Monday, January 07, 2008

Al-Qaida ruft zu Anschlägen im Nahen Osten bei Bush-Besuch auf

Für drei Tage reist US-Präsident George W. Busch ab Mittwoch in den Nahen Osten, um zwischen Israelis und Palästinensern zu vermitteln. Die ohnehin schwierige Mission wird nun durch einen Aufruf der Terror-Organisation al-Qaida noch komplizierter. In einer Video-Botschaft ruft ein ranghohes Mitglied zu Anschlägen gegen Bush auf.

Wenige Tage vor dem Nahost-Besuch von George W. Bush hat ein amerikanischer al-Qaida -Extremist zu Attentaten auf den US-Präsidenten aufgerufen. „Begrüßt ihn nicht mit Blumen und Applaus, sondern mit Bomben und Fallen“, erklärte der als „Azzam der Amerikaner„ bekannteal-Qaida-Anhänger Adam Gadahn am Sonntag in einer 50-minütigen Videobotschaft.

Trotz wieder aufflammender Gefechte zwischen Israelis und Palästinensern wollten beide Seitden noch vor dem Bush-Besuch weitere

Friedensverhandlungen aufnehmen. Israels Ministerpräsident Ehud Olmert erklärte allerdings, das Militär werde hart gegen Extremisten in dem von der Hamas kontrollierten Gazastreifen vorgehen. Bei einem Vorstoß der Armee in ein Flüchtlingslager kamen Krankenhausangaben zufolge vier Palästinenser um Leben, darunter drei Zivilisten.

In der Videobotschaft erklärte der aus Kalifornien stammende Gadahn, Bushs Nahost-Politik habe auf ganzer Linie versagt. In einer theatralischen Geste zeriss der Extremist vor laufender Kamera seinen US-Pass. Die Aufnahme wurde auf mehreren Internetseiten veröffentlicht, die von verschiedenen al-Qaida-nahen Gruppen genutzt werden. Der Heilige Krieg gegen die USA werde weitergeführt, solange auch nur ein einziger Muslime von den USA gefangen gehalten werde. Gadahn, der sich derzeit vermutlich in Pakistan aufhält, war bereits mehrfach in Video-Botschaften von al-Qaida aufgetreten. Al-Qaida ruft zu Anschlägen bei Bush-Besuch auf >>>

Mark Alexander (Paperback)
Mark Alexander (Hardback)

Sunday, January 06, 2008

Merry Christmas and Happy New Year!

This post will remain at the top for the twelve days of Christmas. Please scroll down for the latest postings during this time.

Photobucket
Image courtesy of The National Gallery

I should like to wish all my visitors a very Happy and Blessed Christmas and all things wonderful for the New Year.
Gloria in excelsis Deo
Et in terra pax hominibus bonae voluntatis,
Laudamus te, benedicimus te,
adoramus te.
Glorificamus te. Gratias agimus tibi,
propter magnam gloriam tuam.

Mark Alexander
”Sark-Opera”: 'Unseemly Sarko' Seen as Vulgar, and His Behaviour Seen as “Not in Keeping” with a Head of State as He Rushes into Marriage with “Man-Eater” Carla Bruni “on the Rebound”

TIMESONLINE: President Sarkozy is planning to marry Carla Bruni, his singer girlfriend, in early February, just over two months after meeting her and three since his wife divorced him, according to French and Italian reports today.

As the Elysée Palace made no attempt to deny an imminent wedding, pollsters said that the President's exhibition of the former Italian supermodel and his haste in replacing Cecilia, his wife, explained part of a seven-point slump in his approval rating over the past month.

"Speedy Sarko", 52, today gave the traditionalists more reason to view his conduct as unseemly when he posed for photographers holding hands with Ms Bruni, 40, on a trip to Jordan as guests of King Adullah II. Nicolas Sarkozy ‘to wed Carla Bruni next month’ >>> By Charles Bremner

Mark Alexander (Paperback)
Mark Alexander (Hardback)
Jesus in Turkey

CHRISTIANITY TODAY: For the first time in 550 years, Christianity inside Turkey is growing in numbers and influence. But its recent growth comes at a high price: since February 2006, radicalized Muslims have killed five Christians—the kind of cold-blooded martyrdom not seen in decades.

Modern-day Turkey's 73 million citizens, 98 percent of whom are Muslims, are experiencing social and political upheaval. The country is attempting to improve its economic and human-rights record in order to join the European Union. Turkey's relations with the United States are strained as an ally in the war in Iraq, and because of Congress's aborted effort to pass the Armenian genocide resolution. Also, Turkey's border disputes with Greece over land around the Aegean Sea, as well as violent skirmishes with Kurdish rebels on its southern border, keep this nation's formidable military on highest alert.

This is the context in which a handful of Islamic radicals targeted Christians as "enemies of the state" because of their association with Western groups and their alleged support of Kurdish rebels. The five killed within the last two years were:

• Andrea Santoro, a Catholic priest killed in February 2006. A 16-year-old youth shot Santoro as he was praying in the Santa Maria Church in Trabzon, Turkey.

• Hrant Dink, a Turkish-Armenian newspaper editor. In January 2007, a teenager gunned down Dink, who had been convicted of "insulting Turkishness" two years prior.

• The three Malatya martyrs: Necati Aydin, a Turkish pastor; Tilmann Geske, a missions worker from Germany; and Ugur Yuksel, a new Christian convert from Islam. In April 2007, young radicals feigning curiosity about Christianity killed the three men by slitting their throats at a Christian publishing house in southeastern Turkey. Their survivors include five children, two widows, and a fiancée.

In November, a Turkish court set a trial date for the five suspects involved in the Malatya killings for early January. Police are calling for life imprisonment and said all five suspects have confessed to the murders. The suspects accused the Christians of "forcing local girls into prostitution" and of praising the violence of rebel Kurds. (About 30,000 people have died since the 1980s in rebel-related violence.) Meanwhile, the Alliance of Protestant Churches in Turkey is calling Turkish congregations to pray and fast every Thursday for the next several weeks in preparation for the trial.

Isa Karatas of the Alliance of Protestant Churches in Turkey told Compass Direct News, "It is clear from these statements of the suspects that there is some group of powerful influence behind them. These people want to portray Turkey's Protestants as enemies of the nation." Jesus in Turkey: After 550 years of decline, a bloodied church is being reborn >>> By Tony Carnes in Istanbul

Mark Alexander (Paperback)
Mark Alexander (Hardback)
Germany’s NPD Praises Koch’s Tough Talk on Immigration

SPIEGELONLINE INTRERNATIONAL: State governor Roland Koch's latest comments on immigration include helpful tips for foreigners: Don't slaughter animals in the kitchen and dispose of your garbage properly. The far-right NPD party has praised him and called for Germany to rid itself of foreign criminals.

German state governor Roland Koch, a member of Chancellor Angela Merkel's conservatives, has won praise from the far-right National Democratic Party for his campaign against "criminal young foreigners" (more...) and his calls for immigrants to embrace German values.

The NPD, which states that an "African, Asian or Oriental" can never become German, said Koch's comments provided "impetus to at last take political action in response to the frighteningly high proportion of foreign and foreign-born violent criminals."

"Germany must remain the land of the Germans, so that our children don't suffer the same fate as the (American) Indians who were unable to stop the immigrants and now live on reservations," Peter Marx, general secretary of the NPD, said in a statement. Far-Right NPD Praises Koch’s Tough Talk on Immigration >>> By David Crossland

Mark Alexander (Paperback)
Mark Alexander (Hardback)
50 Islamisten in Marokko wegen Anschlagsplänen verurteilt

NZZ: (sda/reuters) In Marokko sind am Freitag 50 radikale Islamisten wegen der Verschwörung zu Bombenanschlägen und Raub zu bis zu 25 Jahren Haft verurteilt worden.

Das Gericht befand die Verurteilten für schuldig, Angriffe auf Regierungsgebäude und Touristenattraktionen in Casablanca und anderen Städten geplant zu haben. Zudem gehörten sie einer illegalen Vereinigung an, hätten Geld für die Unterstützung des Terrorismus gesammelt und die staatliche Sicherheit unterwandert.

Die Angeklagten, die Mitglieder der «Mahdi Partisanen» von Ansar al-Mahdi sind, bestritten ihre Schuld. Sie wurden 2006 festgenommen. Kurz danach beschlagnahmten die Behörden Sprengstoff und Laborausrüstung. 50 Islamisten in Marokko wegen Anschlagsplänen verurteilt: Mitglieder der «Mahdi Partisanen» bestreiten Schuld

Mark Alexander (Paperback)
Mark Alexander (Hardback)
More Nonsense from the Top, More Clutching at Straws, and More Wasting of Your Tax-Pounds: “Assertiveness Courses” for Muslimatoon!

THE SUNDAY TIMES: MUSLIM women are to be sent on leadership and assertiveness courses to help to prevent Islamic extremism.

In an attempt to stop young Muslims being seduced by Al-Qaeda, women will be sent on training courses designed for FTSE 100 managers to give them the skills and confidence to confront fanatics.

Amid fears that extremists are becoming more sophisticated in their recruitment, Hazel Blears, the communities secretary, has concluded that a key way to stop extremist ideas further permeating Muslim communities is to give “the silent majority” a stronger voice.

She is to publish a good practice guidance document which will say that “resilient communities can only exist where women are playing a full and active part”.

Blears will tell local authorities to use part of a £70m government fund set up to combat extremism to pay for the courses in confidence building, communication and mediation skills.

Muslim women will be offered work placements with business leaders and top athletes to imbue assertiveness and leadership and help them to advance their careers. Funding will be available to set up local Muslim women’s groups to provide a “safe space” where they can discuss their concerns. The plan is likely to attract criticism from some Muslim men who will see it as a threat to cultural traditions about the role of women in society. Muslim women to curb terror >>> By Marie Woolf

WATCH BBC VIDEO:
The Ineffectual Hazel Blears Talking Nonsense to Stephen Sackur on HARDtalk Part 1 and Part 2

Mark Alexander (Paperback)
Mark Alexander (Hardback)
Britain Loses Its Christian Way

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Photo of Bishop Michael Nazir-Ali courtesy of The Sunday Telegraph

THE SUNDAY TELEGRAPH: In fewer than 50 years, Britain has changed from being a society with an acknowledged Christian basis to one which is increasingly described by politicians and the media as "multifaith".

One reason for this is the arrival of large numbers of people of other faiths to these shores. Their arrival has coincided with the end of the Empire which brought about a widespread questioning of Britain's role.

On the one hand, the British were losing confidence in the Christian vision which underlay most of the achievements and values of the culture and, on the other, they sought to accommodate the newer arrivals on the basis of a novel philosophy of "multiculturalism".

This required that people should be facilitated in living as separate communities, continuing to communicate in their own languages and having minimum need for building healthy relationships with the majority.

Alongside these developments, there has been a worldwide resurgence of the ideology of Islamic extremism. One of the results of this has been to further alienate the young from the nation in which they were growing up and also to turn already separate communities into "no-go" areas where adherence to this ideology has become a mark of acceptability.

Those of a different faith or race may find it difficult to live or work there because of hostility to them. In many ways, this is but the other side of the coin to far-Right intimidation. Attempts have been made to impose an "Islamic" character on certain areas, for example, by insisting on artificial amplification for the Adhan, the call to prayer.

Such amplification was, of course, unknown throughout most of history and its use raises all sorts of questions about noise levels and whether non-Muslims wish to be told the creed of a particular faith five times a day on the loudspeaker.

This is happening here even though some Muslim-majority communities are trying to reduce noise levels from multiple mosques announcing this call, one after the other, over quite a small geographical area.

There is pressure already to relate aspects of the sharia to civil law in Britain. To some extent this is already true of arrangements for sharia-compliant banking but have the far-reaching implications of this been fully considered? Extremism flourished as UK lost Christianity >>> By Michael Nazir-Ali, Bishop of Rochester

THE SUNDAY TELEGRAPH LEADER:
Britain has changed but its values must endure

Mark Alexander (Paperback)
Mark Alexander (Hardback)
Bishop Nazir-Ali Warns of “No-Go” Areas Created by Islamic Extremists in Britain

THE SUNDAY TELEGRAPH: Islamic extremists have created "no-go" areas across Britain where it is too dangerous for non-Muslims to enter, one of the Church of England's most senior bishops warns today.

The Rt Rev Michael Nazir-Ali, the Bishop of Rochester and the Church's only Asian bishop, says that people of a different race or faith face physical attack if they live or work in communities dominated by a strict Muslim ideology.

Writing in The Sunday Telegraph, he compares the threat to the use of intimidation by the far-Right, and says that it is becoming increasingly difficult for Christianity to be the nation's public religion in a multifaith, multicultural society.

His comments come as a poll of the General Synod - the Church's parliament - shows that its senior leaders, including bishops, also believe that Britain is being damaged by large-scale immigration.

Bishop Nazir-Ali, who was born in Pakistan, gives warning that attempts are being made to give Britain an increasingly Islamic character by introducing the call to prayer and wider use of sharia law, a legal system based on the Koran. Bishop warns of no-go zones for non-Muslims >>> By Jonathan Wynne-Jones

Have your say: What does the future hold for the Church of England?

Mark Alexander (Paperback)
Mark Alexander (Hardback)

Saturday, January 05, 2008

Guardian’s Tehran Correspondent Expelled from Iran

THE GUARDIAN: The Guardian's Tehran correspondent, Robert Tait, has been expelled from Iran without explanation after nearly three years of reporting from the country.

Tait was forced to leave the country after the Iranian authorities declined to renew his visa and residence permit, despite an appeal on his behalf from the Guardian's editor, Alan Rusbridger, to Iran's culture and Islamic guidance ministry, which supervises the activities of all foreign and domestic media. He is now back in the UK, along with his Iranian wife.

The ministry gave no reason for its decision but said the newspaper was free to propose another journalist as its correspondent in Iran. Guardian's Tehran correspondent expelled without explanation >>>

Mark Alexander (Paperback)
Mark Alexander (Hardback)

Thursday, January 03, 2008

Western Leaders’ Take on the Jihad Being Waged Against Our Civilization!


Mark Alexander (Paperback)
Mark Alexander (Hardback)
Saudi Blogger Arrested

THE INDEPENDENT: Fouad al-Farhan knew they were coming for him. A few days before Saudi security forces swooped on his offices, he sent a letter to friends telling them he was a wanted man. "They will pick me up any time in the next two weeks," he predicted.

His crime? Writing one of the most widely read blogs in Saudi Arabia.

Mr Farhan, 32, who describes his online mission as "searching for freedom, dignity, justice, equality, public participation and other lost Islamic values", had already broken ground by refusing to hide behind a pen-name as he vented his spleen about the rampant corruption blighting political life. Now he has clocked up another first – the first blogger to be arrested in the kingdom.

The blogger was picked up on 10 December from the offices of his computer company in Jeddah, but it was not until this week that the interior ministry finally confirmed his arrest.

Blogging has seen something of a boom in Saudi Arabia, allowing dissident voices a space in a society were the media is kept on a tight leash and where political parties and public gatherings are banned. There are an estimated 600 bloggers in Saudi Arabia, male and female, conservative and liberal, writing in English and Arabic.

The arrest of Mr Farhan has sent shock waves around internet users in Saudi Arabia. "Although we have seen bloggers in Bahrain, Kuwait and Egypt arrested and jailed, I thought this wouldn't happen here," said Ahmed Al-Omran, 23, a student in Riyadh who blogs under the name Saudi Jeans. Blogger who dared to expose Saudi corruption is arrested >>> By Claire Soares

WATCH YOUTUBE VIDEO: Freedom of Expression Saudi Style

Mark Alexander (Paperback)
Mark Alexander (Hardback)

Wednesday, January 02, 2008

Islam and America Through the Eyes of Imran Khan

WATCH YOUTUBE VIDEO - Islam & America: Through the Eyes of Imran Khan – Pakistan

Mark Alexander (Paperback)
Mark Alexander (Hardback)
The Speech that CAIR Didn’t Want You to Hear


Mark Alexander (Paperback)
Mark Alexander (Hardback)
Mark R Cohen: ”The New Muslim Anti-Semitism”

THE JERUSALEM POST: Jewish-Muslim relations are at a nadir today. But the mutual hatred and anti-Semitism on the Muslim side are relatively new phenomena, born of political, rather than religious factors. When the Islamic caliphs ruled large swaths of Asia and Africa, their Jewish subjects enjoyed a protected status their brethren in Christian Europe - victims of anti-Semitism - never thought possible.

Today, Muslim apologists have distorted this age of coexistence. They appropriate an old Jewish myth about an "interfaith utopia" in the Middle Ages and blame the Jews and Zionism for destroying the traditional harmony between the two peoples.

In response, there is a new Jewish "counter-myth" that claims that Islam has persecuted Jews from its origins and that anti-Semitism is endemic in the religion. This counter-myth has been propagated by Jewish writers in the Diaspora especially since the 1970s. It parallels a similar conviction among some Oriental Jews in Israel. Seeking to find their place in a predominantly European Jewish world scarred by centuries of Christian persecutions culminating in the Holocaust, they claim that Islam has persecuted Jews from its origins. By implication, they have a past of suffering like the Ashkenazim, including dislocation from their ancient homelands, and are thus eligible for a larger piece of the Zionist pie than the mostly Ashkenazic founding fathers of Israel have granted them.

THE HISTORIC plight of Oriental Jewry falls somewhere between these two extremes. To discover it, one must move past the layers of propaganda and mutual recriminations that have obscured our view of history.

First of all, however, let us not make the mistake of thinking that Jews lived in the Middle Ages as the equals of Muslims. They were second class citizens, at best. They were classed along with other religious minorities as unbelievers who did not recognize the prophethood of Muhammad and the truth of the Koran. But this kind of unbelief was not as threatening to Islam as Jewish unbelief was to Christians, for unbelief in Christianity means rejection of Jesus as Messiah and as God, a greater affront to the dominant faith than Jewish unbelief was to Islam because it challenged the theological basis of the whole religion.

Moreover, restrictions on Jewish (and Christian) life - they were not to build new houses of worship and were required to wear distinctive garb, avoid Muslim honorific titles, and so forth - were intended not so much to exclude them from society as they were meant to reinforce the necessary hierarchical distinction between Muslims and non-Muslims within a single social order.

Non-Muslims were to remain "in their place," avoiding any act, particularly any religious act, that might challenge the superior rank of Muslims or of Islam. Non-Muslims, however, occupied a definite rank in Islamic society - a low rank, but a rank nevertheless. They managed to co-exist more or less harmoniously with the higher-ranking dominant Muslim group because both sides recognized and accepted the place of the other - whether superior or inferior - and this facilitated interaction with a minimum of conflict. The new Muslim anti-Semitism >>> By Mark R. Cohen

Mark Alexander (Paperback)
Mark Alexander (Hardback)
Surprising Development: Talk of Human Rights for HIV Sufferers in Saudi!

ARAB NEWS: RIYADH, 2 January 2007 — The National Society for Human Rights (NSHR) has called on HIV carriers who received unfair treatment from their employers or from the public to come forward and register their cases with the rights body. The process is part of an initiative by the NSHR to gather information from HIV-positive persons on the sort of maltreatment they receive in Saudi Arabia due to their conditions.

Legislation to protect the rights of these people is likely to be announced by March. “We have sent some members of the (NSHR) board to meet with experts on HIV cases to gather their opinions and observations on the new law,” Mufleh Al-Kahtani, NSHR’s vice president, told Arab News.

The NSHR proposed the national law to protect HIV-positive persons because currently there are no laws in the Kingdom that define the rights of these patients according to Islamic law and international conventions. Report Unfair Treatment, NSHR Tells HIV Carriers >>> By Raid Qusti

Mark Alexander (Paperback)
Mark Alexander (Hardback)
Will We End Up Bland and Boring?

ARAB NEWS: At times I feel we’re almost being legislated out of existence by nanny governments under the pretext of keeping us safe. At the same time globalization and the information age has blurred our national identities, while satellite television insidiously moulds our cultural mores. What does this mean for individual freedom? How does this growing trend affect our identity?

There are those who believe we’ve never had it so good. I’m not one of them. As someone who grew up in London during the 1970s I know what freedom is all about. It was a time when individuals were encouraged to discover themselves and eccentricity far from being shunned was celebrated. It was an age of discovery.

Ordinary people began to travel and interact with different cultures. They discovered a colorful world made up of different ethnicities and nationalities clad in a multitude of garbs, imbued with their own traditions and proud of their unique music, cuisines and way of life. I reveled in those innate differences, which made life interesting and exciting.

But over the decades there’s been a shift. With the advent of globalization young people, in particular, now dress in the same way, carry the same mobile phones, I-Pods and Blackberries, watch the same movies, visit the same websites and often cherish similar aspirations whether they live in Dublin , Dubai , Delhi or Dallas. Will We End Up Bland and Boring? By Linda Heard

Mark Alexander (Paperback)
Mark Alexander (Hardback)
”Xenophobia at the Heart of German Politics”

SPIEGELONLINE INTERNATIONAL: A German state governor has won applause from fellow conservatives for demanding a crackdown on "criminal young foreigners." Immigrant groups and political rivals say he is playing with fire in a debate that reveals the widespread xenophobia obstructing integration in Germany.

An assault by two foreign youths on a German pensioner has triggered conservative calls for a crackdown on "criminal young foreigners" and exposed deeply entrenched xenophobia that casts doubt on this country's ability ever to fully integrate its 15 million inhabitants with an immigrant background.

The 76-year-old pensioner suffered a fractured skull when he was beaten by a 20-year-old Turkish man born in Germany and a 17-year-old immigrant from Greece on December 20 after he asked them to stop smoking on a subway train in Munich, where smoking is forbidden.

The pensioner recovered after a spell in hospital and recalls how they spat at him and called him a "Shit German" before kicking him in the head. Police arrested the attackers shortly afterwards and the case could have been closed as a cowardly assault by two violent criminals who both have long police records.

But a senior member of Chancellor Angela Merkel's Christian Democrats, Hesse state premier Roland Koch (more...), seized on the fact that the attackers weren't German and decided to launch a debate about foreign criminals.

"How much are we prepared to take from a small proportion of violent youths, who frequently have a foreign background?" Koch, who is struggling in his campaign to win a third term in a state election on January 27, told mass circulation Bild Zeitung in an interview published last Friday.

"We have spent too long showing a strange sociological understanding for groups that consciously commit violence as ethnic minorities," he went on. Xenophobia at the Heart of German Politics >>> By David Crossland

Mark Alexander (Paperback)
Mark Alexander (Hardback)

Tuesday, January 01, 2008

Jefferts Schori in Gay Row

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Photo of Presiding Bishop Jefferts Schori courtesy of the BBC

BBC: The head of the Anglicans in the United States has accused other churches, including the Church of England, of double standards over sexuality.

The Presiding Bishop of the Episcopal Church, Katherine Jefferts Schori, told the BBC her church is paying the price for its honesty over sexuality.

The threat of schism in the Anglican Communion was prompted by the appointment of a gay bishop.

The US church appointed an openly gay man Gene Robinson as a bishop in 2003.

Presiding Bishop Jefferts Schori defended her ministry.

"He is certainly not alone in being a gay bishop, he's certainly not alone in being a gay partnered bishop," she said.

"He is alone in being the only gay partnered bishop who's open about that status." US Anglican head in sexuality row >>> By Christopher Landau

LISTEN TO BBC AUDIO:
US Anglican sexuality row

Mark Alexander (Paperback)
Mark Alexander (Hardback)

Monday, December 31, 2007

Aus dem Herzen des Islam: Der Terror!

WELTONLINE: Dem wahren Gesicht des Islam begegnet man nicht auf der deutschen Islamkonferenz. Man begegnet ihm in Ländern wie Pakistan. Dieser Islam richtet sich gegen alle, die nicht nach den Regeln des Koran leben - gegen Demokraten, gegen Atheisten und vor allem gegen Frauen. Und die Welt schaut wie paralysiert zu.

Auch wenn die meisten Muslime es nicht wahrhaben wollen, der Terror kommt aus dem Herzen des Islam, er kommt direkt aus dem Koran. Er richtet sich gegen alle, die nicht nach den Regeln des Koran leben und handeln, also gegen Demokraten, abendländisch inspirierte Denker und Wissenschaftler, gegen Agnostiker und Atheisten. Und er richtet sich vor allem gegen Frauen. Er ist Handwerk des männerbündischen Islam, der mit aller Macht verhindern möchte, dass Frauen gleichberechtigt werden und ihre Jahrhunderte lange Unterjochung ein Ende findet.

Dem wahren Gesicht des Islam begegnet man nicht auf der deutschen Islamkonferenz. Man begegnet ihm in Ländern wie Pakistan. Dieser Islam hat einen Weltkrieg angefangen. Doch die Welt tut so, als wüsste sie immer noch nichts davon. Für viele Zeitgenossen schlagen weit hinten in der Türkei, die Völker aufeinander ein. Es gibt in unserer vernetzten Welt aber kein „weit hinten“ mehr. Sondern nur noch ein „draußen vor der Tür“. Der Totalitarismus der Taliban und der muslimischen Terrorzellen ist wahrscheinlich schlimmer als der Faschismus, denn er ist nicht das Ergebnis eines Zivilisationsprozesses. Er entsteht in einem Raum, in dem nichts mehr an zivilisatorischen Fortschritt erinnert. Der Terror kommt aus dem Herzen des Islam >>>

Mark Alexander (Paperback)
Mark Alexander (Hardback)
Islam: Religion or Cult?


Hat tip: The Truth About Islam

Mark Alexander (Paperback)
Mark Alexander (Hardback)

Sunday, December 30, 2007

Dr Isaac Kfir: Great Triumph for Radicals

YNET NEWS – OPINION: Expert says Bhutto assassination to gravely undermine Pakistan democracy hopes

“Benazir Bhutto’s assassination is an earthquake in Pakistan,” says Dr. Isaac Kfir, an international relations lecturer at the Interdisciplinary Center in Herzliya and a Pakistan expert. Kfir believes that the terror attack that killed the opposition leader constitutes a grave blow to democratic aspirations in the Islamic state. “Her death will cause a huge shock in the country and lead to the opposition party’s collapse. This is an immense achievement for radical Islam,” he says.

Bhutto, the former Pakistani prime minister, was murdered Thursday in a shooting attack carried out by a suicide bomber. Dr. Kfir says that the opposition leader’s death will gravely undermine her party’s future. “Her death will neutralize the opposition party because there is no suitable candidate that could take her place,” he says. “This could lead to a party split and a leadership struggle.”

In addition, Kfir says that the murder significantly boosts the power of Islamists in Pakistan under the leadership of al-Qaeda activists. “The Bhutto assassination proves that radical Islam has shifted from Afghanistan to Pakistan and is moving from rural areas into the large cities. The Taliban may grow stronger and so would al-Qaeda – one of its leaders, Ayman al-Zawahiri, called for Bhutto’s murder and viewed her as a US and Western puppet,” Kfir notes. Great triumph for radicals >>> By Roee Mandel

YNET NEWS OPINION:
World peace at stake: Bhutto assassination could have far-reaching implications for global security By Ronen Bergman

Mark Alexander (Paperback)
Mark Alexander (Hardback)
Islamophobia


In the Name of Allah

Mark Alexander (Paperback)
Mark Alexander (Hardback)
Bhutto’s Death May Bring Musharraf Down

THE TELEGRAPH: As in Yeats's Easter 1916, death changes our view of certain people utterly. It's a tricky thing to broach the martyrdom and apotheosis of someone you didn't like and have publicly criticised.

The news reports after Benazir Bhutto's death repeatedly featured footage of her uttering the fateful words, "Don't worry, God willing, I will be safe. I will be safe."

I'd seen that same interview earlier and at the time I commented scornfully on the platitudes carefully chosen to appeal to her Western audience, the peculiar nasal delivery, the disingenuousness.

What I saw after her murder was only vulnerability, the uncertain smile that followed the words, and her bravery. And it made me profoundly sad.

Who can doubt that Benazir was physically brave? With an executed father and two murdered brothers, no one could have been more aware of the risks of entering Pakistani politics. But she refused to be intimidated by threats from local opponents and extremists who viewed her as an American stooge.

She continued campaigning even after the attempt on her life the day she returned to Pakistan on October 18, which left up to 140 people dead. In the end she was killed just two miles from the spot where her father, Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto, was hanged 28 years earlier. As prime minister, Benazir Bhutto did little >>> Says Jemima Khan

Mark Alexander (Paperback)
Mark Alexander (Hardback)
Poles Could Split Church

THE TELEGRAPH: The leader of the country's Roman Catholics has sparked a row by accusing immigrants of creating a separate church in Britain.

Cardinal Cormac Murphy-O'Connor, the Archbishop of Westminster, urged the Polish community to do more to learn English and integrate into local parishes, claiming the Catholic Church in the UK was in danger of dividing along ethnic lines as the number of Polish-speaking churches rose.



Leading Polish community figures said they felt "violated" and "spiritually raped" by his words and called for talks on the issue.



New research, revealed last week by The Sunday Telegraph, shows that an influx of eastern Europeans boosts numbers attending Mass above those at Church of England Sunday services.

The research ended a momentous week which saw Tony Blair formally convert to Catholicism, while official figures to be released in the new year will show a rise in Mass attendance in 2006.

The number of churchgoers fell 40 per cent between 1963 and 1991, but the arrival of immigrants from Catholic countries in eastern Europe halted the decline and led to an increase in weekly Mass attendance from 917,500 in 2005 to 927,154 last year. Catholic leader claims Poles could split Church >>> By Jonathan Wynne-Jones and Vikki Miller

Mark Alexander (Paperback)
Mark Alexander (Hardback)