14 December 2008

Back to my blog in Spanish

I am sorry to tell you that I couldn't manage this blog and my Spanish blog at the same time. I am also sorry if you don't speak Spanish.

I regret to tell you that you can find me only in my Spanish blog: crispal.blogspot.com.

Thank you .

20 May 2008

Saudi Arabia: 28,000 Scorpion Stings Each Year: Researcher

28,000 Scorpion Stings Each Year: Researcher
Arab News

DAMMAM, 20 May 2008 — A Saudi expert on scorpions has said that between 24,000 and 28,000 cases of scorpion stings are reported in the Kingdom annually.

“The 20 varieties of scorpions found in the Kingdom are poisonous to various degrees. While some are fatal, others cause lesser complications, although these can be painful,” said Abdul Rahman Al-Asmari, head of the Scorpion Studies Center and deputy director of research at the Armed Forces Hospital (AFH) in Riyadh.

The center, which is part of the AFH, was launched as a large number of soldiers are being stung and bit by scorpions and snakes each year. “The research center undertook detailed studies of scorpions in 2006 and developed an effective antivenom,” Al-Asmari told Asharq Al-Awsat newspaper.

He added that during the study some types of scorpions were discovered in the Kingdom for the first time.

“We conducted tests to classify the scorpions that were found in the Kingdom. We also sought the help of latest nanotechnology to develop different varieties of antivenom,” he added.

Al-Asmari said that a major difficulty in treating scorpion poison was that the anti-scorpion venom used in one region would not work against the same type of scorpion in another. So, separate antivenoms have to be developed for each variety of scorpions in different regions.

The center’s study also included methods of identifying different types of scorpions during diagnosis and how the poison works in the human body. The World Health Organization recently invited Al-Asmari to Geneva to explain the center’s findings on Saudi scorpions, he added.

Al-Asmari said the center intends to carry out research on other poisonous creatures, such as snakes, to manufacture antivenoms for all sorts of poison. The center is the first of its type in the Gulf region.

He added that several institutions are helping the center, including the Ministry of Health, the Armed Forces Hospital, the King Saud University and the King Faisal Specialist Hospital and Research Center.

It also shares its know-how with scorpion specialists in Egypt, Oman, India, Britain and United States, he added.

Al-Asmari warned that scorpions mostly come out during hot summer nights and that people should avoid walking barefoot outside after the sunset, especially in farmlands.

He also warned that children and the elderly are more vulnerable to scorpion poison than young men and should be quickly brought to health centers when stung.

13 May 2008

Islamic supremacists killing singers, actors, and artists in Iraq

From Jihad Watch.


Their work is un-Islamic, you see. Imagine what fun Muslims who share this perspective could have once they gain control in Europe! "Iraqi artists and singers flee amid crackdown on forbidden culture," by Afif Sarhan and Caroline Davies in The Observer, May 11 (thanks to all who sent this in):

Iraqi singers, actors and artists are fleeing the country after dozens have been killed by Islamic radicals determined to eradicate all culture associated with the West.

Cinemas, art galleries, theatres, and concert halls are being destroyed in grenade and mortar attacks in Basra and Baghdad.

According to the Iraqi Artists' Association, at least 115 singers and 65 actors have been killed since the US-led invasion, as well as 60 painters. But the terror campaign has escalated in recent months as both Shia and Sunni extremists grow ever bolder in enforcing religious restrictions on the citizens of Iraq....

In November Seif Yehia, 23, was beheaded for singing western songs at weddings, and painter Ibraheem Sadoon was shot dead as he drove through Baghdad. In February Sunni fighters killed Waleed Dahi, 27, a young actor, while he rehearsed for a play due to open at the Jordanian National Theatre this month.

Culture was encouraged during Saddam Hussein's regime, but no longer. Abu Nur, an Islamic Army spokesman, said: 'Acting, theatre and television encourage bad behaviour and irreligious attitudes. They promote customs that affect the morality of our traditional society.'

05 May 2008

A Physical Description of Angels

From Arab News

A Physical Description of Angels
Commentary by Sayyid Qutb

In the name of God, the Lord of Grace, the Ever Merciful

All praise is due to God, the Originator of the heavens and the earth, who assigns angels to be messengers, endowed with wings, two, or three, or four. He adds to His creation what He pleases. Indeed God has power over all things. (The Originator, Fatir, 35: 1)

The surah begins by offering all praise to God, as its whole purpose is to make our hearts turn to Him, contemplate His signs, appreciate His mercy, and look at the wonders of His creation. We are made to fully appreciate these wonders so that our hearts overflow with His praise and glorification: “All praise is due to God.”

Next comes God’s attribute indicating creation and His bringing it into being: “the Originator of the heavens and the earth.” It is He who has originated all these great bodies, some of which we see around us. We know only a little about the smallest and nearest to us of all these bodies, i.e. our earth. Yet they are all subject to one law of nature that keeps them in harmony, despite the huge distances separating them, which we can only imagine with great difficulty. Despite their great sizes and endless spaces separating their orbits, there exist certain relations between them, which, if disturbed even by just a little, could lead to a major catastrophe.

We often pay little attention to Qur’anic references to the creation of the heavens and the earth, or to its scenic descriptions of the universe. This is because our senses have been blunted by familiarity. Therefore, these scenes do not elevate us to the same level of inspiration that they give a heart that remembers God always, and thus remains sensitive to what His able hand produces. Only such a heart feels the awe these scenes impart.

An alert heart which maintains its bond with God does not need accurate information about the exact positions of stars, their sizes, relations to each other in position or movement, the thickness of the atmosphere around each, or the orbits they follow in order to appreciate the awesomeness of this great, wonderful and beautiful creation. It is enough for such a heart that these scenes play their precisely stringed music. It is enough for it to look at the stars shining across the dark night sky; or the light reflected by a full moon; or the dawn breaking through the darkness giving a feeling of new life; or the sunset heralding the darkness that brings a feeling of farewell; or the earth with its endless vistas; or indeed a single flower with its color and shape that takes us long to contemplate.

The Qur’an gives us inspiring directives so that we contemplate these creatures, large and small. Looking at only one of them is enough evidence of the greatness of its Creator and makes us address our glorification, praise and prayer to Him alone.

“All praise is due to God, the Originator of the heavens and the earth, who assigns angels to be messengers, endowed with wings, two, or three, or four.” (Verse 1) This surah dwells long on God’s messengers, revelation and the truth it contains. The angels are God’s messengers to His chosen servants on earth. The message they bring is the greatest thing in life. Hence God follows the reference to His creation of the heavens and the earth by mentioning the role of the angels whereby it is they who make contact between heaven and earth, fulfilling the greatest task of all as they deliver His message. It is a message from the Originator of the heavens and the earth to His prophets whom He sends as guides to mankind.

For the first time in the Qur’an we have a physical description of the angels. Previously we were given descriptions of their nature and role, such as “Those that are with Him are never too proud to worship Him and never grow weary of that. They extol His limitless glory by night and day, tirelessly.” (21: 19-20) “Those who are near to your Lord are never too proud to worship Him. They extol His limitless glory, and before Him alone prostrate themselves.” (7: 206) Here, however, we have a reference to their physical appearance. They are ‘endowed with wings, two, or three, or four.’ This description does not, however, help us imagine how they look, because we do not know anything about their physique or about the form their wings take. We can do no more than take this description as it is, without adding anything from our imagination, for anything we may imagine could be wrong. We do not have any definite description of how the angels look from a reliable source. What we do have though in the Qur’an is this description and a reference to the angels in charge of hell: “Over it are appointed angels who are stern and severe: they do not disobey God in whatever He has commanded them, but always do what they are bidden to do.” (66: 6) Again this description does not give any physical delineation. It is reported in a Hadith that ‘the Prophet saw Gabriel in his natural form twice.’ One report mentions that Gabriel ‘has 600 wings.’ (Related by Al-Bukhari and Muslim.) Again we do not have here a physical description, so we must leave it at the level God has imparted to us, accepting that all knowledge belongs to Him.

Wings are specified as being in twos, threes and fours, but man knows only a two-winged form in all birds. Therefore, the opening verse states that God ‘adds to His creation what He pleases,’ thus making it clear that God’s will is free, unlimited to any one form of creation. We know and see countless forms of creation, but the ones we do not know about are far more numerous. “Indeed God has power over all things.” This comment is broader and more comprehensive than the statement before it. Its import applies to all forms of creation, origination, transformation and alteration.

17 April 2008

Turkish Barber Detained Over Profane Remarks

Turkish Barber Detained Over Profane Remarks
Ebtihal Mubarak, Arab News

JEDDAH, 17 April 2008 — Officials at the Jeddah General Court confirmed yesterday that they are dealing with the case of a Turkish barber who is allegedly facing the death penalty after being tried for swearing at God.

The officials said they were unable to provide specific details of the case yesterday and advised Arab News to contact President of the Jeddah General Court Sheikh Rashid Al-Hazza’a, who is on leave, on Saturday.

Hani Al-Hajri, head of press relations at the court, also said he would only be able to provide details on Saturday.

According to the Turkish press, the barber, Sabri Bogday, had an argument with a neighbor, an Egyptian tailor, and was arrested by police after the tailor filed a complaint that he had sworn at God. Bogday has reportedly been in prison for 13 months, while his accuser has disappeared.

Abdul Rahman Al-Lahem, a Riyadh-based lawyer, said rulings in such cases depend on judges’ own interpretations of the Islamic Shariah.

“Some judges consider it heresy and infidelity, and say that the accused cannot repent and so faces death penalty. Others consider the statement to be disbelief, thus allow the accused to retract what he has said and repent and then set him free,” said Al-Lahem.

He said according to Saudi law the testimony of an accuser would not be accepted if it were shown that he or she might have some ulterior motive. “If two people have an argument, the testimony of one of the two against the other cannot be legally accepted,” Al-Lahem said.

He added that the Investigation and Prosecution Board must have investigated the case before taking it to court and that Saudi courts rarely issue guilty verdicts in such cases.

“Sentences in these cases are limited and considered rare, because the judgment is not based on something that is written,” he said.

Hasan Al-Malki, a Saudi researcher in Islamic studies and history, said if a Muslim were to reject Islam and then later repent, the repentance would be valid. “Thus it seems logical that Muslims who make a joke or swear at Allah or the Prophet (peace be upon him) and then repent should be allowed to repent,” said Al-Malki.

According to the Turkish press, an appeals court is expected to look at the case within the next 10 days.

The case has attracted the attention of state leaders. Turkish President Abdullah Gul has written to Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques King Abdullah requesting a pardon for Bogday, who moved to Jeddah from southeastern Turkey more than a decade ago. Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan also contacted Saudi officials on the barber’s behalf.

04 March 2008

28 Al-Qaeda Militants Arrested in Kingdom

P.K. Abdul Ghafour, Arab News

JEDDAH, 4 March 2008 — Saudi Security forces have arrested 28 militants, who were involved in rebuilding the Al-Qaeda network in Saudi Arabia to launch another campaign of terror across the Kingdom, an Interior Ministry spokesman said in a statement.

The militants had been collecting funds on the pretext of supporting the needy in Pakistan and Afghanistan — money that was, in fact, being used “to finance their criminal activities,” said the spokesman.

One of those arrested was carrying a recorded message of Al-Qaeda’s second-in-command Ayman Al-Zawahri on the memory card of a cell phone. “The bearer of this message is one of our trusted brothers, therefore, please give him your donations to help hundreds of families of captives and martyrs in Pakistan and Afghanistan,” Al-Zawahri said in the audio recording aired by the Kingdom’s state television.

The Interior Ministry spokesman added that a person visiting Makkah had brought the recording to the Kingdom.

56 Arrests Since December

The latest arrests bring the total number of militants detained by Saudi authorities since December 2007 — when 28 people were arrested over alleged plans to attack sites outside the holy cities of Makkah and Madinah during the Haj season — to 56.

The Interior Ministry statement added that the 56 men were of different nationalities and included the head of the group. The men had reportedly been close to establishing hide-outs for their cells, forging travel documents and launching a media campaign through the Internet to spread their deviant ideology.

The spokesman said investigations proved that the newly detained militants belonged to Al-Qaeda and had been in contact with its leadership abroad. Those arrested were also recruiting young men and sending them to different regions of the Kingdom to participate in activities that undermine the security of Saudi Arabia.

Clampdown on Al-Qaeda

The latest arrests indicate that Al-Qaeda and other terrorist and extremist organizations are still trying to destabilize the Kingdom, the world’s largest oil supplier. A major sweep last April netted 172 militants, including pilots trained to carry out attacks on oil refineries using civilian planes.

The Kingdom has orchestrated a heavy crackdown on Al-Qaeda since 2003. It has also been building a 35,000-strong rapid reaction force to protect oil installations after a failed Al-Qaeda attack in 2006 on the world’s largest oil processing plant at Abqaiq in the Eastern Province.

Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques King Abdullah has stressed that Saudi Arabia will root out terrorists from the country and has praised security forces for their work against militants.

Interior Minister Prince Naif said his forces had foiled 95 percent of attacks and that 58 police officers have so far died in anti-terror operations.

02 March 2008

Poland and Malta Stand Up to European Union, United Nations on Abortion

by Samantha Singson
February 28
, 2008


LifeNews.com Note: Samantha Singson writes for the Catholic Family and Human Rights Institute. This article originally appeared in the pro-life group's Friday Fax publication.

The governments of Poland and Malta broke rank with the European Union on the question of abortion this week. The dissension occurred at the UN Commission on the Status of Women (CSW) which convened it’s annual two-week meeting at UN headquarters in New York on Monday. The reaction of Poland and Malta happened after the EU tried to shift the meeting’s agenda to include the right to abortion.

On Tuesday Radoslaw Mleczko, the Polish Under-Secretary of State in the Ministry of Labor and Social Policy, told the gathering of UN Member States that Poland generally aligned itself with the EU but that any EU reference to sexual and reproductive health could not include abortion.

On Thursday afternoon, the head of Malta’s mission to the UN, Ambassador Saviour F. Borg said, “Malta would like to clarify its position with respect to the language relating to sexual and reproductive health and rights in the [EU] statement. Malta firmly continues to maintain that any position taken or recommendations made regarding women’s empowerment and gender equality should not in any way create an obligation on any party to consider abortion as a legitimate form of reproductive health rights, services or commodities.”

The split in the European Union is significant because the EU hardly ever splits on questions of social policy at the UN. Even countries that are generally anti-abortion go along with the more radical approach taken by the United Kingdom, France and Germany. They do this as an agreement that the EU will always work out their differences behind closed doors and present a united front at UN negotiations.

This works to the advantage of the pro-abortion states since they outnumber the anti-abortion states.

Moreover, an EU that is divided is one that can be defeated on social policy questions. In fact, the last time the EU split in any significant way was in the UN cloning debate which resulted in the UN calling for the ban of all forms of human cloning, an effort opposed by the UK, France, Germany and other left-wing European governments. It is unclear how meaningful this current split will be in the negotiations which will begin in earnest tomorrow.

Pro-life and pro-family issues were also woven into UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon’s opening remarks to the commission on Monday when he criticized the now widespread practice of choosing abortions based on the sex of the baby, an issue that was all but taken off the agenda at last year’s CSW despite solid support from both civil society and numerous governmental delegations.

In his speech to launch the new UN multi-year campaign to end violence against women, the Secretary-General stressed, “Through the practice of prenatal sex selection, countless others are denied the right even to exist. No country, no culture, no woman young or old is immune to this scourge.”

The Secretary-General also highlighted the importance of families and children stating, “We know that violence against women compounds the enormous social and economic toll on families, communities, even whole nations. And we know that when we work to eradicate violence against women, we empower our greatest resource for development: mothers raising children.”

Among the many pro-life and pro-family lobbyists attending the CSW is a large contingent of high school girls from Overbrook Academy in Rhode Island. Fourteen year old Elsa Corripio told the Friday Fax, “We want these delegates to know that there are many young people who believe in respecting life.”

Ana Paola Rangel, 15, added, “Maybe we can't change the world, but we know we can make a difference.”

The CSW meeting continues through next week.

Lies, more lies, and the truth of it

Lies, more lies, and the truth of it


Johnny D. Symon
February 29, 2008


With Spain's general election looming, I've spent a little time searching out the inevitable anti-American ploy from the present incumbents. Those incumbents, as you may recall, were originally chosen to rule Spain for and on behalf of terrorists when three days before the election on March 14, 2004, their little helpers dealt their block vote, thus overturning yet another inevitable win that all major opinion polls had predicted. Since that time Spain's lunatic government have transformed this once great country, turning it almost overnight into a sleazy, crime ridden, and overrun, overpriced, Banana Republic. Its President recently described Hugo Chavez as a great patriot, and he always has a kind word to say about Infidel Castrato in Cuba, but not once has he had a kind word to say about the United States. And this is not solely because he's never been invited to the Whitehouse as he's persona non grata, I reckon he's never been invited because if he finds something that ain't been nailed down, it'll be winging its way back to the old banana plantation with him.

I've never encountered such an all-round bad government as this lot. Lying's their middle name, and if one were crazy enough to believe all the jive emanating from the pre-electoral PSOE government you'd get to thinking that the 1980's PSOE government, headed by Felipe Gonzalez, was the best thing since sliced terrorist, when in fact that bum and his chums destroyed the economy, so much so that when José Maria Aznar gained office in 1996, he soon discovered that the Spanish Pensions Fund was completely empty. He literally had to apply for a bank loan to supply the pension needs of Spain.

About three weeks back Zapatonto assured Spain that he would not form a new government if he did not receive a large majority, then this week in a TV interview, he stated that if need be he'd form pacts with other Left-wing parties. In my book this is a contradiction, but in Zappo's it's simply a way of life. The truth is, he and his unsavory and immoral, lying, cohorts, are getting worried about the outcome of the March 9 election, so worried that most of the leading lights, or darks, to be more exact, or maybe it's dorks, have taken on themselves the task of resurrecting the old hate America vote-promoting ploy. WMDs, George Bush and his "illegal Iraq war" are just two much-used recent examples, Aznar is another. During several TV debates Zapatonto took the space to rant on about the past; Franco and fascism, Aznar and terrorism, and his recent favorite of a non-existent "extreme Right-wing" on Spains political scene.

On the superb Antena 3 breakfast show, "Espejo Público," last Wednesday, one journalist remarked that Zappo and his crew are acting like those who ran the show in the United States during the so-called McCarthy witch-hunts, though in my view, Zappo and his loons are much worse on the witch-hunt stakes. They managed to exclude the Spanish Conservative party from attending any inter-party meetings in Catalonia by making secret agreements with Catalonia's most radical political movements. The truth came to light only when a secret jointly signed letter of agreement slipped out of their grasp. Then when two people were killed by a bomb blast at the T-4 Building of Madrid airport, December 30, 2006, planted by ETA, Zappo and his buddies continued secret negotiations with those terrorists, while telling the public that no negotiations were taking place. Zappo admitted this just several days back.

To make matters worse, he and his Leftist Loons have found themselves at war with the Spanish Church and major Christian organizations, over their gay civil marriage law, their new quickie divorce law, and numerous other little ditties that Christians in general do not approve of. Spain's Vice President, "De la Vaguely," rumored to be lesbian herself, (58 yet unmarried,) explained recently that neither the Catholic Church or anyone else will dictate morals to the government. Both herself and several other Leftist Loons, in reference to Christianity, are slipping in the term "ideology."

Truth be known, the "science of ideas" pitched against "spiritual faith and knowledge" are impossible to reconcile. For me the ideology tool holds no mysteries because those who think and act like beasts can never comprehend that spiritual dimension and its subsequent physical dynamics, whereas people like myself who can, find ourselves understanding where they're coming from too.

You see, personal taxation is a curse because it instills a false atmosphere of balance; if everyone pays their personal tax, and benefits and returns are available, such as marriage allowance, child allowance, adoption allowance, and so on, then those who live alternate sexual lifestyles and pay their full dues to Big Brother, start wondering why they're getting less out of that purse. I reckon that Alan Keyes' problems are due in great extent to his intention to abolish personal tax, for with personal and even small family business tax removed, the other side will find themselves without their pressure tool, for the very existence of personal taxation leads governments to offer handouts, and handouts can be fickle and contrived.

Finally, I guess, both the horizon of faith and of ideology join to become one, and folks increasingly become blind to obvious truths of spiritual harmony and balance, and I am not aware of any Western nation that does not use tax money to bribe it's servants prior to election time.

The first time I witnessed the ideology trick happening in Spain was about two months back on Tele Cinco's breakfast show, where Monseñor Juan Antonio Martinez Camino, spokesman for the Catholic Church, delivered a superb round of points surrounding the church's opposition to the Anarchist Cause. In retaliation the other side not only slipped in the "ideology" tag, they also falsely accused the Spanish Church of telling their folks to vote Conservative, when in fact they were merely advising Catholics to vote for the party that promoted the same moral cause upheld by the church.

This false allegation left the other side open to attack on a charge of double standards, for in truth, the Socialist government were being promoted openly by Spain's Islamic Community leaders as the party to vote for, which is quite obvious as no future Islamic State could form with a Conservative government in place ... Al Andalus regained requires the pro-Islamic PSOE remaining in government, for that was the very purpose behind al Qaeda's "block vote" for Zappo, back in March 11, 2004, and I shouldn't have to remind you all that Gibraltar and Southern Spain are in the most strategic location in Europe, they form the gateway to the Mediterranean, though likewise, they could become a gateway for Europe's Islamic takeover.

Spain's present government are in place by terrorist favor, so next month's general election could prove to be of greater future historic interest than most would believe. For many years I've held the belief that Spain's present government, the PSOE, are nothing more than a stupid and unwitting arm on the body of Radical Islam, and when I say stupid it's used mildly, for the funny thing is that Radical Islam would reverse everything the PSOE government have been doing over the past four years, and I reckon it would take only three months to do it; Gay marriage would go, fast divorce, gay adoption rights, etc. In effect their unholy alliance will be the end of them.

I'm certain within myself that if the present incumbents are voted in for another destructive term, future historians will stand back in awe. They'll regard present-day Spain as the fulcrum point and successor to 1492, that was a fulcrum for Islam's expulsion from the Iberian Peninsular. Islam's Paradise Lost shall be turned to gain with a PSOE win next month. That's one thing I'm certain of. Yet already the Loon Regime's subjects are crying out against the huge immigration problem. This does not phase the government though, yet it should, because a recent poll found 71% of their own supporters and voters were worried too.

Spain, thanks to Zapatonto and his crew, is now second to United States in nations that receive the most immigrants, but Spain is a small country with just 45 million inhabitants ... or so we're told.

C S Lewis once said, "We laugh at honor, and are shocked to find traitors in our midst." And you know? There's a strong point there, and it's wisdom interconnects and weaves its way around world history and present-day world politics, because if someone's political career is flawed in the honors regime, then we'd be foolish to place our trust in them.

So come voting time the first thing any sensible person would do would be to check out the character and history of a prospective national leader, for after all, we're not their servants, they're ours. Our allegiance is not to them but their allegiance is meant to be to God and man.

Dr Alan Keyes is considering legal redress due to several cases of political stonewalling against him, and I'm with him all the way, as is the above quote by C S Lewis, for the point is here that I've yet to see the other candidates stand up and be counted, defending Alan Keyes' right to fight for the candidature. And if I was one of those candidates everyone would have to stick their fingers in their ears, for I'd be hollering from every high point in every State, saying, "I'm a man of honor. So I won't speak if he can't!" You see, without honor no one can be trusted. I reckon Alan's plight can be likened to some of King Solomon's judgments. I believe old Solomon would sit back and watch each and every candidate, then say, "One man spoke up and is thus deemed honorable, therefore, Alan Keyes and that man shall be the sole candidates." However, if no one spoke up, only Alan Keyes would be chosen. I firmly believe in spiritual wisdom and judgment, so I reckon if the others don't play fair in the honors stakes before the big day, how can we expect them to begin afterwards.

But maybe I see yet another lesson, another truth even, in various pre-electoral events that are taking place on both sides of the Atlantic Ocean. For on both sides everything rests on figureheads, and each one is raised up and attacked from the other side.

"This thing Allegiance, as I suppose,
Is a ring fitted in the subject's nose,
Whereby that organ is kept rightly pointed
To smell the sweetness of the Lord's anointed."
— G.J.

Because God's invisible we've taken to hoisting up some straw man, and placed him in His stead; "One nation under God" becomes one nation under some man or woman, and we've failed to notice the stark truth of this. Other national leaders then find it easy to attack a nation completely by abusing and accusing it's leader, whereas with "one nation under God," it's entire people would feel a sense of righteous indignation, though sometimes I wonder why Americans en masse fail to take attacks against their leader as an attack against themselves, their families and their ancestry too. After all, this used to be the case way back when, in the days of good old Theocracy. Those were the days when true national faith led to true and positive change, and those changes were nigh on impossible for the enemy to deny.


Contact Johnny D. Symon at johnny_symon@yahoo.com

© Copyright 2008 by Johnny D. Symon
http://www.renewamerica.us/columns/symon/080229

29 February 2008

Gunmen kidnap Iraqi Chaldean Catholic archbishop

MOSUL, Iraq (Reuters) - Gunmen kidnapped the Chaldean Catholic archbishop of Mosul on Friday in the northern Iraqi city and killed his driver and two companions, police said.

"He was kidnapped in the al-Nour district in eastern Mosul when he left a church. Gunmen opened fire on the car, killed the other three and kidnapped the archbishop," said provincial police spokesman Brigadier-General Khaled Abdul Sattar.

An assistant to Cardinal Emmanuel III Delly, the Chaldean patriarch of Baghdad and spiritual leader of Iraq's Catholics, said they had heard that three people had been killed and they did not know the fate of the archbishop, Paulos Faraj Rahho.

A number of Christian clergy have been kidnapped or killed, and churches bombed in Iraq since the 2003 U.S.-led invasion.

Last June gunmen murdered Catholic priest Ragheed Aziz Kani and three assistants in Mosul, 240 miles north of Baghdad, after stopping his car near a church in the eastern part of the city.

The assailants dragged out the priest and his assistants and shot them dead in an attack that was condemned by Pope Benedict.

A former Archbishop of Mosul, Basile Georges Casmoussa, was kidnapped at gunpoint in 2005, but was released after one day of captivity and said no ransom was paid.

Chaldeans belong to a branch of the Roman Catholic Church that practices an ancient Eastern rite. Most of its members are in Iraq and Syria, and they form the biggest Christian community in Iraq.

Christians make up about 3 percent of Iraq's 27 million, mostly Muslim, population. According to a 1987 census there were 1.4 million Christians in Iraq, but the number now is thought to have fallen below one million.

While violence across much of Iraq has fallen in recent months, U.S. and Iraqi officials say that Mosul is the last urban stronghold of al Qaeda, which they identify as the biggest threat to the country's security.

(Writing by Michael Holden, editing by Tim Pearce)

© Reuters 2008 All rights reserved

Left With Few Choices, Widows Rely on Charity

Najah Alosaimi, Arab News

RIYADH, 29 February 2008 — Umm Koloud is a 41-year-old Saudi mother of six girls. She lives in a squalid apartment in Athoqbah, Eastern Province. She gets SR2,100 in social insurance every month, over half of which goes to rent. “We are living under a constant threat of eviction,” she said. “We just can’t afford SR1,100 for rent every month.”

Umm Koloud’s husband died seven months ago. She is one of Saudi Arabia’s estimated 182,403 widows, many of who scrape by with little or no support from blood relatives or in-laws.

For Saudi women the passing of a husband often means more than losing a loved one; it means beginning a phase of more responsibility, challenge and economic uncertainty. Some widows are left without relatives able to take them in or offer even modest financial support.

And because of the Saudi guardianship laws, many of these widows are caught between the rock of an indifferent extended family and the hard place of a system that prohibits them from managing many of their own affairs.

A male guardian — known as mahram, who is usually a spouse, father, brother or son — is often required to sign on behalf of women. A woman who doesn’t have anyone to be her mahram has no alternative but to become a ward of the state under the guardianship of a local Islamic court.

In most cases, however, a widow usually ends up finding a mahram within their extended families or getting re-married, in some cases as a second wife.

Saedah F., 36, got married at 19 to a man much older than her. She never graduated from high school. She’s the mother of numerous children; she didn’t say how many. When her husband passed away, the women who married him before her got most of the inheritance set aside for his wives. “My children and I haven’t inherited much,” she said.

Sociologist Ahmed Al-Hariri said that the Saudi custom of parents forcing young girls to marry older men is partly to blame for many relatively young women becoming widows. While forced marriage is forbidden in Islam, many girls find it difficult not to submit to the marriage wills and selections made by their parents.

Often marriage is viewed as a way to get out from under the wing of the parents, too, leading girls to make hasty decisions that might be contributing to Saudi Arabia’s growing divorce rate.

Like divorcees, widows are faced with the “damaged goods” stigma that causes problems with finding another husband.

Fatimah Hussan, who lives in Dammam, has a different problem that leads to similar complications: Her husband is serving 17 years in prison and has still 15 years to go.

“I have two children at home and can’t find a place to put them while I’m at work,” said Hussan, who survives in part through charity from neighbors and friends. She says her social insurance disbursements barely cover the SR11,000 she pays in rent annually.

Hussan’s only option for a mahram (other than to become a ward of the state) is a married brother who lives on the other side of the country in Najran. She said moving to Najran would be a burden on her brother who has a wife and earns a modest income. Finding work and living on her own has been difficult, she added.

For example, she said she tried working as a cook of traditional Saudi food in a kitchen of a restaurant, but the owner said he could not hire a woman. Men and women must work in segregated environments under Saudi law, an accommodation that most small businesses cannot afford to provide.

The Ministry of Social Affairs provides welfare to Saudi women who are landless, single and with at least two children. As soon as a son turns 18, however, the mother becomes his dependent and in many cases she is no longer eligible for ministry disbursement based on being a single-woman head of household.

According to Suhaylah Zain Al-Abidin, a women’s rights activist and member of the nongovernmental National Society of Human Rights (NSHR), depending on financial help is not a cure to the predicaments of these women, but rather simply a treatment of the symptoms.

“Keeping widows surviving on charity exacerbates their feeling of hopelessness,” she said. What would give them hope, she added, was to implement programs to help widows recuperate their emotional losses and to encourage them to be active members of society. Vocational and continuing education courses would be a positive step, she said.

24 February 2008

Blogger’s Family Urges Authorities to Allow Prison Visits

Ebtihal Mubarak, Arab News

JEDDAH — The family members of the detained Saudi blogger Fouad Al-Farhan said yesterday that although Saudi authorities allowed Al-Farhan for the first time to make a telephone call from Jeddah’s Dahban Prison on Feb. 12 they would still like to continue to visit him.

Prior to the telephone call, the 32-year-old Saudi father of two has only been seen once by his father-in-law during a brief visit on Jan. 5. Al-Farhan told him that he was being kept in solitary confinement and subjected to questioning for 15 minutes a day. He has also not been informed of the charges against him. The family’s requests for further visits have so far been denied.

Speaking about Al-Farhan’s telephone call on Feb. 12, his wife told Arab News, “He talked to his mother briefly over the phone assuring her that he is all right and that he is not being harassed.” She added that he initially called home and that she was out with their children and so he telephoned his elderly mother, who lives in Taif.

She said although her husband spoke to his mother on the phone, they were still unaware of whether he was facing charges, whether he was still in solitary confinement and whether he had been given the right to legal access.

“Since he was talking to his mother for less than 10 minutes for the first time in more than two months, she was mainly concerned about his health. You know how mothers are,” she said.

Maj. Gen. Mansour Al-Turki, spokesman for the Interior Ministry, told Arab News earlier this month that there is no update on the Al-Farhan case other than the ministry’s previous statement that the blogger was being held for “interrogation for violating non-security regulations.”

Al-Turki would not clarify exactly why Al-Farhan was being held and whether it was in connection with his blog www.alfarhan.org. Al-Turki was unavailable for comment yesterday.

“Since his arrest, I rarely leave home hoping he might call. That Tuesday I had to leave to buy some things for the children,” said Al-Farhan’s wife, who has not seen her husband since Dec. 10 after officials — following his arrest at his office the same day — brought him home to search his belongings. “I was in one of the rooms with my children accompanied by women officers when they searched the house,” she added.

Saleh Al-Kathlan, head of the Monitoring and Follow-Up Committee at the National Society of Human Rights (NSHR) in Riyadh, said that the NSHR had sent a second letter to the Interior Ministry last week inquiring about Al-Farhan.

Al-Khathlan said the letter mentioned the issue of allowing Al-Farhan’s family to visit him. “According to Saudi Criminal Law detainees should not be denied visits after more than 60 days. They also have the right to see a lawyer for advice,” he added. In five days’ time, Al-Farhan will have been in prison for 80 days.

Article 119 of Saudi Criminal Law states that “the investigator shall order that the accused may not communicate with any other prisoner or detainee, and that he not be visited by anyone for a period not exceeding 60 days if the interest of the investigation so requires, without prejudice to the right of the accused to communicate with his representative or attorney.”

This is the second letter the NSHR has sent to the Interior Ministry regarding Al-Farhan’s case. “So far we have not received a response. But we will keep on following up the case,” said Al-Khathlan.

Hussein Al-Sharif, head of the NSHR’s Western Region office and a professor of law at King Abdul Aziz University in Jeddah, told Arab News earlier that the General Investigation and Prosecution Board (the Saudi equivalent of an attorney general’s office) is allowed to legally detain people for up to six months.

After six months, detainees are either freed after investigation is done or presented in a court for trial if they are charged. Al-Farhan can be thus detained for another three months.

His wife said she was perplexed how to answer her children’s queries about their missing father. She told Arab News that her youngest child Khetab, who is only 5 years old, shocked her the other day when he said that his father was not traveling but in prison. “I’ve tried to keep disturbing news away from them. However, after more than two months the kids miss their father dearly,” she said.

Last Tuesday she remained all day at home beside the phone. “I thought to myself maybe phone calls are only allowed on that particular day. But he didn’t call last week,” she said.

Al-Farhan’s blog leads with the slogan: “Searching for freedom, dignity, justice, equality, public participation (shoura), and all the rest of lost Islamic values, and for Raghad and Khetab” (Farhan’s two children).

Al-Farhan is considered in the Saudi blogosphere as being the “Dean of Saudi Bloggers” for blogging under his real name. www.alfarhan.org has tackled social issues in the Kingdom, condemned terrorism and called for “open” and “real” dialogue within the Kingdom.

23 February 2008

Tensions Surround Qatar's First Christian Church

Wednesday, 20 February 2008
By BosNewsLife News Center with BosNewsLife Correspondents in the region
Roman Catholic Church will open for worshippers next month

DOHA, QATAR (BosNewsLife)-- A bitter debate continued in Qatar Wednesday, February 20, about the construction of the first Christian church in this Muslim nation, which is scheduled to open next month.

Conservative Muslims are furious, but the emir of Qatar, home of international broadcaster Al-Jazeera, has refused to prevent the church inauguration, in time for Easter.

"If all goes well, we will celebrate Easter in our new church", confirmed the Doha-based Roman Catholic Church of St. Mary in a statement to Radio Netherlands Worldwide (RNW) network.

The church has been constructed without a bell tower or cross, apparently to prevent more tensions with the local Muslim population. St. Mary's parish priest, Father Tomasito Veneracion, a Filipino, stressed in published comments that the church would be "merely a place for collective prayer." In addition, the church had reportedly to promise authorities that it will not engage in missionary activities.

POPULAR REFERENDUM

Yet despite these compromises, Muslim intellectuals and several media outlets in Qatar are not satisfied, saying only a popular referendum can decide on whether to allow a Christian church in the Arab emirate.

"The cross should not be raised in the sky of Qatar, nor should bells toll in Doha", commented the influential Al-Arab newspaper.

In a letter to Al-Watan newspaper, engineer Rashed al-Subaie said Christians have the right to practice their faith, but should not have permission to build places of worship. Lawyer and former Justice Minister Najib al-Nuaimi was quoted as saying that Qatar "is a Muslim country, not a secular one," adding that "a referendum is the only way to ensure that the church is socially acceptable."

Non-Muslims, like elsewhere in the region, are in a minority, however church observers say among guest-workers there are many Christians.

LARGE CHURCH

The new church is expected to serve some hundred thousand Catholics residing in the tiny emirate, most of whom are from the Philippines, India and Lebanon. The St. Mary Church, which costs 18 million dollars, will reportedly contain a conference hall, a library, accommodation for clerics and a café.

Construction of other chruches, including can Anglican church, will begin in May, according to Qatar's Anglican priest Canon William Schwarz. Building has already begun on a Greek Orthodox Church and another for Copts.

Despite protests, Italian ambassador in Doha, Ignatio Di Pashi, suggested to local media he does not expect church closures. "A few years ago, opening a church in Qatar was sort of impossible", he was quoted as saying. "But Qatar has changed since the coming of the
new emir."

Since coming to power in 1995, Prince Hamad bin Khalifa al-Thanihas made clear he wanted to the tolerant face of Islam and to accommodate the new Christian minority in his gas-rich country. Thirteen years later Christians want to see that promise fulfilled.

Once St. Mary’s opens, neighbour Saudi Arabia, which also practices Wahhabism, will be the only Arab nation in the Gulf that bans churches.

20 February 2008

Corruption cases on the rise in Saudi Arabia

By Mariam Al Hakeem, Correspondent. Gulf News.
Published: February 20, 2008, 00:54

Riyadh: Bribery cases in Saudi Arabia increased by 15 per cent in 2007, according to a recent report released by the Saudi interior ministry.

Despite the fact the cases of bribery increased last year, no case was reported in the Baha region, the report added. Baha is located in the southern part of Saudi Arabia.

However, the report did not say why no bribery cases were reported in this area in particular while cases of bribery were reported in other parts of the kingdom.

The report noted that 221 expatriates in Riyadh were accused of bribery last year. It did not say the overall cases of bribery reported in Riyadh that year. It added that 237 Saudis were involved in bribery cases in the eastern province in 2007.

Imprisonment

The total reported cases of bribery in that year in the province amounted to 340, the report pointed out.

Bribery is on the increase in Saudi Arabia despite Saudi government efforts to fight it by enacting relevant laws.

The first Saudi anti-bribery law was enacted in 1962. The law was amended in 1968 and then in 1992.

The last amended law to combat bribery, endorsed by the Saudi Cabinet in 1992, stipulates severe punishment against those who receive bribes.

The law notes that "any employee who accepted or received a promise or gift to perform any duties of his function, shall be punished with imprisonment for a period not exceeding 10 years or a fine not exceeding one million riyals (Dh1m) or both."

Using connections or influences, or what is known in Arabic, as "wasta" is common in the kingdom. The practice is not considered illegal in official circles. It is not unusual to see people seeking "wasta" to get things done outside of the normal procedures.

Observers attributed the spread of this practice, among other things, to the social and tribal connections in Saudi Arabia.

Sharjah shops told to 'behead' mannequins



By Mariam M. Al Serkal, Staff Reporter. Gulf News.
Published: February 19, 2008, 17:31

Sharjah: Mannequins in Sharjah shops should be headless and only model “decent” clothing, a Sharjah Municipality circular has stated.

The municipality has urged shopkeepers to abide by a ban that prohibits the display of mannequins with facial features, said a senior Sharjah Municipality official.

“The only clothes on display now should be decent and the mannequins should be headless,” said Khalid Al Jaberi, head of market control at Sharjah Municipality.

A circular was recently sent to all shops stating the heads of mannequins be removed and that they are forbidden to wear underwear, to uphold the traditional and religious values of the emirate.

“We reinforced the ban because it was a religious issue that raised many complaints from residents, who were against shops displaying men and women’s undergarments on realistic mannequins,” said Al Jaberi.

He said no fines had been imposed on shops because everyone had adhered to the circular.
Sharjah Municipality originally implemented the ban five years ago following a fatwa issued by the Islamic Affairs Department.

However, the ban has been reinforced because several outlets had stopped abiding by the rule.
The municipality has always been keen on conserving the traditional Islamic values of Sharjah and has already implemented several rules, including the ban on men selling women’s undergarments in shops.

The Sharjah Economic Development Department ordered 10 shops to close in March 2007 for flouting the rule, and instructed all shops and shopping centres to hire only female employees to sell women’s undergarments.

Top Lawyer Comes to Yara’s Defense

Ebtihal Mubarak, Arab News

JEDDAH — A prominent human rights lawyer said yesterday that the Commission for the Promotion of Virtue and the Prevention of Vice committed various violations in the way one of its members arrested a 37-year-old businesswoman in Riyadh.

Yara was arrested on Feb. 4 by commission members for being in the family section of a Riyadh Starbucks cafe with a Syrian colleague.

“There is a good possibility of winning the case against the commission if Yara filed a lawsuit at the Court of Grievances,” Abdul Rahman Al-Lahem told Arab News.

He added that the commission member in this case violated an order from the Interior Ministry that binds commission members to produce suspects at the local police center. It is the local police’s responsibility to investigate such cases.

“The Interior Ministry rule is clear on that matter,” Al-Lahem said. “The commission must hand over anyone they arrest in any case to the police.”

The lawyer added that placing a suspect in a taxi for transfer is a clear violation of existing rules, which is what happened in Yara’s case. Al-Lahem said that the commission member should have had proper identification. “He’s actually violating the commission’s own rules,” he said. “When arresting someone, they should present the commission’s ID card.” Yara has claimed that the member who arrested her refused to produce any identification.

The lawyer also questioned the commission’s claim that Yara and her colleague were violating Islamic law and instead criticized the commission member for forcing Yara into a taxi.

“What is a Shariah violation?” he questioned. “Who defines one? There is no legislation that prevents people who are not related from meeting in public. In fact, being in a limousine with an unrelated man is more of a ‘khulwa’ than being in a coffee shop.” (Khulwa is defined as being in a state of seclusion with an unrelated man or woman.)

In its statement on Monday, the commission charged that Yara and her colleague violated Labor Ministry regulations for “working together”.

Al-Lahem countered this saying the commission is not authorized to monitor Labor Ministry violations.

“The minister of labor is the only authority to check on such violations,” he said. “Does the commission now want to monitor all violations in the country?”

In addition, the commission accused two prominent Saudi columnists — Abdullah Al-Alami of Al-Watan newspaper and Abdullah Abou Alsamh of the Okaz daily — of supporting illegal and un-Islamic activities.

Abou Alsamh denies making any un-Islamic remarks in his column and said he merely questioned the commission’s interpretations about khulwa.

“My point was that the commission members humiliated her,” he said. “They said that under Islamic law a woman couldn’t travel without mahram (a legal male guardian). If so, then why is the government allowing this? Why are local airlines not prohibiting women from traveling alone?”

In Al-Alami’s case, the commission threatened legal action against him for describing Yara’s arrest as an “abduction”.

“I still stick to what I said in my column,” Al-Alami told Arab News yesterday. “I’m committed to human rights as mandated under the law.”

Arab News attempted to contact Abdullah Al-Shathari, the head of the Riyadh branch of the commission, who released the statement on Monday. He was, however, not available.

— Additional input by Ali Al-Zahrani