Tag: extremists

  • Mahmud Abbas And Benjamin Netanyahu Among World Leaders Linking Arms In March Against Terrorism

    Mahmud Abbas And Benjamin Netanyahu Among World Leaders Linking Arms In March Against Terrorism

    PARIS (AFP) – World leaders, including some who are normally implacable foes, on Sunday linked arms in unprecedented scenes of solidarity during an historic march against terrorism in Paris.

    Walking arm in arm alongside President Francois Hollande were a string of leaders including British Prime Minister David Cameron and German Chancellor Angela Merkel.

    They were joined on the front line by arch nemeses Israeli leader Benjamin Netanyahu and Palestinian President Mahmud Abbas, who were positioned just four people apart.

    Also present were Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko and Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov, whose countries are engaged in a violent struggle in Ukraine.

    “Paris is the capital of the world today,” said Hollande before the march, which attracted hundreds of thousands to the streets of Paris and many more across the rest of France and Europe.

    Before he set off for the march, Britain’s David Cameron said: “We in Britain face a very similar threat, a threat of fanatical extremism.

    “It’s a threat that has been with us for many years and I believe will be with us for many more years to come,” he told Sky News.

    Italy’s Prime Minister Matteo Renzi vowed that Europe would “win the challenge against terrorism”.

    The procession was organised in record time following a three-day extremist killing spree that saw 17 people – police, prominent cartoonists, shoppers and others – die at the hands of three gunmen.

    The dramatic events ended Friday when the attackers took hostages in two separate locations and were eventually shot dead by security forces in simultaneous assaults.

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • Muslim Police Officer Ahmed Merabet Among Victims of Charlie Hebdo Shootings

    Muslim Police Officer Ahmed Merabet Among Victims of Charlie Hebdo Shootings

    Thousands were today paying tribute to dead Muslim police officer Ahmed Merabet using the rallying cry ‘JeSuisAhmed’ after the heroic officer was gunned down in Paris.

    The celebration of Mr Merabet, who was killed as he begged for his life by suspected Islamic fanatics, echoes the ‘JeSuisCharlie’ (I am Charlie) demonstrations that have swept the world in the wake of yesterday’s shocking massacre.

    His colleagues today said they were in extreme shock after a video of the Charlie Hebdo office attack emerged – showing Mr Merabet on the ground and begging for mercy as he is killed casually executed by a gunshot to the head.

    Today, #JeSuisAhmed began trending on Twitter as thousands expressed their admiration for his sacrifice while defending the right to freedom of speech.

    The rallying cry is a play on words of ‘Je Suis Charlie’, the catchphrase spawned in the wake of the deadly massacre to show solidarity with those killed.

    Mr Merabet, originally from Livry-Gargan in north eastern Paris, had been a fully-trained police officer for eight years.

    Today his police union colleagues released a statement, stating they were in shock after seeing him ‘shot down like a dog’.

    The union’s departmental secretary, Rocco Contento, said he was a very quiet and conscientious man.

    He added: ‘We are all extremely shocked. The police are deeply affected by the video of the murder of their colleague circulating on some networks.’

    It is understood that Mr Merabet was a married Parisian cycle cop assigned to the 11th arrondissement – the Paris neighbourhood where Charlie Hebdo’s office is located and known for its dining and fine wines.

    As the French magazine vowed to publish next week in defiance of the massacre, one French mourner wrote: ‘Ahmed Merabet died protecting the innocent from hate. I salute him.’

    Mr Merabet was one of 12 people killed in the terrifying attack, including eight journalists at the offices of the French satirical newspaper, two guests, and one other policeman.

    Tributes for Mr Merabet continuing pouring in today, with one person writing: ‘RIP Ahmed Merabet, French policeman, murdered protecting people in Paris’, while Alan Mendoza said: ‘Important to note that amid the carnage today a brave Muslim policeman was murdered by those claiming to represent Islam.’

    His family have said they wish to bury him at a famous Muslim cemetery in France. Located just north-east of Paris, it is the burial ground of more than 7,000 Muslims.

    Editor Stephane Charbonnier – who famously said he would rather die than ‘live like a rat’ – was also killed alongside Franck Brinsolaro, a police officer assigned to protect him.

    The hugely popular cartoonists Bernard Verlhac, Georges Wolinski, Jean Cabut and Philippe Honore were also massacred, alongside with psychiatrist Elsa Cayat, and Bernard Maris, Michael Renaud, Frederic Boisseau and Mustapha Ourrad.

    The second police officer to be killed in the attack was Franck Brinsolaro, 49, a brigadier and protection officer for the magazine’s editor Stephane Charbonnier.

    The married 49-year-old lived in Bernay, France, and was the father of two children. His wife, Ingrid Brinsolaro, is editor of the Awakening Normand, Bernay, a newspaper that belongs to the group Publihebdos, as Hebdo de Sevre et Maine.

    The team at Publihebdos have released a statement regarding the killing.

    It read: ‘Publihebdos teams are in shock after the cowardly attack and great seriousness that hit Charlie Hebdo today.

    ‘This barbaric attack left many victims including a downed police was the husband of Ingrid Brinsolaro, our editor at Bernay. We are devastated and very sad.

    ‘We believe that family close to us, destroyed by this horror, who lives in the moment of dramatic hours and that all changed this January 7th.

    ‘With this attack it is the journalists that one is, is freedom of the press is challenged and through it all our freedoms.

    ‘Our duty, the honor of the publishing community is to affirm more than ever its solidarity with his friends of Charlie Hebdo for the defense and illustration of the freedom of the press.

    ‘It is also declare that it will never yield to threats and intimidation against intangible principles of freedom of expression.’

    Among the victims was Mr Charbonnier, the defiant editor whose satirical newspaper dared to poke fun at everything from religion to feminism. 

    While others may have left Islam alone amid constant warnings of violence, Mr Charbonnier refused to relent.

    ‘I am not afraid of retaliation. I have no children, no wife, no car, no credit,’ he said after receiving death threats two years ago. ‘It perhaps sounds a bit pompous, but I’d rather die standing than live on my knees.’

    Mr Charbonnier – nicknamed Charb – spoke out fiercely against political correctness, saying: ‘It should be as normal to criticise Islam as it is to criticise Jews or Catholics.’

    The 47-year-old, who took over as editor in 2009, grew up in Conflans-Sainte-Honorine, northern France and joined Charlie Hebdo in the early 1990s as a designer.

    Jean ‘Cabu’ Cabut was another victim. The magazine’s 76-year-old lead cartoonist was an almost legendary cultural figure in France.

    Known by the nickname ‘Cabu’, he was renowned for his quick wit and youthful style. He was also notorious for his drawing of Mohammed, which sparked fury after adorning the cover of Charlie Hebdo in 2006.

    Despite all the controversy, Mr Cabut was insistent that art should not be constrained. Perhaps his most famous quote was: ‘Sometimes laughter can hurt – but laughter, humour and mockery are our only weapons.’

    Also among the dead was Georges Wolinski, an 80-year-old who was as renowned for his colourful home life as he was for being a ‘master of satirical illustration’.

    Married twice, he once joked about his dying wish, saying: ‘I want to be cremated. I said to my wife, “if you throw the ashes in the toilet, I get to see your bottom every day”.’

    Mr Wolinski was born in Tunis on June 28, 1934 to a Franco-Italian mother and a Polish Jewish father. He joined Hara-Kiri with Cabu in 1960 and became renowned for his cartoons, which spoofed politics and sexuality.

    Another victim, cartoonist Bernard ‘Tignous’ Verlhac, was a renowned pacifist. The 57-year-old Parisian had been drawing for the French press since 1980 and originally made his name on comic publication L’idiot international.

    Mourners were also last night paying tribute to Philippe Honore, a regular contributor to Charlie Hebdo who specialised in ‘literary puzzles’. The 73-year-old was born in Vichy, central France, and was first published aged just 16.

    Victim Bernard Maris was a Left-wing economist, known to readers as ‘Uncle Bernard’. Heartbroken friends said the 68-year-old was a ‘cultured, kind and very tolerant man’.

    Also killed was Michel Renaud, who did not work for Charlie Hebdo, but had been invited to the magazine’s offices as guest editor. He was the founder of ‘Rendez-vous de Carnet de Voyage’, a travel-themed art festival.

    It has been reported that the final two victims are Frédéric Boisseau, a maintenance worker, and Elsa Cayat.

    Ms Cayat, the only female victim of the gunmen, was a columnist and analyst for the magazine, according to Le Figaro.

    Post mortems will be held on Thursday, according to reports citing the prosecutor of Paris, François Molins.

    Police officers were involved in a gunfight with the ‘calm and highly disciplined men’, who escaped in a hijacked car, speeding away towards east Paris. They remain on the loose, along with a third armed man.

    Tributes have been pouring in to the ‘heroic’ men who refused to be intimidated and who saw their work as vital tools of political expression, with one Twitter user stating ‘you wanted to kill Charlie Hebdo, you just made it immortal’.

    As the world expressed its horror at the massacre, Charlie Hebdo’s editor-in-chief Gerard Biard said ‘a newspaper is not a weapon of war.’

    The gunmen reportedly asked for the cartoonists by name before shooting them dead and yelling ‘the Prophet has been avenged’.

    And there were unconfirmed reports that one of the gunmen said to a witness: ‘You say to the media, it was Al Qaeda in Yemen.’

    President Francois Hollande said the bloodbath – France’s deadliest postwar terrorist outrage – was a ‘barbaric attack against France, and against journalists’.

    The magazine’s offices were burnt down in a petrol attack in 2011 after running a magazine cover of the Prophet Mohammed as a cartoon character.

    Afterwards Charbonnier remained defiant, saying that Islam could not be excluded from freedom of the press.

    He said: ‘If we can poke fun at everything in France, if we can talk about anything in France apart from Islam or the consequences of Islamism, that is annoying.’

    Mr Charbonnier said he did not see the attack on the magazine as the work of French Muslims, but of what he called ‘idiot extremists’.

    The cover showed Mohammed saying: ‘100 lashes if you are not dying of laughter’.

    Mr Charbonnier, who once said ‘a drawing has never killed anyone’, was included in a 2013 Wanted Dead or Alive for Crimes Against Islam article published by Inspire, the terrorist propaganda magazine published by Al Qaeda.

    In 2012 he said: ‘I don’t feel as though I’m killing someone with a pen. I’m not putting lives at risk. When activists need a pretext to justify their violence, they always find it.’

    Charbonnier said that he didn’t fear reprisals. After publishing naked pictures of the Prophet in 2012, he said: ‘I have neither a wife nor children, not even a dog. But I’m not going to hide.’

    He added: ‘It should be as normal to criticize Islam as it is to criticize Jews or Catholics. I’d rather die than live like a rat.’

    Georges Wolinski, who lived in Paris, was married twice, first to Jacqueline Saba, with whom he had two children, Frederica and Natacha, and then in 1971 to Maryse Bachere. They had one daughter together, Elsa-Angela.

    The offices of Charlie Hebdo were burnt down in a petrol attack in 2011 after running a magazine cover of the Prophet Mohammed as a cartoon character.

    Afterwards Charbonnier remained defiant, saying that Islam could not be excluded from freedom of the press.

    He said: ‘If we can poke fun at everything in France, if we can talk about anything in France apart from Islam or the consequences of Islamism, that is annoying.’

    Mr Charbonnier said he did not see the attack on the magazine as the work of French Muslims, but of what he called ‘idiot extremists’.

    The cover showed Mohammed saying: ‘100 lashes if you are not dying of laughter’.

    Mr Charbonnier, who once said ‘a drawing has never killed anyone’, was included in a 2013 Wanted Dead or Alive for Crimes Against Islam article published by Inspire, the terrorist propaganda magazine published by Al Qaeda.

    In 2012 he said: ‘I don’t feel as though I’m killing someone with a pen. I’m not putting lives at risk. When activists need a pretext to justify their violence, they always find it.’

    Charbonnier said that he didn’t fear reprisals. After publishing naked pictures of the Prophet in 2012, he said: ‘I have neither a wife nor children, not even a dog. But I’m not going to hide.’

    He added: ‘It should be as normal to criticize Islam as it is to criticize Jews or Catholics. I’d rather die than live like a rat.’

    Wolinski previously lived off the fashionable Boulevard Saint Germain where he was a well-known and well-liked character.

    A waiter called Mathieu – who works in a cafe on the Rue Bonaparte where Wolinski lived – tonight paid tribute to him.

    He told MailOnline: ‘He was a great man and a great cartoonist. Everybody around here knew him and admired him for his work.

    ‘He would come in every morning for an espresso and would chat to everyone, including all of the staff.

    ‘This is a very liberal area, with lots of bookstores, so we are all in shock today.

    ‘A lot of the Charlie Hebdo staff would eat and drink around here and have lots of friends in this neighbourhood, so it is a very sad day for us all and for Paris.’

    Cabu’s drawings first appeared in a local French newspaper in 1954. He was conscripted to the Army for two years for the Algerian War, but that didn’t stop his creative talent, which was put to use in the army magazine Bled and in Paris-Match.

    In the 1960s, 70s and 80s his career flourished, with the artist co-creating Hara-Kiri magazine, working on children’s TV show Recre A2 and eventually working on Charlie Hebdo as a caricaturists.

    His most controversial moment came in 2006 when his drawing of the Muslim prophet Muhammad appeared on the cover with the caption ‘Muhammad overwhelmed by fundamentalists’ with a speech bubble containing the words ‘so hard to be loved by jerks’. Muslims consider any drawings of the prophet to be extremely offensive.

    He was the father of French singer/songwriter Mano Solo, who died in 2010.

    Victim Bernard Maris was an economist who contributed to the newspaper and was heard regularly on French radio. He was married to journalist Sylvie Genevoix, who died on 20 September 2012.

    Four of the other victims were named by French newspaper Le Monde.

    The former chief of staff of the mayor of Clermont-Ferrand, Michel Renaud was reportedly among those that were killed while visiting the Paris office where he was invited to be a guest editor.

    It is thought he was accompanied by friend, Gerard Gaillard, who escaped the shooting by lying on the ground, according to France 3 Auvergne.

    Philippe Honoré was born in Vichy in 1941 and had his first cartoon published when he was just 16. He was a regular contributor to the magazine, specialising in puzzles, and had many books published.

    The magazine’s proof reader, Mustapha Oura, is thought to have recently obtained French nationality.

    Thousands of tributes to the cartoonists have appeared on Twitter.

    Gabriel Heller paid tribute by posting his favourite quote from Jean Cabut: ‘Sometimes laughter can hurt, but laughter, humour and mockery are our only weapons.’

    Gerard Biard, editor-in-chief of Charlie Hebdo: ‘I am shocked that people have attacked a newspaper in France, a secular republic. I don’t understand how people can attack a newspaper with heavy weapons. A newspaper is not a weapon of war.’

    Ian Hislop, editor of Private Eye: ‘I am appalled by this murderous attack on free speech. I offer my condolences to the families and friends of those killed – the cartoonists, journalists and those who were trying to protect them. They paid a very high price for exercising their comic liberty. Very little seems funny today.’

    Novelist Salman Rushdie, who spent years in hiding after his novel The Satanic Verses drew a death edict from Iran’s religious authorities: ‘I stand with Charlie Hebdo to defend the art of satire, which has always been a force for liberty and against tyranny, dishonesty and stupidity. “Respect for religion” has become a code phrase meaning fear of religion. Religions, like all other ideas, deserve criticism, satire, and, yes, our fearless disrespect.’

    Swedish artist Lars Vilks, who lives under police protection after drawing caricatures of the Prophet Mohammed: ‘This will create fear among people on a whole different level than we’re used to. Charlie Hebdo was a small oasis. Not many dared do what they did. I don’t know what’s going to happen. Can they continue to publish the magazine?’

    Editorial in Danish newspaper Jyllands-Posten, which faced numerous threats and foiled attacks after it published 12 caricatures of the Prophet Mohammed in 2005: ‘Charlie Hebdo was among the magazines that showed the most solidarity with Jyllands-Posten when the Mohammed crisis was at its peak. We haven’t forgotten that.’

    Christophe Trivalle wrote: ‘This day will be as memorable in France as 11th September in the US.’

    Twitter user ArtByFab, meanwhile, said that the cartoonists ‘made me love and want to draw since I was a child’.

    Another, Eleadorable, had a message for the killers: ‘You wanted to kill Charlie Hebdo, you just made it immortal.’

    As well as the AK47 assault rifles, there were also reports of a rocket-propelled grenade being used in the attack, which took place during the publication’s weekly editorial meeting, meaning all the journalists would have been present.

    When shots rang out at the office – located near Paris’ Bastille monument – it is thought that three policemen on bicycles were the first to respond.

    ‘There was a loud gunfire and at least one explosion,’ said an eye witness. ‘When police arrived there was a mass shoot-out. The men got away by car, stealing a car.’

    A police official, Luc Poignant,told BFM TV: ‘It’s carnage.’

    Survivor and Charlie Hebdo cartoonist Corinne ‘Coco’ Rey was quoted by French newspaper L’Humanite as saying: ‘I had gone to collect my daughter from day care and as I arrived in front of the door of the paper’s building two hooded and armed men threatened us. They wanted to go inside, to go upstairs. I entered the code.

    ‘They fired on Wolinski, Cabu… it lasted five minutes… I sheltered under a desk… They spoke perfect French… claimed to be from al Qaeda.’

    Florence Pouvil, a salesperson at Lunas France on Rue Nicolas Appert, opposite Charlie Hebdo offices, told MailOnline: ‘I saw two people with big guns, like Kalashnekovs outside our office and then we heard firing. We were very confused.’

    ‘There were two guys who came out of the building and shot everywhere. We hid on the floor, we were terrified.

    ‘They came from the building opposite with big guns. It has a bunch of different companies inside. Some of our co-workers work there so we were frightened for them.

    ‘They weren’t just firing inside the Charlie Hebdo offices. They were firing in the street too.

    ‘We feared for our lives so we hid under our desks so they wouldn’t see us. Both men were dressed in black from head to toe and their faces were covered so I didn’t see them.

    They were wearing military clothes, it wasn’t common clothing, like they were soldiers.’

    Once inside the gunmen sought out Charbonnier, shouting ‘where is Charb? where is Charb? They killed him and his police bodyguard first, said Christophe Crepin, a police union spokesman. They then sprayed the rest of the room with bullets.

    Minutes later, two men strolled out to a black car waiting below, calmly firing on a police officer, with one gunman shooting him in the head as he writhed on the ground, according to video and a man who watched in fear from his home across the street.

    The witness, who refused to allow his name to be used because he feared for his safety, said the attackers were so methodical he first mistook them for France’s elite anti-terrorism forces. Then they fired on the officer.

    ‘They knew exactly what they had to do and exactly where to shoot. While one kept watch and checked that the traffic was good for them, the other one delivered the final coup de grace,’ he said. ‘They ran back to the car. The moment they got in, the car drove off almost casually.’

    The witness added: ‘I think they were extremely well-trained, and they knew exactly down to the centimetre and even to the second what they had to do.

    A visibly shocked French President François Hollande, speaking live near the scene of the shooting, said: ‘France is today in shock, in front of a terrorist attack.

    ‘This newspaper was threatened several rimes in the past and we need to show we are a united country.

    ‘We have to be firm, and we have to be stand strong with the international community in the coming days and weeks.

    ‘We are at a very difficult moment following several terrorist attacks. We are threated because we are a country of freedom

    ‘We will punish the attackers. We will look for the people responsible.’

    Charlie Hebdo’s editor-in-chief Gerard Biard, who was in London at the time of the attack, spoke of his shock.

    He told France Inter: ‘I don’t understand how people can attack a newspaper with heavy weapons. A newspaper is not a weapon of war.’

    He said the magazine, started in 1960 by Georges Bernier and François Cavanna, had not received threats of violence: ‘Not to my knowledge, and I don’t think anyone had received them as individuals, because they would have talked about it. There was no particular tension at the moment.’

    The deaths of the cartoonists will shock France as their work, though sometimes controversial, was extremely popular.

    Marie Pommery, a French chef currently living in London, told MailOnline: ‘This is the worst attack on press freedom. A whole generation of French people grew up with Cabu and Wolinski’s cartoons. It’s shocking news.’

    Prime Minister David Cameron joined the condemnation of the attack, saying: ‘The murders in Paris are sickening.

    ‘We stand with the French people in the fight against terror and defending the freedom of the press.’

    The British Foreign Office immediately updated is advice for travellers heading to Pairs, warning: ‘There is a high threat from terrorism.’

    It added: ‘If you’re in Paris or the Ile de France area take extra care and follow advice of French authorities.’

    Source: www.dailymail.co.uk

  • Defining The Moderates In The Malay Muslim Community – Are Majority Of Us Extremists?

    Defining The Moderates In The Malay Muslim Community – Are Majority Of Us Extremists?

    It is indeed funny to see how the star lined up a band of people whom it called the voices of moderation.

    Well I don’t care about the non-Muslim (not Malay) in the line up because it is none of my business to interfere with how they want to define the term moderation, but it is kind of appalling to see the Malays in the list. They are

    • Marina Mahathir
    • Zaid Ibrahim
    • Razali Ismail (chairman of Global Movement of Moderates)
    • Zainah Anwar (Sisters in Islam co-founder)
    • Karim Raslan
    • Azmi Sharom
    • Anas Zubedy
    • Wan Saiful Wan Jan
    • Sharyn Shufiyan (Tunku Abdul Rahman’s great granddaughter)

    I want to clarify that I have nothing against them personally. What I am against is the people who put them in the list and claimed that they are the voices of moderation that represent the Muslims whereas many Muslims (including me) and Malays are against their thinking and ideology. What more when some of them are well known for carrying ideology that is against the main stream understanding of Islam. Take for example the ladies in the list, whom none is wearing tudung. Zainah Anwar is also known to claimed that covering one’s hair is unnecessary in Islam, whereas the mainstream Muslim understanding all over the world is that it is compulsory. So how can the person ever claimed that Zainah Anwar is the voices of moderation for the Muslim while clearly she is the minority. If Zainah Anwar represents the voices of moderation for the Muslim, does that mean 90% (or probably 99%) of Malaysian Muslim women who believe hair as aurat which needs to be covered in public are the extremist? This is indeed insulting.

    I am not sure if the person who put up the list is a Muslim or not, but for me, as a Muslim, it is a blatant misused (and wrongly used) of the term moderation for the Muslim. Firstly, the term moderation is a very misunderstood terminology. Secondly, for the Muslim, the term moderate is a religious definition where there are hadiths from the prophet S.A.W. that explains about the meaning of moderation. Therefore, to put these Malays (Muslims) as role model of moderation is an insult to the Muslim especially when some of them is known to have ideology and understanding of Islam that is against the understanding and practice of the mainstream Muslim.

    It is Tolerate, not Moderate

    When I dropped the word Moderate into Google, this is what I got

    moderate

    Moderate, by its adjective definition is the average in amount, intensity, quality, or degree. You cannot have an average if you only have one extreme. For example, what is the average of 10? No one can tell you. But if  you ask what is the average between 1 to 10, then the answer is 5. So we can say that 1 is the extreme to the left and 10 is the extreme to the right. So 5 is the moderate value which is in between the two intensities!

    extreams

    The misconception comes in the noun definition. It says that moderate is a person who holds moderate views, especially in politics. Now the problem is that views in politics are subjective. What someone view as moderate may not be viewed as moderate by others. For example, to the non-Muslim, a Muslim who is not wearing tudung is a moderate Muslim. To the many Muslims, she is not a good Muslim. To the non-Muslim, a person who drink only in social occasion is a moderate drinker. To the Muslim, if a Muslim drink at any occasion, he is a sinner. People like Marina, Zainah and Zaid Ibrahim may think that they are the moderate, but to the many they are the liberals and to some they are the deviants.

    The more correct definition that fits them is Tolerate. These people are not moderate, they are just more tolerable, for example, some are more tolerable to western lifestyle where they don’t mind to wear bikini or drinking in a party with alcohol. So does in political view. Some are more tolerable to opposing views.

    There is no point arguing who is indeed the moderate. We can never agree to such a subjective matter. What is unbecoming is for the Star to put up these people and claimed that they are the voices of moderation among the Muslim. it is like the Star trying to shovel the definition Moderation into the throats of Muslim. Who is the Star to tell the world that those people represent the moderate voices of Muslim in Malaysia? That is why I say it is insulting.

    A Religious Definition

    Islam has clear definition moderation. It is in the Quran and there are numerous hadiths from the Prophet s.a.w. about moderation.

    In the Quran, Allah S.W.T. says

    “We made you to be a community of the middle way, so that (with the example of your lives) you might bear witness to the truth before all mankind.” (Qur’an, 2:143) 

    In one of the hadith,

    ‘Abdullah ibn Masood (Allah be pleased with him) reported that once Allah’s Messenger (Peace be upon him) drew a line in the dust with his hand and said, “This is the straight path of Allah.” Then he drew a series of lines to the right of it and to the left and said, “Each of these paths has a devil at its head inviting people to it.” He then recited (Qur’an 6:153), “Verily this is my straight path so follow it and do not follow the (twisted) paths.” (Collected by Ahmad, Nisai and Darimi; see Mishkat ul-Masabih, 1/166)

    If you look back at the adjective definition, you will understand better the concept of moderation in Islam. In every moderation, there is always an extreme left and extreme right. So the moderate is the middle path in between the extremes. Picture speaks a thousand word. By looking at the picture below, you should understand better. This is off course according to Ahlul Sunnah definition.

    moderate2

    What it clearly tells you is that Zainah, Marina, and the other ladies in the list are not the moderate according to the Muslim standard. They are indeed the extremists, the liberals!

    I will list few more examples of moderation in Islam

    EXTREME LEFT MODERATE EXTREME RIGHT
    Marriage
    Priesthood, complete refrain from marriage Marriage up to 4 wives (in this respect, Sister in Islam by Zainah Anwar is against polygamy, so she is not the moderate) More than 4 and unlimited number of concubines
    Relationship with Non-Muslim
    Extreme enimity against non-Muslim irrespective of whether they have peace agreement with the Muslim or not. Treat and deal with those who have peace agreement with Muslim with kindness, honor, respect. Befriend those who are an obvious enemy to Muslim who are known of ploting to destroy Islam and the Muslim
    Ibadah
    Monastery life, i.e. spend whole life doing nothing except in prayer and worship Balance between worldly life and time spend in prayer and worship of God Only focus on world life and ignore worshipping of God
    Charity
    People who give everything and left nothing for themselves Give some part of their wealth for charity and keep the remaining for own use Do not give charity or alms at all

    So it is not difficult to understand moderation in Islam. It is something very clear cut and obvious. There is a law in Islam. Some will take it extremely lightly and some will take it rigidly. The moderate is the one who take the middle path.

    Trying to tell Muslim how to practice Islam

    This is the alter ego and ignorance of many of the non-Muslim today. What exhibits by the Star is the result of this alter ego. They believe these few figures are the “moderates” so they put them as the moderate voices of Malaysia without an iota to think if the mainstream Muslim actually agree with them. Arrogance is one thing, but such ignorance is unacceptable. Even for those non-Muslims, do you think they really represent the voices of moderate among the non-Muslims? Don’t they know that Zainah is one of the most loathe personality among the mainstream Muslim community in Malaysia. How can you ever shovel such person into throats of Muslim forcing them to accept her as role model. This is an utter demonstration of low class journalism.

     

    Source: https://grandmarquis.wordpress.com

     

  • Amnesty International – IS Using Captured Women As Sex Slaves

    Amnesty International – IS Using Captured Women As Sex Slaves

    Captured Yazidi girls in Iraq are killing themselves to escape rape and torture at the hands of Isis militants holding them prisoner.

    Hundreds of women and children were captured during the group’s bloody sweep through northern Iraq earlier this year and have since been trafficked as sex slaves , forced into marriage and imprisoned.

    Victims who managed to escape told Amnesty International that many Yazidi girls killed themselves after losing hope of being saved.

    A 20-year-old survivor, called Luna, said she was held with 20 girls as young as 10 in the Isis-controlled city of Mosul when they were told to dress up.

    “One day we were given clothes that looked like dance costumes and were told to bathe and wear those clothes,” she added. “Jilan killed herself in the bathroom. She cut her wrists and hanged herself. She was very beautiful.

    “I think she knew that she was going to be taken away by a man and that is why she killed herself.”

    Displaced Yazidi women

    Another woman, 27-year-old Wafa, said she and her sister attempted suicide while imprisoned in Mosul after the man holding them gave them the choice of marrying him and his brother or being sold as slaves.

    “At night we tried to strangle ourselves with our scarves,” she told Amnesty. “Two girls who were held with us woke up and stopped us and then stayed awake to watch over us.

    “When they fell asleep at 5am we tried again, and again they woke up and stopped us. I could not speak for several days after that.”

    Relatives of girls who managed to escape fear that the trauma will never leave them, reporting panic attacks and depression.

    The grandfather of a 16-year-old girl who was raped in Isis captivity said: “She is very sad and quiet all the time. She does not smile anymore and seems not to care about anything. I worry that she may try to kill herself, I don’t let her out of my sight.”

    Amnesty interviewed 42 women and girls for its report, “Escape from Hell”, which is being released today.

    It chronicles the torture, rape and sexual violence suffered by women from the Yazidi minority. Women who converted to Islam were forced to marry Isis militants and those maintaining their faith have been trafficked as sex slaves, abused and imprisoned.

    Videos have emerged online of horrifying “slave auctions” of girls in Mosul and Isis members have boasted of the abductions, justifying them by calling Yazidis “apostates”.

    Thousands of people from the religious minority, who are viciously targeted by the Sunni extremist group because they are considered heretics, were driven from their homes in Sinjar by the Isis advance in August.

    Hundreds were killed in raids on towns and more died of thirst or starvation after fleeing up the remote Mount Sinjar.

    Randa, a 16-year-old girl from a village near the mountain, was abducted with scores of her family members including her heavily-pregnant mother and given to a man twice her age who raped her.

    “Da’esh [Islamic State] has ruined our lives … What will happen to my family? I don’t know if I will ever see them again.”

    One woman called Alba, 19, was visibly pregnant with her second child when she was kidnapped with her son but Isis showed no mercy.

    “I had my little boy with me and my pregnancy was very visible already but one of the guards chose me to be his wife,” she told Amnesty, adding that the man threatened to send her to Syria if she resisted.

    Some Yazidi girls forced into marriage have reported being taken to the homes of Isis fighters’ families and even meeting their wives and children. Some received further abuse, while others made friends with their captor’s wives.

    Several girls held by foreign fighters told Amnesty International their families helped them escape and one 13-year-old girl, who was held with her toddler sister, said her captor did not abuse them but instead sent them straight home to their family.

    But even those escaping have a bleak prospect to return to, with the loss of dozens of killed or captured relatives, and home towns and villages overrun by Isis.

    The trauma of survivors of sexual violence is further exacerbated by the stigma surrounding rape. Survivors feel that their “honour” and that of their families has been tarnished and fear that their standing in society will be diminished as a result.

    Donatella Rovera, who spoke to more than 40 former captives in northern Iraq for Amnesty International, said Isis were using rape as a weapon in attacks “amounting to crimes against humanity”.

    “The physical and psychological toll of the horrifying sexual violence these women have endured is catastrophic,” she added. “Many of them have been tortured and treated as chattel. Even those who have managed to escape remain deeply traumatised.”

    She called on Kurdistan Regional Government, UN and humanitarian organisations to ensure they were reaching everyone who needed support.

     

    Source: www.independent.co.uk

  • IS Raih Untung Jual Organ Manusia Untuk Biayai Aktiviti Keganasan

    IS Raih Untung Jual Organ Manusia Untuk Biayai Aktiviti Keganasan

    DAMSYIK: Kumpulan militan Negara Islam di Iraq dan Syria (ISIS) dipercayai meraih keuntungan besar dengan menjual organ manusia dengan hasilnya digunakan bagi membiayai aktiviti keganasan di seluruh Timur Tengah.

    Kumpulan itu dikesan mendapatkan dana sehingga AS$2 juta ($2.63 juta) setahun daripada pelbagai sumber, termasuk pengeluaran minyak, pemerdagangan manusia dan penyeludupan dadah.

    Namun, sejak beberapa bulan lalu militan ISIS menggunakan khidmat doktor asing bagi mengeluarkan organ manusia – bukan saja daripada anggota mereka yang mati, malah daripada tawanan hidup, termasuk kanak-kanak dari seluruh Iraq dan Syria.

    Difahamkan, organ juga diambil daripada militan yang terkorban, mangsa cedera yang ditinggalkan atau individu yang diculik.

    Perkara itu didedahkan portal berita al-Monitor yang berpangkalan di Amerika Syarikat.

    Sumber portal itu dikenal pasti sebagai pakar telinga, hidung dan tekak, Encik Siruwan al-Mosuli.

    Menurut Encik Siruwan, pegawai kanan ISIS melantik doktor asing bagi menjalankan sistem pemerdagangan organ meluas dari hospital di Mosul yang di bawah pentadbiran ISIS.

    Katanya, pulangan perdagangan organ manusia amat menguntungkan.

    Disebabkan itu, ISIS menubuhkan bahagian khas bagi mengendalikan penyeludupan organ yang bertanggungjawab menjual jantung, hati dan buah pinggang manusia di pasaran gelap antarabangsa, katanya.

    “Saya mengesyaki ada sesuatu tidak kena apabila melihat ramai pakar bedah Arab dan asing diambil bekerja, tetapi dilarang berinteraksi dengan doktor tempatan. Desas-desus kemudian mengatakan mereka terbabit dalam aktiviti penjualan organ.

    “Pembedahan dilakukan di dalam hospital sebelum organ diperlukan dipindahkan segera melalui rangkaian pemerdagangan manusia,” kata laporan itu.

    Bagaimanapun, maklumat mengenai penjualan organ akhirnya bocor, lapor Press TV.

    Assyrian International News Agency pula melaporkan, kebanyakan organ diseludup keluar dari Syria dan Iraq ke negara jiran seperti Arab Saudi atau Turkey untuk dijual kepada kumpulan jenayah yang kemudian mendapatkan pembeli dari seluruh dunia.

    Tindakan menjual organ manusia itu merupakan salah satu cara bagi membiayai aktiviti keganasan kumpulan mereka.

    Menurutnya lagi, pembedahan dilakukan di hospital dan organ mayat diedarkan segera melalui rangkaian khusus dalam pemerdagangan organ manusia.

     

    Source: www.beritaharian.sg

     

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