Prophet’s picture in textbook stirs row in Uttar Pradesh

Lucknow, July 28: Taking serious note of a picture of Prophet Mohammed published in an officially prescribed textbook, the Uttar Pradesh Minorities Commission Tuesday issued a show-cause notice to the state government.

This followed an uproar among Islamic scholars and the clergy, who consider publication of the Prophet’s picture ‘blasphemy’.

SIMI not a front, says Muslim group

Lucknow, July 28: Days after the arrest of 14 persons from what the police called a secret meeting to set up a frontal organisation for SIMI, a group from Saharanpur said that the organisation named has been in existence for years and should not be connected with SIMI.

The police had said that the frontal organisation being planned at the secret meeting, in Mana village of Akola district, was vaguely named as Wahadat-E-Islam. Now, the Saharanpur-based group said they belong to Wahadat-E-Islam, which is 15 years old.

Human Rights Watch blasts Iran lawyer arrests

Cairo, July 27: Iranian authorities are spreading fear by arresting prominent human rights lawyers to prevent them from representing protesters detained in the aftermath of the country’s disputed presidential election, a leading international rights group said.

Human Rights Watch detailed several cases of arrests of lawyers in Iran and said others have been threatened and told not to talk to media — especially foreign outlets.

Iran pursuit of nukes ‘futile’: Clinton

Washington, July 27: Secretary of State Hillary Clinton has said that Iran will never achieve its goal of obtaining a nuclear weapon, declaring to Tehran: “Your pursuit is futile.”

“What we want to do is to send a message to whoever is making these decisions, that if you’re pursuing nuclear weapons for the purpose of intimidating, of projecting your power, we’re not going to let that happen,” she said on NBC’s “Meet the Press” on Sunday.

Revolutionary Guard tightens hold in Iran crisis

Cairo, July 27: The Revolutionary Guard tightened its already powerful hold over Iran during the post-election turmoil, raising alarm among some Iranians that it is transforming the Islamic Republic into a military state.

The elite force and an affiliated volunteer militia, the Basij, led the crackdown against street protesters who claim mass fraud in the June 12 election after President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad was declared the winner in a landslide. At least 20 protesters have been killed in clashes and hundreds detained.

The Revolutionary Guard weighed in at key moments of the crisis.

Worldwide day of protest against Tehran regime

Demonstrators in cities around the globe joined protests Saturday denouncing human rights abuses in Iran and showing support for opponents of hardline President Mahmoud Ahmandinejad.

Some of the biggest rallies took place in Amsterdam, London and Stockholm, with more than 4,000 alone taking to the streets of the Swedish capital.

Among the 1,000 people in Amsterdam was Iran’s Nobel Peace laureate Shirin Ebadi who led the crowd in chanting: “We want to live in peace. Long live peace”.

Iran vows to hit Israel’s if attacked

Tehran, July 25: The Revolutionary Guards said on Saturday that Iran would strike Israel’s nuclear facilities if the Jewish state attacked it, state television reported.

“If the Zionist Regime (Israel) attacks Iran, we will surely strike its nuclear facilities with our missile capabilities,” Mohammad Ali Jafari, Guards commander-in-chief, told Iran’s Arabic language al-Alam television.

The Revolutionary Guards are the ideologically driven wing of Iran’s military with air, sea and land capabilities, and a separate command structure to regular units.

Iranian airliner skids off runway killing 16

Tehran, July 24: An Iranian passenger plane skidded off the runway during its landing in northeast Iran and crashed, shredding the cockpit into a tangled mass of wreckage and killing 16 people, the state news agency said.

Footage from Iran’s Press TV showed the plane sitting at an angle, its tail awkwardly on the ground and the mangled front end pointing upward. The rest of the craft appeared largely intact.

The IRNA news agency reported that the tires failed on landing and it skidded into a wall, though no wall was visible in the footage.

N Korea ‘tests weapons on children’

Pyongyang, July 24: When Im Chun-yong made his daring escape from North Korea, with a handful of his special forces men, there were many reasons why the North Korean government was intent on stopping them.

They were, after all, part of Kim Jong-il’s elite commandos – privy to a wealth of military secrets and insights into the workings of the reclusive regime.

But among the accounts they carried with them is one of the most shocking yet to emerge – namely the use of humans, specifically mentally or physically handicapped children, to test North Korea’s biological and chemical weapons.

More non-Muslims turning to Sharia courts to resolve civil disputes

London, July 23: Increasing numbers of non-Muslims are turning to Sharia courts to resolve commercial disputes and other civil matters, The Times has learnt.

The Muslim Arbitration Tribunal (MAT) said that 5 per cent of its cases involved non-Muslims who were using the courts because they were less cumbersome and more informal than the English legal system.

Freed Chedie, a spokesman for Sheikh Faiz-ul-Aqtab Siqqiqi, a barrister who set up the tribunal, said: “We put weight on oral agreements, whereas the British courts do not.”

NHRC gives clean chit to Delhi police in Batla encounter case

New Delhi, July 22: National Human Rights Commission on Wednesday gave clean chit to Delhi police in Batla House encounter case. “We are clearly of the opinion that having regard to the material placed before us, it cannot be said that there has been any violation of human rights by action of the police”, the NHRC said in its 30 page report on the encounter in September last year. The action taken by police in which two persons died “is fully protected by law,” said the NHRC.

Saudi Arabia’s terror fight plagued with abuse: Amnesty

Riyadh, July 22: Saudi Arabia is holding more than 3,000 people in secret detention and has used torture to extract confessions in its anti-terrorism crackdown since the September 11, 2001 terror attacks, Amnesty International said in a report.

The report criticised the international community for turning a blind eye to the kingdom’s methods in its crackdown. Saudi Arabia has carried out a heavy wave of arrests against al Qaeda members in past years after the militant group carried out a string of attacks against expatriate residential compounds, oil facilities and government buildings.

Deadly bomb blasts hit Iraq

Baghdad, July 22: At least 18 people have been killed in a series of bombings in Baghdad, the Iraqi capital, and the western city of Ramadi, security and medical officials said.

A one-year-old baby and an eight-year-old girl were among three people who died after an explosion in a market in Baghdad’s Sadr City on Tuesday.

At least 15 other people were wounded in the blast, the defence ministry said.

Another four people were killed and 31 injured in an earlier twin bomb attack in the same district in the northeast of the city.

Shaukathullah Ghori sent to 15-day Police remand in Gujarat

Hyderabad, July 21: Shaukatullah, who was arrested from the Hyderabad airport, along with his brother financed the LeT and HuJI to target the state Special POTA Judge Jyotsnaben Yagnik on Monday remanded 43-year-old Akshardham attack accused Shaukatullah Ghori to 15 days police custody.

Unleashed terror on Muslims

Mumbai, July 21: Police used Mumbai blast as an excuse to unleash terror on Muslims. For five days in December 1992 (6th to 10th December 1992) and fifteen days in January 1993 (6th to 20th January 1993), Bombay was rocked by riots.

Then on March 12, 1993 Mumbai was set ablaze by a series of bomb blasts, leading to the death of 260 people and 1,000 injured.

Haj can be skipped this year – cleric

Beirut, July 20: Lebanon’s most influential Shiite cleric issued a religious edict saying Muslims who have serious concerns about contracting swine flu while performing the annual hajj pilgrimage in Saudi Arabia may stay away this year.

However Grand Ayatollah Mohammed Hussein Fadlallah, who is widely respected among Lebanon’s 1.2 million Shiites and many others in the Muslim world, said the entire pilgrimage should not be canceled under any circumstances because it is a “divine duty.”

EVMs rigged? Poll panel challenges doubters

New Delhi, July 19: The controversy over electronic voting machines (EVMs) has a new twist. The Election Commission has challenged a software developer to prove his claim that EVMs can be programmed to guarantee victories for particular candidates or parties.

Ripujit Nomthondam claims the software he has developed can be put into any EVM by activating an already existing secret loop to ensure that by default every fifth vote will go in favour of a chosen candidate.

Scam exposes porn, poker in British royal

London, July 19: The trial of a British royal protection officer has exposed a culture of porn, gambling and alcohol inside Buckingham Palace, a news report said.

Paul Page, who was in the elite SO14 royal protection squad, faces a long sentence after he was found guilty of a multi-million-pound fraud.

UK Muslim convert gets 10 years for suicide plot

London, July 18: A British student who converted to Islam was jailed for at least 10 years for plotting to blow up a shopping center using his own homemade “suicide vest.”

Isa Ibrahim, 20, a student from Bristol in southwest England, was arrested in April last year after police received what they described as a “landmark” tip-off from a member of the local Muslim community.

” You were, in my judgment, a lonely and angry young person at the time of these events, with a craving for attention ”
Judge

Iraq government faces claims of prisoner abuse

Baghdad, July 18: Iraqi officials outraged by the abuse of prisoners at the U.S.-run Abu Ghraib prison are trying to contain a scandal of their own as allegations continue to surface of mistreatment inside Iraqi jails.

Accounts of Iraqis being beaten with clubs, blindfolded and coerced into signing false confessions are attracting increased attention partly because the United States is getting out of the prison business in Iraq. The U.S. has transferred 841 detainees into Iraq’s crowded prison system and more are on the way.

Blasts rock Marriott hotels in Jakarta, 9 dead, 50 injured

Jakarta, July 17: In coordinated bombings, suspected terrorists targetted two luxury hotels in the Indonesian capital Jakarta today, killing at least nine people and injuring 50 others, many of them foreigners.

“There were two explosions, one in the Marriott and one in the Ritz-Carlton,” a police spokesman said. Mostly foreigners stay at these two hotels. It is not yet known if any Indian was among the dead or injured.

“So far, nine people have been killed. Eight died at the scene and one in the hospital,” the spokesman said, adding 14 foreigners were injured in the blast.

US state law barring religious dress

Washington, July 17: A leading US Muslim civil rights organization slammed a draft state law that would bar teachers in public schools from wearing “religious dress” such as a headscarf.

“This legislation forces Muslims, Jews, Sikhs and others to choose between their faith and entering the teaching profession,” said Ibrahim Hooper, communications director for the Washington-based Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR), referring to a bill before the governor of the northwestern state of Oregon.

Israel ready to attack Iran’s nuclear project

Jerusalem, July 16: Two Israeli missile class warships have sailed through the Suez Canal ten days after a submarine capable of launching a nuclear missile strike, in preparation for a possible attack on Iran’s nuclear facilities.

The deployment into the Red Sea, confirmed by Israeli officials, was a clear signal that Israel was able to put its strike force within range of Iran at short notice. It came before long-range exercises by the Israeli air force in America later this month and the test of a missile defence shield at a US missile range in the Pacific Ocean.

Zawahri urges Pakistanis to join jihad

Dubai, July 15: Al Qaeda’s second-in-command accused the United States of leading a crusade to turn Pakistan from a Muslim nuclear power into a divided nation and urged Pakistanis to join jihad to resist.

Militants were in a tug-of-war with the U.S.-allied government as they push to make Pakistan a “citadel of Islam” in the region, Ayman al-Zawahri said in a audio recording posted on an al Qaeda-linked website.