollah will not take place in the next few days”, the Israeli Defense Ministry official said Wednesday. “In any case, such an exchange will not take place until the cabinet meets to approve the release of Samir Kintar, whose freedom still depends on a 2004 cabinet decision to release him only in exchange for information on missing Israeli navigator Ron Arad”.
 
The schedule for the swap is still unclear, though it may possibly come next week, and no date has been set. It is also not clear whether such a swap would take place at the Naqura border crossing, or whether, as in previous exchanges, it would be carried out in Germany, with two airplanes taking off at the same time, one from Tel Aviv and the other from Beirut, on their way to a German military airport.
 
Israel has stated that it will release four Hezbollah fighters who were taken captive during the July 2006 War, and another eight martyrs’ bodies.
Nevertheless, Israel may release a few dozen Palestinian prisoners at a later date. Ofer Dekel, the prime minister’s representative for negotiations with Hezbollah, returned on Wednesday from a private vacation in Paris, though he also dealt with the exchange talks there. He may also have met with the UN mediator involved in the talks, German Gerhard Konrad.
 
Claims roamed on Wednesday that Israel had already started exhuming the bodies of the Lebanese to be returned as part of the deal. Dekel made it clear to the two families of the captured soldiers, Eldad Regev and Ehud Goldwasser Dekel, at a meeting in his Tel Aviv office that he had not received any new information. He explained that it is likely that only during the actual swap will they find out whether the two are dead or alive. He informed the families of the possible schedule for the deal.
 
Goldwasser’s father, Shlomo, told Haaretz that a dramatic step over the weekend had been ruled out. The families confirmed reports of the meeting, but refused to reveal details, describing the meeting as a short update.
 
On the other hand, an Israeli security source confirmed few days ago that a “swap deal is expected to take place in the near future, possibly even by late next week”. Lebanese media referred to a number of possible dates for an exchange, with Friday June 20 as the earliest, and Wednesday June 25 being the latest.
 
An Israeli senior political source told Haaretz earlier that Israel is still waiting for a final response from Hezbollah and “nothing is final yet.”
 
Sources in the Prime Minister’s Bureau said that the reports published by the Lebanese daily Al-Akhbar, suggesting a prisoner exchange deal is expected as early as next week, were “inaccurate,” adding it is unlikely the deal will be finalized in such a short time.
 
As for Ron Arad, the missing Israeli air force navigator: Eliad Shraga, head of the Born Free organization, told Israeli daily Ynet that “every possible mistake has been made. Hezbollah has beaten Israel big-time. They’ve been able to get every last one of our bargaining chips, kidnap more soldiers and now we have nothing left. Promises must be kept. We had to give (Mustafa) Dirani and (Abdel Karim) Obeid in the last prisoner swap – they were the best bargaining chips we had on Ron’s case. To make this wrong a little more right, they told us the deal would have a second stage – information about Ron in exchange for Kintar. It’s been four year. Kintar is going home and we still have no new information about Ron.”
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Ahmadinejad

Iran urges the OPEC member states again to convert their cash reserves into a basket of currencies rather than the tumbling US dollar.

Speaking at a ceremony to open the 29th ministerial meeting of the OPEC Fund for International Development (OFID), Iran’s President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad repeated his proposal made about six months ago in a rare summit of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries’s heads of states.

“The fall in the value of US dollar is one of the pressing problems of the world today,” warned the Iranian president at the conference in Isfahan on Tuesday.

He further expressed concern over the adverse effect of the dollar depreciation on the international community, especially energy exporting countries through increasing the price of commodities like wheat, rice and oilseeds.

Ahmadinejad said he warned six months ago in the summit conference in Riyadh that there were many indications pointing to continued fall in the value of the greenback.

“And we see that this continues to happen and the resources and wealth of OPEC member countries have been hugely damaged.

“I again repeat my previous proposal; we should have a basket of different international hard currencies as the basis or the member countries should come up and produce a new hard currency for petroleum contracts,” he stressed.

“They get our oil and give us a worthless piece of paper,” Ahmadinejad said earlier after the close of the summit in the Saudi capital of Riyadh.

The comments by the Iranian president gained backing from Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez as he said at the same event, “The empire of the dollar has to end.”

On the soaring oil prices, the Iranian president said, “At a time when the growth of consumption is lower than the growth of production and the market is full of oil, prices are rising and this trend is completely fake and imposed.”

“As you know the decrease in the dollar’s value and the increase in energy prices are two sides of the same coin which are being introduced as factors behind the recent instability,” Ahmadinejad added.

MK/GM

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Kieth Ellison

Minnesota Congressman Keith Ellison has criticized the policies of the US President George W. Bush in dealing with Iranian issues.

George W. Bush has adopted wrong policies on Iran–a country that plays an important role in the Middle East and the world, Ellison said.

Calling the preconditions for talks with Iran irrational, the Congressman said the Bush administration is not able to take practical steps to resolve the problems between the two countries and added that the only option is to wait for the next US president.

Ellison pointed out that he always votes “nay” to sanctions against Iran in the US Congress. He maintains that the sanctions are fruitless and only worsen the situation.

Going further, he condemned Bush’s policies on Iraq. Ellison emphasized that the only way to resolve the crisis in Iraq is to withdraw US forces from the war-torn country and ask Islamic countries, especially Iran, to help reconstruct the country.

Ellison was also critical of the US and Western mass media, which generally offer a prejudgmental image of Iran and a negative view of Islam.

HRF/JG/GM

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Fadlullah

Lebanon’s top cleric Mohammad Hussein Fadlallah draws a parallel between the US and Israel in the savage killing of innocent people.

“The US and its protégé, Israel, are two sides of the same coin in their brutal killing of innocent people,” said the prominent Lebanese cleric in his weekly Friday prayer sermon delivered from the Imamayn Hassanayn Mosque in Haret Hreik.

“When US military aircraft bomb innocent Afghan families and kill Pakistani soldiers to warn them nobody better dare stick their necks out against White House policy on its so-called war on terror, it looks very much like its Israeli ally which launches air strikes against residential units in the Gaza Strip,” said the senior cleric.

“Washington sees the world as an area under its dominance and feels no shame in the kidnapping and torture of those opposing its policies in its military bases stationed across the globe,” Fadlallah added.

US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, who voices concern over the ‘captivity’ of Israeli soldiers, expresses no sympathy over the appalling condition of 11,000 Palestinians subject to psychological and physical torture in Israeli prisons, the cleric argued.

Fadlallah sees no difference between Israeli or American prison guards, as the US soldiers have tortured many prisoners in the Guantanamo Bay detention center, Abu Ghraib, and prisons in Afghanistan.

MK/JG/GM

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Hamas

GAZA CITY, Gaza Strip – A year into Hamas‘ rule in the Gaza Strip, courts are meting out justice, police are arresting thieves, motorists are paying for licenses and authorities are blocking Internet porn sites.

At the same time, Gazans are stocking up on vegetable oil — not for cooking, but to run their cars during a severe fuel shortage. A punishing Israeli-led blockade has forced 80 percent of the people to rely on United Nations food handouts. With sanitation services collapsing, millions of gallons of raw sewage are flowing into the sea. Enemies of the regime have been silenced.

A year after Hamas militants seized power in five days of bloody fighting that included tossing rivals off high-rise rooftops, it’s become clear that Israel’s boycott of Gaza has not significantly weakened Hamas and its control is deepening.

“We’ve only become stronger. We will not stand down. We will not go back,” said Hamas official Sami Abu Zuhri.

Hamas’ rule in Gaza — along with a corruption scandal in Israel that threatens to bring down Prime Minister Ehud Olmert — is badly damaging prospects for a U.S.-backed Mideast peace initiative that seeks to forge an agreement by year’s end between Israel and the moderate Palestinian leadership in the West Bank.

Gaza — a tiny fenced-in territory whose 1.4 million inhabitants are not free to come and go — has become a morass of contradictions.

Internal fighting has stopped and crime is down under Hamas rule, but the calm was partly purchased through killing and torture. A cease-fire in Gaza that Egypt is trying to arrange could boost a U.S.-backed Mideast peace initiative, but it could also prolong Hamas’ rule. Quite a bit of money seems to be entering Gaza, but there’s hardly anything to buy.

Hamas is on a collision course with Israel, which still controls Gaza’s borders, air space and coastline despite having withdrawn its army and settlers from the territory three years ago. Gaza militants launch rockets at southern Israel almost daily, and Israel targets Gaza with air strikes, land incursions and deadly missiles said to be fired from unmanned drones.

The fighting has killed more than 400 Gazans and injured thousands of others in the past year. On the Israeli side, 11 soldiers have died fighting inside Gaza and six Israeli civilians have been killed and 110 wounded by shells fired into Israel.

The barrages — nearly 3,000 rockets and mortars, according to the Israeli army — also have terrorized any Israeli living within range, including the about 110,000 residents of Ashkelon, nine miles north of Gaza.

Musa Mahmoud Jaber el-Ghoul is a village elder among about 300 Palestinians living a few hundred yards from Gaza’s northern border with Israel — the area where militants often launch rockets — and he says he has repeatedly begged the rocketers to stop firing across the border.

“When anyone is injured over there (Ashkelon), it’s considered a great achievement for the resistance,” says 62-year-old el-Ghoul. But, he added, “It means the retaliation from the other side is also very tough … and we pay the price.”

El-Ghoul, nicknamed Abu Ziad, was wounded himself fighting Israel and spent eight years in an Israeli jail. But now whenever Israel decides to stage a raid, soldiers with loudspeakers shout out “Abu Ziad!” from atop tanks, or call him on his cell phone, telling him to ask residents to stay indoors.

One bizarre aspect of the fighting is the militants’ decision to target the border crossings from where vital humanitarian aid enters Gaza. That helps explain what the U.N. says is a 75 percent reduction in the supplies coming in during the past year.

On one recent day, a militant blew up the only pedestrian crossing into Israel with a four-ton truck bomb. Despite the bombing, thousands of Gazans demonstrated hours later to demand the opening of Gaza’s borders, and Palestinians said Israeli soldiers fired on the crowd, killing one man and wounding 16 others.

While striking the border crossings would seem to be against the interests of Gaza’s rulers, the attacks may be part of a strategy to break the Israeli boycott and seek more favorable conditions for a cease-fire.

Such a truce could further President Bush’s peace efforts because heavy casualties in Gaza make it hard for the moderate, West Bank Palestinian leadership to negotiate with Israel. Yet if a truce includes opening Gaza’s borders to trade as Hamas demands, the main leverage on the group would be forfeited.

For now, the fighting goes on, and civilians — both in Gaza and southern Israel — are paying the heaviest price.

Fawez Abdul Jawad, a 40-year-old former Fatah-affiliated policeman, says he watches a video, over and over, of the Israeli bomb that destroyed his son’s wedding last January.

In the video, two young boys and a man are seen dancing to the joyful beat of drums when the screen suddenly goes blank. Seconds later, the scene reappears — but this time with clouds of dust, screaming women and bloodied bodies. An Israeli missile had hit a Hamas police building next door, killing Jawad’s aunt and injuring him and three relatives, including a 7-year-old boy who he said may be permanently paralyzed.

“The joy was ripped from us,” said the father of six.

Hamas, aware of the damage the Gaza-West Bank split has done to the Palestinians’ statehood aspirations, says it wants to return to a power-sharing arrangement with Fatah — like the one dissolved last June 14 when Hamas took control of the strip.

“We need each other,” says Ghazi Hamad, political adviser to Hamas’ prime minister, Ismail Haniyeh.

But for Fatah’s West Bank government, joining forces with Hamas could jeopardize the large amount of money it gets from the international community. And Israel has made it clear it won’t hold peace talks with any government that includes Hamas, which remains sworn to the Jewish state’s destruction.

Meanwhile, the prevailing view in Gaza is that Hamas is becoming entrenched.

Motorists now must pay to register their vehicles and Hamas police control traffic — a big change from the general mayhem under Fatah-led governments. This past week authorities began blocking Internet porn, jamming many wholesome sites in the process.

Not everyone is happy with Hamas’ methods, but Gazans are reluctant to complain. Hamas has shut down all opposition media in the strip, and two men interviewed for this story said they were tortured by Hamas — one displaying a leg wound that he said came from metal spikes driven into his shin.

Support from Syria and Iran helps keep the Hamas government running. Iran is said to be both financing Hamas and providing increasingly sophisticated weaponry to attack Israel.

The moderate Palestinian president, Mahmoud Abbas, also sends lots of money into Gaza by paying salaries to former Fatah employees on the condition they stay home from work.

But even Gazans with money can find little to buy. Some goods are smuggled in through tunnels from Egypt, but mostly only food and medicine are allowed in, leaving acute shortages of everything from cement to baby strollers.

Gaza’s children seem the most vulnerable in the bitter standoff. Between 70 percent and 90 percent are failing math in U.N.-run schools and 60 percent are failing Arabic, said John Ging, Gaza director of the U.N. agency in charge of Palestinian refugees. He blamed the children’s flunking on “overcrowding, underfunding and a violent environment” that does not encourage study.