Showing posts with label Afghanistan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Afghanistan. Show all posts

One less troublemaker?

An Ariana Afghan Airlines aircraft flying over...Image via Wikipedia

CANADIAN GETS LIFE FOR TERROR THREATS
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MONTREAL - A Moroccan man was sentenced on Wednesday to life in prison for plotting attacks in Germany and Austria and touting terrorism online from his basement apartment in a Quebec village, said media.

Said Namouh, 37, was convicted in October of four charges under Canada's Anti-Terrorism Act, including conspiring to detonate a bomb, facilitating terrorism, participating in a terrorist group and extorting a foreign government on its behalf.

Namouh was arrested in September 2007 for engaging in more than 1,000 online conversations and producing videos praising violent attacks on US soldiers in Iraq and Afghanistan, as well as helping distribute ransom demands for kidnappers of a British journalist in Gaza.

In online postings, he also touted his explosives expertise and threatened future attacks in Germany and Austria unless their troops withdrew from Afghanistan.

Namouh, who moved to Canada in 2003, may be eligible for parole after 10 years. Ottawa has said it would seek to deport him after his release from prison. AFP

From TODAY, Friday, 19-Feb-2010

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Cloaked in confusion

ISLAM IN FRANCE

Burqa furore hints at internally-conflicted political discourse


Muslims in France wear the niqab (left) while the burqa (centre, right) is seldom seen in the country. AFP

PARIS - It is a measure of France's confusion about Islam and its Muslim citizens that in the political furore here over "banning the burqa", as the argument goes, the garment at issue is not really the burqa, but the niqab.

A burqa is the all-enveloping cloak, often blue, with a woven grill over the eyes, that many Afghan women wear, and it is almost never seen in France. The niqab, often black, leaves the eyes uncovered.

Still, a movement against it has gotten traction within France's ruling centre-right party, which claims to be defending French values, and among many on the left, who say they are defending women's rights. A parliamentary commission will soon meet to investigate whether to ban the burqa.

The debate is indicative of the deep ambivalence about social customs of a small minority of France's Muslims, and of the fear that France's principles of citizens' rights, equality and secularism are being undermined. French discomfort with organised religion is aggravated by these foreign customs, which are associated with repression of women.

Mr Andre Gerin, Mayor of Venissieux, a Lyon suburb with many Muslims from North Africa, began the affair in June by initiating a motion, signed by 57 other legislators, calling for the parliamentary commission.

"The burqa is the tip of the iceberg," Mr Gerin said. "Islamism really threatens us." In a letter to the government, he wrote: "It is time to take a stand on this issue that concerns thousands of citizens who are worried to see imprisoned, totally veiled women."

A few days later, President Nicolas Sarkozy said that "the burqa is not welcome on the territory of the French Republic".

The French press has been full of heated opinion pieces. Women wearing the niqab, many of them French converts to Islam, have said that they have freely chosen to cover themselves after marriage.

Passions have run so high that when domestic intelligence issued a report saying that only 367 women in France wore a full veil, it seemed to make no difference. For many French Muslims, the entire discussion is an incitement to racial and religious hatred.

Mr Mohammed Henniche, secretary for the private Union of Muslim Associations of Seine-Saint-Denis, said: "I think choosing to use burqa instead (of niqab) is not an accident. They chose a word that is associated with Afghanistan, and that spreads a negative, scary image."

Even existing laws are misunderstood, he said, with a woman refused entry to a bank because employees thought a head scarf was illegal.

"French political discourse is internally conflicted," said Mr John R Bowen, professor at Washington University in St Louis. There is confusion about different kinds of public space, he said - the street and places that belong to the state but are not freely open to the public, like schools.

However, Mr Bowen does not think there will be a law banning the niqab. THE NEW YORK TIMES


From TODAY, World – Wednesday, 02-Sep-2009


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Indonesia police probe school on attacks

On related news, teachers in a school were questioned, the school which was believed to be attended by one of the suicide bombers.

Getting to the root of it? Or simply a shotgun approach, which, in not being able to pinpoint, you spray-strike everything on sight?

Whatever the case, read that news story here.

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