Monday, January 21, 2008

Women to Be Allowed to Drive in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia!

THE TELEGRAPH: Saudi Arabia is to lift its ban on women drivers in an attempt to stem a rising suffragette-style movement in the deeply conservative state.

Government officials have confirmed the landmark decision and plan to issue a decree by the end of the year.

The move is designed to forestall campaigns for greater freedom by women, which have recently included protesters driving cars through the Islamic state in defiance of a threat of detention and loss of livelihoods.

The royal family has previously balked at granting women driving permits, claiming the step did not have full public support.

The driving ban dates back to the establishment of the state in 1932, although recently the government line has weakened.

"There has been a decision to move on this by the Royal Court because it is recognised that if girls have been in schools since the 1960s, they have a capability to function behind the wheel when they grow up," a government official told The Daily Telegraph. "We will make an announcement soon." Saudi Arabia to lift ban on women drivers >>> By Damien McElroy in Riyadh

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We Want to Offer Sharia Law to Britain

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Photo of Dr Husaib Hasan, a man pushing for the integration of personal sharia law into the British legal system, courtesy of The Telegraph

THE TELEGRAPH: Islamic courts meet every week in the UK to rule on divorces and financial disputes. Clare Dwyer Hogg and Jonathan Wynne-Jones report on demands by senior Muslims that sharia be given legal authority

Amnah is a modern British Muslim. She is dressed in a denim skirt and her head is covered in a hijab. Poised and self-assured, she has come to meet Dr Suhaib Hasan, a silver-bearded sheikh who sits behind his desk, surrounded by religious books.

"But why would I have to observe the waiting period?" she asks him. "What are the reasons?" There is an urgency to her questions.

"These reasons don't apply to me, that's what I'm very confused about. If you could give me the reasons why I have to wait three months, then I'll understand."

Amnah is going through a divorce and is baffled at being told that she must wait for three months to remarry, considering that she hasn't seen her estranged husband for two years.

She twists her sock-clad toes into the carpet, grasping one hand with the other in her lap, and fixes Dr Hasan with an intense look. He meets this with a simple reply: "These rulings are all in the Koran. The rulings are made for all."

Amnah has little choice but to comply: Dr Hasan is a judge, and this is a sharia court - in east London. It sits, innocuously, at the end of a row of terrace houses in Leyton: a converted corner shop, with blinds on the windows, office- style partitions and a makeshift reception area.

It is one of dozens of sharia courts - also known as councils - that have been set up in mosques, Islamic centres and even schools across Britain. The number of British Muslims using the courts is increasing.

To many in the West, talk of sharia law conjures up images of the floggings, stonings, amputations and beheadings carried out in hardline Islamic states such as Saudi Arabia and Iran. However, the form practised in Britain is more mundane, focusing mainly on marriage, divorce and financial disputes.

The judgments of the courts have no basis in British law, and are therefore technically illegitimate - they are binding only in that those involved agree to comply. For British Muslims who are keen to follow Islam, this poses a dilemma. An Islamic marriage is not recognised by British law, and therefore many couples will have two ceremonies - civil for the state, and Islamic for their faith.

If they wish to divorce, they must then seek both a civil and an Islamic divorce.

Dr Hasan, who has been presiding over sharia courts in Britain for more than 25 years, argues that British law would benefit from integrating aspects of Islamic personal law into the civil system, so that divorces could be rubber-stamped in the same way, for example, that Jewish couples who go to the Beth Din court have their divorce recognised in secular courts.

He points out that the Islamic Sharia Council, of which he is the general secretary, is flooded with work. It hears about 50 divorce cases every month, and responds to as many as 10 requests every day by email and phone for a fatwa - a religious verdict on a religious matter.

Dr Hasan, who is also a spokesman for the Muslim Council of Britain on issues of sharia law, says there is great misunderstanding of the issue in the West.

"Whenever people associate the word 'sharia' with Muslims, they think it is flogging and stoning to death and cutting off the hand," he says with a smile.

He makes the distinction between the aspects of law that sharia covers: worship, penal law, and personal law. Muslim leaders in Britain are interested only in integrating personal law, he says. We want to offer sharia law to Britain >>> Page 2 and >>> Page 3 By Clare Dwyer Hogg and Jonathan Wynne-Jones

The Origins and Obligations of Sharia Law

Hat tip: Common Sense Against Islam

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Start of a Beautiful Friendship?

THE FIRST POST: A union of Europe and America might stand up to China, but how realistic is it, asks PHILLIP BLOND

For the first time in several hundred years the West is on the losing side of history. This is the thesis of Edouard Balladur, the former French Prime Minister who in a recent essay argues that "history is starting to be made without the West and perhaps one day it will be made against it".

The 78-year-old statesman believes that Western values are so threatened that the only way to defend global democracy and the rule of law is for the US and the EU to consider a real political, economic and cultural union.

Like many he fears that the West is in cultural decline and unable to face the challenges that confront it. America and Europe, economically stagnant and unable to innovate and prosper in the face of Chinese and Indian economic success, face new shared dangers in Islamic fundamentalism, and the rise of hostile independent states such as Iran and Russia.

For Balladur, the West must undergo a revolution in thinking and come together and defend its common values in the face of unprecedented global threats.

This is more than the delightful delusions of an aloof French aristocrat. These ideas are taken seriously at the highest level. Nicolas Sarkozy is certainly listening: the current President of France, a close confidante and political ally of Balladur, is intrigued by the prospect of a renewed Western project with France at its centre.

Moreover, the British elite have long been seduced by the idea of a transatlantic free-trade pact. While Angela Merkel, the German PM, wants to extend the traditional trans-Atlantic military alliance into new cultural and economic agreements based around common values and beliefs.

Looking at it objectively, Balladur expresses unmistakable geo-political truths. The age of Western dominance is clearly over. America may still be a superpower but within a generation it will be equalled by other nations both economically and militarily. Opinion: Start of a Beautiful friendship? >>> By Phillip Bond

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Turkey’s Leaders Plan Muslim Europe

THE FIRST POST: For the AKP, democracy is merely a means to a higher Islamic goal, says edward luttwak

If you thought Turkey was no threat to the West, think again. A new generation of politicians is aiming to Islamise the state by stealth. The AKP - Adalet ve Kalkinma Partisi, or Justice and Development Party - has a stranglehold on Turkey for the foreseeable future.

The AKP was founded to replace a previous Islamic party banned for extremism. It benefited hugely from the corruption scandals that dragged down the previous government, taking two-thirds of parliament in the 2002 general election (on a third of the vote).
On Friday, its ex-foreign secretary Abdullah Gul narrowly failed to win a victory in the first round of presidential elections. The result was close enough to prompt public demonstrations by secularists ahead of the second round voting on May 2, and a statement from the military - long the guardians of Turkey's secular traditions - warning against a pro-Islam political agenda.

Since coming to power, the AKP has done nothing revolutionary, but it does have a revolutionary agenda. For all their suavity, its leaders seek to transform the country into a Sunni Muslim republic. This collides with institutions and laws strictly limiting Islam's role in public life, and with a long-standing security alliance with Israel.

It also collides with democracy itself, for no Koranic state can have a sovereign parliament free to legalise such abominations as equal rights for women and homosexuals or the drinking of alcohol.

A sinister slogan attributed to the AKP is that democracy is 'a bus we can ride until we reach our station'. Under Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan and his foreign secretary Abdullah Gul, the party has been cautious until now.

But abroad the AKP has been more strident. Turkey has stepped up relations with Muslim countries and cooled them with Israel. They have capitalised on public suspicion of the Western war on terror and yet have pursued Turkey's application to join the EU. Opinion: Turkey’s leaders plan Muslim Europe >>> By Edward Luttwak

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Euro Bosses to Bet on Turkey

TURKISH DAILY NEWS: 'Turkey is already a member of the EU for us,' Volvo Group's CEO says. This world-leading company is making positive noises about Turkey's future as it considers Turkey a regional hub to ease its distribution to the Middle East, Caucasus and the Balkans, and talks of plans for introducing more 'environment friendly' vehicles in the country

The world's leading car, truck and construction equipment manufacturing giant, the Volvo Group, has chosen Turkey as its regional hub for future investments.

“We consider Turkey as a center to distribute our products to the Middle East and the Caucasus. As a first step we have decided to establish an assembly factory for Renault Trucks,” Leif Johansson, president and the CEO of the Volvo Group, told the Turkish Daily News, in an exclusive interview here Friday.

Renault Trucks, a member of the Volvo Group since 1992, which produces light and heavy commercial vehicles, plans to sell more than 100,000 vehicles by 2010. The trucks that are manufactured in factories in France and Spain are assembled in 11 different countries. Turkey will be the 12th, according to Johansson.

“For us Turkey is already a member of the European Union. Not only important due to its geographic location in its region, Turkey is also a good market for us in itself,” he said. Euro bosses to bet on Turkey >>> By SERKAN DEMİRTAŞ

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Türkei sperrte erneut Zugang zu "YouTube"

WIENER ZEITUNG: Istanbul. Weil der Gründer der republikanischen Türkei, Mustafa Kemal Atatürk, in einem Clip bei "YouTube" herabgewürdigt worden sein soll, haben die türkischen Behörden landesweit den Zugang zu dem Internet-Videoportal gesperrt. Statt der "YouTube"-Internetseite erschien am Montagvormittag auf türkischen Computern der Hinweis, dass der Zugang aufgrund einer Entscheidung eines Gerichts Ankara gesperrt worden sei. In dem Video-Clip ist Atatürk angeblich als "türkischer Affe" bezeichnet worden. Wegen Verunglimpfung des Staatsgründers Atatürk, Türkei sperrte erneut Zugang zu "YouTube" >>>

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Saudi Woman Considers Suicide after Judge Annuls Her Marriage to the Man She Loves

DAILY MAIL: A Saudi woman is appealing to Saudi Arabia's King Abdullah to reunite her with the husband she loves after her relatives went behind her back to seek a divorce on the grounds she had married beneath her.

Two years ago, a knock on Fatima and Mansour al-Timani's door shattered the life they had built together. It was the police, delivering news that a judge had annulled their marriage in absentia, thanks to her relatives' efforts.

Under Saudi Arabia's strict segregation rules that means the couple can no longer live together. They sued to reverse the ruling, publicised their story and sought help from a Saudi human rights group.

But, after a spell in jail - for living together illegally - the two remain apart and Fatima is considering suicide, she said, if her recent appeal to King Abdullah doesn't reunite her with the man she still considers her husband.

"I want to return to my husband, but if that is not possible, I need to know so I can put an end to my life," she said. Saudi woman considering suicide after family go behind her back to divorce her from man she loves >>>

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Sunday, January 20, 2008

Dutch Government Ready for Wilders’ Film Fall-Out

DUTCH NEWS: Government security experts have drawn up a 20-page document detailing how to deal with the expected fall-out of the anti-Koran film being made by MP Geert Wilders, the Volkskrant reports on Friday.

The paper says the document, marked 'state secret' has been circulated to need-to-know ministers only.

There are also instructions for diplomatic staff so that they will be ready to deal with protests and embassy evacuation plans have been drawn up, the paper says.

Ambassadors in Islamic countries are currently talking to their contacts about the film. While stressing that freedom of speech is an important in the Netherlands, they are also making it clear that Wilders’ opinions are not shared by the government, the paper says.

The film is due to be screened at the end of the month. [Source: Government ready for Wilders’ film fall-out]

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Au Vatican, plus de 100 000 personnes défendent la “liberté de parole” dup ape Benoît XVI

LE MONDE: A l'occasion de la prière de l'Angelus, dimanche 20 janvier, entre 100 000 et 200 000 personnes se sont rendues à la place St-Pierre au Vatican pour écouter le pape Benoît XVI et lui apporter leur soutien, après que sa visite à l'université La Sapienza de Rome a été annulée sur fond d'une contestation née parmi les enseignants.

"Merci à tous de votre présence, a lancé le souverain pontife depuis la fenêtre de son bureau, allons de l'avant dans un esprit de fraternité et d'amour pour la liberté et la vérité et un engagement commun pour bâtir une société fraternelle et tolérante". Revenant sur l'annulation de sa visite à La Sapienza, la plus grande université italienne, le pape a expliqué que "le climat qui s'était créé avait rendu inopportune ma présence". Au Vatican, plus de 100 000 personnes défendent la "liberté de parole" du pape Benoît XVI >>>

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Libanon: Nasrallah provoziert

DIE PRESSE: Kairo/Beirut. Mit einem Paukenschlag meldete sich der Hisbollah-Generalsekretär Hassan Nasrallah bei seinem ersten öffentlichen Auftritt seit über einem Jahr zurück. Anlässlich des schiitischen Aschura-Festes schlug Nasrallah vor Zehntausenden seiner Anhänger den für ihn typischen selbstbewussten Ton an. „Wenn Israel gegen den Libanon einen neuen Krieg beginnt, versprechen wir ihnen einen Krieg, der die gesamte Region verändern wird“, rief er unter dem frenetischen Applaus seiner Anhänger.

Hisbollah besitze „Köpfe, Hände und Beine“ israelischer Soldaten, die während des jüngsten Libanonkriegs getötet worden waren. Man verfüge sogar über eine fast vollständige Leiche, ließ er in einem besonders makaberen Teil seiner Rede verlauten. „Die israelische Armee war auf dem Feld so schwach, dass sie nicht nur die Überreste von zwei, drei sondern von vielen Soldaten zurückgelassen hat“, sagte der Hisbollah-Chef. Libanon: Nasrallah provoziert: Israel schäumt über „Leichenteile“-Aussage >>> Von Karim El-Gawhary

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Geert Wilders ‘Teaser’ of New Film on Islam


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Ashura

BBC: Ashura in Pictures

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Anti-Islamisation Campaign in Europe

RADIO NETHERLANDS WORLDWIDE: Far-right groups are calling for a ban on the building of new mosques as part of a new campaign to stop the spread of radical Islam in Europe. 
 


Belgium's far-right Vlaams Belang party teamed up with radical groups from Austria and Germany on Thursday to launch a Charter to 'fight the Islamisation of West-European cities'.


"We are not opposed to freedom of religion but we don't want Muslims to impose their way of life and traditions over here because much of it is not compatible with our way of life," Vlaams Belang's Filip Dewinter told Radio Netherlands Worldwide. "We can't accept headscarves in our schools, forced marriages and the ritual slaughter of animals."
 


Mosques as catalysts

In particular, the coalition called for a moratorium on new mosques, which they say "act as catalysts for the Islamisation of entire neighbourhoods."
 


"We already have over 6,000 mosques in Europe, which are not only a place to worship but also a symbol of radicalisation, some financed by extreme groups in Saudi Arabia or Iran," Mr Dewinter explained, citing a large new mosque being built in the Dutch port city of Rotterdam. "Its minarets are six floors high, higher than the illuminations of the Feyenoord soccer stadium!" he cried. "These kinds of symbols have to stop." Anti-Islamisation campaign in Europe >>> By Vanessa Mock

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Dutch Government Fears Violence over Geert Wilders’ Film

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Photo of Geert Wilders courtesy of Google Images

THE GUARDIAN: The Dutch government is bracing itself for violent protests following the scheduled broadcast this week of a provocative anti-Muslim film by a radical right-wing politician who has threatened to broadcast images of the Koran being torn up and otherwise desecrated.

Cabinet ministers and officials, fearing a repetition of the crisis sparked by the publication of cartoons of Muhammad in a Danish newspaper two years ago, have held a series of crisis meetings and ordered counter-terrorist services to draw up security plans. Dutch nationals overseas have been asked to register with their embassies and local mayors in the Netherlands have been put on standby.

Geert Wilders, one of nine members of the extremist VVD (Freedom) party in the 150-seat Dutch lower house, has promised that his film will be broadcast - on television or on the internet - whatever the pressure may be. It will, he claims, reveal the Koran as 'source of inspiration for intolerance, murder and terror'.

Dutch diplomats are already trying to pre-empt international reaction. 'It is difficult to anticipate the content of the film, but freedom of expression doesn't mean the right to offend,' said Maxime Verhagen, the Foreign Minister, who was in Madrid to attend the Alliance of Civilisations, an international forum aimed at reducing tensions between the Islamic world and the West. In Amsterdam, Rotterdam and other towns with large Muslim populations, imams say they have needed to 'calm down' growing anger in their communities.

Government officials hope that no mainstream media organisation will agree to show the film, although one publicly funded channel, Nova, initially agreed before pulling out. 'A broadcast on a public channel could imply that the government supported the project,' said an Interior Ministry spokesman. Violence fear over Islam film: Counter-terrorism alert as a Dutch right-winger launches a movie that will denounce the Koran >>> By Jason Burke, Europe editor

AFP:
Unease in the Netherlands over MP’s planned anti-Islam film

Geert Wilders:
Geert Wilders’ official website (in Dutch)

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New ‘Black Pope’ to Build Bridges with East

THE SUNDAY TELEGRAPH: A little-known Spanish priest, who has spent his entire life in Asia among the poor, has been elected to lead the Jesuits, the Catholic Church’s largest religious order.

Father Adolfo Nicolás was chosen by 217 electors as the new "Black Pope".

The nickname derives from the power and influence he will wield, as well as from the simple black garments he will wear. 

His appointment came almost two weeks after the Jesuits began their 35th General Conference, at which Father Peter Hans Kolvenbach, the previous leader, stepped down.

Fr Nicolás has lived in the Far East since 1964, when he studied theology in Tokyo, spending his time in the Philippines and Japan.

In the last three years, he has run Jesuit operations in East Asia and Oceania. He speaks five languages.

The appointment reflects the desire of the order, which has 20,000 members around the world, to build bridges with the East. New 'Black Pope' to build bridges with East >>> By Malcolm Moore in Rome

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Women Turn on ‘Traitor’ Oprah

THE SUNDAY TIMES: AMERICA’S favourite television presenter is paying a painful price for her intervention in the US presidential campaign last month. Oprah Winfrey has been dubbed a “traitor” by some of her female fans for supporting Barack Obama instead of Hillary Clinton.

Winfrey’s website, Oprah.com, has been flooded with a barrage of abuse since the queen of daytime chat shows joined Obama on a tour of Iowa, New Hampshire and South Carolina in mid-December.

Her intervention was widely credited with broadening Obama’s national appeal - especially among women - and with helping him to an upset victory over Clinton in the first vote of the election year in Iowa.

Yet a backlash by Clinton supporters appears to have prompted a rethink by Winfrey, the African-American media titan who is routinely described as the most influential woman on television.

She did not reappear in the final days before the New Hampshire primary - which Obama lost to Clinton - and has been absent from the most recent campaigning in South Carolina, which votes next weekend. Women turn on ‘traitor’ Oprah Winfrey for backing Barack Obama: Oprah fans leave a barrage of negative messages on her official website in response to the talk show host's support of Obama >>> By Tony Allen-Mills, New York

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Saturday, January 19, 2008

Hillary Wins Tight Nevada Caucus

BBC: Hillary Clinton has won a fiercely contested election in the US state of Nevada, according to projections based on 88% of the vote count.

Preliminary figures show Mrs Clinton with 51% of the vote, to 45% for Barack Obama. Both candidates have fought hard to win the support of Latino voters.

US TV networks project a big win in the state for Republican Mitt Romney.

The party's contest in Nevada has been overshadowed by a closely-fought primary being held in South Carolina.

Voting continues in the first southern state to hold a primary, where Republicans John McCain and Mike Huckabee, who appear to be the frontrunners in a very tight race, have focused their efforts.

But a win in Nevada for Mr Romney, the former governor of Massachusetts, could give him a useful boost going into the next primary vote in Florida. Clinto wins tight Nevada caucus >>>

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The Problem of Militant Islam in Europe


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Islamic Extremism Growing in Britain


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Islamification of Britain


Part 1: Multiculturalism and Islamification


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Brigitte Gabriel, a Survivor of Islamic Terrorism Warns America

Part !:

Part 2:

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Wafa Sultan: Terrorism and Islam


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Globaloney

DEFENDING AMERICA FOR KNOWLEDGE AND ACTION (DAFKA): There is something surreal about the spectacle of President Bush touring the Persian Gulf. It calls to mind the signature line of Mad Magazine's mascot, Alfred E. Neuman: "What, me worry?"

Mr. Bush's trip is, after all, premised on the notion that the Arab leaders he is courting there are reliable allies. Such a proposition should be subjected to the closest of critical scrutiny by Congress, the press and the American electorate since a number of highly debatable, and increasingly portentous, policies are predicated on this assumption. These include:

--Saudi Arabia and the other, smaller desert principalities are "moderates" who are as opposed as we to the totalitarian political agenda of fanatical ideologues such as Osama bin Laden.

--The Gulfies share our concern about the rising power of Iran and therefore can be counted upon to join us in countering that region's would-be Islamofascist superpower. It follows not only that we can safely provide these autocracies with an array of advanced weapons, but we must do so.

--The Arab regimes in the Persian Gulf will help broker a peace between Palestinians and Israelis — if only the United States pressures the Jewish State to make territorial and other concessions that may imperil the latter.

--And the willingness of the Gulf's potentates to recycle the immense wealth they have accumulated in recent years — primarily through oil sales at exorbitantly inflated prices — to purchase big stakes in U.S. companies and capital markets is a welcome development. Such investment is to be encouraged, and those who say otherwise should be condemned as "Chicken Little xenophobes" in the words of former General Electric Chairman Jack Welch and his wife, Suzy.

In fact, the Welch tag-team used a Jan. 21 Business Week column to admonish a letter-writer worried about Arab and other sovereign wealth funds buying up American corporations: "In trying times, U.S. companies always attract opportunistic, activist shareholders. Sometimes they look like Carl Icahn or Nelson Peltz. Sometimes they look like shiny-faced hedge fund managers just out of Wharton or Harvard Business School. And sometimes — like now — they look Chinese or Saudi or whatever. It doesn't matter. They're all after the same thing: the opportunities in America's capitalistic market."

Unfortunately, this confidence in the inexorable forces of "globalization" is as misplaced in the case of the so-called "pro-Western" Arab states as are the other assumptions driving American policy towards the region at the moment. Globaloney >>> By Frank Gaffney (from The Washington Times)

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L'Espagne de nouveau face à la menace terroriste ?

LE FIGARO: 14 personnes supposées être en relation avec le «terrorisme islamique radical» ont été interpellées à Barcelone par la garde civile.

C'est une arrestation qui risque de réveiller le cauchemar des attentats du 11 mars 2004. Samedi matin, la garde civile espagnole a interpellé 14 personnes dans un quartier de Barcelone pour leur relation présumée avec le «terrorisme islamique radical».

Selon le ministre de l'Intérieur Alfredo Perez Rubalcaba, il existe des preuves indiquant que les suspects, 12 Pakistanais et deux Indiens, font partie d'un groupe qui se préparait à commettre des attentats à Barcelone. D'après des informations fournies par des agences de renseignements européennes, une action violente était en cours de préparation. L'Espagne de nouveau face à la menace terroriste ? >>>

LE JOURNAL DU DIMANCHE:
Des terroristes visaient l'Espagne Par Sabrina Bestani

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