Wednesday, August 31, 2011

Sunni Muslims Banned from Holding Own Eid Prayers in Tehran

THE GUARDIAN: Security police block access to houses rented by Sunni minority for worship

Sunni Muslims in Tehran have been banned from congregating at prayers marking the end of Ramadan.

Iran, a Shia country, ordered its Sunni minority not to hold separate prayers in Tehran for Eid al-Fitr, the Muslim festival that brings the month of fasting to an end. They were instead asked to have a Shia imam leading their prayers – something that is against their religious beliefs.

Hundreds of security police were deployed in the capital to prevent Sunni worshippers from entering houses they rent for religious ceremonies. » | Saeed Kamali Dehghan | Wednesday, August 31, 2011
Bahraini Boy Killed in Protest

A 14 year old boy dies from injuries as anti-government protesters clash with police in Sitra.

The death comes only days after the UN Human Rights Chief criticised Bahrain's treatment of pro-democracy protesters.

Al Jazeera's Charles Stratford reports - and a warning, viewers may find some of the pictures distressing.


Gaddafi’s Daughter to Leave Hospital After Giving Birth

OMAN DAILY OBSERVER: ALGIERS — Aisha Gaddafi, who gave birth in Algeria this week after fleeing Libya as her father’s regime crumbled, was to leave hospital in the southern town of Djanet yesterday, a government source said.

The government said Tuesday that she had crossed into Algeria on Saturday with her brother Hannibal, their mother Safiya — Gaddafi’s second wife — and the fugitive leader’s eldest son Mohammed.

“Both (mother and daughter) are in very good health,” said the source who requested anonymity. The government said on Tuesday that Aisha Gaddafi gave birth to a baby girl in the small southern town of Djanet [français], 2,300 kilometres south of Algiers, early on Sunday.

The government official declined to comment on tensions between Algiers and Libya’s National Transitional Council, which has all but vanquished Gaddafi and has called for the handover of the Gaddafi family members.

Algeria’s foreign ministry on Tuesday said the Gaddafi family members were allowed in the country “for strictly humanitarian reasons”.

The daily Ennahar newspaper reported yesterday that up to 62 Gaddafi clan members had entered Tunisia. » | Agencies | Thursday, September 01, 2011
Sharia Enshrined in Libyan Draft Constitution

THE NEW AMERICAN: Now that the U.S. military, under the auspices of NATO, has “liberated” Libya, that country is on a path to become the third such nation to establish Sharia as the principal basis for all future constitutional legislation.

With the pen of power placed in their hands by the armed forces of the United States, the members of the Libyan Transitional National Council (TNC) has released a draft of a proposed new constitution that enumerates Islamic Sharia law as its foundation.

Sharia, which means “path” in Arabic, is the sacred law of Islam. The precepts of Sharia have two sources: the Koran and the writings of Mohammed. Sharia is the code that is responsible for the stoning of adulteresses; the caning of rape victims; and the restrictions on dress, rights of inheritance, and marital status of women.

A document released by the TNC explicitly establishes Islam as the state religion and specifies that the principal source of all laws lawfully promulgated under the proposed constitution will be the precepts of Sharia. » | Joe Wolverton II | Friday, August 26, 2011
Al Jazeera English Live

Jesus or Muhammad?

Did Jesus Die by Crucifixion?

Inside Story - Algeria - Libya Relations

Is al-Qaeda stoking the friction between Libya and its neighbour?

Tuesday, August 30, 2011

King Idris of Libya

Sayyid Muhammad Idris bin Sayyid Muhammad al-Mahdi al-Senussi was the King of Libya from 1951 to 1969, and the Chief of the Senussi Muslims. While out of the country he was deposed in a military coup led by Colonel Muammar al-Gaddafi. He died in Cairo in 1983 and was buried in Medina, Saudi Arabia.


THE WALL STREET JOURNAL: Libyan Prince: I’m Ready to Be King » | John W. Miller | Wednesday, April 20, 2011
Libya’s Crown Prince in Exile


Crown Prince Mohammed El Senussi – Biography »
History of Libya

Documentary film of some of the key events in Libyan history between the years 1911 – 1969


Prince Mohammed El Senussi (Official Website) »
Sky News - Mohammed El Senussi with Adam Boulton [March 22, 2011]


WIKI: Prince Mohammed El Senussi »
Mohammed El Senussi Statement [on] Libya [in Arabic]


CROWN PRINCE MOHAMMED’S OFFICIAL WEBSITE: Prince Mohammed El Senussi’s Personal Message (August 18, 2011) »
The Path of a Young German Salafist

SPIEGEL ONLINE INTERNATIONAL: Robert B. wore long robes, dreamed of paradise and called himself Abdul Hakiim. He and his friend were arrested in July for trying to enter Britain with bomb-making guides and al-Qaida propaganda. They now sit in a London high-security prison. But Robert's motivations remain a mystery.

A mother can't be fooled, and a mother notices when her child goes astray, says Marlies B. That's why she called the state authorities in October 2010 and asked if she needed to be worried about her son.

Her son Robert had changed. He'd converted to Islam, forsaken pork and alcohol, and now he wore a knit wool cap and wandered the city of Solingen, northeast of Cologne, in floor-length garments. Marlies B. says she'd never seen him this way. People asked her about it, and it was embarrassing. It frightened her.

At the end of July -- after a period when she couldn't reach him, either on his cell phone or at his apartment -- she printed out a statement from his bank account. (Robert had given her notarized power of attorney years before.) She noticed a flight booked for €447 ($647), and "all of my alarm bells went off," she says. She drove to a national-security office in Wuppertal.

"You're son is doing well," an official told her, asking her to take a seat in the hall. Marlies B. had an uneasy feeling. A mother knows, she says. Two other officials came upstairs. They had just searched Robert's apartment, and they told her that her son had been in a London prison since July 15. » | Julia Jüttner, Solingen | Tuesday, August 30, 2011
Grausamkeiten in Libyen

Jüngste Berichte aus Libyen zeugen von unfassbarer Brutalität auf beiden Seiten des Krieges. Es häufen sich Meldungen über Funde von verbrannten Leichen, Exekutionen, Folter und Massaker. Von Zehntausenden Gefangenen fehlt jede Spur.

10vor10 vom 29.08.2011
Libyan Rebels Demand Return of Gaddafi Family from Algeria

Libya's National Transitional Council says the dictator's wife Safiya, who crossed the border into Algeria with Gaddafi's daughter Aisha, sons Hannibal and Mohammed and their children on 29 August, should be extradited. The family crossed at the south-western Libyan town of Ghadamis into Algeria, according to witnesses

Monday, August 29, 2011

Gaddafis Familie auf der Flucht

Gaddafis Frau und drei seiner Kinder, darunter sein Sohn Hannibal, haben das Land Richtung Algerien verlassen. Vom Diktator fehlt weiterhin jede Spur. Nahostkorrespondent Pascal Weber schätzt für «10vor10» die neusten Entwicklungen ein.

10vor10 vom 29.08.2011
Gaddafis Familie in Algerien

Laut Angaben des algerischen Aussenministeriums ist Gaddafis Ehefrau mit den Kindern Mohammed, Hannibal und Aischa nach Algerien ausgereist. Der libysche Despot Muammar al-Gaddafi ist noch immer auf der Flucht. Die NATO hat erneut Luftangriffe auf Gaddafis Heimatstadt Sirte geflogen.

Tagesschau vom 29.08.2011
Muslim Student Group a Gateway to Jihad?

The Muslim Students Association is one of the largest Islamic organizations in America. Yet some terror experts are saying the group a recruiting tool for jihad.

Sunday, August 28, 2011

Das geheime Leben der Hana Gaddafi

WELT ONLINE: Sie wurde vor 25 Jahren für tot erklärt – doch der Verdacht erhärtet sich, dass Gaddafi-Tochter Hana noch lebt. Offenbar arbeitet sie als Ärztin.

Ihr Leben war streng geheim, denn für die Öffentlichkeit durfte sie nicht existieren. Hana Gaddafi, die Tochter des Diktators, wurde im April 1986 nach dem US-Bombenangriff auf Tripolis vom Regime für tot erklärt – aus Propagandazwecken. In den letzten Tagen erhärtete sich der Verdacht: Hana Gaddafi ist am Leben.

Erste Hinweise hatte es gegeben, als die Schweizer Regierung Konten der Gaddafi-Familie einfrieren ließ, darunter auch das Vermögen einer Hana Gaddafi, geboren am 11. November 1985. Die junge Frau hatte in London gelebt, in Libyen Medizin studierte und anschließend als Ärztin gearbeitet.

Die Eroberung der Gaddafi-Residenz Bab al-Asisia förderte weitere Beweise zutage. Eine irische Reporterin stieß in Gaddafis Palast auf einen Raum, in dem ganz offenbar noch vor Kurzem eine junge Frau aus dem Diktatorenclan gelebt hatte. Im Regal standen DVDs der US-Serie „Sex and the City“ und CDs von den „Backstreet Boys“. Außerdem entdeckte die Journalistin Anti-Cellulite-Creme und Stofftiere. » | Florian Flade | Sonntag 28. August 2011
Ouragan Irene: la catastrophe annoncée n'a pas eu lieu

TRIBUNE DE GENÈVE: L'ouragan Irène, entre-temps rétrogradé tempête tropicale, a bel et bien frappé New York. Mais la catastrophe annoncée n'a pas eu lieu.

L’ouragan Iréne a frappé ce week-end la côte Est des Etats-Unis, faisant douze morts. Il a été rétrogradé en tempête tropicale alors qu’il atteignait New York, où il a provoqué des inondations et de fortes pluies. La catastrophe redoutée n’a toutefois pas eu lieu.

New York «s’en est sortie», a déclaré le responsable des services de secours de la ville Joseph Bruno. «Certaines parties de la ville sont inondées, il y a de la pluie, mais globalement, je pense que nous nous en sommes sortis», a-t-il déclaré sur CNN.

Il a également évoqué des «milliers d’arbres à terre ou endommagés, de nombreux débris, et des inondations». Plus de 70’000 personnes ont été privées d’électricité dans la métropole.

Mais en milieu de matinée, la pluie avait faibli, la circulation reprenait progressivement, et certains New Yorkais se promenaient en famille, dans une ville toujours privée de transports en commun. » | AFP | Dimanche 28 Août 2011