Obama overrules FBI and DHS on release of Gitmo jihadists into American civilian population

They told him these guys were dangerous jihadists, and Obama doesn't seem to care. They're coming to your neighborhood whether you or the FBI or DHS like it or not. Relax. What could go wrong?

An update on this story. "BREAKING: White House Overrides FBI and DHS on Gitmo Release," by Jed Babbin for Human Events, April 30 (thanks to Islam In Action):

Moving quickly to release Chinese Uighur terrorists into the United States, Obama administration officials have -- for the second time -- overridden objections of federal agencies responsible for national security.

The first time -- as I reported on April 20 -- the White House overrode the inter-agency panel it created from all the national security agencies to review all the cases of the Guantanamo Bay prisoners. That panel found that the seventeen Uighurs -- members of the East Turkestan Islamic Movement captured at an al-Queda training camp in Pakistan -- were too dangerous to release in the United States.

Now -- according to a federal agency source who requested anonymity -- the White House has also overridden opposition to the release from both the FBI and the Department of Homeland Security.

Beginning yesterday and continuing today, Obama administration officials are briefing key members of Congress on the release, which may happen as early as next week. There apparently has been no decision on where the Uighurs will be turned loose. Earlier reports suggested they could be released in Alexandria, Virginia or Washington, D.C.

How about put them up in the White House?

Muslim Only Hours at Local Pool in Italy

Muslim women in the northern Italian province of Bergamo now have private access to a local swimming pool where they can swim freely without traditional clothing. Men are not permitted to swim at the Siloe pool when the women remove their veils, or burquas, at designated times each week, according to the Italian daily, Corriere della Sera.

Maida Ziaradi, an Iranian who has lived in Italy for 17 years spearheaded the move and said many Muslim women from Tunisia, Morocco, Iran and Egypt as well as Italians can take advantage of it.

The pool is owned by the diocese of Bergamo and the arrangement with the Muslim women is seen as a form of ecumenical respect for the Koran.

"At the beginning several (women) were hesitant and fearful," Ziaradi said.

"One had never swum before, others made a remarkable effort exposing their legs, one was terrified of the water and now doesn't miss a lesson."

Italy is not the first country to introduce designated swimming for Muslim women. In Germany the burqua can be worn in some public swimming pools, while in Australia some public pools have specific timetables for Muslim women.

Mecca Laalaa, a 22 year-old Australian is the first Muslim woman to become a volunteer surf life saver, wearing a specially designed costume or 'burkini'.

The burkini that completely covers the body and head, leaving the face exposed.

18% of Muslims in Denmark agree that "Sharia law should be integrated into Danish law"

Not quite as "zealous" as Britain's Muslims, 61% of which want sharia, but a start. "Denmark: 18% of Muslims want to see Sharia law implemented," from Islam in Europe, April 30:

Close to a fifth of Muslims in Denmark want to see Sharia law implemented in Denmark. A study conducted by analysis institute Capacent for DR news shows that 18% of Muslims in Denmark declare they 'agree' or 'completely agree' with the statement: "Sharia law should be integrated into Danish law".

Sharia legislation is several hundred years old and built on principles from the Koan and report of the Prophet Muhammad's life.

But the notion of what sharia is, is interpreted very different by Muslims round the world.

In countries like Sudan, Nigeria and Iran sharia law means that adultery or stealing can lead to cutting off of hands or whipping. At the same time, there are laws which considerably place women worse off than men, which means that women can be refused the right to a divorce.

In several Western countries, some Sharia law is implemented. Here in Denmark it's possible to receive a so-called sharia-loan without interest, and in Great Britain there are so-called sharia councils which can solve private conflicts between Muslims.

Six of '10 Worst Countries to be a Blogger' are Muslim

With a military government that severely restricts Internet access and imprisons people for years for posting critical material, Burma is the worst place in the world to be a blogger, the Committee to Protect Journalists says in a new report. CPJ’s “10 Worst Countries to be a Blogger” also identifies a number of countries in the Middle East and Asia where Internet penetration has blossomed and government repression has grown in response.

“Bloggers are at the vanguard of the information revolution and their numbers are expanding rapidly,” said CPJ Executive Director Joel Simon. “But governments are quickly learning how to turn technology against bloggers by censoring and filtering the Internet, restricting online access and mining personal data. When all else fails, the authorities simply jail a few bloggers to intimidate the rest of the online community into silence or self-censorship.”

Relying on a mix of detentions, regulations, and intimidation, authorities in Iran, Syria, Saudi Arabia, Tunisia, and Egypt have emerged as the leading online oppressors in the Middle East and North Africa. China and Vietnam, where burgeoning blogging cultures have encountered extensive monitoring and restriction, are among Asia’s worst blogging nations. Cuba and Turkmenistan, nations where Internet access is heavily restricted, round out the dishonor roll.

“The governments on the list are trying to roll back the information revolution, and, for now, they are having success,” Simon added. “Freedom of expression groups, concerned governments, the online community, and technology companies need to come together to defend the rights of bloggers around the world.”

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British airline apologizes for deleting Israel from map

The existence of Jews in Israel, most who are indigenous to the Middle East, offends Muslims. So a ridiculous British company decides to remove "Israel" off the map just in case.
British airline BMI apologized Thursday for deleting Israel from an electronic map that appears on its flights.

Army Radio reported earlier that BMI's London-Tel Aviv flights, Israel and most of its cities weren't marked in order to avoid angering Muslim passengers. Only Haifa was identified - by its Arab name, Khefa.

In its apology, BMI said the plane bearing the map was acquired from a now-defunct airline that flew to several Arab countries in the Middle East, and the map highlighted locations including the Muslim holy city of Mecca.

BMI says the airline asked for the map to be removed once it took over the planes, but there had been a technical mistake.

The airline will provide new maps and BMI will use different aircraft in the meantime for its twice-daily flights to Israel.

BMI also said it was making every effort not to hurt passengers' feelings by adopting a nonpolitical position.

BMI operates flights from England to many popular Muslim destinations, including Syria, Lebanon and Iran, but has also recently launched an agreement with the Tourism Ministry to add Israel to its roster.

Donkey 'Homicide' Bombs Latest Taliban Tactic

A senior British Army officer and six other military personnel survived an attack when a tethered donkey laden with explosives was detonated as their armored vehicle passed in southern Afghanistan.

The huge explosion showered the soldier standing on “top cover” out of the Mastiff’s turret with donkey entrails and blood, and the sight was so gruesome that the rest of those in the vehicle thought he had been mortally wounded in the blast, south of Garmsir in southern Helmand province.

”I’m all right, I’m all right,” he shouted, according to one of the officers at the incident who spoke to The Times, giving the first account of the incident.

”We’d spotted the donkey tethered to a tree as we were on our way down south to monitor an operation that had been going on that day, but thought nothing of it. There are donkeys around everywhere,” the officer said.

Nothing happened when they first passed, but as the patrol returned to the British battle group headquarters at Forward Operating Base (FOB) Delhi, explosives hidden in buckets slung from the donkey’s saddle were detonated.

“I was asleep because you can feel quite nauseous travelling in a Mastiff and was woken by the explosion,” the officer said. “When I saw the top cover guy covered in blood, I tried to get to him with emergency medical kit.

“He said he was all right but I told him he had been badly injured. When we realized what had happened it wasn’t long before the first donkey jokes started to come out — ‘drop the dead donkey’ was one, and ‘pain in the ass’ another.”

The explosion damaged three of the wheels of the Mastiff and caused severe hearing problems for the Territorial Army soldier riding aloft. The stench of donkey remains lingered for weeks inside the vehicle.

”We were really lucky, especially the top cover TA soldier. The explosion seemed to go upwards and over the top but there were nails packed into the explosives, so it was a miracle there were no injuries. We reckon the two buckets could hold about 20 kilos of explosives,” the officer said.

Troops in Afghanistan have been attacked by a boy with a wheelbarrow full of explosives and a bicycle with a bomb attached, but the explosion south of Garmsir in southern Helmand province is thought to be the first using tethered livestock.

Algeria: Imam is Imprisoned for Terror Defense

An Algerian imam has been sentenced to two years in prison for defending terrorist practices. The sentence was handed down by the court in Boumerdes, in Cabilia (50km east of Algiers), which is one of the areas worst-hit by attacks from Islamist armed groups.

The Algerian press reports that the imam was arrested in 2008 as he tried to make contact with a member of the terrorist group, who had in fact been killed a week earlier by security forces. Mosques in the country - which in the 1990s formed a favourite pulpit for fundamentalists to incite revolt and violence against the state - are now under heavy surveillance.

7/7 bombings: end of the road

No one will be brought to justice for the mass murder of 52 people in the 7/7 London bombings, security sources conceded last night as three men were acquitted of helping the terrorists.

After a massive security operation, a four-year investigation and two trials costing well in excess of £100 million, three friends of the lead suicide bomber, Mohammad Sidique Khan, were cleared by a jury of being part of his support cell. Sadeer Saleem, 28, left court a free man but Waheed Ali, 25, and Mohammed Shakil, 32, were convicted of attending terrorist training camps and will be sentenced today.

Detectives are certain that the bombers received help from within the Muslim community in Beeston, Leeds, which, they say, is reluctant to co-operate with police. Sources said that potential witnesses had been “actively dissuaded” from helping police. As many as ten sets of unidentified fingerprints were found in bomb factories used by Khan, 30, and the three other men who killed themselves in the attacks on three Tube trains and a London bus on July 7, 2005.

Deputy Assistant Commissioner John McDowall, of the Scotland Yard Counter Terrorism Command, said: “While those directly responsible for the bombings died in the attacks, we remain convinced that others must have been involved in the planning.”

Mr McDowall appealed for witnesses to come forward, but Andy Hayman, the Yard’s head of counter-terrorism in July 2005, writes in The Times today that the trial was “the last throw of the dice” for the 7/7 investigation.

Survivors and relatives of the victims accepted the verdicts with resignation and demanded immediate publication of an Intelligence and Security Committee (ISC) report into 7/7, the urgent opening of inquests and an independent inquiry with powers to summon witnesses.

“We want an inquiry which can get to the bottom of what went wrong and why Khan wasn’t stopped. We don’t want a witch-hunt, we just want the truth,” said Rachel North, who was injured in the blast at King’s Cross.

The ISC report is expected in two weeks. The key issue for the relatives will be the fate of a fax message sent by MI5, which watched Khan in 2004 as he associated with another British terrorist, to West Yorkshire Police asking for his movements to be watched.

Informed sources say that receipt of the fax was never acknowledged. Police did not monitor Khan and he flew to Pakistan where he was groomed by al-Qaeda leaders to become a suicide bomber.

Graham Foulkes, whose son David, 22, died on a Circle Line train at Edgware Road, said that the trial revealed that there had been significant pre-attack intelligence about Khan.

He said: “Immediately after the bombings the Home Secretary, Tony Blair and other politicians were saying these men were ‘clean skins’ and the attacks came ‘out of the blue’. Either they were lying, or the intelligence community lied to the politicians.”

Swine flu: Imam claims virus affirms Koran

What about bird flu then? No warning there.... Muslims do eat chicken, after all.
The global spread of the deadly swine flu virus affirms Islam's teachings and its holy book, the Koran, according to imam Amadia Rachid based in the Italian city of Salerno. "We believe that what is happening shows the truth of our faith," said Algerian-born Rachid in an interview with Adnkronos International (AKI).

Pigs are considered unclean animals in the Muslim and Jewish religions and eating pork is proscribed.

"Even Muslims who live in Italy are talking about swine flu at the moment," Rachid said.

Most Muslims are not worried by the disease, as they don't eat pork and don't work with pig livestock, he said.

"But many believe the disease confirmed the teaching of the Koran."

The Koran orders Muslims to avoid close contact with pigs, as well as not to eat pork, Rachid noted.

"The Islamic faith doesn't explain exactly why pigs should be considered unclean animals," he said.

"But it's clear that for most theologians, it is precisely to avoid the spread of disease that Islamic tradition tends to keep men away from pigs," he added.

Scientific truths lie behind the teachings of the Koran that has taken many centuries for man to discover, Rachid claimed.

The number of probable deaths from swine flu in Mexico - the epicentre of the virus - has risen to 152.

Trial Opens for 27 Muslims Charged With Torture of French Jew

PARIS — The presumed leader of a group of 27 young people charged with participating in the torture and killing of a young French Jew took his seat in juvenile court Wednesday with the defiant declaration, "Allah will be victorious."

The 23-year-old victim, Ilan Halimi was found naked, handcuffed and covered with burn marks near railroad tracks in the Essonne region south of Paris on Feb. 13, 2006. He died on the way to the hospital after being held captive for more than three weeks.

Youssouf Fofana, 28-year-old presumed leader of a group of 10 young women and 17 young men, stands accused of a crime that shocked the nation. He is charged with premeditated murder, demanding ransom, and acts of torture and barbarism, and faces a possible maximum sentence of life imprisonment.

He smiled as he took his seat in the Paris court and said, "Allah will be victorious."

After the opening, the judge ordered the trial be held behind closed doors, with the public and media excluded, as some of the accused were minors at the time of the crime.

With the exception of Fofana, the accused are charged with a variety of crimes, including entrapment, kidnapping by an organized group, sequestration by an organized group that resulted in death, or failing to assist a person in peril.

Fofana and his accomplices tried to kidnap other people, including some of Jewish faith, with the intent to demand ransom before seizing Halimi, the original charges said.

Halimi's mother, Ruth, said in a French television interview aired this week that she believed the proceedings should be open to the public.

She appeared in court, and sat rocking back and forth as if in prayer.

The family's lawyers say Halimi was targeted because he was Jewish. Critics say police initially ignored evidence of anti-Semitic motives in the killing, which caught the attention of senior government officials and prompted fear of a resurgent anti-Semitism in France.

Halimi's body was reburied in a Jerusalem cemetery in 2007.

New Religion of Peace Massacre at Ice Cream Parlor

By Sattar Rahim

BAGHDAD (Reuters) - At least 41 people were killed and 68 wounded on Wednesday when two car bombs ripped through a busy market in Baghdad's Sadr City slum, mowing down families as they crowded around a popular ice cream parlor, police said.

A third car bomb planted in a taxi in the mainly Shi'ite Muslim area was detonated by security forces.

The blasts followed two days of suicide bombings last week in which 150 people died, stirring fears Iraq could descend into a new spiral of sectarian conflict just as it appeared to be emerging from six years of bloodshed.

After Wednesday's explosions, Iraqi troops fired shots to scatter bystanders crowded around charred wreckage. Angry residents threw stones and empty bottles at army vehicles and accused the soldiers of failing to protect them.

"Instead of helping us to evacuate the wounded, they are shooting at us. This is the Maliki government?" one man, calling himself Abu Ahmed, shouted indignantly about the government of Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki.

Many of last week's victims were pilgrims from Shi'ite Iran while the sprawling slum of Sadr City is a stronghold of support for anti-American Shi'ite cleric Moqtada al-Sadr.

Targeting Shi'ites is a tactic used by al Qaeda and other Sunni Islamist insurgents to try to provoke sectarian clashes.

Body parts lay scattered around the smoking wreck of a car after the blasts while the wounded were piled into private cars, minibuses and on the back of a pick-up truck and rushed to hospital. Police vehicles cleared a way for the convoy.

The nearby shops set ablaze by one of the explosions included the popular Aziz al-Kaabi ice cream shop, which residents said is usually crowded with families in the late afternoon, the time the bombs went off.

The second car bomb appeared to have exploded around 60 meters (yards) away near an area of the market selling pets.

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Can Ahmadinejad copy Obama's election slogan? Yes, he can

Iran president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad hopes US leader's winning words will work for him too as he seeks second term

Barack Obama's offer of a hand of friendship to Iran after 30 years of hostility may have met with a sceptical public response from Tehran. But now a rapprochement of sorts may be under way amid evidence that the US president's can-do electioneering tactics have struck a chord with his Iranian counterpart, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.

Obama's signature campaign slogan, Yes We Can, has been replicated by the Iranian president in a promotional video issued for Iran's presidential poll on 12 June, when Ahmadinejad is seeking re-election.

The video features a cover picture of Ahmadinejad wearing his trademark white jacket and pointing to the Farsi phrase Ma Mitavanim (We Can) on a blackboard. The film is aimed at students and capitalises on his former status as a university lecturer.

Its release coincides with that of another campaign video apparently attempting to trump Obama by recounting Ahmadinejad's visit to Turkey.

Obama won international acclaim during a visit to Turkey this month for declaring that the US was "not at war" with Islam and stressing that there were Muslims in his family.

Ahmadinejad's visit last August was arguably less successful. The Islamist president was deprived of full state honours after declining to pay homage to the tomb of Turkey's secular founder, Ataturk, in Ankara. He also endured the indignity of Turkey withdrawing from an anticipated lucrative natural gas contract, partly because of American pressure.

There was further discord when Istanbul residents complained of huge traffic jams caused by security measures for the visit.

The films have been distributed during Ahmadinejad's recent public appearances in and around Tehran. Another video focuses on his provincial trips across Iran, a hallmark of his presidency.

Ahmadinejad's surprise election win four years ago was partly attributed to a promotional film that depicted him as a humble man who empathised with the poor.

Boy wounded in Taliban attack near Karachi dies

by Qaiser Felix

Irfan Masih, 11, succumbed to gunshot wounds he suffered to the head. Five other people were also injured in the attack during which Islamists set fire on Christian homes and Bibles. Activists complain about police inaction.

Karachi (AsiaNews) –Irfan Masih, the 11-year-old boy wounded on 22 April during a Taliban attack against Christians in Tiasar Town near Karachi, has died. In critical conditions from the start, the boy slipped away after five, agonisingly long days.

Fr Emmanuel Yousaf Mani, the director of the National Commission for Justice and Peace (NCJP), led a delegation to the site of the attack. The group, made up of clergymen and lay people, visited the wounded in hospital and then met leaders of the Muttahida Quami Movement (MQM), the only Pakistani party that is opposed to the introduction of Sharia in the Swat Valley.

On 22 April a gang of armed extremists attacked a group of Christians in Tiasar Town, a Karachi suburb, setting six homes on fire and seriously injuring three Christians. One of them was Irfan Masih, whose conditions were serious from the beginning.

Father Mani urged the local Christian community to “remain united”, reassuring them that the NCJP would provide them with free legal aid when matters reach the courts.

According to NCJP activists, the Taliban attacked the Christians because they were wiping off insulting graffiti from the walls of local homes and the local church. The Taliban had scribbled words that incited hatred and violence, like ‘Taliban are coming’, ‘Long live Taliban’ and ‘Be prepared to pay Jizia (Tax for non-Muslims) or embrace Islam’.

The Taliban in question are ethnic Pathan who live opposite the Christian settlement.

The attack took place in two stages. In the second one, around 3.30 pm, Irfan Masih was hit to the head by a gunshot.

The Muslim attackers also stormed several Christian homes and destroyed many copies of the Bible.

Only when Pakistani paramilitary forces moved in a few hours later did things get back to normal.

Christian activists have complained that police from the nearby Surjani station stood idly by when the attack took place.

As an explanation of their inaction, the agents said that both Christians and Muslims opened fire.

However, only Christians were hurt or killed. Five Muslims were arrested, caught brandishing weapons used during the attack.

Taiser Town is home to some 700 Christian families; 300 of them are Catholic from the St Jude Parish Church (Karachi Archdiocese). Their parish priest is Richard D’Souza.

The families used to live in a more central area of Karachi but were evicted and forced to move to the outskirts of the city.

Would-be terrorists sentenced

By Joseph Ryan

A federal judge today sentenced three Muslim immigrants to life in prison for planning an attack on Fort Dix, saying radical ideology and hatred for America drove their plot to kill U.S. soldiers.

The men, brothers from the Balkans, were among five defendants convicted in December of conspiring to target the Burlington County base in a crime prosecutors said was inspired by al-Qaida and proved that homegrown jihadists were plotting inside America.

"Nothing has a greater impact on society than the crime of terrorism," U.S. District Judge Robert Kugler said, before delivering the sentences in a heavily guarded Camden courtroom packed with government officials, the men's relatives and reporters.

Dritan, Shain and Eljvir Duka -- each delivered rambling statements before they were sentenced, quoting the Koran and Thomas Jefferson as they accused prosecutors of manufacturing the case to scare the American people.

"Their job was to make us look as monstrous as possible" said Eljvir Duka, 25.

Dritan Duka, 30, and Shain Duka, 28, were sentenced to an additional 30 years for weapons charges. Federal inmates are not eligible for parole.

Lawyers for the three men said they plan to appeal.

The Dukas, ethnic Albanians who were born in Macedonia, have lived illegally in the U.S. since slipping across the border through Mexico in 1984. They ran a pizzeria and worked as roofers. Shain and Eljvir Duka attended Cherry Hill High School West.

But prosecutors said they also held fervent religious beliefs and studied jihadist videos and lectures. While they had no known ties to established terror groups, authorities said the men trained with guns and scouted Fort Dix and other bases for possible attacks.

"I think that had the FBI and their partners not caught these men, we would have been attending funerals of military personnel at Fort Dix," said acting U.S. Attorney Ralph J. Marra.

After a 12-week trial, the Dukas were convicted of conspiracy and weapons charges but acquitted of attempted murder. The two other defendants, Mohamad Shnewer and Serdar Tatar, are to be sentenced Wednesday.

Defense attorneys argued the men were goaded into the plot by paid government informants. They also said the men talked brazenly but never took concrete steps to kill anyone.

Michael Huff, a lawyer for Dritan Duka, urged the judge to keep in mind the plot was never executed.

"The punishment should not reflect what might have happened," he said.

The case relied heavily on undercover informants.

The investigation began in January 2006 with a tip from a Circuit City clerk in Mount Laurel. Two men dropped off an 8-millimeter tape and wanted it converted to a DVD. The tape showed the defendants firing rifles and shouting Islamic battle cries. The clerk called police.

FBI agents and two paid cooperators spent the next 15 months shadowing the suspects, recording conversations and searching their computers.

U.S. Deputy U.S. Attorney William E. Fitzpatrick said the men were driven solely by their fanatic religious beliefs.

"There was no financial motive. There was nothing else. They seemed to be motivated entirely by revenge, by hatred -- and by animosity of our way of life," said Fitzpatrick, who prosecuted the case with Assistant U.S. Attorney Michael A. Hammer Jr.

During the investigation, authorities recorded hundreds of conversations with the defendants with help from two informants.

On one of the tapes, Eljvir Duka, who is married to Shnewer's sister, said he wanted to "train sniper" and wondered how close he would have to stand from the White House to shoot President Bush.

Afghan's Karzai says will amend controversial law

 Afghan President Hamid Karzai said on Monday the Justice Ministry was amending a controversial law which contains harsh provisions on women that critics have called a step back toward Taliban-era controls.

The law, which applies to Shi'ite Muslims who make up about 15 percent of Afghanistan's population, requires women to satisfy their husbands' sexual desires. Opponents say this could be used to justify marital rape.

Other controversial passages require wives to get permission when leaving the home unless for employment, education or medical reasons, and allow a man to order his wife to wear make-up.

Karzai said the law would be changed to bring it in line with the constitution, which guarantees equal rights for women, and international treaties the country has signed.

"The law is under review and amendments will take place," Karzai told a news conference with visiting British Prime Minister Gordon Brown.

"I assure you that the laws of Afghanistan will be in complete harmony with the constitution of Afghanistan, and the human rights that we have adhered to in our constitution and in the principles of the international treaties," he added.

The legislation sparked an outcry from leaders of Western countries with troops in Afghanistan, including U.S. President Barack Obama who called it "abhorrent."

Karzai signed the law earlier this year, but on Sunday he told women activists he did not fully understood it at the time, the activists said.

The disputed passages are buried in the 239-page law, much of which is written in complicated Islamic theological language.

Some lawmakers have accused Karzai of signing it hastily because he faces an election on August 20 and wants to curry favor with Shi'ite voters, who can swing the contest.

They say he may find it hard to scupper the legislation without offending some powerful Shi'ites.

Taliban suspend peace talks with Pakistan government

Taliban on Monday suspended talks with the Pakistani government on the Swat deal to protest against the military operations in Dir, adjoining Swat Valley, in which so far 30 militants and an army officer have been killed.

As the Pakistani forces intensified the operations for second day on Monday, Tehrik-e-Nifaz-e-Shariah Muhammadi spokesman Izzat Khan told reporters that no peace talks would be held with the government unless the security forces halted the operations.

Taliban spokesman Muslim Khan also said the militants will not lay down their arms at any cost. The Swat peace deal stipulated that the militants would lay down their arms once the demand for enforcing Islamic Sharia law in the once Pakistan's famous tourist resort was implemented.

The security forces continued shelling militant hideouts at several places in Dir district. Interior Ministry chief Rehman Malik said security forces had killed at least 30 militants during the operations, which was launched in retaliation to efforts by the Taliban to extend their influence outside Swat.

The Taliban confirmed that commander Maulvi Shahid was among the militants killed on Sunday. Gunship helicopters targeted militant hideouts, killing and injuring a number of them.

Two personnel of the paramilitary Frontier Corps were also killed and a Major was among five personnel injured in an ambush in Maidan, the hometown of TNSM chief Sufi Muhammad.

Army helicopters airlifted Frontier Corps troops to strategic hilltops in Dir while armoured personnel carriers were seen moving towards the area.

An indefinite curfew was imposed in Lal Qila, Islampura, Kal Kot and several other areas in Dir considered to be strongholds of the Taliban. Security forces on Sunday took control of Lal Qila after clearing the key area of militants.

Reports from Swat this morning said the Taliban had occupied a telephone exchange in Bahrain town.

Security forces arrested four militants with heavy weapons at Khwazakhela in Swat. Militants in Dir have also taken up positions on hilltops to resist the security forces.

The Inter-Services Public Relations said the operation in Dir was launched on the request of the North West Frontier Province government to rid the area of militants who were threatening peace in the area.

The situation in Maidan, the hometown of Sufi Muhammad, worsened after district police chief Khurshid Khan and local mayor Alamzeb Khan were killed and scores of people were kidnapped in the past few weeks.

Taliban-Inspired Attacks Hit Christians

(Compass Direct News) – As Taliban control hits pockets of Pakistan and threatens the nation’s stability, Christians worry their province could be the next to fall under Islamic law. Violence on Tuesday night and Wednesday (April 21-22) near the port city of Karachi – some 1,000 kilometers (nearly 700 miles) from the Swat Valley, where the government officially allowed the Taliban to establish Islamic law this month – heightened fears.

As members of a congregation erased pro-Taliban graffiti on their church in Taiser town, near Karachi, armed men intervened to stop them. Soon 30-40 others arrived as support and began to fire indiscriminately at the crowd; among those seriously injured were three Christians, including a child, according to a report by advocacy group Minorities Concern of Pakistan. Policemen and military forces arrested seven suspects and recovered an arms cache of semi-automatic pistols and a Kalashnikov assault rifle.

A legal advocacy worker told Compass that police stood by as a Taliban-assembled mob attacked the Christians. “The Christians do not have guns, they do not have weapons, but only a little bit of property and the few things in their houses,” said Sohail Johnson, chief coordinator of Sharing Life Ministry Pakistan. A representative of the Muttahida Quami Movement regional party told Compass that after firing on the crowd, Taliban fighters went through Christian houses, ransacked them and burned one down. He said they also burned Bibles and beat women on the street. Reports of two execution-style killings of Christians could not be verified.

Guantanamo Bay works, should stay open, says dad of 9/11 victim

By John Frank

SPRING HILL, Fla. — In a courtroom in a heavily fortified corner of Cuba, Joe Holland first saw the men who killed his son.

He heard them boast about what they had done, how they engineered the attacks that killed nearly 3,000 people on Sept. 11, 2001.

Despite the years of delays and allegations that the men were tortured, despite other failed prosecutions and the debate about the fairness of the military commissions, Holland felt satisfied that justice was being done.

"They are saying they are murderers," Holland thought. "Let's get it over with."

That was Jan. 19, the day before Barack Obama was sworn in as president. The next day, court recessed for the inauguration. It did not resume.

On his second full day in office, President Obama signed an order halting the trials for 120 days and he promised to close the controversial prison at Guantanamo Bay, which for many had become a tainted symbol of a long and unpopular war.

At a news conference outside the courtroom, a reporter asked Holland if he was frustrated. "I said, 'Would you be frustrated that you lost your son and they aren't going to do anything about it?' "

He returned home to Spring Hill emboldened with a mission: to stop a presidential order that seemed unstoppable.

Weeks later, at a Veterans of Foreign Wars hall in Spring Hill, the 65-year-old retired New York City firefighter gave a talk that he has made a lot recently.

He talked about his son, Joey, a 32-year-old commodities trader who was working in the North Tower of the World Trade Center. He talked about how the Pentagon created a program that enabled family members like him to go to Guantanamo to see the trials and tour the facility.

And he talked about what he had seen there — the state-of-the-art courtroom with top security, how every accommodation is made for the defendants: laptops and multiple opportunities each day to pray toward Mecca.

"They are handled with kid gloves," he said.

In the courtroom he stared at Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, the confessed mastermind of the attacks, and said to himself: "I'm looking at evil."

Holland rejected the idea of moving the trials to a federal court in the United States. He feared it would allow the men to obtain secret intelligence that would lead to future terrorist attacks. He worried prosecutors wouldn't get a conviction. And he believed the courthouse would become a target for a bombing.

"If you move them to the States, you'd have to close down the city," said Holland, a former U.S. Marine. "I think it's a tragedy to even think about moving them to America."

But more than anything, he doesn't want the United States to appear weak. Closing the prison, he said, amounts to "bowing to international pressure ... and basically admitting we did something wrong."

He circulated a homemade petition with the words "JUSTICE DELAYED IS JUSTICE DENIED" in bold type. He asked for signatures and told people to call the White House, which he does nearly every day.

His word-of-mouth efforts are personal and informal (he has about 500 signatures so far), but part of a larger grass-roots effort nationwide. Led by conservative groups such as Move America Forward, activists are campaigning to keep the detention camps at the U.S. naval base open despite the president's decision to shutter it.

"Guantanamo Bay is the best place we have at this point," said Danny Gonzalez, a spokesman for Move America Forward. "And it's definitely better than bringing them here with all the legal ramifications and difficulties it presents in prosecuting them."

Holland is not connected to the group, though he encourages people to sign its Internet petition, which has collected about 10,000 signatures.

And he doesn't consider his role in promoting the debate significant, even though his trip made him a widely quoted figure in the media.

"I'm just a father whose son was murdered," he said. "I just want justice for him and everyone else."

Stacy Sullivan, a counterterrorism specialist with Human Rights Watch, met Holland when she went to Cuba to watch the trials. And she understands his pain.

"Everyone wants to see justice done," she said. But "we want to see them face justice in a system that can't be questioned afterward."

Her group is pushing to have the approximately 240 detainees brought to justice in U.S. courts, where hearsay and evidence obtained from torture is not allowed.

For Holland, hearing the men proudly declare their guilt was enough proof they deserve the death penalty. But Sullivan says their desire to be killed at the hands of the United States is not an endorsement of the process; it only means they are willing to become religious martyrs.

The future of the prison and the detainees remains unclear. The cloud surrounding the treatment of the detainees is only intensifying with the recent release of memos detailing the use of harsh interrogation techniques.

But the direction set by the White House leads experts to suggest the trials won't resume, at least not in their current form.

Holland thinks differently. He expects the court to start again when the four-month suspension ends in late May. He said he will keep the debate alive.

"It's not anger, it's like maybe, I'm accomplishing something," Holland said of his motivation. "Maybe if I talk loud enough and long enough, maybe somebody will listen."

Taliban Attack, Kill Christians in Pakistan Town

By Ethan Cole

Masked Taliban militants attacked and killed at least one Christian and injured dozens of others this past week in a Christian colony in Karachi, Pakistan’s largest city, according to local media.
Irfan Masih, 11, was shot execution style by the Taliban and died in the hospital, the government of Sindh province confirmed, according to Pakistan Christian Post on Friday. Meanwhile, Imran Masih and Qadoos Masih, who were also shot, are in critical condition in the hospital.

More than 100 Taliban militants with machine guns had reportedly attacked the Christian colony in Taiser town on April 21. A few days prior to the attack, the group had chalked threats on local churches and on Christian homes in the town, insisting that Christian residents convert to Islam. Residents of Taiser are overwhelmingly Muslim.

When the Christians saw the threats, they organized a demonstration to call on authorities to protect their community. The police, however, refused to send officers or guards for the church.

A few days later, the Taliban came to Taiser and dragged Christians out of their homes at gunpoint. According to Pakistan Christian Post, the gunmen shouted, “You infidels have to convert to Islam or die. Why did you clean off the warnings we chalked on your church and the doors of your houses? How dare you stage a procession against the Taliban?”
In total, three churches were burned down along with dozens of Christian owned shops.

Dr. Nazir Bhatti, president of the Pakistan Christian Congress, said an attacked [sic] by the Taliban had been feared for months but no preventative action was taken.

He said the attack on Christians is “a warning bell” for the Sindh government and warned that the Taliban is planning to expand Shariah, or Islamic law, in Karachi. The Christian colony, he added, was the “first victim” of the group’s goal....

UK: Judges could be forced to bow to Sharia law

The archbishop of Canterbury's predictions on sharia law's "inevitability" in the U.K. keep coming closer to fruition. "EU judges want Sharia law applied in British courts," from the Daily Mail, April 26:
Judges could be forced to bow to Sharia law in some divorce cases heard in Britain.

An EU plan calls for family courts across Europe to hear cases using the laws of whichever country the couple involved have close links to.

That could mean a court in England handling a case within the French legal framework, or even applying the laws of Saudi Arabia to a husband and wife living in Britain...

Peace in peril, but Pakistan says don't 'panic'

ISLAMABAD – A Pakistani military offensive against insurgent hideouts prompted suspension of controversial peace talks with the Taliban Monday, and the country's president sought additional foreign aid to assure its nuclear arms remain in "safe hands."

The developments came as British Prime Minister Gordon Brown visited Afghanistan and Pakistan, calling their shared border region a "crucible of terrorism."

Following the military push into Dir, a district on the Afghanistan border, militants described their peace pact with the government as "worthless," threatening a cease-fire the Obama administration has criticized as a capitulation to allies of al-Qaida.

Pakistan agreed in February to impose Islamic law in the Taliban-held Swat Valley and surrounding districts of the Malakand Division if militants ended a rebellion that included beheading opponents and burning schools for girls.

However, the concession appeared to embolden the Taliban, which staged a foray last week into neighboring Buner district, just 60 miles from the capital, reportedly patrolling other areas in the region as well.

Pressure on the deal grew Sunday when authorities sent troops backed by artillery and helicopter gunships to attack militants in Lower Dir, another district covered by the pact. Thousands of terrified residents fled, some clutching only a few belongings.

The military said the offensive was an attempt to stop insurgents who had plunged the area into lawlessness by attacking security forces and abducting prominent people for ransom. Losing either Lower or Upper Dir would be a blow not only for Pakistan but for U.S. efforts to shore up the faltering war effort against the Taliban in Afghanistan.

At least 46 militants were killed in the operation, the army said in a statement Monday. Maulvi Umar, a spokesman for the umbrella group of Pakistan's Taliban, claimed insurgents were in the area and killed nine troops and lost two of their own.

"The agreements with the Pakistan government are worthless because Pakistani rulers are acting to please Americans," said Muslim Khan, a Taliban spokesman in the Swat Valley.

He denounced the military's operation as a violation of the peace pact and said fighters were on alert in case the agreement was pronounced dead by Sufi Muhammad, a hard-line cleric who mediated the deal.

A spokesman for the cleric said he was trapped in his home in the same area of Lower Dir attacked by troops and that his supporters have been unable to contact him.

"We will not hold any talks until the operation ends," spokesman Amir Izzat Khan said.

American officials worry the pact could turn Swat into another haven for militants and encourage extremists to call for Islamic law in other areas of the country.

Western allies have expressed frustration that Pakistan is focusing on archrival India, distracting the government from dealing with extremist sanctuaries on the Afghan border.

Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari insisted Monday his country was doing what it must to root out domestic militants.

In a wide-ranging interview with reporters from foreign media outlets, Zardari said Pakistan's nuclear capabilities were in "safe hands," but called for more foreign support for his cash-strapped country to prevent any danger of that changing.

"If Pakistan fails, if democracy fails, if the world doesn't help democracy, then any eventuality is a possibility," he said.

Zardari also said Pakistani intelligence thought al-Qaida chief Osama bin Laden might be dead, but cautioned there was no proof.

"He may be dead. But that's been said before," Zardari said. "It's still between fiction and fact."

After visiting British troops in Afghanistan Monday, Brown said the safety of the Western world was tied to events in the beleaguered frontier region.

"Stability on the streets of London depends on stability in the border areas of Afghanistan and Pakistan," Brown said. The border areas "are the breeding ground, the crucible of terrorism."

In Islamabad, Brown said Britain would focus its aid on providing services in the impoverished northwest — with a particular emphasis on girls' schooling — to lessen the allure of extremism.
American officials have also expressed rising concern.

Dianne Feinstein, head of the U.S. Senate Intelligence Committee, said Sunday the Taliban advance in Buner — and the lack of a robust military response — suggested Pakistan was "in very deep trouble."

"This thing has to get sorted out and sorted out quickly or you could lose the government of Pakistan," Feinstein said on CNN television.

Pakistan's foreign minister asked U.S. officials Monday to "not panic."

"We mean business, and if we have to use force we will use force. We will not hesitate," Shah Mahmood Qureshi told the AP on the sidelines of meetings with his Afghan and Iranian counterparts. "We will not surrender, we will not capitulate, and we will not abdicate."

Zardari tossed aside suggestions that U.S. pressure was what prompted the latest military offensive, saying, "I don't think the Americans micromanage situations on the ground."

He also said other offensives in the region were possible.

Al-Qaeda group in threat to kill British hostage unless Abu Qatada freed

Al-Qaeda in North Africa has threated to kill a British hostage unless the UK government releases Abu Qatada, a radical Muslim preacher in custody in a British jail.

The terror group said in a statement posted on an Islamist Web site today that it will execute the tourist, who has been held by the group since late January, if Abu Qatada is not freed within 20 days.

Abu Qatada, a Palestinian-Jordanian, was jailed in Britain in 2002 accused of links with militant groups but was released in 2005. He was re-arrested and is pending deportation to Jordan where he was sentenced to life in prison in absentia.

Four tourists, including two Swiss, a German woman and a British man, were kidnapped by gunmen on January 22 in Niger, their tour operator said. It is understood that they was seized near the border between Niger and Mali while they were returning from a music festival in the Sahara desert.

Al-Qaeda in North Africa grew out of an earlier Islamist organisation based in Algeria called the Salafist Group for Preaching and Combat.

It has been praised by Ayman al-Zawahiri, Osama bin Laden's deputy, but appears to operate independent of bin Laden's control.

Attacks on Christians in Iraq leave 3 dead

Two attacks on Christian families in the city of Kirkuk on Sunday evening left three people dead and two others wounded, police said.

The first occurred in a neighborhood in southern Kirkuk when a Christian woman and her daughter-in-law were murdered in their home late night Sunday. Police told CNN the attackers slit the women's throats.

In a neighborhood close by, gunmen attacked a Christian family in their home, shooting a father and his three sons, police said. One of the sons died instantly and the other son and the father were wounded.

Many of Iraq's estimated 1 million Christians have fled the country after targeted attacks by extremists.

In October, more than a thousand Iraqi families fled the northern city of Mosul after they were reportedly frightened by a series of killings and threats by Muslim extremists, who apparently ordered them to convert to Islam or face possible death.

At least 14 Christians were killed in Mosul in the first two weeks of October.

Kirkuk is 150 miles (240 km) north of Baghdad.

No need of Jihad, says an arrested Pakistani militant

A Pakistani militant arrested by Army today said there is no need of Jihad in Kashmir as contrary to what he has been told in Pakistan, Kashmiris are not facing any oppression.

Syed Moinullah Shah, cadre of the Pakistan based Hizbul Mujahideen who was part of the group of 31 militants who crossed over the LoC recently said that after seeing the conditions of Kashmiri Muslims he wanted to go back rather than carry on with “jihad.”

“I was told by Kashmiris who come there (Pakistan) that they are being tortured by the Indian Army. Their houses have also been taken away besides not being allowed to do the namaaz. They also said their women were being raped,” Shah who was presented before the media said.

Shah who underwent an intensive training in Pak-occupied Kashmir, said,“When I came here, I did not see any kind of torture. Everybody was busy doing their own work. I felt their was no need of jihad in Kashmir and hence wanted to go back.”

The Pakistani militant ruled out involvement of Taliban in Kashmir and said,“Taliban do not operate here. They are separate and have a different set-up. They are involved in Afghanistan and certain parts of Pakistan.”

Fear grips Pakistan district despite Taliban ‘retreat’

I have resigned. I will never go to my job as I don’t want my parents to be sent my body,’ said a woman in a northwest Pakistan district from which the Taliban claimed to have withdrawn.

The woman, who called herself only Hafsa, said she worked for a charity until the Taliban advanced into Buner, just 100 kilometres (62 miles) from Islamabad, from the neighbouring district of Swat, which was torn apart by a nearly two-year Islamist insurgency.

Fear and uncertainty reigned in Buner on Saturday despite what the hardline movement trumpeted as a withdrawal to Swat—just the other side of the mountains—to shore up a deal to enforce Islamic law there.

‘People are scared,’ said local resident Nisar Khan.

‘We used to see women going to their offices before the Taliban arrived in the area, but today they did not go to their jobs,’ he added.

‘Shops are open and there are no signs of armed Taliban patrolling streets in Buner but people face uncertainty and fear that they may come back,’ Khan told AFP by telephone from the district.

People were reluctant to go to markets and other public places, as women stayed away from their workplaces and girl students stayed at home on the morning after the pull back, witnesses said.

The government deployed up to 300 extra paramilitary police to secure Buner but Taliban elements were still present, local police said.

Banners, which were strung up in Buner town after the Taliban moved in telling women not to go to markets, still flapped in the wind Saturday, said one resident, on condition of anonymity.

Jam Sher Khan, who works for a local non-governmental organisation, said the Taliban had forcefully occupied his office in Buner.

‘Now they have left but our office is still locked and we will not resume duty until authorities provide us security,’ he said.

A Taliban commander said after his men entered Buner that they would set up strict Islamic sharia courts, as they have done in Swat.

Both Buner and Swat fall within Malakand, a district of some three million people in North West Frontier Province where President Asif Ali Zardari has ratified an agreement to enforce sharia law in exchange for peace.

‘Female staff in my office as well as schools and colleges did not turn up today,’ said deputy district education officer, Mohammad Sahib.

Some people were grateful that the threat of a military operation to flush out the Taliban had been averted—at least for now.

‘I am very happy about the Taliban’s retreat from the area because this has diminished chances of a military operation,’ said Mohammad Khanzada, who runs a grocery shop.

‘I do not want my town to become another Swat, which lost its beauty after the military operation.’

The Pakistan military were bogged down in nearly two years of fighting with the Taliban in Swat, once the jewel of Pakistan’s tourism industry and a popular ski resort, during which tens of thousands of residents fled.

People in Buner said they hoped things would now improve but were concerned about the lingering presence of local Taliban.

‘We are hopeful that the situation will now return to normal after the Taliban withdrawal,’ Jehanzeb Khan, a local lawyer said.

‘The Taliban from Swat have left and there is no patrolling going on but we still have local Taliban members from Buner present,’ he added.

France: Parents arrested for violently preventing their children from Westernizing

France: Parents arrested for violently preventing their children from Westernizing

It started off as a simple runaway case. Monday, around 1pm in Meximieux, two sisters aged 15 and 18, of Turkish origin, were reported missing.

The Meximieux police found their two hours later, but their investigation did not end there. They discovered that the two sisters were regularly subjected to violence by their parents, who did not accept their wish not to live according to their very rigorous life principles. Fundamentalist Muslims, the parents do not tolerate seeing them in Western clothing, visiting friends, or pursuing their studies. They were also forbidden to watch French television.

The parents initially denied even the simple practice of religion, but later admitted to the facts and violence.

They will be tried by the court for violence by a person of authority towards a minor.

Source: Le Progress (French), h/t Bivouac-ID

Gays under threat in Senegal

By Anne Look

A mob gathered near a mosque outside Dakar. They were there to hunt down and kill nine men accused of homosexual acts.

Earlier this week the nine Senegalese AIDS activists were freed from eight-year-prison terms for alleged homosexual acts, but they went into hiding because of death threats from Muslim religious leaders and the general population.

“The homosexuals will not escape lynching. They will be fish food,” Dakar newspaper L'Observeur quoted a local youth leader as saying.

“Gay men will never be free in Senegal. They expose us all to danger,” said Imam Mbaye Niang, a prominent religious leader and member of parliament. “The judges should understand that Senegalese people need to protect their children, their families from homosexuality.”

In Senegal — where 95 percent of the population is Muslim — homosexual acts are punishable by fines and up to five years in prison. In January, the nine men received the harshest sentence yet for such an offense in Senegal, getting the maximum of five years and an additional three for criminal conspiracy.

Though widely supported in Senegal, the conviction was condemned by international human rights groups and foreign governments, most notably France.

“They were judged and condemned very severely, surely on the basis of public outcry, therefore the justice was neither objective nor founded in law,” said lead defense attorney Barim Sassoum Sy, who called the initial ruling hasty and emotional.

A Dakar appeals court overturned that decision Monday, citing violations of legal protocol.

Acting on an anonymous tip, police had arrested the men — most of whom do HIV prevention work in the "men having sex with men" community — in December at the home of a prominent gay activist. But the police did not have a search warrant, nor did they catch the men in the act, which is required by the Senegalese law prohibiting “indecent acts against nature." The judge hearing the appeal therefore declared their convictions null and void, Sy said.

Yet even as smiling attorneys and supporters celebrated in the packed courtroom Monday and exchanged congratulations, plans were already in place to get the freed men into hiding outside Dakar.

“The first judge sentenced them to eight years,” said Imam Niang. “He had the courage to say it. The judge that let them go was much less courageous. He yielded to international pressure.”

Niang said that in Islam, the punishment for homosexuality is death. To be gay is a choice, he said, adding that he believes homosexuality is an impure, corruptive force threatening to infect Senegalese society, particularly its youth.

“In our society, homosexuality will never be accepted,” Niang said. “Our religion forbids it, so we can never accept it, even if it is accepted everywhere else in the world.”

Click here to read more.

Gyms for Saudi women face shut-down

Report dozens of women-only gyms face closure because there is no regulatory authority for them.

RIYADH - Increasingly popular sports clubs and gyms for women in Saudi Arabia face shut-down because the government only licenses men's clubs, a Saudi newspaper reported on Sunday.

Dozens of privately-established women-only gyms around the country, which strictly separates men and women outside family venues, could be closed because there is no regulatory authority for them, the Arab News said.

While the General Presidency for Sport and Youth Welfare has the authority over men's gyms, it has not been allowed to regulate those for women, according to the report.

That means that the women's gyms springing up in major cities are unlicensed and illegal, according to the report.

Female Saudi fitness fans frequently complain of the lack of places to exercise outside the home, since they cannot go to men's clubs.

Saudi Arabia's conservative brand of Islam strictly forbids the mixing of unrelated members of the opposite sex, and women in the presence of men not from their families must remain completely covered in the black abaya shroud.

Some investors have opened women-only gyms calling them beauty salons or, in one case, a "natural treatment clinic," Arab News said.

Lawyer Abdulaziz al-Qasim told the newspaper that no government department wants to take responsibility for the issue, lest they be attacked by conservative Islamic clerics, many of whom oppose sports activities for women.

The result, he said, is a move by the Ministry of Municipal and Rural Affairs to shut down the existing gyms.

"It's clear that one department is now taking the decision to put an end to the increasing number of unlicensed clubs," he said.

Children Blown Up By Bomb In A Football

Sixteen children have been killed in explosions in Pakistan over the weekend - 12 of them while playing with a football which contained a bomb.

The blasts were in the northwest region where violence has increased as Taliban fighters extend their reach.

The football explosion happened in a village in the mountains of Lower Dir. The children, five of them girls, found the ball as they were returning from school. Seven victims belonged to the same family.

Pakistan's Interior Ministry chief, Rehman Malik, blamed the Taliban saying: "The Taliban have exposed their real face by killing innocent children."

He said investigators would check whether the children were targeted because their families had refused to let the Taliban take them for training, including as suicide attackers.

He also appealed to parents across North West Frontier Province (NWFP) to stop children accepting food or toys from strangers.

Dir is part of the Malakand division of NWFP, where President Asif Ali Zardari recently sanctioned the imposition of Islamic law under a controversial deal aimed at ending conflict with Taliban militants in Swat valley.

But just days after Zardari's move, fighters in Swat pushed into neighbouring parts of Malakand, closer to the Pakistani capital of Islamabad.

Western governments have criticised Pakistan for making deals, saying the strategy will encourage militants.

Four children and their parents were killed when a grenade exploded in their car near Datta Kheil, a district in the North Waziristan tribal region, near the Afghan border.

Authorities were unsure who to blame as it was unclear whether the parents were carrying the grenade, or if it was planted in the car they were travelling in with their eight children.

The Pakistani army has said it has launched a military offensive against the Taliban in the north west of the country.

A military spokesman said fighting had been taking place in the Lower Dir district, an area that borders the Swat Valley and Afghanistan.

Couple Brutally Shot Dead by Taliban (Shocking Video)

Taliban gunmen have been filmed executing a surprised couple whom they repeatedly shot for the alleged crime of adultery.

By Saeed Shah in Islamabad

Their deaths were squalid, riddled with bullets in a field near their home by Taliban gunmen as the execution was captured on a mobile telephone.

In footage which is being watched with horror by Pakistanis, the couple try to flee when they realise what is about to happen. But a gunman casually shoots the man and then the woman in the back with a burst of gunfire, leaving them bleeding in the dirt.

Moments later, when others in the execution party shout out that they are still alive, he returns to coldly finish them with a few more rounds.

Their "crime" was an alleged affair in their remote mountain village controlled by militants in an area that was only recently under the government's sway. It was the kind of barbarity that has become increasingly familiar across Pakistan as the Taliban tide has spread.

But this time, with black-turbaned gunmen almost at the gates of Islamabad, the rare footage has shown urban Pakistanis what could now await them.

Admiral Mike Mullen, chairman of the United States Joint Chiefs of Staff, has warned that Islamic extremists could take over the nation.

In the past few days the footage has circulated among Pakistanis who usually show little interest in the rough ways of the distant frontier regions.

They have now started to wake up to the fear that al-Qaeda-linked rebels from the frontier could take over their nation.

The killings happened in Hangu district, in North West Frontier Province, about two hours drive from the regional capital Peshawar. The punishment was administered by a local group of the Pakistani Taliban, the Islamic militia which has swept across the NWFP towards the capital Islamabad.

Last week, the Taliban had reached within 60 miles of Islamabad, in Buner district. Their takeover sparked panic in the West, which was already appalled by a peace deal that the government had signed this month with Taliban in adjacent the Swat valley.

In an extraordinary move, US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, called on the people of Pakistan to defy their government, saying they "need to speak out forcefully against a policy that is ceding more and more territory to the insurgents".

The Taliban had agreed a withdrawal, in the last couple of days, to their stronghold of Swat. That will scarcely make the government and elite in the capital Islamabad feel much safer, as Swat is only 100 miles from them.

"The Taliban are steady and confident, the government is weak and faltering," said Pervez Hoodbhoy, a professor at Islamabad's Quaid-e-Azam University and one of Pakistan's leading intellectuals.

"A Taliban victory will enslave our women, destroy Pakistan's rich historical and cultural heritage, make education and science impossible, and make the lives of its citizens impossibly difficult. Some are already contemplating an exodus."

Pakistan today stands on a knife-edge, threatened with anarchy. The desperate deal signed with the Taliban in Swat looks set to fall apart. The result will almost certainly be violence. An army convoy heading into Swat on Saturday morning was stopped by the Taliban and forced to turn back, in a naked display of their power.

They seem to have been only emboldened by the peace agreement. Many believe that a bloody military operation now looks inevitable,

For those in areas falling under Taliban control, their harsh rule is terrifying.

An SOS text message sent out on Friday by a terrified local resident, in an area of Swat called Bahrain, says that the Taliban have established total control. Asking not be named for fear of reprisal, he said that they have set up check posts at the entrance to Bahrain, from where they kidnap those they want, including young women.

"They've even warned the local schools to close the girl classes or face dire consequences. Yet the government says its writ is in Swat."

Another Swat resident said: "Every day I see armed Taliban move around freely. At the time of prayer, if they see anyone in his shop or walking about, they whip him with a stick."

The Pakistani Taliban, a copy of the Afghan extremist movement, have long controlled the tribal area along the Afghan border, which is a sanctuary for militants, including al-Qaeda. But it is their march into the heart of the country that has horrified ordinary Pakistanis, and the wider world. And the threat comes not just from the Taliban to the west. Islamic extremists, who are not part of the Taliban, are already entrenched in Islamabad and across the Punjab, the most populous province, seemingly ready to surface when their moment comes.

Islamabad's defences are being hurriedly fortified, with paramilitary troops stationed on the Margalla Hills, which overlook the city from the West. In the capital, there are thousands of followers of the radical Red Mosque, where there are now open calls for Islamic revolution at the weekly Friday prayers.

"The Taliban will not stop at Swat. They will come towards Islamabad," said Hasan Askari Rizvi, a military analyst based in Lahore. "If the army is to take action against them, it is going to be a really bloody battle. And then civil government will be knocked out."

"Extremist groups based in Islamabad will move from within and they (Taliban) will build pressure from outside."

The footage Pakistanis have been watching shows them what they could expect.

A local journalist was invited to witness the execution, who filmed it with his mobile phone for a Pakistani channel, Dawn News. The Sunday Telegraph is showing the footage in the West for the first time.

There were no names for the two victims.

"Using the media is part of their (the Taliban's) psychological warfare," said Imtiaz Gul, chairman of Centre for Research and Security Studies, an independent think tank in Islamabad. "This way, they inject fear into the minds of people who might oppose them, keeping the majority silent."

After the couple were shot, the family were told to take their bodies away for burial. The punishment was administered by a local group of the Pakistani Taliban linked to warlord Baitullah Mehsud.

Red Cross hostage unable to walk due to abuse from Islamists

An Italian Red Cross aid worker held hostage by Islamic militants is in pain and unable to walk after more than three months in captivity in the southern Philippines, the military said Wednesday.

Eugenio Vagni, 62, has previously been reported by the authorities as needing surgery for hernia, with Jolo island's harsh terrain also said to be taking a toll on his emotional state.

Abu Sayyaf militants seized Vagni and two other International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) workers in January. The Filipina hostage was released on April 2 while the Swiss captive walked free Saturday.

Latest intelligence reports indicated that Vagni could no longer walk because of his condition, military spokesman Lieutenant Colonel Edgar Arevalo said in a statement Wednesday.

He said troops were continuing to apply "calibrated pressure" against Abu Sayyaf, which has splintered into three groups in a bid to confuse the authorities.

"Reports say he is well but unable to walk due to hernia," Arevalo said of Vagni.

"Aside from the calibrated pressure to deny the bandits freedom of movement, the kidnappers are saddled with the fact that Vagni is not ambulant and must be carried as they move," Arevalo said.

He said Vagni was "alive but under tight guard."

Vagni was seized by Abu Sayyaf militants along with ICRC colleagues Andreas Notter of Switzerland and Mary Jean Lacaba of the Philippines. Notter flew back to Switzerland Tuesday.

Numbering in the low hundreds, the Abu Sayyaf was founded in the 1990s ostensibly to fight for an independent Islamic state. The group later branched off into high-profile abductions and bombings.

ABC News Exclusive: Torture Tape Implicates UAE Royal Sheikh

By Vic Walter, Rehab El-Buri, Angela Hill and Brian Ross

A video tape smuggled out of the United Arab Emirates shows a member of the country's royal family mercilessly torturing a man with whips, electric cattle prods and wooden planks with protruding nails.

A man in a UAE police uniform is seen on the tape tying the victim's arms and legs, and later holding him down as the Sheikh pours salt on the man's wounds and then drives over him with his Mercedes SUV.

In a statement to ABC News, the UAE Ministry of the Interior said it had reviewed the tape and acknowledged the involvement of Sheikh Issa bin Zayed al Nahyan, brother of the country's crown prince, Sheikh Mohammed.

"The incidents depicted in the video tapes were not part of a pattern of behavior," the Interior Ministry's statement declared.

The Minister of the Interior is also one of Sheikh Issa's brother.

The government statement said its review found "all rules, policies and procedures were followed correctly by the Police Department."

"If this is their complete reply, then sadly it's a scam and it's a sham," said Sarah Leah Whitson of Human Rights Watch.

"It is the state that is torturing them," she said, "if the government does not investigate and prosecute these officers, and those commanding those officers."

The 45-minute long tape was smuggled out of the country by Bassam Nabulsi, of Houston, Texas, a former business associate of Sheikh Issa.

Nabulsi is now suing the Sheikh in federal court in Houston, alleging he also was tortured by UAE police when he refused to turn over the videos to the Sheikh following their falling out.

"They were my security, really, to make my case that this man is capable of doing what I say he can do," said Nabulsi in an interview to be broadcast Wednesday on the ABC News program Nightline.

Nabulsi says the video tapes were recorded by his brother, on orders from the Sheikh who liked to watch the torture sessions later in his royal palace.

The Sheikh begins by stuffing sand down the man's mouth, as the police officers restrains the victim.

Then he fires bullets from an automatic rifle around him as the man howls incomprehensibly.

Click here to read more and view the tape (warning: graphic footage).

Obama Administration Wants Judge to Toss Embassy Hostage Suit

In court papers filed Tuesday night without any announcement, the Justice Department argued that the agreement to release the hostages, known as the Algiers Accords, precluded lawsuits against Iran.

The Obama administration has asked a federal judge to throw out a lawsuit against Iran filed by Americans held hostage at the U.S. Embassy in Tehran 30 years ago.

The request comes in a $6.6 billion class-action lawsuit filed in U.S. District Court in Washington. Fifty-two American diplomats and military officials were held captive for more than a year at the end of Jimmy Carter's presidency by a group of Islamist students who supported the Iranian revolution.

The hostages were released on Jan. 20, 1981, just minutes after Ronald Reagan was sworn in as the new president.

In court papers filed Tuesday night without any announcement, the Justice Department argued that the agreement to release the hostages, known as the Algiers Accords, precluded lawsuits against Iran.

A similar lawsuit brought by the Iranian hostages was dismissed in 2000 after the government successfully argued it was banned by the Algiers Accords. The hostages argue that legislation passed by Congress last year and signed into law by President George W. Bush gives them the right to bring private lawsuits.

But the Justice Department argued that the law does not mention the Algiers Accords, much less explicitly repeal them.

"The gratitude of the United States for the service and dedication of these brave individuals cannot be overstated, nor can the suffering and abuse they endured on behalf of this country be exaggerated; these matters are beyond dispute," the Justice Department wrote in its filing.

The hostages argue that Iran supported their confinement and abuse, with visits from government officials, stays in government prisons and buildings and threats of trial in Iranian courts. The lawsuit says current Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad was one of their interrogators.

The lawsuit says the hostages were tortured, beaten sometimes until they lost consciousness and kept in fear of their lives, at times even lined up in front of marksmen locking their guns. It says they were imprisoned without adequate food, clothing or medical care, blindfolded with their hands tied, interrogated for hours at a time and kept in isolation for months at a time.

The original plaintiffs are three of the hostages -- Charles Scott of Jonesboro, Ga., David Roeder of Alexandria, Va., and Don Sharer of Mansfield, Texas -- and the wife and daughter of another hostage, Barry Rosen, from New York City.

Iraq suicide bombs kill 73

Seventy-three people, including children, were killed in two separate suicide attacks in the cities of Baghdad and Baquba on Thursday, defence and interior ministry officials told AFP.

At least 45 people, including several Iranian pilgrims, were killed when a bomber struck a restaurant in a town near Baquba northeast of Baghdad.

Meanwhile 28 people were killed after an attack on a police patrol in southeastern Baghdad

"Iraqi police were distributing aid to displaced families when a suicide bomber blew himself up," an interior ministry official said. "At least 10 police and five children are among 28 dead."

Fifty-two people were also wounded in the blast, defence and interior ministry officials said.

A second interior ministry source said the suicide bomber was a woman, but this could not immediately be confirmed.

A hospital official told AFP that families were fighting to discover if their relatives were listed as dead on a casualty list.

Sixteen people, including the 10 policemen, five children and a woman, were confirmed dead at the hospital, he said, with 25 wounded receiving treatment there.

Security has improved dramatically in Iraq over the past two years but attacks targeting security forces are still common in some parts of the country, including the capital.

Iraq has witnessed a number of deadly attacks in April.

Four people were killed and 13 others wounded on Wednesday when a suicide bomber targeted a US-allied militia leader at a mosque north of the Iraqi capital, security officials said.

Two days earlier a suicide bomber disguised as an Iraqi policeman killed three officers and wounded 15 people, including eight US soldiers and a child, in Baquba, northeast of Baghdad, in the third such attack in just over a week.

Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki warned on Sunday at a meeting of senior security officials that the danger from "terrorist cells" was far from over.

His remarks followed an upsurge in violence over recent weeks after several months in which there was a steady reduction in the number of attacks.

"We have succeeded in re-establishing security, but maintaining it is more difficult," Maliki told the meeting of senior police officers.

Iraq's 560,000 police and 260,000 soldiers are to assume greater responsibility for security as US forces withdraw from all cities by June 30 and from the country as a whole by the end of 2011.

Violence has plummeted over the past two years as American and Iraqi forces have allied with local tribes and former insurgents to bring calm to vast swathes of the country.

However more than 100 people have been killed since the start of April, according to an AFP count based on reports from security officials.

Palestinians Desecrate Jewish Site With Swastikas

The burial site of biblical patriarch Joseph, which lies close to Nablus in the West Bank (Palestinian territories) and is venerated in Jewish tradition, was desecrated last night by persons unknown. Today Israeli sources reported that it was found littered and laid waste. The believers who arrived there in the morning for prayers discovered the place covered in anti-Semitic graffiti and swastikas, as well as burns and damage to the tombstone. The site is venerated almost daily by the inhabitants of orthodox Hebrew settlements inserted in the Nablus area, and is viewed as a sort of symbol of the presence of settlers in the heart of Palestinian territory by the Arab population. Recently restored, it had already been the object of desecration in the past. Gershon Mesika, who works with the coordination of Jewish settlements in Samaria, commented that 'only barbarians can carry out such acts of violence'' and called on Israel's authorities to promptly repair the site.

Minor girl married off to 50-year-old moneylender to clear debt

SUKKUR, April 20: A heavily-indebted man gave his eight-year-old daughter in marriage to a 50-year-old moneylender to clear the debt in the Jungal village in Jacobabad district on Sunday night.

Sources in the village said that Mohammad Siddiq Shaikh had taken a loan of Rs50,000 on heavy interest from one Nihal Chachar of Pano Akil, which had swollen to Rs150,000 with Rs100,000 interest over 30 months, and Nihal had been pushing him to pay back but Siddiq was unable to clear the debt.

On Sunday night, Nihal accompanied by his accomplices visited Siddiq’s house and repeated his demand to which Siddiq said he would not be able to pay.

Nihal asked him to give his minor daughter Zamiran in marriage to him to get the debt cleared, sources said and added that Siddiq first rejected the proposal but he had to agree after being subjected to maltreatment and threats by Nihal and his accomplices.

He called schoolteacher and moulavi Inayatullah Soomro who solemnised his daughter’s nikkah with Nihal.

Sources claimed that Nihal forcibly took away Zamiran with him after the nikkah. The SHO of Thull police station Gul Mohammad Mahar confirmed the report and said that he, too, had learnt about it this evening and was going to the village to investigate it. He said that nobody had so far come forward to file a complaint in this regard.

Husband kills wife for not bearing son

A MAN killed his wife with strokes of glass to her chest for her ‘inability’ to bear him a son in the Factory Area police limits on Monday.

Victim Aasia Bibi, 37, a resident of Bhalla, Liaqatabad, was married off to her cousin Umar, a resident of Islamnagar, Walton Road, some 15 years back. The couple had two daughters. The accused worried for not having a son and he used to fight with his wife over the issue. On Monday, Umar found his Aasia alone at home and killed her with consecutive strokes of a broken glass bottle to her chest. As a result, the victim received serious wounds which resulted into her instant death.

The accused managed to escape from the crime scene. The accused’s family informed police when they came home and found Aasia dead. Police reached the spot and shifted the body to morgue. A case has been registered against the accused.

Islamic fundamentalists threaten UN agencies and Red Crescent

By William Gomes

Three intimidating letters have been sent to UNICEF, the World Food Program, and the Islamic equivalent of the Red Cross. Some observers see this as a response to the UN's promise to help the government set up a court to try Islamic fundamentalists for war crimes.

Dhaka (AsiaNews) -The Islamic extremists of the group Jama’atul Mujahideen Bangladesh (JMB) are threatening attacks against UNICEF, the World Food Program, and the Red Crescent, telling the three organizations to leave the district of Barisal in southern Bangladesh.

Three letters signed by the Islamic organization, which is prohibited by the government of Dhaka, were sent to the local headquarters of the international humanitarian agencies. The militants of the JMB are announcing reprisals if the recipients of their threats do not leave the area.

Mohammed Mahabur Rahman, a police official in Barisal, confirms the report for AsiaNews and says that the threats are to be taken seriously. Security has already been stepped up for the three humanitarian organizations, but Rahman explains that "the police by itself is not capable of combating Islamic terrorism," and says that for this reason he is convinced that "the police and the population must work together against Muslim fundamentalism."

For Rashid Khan Menon, a member of parliament from the Workers' Party, the threats against the three organizations "are connected to the UN's recent promise to help Bangladesh in proceedings against war crimes perpetrated in the country."

Imtiaz Ahmed, a professor of international relations at the University of Dhaka, sees the intimidating letters as the sign of "a special agenda" on the part of fundamentalists against the presence of international organizations.

Recent security operations by the Rapid Action Battalion have led to the arrest of a number of militants of the JMB, and about a hundred people suspected of connections to the fundamentalist group. For professor Ahmed, the threats against the UN agencies have a twofold purpose: on the one hand, they send a signal to the authorities who want to take Islamic extremists to court for war crimes, on the other hand they seek to internationalize domestic affairs.

During the arrests of the mujahideen of the JMB, weapons, materials for making bombs, and computers were found, in addition to propaganda documents supporting jihad. In one flyer, the fundamentalists charge that "the media controlled by the Christians are making a false representation of the noble campaign of the mujahideen to liberate the country from the infidels"; they promise "to destroy all of the enemies of Allah," and "corrupt political leaders," and to "establish an Islamic state."

Islamic fundamentalism has been on the rise in Bangladesh for years, and has included coordinated violent actions in multiple places in the country. Islamic extremist groups also have significant political influence.

Woman Executed by Firing Squad for Killing Husband

SAN'A, Yemen — A Yemeni woman has been executed by firing squad for killing her husband, whom she accused of molesting their daughter.

The woman's lawyer, Abdel-Alim al-Wafi, says she was executed Sunday in a province north of the capital, San'a.

The 40-year-old woman, Aisha al-Hamzi, had seven children. She said she killed her husband in 2002 because he molested their oldest daughter, now 14.

She was sentenced to death in 2003. Under Yemeni law, she could have been pardoned if one of her children had agreed. But the lawyer says none of her children did because of pressure from the father's family.

Archbishop of Lahore: Sharia in the Swat Valley is contrary to Pakistan's founding principles

by Qaiser Felix

Archbishop Saldanha denounces the violation of minority and women's rights. The archbishop expresses his concern "in matters concerning criminal justice," and denounces abuses and violence by the Taliban toward Christian, Sikh, and Hindu places of worship and schools. The Catholic Church supports the Muttahida Quami Movement, the only party that has opposed the "forces of darkness."

Lahore (AsiaNews) - Sharia law in the Swat Valley demonstrates a "total neglect" of minorities and their rights, sanctioned by the founding father of the country in 1947, at the Constituent Assembly. This is the position of Lawrence John Saldanha, archbishop of Lahore and president of the Pakistani bishops' conference, who expresses special concern "in matters concerning criminal justice."

The prelate has sent an open letter to President Asif Ali Zardari, Prime Minister Raza Gilani, and the Justice Minister of the government of the North-West Frontier Province, in which he stresses his "sorrow that your government has failed to take stock of the concerns of civil society" about the introduction of Islamic law into the Swat Valley. This, in fact, "jeopardizes the socio-economic and cultural growth" in the region, legitimizes the claims of the Taliban, who are destroying "the constitutional protections for minorities and women."

The letter was also signed by Peter Jacob, executive secretary of the National Commission for Justice and Peace. The Catholic leaders explain that the climate of "impunity" surrounding the Taliban's "killing machine of terror" perpetrates crimes and violence against "the small communities of Hindus, Sikhs and Christians." The Christian minorities of the NWFP are forced to endure "unemployment, intimidation and migration" because of the imposition of the Jizya, the tax levied by Muslims on the faithful of the religions of the Book (Christians and Jews). The Islamic extremists have defaced the "statues of the Buddha" and razed to the ground "St. Mary’s School, Convent, and Chapel at Sangota (Swat)." The fundamentalists have also targeted the school of Don Bosco, in Bannu. Archbishop Saldanha says that "several of our institutions have received threats."

Special concern has been prompted by the creation of "a parallel legal system," based on Islamic law. "This decision," the archbishop says, "must be put to a vote by the judges and the people." Another significant aspect is the " ideological extremism" that seems to be gaining a foothold in the country. In the open letter, there is a reference to the inaugural address - in 1947 - of the founder of the country to the Constituent Assembly: Quaid-e-Azam Mohammad Ali Jinnah recalled that religion is a "personal matter" and has nothing to do with "the affairs of state."

In a second letter, addressed to the head of the Muttahida Quami Movement (MQM), Archbishop Saldanha and Peter Jacob express their "appreciation" for the only party in parliament that has "opposed the introduction of Sharia in the Swat." "This contribution," the letter reads, "aimed to save the nation from falling into darkness, will always be remembered."

Catholics "share" the concerns of the members of the MQM over the "tacit approval" of the actions of the terrorists, and their plans, aimed at overturning "the social and political order" of the country. Peter Jacob and Archbishop Saldanha invite the Muttahida Quami Movement to "continue its efforts" to create a "tolerant and pluralist" Pakistani society.

The Taliban, meanwhile, are continuing their battle to extend Islamic law to the entire country, and say they have no intention of "giving up weapons: we are Pashtun, and every Pashtun has a weapon," says Muslim Khan, spokesman of Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan. Last Sunday, Sufi Muhammad, the spiritual leader of the movement Tahrik-e-Nifaz Shariat Muhammadi, recalled that "only Islamic law is valid" in the Swat Valley, and the entire judicial system of Pakistan must be regulated "according to the dictates of Sharia." The fundamentalist leader emphasized that "there is no room for democracy" in Islam, and called Western governments "a system of infidels" that has divided the country thanks to the support of the Supreme Court and the local high courts.