Showing posts with label religion. Show all posts
Showing posts with label religion. Show all posts

Saturday

Islam, Brave Ismael. KNOW HIS STORY AND STAND UP FOR HIS RIGHTS!

Saturday

He said no when fighters from Somalia’s notorious al Shabab militia came to recruit him. A month later, he was tied down in a stadium while his hand and foot were hacked off. The Star‘s Michelle Shephard talks to the victims and butchers in the world’s most failed state.



MOGADISHU, Somalia–Ismael Khalif Abdulle was on his way home from school when they came to get him.

He feared this might happen, as did every teenager who lived in the neighbourhood of Dayniile, where al Shabab has a stronghold. That’s why kids joined, Abdulle says. They didn’t believe in a religious obligation to fight; they were just scared, poor and, like him, had grown up with nothing but war. Joining a militia with big guns and deep pockets seemed like a smart thing to do.

But Abdulle wanted to go to school and said so. The two Shabab members who tried to recruit him came back a few days later to teach him a lesson, and this time they brought four truckloads of fighters.

“They pointed their guns at me and told me I was a thief and I was robbing people and took me to their prison,” the slight 17-year-old said, his eyes widening as he recounted his capture in an interview with the Toronto Star this week.

In the house where they were held, he met three older boys who said they, too, were told they had committed crimes.

Twenty-five days later, the four hungry and thirsty captives were taken to a stadium where a crowd had gathered. “They were holding me tight on my arms and I said, `Please don’t hold me that tight. I’m not running anywhere.’ They didn’t even answer,” Abdulle recalled.

Men in white coats, with masks and surgical gloves, stood around a dirty mattress on the stadium ground. Abdulle was held down first, suddenly thankful for the strong arms on him. “I asked, `Please tie me tight because when you start I don’t want to mistakenly move too much.’”

He doesn’t remember when they cut off his left foot because the pain and blood from losing his right hand made him pass out. The severed limbs of the four boys were later hung in the town as a warning.

In the years since the 9/11 attacks on the U.S., intelligence agencies worldwide have scrambled to keep ahead of growing insurgencies around the world. Security officials often glibly describe it as a game of whack-a-mole – make inroads with one group only to have another pop up elsewhere.

Al Shabab, a group Washington believes is Al Qaeda’s proxy in the Horn of Africa and has listed as a terrorist organization, is now demanding attention. With international pressure bearing down on the Yemen-based Al Qaeda in the Arab Peninsula, the problem here, just across the Gulf of Aden, is expected to grow worse.

And, as is always the case in this city that has not seen peace in nearly two decades, it’s those like Abdulle who are trapped.

ISMAEL MAHMOUD laughs when asked what he would do had he met a Western reporter under different circumstances.

“That would be a problem,” the 21-year-old Shabab member says in English.

The circumstances now, however, have Mahmoud lying on a cot, with an African Union soldier standing by. He was captured after a recent mortar attack shredded his left leg and has been recovering at the AU base hospital since.

He is still what officials here would call “hard core,” even though he says he can no longer fight because of his injury. Asked if he is still a member of Shabab, he nods.
“That’s my religion to be a guerrilla, a jihadi,” he says.

Then, he adds: “All of us al Shabab, we don’t like muzungus, white people.” Again, he smiles.

Al Shabab, meaning the Youth, began as a loosely organized group of militia in 2006, fighting to conquer corrupt warlords and implement a strict interpretation of sharia law throughout Somalia. They were not sophisticated at first and had trouble recruiting members, since most Somalis traditionally follow a mystical Sufi interpretation of Islam, not the dogmatic Wahabbi practice al Shabab demanded.

But the 2007 Ethiopian invasion that ousted Mogadishu’s self-proclaimed government of the Islamic Courts Union was a gift for al Shabab. The presence of troops from Somalia’s historic and much hated rival attracted recruits not just from within Somalia and the Horn of Africa but from countries like Canada and the U.S.

By the time Ethiopia withdrew in late 2008 and President Sheikh Sharif Sheikh Ahmed was declared president of a Transitional Federal Government, al Shabab had grown. In January, they publicly pledged allegiance to Al Qaeda.

But why was the Shabab carrying on its fight against a Somali government and president that vowed to incorporate Islamic law?

“Those people are not Muslims. They’ve changed their religion. They are kafir,” Mahmoud says, using the Arabic term for non-believers.

When Mahmoud’s wounds heal, he will return to his family. The 5,300-strong AU peacekeeping mission here of Ugandan and Burundian troops, known as AMISOM, has neither the authority to try captured fighters nor the mandate to turn them over to Somalia’s transitional government. Mahmoud says although he considers himself a member of Shabab he will not go back to the fight. “I would have to fight AMISOM and they have helped me,” he says. Others aren’t convinced.

A short drive from the tents that make up the AU hospital is a medical outpost where the women, children and elderly gather for treatment. Some have walked for hours to reach it, since what they get at the AU-run facility is the only free health care they can receive. Ugandan doctor Ronald Mukuye says he has seen women come from Kismayo, a port town 550 kilometres away.

Somali interpreters who help AU forces live in the hospital due to security concerns. “Hello, welcome,” calls one as a Star reporter passes. He wants to talk, but cannot give his name as his family still lives in town and would be targeted by al Shabab if it was known that he was helping the AU. “I want to work for my country,” the 50-year-old explains simply when asked why he takes the risk.

The mid-afternoon Monday line to get into the clinic is long. Mothers cradling limp babies in the sun plead for attention from AU armed guards. The clinic is open Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays and AU officials estimate about 1,200 patients come each week.

Hours later, just as the clinic was getting ready to close, a man reportedly joined the line of patients. As forces prepared to search him a bomb went off, killing at least four and injuring more than eight others. One Ugandan peacekeeper was among the dead.

An al Shabab spokesperson claimed responsibility for the attack.

SOMALIS REFER to it as “flashing,” as in the common practice of calling someone’s cell and hanging up so they’ll know to call back. To receive a call requires fewer pre-paid minutes than making one.

Applied here, flashing is the name given to the reaction of AMISOM forces to Shabab provocation. As a peacekeeping mission, AU forces are unable to attack unless attacked first. But this happens daily, as al Shabab routinely fire mortars at Villa Somalia, where the president works and resides, and at the AU base near the airport. Before dawn this week, the morning call to prayer echoing throughout the city was accompanied by the booming of tanks and the sound of gunfire.

Somalis are tired of the fighting. They complain that while the Shabab attacks kill dozens, the retaliation of much higher-grade AU weapons also kills civilians. And when mortars are raining down on shopkeepers in the Bakara Market, where al Shabab hides, all that matters is their impact, not who’s firing. There are no good or bad guys – just ones with weapons and those without.

In this fragile state, survival is the only goal. That’s one reason Shabab is able to get money from residents whom government or AU forces can’t protect.

“Whether you support them or not, if you’re in a Shabab area you might get security, but this security is based on intimidation,” says Abdusalam Omer, a Somali-born American who served as the chief of staff for Washington’s mayor in the late 1990s and now advises the finance minister in Somalia’s transitional government.

“This is the biggest danger facing Somalia – that people who grew up with 20 years of war could live with this.”
TWO RECENT ATTACKS here show al Shabab’s sophistication, but may also hint at its vulnerability.
In September, twin suicide bombers travelled in two stolen UN vehicles to the inner gates of the fortified AMISOM compound near the airport before detonating their explosives. Seventeen peacekeepers, including the Burundian force’s deputy commander, were killed, and many more injured.

Three months later, on the morning of Dec. 3, they targeted a graduation ceremony for new doctors at the Shamo Hotel. Senior government ministers and nearly a dozen journalists attended the event, and while security was plentiful, participants said few were searched.

“The hall had been brightly decorated, and there was a feeling of excitement – such ceremonies rarely happen in Mogadishu,” Mohamed Olad Hussan, a local journalist who files to the BBC and the Associated Press, later wrote of the incident.

“Then all this brightness turned to darkness. All I remember is being covered in dust… I looked across and the young guy sitting next to me was dead. The seat he had been sitting on was mine. We had changed positions for one moment, when I had left momentarily to move my recorder nearer to the speakers.”

The bomber was dressed as a woman, reportedly hiding the explosives under a shapeless abaya. Witnesses said the bomber approached the panel, said “Peace,” and then blew up.

In total, 24 people died, including four journalists and three government ministers. Ibrahim Hassan Addou, the minister of higher education, and minister of education Ahmed Abdulahi Waayeel – both observant Muslims who had been forceful in their denunciations of al Shabab and were highly regarded – might have been the intended targets. In a 2006 interview with the Star, Addou had stressed the importance of free education for Somalis and implementing laws guided by Sharia law.

The attack was condemned worldwide and horrified many in Mogadishu, where locally trained doctors are desperately needed.

Perhaps sensing a backlash, Shabab issued a statement denying responsibility for the attack.

ABDULLE DOESN’T have anywhere to go. A double amputee, he is forever identified as an enemy of the Shabab. He came to the president’s compound this week to talk with the Star, but normally resides in another guarded minister’s house. Government officials have tried to get refugee status for the four victims to get them out of here but so far have had no luck.

Part of the problem is that the boys’ stories are difficult to verify. Some reports state that they were actually once members of al Shabab and tried to defect, taking the cellphones they had been given with them. Others believe they were embroiled in a feud over business.

Whatever the circumstances, there is no doubt Abdulle and three others were led into a stadium June 26 and before a crowd of hundreds had their limbs severed.

Abdulle says he is still amazed he didn’t bleed to death. For weeks he lay captive inside a Shabab home with three other boys as they moaned and cried. But his torture had not ended.

On the 15th day, Abdulle claims he was visited by Shabab leader Fuad Shangole, a Somali-born Swedish citizen, who returned here to fight against the Ethiopians. Abdulle said Shangole looked at the wounds and chastised Abdulle’s captors. “He said, `You only cut to here,’” Abdulle recalled, drawing his finger across his right ankle.

Shangole demanded they cut more and again Abdulle was held down screaming.

Eventually, the Shabab seemed to tire of caring for the captives. One of the older boys got a cellphone and called friends to rescue them.

Abdulle wants to stay here and be reunited with this family, who he hasn’t seen since he was taken six months ago. He isn’t confident, though, that the Shabab can be conquered.

“They don’t think in terms of human beings,” he says, sweating and shaking even though a cool breeze blows through the government hall where he sits.

“Lots of kids that I was going to school with joined the Shabab. They are made to believe when they die they will be martyrs and go to heaven,” he says.

But perhaps the biggest draw was the cash and cellphones with prepaid minutes.
“And,” Abdulle notes, “they top them up for them.”


Source: The Star

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Thursday

Saudi Gay Scene: 'Forbidden, but I can't Help It' -- Across the Middle East, Many Struggle With the Stigma of Homosexuality

Thursday
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Saturday

Islam 'recognizes homosexuality'

Saturday
Abdul Khalik , The Jakarta Post , Jakarta | Fri, 03/28/2008 1:38 AM 

Homosexuals and homosexuality are natural and created by God, thus permissible within Islam, a discussion concluded here Thursday.

Moderate Muslim scholars said there were no reasons to reject homosexuals under Islam, and that the condemnation of homosexuals and homosexuality by mainstream ulema and many other Muslims was based on narrow-minded interpretations of Islamic teachings.

Siti Musdah Mulia of the Indonesia Conference of Religions and Peace cited the Koran's al-Hujurat (49:3) that one of the blessings for human beings was that all men and women are equal, regardless of ethnicity, wealth, social positions or even sexual orientation.

"There is no difference between lesbians and nonlesbians. In the eyes of God, people are valued based on their piety," she told the discussion organized by nongovernmental organization Arus Pelangi.

"And talking about piety is God's prerogative to judge," she added.

"The essence of the religion (Islam) is to humanize humans, respect and dignify them."

Musdah said homosexuality was from God and should be considered natural, adding it was not pushed only by passion.

Mata Air magazine managing editor Soffa Ihsan said Islam's acknowledgement of heterogeneity should also include homosexuality.

He said Muslims needed to continue to embrace ijtihad (the process of making a legal decision by independent interpretation of the Koran and the Sunnah) to avoid being stuck in the old paradigm without developing open-minded interpretations.

Another speaker at the discussion, Nurofiah of the Nahdlatul Ulama (NU), said the dominant notion of heterogeneity was a social construction, leading to the banning of homosexuality by the majority.

"Like gender bias or patriarchy, heterogeneity bias is socially constructed. It would be totally different if the ruling group was homosexuals," she said.

Other speakers said the magnificence of Islam was that it could be blended and integrated into local culture.

"In fact, Indonesia's culture has accepted homosexuality. The homosexual group in Bugis-Makassar tradition called Bissu is respected and given a high position in the kingdom.

"Also, we know that in Ponorogo (East Java) there has been acknowledgement of homosexuality," Arus Pelangi head Rido Triawan said.

Condemnation of homosexuality was voiced by two conservative Muslim groups, the Indonesian Ulema Council (MUI) and Hizbut Thahir Indonesia (HTI).

"It's a sin. We will not consider homosexuals an enemy, but we will make them aware that what they are doing is wrong," MUI deputy chairman Amir Syarifuddin said.

Rokhmat, of the hardline HTI, several times asked homosexual participants in attendance to repent and force themselves to gradually return to the right path.

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Czech politician quits over gay, Jewish comments and other stories about gay rights: VERY DISGUSTINGLY INTERESTING


Here is a sort of a round up of what's going on in various countries which has something to do with the gay community. 

First stop is Prague, where a government official of the Czech Republic drew flak over his remarks about Jews, the Catholic Church and gays causing him to resign as chairman of his conservative political party, Mirek Topolanek had been under strong pressure from within his Civic Democratic Party to step down following the comments to the editorial staff of the gay magazine Lui. He announced last week that he would not lead his party's campaign in a May 28-29 election or run as a candidate. 

“He said that Transport Minister Gustav Slamecka is a homosexual who "gives in" when he faces a serious problem." About Prime Minister Jan Fischer, he said, "he's simply a Jew; he's not gay and he gives in even sooner." Fischer is Jewish. Slamecka has not publicly commented on his sexual orientation”. Topolanek also accused the Roman Catholic church of "brainwashing" believers. 

Later on, he said in a statement "I apologize to gays - friends of mine and others," Topolanek said in a statement. "I apologize to church members - those I know and those I don't know. I apologize to Jews - politicians and all the others. I apologize to the citizens." 

This is an example of a pervert, a man who cannot control his mouth and forgets his status in his country. At least he had the decency to accept his outrageous remarks and resigned.

In India, the  federal government has told the Delhi High Court that homosexuality is the result of a perverse mind and should not be decriminalized, this made my pressure rise. In a brief,  brief filed this week with the court, the government said that if the country’s sodomy law is overturned it could have an impact on Indian culture, what culture are they talking about when this week, India will be releasing their first Bollywood movie featuring a first gay kiss on the big screen.   

LGBT rights groups and AIDS outreach organizations told the court last month that the law is anachronistic, impedes civil rights and blocks AIDS groups’ abilities to reach out to gays.

This law against homosexual sex that dates to the British colonial era forbids sexual acts which they said are “against the order of nature,” carries punishment of up to 10 years in prison.

Last month during oral arguments before the court the government said the law should be maintained because homosexuality was a disease which was responsible for the spread of AIDS in the country. Really, and the government of India only limits their understanding that homosexuality is the ONLY reason that their is a spread of the HIV. What a government, what a reckless proposition, even saying that Homosexuality is a disease. “Show us one report which says that it is a disease. A [World Health Organization] paper says that it is not a disease but you are describing it as a disease. It is an accepted fact that it is a main vehicle that causes [the AIDS] disease but it is not a disease itself,” demanded Chief Justice AP Shah.

Now tell me, if homosexuality is a disease, what do we call corruption in government, social injustice and failure of the government to address the needs of the majority of the poor in India, JAI HO? I call it a crime, more than a disease!

Elsewhere in Iran, more than 300 gays have left Iran since last June’s election of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, the Washington Post reports. Many have fled to Turkey seeking asylum, where they await help from the United Nations to place them in the United States, Canada, Western Europe or Australia. In Iran, being gay is punishable with death. Turkey, in contrast, has relatively secular attitudes. Goodness, I said it before and I will say it again, good thing I live in the Philippines for very obvious reasons. 


 Gays executed in Iran, now the living are leaving.

 
The  man who is afraid that gays will topple his presidency..

IT IS A CRIME TO BE GAY IN IRAN, LIKE UGANDA

Last stop, Baltimore, Maryland where donations are pouring in for a fallen Marine’s father who was ordered to pay the court costs of an anti-gay church he’s been battling, the court ordered him to pay 16,510 US dollars in court costs to Fred Phelps, pastor of the Westboro Baptist Church.  Westboro members picketed the Maryland funeral of Snyder’s son, Matthew.  

The church contends U.S. military deaths are God’s punishment for tolerance of homosexuality. Albert Snyder sued the church. The U.S. Supreme Court has agreed to hear the case. Shall I say, deaths also of our soldiers in Basilan and the Ampatuan massacre was also because of their tolerance of gays? WHAT KIND OF BRAIN DOES THIS PASTOR HAVE? Utak talangka or tilapia, i bet. Fox News commentator Bill O’Reilly has pledged to pay the court costs. 

 The crazy nut, Fred Phelps.

Yes He does, but not you!


and the next photo is for you pastor, from all of us.
you should rot in hell! 
GREAT ROUND UP!


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