Thursday, October 04, 2007

Audacity! Saudi Arabia Plans to Lecture the West on Human Rights!

BNP: The “Human Rights Commission” of Saudi Arabia, a country where slavery was formally abolished as late as the 1960s and is still practiced more or less openly (it is permitted under sharia law), now plans to lecture Europeans on Islamophobia as part of the jihad to bring Europe under the sword of this medieval desert faith. In an address to be made at a Arab-European conference in Denmark later this month the Saudi delegation will demand an end to the way terrorism is linked with Islam and ways of combatting “Islamophobia”.

In 2005, Saudi Arabia was designated by the United States Department of State as a Tier 3 country with respect to trafficking in human beings. Tier 3 countries are "Countries whose governments do not fully comply with the minimum standards and are not making significant efforts to do so."

In Saudi Arabia:

• Employers rape and beat their migrant workers.
• Women’s rights are non-existent and account for just 5% of the workforce.
• Women are not allowed to vote.
• Homosexuals are liable to be flogged or executed.
• There is no freedom of privacy.

In addition Saudi Arabia is the biggest sponsor of Wahhabism – the fundamentalist form of Sunni Islam which preaches that the Salafis (Wahhabis) are the chosen ones destined for heaven and everyone else, Shi’a Muslims, Jews, Christians and others are all non-believers.

The Euro-Arab Dialogue, which this is a part of, was established in the 1970s and is rapidly progressing towards the goal of merging Europe with the Arab world. The European Union is thus formally negotiating the surrender of an entire continent, without asking their peoples about it and without even mentioning this in the major media. It is one of the greatest betrayals ever recorded in the history of Western civilisation. Saudi Arabia plans to lecture the West on human rights (more)

BNP:
Saudi money suppresses free speech in the UK

ARAB NEWS:
Human Rights Commission to Address Muslim Rights Issues in Europe

Mark Alexander