Tag Archives: Mohammed

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Israel contests France TV over Palestinian boy’s death

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Israel says there is new evidence that a French television report whose harrowing images helped inspire the second Palestinian uprising was unfounded.

The report in 2000 showed a father and son in Gaza caught up in Israeli-Palestinian crossfire. The 12-year-old was later pronounced dead – hit, said France 2, by Israeli troops.

Nearly 13 years later, the Israeli government-commissioned report says there is no proof Israel was responsible – adding that unbroadcast pictures suggest the two were perhaps not hit at all.

“The network has information in their own raw footage indicating that after he was allegedly dead, he moved and did it intentionally and on purpose which puts a lot of doubt on whether he was actually dead,” said the Israeli Ministry for Strategic Affairs, Yossi Kuperwasser.

Israel wants the TV report corrected, but in Gaza, Mohammed’s father denounced Israel’s claims as fabricated.

He has called for an international investigation into the shooting.

Afterwards Jamal al-Dura was reportedly treated for bullet wounds in Jordan. At his son’s graveside he said:

“Once they said Mohammed was alive and another time that he was killed by Palestinian gunfire. Also another time they filmed me and Mohammed as if we were Israelis and the Palestinians were shooting towards us. I told them, if Mohammed is alive, what happened to me?”

France 2 has offered to cooperate and to help exhume the boy’s body if necessary.

In France a long-standing defamation case by the France 2 TV reporter, Charles Enderlin, against Philippe Karsenty, a media analyst who said the item was staged, again comes to court this week.

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Jerusalem’s Grand Mufti detained for questioning

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Israeli police in Jerusalem have questioned leading Muslim cleric Sheikh Mohammed Hussein, the Grand Mufti of the city – a day after violence broke out between Palestinians and Israelis outside the city’s main al-Aqsa mosque.

Israeli police say the incident started when they detained an Arab who wanted to enter the plaza around the mosque, but refused to present his identity card. This sparked violence, during which Muslim worshippers threw chairs at Jewish visitors to the holy site, according to police.

The mosque overlooks Jerusalem’s Western Wall, which Israeli Prime Minister Benyamin Netanyahu has called ‘the rock of existence’ for the Jewish people. The Israelis and the Palestinians are locked in a dispute over territory in the city.

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Deadly anti-blasphemy protests in Bangladesh prompt national shutdown

The strike, effective Wednesday is organized by the Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) and its Islamist allies in protest of “mass killing” during the clashes on Sunday and Monday  when police attacked a mass rally in central Dhaka. “We have called two days of nationwide strike to protest the mass killing of Hifajat-e-Islam workers and supporters on Sunday and Monday,” BNP spokesman Khandaker Mosharraf told the AFP on Tuesday. At least 38 people have been killed according to the AFP and hundreds more injured leading the police to ban all rallies in the Bangladeshi capital. The opposition puts the death toll in the hundreds. Meanwhile 194 activists of the Hefajat-e-Islam (Protectorate of Islam), a hardline Islamic group behind the violence were indicted by the police.   TV stations which broadcasted the violence, Diganta Television and Islamic, were taken off the air. There are also reports of the government cutting off electricity and approaching the protesters with weapons. The government of Bangladesh has rejected the Hefajat-e-Islam demands and a May 5 deadline to introduce a new blasphemy law, reinstate the role of Allah in the constitution, make Islamic education mandatory and ban women from mixing with men.The violence began on Sunday as some 200,000 Islamist supporters marched in Dhaka demanding of the government to introduce a new blasphemy law and execute bloggers whom they accuse of having insulted the Prophet Mohammed. Chanting “Atheists must be hanged”, activists blocked at least six highways cutting Dhaka off from the rest of the country. On Monday the protests intensified when supporters of the Hifazat-e-Islam organization lined roads with burning tires, setting fire to vehicles and storming a police post, igniting clashes which lasted for more than five hours. Law enforcement used flash-bang grenades, water cannon, tear gas and rubber bullets to quell a crowd of at least 70,000 protesters who responded with force.”We were forced to act after they unlawfully continued their gathering at Motijheel. They attacked us with bricks, stones, rods and bamboo sticks,” Dhaka police spokesman Masudur Rahman told AFP. Violence also flared up in other parts of the country. Country’s Information Minister accused the religious institutions of encouraging “terrorist activities” by sending their pupils to the rallies.“The madrassa superintendents who are encouraging their students to take part in terrorist activities will be tried,” Hasanul Haque Inu said.On Monday, UN chief Ban Ki Moon, encouraged the government and the opposition to come into terms. “The Secretary-General calls on all concerned to stop the violence, to respect the law and to express their views peacefully,” a statement read. Overall Bangladesh has been locked in political and secular division since January, after the government created a tribunal to investigate crimes during a 1971 war of independence from Pakistan.  Three leading figures have so far been convicted for their role in during the independence struggle.The opposition party at the time opposed Bangladeshi independence from Pakistan in the war and now refuses to acknowledge its role in the alleged murder, rape and torture during the conflict. There is a “proxy war” raging between the opposition and the government and both sides are using “different pretext to wage this war,” independent journalist Haroon Siddiqui explained to RT.“The government is accused of using the court to get level with the opposition. The opposition is using Islam and blasphemy to get back at the government,” Siddiqui says. Read More

19-årig fængslet for skuddrab på Frederiksberg

En dommer har valgt at varetægtsfængsle en 19-årig mand for drabet på Zaid Mohammed al-Kayssi i februar. Read More

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Adam Lanza vs. the knockoff jihadis

Leave it to Joe Biden – or his speechwriters – to come up with the best description yet of Tamarlan and Dzohkhar Tsarnaev: “knockoff jihadis.” Knockoffs are, of course, cheap imitations, not the real thing, but the word also gets in a sly allusion to “whack-off” and “jerk-off,” or maybe that’s just me. It’s intentionally belittling. Biden thumbed his nose at those who would put the Tsarnaevs in a class with Mohammed Atta or Anwar al-Awlaki, let alone Osama bin Laden, and his words set up predictable braying on the right. (I learned about the controversy when I defended Biden’s comments on Joy Behar’s “Say Anything” while talking about my book, and inspired more invective on the right.)Continue Reading… Read More

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Death toll in Bangladesh factory collapse eclipses 300

SAVAR, Bangladesh (AP) — More than two days after their factory collapsed on them, at least some garment workers were still alive in the corpse-littered debris Friday, pinned beneath tons of mangled metal and concrete. Rescue crews struggled to save them, knowing they probably had just a few hours left to live, as desperate relatives clashed with police in their anger and grief.Amid the chaos, the cries for help and the smell of decaying bodies at the eight-story building where more than 300 died, what happened to 18-year-old Mussamat Anna passes as luck. Rescue workers cut off the garment worker’s mangled right hand to pull her free from the debris Thursday night.”First a machine fell over my hand and I was crushed under the debris. … Then the roof collapsed over me,” she told an Associated Press cameraman from a hospital bed Friday.The death toll topped 300 on Friday and it remained unclear what the final grim number would be. Military spokesman Shahin Islam told reporters that 304 bodies had been recovered.Brig. Gen. Mohammed Siddiqul Alam Shikder, who is overseeing rescue operations, said 2,200 people have been rescued. The garment manufacturers’ group said the factories in the building employed 3,122 workers, but it was not clear how many were inside it when it collapsed Wednesday in Savar, a suburb of Bangladesh’s capital, Dhaka.Continue Reading… Read More

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At least 23 killed as Iraqi forces raid Sunni camp

Conflicting reports on the death toll have emerged, but they confirm that both the government forces and the protesters saw casualties. Three security officers and 20 demonstrators were killed, according to the Iraqi defense ministry. Other military sources put the number of security casualties at 6.Health officials have reported that the three hospitals in the Kirkuk region received 15 dead, including one soldier, and 50 wounded, including 15 security forces troops.The Ministry of Defense said they raided the Sunni encampment while searching for fugitive militants who attacked a checkpoint near Hawija several days earlier. The military officials also said they had warned camp residents of the looming raid and asked them to leave the area, some of whom did. Those who remained allegedly attacked the government troops.”When the armed forces started… to enforce the law using units of riot control forces they were confronted with heavy fire,” the defense ministry said in a statement, according to Reuters. In the ensuing conflict, security forces detained 75 protesters and confiscated a huge arsenal, seizing multiple weapons such as rocket-propelled grenades, sniper rifles and AK-47s, AP reported.However, protesters claimed they were unarmed when the security forces attacked them. “When special forces raided the square, we were not prepared and we had no weapons, they crushed some of us in their vehicles,” protester Ahmed Hawija, a student, said, according to Reuters.Sunni government officials have condemned the raid. Iraqi Education Minister Mohammed Tamim, a Sunni Muslim, protested the incident by announcing his resignation. The fighting at the Sunni camp was not the end of Tuesday’s violence: Three checkpoints around Hawija were seized by tribal Sunni militants for a short while, until they were retaken by government forces.A curfew has now been imposed in the area, and the protesters’ tents were burned down by government troops.The fighting in Hawija was reportedly the bloodiest in the series of clashes between Sunnis and government troops that have been taking place since December, when Iraqi Sunni’s exploded in protest against the country’s Shiite-led leadership. The protesters point to Iraq’s anti-terrorism law, which they describe as a pretext for their persecution.Sunnis also came under attack on Tuesday in southern Baghdad when two roadside bombs were detonated while worshippers were leaving a mosque, according to police. At least seven people reportedly died and 17 more were wounded. Iraq has been wracked by violence since US troops withdrew from the country in 2011. Political power appears to have concentrated in the hands of a Shia political elite, resulting in widespread protest by Iraqi Sunnis and ethnic Kurds.The run-up to the provincial election, held on April 20, saw this violence escalate, with bombings reported nearly every day. Fourteen candidates, most of whom were Sunni, died. Eventually, 6 of Iraq’s 18 provinces could not participate in the polls for security reasons.The latest outbreak of violence comes as the country awaits the results of the election. Read More