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NATO to take over Libya no-fly zone

Agreement comes after days of hard bargaining among its members; Attacks on the ground will continue to be run by U.S.-led coalition

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The Anchor

An anchor is a device cast overboard to secure a ship, boat, or other floating object by means of weight, friction, or hooks called flukes. In ancient times, anchors were often merely large stones, bags or baskets of stones, bags of sand, or, as with the Egyptians, lead-weighted logs. The Greeks are credited with the first use of iron anchors, while the Romans had metal devices with arms similar to modern anchors. What anchoring technique is used in "ultimate storm" conditions?

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Snake Charming

Most common in South Asia and North Africa, snake charming is the practice of "charming" snakes through music and rhythmic body movements. Street performers set up in front of audiences and use different methods to draw out their snakes—often venomous varieties such as cobras—which sometimes appear to move along with the music. A typical performance may also include handling the snakes or performing other seemingly dangerous acts. Why is snake charming becoming increasingly rare in India?

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Meeting in El Maqar-NJ Jan 25th 2009

Meeting in El Maqar-NJ Jan 25th 2009
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Bin Laden urges jihad against Israel over Gaza

Bin Laden urges jihad against Israel over Gaza
The Associated Press
The Washington Post
14 January 2009 artbinladengi1

Al-Qaida chief Osama bin Laden urged Muslims to launch a jihad against Israel and condemned Arab governments as allies of the Jewish state in a new message aimed at harnessing anger in the Mideast over the Gaza offensive.

CAIRO, Egypt — Osama bin Laden urged Muslims to launch a jihad against Israel, seeking to harness anger over the Gaza offensive with a new message posted on the Internet on Wednesday.

The al-Qaida chief vowed to open “new fronts” against the U.S. and its allies beyond Iraq and Afghanistan and also criticized Arab leaders, accusing most of them of being allies of the U.S. and Israel.

The White House dismissed the call to jihad, saying it reflects bin Laden’s isolation and shows he is trying to remain relevant at a time when his ideology and mission are being challenged.

Bin Laden spoke in a 22-minute audiotape posted on Islamic militant Web sites where al-Qaida usually issues its messages. The 51-year-old al-Qaida leader has been in hiding since the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks, believed to be living somewhere along the lawless Pakistan-Afghan border.

It was bin Laden’s first tape since May and came nearly three weeks after Israel launched the offensive against Hamas that Gaza medical officials say has killed more than 1,000 Palestinians.

He said President-elect Barack Obama has received a “heavy inheritance” from George W. Bush _ two wars and “the collapse of the economy.” He predicted that burden will render the U.S. unable to sustain a long fight against the mujahedeen, or holy warriors.

There is “only one strong way to bring the return of Al-Aqsa and Palestine, and that is jihad in the path of God,” Bin Laden said, referring to the revered Al-Aqsa Mosque in Jerusalem. “The duty is to urge people to jihad and to enlist the youth into jihad brigades.”

He also appealed for donations to finance the fight, saying the “tithes from any of the great Muslim or Arab traders” would be enough “for jihad on all the fronts.”

The authenticity of the tape could not be independently confirmed. State Department spokesman Sean McCormack said he had no reason to question its authenticity but was not certain whether the U.S. had verified the voice.

“It appears this tape demonstrates his isolation and continued attempts to remain relevant at a time when al-Qaida’s ideology, mission and agenda are being questioned and challenged throughout the world,” said Gordon Johndroe, a spokesman for the National Security Council at the White House.

“This also looks to be an effort to raise money as part of their ongoing propaganda campaign,” Johndroe said.

The tape, entitled “A call for jihad to stop the aggression on Gaza,” was played over a picture of bin Laden and the Al-Aqsa Mosque, one of Islam’s holiest sites. There were no English subtitles or the flashy production graphics that usually accompany such messages.

That suggested the message had been hastily put together to exploit Muslim anger over the Gaza offensive. Israel says the offensive aims to halt rocket fire from Gaza against Israeli towns but Palestinian medical officials say half of those killed have been civilians.

“The bin Laden speech is an obvious and cheap attempt to capitalize on the Arab world’s boiling anger about the Israeli invasion of Gaza,” said terror expert Eric Rosenbach of the Center for International Affairs at Harvard’s Kennedy School.

He said links between al-Qaida and Gaza’s Hamas rulers are “tenuous at best” and that Hamas, which seized power in Gaza in 2007, has historically distanced itself from bin Laden’s terror movement.

Bin Laden and his lieutenants frequently use the Palestinian issue to try to rally support for al-Qaida and often call for holy war to free Jerusalem. But there has been little sign that the terror group has carried out attacks in Israel.

Bin Laden made no direct reference to Hamas, and al-Qaida leaders have frequently criticized the Palestinian militant group for participating in elections and failing to seriously pursue jihad against Israel.

The al-Qaida leader also accused Arab leaders of “avoiding their responsibility” to liberate Palestine.

“If you are not convinced to fight, then open the way to those who are convinced,” he said. Bin Laden accused most Arab leaders of allying themselves with the U.S. and Israel.

Rita Katz, director of SITE Intelligence Group that monitors militant Web sites, said bin Laden was “attempting to convince Palestinians and the Muslims around the world that the only group that can help them is the jihadists” and that “Arab rulers and the Palestinian movements have failed them.”

“His other purpose is to exploit the conflict to exhort others to jihad and build support for al-Qaida,” she said.

Katz said the bin Laden’s appeal for money to finance jihad was unusual and “might reflect financial difficulties facing al-Qaida.”

Bin Laden pointed to financial problems facing the U.S., saying that was a sign that the U.S. power was falling apart.

“The Islamic nation’s jihad is one of the main causes of these destructive results for our enemies,” he claimed.

He pointed to wars in Afghanistan and Iraq since the Sept. 11 attacks, saying al-Qaida was prepared to fight “for seven more years, and seven more after that, then seven more.”

“The question is, can America continue the war against us for several more decades? The reports and signs show us otherwise,” he said. He said Bush had left his successor “with a heavy inheritance,” forcing Obama to choose between withdrawing from the wars or continuing.

“If he withdraws from the war, it is a military defeat. If he continues, he drowns in economic crisis,” bin Laden said.

Associated Press Writer Carley Petesch contributed to this report from New York

Posted in Christianity, News.

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Madonna targeted by extremists

Madonna targeted by extremists
Media International
11 January 2009

madonna

Madonna is reportedly being targeted by Muslim fanatics. Skip related content

The US singer – who follows the Jewish rooted faith Kabbalah – has added to her personal security team and warned ex-husband Guy Ritchie to increase protection for the children they raise, Lourdes 12, Rocco, eight and adopted David Banda, three.

A source told Britain’s The People newspaper: “Madonna is well known for her Kabbalah faith and support for Israel, having visited the country several times.

“This seems to upset extreme Muslims who forget she respects people of all faiths whether Islamic, Christian or Buddhist. Like anyone else she would like to see a peaceful end to the problems in Gaza.

“But she is beside herself with worry, not just for her own safety, but for that of the children.”

Extremists angry about the current situation in Gaza – where Israeli and Palestinian groups have been warring since the beginning of the year – have taken their attack on western values to a personal level, writing hate messages about Madonna on websites.

According to The People, Palestinian leader Abdel-Al wrote on site Islambase.com: “If I meet these w****s I will have the honour of to be the first one to cut the head off Madonna if they will keep spreading their satanic culture against Islam.”

Madonna, 50, has now reportedly hired two minders, veterans of Israeli security service Mossad, who accompanied her on her recent ‘Sticky and Sweet’ world tour.

Madonna’s security team have also reportedly told her ex-husband, film director Guy Ritchie, to move as his present house is close to a busy road in London and doesn’t have sufficient security measures to protect their children.

Posted in Christianity, News.

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Egypt court tells Coptic wife no divorce

Egypt court tells Coptic wife no divorce
Al Arabiya
08 January 2008

Husband converting to Islam was “no harm, no foul”
The court said no harm was inflicted on the wife as a result of the conversion (File)
Cairo, 7 January 2009:-An Egyptian court dismissed Monday a divorce lawsuit filed by a Coptic wife against her husband, who recently converted to Islam.

In the first ruling of its kind, the Cairo Personal Status Court refused to grant Laila Hanna a divorce from her husband based on the principle of “no harm, no foul,” a judiciary source told AlArabiya.net.

“The fact that the Christian husband converted to Islam does not invalidate the marriage contract since Islam allows the marriage of Muslim men to Christian women,” he said.
This is applicable as long as no harm was inflicted on the wife as a result of the conversion. Hanna’s lawsuit, filed almost a year ago, did not mention any afflictions. On the contrary, Hanna said her husband treats her well.

The reason she cited for seeking a divorce was that the marriage contract was ecclesiastic and was signed by members of the Christian clergy. She said this was enough to annul the contract since marrying a Muslim requires two Muslim witnesses.

“The court goes by the purpose of the contract back when the husband was Christian,” the verdict said. “The fact that the husband converted does not invalidate this.”

(Translated from Arabic by Sonia Farid).

Posted in Coptic, Egypt, News.


Pope: promote human rights everywhere, founded, in the end, in God creator

Pope: promote human rights everywhere, founded, in the end, in God creator
AsiaNews.it
11 December 2008 Vatican City (AsiaNews) The path towards full respect of human rights worldwide remains long, human rights that are ultimately founded in God creator: if this solid ethical base is ignored, then these rights remain weak because they are devoid of a solid foundation.

With these words this evening, Benedict XVI concluded Vatican commemorations of the anniversary of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights in the Paul VI audience hall.Organised by the Pontifical Council for Justice and Peace, celebrations began with a study and reflection session which saw interventions by Vatican secretary of state Card. Tarcisio Bertone, the Director General of the World Labour Organisation, Juan Somavia, and the presence among others, of the Italian President Giorgio Napolitano. At the end of the session a concert was given by the Brandenburghisches Staatsorchester from Frankfurt, under the direction of Spanish maestro Inma Shara, the first woman to direct a symphonic orchestra in the Vatican.

Sixty years ago noted the Pope on December 10th, the General Assembly of the United Nations, gathered in Paris, adopted the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, which still today constitutes a high reference point for inter-cultural dialogue on the freedom and rights of humanity. The dignity of each man and woman is only truly guaranteed when his or her fundamental rights are recognised, safeguarded and promoted.

The Church has always that fundamental rights, above and beyond the diverse formulations and weight they may carry within various cultures, are a universal fact, because they are innate to the very nature of man. Natural law, written by God within human conscience, – continued the Pope is a common denominator between all men and all peoples; it is a universal guide that everyone can recognise and thanks to which people can understand each other.

And so, human rights are ultimately founded in God the creator, who gave each one of us intelligence and freedom. If we ignore this solid base, human rights will remain weak because devoid of a solid foundation.

The celebration of the 60th anniversary of the Declaration noted the Pope is the perfect opportunity for us to verify to what measure the ideals, accepted by the vast majority of the community of Nations in 1948, are observed today in the various national legislations, more over, in the collective and individual conscience.

Without doubt, we have come a long way, but we still have a long way to go: the right to life, freedom and security of hundreds of millions of our brothers and sisters are still under threat; the dignity and equality of each individual is not always respected, while in our very midst new barriers are being erected for reasons linked to race, religion, political opinion or other convictions. This is why the common commitment to promote and better define human rights must never cease and efforts to guarantee their respect be intensified.

During the commemorative congress, Cardinal Bertone in his observations on human rights, highlighted the value of religious freedom as a fundamental right; the object of this right, is not the intrinsic content of one determined religious faith, but immunity from all coercion, a security zone capable of guaranteeing the inviolable space in which every believer and the community in which he expresses his beliefs are free to act, without outside pressures from persons, social groups or authorities, whomever they may be.

It is an evident fact that religion has a direct influence on the internal life of States and the International Community. Despite this, there are increasing indications of trends that seem to want to exclude religion and the rights connected to it from the possibility of concurring in the building of social order, even in full respect of that pluralism which distinguishes contemporary society.

Religious freedom, continued the cardinal risks being confused with freedom of worship, or of being interpreted as an element which belongs to the private sphere, thus being replaced by the indeterminate right to tolerance. And this by ignoring that religious freedom as a fundamental right surpasses religious tolerance, which was solidly anchored to a relative vision of individualism without limits.

Analogously, it is the current international outlook that allows this tendency to emerge that relegates religion to a cultural dimension or amalgamates it with traditional folklore and practices. This vision is not far removed from syncretism and forgets that religion, and the rights and freedoms connected to it, is an indicator of the deepest aspirations that a person through his behaviour aims to reach.

Posted in Article, Christianity, News.


Belgian police arrest ‘al Qaeda legend’

Belgian police arrest ‘al Qaeda legend’

12 December 2008
Malika El-Aroud is the widow of one of the men who killed Afghan anti-Taliban leader Ahmad Shah Massoud.(CNN) — Belgian police Thursday arrested a woman they called an “al Qaeda living legend” as part of an operation to thwart a terror attack being planned to coincide with an EU summit in Brussels, a Belgian police source told CNN.

Police seized 14 people, one of whom was planning to carry out a suicide attack in Belgium, the source said. They had contacts at the “highest levels of al Qaeda,” the source said.

The police source said officers “had only 24 hours to act.”

The leaders of the European Union’s 27 member states are meeting in Brussels Thursday and Friday. It is not clear that the heads of state and government themselves were the target of the planned attack.

The federal prosecutor’s office in Belgium identified one of the suspects as Malika El-Aroud, the widow of one of the men who assassinated a key opponent of the Taliban in Afghanistan two days before September 11, 2001.

El-Aroud’s late husband was one of two men who killed Ahmed Shah Massoud, a leader of the Northern Alliance, in a suicide mission ordered by Osama Bin Laden.

Belgian police aimed to prevent El-Aroud, whom the police source called an “al-Qaeda living legend,” from moving to Afghanistan to play a role in the fight against the coalition forces there, the source said.

She is thought to be a recruiter for the anti-Western network, rather than a fighter, the source said.

El-Aroud described the “love” she and her late husband felt for Osama bin Laden in a 2006 interview with CNN.

“Most Muslims love Osama. It was he who helped the oppressed. It was he who stood up against the biggest enemy in the world, the United States. We love him for that,” she told CNN then.

Gazing into CNN’s cameras she said, “It’s the pinnacle in Islam to be the widow of a martyr. For a woman it’s extraordinary.”

“Most of those arrested” Thursday had Belgian passports, the police source said. All 14 are of Moroccan descent.

Three of the suspects had traveled to the Afghanistan-Pakistan border region to participate in fighting or training camps, and were in contact with an unnamed suspect who had direct links to important al Qaeda figures, police said.

Two of those three returned to Belgium several months ago and started surveillance operations, and the third returned to Belgium a week ago, police said. Intelligence showed that third person was ready to carry out a suicide attack, police said.

Information showed the suspect who was to carry out the attack had received the green light to execute the operation, police said. Investigators noted the suspect had said goodbye to his family “because he wanted to go to paradise with a clear conscience,” police said.

Authorities also found a video meant for the suspect’s family, which police said was probably a farewell tape. They did not find any explosives, the police said in a statement.

The 14 suspects were arrested after police carried out 16 search warrants in Brussels and one in the western Belgian city of Liege. During those searches, police seized computer equipment and documents and the 14 people, including the three who traveled to Afghanistan and Pakistan and 11 others suspected of having given them logistical and material support.

Police said their investigation has been under way intensively since the end of 2007.

Posted in Article, Middle East, News.