Thursday, October 30, 2014

Lebanese troops, militants clash near Syria




Lebanese security forces have exchanged fire with al-Qaeda-linked militants in the Bekaa Valley near the border with Syria.




Lebanese security forces have exchanged fire with al-Qaeda-linked militants in the Bekaa Valley near the border with Syria.



Local sources said the clashes erupted outside the towns of Deir al-Ghazal and Qusaya on Wednesday when al-Nusra Front militants tried to infiltrate into Lebanon from Syria.



The Lebanese army, supported by Syrian soldiers on the other side of the border, halted the terrorists’ advance, with Hezbollah fighters also giving a hand to prevent their infiltration.



Earlier, clashes between the country’s army and the militants in the Bab al-Tabbaneh neighborhood of the northern city of Tripoli claimed the lives of dozens of people. The clashes also displaced thousands of people from the violence-ravaged district.



Bab al-Tabbaneh had for long been a stronghold of Takfiri terrorists. Following the raids, the Lebanese army discovered several arms depots and an ammunition factory in the neighborhood.



The al-Qaeda-linked al-Nusra Front and the Takfiri ISIL militants overran the city of Arsal, situated 124 kilometers (77 miles) northeast of the capital Beirut in August, abducting more than three dozen soldiers and security forces. They have executed at least three of the hostages.



Over the past months, Lebanon has been suffering from terrorist attacks by al-Qaeda-affiliated militants as well as random rocket attacks, which are viewed as a spillover of the conflict in Syria.



Syria has been gripped by deadly violence since 2011 with the ISIL Takfiri terrorists currently controlling parts of it mostly in the east and north.






Mass trek of people to Muharram Majalis in Bauchi, Nigeria + Pics

Saudi Criminal Court sentenced a Shia activist to 9 years in prison




On October 27, the Specialized Criminal Court in Riyadh sentenced the activist ” Mohammad Salih Abdullah al-Zanadi, from Awwamiyah town, to 9 years in prison.




On October 27, the Specialized Criminal Court in Riyadh sentenced the activist 'Mohammad Salih Abdullah al-Zanadi', from Awwamiyah town, to 9 years in prison.



Al-Zanadi was arrested by a security force on 23 March 2012. He was injured when the force opened fire on him in Jomoma district in Awwmiyah. He was taken to al-Dahran military hospital, then to al-Dahran prison.



Al-Zanadi, one of 23 wanted persons on a list Interior Ministry, was accused of disobeying the ruler, inciting disorder, the fomentation of sedition and sowing seeds of discord among citizens, trying to assassinated the security member, and possession weapons.







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Egypt: Al-Azhar Sheikh Invited to Attend Ashura Mourning Ceremony




An Egyptian Shia activist has invited Al-Azhar’s Sheikh Ahmed al-Tayyeb to attend the Ashura mourning ceremony at Cairo’s Imam Hussein (AS) Mosque.




An Egyptian Shia activist has invited Al-Azhar’s Sheikh Ahmed al-Tayyeb to attend the Ashura mourning ceremony at Cairo’s Imam Hussein (AS) Mosque.



Sayyid Taher al-Hashemi, who is a member of the Ahl-ul-Bayt World Assembly, asked al-Tayyeb to deliver a speech in the program on the event of Ashura, Bawaba website reported.



He also invited Egyptian Awqaf ministry official and members of the country’s Islamic Studies Center to take part in the ceremony.



Al-Hashemi’s call has drawn some objections, however. Muhammad al-Shahat, secretary general of Egypt’s Supreme Islamic Affairs Council, considered it to be a move aimed at “introducing Shia ideology and imposing Shia school of thought on Sunnis”.



Due to anti-Shia propaganda, Egyptian Shias face a lot of challenges living and practicing their faith freely in a country that spent a significant part of its history under Shia rule.



Every year, millions of Shias and other Muslims around the world mourn the martyrdom of Imam Hussein (AS) and his 72 faithful companions on Ashura, the tenth day of the first month of the lunar calendar year, Muharram.



Ashura ceremonies symbolize eternal and unwavering stance of truth against falsehood and humanity's struggle against tyranny realized by Imam Hussein (AS).



This year, the day of Ashura falls on Tuesday, November 4.









3rd Century A.H. Quran Copy at Al-Aqsa Mosque




The oldest Quran copy held in Al-Alqsa Mosque dates back to the 3rd century A.H., an official with the library of the mosque said.




The oldest Quran copy held in Al-Alqsa Mosque dates back to the 3rd century A.H., an official with the library of the mosque said.



According to Masdarak website, Uzbaki, who is in charge of the manuscripts of the library, introduced the valuable Quranic works in a seminar titled “Manuscripts of the Holy Quds and Palestine and the Importance of Research on These works and Their publication”.



The seminar was held on October 28 at Bethlehem University of Palestine.



He stressed the scientific, historical and artistic value of the manuscripts adding that the oldest manuscript copies of the Quran were written in the first five centuries after the advent of Islam.



The official said that the library is the most important one in the Holy Quds with more than 2000 manuscripts and over 200 Quran copies.



Uzbaki went on to say that the oldest page of a manuscript Quran copy available today is kept at Leiden University in the Netherlands and dates back to the years between 70 and 80 A.H.







Pakistani media and rulers keep quiet over the killing of an innocent Shia child




What is significant to note here is that the Tweet-crazy and sloganeering-obsessed Bilawal did not open his mouth and Tweet account to say a word about the child or her killer. The PPP government kept quiet. The MQM for which the Shias of Sindh have given unprecedented sacrifices kept quiet as it has recently formed an alliance with the Shia-killers of ASWJ




Last evening, terrorists, most probably the Deobandi hit men, threw a hand grenade at a group of Shia mourners, all females, outside the Islamic Research Centre (IRC) mosque, injuring nine woman and killing one-and-a-half-year old girl Batool Waqar.



The hit men as usual made an escape and the police remained silent, as they have always done. There is nothing new in the police behaviour. They have to obey their masters on whose mind the Shia genocide is the last thing.



What is significant to note here is that the Tweet-crazy and sloganeering-obsessed Bilawal did not open his mouth and Tweet account to say a word about the child or her killer. The PPP government kept quiet. The MQM for which the Shias of Sindh have given unprecedented sacrifices kept quiet as it has recently formed an alliance with the Shia-killers of ASWJ/SSP/LeJ.



The reporting of Batool’s killing has been interesting. All the newspapers briefly flashed the killing on their web sites. But within five to eight hours, the news disappeared altogether.



One can verify it by tracking how the likes of Dawn, The News, and Express Tribune only briefly flashed the news of Batool’s killing, but then relegated it to the pages one cannot easily access.



Some mainstream Urdu papers did not mentioned at all. One is referred to Dunya and Jang to find out how they ignored yet another act of the Shia genocide in Pakistan.



The newspapers were busy reporting how an 80-year old man in Kashmir was killed by the Indians. This report is still unverified, but is the main item on many newspaper’s web sites. The innocent Shia girls and eight women with severe injuries have been forgotten.













Pakistan: Saudi-backed terorists planned to hit 21 Pakistan Shia scholars, politicians and Iranian envoy




The police Tuesday warned of possible terrorist attacks on Shiite religious groups and political personalities in the country on occasion of 9 and 10 of Muharram.




PAKISTAN - The police Tuesday warned of possible terrorist attacks on different religious and political personalities in the country on occasion of 9 and 10 of Muharram.



According to a private TV channel, a letter in this regard has been sent to the Ministry of Interior. The police informed that the terrorists had prepared their plan to attack key religious personalities and political figures.



Those on the hit list include Iranian ambassador to Pakistan Faisal Saleh Hayat, religious scholar Allama Nasir Abbas, Mushahid Hussain Syed and Dr Ghazanfar Mehdi.



The police said terrorists had planned to specifically carry out foul plays in Rawalpindi and Islamabad during the Ashura.










Islamic State terrorists in Fallujah-Baghdad-Karbala triangle




Da'ish organization (Islamic State) is trying for the last ten days to control Amiriyat al-Fallujah (Anbar province) in preparation to open a new front towards Baghdad and Shiite city of Karbala, as reported by extremist sites.




Da'ish organization (Islamic State) is trying for the last ten days to control Amiriyat al-Fallujah (Anbar province) in preparation to open a new front towards Baghdad and Shiite city of Karbala, as reported by extremist sites.



Da'ish gunmen are trying to enter the city from several fronts, while tribesmen, pro-government Sahwa (Awakening) forces and the governmental army are trying to hinder the progress of Da'ish moves.



Security observers believe that Amiriyat al-Fallujah area is a "vital" passage to the extremists if they directed their forces to Baghdad or Shiite Karbala city.



Da'ish is trying a psychological warfare these days by publishing photos on the social networks of the numbers of his gunmen, who are trying to storm into the city.





Amiriyat al-Fallujah lies 40 km west of Baghdad with a population of about 110.000 citizens, mostly Sunni Arabs.









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Iraq and Iran to reopen Mendeli border that was closed for 30 years




On Wednesday, Mendeli Council in Diyali province announced that it reopened a border crossing between Iraq and Iran that was closed since more than a 30 years.




DIYALI, IRAQ - On Wednesday, Mendeli Council in Diyali province announced that it reopened a border crossing between Iraq and Iran that was closed since more than a 30 years.



The border will aim at supporting the lives of the people in Diyali and provide many jobs by increasing the trade activity between the two countries.



The head of Mendeli Council Azad Hamid Shafi informed that, “An official government delegation from both sides have opened the Sumar-Mendeli border crossing that was closed since more than about 30 years.”



Shafi has also noted that the trade activity between the two sides will be after fulfilling some procedures by the specialized authorities in both governments.







The first installment of Peshmerga forces enter to Kobani












The first installment of Peshmerga forces enter to Kobani



The first installment of the Peshmerga forces from the Kurdistan region of Iraq has managed to enter Kobani city, to offer bock up to fighters defending the town and confront "ISIS" members.

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ISIS terrorists execute over 55 Sunni tribesmen in Iraq's Anbar / GRAPHIC



Jihadists from the Islamic State terrorist group executed Wednesday more than 55 members of the Albu Nimir tribe that fought against them in Iraq's Anbar province, sources said.



The men from the Albu Nimr tribe were killed in the Heet area, northwest of Baghdad, which was overrun by the militants earlier this month, a local leader and a doctor said.



A police colonel and a leader from the anti-jihadist Sahwa forces confirmed the killings.



Sources differed on the exact number of dead, with some saying as many as 55 were killed.



IS has overrun large areas of Anbar, and the killings are likely aimed at discouraging resistance from powerful local tribes, who will be key to any successful bid to retake the province.



Pro-government forces have suffered a string of setbacks in Anbar in recent weeks. That has prompted warnings that the province, which stretches from the borders with Jordan and Saudi Arabia to the western approach to Baghdad, could fall entirely.



Images said to show the aftermath of the public execution circulated on Twitter, but their authenticity could not be independently confirmed.



One picture shows a line of more than 30 men in civilian clothes lying in the middle of a street with streams of blood running over the dusty ground, as young men and children look on.



The victims are barefoot and many are blindfolded, their hands bound behind their backs.



IS did not immediately claim responsibility for the killings, but has executed hundreds of people in areas of Iraq and Syria that it controls.



Human Rights Watch says there is evidence the group executed between 560 and 770 men -- mostly captured soldiers -- earlier in the year.



And IS executed hundreds of members of a Syrian tribe that fought against them, according to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights monitoring group.



IS spearheaded an offensive that has overrun much of the country's Sunni Arab heartland since June, sweeping security forces aside.



Iraqi security forces, Shiite militias and some Sunni tribesmen are fighting to push IS back.














Special Iraqi forces deploy in Baghdad before Ashura holiday




While Iraqi Security Forces battle ISIS across a number of Iraqi territories, additional special units are being deployed in tactical formations to secure the capital Baghdad.




BAGHDAD - While Iraqi Security Forces battle ISIS across a number of Iraqi territories, additional special units are being deployed in tactical formations to secure the capital Baghdad.



The special units from the Army and the police will hide among civilians, and others will be dressed in military uniforms, observing and securing the areas of Baghdad just before Ashura’a holiday next week.



One of the leaders of the units said, “We have fought in many battles in Tikrit, Anbar and Jurf Al-Shakr, and now we’re here to protect the Iraqi people in the capital Baghdad.”







Iraq: Muthanna chemical weapons facility liberated from ISIS control




Baghdad Operations Command confirmed that the armored force of the 9th Division and a regiment of the Federal Police managed to free the Muthanna chemical weapons facility from ISIS control.




BAGHDAD, IRAQ - Baghdad Operations Command confirmed that the armored force of the 9th Division and a regiment of the Federal Police managed to free the Muthanna chemical weapons facility from ISIS control. The facility is located on the Samarra/Al-Therthar road which lies about 60 km away from Baghdad.



On Tuesday, the commander of the Baghdad Operations Lt. Gen. Abdul-Amir Al-Shammari said in a press statement, that his forces will begin clearing the road of explosives, noting that “opening the Samarra/Jabber road will only lead to breaking the cordon around the unites located in the Japanese bridge and Al-Therthar road.”



The United States has already expressed concern about ISIS’ seizure of Muthanna chemical weapons facility after the 10th June events, but the International Atomic Energy Agency of the United Nations underestimated the chemicals contained therein stressing that “it does not represent danger or security threat.”







Мi-28 Russian helicopters join service in Iraq




The Iraqi Ministry of Defense assured the entrance of the Russian helicopter (Night Hunter) to the service to support terrorism fighting and Iraqi infantry forces.




Baghdad - The Iraqi Ministry of Defense assured the entrance of the Russian helicopter (Night Hunter) to the service to support terrorism fighting and Iraqi infantry forces.



A statement by the MoD cited “Minister of Defense Khalid al-Obaidi accompanied by several military commanders observed on Wednesday the final stage of preparing and arming the first group of the Russian modern fighting helicopters (MI-28) in a step towards sending them to specified air bases.”



“These helicopters which are known as the Night Hunter will increase the efficiency of the Iraqi Army Air Force in its war against terrorism,” the statement added.



“This is the first group of helicopters included by the contract concluded with the Republic of Russia to provide Iraqi Army with modern fighting helicopters,” the statement concluded.







Wednesday, October 29, 2014

Google employee held for trying to join ISIS terrorists in Iraq




A 30-year-old Google employee, who was allegedly plotting to join the Islamic State (ISIS) ranks in Iraq, has been detained by Hyderabad Police.




A 30-year-old former Google employee, who was allegedly plotting to join the Islamic State (ISIS) ranks in Iraq, has been detained by Hyderabad Police.



Software engineer Munawad Salman, hailing from Tamil Nadu, got attracted to jihadist group Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS) through social media networks and had planned to join its forces, a senior police officer said today.



Salman, who had worked at the Hyderabad office of technology giant Google before quitting his job around seven months back, was picked up on Tuesday following inputs that he was making efforts to procure a visa to Saudi Arabia from where he allegedly planned to flee to Iraq, he said.



He reportedly studied posts of the ISIS and their propaganda on the internet and social media platforms for past six months and had planned to join the group's fighters in Iraq. "Salman was picked up yesterday and he was bound over also. We have counselled him through his parents and his brother to keep up good behaviour. He was asked to keep away from indulging in those activities. Now he has been let off. We have not registered any case," a senior intelligence officer told PTI.



"He has been asked to desist from such things, and if he is found indulging in such activities again, a specific case will be booked and he will be arrested," he said.



"After quitting his work at Google, he is jobless. He was planning to go out of the country and trying for a visa. He is from Tamil Nadu and for job purpose he came to Hyderabad," the officer said.



The Hyderabad Police had in August "foiled" an alleged attempt by a group of four young men from the city, including two engineers, to join the rank of ISIS after they were tracked down to Kolkata from where they were allegedly preparing to flee to Iraq.



The youth, who were "attracted" towards the ISIS propaganda on social networking sites and net-based mobile messenger, were questioned and let off after counselling.



The Hyderabad Police had on October 22 arrested a suspected SIMI operative and an aide of Indian Mujahideen media in-charge (both youth from Maharashtra) from Secunderabad. They were allegedly planning to go to Afghanistan to get training from militant organisation Al Qaeda for carrying out terror activities in India, police had earlier said.









California university students rally to remove Islamophobe Bill Maher as commencement speaker




Bill Maher’s anti-Islam comments sparked a petition to remove him as commencement speaker at the University of California




TV host Bill Maher’s controversial comments about Islam have sparked a petition to remove him as the December commencement speaker at the University of California, Berkeley.



The Change.org petition, which had gathered nearly 2,000 signatures by Monday afternoon, was authored by Marium Navid, a senator with the student government group Associated Students of the University of California, with the support of Khwaja Ahmed, a member of the the campus advocacy group Middle Eastern, Muslim and South Asian Coalition, the campus’ Daily Californian reported Sunday.



“Bill Maher is a blatant bigot and racist who has no respect for the values UC Berkeley students and administration stand for,” the petition reads. “In a time where climate is a priority for all on campus, we cannot invite an individual who himself perpetuates a dangerous learning environment. Bill Maher's public statements on various religions and cultures are offensive and his dangerous rhetoric has found its way into our campus communities.”



Navid said allowing Maher to speak at Berkeley, a campus made famous by 1964’s free speech movement, would give legitimacy to provocative comments he made earlier this month on his HBO show, "Real Time With Bill Maher," describing Islam as “the only religion that acts like the Mafia, that will fucking kill you if you say the wrong thing, draw the wrong picture or write the wrong book."



"People say he has the right to freedom of speech, and I agree with that," Navid told the San Jose Mercury News. “The problem is that when you bring him to the university, you're pretty much putting him into a privileged position. You're raising his voice."



This spring saw numerous student protests against commencement speakers at other colleges and universities, including successful campaigns to cancel Condoleezza Rice at Rutgers University, International Monetary Fund head Christine Lagarde at Smith College and former UC Berkeley Chancellor Robert Birgeneau at Haverford College.







France: Muslim funeral home in Orléans defaced with Islamophobic graffiti



Saphir News reports that last Friday night racist vandals broke into the office of the Muslim Assistance funeral home in Orléans and defaced the walls with Islamophobic graffiti.



The graffiti featured swastikas and Celtic crosses, and a drawing of a pig’s head, accompanied by slogans such as “Islam out”, “close or die” and “dirty Arabs”. Computer equipment was stolen and a photocopier damaged.



The manager of Muslim Assistance, Abdessamad Errich, later received anonymous phone calls boasting of the attack. Last month he had been subjected to telephone threats.



The vandalism may be connected to the fact that Errich publicly opposed the recent closure of a Muslim school at La Chapelle-Saint-Mesmin, which was itself the object of a graffiti attack at the end of September.








Lebanese Hezbollah slams Bahrain ruling to suspend al-Wefaq




The Lebanese resistance movement Hezbollah has denounced a ruling by the Bahraini regime to suspend the activities of the country’s prominent opposition party al-Wefaq ahead of the upcoming parliamentary elections in the Persian Gulf kingdom.




The Lebanese resistance movement Hezbollah has denounced a ruling by the Bahraini regime to suspend the activities of the country’s prominent opposition party al-Wefaq ahead of the upcoming parliamentary elections in the Persian Gulf kingdom.



In a statement on Tuesday, Hezbollah said the ban on al-Wefaq party “proves that the elections (scheduled for November 22) are sham, pre-determined and far away from representing the will of the Bahraini people and the political powers.”



Hezbollah also said the ban indicates the repressive and totalitarian nature of the Al Khalifa regime, warning against the negative repercussions on the political future of the Persian Gulf state.



“The ruling authorities in Bahrain are not determined to make serious steps in order to solve the incurable political crisis,” said the statement.



On Tuesday, the Manama administrative court imposed the three-month ban on al-Wefaq after it threatened to boycott the November 22 elections.



The opposition party dismissed the ruling as “irrational and irresponsible”, saying, “The tyrannical dictatorship in Bahrain is ruling with an iron fist and moving to destroy the political and social life by blocking the people out.”



Eligible voters in the country will elect members of the 40-seat Council of Representatives in Bahrain next month for the first time after the beginning of anti-regime protests in the country.



In 2011, al-Wefaq pulled 18 of its representatives out of parliament after a deadly regime crackdown on Shia protesters demanding reforms in the country.



The Bahraini opposition has been demanding the formation of a constitutional monarchy, an independent election commission, as well as the appointment of a prime minister by parliamentary majority instead of the king.



Since mid-February 2011, thousands of protesters have held numerous demonstrations in the streets of Bahrain, calling on the Al Khalifa royal family to step down.







Saudi Grand Mufti: ISIL, al-Qaeda, al-Nusra Takfiri groups have no connection to Islam




Saudi Arabia’s Grand Mufti Sheikh Abdul Aziz al-Sheikh says terrorist groups attempting to portray themselves as Islamic have no connection to Islam.




Saudi Arabia’s Grand Mufti Sheikh Abdul Aziz al-Sheikh says terrorist groups attempting to portray themselves as Islamic have no connection to Islam.



The well-known mufti made the remarks in response to a question by one of his disciples seeking his opinion on terrorist groups, including the ISIL Takfiri group and the al-Qaeda-linked al-Nusra Front, the Saudi-based newspaper Al-Hayat reported.



“If you were to have a thorough examining look, you would find that they do not have a shred of connection to Islam,” al-Sheikh said in reference to the terrorist groups.



“They have adorned their opinions and vanities with the robes of Islam in order to deceive the people. You would find them to be misguided, for they have shed blood, violated sanctities, looted funds, created mischief in the earth and stolen countries unlawfully,” the grand mufti said.



The ISIL terrorists currently control large swathes of territory across Syria and Iraq. They have committed terrible atrocities in both countries, including mass executions and beheading of local residents as well as foreign nationals. Al-Nusra Front is a branch of al-Qaeda that is mainly operating in Syria and Lebanon.



In his remarks, the Saudi mufti also referred to Muslim Brotherhood, which is considered by some Arab countries, including Saudi Arabia, as a terrorist group.



“All the methods of these groups are false. There are things behind them and there is no good in them. We do not trust them or trust their people. Whoever invites our youth to join these misguided factions is mistaken and is straying far away from the right path,” al-Sheikh said.



This is while senior Iraqi and Syrian leaders have blamed Saudi Arabia and Qatar for the security crisis and growing terrorism in their country, denouncing Riyadh as a major supporter of terrorist groups including ISIL.










Iran Supreme Leader stresses unity among Muslim states




Leader of the Islamic Revolution Ayatollah Seyyed Ali Khamenei has underscored the need for unity among all Muslim countries amid enemy plots to create rift in the Islamic Ummah.




Leader of the Islamic Revolution Ayatollah Seyyed Ali Khamenei has underscored the need for unity among all Muslim countries amid enemy plots to create rift in the Islamic Ummah.



Addressing a group of Iranian Hajj officials in Tehran on Tuesday, Ayatollah Khamenei described Islamic unity as "the Islamic Republic’s fundamental slogan", which means that Muslim states should set aside enmities and stand by each other vis-à-vis important global issues.



The Leader further described Hajj pilgrimage as an opportunity that must be seized in order to foil enemy plots, which are hatched to separate Iran from the rest of the Muslim world.



“Raising a barrier between the Islamic Republic [of Iran] and the rest of the Muslim world is one of the ploys [used by] the enemies of unity in the Islamic Ummah,” the Leader stated, adding that every Muslim is obligated to make efforts to help raze this “fake barrier.”



Ayatollah Khamenei also warned of false enemy propaganda aimed at spreading illusions about Iran and Shia Islam.



The annual pilgrimage of Hajj brings millions of Muslims together from a variety of nationalities, races and sects.



Hajj, as one of the world's largest gatherings, is a demonstration of the solidarity of the Muslim people and their submission to God. Hajj rituals take place during six days (8th-13th) of the Islamic lunar month of Dhul-Hijjah.







Ayatollah Safi-Golpaygani: “One cannot preach Islam if he isolates himself from society”




Ayatollah Safi-Golpaygani has met with Ayatollah Moqtadaei and Hujjat al-Islam Farrokh-Fal to receive a report on the status, curriculum and plans of the Holy Islamic Seminary of Qom.




Grand Ayatollah Lotfollah Safi-Golpaygani has met with Ayatollah Mortaza Moqtadaei, the director of the Higher Council for the Islamic Seminary, and Hujjat al-Islam Ahmad Farrokh-Fal, the director of the Islamic Seminary of the Province of Qom.



During the meeting Ayatollah Safi-Golpaygani appreciated the two scholars services and efforts in the Holy Islamic Seminary of Qom. He referred to the importance of the Islamic Seminary of Qom and the importance of its educational programs. “If students start their seminary studies with correct and precise planning and study well, it will be beneficial strengthen their knowledge when they reach the higher levels of study. Thus, the managers of the seminaries must give greater attention to introductory seminary courses,” His Eminence advised.



“The facilities of the seminaries are much better now than they were previously [but] we also must work harder and support the seminarians more than previously,” Ayatollah Safi-Golpyagani added in reference to the hard work that the managers of the seminary have been accomplishing.



In reference to the beginning of his own studies, the 95-year old source of emulation stated that at that time there was no encouragement to study in the seminary but rather there were many barriers to study Islamic sciences. He stated that it was said to seminarians: “Why do you study religious sciences? The time has passed for this type of studies!”



His Eminence explained that some wealthy benefactors even offered to pay to send him to study in London. Only some his local benefactors encouraged him to study in the seminary. He stated that we are very blessed that many youth are joining the seminary but due to this, we need to plan well and precisely so that the seminarians can take full advantage of their studies.



Ayatollah Safi-Golpaygani added that it is very important that seminarians become good preachers and missionaries for the sake of Islam and not isolate themselves from the people. “The true mystic is one who preaches the religion and saves people from going astray. A mystic is not someone who isolates themselves and chooses the name of mysticism for himself,” he explained.



At the beginning of the meeting, Ayatollah Moqtadaei and Hujjat al-Islam Farrokh-Fal delivered a detailed report on behalf the director of the Islamic Seminary of Qom in regards to the seminary’s curriculum, extracurricular studies as well as theological and ethical classes and training camps for preachers. Ayatollah Safi-Golpaygani thanked them once again for their efforts.






Bahrain’s allies must take action to free human rights defenders




The undersigned 40 organisations call on the international community to publicly condemn the ongoing crackdown on human rights defenders, who face harassment, imprisonment, and forced exile for peacefully exercising their internationally recognised rights to freedom of expression and assembly.




The undersigned 40 organisations call on the international community to publicly condemn the ongoing crackdown on human rights defenders, who face harassment, imprisonment, and forced exile for peacefully exercising their internationally recognised rights to freedom of expression and assembly. With parliamentary elections in Bahrain scheduled for 22 November, the international community must impress upon the government of Bahrain the importance of releasing peaceful human rights defenders as a precursor for free and fair elections.



Attacks against human rights defenders and free expression by the Bahraini government have not only increased in frequency and severity, but have enjoyed public support from the ruling elite. On 3 September 2014, King Hamad bin Isa Al-Khalifa said he will fight "wrongful use" of social media by legal means. He indicated that "there are those who attempt to exploit social media networks to publish negative thoughts, and to cause breakdown in society, under the pretext of freedom of expression or human rights." Prior to that, the Prime Minister warned that social media users would be targeted.



The Bahrain Centre for Human Rights (BCHR) documented 16 cases where individuals were imprisoned in 2014 for statements posted on social media platforms, particularly on Twitter and Instagram. In October alone, some of Bahrain’s most prominent human rights defenders, including Nabeel Rajab, Zainab Al-Khawaja and Ghada Jamsheer, face sentencing on criminal charges related to free expression that carry years-long imprisonment.



Nabeel Rajab, President of the BCHR, Director of the Gulf Centre for Human Rights (GCHR), and Deputy Secretary General of the International Federation for Human Rights (FIDH), was arrested on 1 October 2014 and charged with insulting the Ministry of Interior and the Bahrain Defence Forces on Twitter. Rajab was arrested the day after he returned from an advocacy tour in Europe, where he spoke about human rights abuses in Bahrain at the United Nations Human Rights Council in Geneva, addressed the European Parliament in Brussels, and visited foreign ministries throughout Europe.



On 19 October, the Lower Criminal Court postponed ruling on Rajab’s case until 29 October and denied bail. Rajab’s family was banned from attending the proceedings. Under Article 216 of the Bahraini Penal Code, Rajab could face up to three years in prison. We believe that Rajab’s detention and criminal case are in reprisal for his international advocacy and that the Bahraini authorities are abusing the judicial system to silence Rajab. More than 100 civil society organisations have called for Rajab’s immediate and unconditional release, while the United Nations called his detention “chilling” and argued that it sends a “disturbing message.” The United States and Norway called for the government to drop the charges against Rajab, and France called on Bahrain to respect freedom of expression and facilitate free public debate.



Zainab Al-Khawaja, who is over eight months pregnant, remains in detention since 14 October on charges of insulting the King. These charges relate to two incidents, one in 2012 and another during a court appearance earlier this month, where she tore a photo of the King. On 21 October, the Court adjourned her case until 30 October and continued her detention.



Zainab Al-Khawaja is the daughter of prominent human rights defender Abdulhadi Al-Khawaja, who is currently serving a life sentence in prison, following a grossly unfair trial, for calling for political reforms in Bahrain. Zainab Al-Khawaja has been subjected to continuous judicial harassment, imprisoned for most of last year and prosecuted on many occasions. Three additional trumped up charges were brought against her when she attempted to visit her father at Jaw Prison in August 2014 when he was on hunger strike. The charges are related to “entering a restricted area”, “not cooperating with police orders” and “verbal assault”.



Zainab’s sister, Maryam Al-Khawaja, was also targeted by the Bahraini government recently. The Co-Director of the GCHR is due in court on 5 November 2014 to face sentencing for allegedly “assaulting a police officer.” While the only sign that the police officer was assaulted is a scratched finger, Maryam Al-Khawaja suffered a torn shoulder muscle as a result of rough treatment at the hands of police. She spent more than two weeks in prison in September following her return to Bahrain to visit her ailing father. More than 150 civil society organisations and individuals called for Maryam Al-Khawaja’s release in September, as did UN Special Rapporteurs and Denmark.



Other human rights defenders recently jailed include feminist activist and women's rights defender Ghada Jamsheer, detained since 15 September 2014 for comments she allegedly made on Twitter regarding corruption at Hamad University Hospital. Jamsheer faced the Lower Criminal Court on 22 October 2014 on charges of “insult and defamation over social media” in three cases and a verdict is scheduled on 29 October 2014.



While the government of Bahrain continues to publicly tout efforts towards reform, the facts on the ground speak to the contrary. Human rights defenders remain targets of government oppression, while freedom of expression and assembly are increasingly under attack. Without the immediate and unconditional release of political prisoners and human rights defenders, reform cannot become a reality in Bahrain.



We urge the international community, particularly Bahrain’s allies, to apply pressure on the government of Bahrain to end the judicial harassment of all human rights defenders. The government of Bahrain must immediately drop all charges against and ensure the release of human rights defenders and political prisoners, including Nabeel Rajab, Abdulhadi Al-Khawaja, Zainab Al-Khawaja, Ghada Jamsheer, Naji Fateel, Dr. Abduljalil Al-Singace, Nader Abdul Emam and all those detained for expressing their right to freedom of expression and assembly peacefully.



Signed,



Activist Organization for Development and Human Rights, Yemen



African Life Center



Americans for Democracy and Human Rights in Bahrain (ADHRB)

Arabic Network for Human Rights Information (ANHRI)

Avocats Sans Frontières Network



Bahrain Center for Human Rights (BCHR)



Bahrain Human Rights Observatory (BHRO)



Bahrain Institute for Rights and Democracy (BIRD)

Bahrain Salam for Human Rights

Bahrain Youth Society for Human Rights (BYSHR)



Canadian Journalists for Free Expression (CJFE)

CIVICUS: World Alliance for Citizen Participation



English PEN



European-Bahraini Organisation for Human Rights (EBOHR)

Freedom House



Gulf Center for Human Rights (GCHR)



Index on Censorship



International Centre for Supporting Rights and Freedom, Egypt



International Independent Commission for Human Rights, Palestine



International Awareness Youth Club, Egypt



Kuwait Institute for Human Rights



Kuwait Human Rights Society



Lawyer's Rights Watch Canada (LWRC)



Maharat Foundation



Nidal Altaghyeer, Yemen



No Peace Without Justice (NPWJ - Italy)



Nonviolent Radical Party, Transnational and Transparty (NRPTT - Italy)



PEN International



Redress



Reporters Without Borders



Reprieve



Réseau des avocats algérien pour défendre les droits de l'homme, Algeria

Solidaritas Perempuan (SP-Women's Solidarity for Human Rights), Indonesia



Strategic Initiative for Women in the Horn of Africa (SIHA)



Syrian Non-Violent Movement

The Voice of Women



Think Young Women

Women Living Under Muslim laws, UK



Youth for Humanity, Egypt







Tuesday, October 28, 2014

Bahrain regime suspends activities of Al Wefaq National Islamic Society




In a seriously concerning step, the Bahraini regime has suspended the activities of Al Wefaq National Islamic Society (the largest political group in Bahrain) for a period of 3 months.




In a seriously concerning step, the Bahraini regime has suspended the activities of Al Wefaq National Islamic Society (the largest political group in Bahrain) for a period of 3 months.



Al Wefaq considers the measure irrational and irresponsible. Al Wefaq said the tyrannical dictatorship in Bahrain is ruling with an iron fist and moving to destroy the political and social life by blocking the people out. The regime is heading to a unilateral life and replacing the people with sham foundations and projects.


Al Wefaq will continue in its struggle for democratic transition and justice to build a democratic state for all Bahrainis and end the totalitarian rule that is excluding the people through harsh sentences and security measures that violate fundamental human rights.







Pakistan Must Act to Stop the Genocidal Campaign Against Shia Muslims




Malik Ishaq, the leader of the most notorious anti-Shia extremist group Lashkar-e-Jhangvi (LeJ) says that Shia Muslims are "the greatest infidels on earth" and demands that the Pakistani state "declare Shia non-Muslims on the basis of their beliefs".




More than three dozen Shia Muslims have been killed by terrorists in Pakistan this month, pushing the number of victims over three hundred so far in 2014. This epidemic of suicide bombings, bomb explosions and targeted assassinations against the Shia community has extended to Karachi, Hyderabad, Khairpur, Rahim Yar Khan, Quetta, Peshawar, Kohat, and Gilgit, together with the main pilgrim routes.



Since 2008, extremist terrorists have openly declared on the social media that they intend ultimately to exterminate the whole Shia population of the country, numbering between 17 and 30million - unless they convert to the fundamentalist brand of Sunni Islam the terrorists espouse. Thousands have been murdered already, and their properties and places of worship destroyed. This campaign of religious cleansing also extends to other minorities, strikingly similar to what the Daesh are doing in Iraq and Syria. Its time the international community joined the dots, and recognised that we have to contend not only with the territorially based pseudo-caliphate in the Middle East, frightening as that is to all civilised people, but also with its metastasising growths in other vulnerable states, of which Pakistan is the main example.



Malik Ishaq, the leader of the most notorious anti-Shia extremist group Lashkar-e-Jhangvi (LeJ) says that Shia Muslims are "the greatest infidels on earth" and demands that the Pakistani state "declare Shia non-Muslims on the basis of their beliefs". The LeJ is officially banned, yet Ishaq was released from prison in May when the prosecution failed to produce evidence against him and he was acquitted of charges including the master-minding of a bomb attack on Shias in Quetta which killed 90 people. Not a single one of the genocidal killers of the LeJ and other terrorist groups has been finally convicted and put behind bard: some are arrested and spend a few months in custody, but somehow they all get away with their heinous crimes in the end.



Ahle Sunnat wal Jamaat, the parent organisation of the LEJ, which was banned by Pakistan in March 2012, has nevertheless been staging public rallies in Quetta, Karachi and other cities by the Nawaz Sharif government, fomenting religious intolerance and extremism. At the same time the Army Chief General Raheel Sharif has launched an operation against the terrorists in North Waziristan, the lawless province in the northwest of the country bordering Afghanistan which is the cradle of terrorist activity. The government doesn't see any inconsistency between giving terrorism a free rein to commit atrocities and spread their doctrine of hate in the main centres of population, while attempting to root them out in one remote area.



The same double-standard is the hallmark of Asif Ali Zardari, co-chairman of Pakistan Peoples' Party, which has ruled Sindh since 2008. Addressing a gathering in Lahore, he says: "now there is a security threat to Sindh I am looking into it". He has turned a blind eye for six years to the targeted killings of Shia Muslims in Karachi, now a daily occurrence. The construction of several thousand seminaries without permission is in full swing, aimed at radicalising the population of Sindh. What on earth is Zardari looking at and how long will he ignore the threat to the very existence of Pakistan as a democratic state?



Imran Khan, leader of the opposition, advocated negotiations with the terrorists during the election. He denounced them briefly as enemies of Islam in the early months of 2014, but lapsed into silence since then. He too fails to recognize that extremist outfits with an ideology almost identical to that of the Daesh in Syria and Iraq present an existential threat to Pakistan.

Today is the start of the holy month of Muharram, which has seen an upsurge of violence against traditional Shia ceremonies across the nation in recent years. The politicians should forget their differences and come together for once, appealing to their followers of whatever belief to join the processions as they used to do in the old days, in an act of defiance against the anti-Islamic merchants of hate.







Campaign in Germany about Imam Hussein’s (AS) Uprising




A campaign has been launched by a number of lecturers and students of the Islamic Studies Center in Hamburg, Germany, to introduce the objectives and features of Imam Hussein’s (AS) uprising.




A campaign has been launched by a number of lecturers and students of the Islamic Studies Center in Hamburg, Germany, to introduce the objectives and features of Imam Hussein’s (AS) uprising.



72 lecturers and students of the scholarly center have planned sessions with the aim of disseminating the teachings of Ashura uprising.



The campaign began on the first night of Muharram, the first month in the lunar Hijri calendar, and will continue for five nights.

The organizers plan to hold the sessions in five great cities of Germany in next year’s Muharram.



Islam is the largest minority religion in the country. The large majority of Muslims in Germany are of Turkish origin followed by smaller groups from Pakistan, countries of the former Yugoslavia, Arab countries, Iran and Afghanistan.



Every year, millions of Muslims around the world mourn the martyrdom of Imam Hussein (AS) and his 72 faithful companions on Ashura, the tenth day of Muharram.



Ashura ceremonies symbolize eternal and unwavering stance of truth against falsehood and humanity’s struggle against tyranny realized by Imam Hussein (AS).






A 9-month Old Shiite Girl Slains at Imam Hussain Majlis in Karachi




A Shiite girl was martyred and nine others were injured in a grenade attack outside an Shia mosque when they were returning home after attending Imam Hussain Majlis on Tuesday evening in Karachi of Pakistan, a senior police official said.




When children are killed in the hail of virulent hatred there is a special kind of barbarity. Children have no agency, not even the slightest shred of the responsibility or complicity that adults to one degree or another may possess for their beliefs. They are not yet old enough to question the choice their birth forced on them.



When children are attacked and lose their lives or their little legs, their arms, their eyes it is everybody’s tragedy and everybody’s burden.



According to their pronouncements, traits, situations, motivations, and actions – only Wahhabi-inspired takfiri militants are capable of such intent in today’s world.



A minor Shia Muslim baby embraced martyrdom and nine people, mostly women, have been injured in a blast perpetrated by takfiri nasbi terrorists of banned Sipah-e-Sahaba (ASWJ) near an Imam Bargah (Shia religious place for mourning) in Karachi on Tuesday night.



AIG Karachi Police Ghulam Qadir Thaibu said terrorists riding motorcycles threw a cracker near Islamic Research Center near Ayesha Manzil Bus Stop and fled the scene.



The cracker was lobbed near the entry-exit point of the Imam Bargah situated in the premises of Islamic Research Centre when mourners of Imam Hussain (AS) were leaving the Imam Bargah at the end of majlis.



The injured were rushed to the hospital for treatment. A 9 month old baby namely Kiran Fatima alias Batool breathed her last at a private hospital. Some of the injured were identified as Waqar Abbas son of Wafa Abbas, Ali Hassan, Zahra, Faiza and Sana Zaidi.



The blast angered Shia Muslims who complained that the blast occurred due to lack of security by the police and rangers near the Imam Bargah and on the road bridge in front of the Imam Bargah.



Shia parties and leaders condemned the blast that police and rangers considered either cracker or hand grenade. They said that eminent Shia leader Allama Hassan Zafar Naqvi was addressing the majlis-e-aza at the Imam Bargah and the terrorist attack was a veiled threat to Shia leader hence security officials need to make fool proof security arrangements to avoid such attacks at any place in future.


Majlis Wahdatul Muslimeen (MWM) has condemned the attack, seeking more security to Shia mourners during the holy month of Muharram. “We demand full security to the mourners from Sindh government,” said Allama Raja Nasir Abbas of MWM.



He also demanded a swift arrest of the culprits behind the attack.


On Sunday, police in Karachi claimed that they killed nine suspected extremists, who according to them were planning to target Muharram related events.



Main Ashura procession among other Muharram events have been attacked in Karachi in the past as well.


Every year during Muharram, Shia Muslims across the globe mourn the martyrdom of Hazrat Imam Hussain, the grandson of Prophet Mohammad, and his 72 followers in the battle of Karbala.






Islamophobia threatens Muslims’ rights in Belgium




Belgium’s Muslim women speak out against social exclusion for practicing their religion.




Belgium’s Muslim women speak out against social exclusion for practicing their religion.



Hind is a 31-year-old Moroccan woman living in Brussels without a job. She also happens to be a Muslim who wears the Niqab, a hijab that covers the face.



''I’m looking for a job … and here in Belgium there is a new law we cannot work with our veil," said Hind, who did not want to reveal her last name. "We have to take it off to work."



A law banning the full-face veil came into effect in Belgium in 2011. Veiled women objected to the law, which bans clothing that obscures the identity of the wearer in places like parks and on the street.



But in 2012 the Belgian Constitutional Court rejected appeals and ruled that the ban did not violate human rights.



Esma, a 31-year-old Moroccan doctor, told The Anadolu Agency that women tend to get excluded from society in Belgium for even wearing the traditional hijab – which she wears.



''When you graduate from any studies and you want any job, they ask you to not wear it,'' she said. ''It’s not allowed in many activities to wear the headscarf," she said.



Hind and Esma are two of the hundreds of Muslims who gathered Sunday in Brussels to protest Islamophobia and the mysterious death in his prison cell Sept. 15 of a man with a Middle Eastern background.






More wounded terrorists from Syria moved to Israeli hospitals




Forces of the Israeli occupation transferred two wounded terrorists from Syria to Nahariya Hospital in Galilee in the north of the occupied Palestine over the past 24 hours.




Forces of the Israeli occupation transferred two wounded terrorists from Syria to Nahariya Hospital in Galilee in the north of the occupied Palestine over the past 24 hours.



The occupation authorities gave conflicting figures about the number of hospitalized terrorists who have been taken from and to the disengagement area in the Syrian Golan for cure.



The Israeli Walla website reported that two wounded suffering from injuries in the face, limbs and chest were transferred from Syria to Nahariya Hospital, adding that the Hospital have treated 408 so far.



Many terrorist organizations including Jabhat al-Nusra – designated by the UNSC as a terrorist group that should be combated besides ISIS under Chapter VII of the UN Charter- spread in the disengagement zone and gain support by Israel.



Hospitalizing members of terrorist groups who get injured during army operations is just one aspect of the unlimited support provided to these groups by the Israeli occupation authorities, a kind of support that has amounted to no less than the Israeli enemy launching acts of aggression against sites of the Syrian army inside the Syrian territories in various incidents.







Photo: ISIL Beheading Syrians by sword

Indian Students to Hold Conference : "ISIL-Threat to the World Peace"




India’s Muslim Students Organization (MSO) has organized a conference to look into the formation of the Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) terrorist group.




India’s Muslim Students Organization (MSO) has organized a conference to look into the formation of the Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) terrorist group.



The conference, entitled “ISIL; Threat to the World Peace; Creation of CIA, Mossad and Saudi Intelligence” will be held in the Indian city of Jaipur on November 1.



The ISIL is a militant group in Iraq and Syria believed to be supported by the West and some regional Arab countries.



The terrorist group claims as an independent state the territory of Iraq and Syria, with implied future claims intended over more of the Levant, including Lebanon, occupied Palestine, Jordan, Cyprus, and Southern Turkey.



The ISIL militants have seized large swathes of land in Iraq and Syria, terrorizing all communities, including Shiites, Sunnis, Kurds and Christians in the areas they have captured.







Grand Ayatollah Makarem: “Ashura is a thorn in the eyes of the enemies of Islam”




In a statement released to mark the beginning of the sorrowful month of Muharram, Ayatollah Makarem-Shirazi emphasized the need to avoid things which cause division among Muslims.




In a statement released to mark the beginning of the sorrowful month of Muharram, Grand Ayatollah Naser Makarem-Shirazi emphasized the need to avoid things which cause division among Muslims.



His Eminence explained that even if we travel the world over we will never find an event like Ashura in any time or place. Many people do not realize this fact but every year its magnitude becomes more visible. There is no event in all of human history which is as rejuvenating as the event of Ashura was. “Ashura unites both the followers of the Ahlul-Bayt (A) and Muslims as a whole and it also injects new blood which is filled with courage and bravery into the veins of the lovers of Imam Husayn (A) which powers them against the oppressors. Ashura also leads to the purification of the soul and develops ones morality and helps one turn toward God in repentance,” Ayatollah Makarem-Shirazi explained.



In his statement, Ayatollah Makarem-Shirazi stated that evidence shows that more than any previous year, this Muharram’s mourning ceremonies for the Ahlul-Bayt (A) will be more passionate and more splendid. He stated that he hopes that all mourners, speakers and elegists do not forget how powerful Ashura can be.



The renowned source of emulation gave several pieces of advice to the believers on how to conduct themselves during this holy and sorrowful time.



First and foremost, he emphasized that the believers should try to partake in traditional mourning ceremonies which are the most pleasing to the Ahlul-Bayt (A) and to avoid any forms which are offensive and unbefitting to the dignity of the holy martyrs of Karbala.



When the mourners mourn the martyrs of Karbala, they should understand the objectives of Imam Husayn’s (A) uprising and the speakers and elegists should help the people to become familiar with the Imam’s objectives.



Ayatollah Makarem-Shirazi encouraged mourners, especially the youth, to prevent the exploitation of mourning ceremonies by political and factional groups. Muslims should avoid forms of mourning which causes conflict between Muslims and gives the enemies excuses to attack Muslims, such as self-flagellation and insulting the sanctities of our Sunni brethren, emphasizing that any abuse will come at a great cost to the peace and security of Shi’ites throughout the world and will only serve our enemies. He said this in reference to attacks by Takfiri terrorists on Shi’ite mourners which occur every Muharram throughout the Islamic world, especially in Iraq and Pakistan.



His Eminence encouraged the believers to take advantage of the two-month long period of mourning that encompasses Muharram and Safar, saying mourning has great spiritual and moral effects on the soul. He especially encouraged the youth to participate with full vigour. He stated that commemorating the tragic martyrdom of Imam Husayn (A), his beloved family (A), and righteous companions (RA) on the plains of Karbala is a “thorn in the eyes of the enemies of Islam.”









40.000 Muslims in France prisons




The report estimates that 60% of the prison population in France, that is to say 40,000 prisoners, can be considered Muslim, ‘culturally or originally’.




“Muslims in French prisons reach up to 60% claimes France’s UMP party deputy Guillaume Larrive.



The conclusion drawn by Larrive in a report as part of an action plan ‘against Islamist radicalisation in prison’. This action plan is now likely to involve several hundred prisoners, Le Figaro reported.



The report estimates that 60% of the prison population in France, that is to say 40,000 prisoners, can be considered Muslim, ‘culturally or originally’.



French deputy Larrive, who has worked on the budget of the Prison Service for 2015, calls for ‘setting up specialized anti-radicalization shock therapy units (USAR) for prisoners returning from jihad’.



However, French daily Le Monde, firstly regarded the statistics as a ‘shock-number’ of the week, argued the findings of the report citing the related part of it, in which involves some observations of the author of the book ‘Islam in prison’ Farhad Khosrokhavar.



The observations or estimations of Khosrokhavar covered only ‘those close to large urban centers and neighborhood institutions’, not all French prisons, Le Monde claimed.



Le Monde claimed the report allows us to question on the findings, emphasizing ‘the statistics 60% does not originate from an official census since ethnic and religious statistics are prohibited in France.'”







Muharram mourning ceremonies commence in Bauchi, Nigeria / pics



Saturday last week, Muharram 2, 1436 AH (25/10/2014), hundreds of Ahlul Bayt followers in Bauchi began Ashura ceremonies.


Men women and children were seen in orderly manner heading for the Kobi central playground, draped in black carrying black, red and green flags and reciting elegies lamenting the the martyrdom of grandson of the Holy Prophet, Imam Hussain (AS) in the plain of Karbala 61 years after Hijra. The Ameer, Malam Ahmad Yusuf Yashi started his lecture by extending condolence to the Prophet’s Pure Progeny (A’imma), from the Holy Prophet to the last of the Imams (AS), the Awaited Saviour.



He narrated the tragedy of Karbala citing many popular references, saying the event of Ashura and Karbala is now very well known among the people. According to him, due to constant remembrance of the tragedy by followers of Ahlul Bayt (AS), the mystery surrounding the issue has now become more manifest in the society.



The session was completed by songs of lamentation and drama depicting the event of Karbala.


















7th Conference on martyrdom of Imam Hussain held at Rawilpindi




Rawalpindi Arts Council arranged 7th Shahadat-e-Imam Hussain Conference in connection with sacred month of Muharam.




Rawalpindi Arts Council arranged 7th Shahadat-e-Imam Hussain Conference in connection with sacred month of Muharam.



The conference was presided over by Chairman Anjuman Aalmi Tehreek Panjtan Pak Pir Dr Azmat Ullah Sultan. DG Khana Farhang Iran Muhammad Akbari was chief guest at the occasion. The conference was also addressed by Syed Farhad Ali, Sayda Ruqia Shah, Agha Nayyer Abbas, Ali Akbar Kazmi, Naeem Qureshi, Syed Qamar Zaidi, Allah Yar Niazi, Hakeem Mehmood, Maulana Saleem Haider, Rafiq Mughal, Nisar Abbas, Syed Hasnain Sherazi and others religious scholars.



The speakers addressing at the occasion said that Shahadat-e-Imam Hussain is an example of truthfulness. They said that Imam Hussain refused to accept falseness which is need of the time. Resident Director RAC Waqar Ahmed thanked all the honorable guests. The conference was also attended by the leaders from Christian, Hindu and Bohra Community.









Iran’s Quran Radio Produces Quranic Programs in 7 Languages




Iran’s Quran Radio has started the production of Quranic programs in 7 languages.




Iran’s Quran Radio has started the production of Quranic programs in 7 languages.



The programs are in English, French, German, Spanish, Turkish, Arabic and Swahili, Fars news agency reported.


They will be gifted to Islamic radios in other countries to be broadcast in the holy month of Ramadan next year (June- July 2015).



Recitation of the Quran, interpretation, and Quran teaching are among the contents of the programs.



They are being produced with the cooperation of the Islamic Culture and Relations Organization and Al-Mustafa International University.









Monday, October 27, 2014

Yemen military rallies behind the Houthis against Al Qaeda … at last!




If Yemen has, by any account, existed in a semi-permanent state of crisis and tumult over the past three years, plagued by political instability and over-bearing foreign manipulations, this poorest nation of the Arabian Peninsula quite literally stared absolute devastation in the face as Al Qaeda rose to fight the Houthis earlier this October.




By Catherine Shakdam


If Yemen has, by any account, existed in a semi-permanent state of crisis and tumult over the past three years, plagued by political instability and over-bearing foreign manipulations, this poorest nation of the Arabian Peninsula quite literally stared absolute devastation in the face as Al Qaeda rose to fight the Houthis earlier this October.


Only days within the political agreement which saw President Abdo Rabbo Mansour Hadi gave in to Abdel-Malek Al Houthi’s demands for meaningful change, in keeping with popular demands and the spirit of Yemen National Dialogue resolutions, Al Qaeda militants staged a series of terror attacks across the country, targeting the very men who enabled the Yemeni people to reclaim control over their destiny.


Formerly the pariah of Yemen politics due to their affiliation to Shia Islam, a sect which has suffered dearly under Saudi Arabia’s influence, the Houthis of Yemen have risen the undisputed winner of 2011 revolution, having been able to reinvent themselves the people’s champion and fly the flag of democracy as well as social inclusion.


Politically organized under the denomination, Ansar Allah, the group proved itself an inspiration for hundreds of thousands of disillusioned Yemenis, very much the carrier of a new hope for the country. Under Abdel-Malek al Houthi’s impetus, the Houthis tore down Yemen’s veil of falsehood and web of political deceits, exposing to the nation the games which politicians and officials had played for many decades in order to advance their ambitions, and of course amass fortunes.


The further the Houthis advanced in the highlands against Islamists and their tribal militants, the more apparent Yemen’s terror deception became.


By the time the Houthis asserted their control in late September over the capital, Sana’a, having neutralized all opposition, Yemenis woke up to the fact that Al Qaeda had been but a proxy for Riyadh, a weapon used to destabilize the nation and prevent real progress to ever materialize.


As noted by Abdelrahman Jamil, a political commentator, back in September, Saudi Arabia “does not wantto see Yemen as stable, it doesn’t want to see Yemen as a different country, and it doesn’t want to see Yemen as an independent republic or whatever it is.”


As early as Yemen’s first crack at democracy in the early 60s, Saudi Arabia has stood in the shadows, playing politicians and factions against each other to create “manageable chaos” and thus ensure that Yemen would never rise to be the threat Al Saud inherently understand will signal its house’s demise.


Fighting Terror


Because the Houthis directly faced Al Saud’s religious wrath for over three decades, having endured and weathered systematic oppression under the rule of the Salafis and Wahhabis – religious radicals who have proven to harbour suspicious ties to terror groups such as Al Qaeda – whose militants enjoyed unparalleled financial, military and political support from Riyadh; did the faction understand how vital it was for Yemen to extirpate itself from under fanatics’ thumb.


Accustomed to religious terrorism for they lived under its direct shadow, the Houthis immediately recognized the historical opportunity which 2011 offered the Yemeni nation. As Yemen’s first protesters took to the streets Al Houthi pledged his support and his protection to the people, regardless of their political affiliations and religious beliefs, keen to project a sense of unity and nationalism as the country advanced on the road to democracy.


Three years on and Al Houthi has remained true to his promise.


Three years after Yemen rose in anger to denounce nepotism and injustice, the Houthis managed what many thought impossible when they dislodged the last remnants of the former regime - Al Islah, thus breaking the nation free of its shackles.


But if such victory was hailed a defining moment in Yemen’s history, a turning point not just for the country but the region, Islamists soon proved that they were not done just yet.


As Yemen rejoiced, ready to write the next chapter of its transition of power, Al Qaeda pointed its devilish nose, determined to drown the unsuspecting nation into a torrent of blood and tears.


With the army acting a recluse within its bases and encampments, the Houthis were left to hold the fort on their own, abandoned by the political class and the international community as they walked alone to meet Al Qaeda army.


Political U-turn


For days the Houthis have withstood Al Qaeda’s onslaught. As more tribes came to swell the ranks of the terror group, animated by a displaced sense of a religious loyalty and an irrational fear of Shia Islam, the Houthis held their ground, pushing and grinding their way into Al Qaeda territory in order to reclaim Yemen’ sovereignty over its land.


Just as many sold the Houthis to the river, predicting the faction would never recover from the losses it suffered by the hands of terror militants, Yemen suddenly woke up from its stupor.


As often in a moment of great tragedy, one single act of absolute courage can change the tide of events, however bleak and hopeless. At a time when all seemed lost, when Al Qaeda appeared poised to swallow Yemen whole under its black flag, the military swing back into action.


As of Friday the United States resumed its drone campaign against Al Qaeda, thus offering some much needed relief to the Houthis, while President Hadi finally ordered the armed forces to engage terror militants on the ground.


Following decades of intense political bickering and deep dissensions, Yemen finds itself united in its fight against terror. While observers have called the political U-turn an alliance of convenience, arguing that Washington and President Hadi seek only to deal with the most immediate threat – terror, many have begged to differ, noting that Yemen could actually have found its direction in the midst of infinite chaos.


Faced with annihilation by radicalism, Yemen factions chose for the first time to see past their disagreements and conflicting agendas in view of the nation’s interest.


With Yemen standing united behind the banner of the Houthis, the impoverished nation now stands a chance to reclaim its future. But more importantly, this new-found unity will ring the end of Saudi Arabia patronage over this unruly republic.




Kobani Kurdish forces repel ISIL attack




Kurdish forces in the Syrian city of Kobani have repelled an attack by the Takfiri ISIL militants, officials say.




Kurdish forces in the Syrian city of Kobani have repelled an attack by the Takfiri ISIL militants, officials say.



According to Kurdish officials and the London-based so-called Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, the ISIL terrorists attempted to seize Kobani’s border post with neighboring Turkey late Saturday.



The militants were, however, pushed back by the Kurdish fighters in the south and west, guarding the only official gateway from Kobani to Turkey.



Idris Nassan, a local Kurdish official, said that the ISIL militants had shelled Kobani’s border gate late Saturday.



“Of course they will try again tonight. Last night, they brought new reinforcements, new supplies, and they are pushing hard,” Nassan added.



Last week, Iraq’s Kurdistan voted in favor of sending Peshmerga forces to Kobani to help the Kurdish fighters in their battle against the ISIL.



However, Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) spokesman Safeen Dizayee said on Sunday that they will only provide the Kurdish forces in Kobani with artillery support and not with ground soldiers.



Kobani and its surroundings have been under attack since mid-September, with the ISIL militants capturing dozens of nearby Kurdish villages.



As a result of the ISIL’s advances in the region, tens of thousands of Syrian Kurds have been forced to flee into Turkey, which is a stone’s throw from Kobani.



Reports say that at least 815 people have been killed during the clashes between Kurdish fighters and the ISIL militants in Kobani. More than half of those killed are reportedly ISIL militants.