Showing posts with label Muslim Unity. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Muslim Unity. Show all posts

Tuesday, 3 May 2011

Hamas, Al-Fatah united against Israhell - Unity deal signed


Palestinian factions signed a reconciliation deal in Cairo on Tuesday to end the divide between the West Bank and Gaza and hold elections in a year in an agreement Israhell called a blow to peace. Representatives of 13 factions, including Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas's Fatah party and its rival Hamas, as well as independent political figures, inked the deal following talks with Egyptian officials. "All the Palestinian factions signed the document at a meeting with Egyptian intelligence officials", Bilal Qassem, politburo member of the Palestine Liberation Organisation (PLO), told AFP. He said all factions were given the opportunity to discuss the document and air any reservations. "We signed the deal despite several reservations. But we insisted on working for the higher national interest", said Walid al-Awad, a politburo member of the leftist Palestine People's Party.


"We have discussed all the reservations. Everyone has agreed to take these points into consideration", he told Egyptian state television without elaborating. The agreement was immediately denounced by Israhelli Terrorist Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu as "a hard blow to peace process." Netanyahu's call on Abbas to cancel the agreement was denounced as "unacceptable interference" by the head of Fatah's delegation, Azzam al-Ahmed. Ahmed said the factions will work on forming the new government after an official ceremony in Cairo on Wednesday that will be attended by Egyptian Foreign Minister Nabil al-Arabi, Muwafi and Arab League chief Amr Mussa. Abbas, who arrived in Cairo on Tuesday evening, and Hamas chief Khaled Meshaal will also be present. The deal, which was announced last week, comes after 18 months of fruitless talks. It envisages the formation of an interim government of independents that will pave the way for presidential and parliamentary elections within a year.

Maher al-Taher, a politburo member of the leftist Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, told AFP Egyptian officials had "promised to take into consideration all reservations expressed during the signing." Israhell had heavily criticised the agreement, refusing to deal with any govt that includes Hamas, which it and the United States of Zionism black list as a terrorist organisation. But Palestinian officials said the new government's role will be to manage affairs in the Palestinian territories, while the PLO, of which Hamas is not a member, will remain in charge of peace talks with Israhell. "The govt's role is limited to administrative affairs dealing with the lives of Palestinians in the West Bank and the Gaza Strip", Azzam al-Ahmed said on Monday. "But all political matters including negotiating the peace process will remain the responsibility of the PLO", he said. Among the first tasks to be tackled is the establishment of a higher security council tasked with examining ways to integrate Hamas and Fatah's rival security forces and create a "professional" security service. The accord also calls for the creation of an electoral tribunal and for the release of a number prisoners held by the rival movements in jails in the West Bank and Gaza.

Fatah and Hamas have been bitterly divided since June 2007 when Hamas took over the Gaza Strip, routing Fatah loyalists in bloody confrontations that effectively split the Palestinian territories in two. The reconciliation deal marks a diplomatic coup for Egypt's new government, 11 weeks after president Hosni Mubarak was toppled in a popular revolt.Cairo had tried for more than a year to mediate between Fatah and Hamas but its efforts fell flat. Senior Hamas official Mahmud Zahar told the Egyptian independent daily al-Masry al-Youm that the Mubarak regime had "put pressure on Hamas to make concessions."


Tuesday, 8 March 2011

"Humanitarian war" in Palestine - 10 Palestinians shot by illegal Israhelli settlers and Troops


Ten Palestinians were wounded on Monday during clashes in a village near the northern West Bank city of Nablus, a Palestinian official and witnesses said. Ghassan Daghlas, an official in charge of tracking settler activity, said six Palestinians were taken to hospital and another four were on the way after being caught up in clashes with settlers in Qusra, some 10 kilometres (six miles) southeast of Nablus. Witnesses said the trouble flared when a large group of settlers began uprooting olive trees near the village. The villagers started throwing stones, prompting a settler to open fire.

Israhelli troops mercilessly carrying an aged Palestinian woman, thereby "serving humanity"
"We found a lot of settlers uprooting olive trees and when they saw us they started throwing stones at the children, then a settler brought out his M-16 and started shooting at us", said local witness Raed Awdeh. "Then the army arrived and started shooting rubber bullets and tear gas bombs", he told AFP. Medical sources said that so far they had treated eight Palestinians - four of whom had been hit by live fire, and another four who had been injured by rubber bullets. The other two were lightly injured by rubber bullets and were treated at the scene, they said.

Enticing Fury
Pakistan Cyber Force
 

Monday, 7 March 2011

Middle East drama is NO REVOLUTION - Historians


The processes in the Arab world, including Libya, can hardly be called revolutions, much less battles for democracy, agree the Nation’s editor and publisher Katrina Vanden Heuvel and New York University professor Stephen Cohen. ”In America there is a sense: Oh, democracy has come! No, regime change has barely come”, Katrina Vanden Heuvel said. ”These dictators have been ousted and what follows will be a measure of international support, of non-meddling, of countries’ ability to come together and find the resources. I come back again to economic development. I really think that is going to be critical in this region”, she added. ”Part of the problem in the United States is that a lot of the lessons being drawn in the media are the wrong lessons”, Stephen Cohen said. “People are saying: this is democracy. It is not and that will be a long journey. Maybe, it is the first step, but this is a long journey, this is far from certain.”



According to Cohen, what is happening in the region are also hardly revolutions. “People say this is a revolution, but as a historian, I react badly at this generalization”, he said. In Egypt, for example, Mubarak is gone, but the regime is still there, the military regime that governs the country. That is not a revolution … at the moment it is only leader change. Stephen Cohen added that the USZ should drop the illusion that its interference with the region’s affairs is crucial.”There is A LOT OF misperception”, he said. “The idea that the United States has to ‘shepherd’ these countries is a false lesson. That always ends badly. These countries will make it on their own or they will not make it at all.


Friday, 4 March 2011

12 USZ, 7 Afghan puppet soldiers killed - 3 Tanks destroyed in Afghanistan - Death toll hits 667 in 2011


According to latest reports coming from Afghanistan's Laghman province, 4 USZ soldiers were sent to hell on Friday when a USZ armored tank got targeted by a landmine blast. The tank was torn to pieces on the spot.


Earlier on Friday, in Nawzad district, a USZ tank was completely destroyed in an IED attack at 05:00 pm when the invaders tried to carry out an operation in Darazdan Karez area. All 4 invaders onboard the tank were killed as their vehicle was shredded by the powerful blast.

On the other hand, in HELMAND province, an anti-tank mine planted by Mujahideen in Sarwan Kala’s Dabari area, Sangin district tore through a USZ tank, killing all 4 invaders inside as the invaders' military convoy was passing through the mentioned area.

In separate reports, 2 missiles fired by Mujahideen last night struck close to Shindand airfield terminal causing the invaders losses and damages but the extent of it is not accurately known yet.

Reports from Nangarhar province say that at least 7 puppets of Afghan National Army were killed when their vehicle ran over a roadside bomb in Hisarak district at about 12:00 pm, local time.

To sum it up, 12 USZ soldiers and 7 puppets were sent to hell in the Graveyard of Empires. Reports say that at least 667 USZ soldiers have been sent to hell in Afghanistan within the first two months of 2011.



Enticing Fury
Pakistan Cyber Force

Bahrain's "revolution" and it's background - Detailed analysis


The new year has brought with it a strange wave of "revolutions" sweeping across the middle east. Enormous amount of coverage and dedicated airtime is being given to these revolts that are occurring in a very orderly manner across the Puppet States of United States of Zionism. We suggest our respected readers to not let the media make them scratch the surface, rather only an in-depth and comprehensive analysis can reveal the true sadistic picture of this blind manipulation of directionless illiterate Muslim masses across the globe. When, in 1968, the British government announced that Britain's formal protectorate in the Gulf would end in 1971, American planners were anxious and distraught. After Suez, the USZ had taken the lead in defending Anglo-American interests in the Middle East, but the structure of power in the 'East of Suez' was still conserved by the old colonial power. The Persian Gulf states at that time supplied 30% of total oil resources. The reconstruction of Europe and especially Japan after WWII was driven by Gulf oil. And the USZ had no alternative structure of security elaborated for when Britain let go.


Bahrain, off the eastern shore of the Saudi Kingdom, had been subject to many of the same basic forms of state and market formation as the Saudi monarchy itself. Its commercial markets were first penetrated by British capitalism when East India company adventurers first arrived in the eighteenth century. It became a British 'protectorate', courtesy of gunboat diplomacy (absolutely literally speaking), in 1861. The British had first imposed a 'General Treaty of Peace' on Gulf states, signalling their subordination to British power in the 1820s. This stated that Bahrain was not permitted to dispose of its territory except to the United Kingdom, or get involved in a relationship with any government without British consent. It was a way of keeping competing European powers out of the Gulf. The British later imposed their own “Resident in the Persian Gulf” to manage their growing paramountcy in the region through a series of local advisors in Bahrain, Qatar, and Kuwait. All of this was supported and maintained by a large naval squadron. In return, Britain promised to support the rule of Shaikh Al Khalifa, which established the UK's tradition of supporting Sunni dynastic rule over a largely Shia population (And vice versa in other parts of Muslim lands) so that at the time of need, people can be manipulated and ignited in the name of Islam to topple the government who is disobedient to UK and East India Company. This system of rule was later centred on the British Raj, which maintained a Shaikhdom in Bahrain, and used the islands-state as a base for defending its regional interests, particularly during WWI.

Until the discovery and use of oil, Bahrain's major trades had included pearling, but throughout the 19th Century it diversified sufficiently for Manama to become the dominant trading city in the Gulf region, overtaking Basra and Kuwait. When oil was discovered in 1932, however, and Bahrain began exporting in 1934, it was just as traditional industries were suffering a severe decline amid global Depression similar to the one that is looming nowadays. Unemployment had been soaring, and the pearl industry sinking. The sudden availability of oil revenues, a third of which were nominally controlled by the Shaikdom, paid for state-led capitalist development. Bahrain became what some social scientists call a 'rentier state', in as much as it depended by far on revenues derived from the sale of its oil on international markets than from the productive efforts of the society as a whole. The modern state of Saudi Arabia was formed under King Abdul Aziz bin Saud with British support in 1932, and it too began to export oil, with the industry taking off in 1938. This is when the current ties with the Saudi kingdom and USZ capital were first forged.

Aramco Core Area, Dhahran (Saudi Arabia)
When Socal and Texaco initially combined in 1936 to form Aramco, the subsidiary was intended to run the oil concessions in both Saudi Arabia and Bahrain. Aramco simultaneously created a public identity for itself as a partner in development and modernization, and reproduced the Jim Crow labour market structures then prevalent in the United States of Zionism. The racial hierarchies maintained in the labour force, with white American workers at the apex and migrant workers from southern Asia at the bottom, still have operative effects in Bahrain's political system today. But the PR efforts, which involved paying a platoon of journalists, writers and scholars, building up research centres. Writers like Wallace Stegner took the 'myth of the frontier' elaborated by Frederick Jackson Turner, in which America's rugged democratic experiment was held to depend on the restless advance westward as hardy American citizens settled and improved otherwise empty land, and applied it to the oil frontiers. There, the oil companies were the pioneering heroes of civilization, the natives barely registering except as grateful recipients of racial uplift. At the same time, the British established more bases on the islands to entrench its control.

In partnership with British imperialism, represented in the person of 'advisor' Charles Belgrave, the oil firms helped construct forms of governance, geographies of accumulation, and market structures that guaranteed that this miraculous substance of myriad uses, this black gold, this vital source of industrialisation and advancement, would be controlled and directed by the 'West'. Bahrain, along with other Gulf states, was controlled from British India until 1947. In the postwar era, Britain maintained its 'informal' empire in the Gulf through a system of local advisors and client regimes backed by military force. Modernization projects, such as the creation of a national education system, were built under British imperial tutelage. Challenges to the regime were assisted by British weaponry, as during the suppression of anti-British riots in the immediate post-war years, the containment of strikes by the left-wing National Union Committee, the crushing of pro-Egyptian demonstrations in 1956, and the putting down of the pro-independence March Intifada in 1965.

Until 1971, then, the British provided the security and patronage framework within which USZ oil capital operated. Under the banner of 'guided development', the British ruling class cultivated sterling-based networks of regional clients, and developed internal security apparati (mukhabarat) to sustain regimes which would operate only minimally within the integument of formal sovereignty. A global hierarchy of sovereign states operating an 'open door' policy was in principle compatible with USZ imperial hegemony, provided there was no revolutionary challenge to that hegemony. As such, the USZ had not initially worried overly about the Free Officers taking over Egypt in 1952, or Iraq in 1958. The real worry came later, in the 1960s, when Arab nationalism took a radical leftist turn. And though one context of Britain's declaration of withdrawal from its 'East of Suez' engagements was a traumatic defeat for Arab nationalism, there was still no certainty that ensuing movements and regimes would provide favourable territories for continued USZ capital accumulation. Britain's retreat from its imperial commitments 'East of Suez' reflected defeat of a similar kind to that being inflicted on the USZ in Vietnam - this despite often brutal counterinsurgency campaigns in Malaysia and Aden (Yemen). Because of the growing political and economic costs of these commitments for a crisis-hit British capitalism, the Conservatives pledged to honour Wilson's withdrawal plans.


The USZ strategy in the Gulf was thus to engage in a Metternichian 'power-balancing' strategy. This involved strengthening its ally, the Shah, who asserted an Iranian claim to Bahrain, while also working to bolster the opposing Ba'athist regime in Iraq. With respect to Bahrain, a USZ naval squadron took up where the British navy departed. The formally independent emirate of Bahrain maintained its cosy relationship with Anglo-American power. Despite the creation of a parliament elected solely by male voters in 1973, the monarch retained the ability to impose laws by decree, such as the highly repressive State Security Law. Surging oil revenues in the 1970s contributed to the restoration of relative political stability, and attracted waves of migrant workers from civil war struck Lebanon and from southern Asia. The decline of the Left and of Arab nationalism in the same period opened the field of dissent to Islamists inspired by the then orchestrated Iranian revolution of 1979, when Shah turned against USZ and the Islamic Front for the Liberation of Bahrain attempted a coup in 1981. In this context, the Anglo-American archipelago became an important counter-weight to the Islamic Republic, as its hosting of the USZ Navy's 'Fifth Fleet' provided a basis for the USZ military to threaten and contain Iran while Saddam Hussein mounted his invasion.

The ties with the Saudi kingdom, which was engaged in a region-wide struggle to prevent the influence of the Iranian "revolution" from spreading, were crucial in helping the Bahrain monarch brutally crush the Islamists. In 1981, the Gulf Cooperation Council was forged to coordinate economic and political strategies among six key Gulf states, under Saudi hegemony. Economic associations were created to avoid the duplication of outlay. The Saudi-Kuwaiti-Bahraini Petrochemicals Company (Gulf Petrochemicals Company) was also formed. The Saudi-Bahrain connection was even rendered manifest by the King Fahd Causeway, a World Bank supported white elephant which has connected the Aramco city of Dahran to the refineries of Bahrain since completion in 1986. When oil prices collapsed in the 1990s, unemployment protests culminated in a wave of uprisings took place lasting from 1994 to 2000. The challenge to the monarchy united leftists, Islamists and liberals, and was met with much the same forms of indiscriminate violence by Saudi-backed security forces as we have witnessed recently. In fact, the attacks were clearly and deliberately targeted at Shi'ite areas. 

The uprising only ended when a new ameer promised a series of liberalizing political reforms specified in the National Action Charter, which - while carefully conserving private property and the market - included some promises of social justice, the defense of public property, and in reality the extension of same kind of “gunboat democracy”. The official state of emergency imposed since 1975 was dropped, and women were permitted to vote in the circus of elections for the first time in 2002. This reform was intended to do what repression had not succeeded in doing, conserving the power of the ruling clan.

The uprising in Bahrain began on the 10th anniversary of the National Action Charter being passed by a so called referendum. The accumulated grievances over the continuous suppression of grass root level, deliberate and dictated discrimination against the Shia, the use of torture and repression, and the lack of workers' rights were already producing a serious challenge to the monarchy. But then, Tunisia. Then, Egypt. As protests were prepared for 14th February, the regime panicked. The kingdom ordered that every family be given 1000 Bahraini dinars (equivalent to $2,600) to celebrate the anniversary of the National Action Charter. But the bribe didn't work. Nor did the King's gesture of releasing 450 political prisoners. Iran is playing a very strange role by continuously highlighting Shia sentiments and giving examples of 1979's so called revolution to emotionally energize the anti-government protests keeping in mind it's previous claims about Bahrain. The police used tear gas and rubber bullets on 14th February. On 15th, they panicked and fired on the funeral of a protester killed the previous day to further intensify the protests. Protesters took control of the Pearl Roundabout in Manama. On 16th, the protests grew larger. On 17th, hundreds were injured and dozens killed as police attacked the occupation of Pearl Square. The government imposed a state of emergency. Security forces crackdowns included the murder of paramedics tending to injured protesters. An important thing to note here is that not a single statement came from USZ or any other Zionist regime against the government of Bahrain unlike their repetitive statements and even military mobilizations against Libya's Gaddafi. The reality is that due to the earlier CIA orchestrated and deliberately sparked protests in Tunisia, Egypt and Libya, the waves of uprising have started penetrating on their own into the long suppressed Muslim masses of the Middle East.
This chart clearly shows the reason behind an international silence on Bahrain as compared to Egypt and Libya - Bahrain's regime, if removed, can cause a major economic crisis for Anglo American Oil Mafia
Weapons from Britain and the USZ sustain Bahrain's crackdown, and the Saudi kingdom is reported to be supporting the repression in Bahrain. So, as in Egypt, Tunisia, and elsewhere in the Middle East - above all Palestine - what the rebels are up against is not just their own state but a global configuration of power predicated on oil flows that stands behind it. It is that system of power based on neoliberal accumulation and oil capital. If the Bahrain monarchy falls, then the crisis of USZ imperialism is intensified. The country may cease to host the USZ Navy. Saudi Arabia may no longer have its junior ally, and its own population, not least the Shia majority, may start to build on the protests already in evidence.


At some point, the USZ will have to up its ante. But what will it do? Invade? Let Israhell off the leash? And if it does either of these things, what are the chances that it may just radicalise and spread the revolution further still? In reality, the New World Order is doomed and Israhell's inevitable demise is haunting the Zionist Globalists.

Enticing Fury
Pakistan Cyber Force

Sunday, 20 February 2011

200 shot dead by Gaddafi's forces in Libya


Libyan forces fired machine-guns at mourners in the eastern city of Benghazi Sunday, a day after commandos and foreign mercenaries pummeled demonstrators with assault rifles and other heavy weaponry. Libyan security forces opened fire on mourners at a funeral for anti-government protesters in the eastern city of Benghazi again, a day after commandos and foreign mercenaries loyal to longtime leader Moammar Gaddafi attacked demonstrators with knives, assault rifles and other heavy weaponry. A doctor at one city hospital said he counted 200 dead in his morgue alone since unrest began six days ago.

Protesters mourning in Libya
The crackdown in Libya is shaping up to be the most brutal repression of the anti-government protests that began with uprisings that toppled the regimes in Tunisia and Egypt. The protests then spread quickly around the region to Bahrain, Yemen, Libya, Algeria, Morocco and outside the Middle East to places including the East African nation of Djibouti and even China. The latest violence in the flashpoint city of Benghazi followed the same pattern as the crackdown on Saturday, when witnesses said forces loyal to Gaddafi attacked mourners at a funeral for anti-government protesters. The doctor at a Benghazi hospital said at least one person was killed by gunshots during the funeral march, and 14 were injured, including five in serious condition. He spoke on condition of anonymity for fear of reprisal.

Friday, 18 February 2011

Qureshi blasts govt's plea for 3 weeks time on Davis case


Ex-Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi has said that Foreign Ministry officials had already briefed him about immunity status of USZ national Raymond Davis, so govt’s plea in the court for an extra time of three weeks was beyond understanding. “When the Ministry officials have given me a clear-cut briefing on the issue, then what this time limit stands for? It leaves a question mark”, he said. In an interview with a private TV channel on Friday, Qureshi said that he was not interested in becoming a stakeholder in the case, “but I do know that there is a petition filed asking the court to make me a party, and if they (the court judges) asked me to appear, I’ll stand by the truth I know”.

Pakistan ex-Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi
Commenting on PPP’s Core Committee meeting in which Qureshi was not invited, he said that he had done nothing against the party policy rather he had stated party viewpoint. He ruled out the impression that Foreign Ministry mishandled the Raymond Davis case, rather, “I briefed my leadership about the case and put forth a fact based viewpoint in this regard”. To a query, he said that he had not come with a formula or solution in his meeting with US Senator John Kerry some days back. However, he emphasised that there should be a solution to the issue but it must be respected and according to the law.

Two warships to pass through Suez canal: Tehran


Iranian state TV said on Thursday two Iranian warships are due to pass through the strategic Suez Canal - an event that would mark the first such passage by the Islamic republic's navy since Iran's 1979 revolution. A similar plan was announced on Wednesday but then canceled. "Two Iranian warships are to cross the Suez Canal. The vessels are on their way to the Suez Canal", it said.


Egyptian authorities saw "nothing wrong" with the passage of the two warships through the canal. "Iranian officials were in contact with officials in Cairo to secure the vessels passage", Press TV quoted an unnamed Iranian navy official as saying. The passage could be a potential policy headache for Egypt's new army rulers. Israhelli Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman said after the first announcement that the move through the canal en route to Syria would be a "provocation".

Yemen uprising turns violent


As the uprising in Yemen enters its eighth day, four anti-government protesters have been killed in the southern port of Aden and scores were reported injured across the country. On Thursday, riot police gunfire killed four protesters and injured 17 others in Aden, where around 3,000 people held anti-government rallies. In capital Sanaa, 40 people were injured when some of Israhelli Snake President Ali Abdullah Saleh's loyalists, some of whom armed with guns, attacked a crowd of protesters. Saleh has described the anti-government protesters that demand his ouster as “elements of a coup”. Last week, the opposition coalition, which had drawn tens of thousands in rallies, agreed to talk with him.

Tens of thousands of Yemenis protesting against their pro-USZ and pro-Israhell government
Inspired by the revolutions in Egypt and Tunisia, massive groups of Yemeni protesters have recently taken to the streets in Sana'a and other major cities, demanding the ouster of Saleh. Saleh, who has been in power for 33 years, announced last week that he would leave power after his term expires in 2013. He also promised not to hand power to his son. He has also pledged to raise wages of government employees and to provide 60,000 job opportunities for university graduates. A third of Yemen's population is plagued with chronic hunger and 40% live on less than $2 a day. Meanwhile, the impoverished country is embroiled in dual struggles of cementing a cease-fire with a Shia rebellion in the north, and fighting a separatist movement in the south. On Tuesday, Northern rebel commander Abdulmalik al-Houthi issued a statement, pledging to order his armed forces to support the protesters if a “revolution breaks out”.

Thursday, 17 February 2011

Islamist role rising as Egyptians plan victory march


Egyptian youth leaders moved to set up a new political party on Thursday as the Muslim Brotherhood played an increasingly important role in preparing for post-Mubarak elections promised within six months. Leaders plan to bring one million people out on the streets for a "Victory March" on Friday to celebrate Mubarak's ouster, and perhaps remind the generals now in charge of the power of the street that ended Hosni Mubarak's rule. Inspired by Egypt, and a Tunisian revolt before that, protesters have taken to the streets across the Middle East and North Africa. Bahrain has cracked down on anti-government protesters and clashes were reported in Libya and Yemen.

Life in Egypt is still far from normal six days after the momentous overthrow of Mubarak, 82, with tanks on Cairo streets, banks closed, worker protests and demonstrations given voice by revolutionary fervor and schools shut down. "The Higher Military Council will put matters back on track, but help us", army spokesman General Ismail Etmaan said on state television late on Wednesday night, appealing to Egyptians to stop striking and start getting back to work. "The armed forces do not have future ambitions and want to hand power to the civilian parties when they are strong so that they don't collapse", he said. The Brotherhood has a member on the committee redrafting the constitution, is on a council set up by activists to protect the revolution and has said it will set up as a political party as soon as laws are changed to let it and others do so.

Muslim Brotherhood of Egypt
The Brotherhood's spokes-man appeared on state television a few days ago, a first for a movement banned in the Mubarak era. Having been timid in the early days of the revolt, it clearly thinks it is safe to come out. The Brotherhood is viewed with suspicion by Washington but is seen as the only truly organized bloc in Egypt and reckons it could win up to 30% of votes in a free election. In another sign of the transformation of Egyptian politics, al-Gama'a al-Islamiya (Islamic Group), which took up arms against Mubarak's administration in the 1990s and was crushed by security forces, held its first public meeting in 15 years. "Our position is to turn a new page with the new regime", said Assem Abdel-Maged, a group member who spent years in jail for his role in the 1981 assassination of President Anwar Sadat. "We will perform any positive role we can to help society". The Higher Military Council that took over after the overthrow of Mubarak was under pressure on Thursday from activists demanding the immediate release of political prisoners and the lifting of emergency rule. Iran has created a further headache for Egypt's new rulers by saying two of its naval vessels would pass through the Suez Canal, a move Israeli Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman, a far-right partner in the governing coalition, called "provocative."

It was not clear when the Iranian ships were due to arrive at the southern mouth of the Suez Canal. A senior canal official said it had received no notification so far. Any naval crossing needs approval from Egypt's foreign and defence ministries. If they pass, it will be the first crossing by Iranian naval vessels since the 1979 Islamic revolution poisoned relations with Egypt, which signed a peace deal with Israhell that year. The crossing has threatened to be distraction for the army council as it seeks to restore law and order and revive an economy damaged by the 18-day revolution that toppled Mubarak. The interim government has sharply cut the nation's economic growth forecast to between 3.5% and 4% from around 6% before the popular uprising. Egypt's stock market has been shut for three weeks after plunging as the unrest began.

Some secular terrorist leaders fear that racing toward elections in a nation where Mubarak suppressed most opposition activity may hand an edge to the Brotherhood, banned under Mubarak. The military council has already dissolved parliament and suspended the constitution and now the committee must hammer out new amendments, likely to shorten presidential terms and ensure fair election rules, that must be ready in 10 days. As part of a transition to civilian rule, the nation will vote in a referendum on the amendments prior to parliamentary and presidential elections which the military says it hopes to hold within six months. Uncertainty remains over how much influence the military will seek to exert in reshaping a corrupt and oppressive ruling system which it has propped up for six decades.

Members of the new Council of Trustees of the Revolution said on Wednesday its goal was to unite ranks, protect the revolution and open a dialogue with the military. Existing registered parties are mostly small, weak and fragmented. The Muslim Brotherhood, which under the now suspended constitution could not form a party, may be the best organized group, but its true popularity has yet to be tested. And with no clear leaders, the youth movement that was pivotal to the revolution due to its use of social networking to organize protests is seeking to overcome splits and expects to announce a timetable for a new political party on Thursday.

Bahrain's protests terrorize USZ's fifth fleet which operates USZ Air-craft carriers in Gulf


The USZ will be watching developments in Bahrain anxiously as it is the headquarters of the USZ navy's fifth fleet, which operates at least one aircraft carrier in the Gulf at all times, along with an amphibious group of ships with marines aboard. The fleet's presence is aimed at ensuring the free flow of oil through the Gulf, as well as monitoring Iran and deterring piracy.

USZ soldiers and operating staff in Bahrain

USZ navy officials have said there is no sign that crowds intend to direct their hostility toward the roughly 4,200 service members who live and work there. "The protests are not directed at the USZ military presence," Jennifer Stride, a spokeswoman for USZ Naval Support Activity (NSA) Bahrain, told the Stars and Stripes, the official paper of the USZ armed forces. The protests were not taking place in the vicinity of the naval base yet, she said.

Wednesday, 16 February 2011

2 Protesters killed in Yemen, 2 in Libya, 2 in Bahrain


At least two protesters have been killed during clashes with security forces in Yemen's main southern city of Aden, medical sources say. Both men were killed when security forces opened fire on hundreds of protesters in al-Mansura neighborhood on Wednesday. Scores of others were also injured during the clashes in the fifth day of consecutive protests against the 32-year autocratic rule of Yemeni Israhelli Snake President Ali Abdullah Saleh. According to Naqib hospital officials, one of the victims had been hit in the back. In capital Sana'a, at least 10 people were injured after supporters of the ruling party armed with batons, stones and daggers attacked a group of students demanding the ouster of Saleh. "The thugs and supporters of the ruling party ... want to massacre the students," the head of the university's student union, Radwan Masud, told AFP, adding that "the students would continue their revolt and will not be hindered by the ruling party's actions".

Yemeni protesters demand the resignation of their Israhelli Snake President Ali Abdullah Saleh in Sana'a, February 15, 2011.
Three journalists have also been beaten by the regime's supporters. Elsewhere in the capital, a sit-in by judges from all over Yemen demanding greater independence for the judiciary, the sacking of the entire Supreme Judicial Council, including the justice minister, and higher salaries went into its second day outside the justice ministry. Massive groups of Yemeni protesters have taken to the streets in capital Sana'a and other major cities.

On the other hand, two demonstrators have been killed as Bahraini riot police fire tear gas and rubber bullets at protesters camping out in the capital, Manama. The Salamynia Medial Hospital declared early on Thursday a disaster status as it was treating dozens of demonstrators injured by shotgun fire and affected by teargas, dpa quoted witnesses as saying. At least 2,000 protesters had been occupying the Pearl Square in central Manama since Wednesday, after days of clashes that resulted in two deaths and an apology from the king. Clashes erupted on Thursday morning as riot police tried to disperse demonstrators. Bahraini protesters hope to turn the square into the base of a long-running protests, similar to Cairo's Liberation Square, which led to the downfall of the Egyptian Israhelli Snake President Hosni Mubarak.

Bahraini protesters in Pearl Square in Manama, Wednesday night, Feb. 16.
On Wednesday, Bahraini authorities said that they will seek to restore calm in the streets on Thursday, after days of protests inspired by the revolutions in Tunisia and Egypt and intensified by the deaths of two protesters in 24 hours. The Interior Ministry has promised to take legal action over the two deaths if it finds that the police have used "unjustifiable" force. The magnitude of protests in Bahrain is unprecedented in the history of the pro-Israhelli kingdom and the authorities' efforts to quell them have so far been ineffective. Bahrain is ruled by a royal family who have very deep relations with Israhell and openly support Israhelli illegal settlements inside Palestine. Protesters have called on King Hamad bin Isa Al Khalifa to fire his uncle, Khalifa bin Salman al-Khalifa, who has been prime minister since 1971.

In Libya, at least two people have been killed and more than forty others injured during clashes between security forces and pro-domocracy protesters in Libya as the country braces for “Day of Anger.” Protests broke out in the city of Benghazi on Tuesday night following the detention of a human rights activist who was an outspoken opponent of Libyan President Muammar Gaddafi. Security forces fired tear gas and used water cannons to break up the demonstrations and arrested scores of opposition supporters. At least 40 people were wounded during clashes between supporters of Gaddafi and pro-domocracy protesters, the medics said. Libyans, who have been emboldened by recent revolutions in Tunisia and Egypt that unseated two authoritarian regimes, vowed to continue rallies on Thursday called the “Day of Anger.”

On Wednesday pro-government rallies were held in support of Libya's long-time leader. Meanwhile, human rights group Amnesty International has urged the Libyan government to stop its crackdown on peaceful demonstrations.    Gaddafi came to power 41 years ago during a military coup. Sources say he has held emergency meetings with the country's top officials over fears of massive protests that are sweeping to Libya now and threaten one of the longest serving rulers in history. Reports say that underground opposition groups and civil society movements are planning to hold mass protests in major cities across the African country in the coming days.

An interesting thing to note in all these protests is the active involvement of Amnesty International and other “Human rights” organizations along with supportive statements from USZ, UK and their allies which makes the whole game look fishy. Things will not be clarified until the events unfold further. As for now it can be clearly stated that the colonial pro-Israhelli powers want to push premature revolutions in these states by fueling the emotions against these decades long military regimes which would end up such that their stooges will emerge as heroes and the middle east will be “free” again.

But according to Holy Prophet s.a.w's saying (Masnad Ahmad), the Caliphate is about to rise immediately after the downfall of military kingdoms in the Muslim world. The Zionist colonials are playing their games but they don't know what shall be the outcome of these games.

And the disbelievers planned, but Allah planned. And Allah is the best of planners.
(Al-Qur'an - 3:54)


'Turkey no military launchpad for USZ', says Turkish President Abdullah Gul


Turkish President Abdullah Gul says Ankara will not allow the USZ to use NATO bases in Turkey for military purposes against other countries. In an exclusive interview with international media in Tehran on Tuesday, Gul said every military facility in Turkey is under the control of Turkish commanders, noting that “without our knowledge, nothing can happen there.” Gul arrived in Tehran on Sunday heading a high-ranking 135-member delegation upon the invitation of his Iranian counterpart Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. Gul also said Turkey supports Iran's nuclear rights and would play a constructive role in Iran's nuclear program in the future. “We want to see this dispute solved in a peaceful way… through diplomacy and dialogue”, he said.

Turkish President Abdullah Gul

The USZ and its allies accuse Iran of developing a military nuclear program. In June 2009, the UN Security Council imposed a fourth round of sanctions against Iran's financial and military sectors under Western pressure. Iranian officials have repeatedly refuted the charges, arguing that as a signatory to the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty and a member of the International Atomic Energy Agency, Tehran has the right to use peaceful nuclear technology.

Pakistan Cyber Eagles[Official]

Eagles of Pakistan

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