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Reported from harpazo Ready:
- Al
Qaeda exploits 'blue-eyed' Muslim converts (October
12, 2005)
- What prompts someone to convert to Islam and to sign up for global
"holy war" in the name of Osama bin Laden's al Qaeda?
Security agencies are asking that question with increasing urgency
as they confront a growing catalogue of actual or attempted attacks
in which Muslim converts are suspected of playing prominent roles.
Richard Reid, the convicted British "shoebomber" who tried
to set off explosives in his footwear on a 2001 trans-Atlantic
flight, was a petty criminal who first turned to Islam during a
spell in prison. Christian Ganczarski, a German suspected of
involvement in a 2002 bombing in Tunisia, converted at 20 before
embarking on a jihadist career in which, investigators believe, he
became a close associate of bin Laden's. Other high-profile militant
converts include Jamaican-born Germaine Lindsay, one of four suicide
bombers who killed 52 people in London in July, and Briton Andrew
Rowe, jailed for 15 years last month for possessing terrorist
materials. Frenchman Lionel Dumont, a suspected Rowe associate and
another convert, will go on trial in December accused of a series of
attacks in the 1990s, including an attempt to bomb a Group of Seven
summit in Lille. more...
- Vatican
'must let priests wed' (October 11, 2005)
- LEADING bishops gathered at the Vatican have suggested that Roman
Catholic priests should be allowed to marry as a way of overcoming
the shortage of priests. The question of celibacy, which was
suppressed under Pope John Paul II, has come to dominate a
three-week synod of more than 250 cardinals and bishops.Cardinal
Angelo Scola, the Patriarch of Venice, who is seen as a potential
future Pope and is chairing the discussion, raised the issue in the
presence of Pope Benedict XVI. Cardinal Scola said that some bishops
had put forward the request to ordain married faithful of proven
faith and virtue, the so-called viri probati, while maintaining
his own support for celibacy. There is a shortage of priests, and
reformers believe that allowing married priests would help to
attract newcomers. There is one priest for every 2,677 Catholics,
compared with one for every 1,797 thirty years ago. In the United
States, where the Church has been hit hard by the crisis involving
sexual abuse by clergy, the number of priests has fallen from 58,909
to 42,528. Meanwhile, the number of American Catholics has risen
from 48 million to 65 million. After the synod, the first under the
new papacy, a papal document will be released banning even celibate
homosexuals from seminaries, a move that could worsen the shortage
of priests. The issue has been taken up by several members of the
gathering. Bishop Luis Antonio Tagle, of the Philippines, said:
In the absence of a priest, there is no Eucharist. We have to
face the shortage of priests squarely. more...
- Schroeder
Won't Be Part of New German Government (October
12, 2005)
- Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder told a trade union conference in his
hometown Wednesday he will ``definitely'' not participate in
Germany's new coalition government. Schroeder's Social Democrats
lost last month's parliamentary elections to conservative Angela
Merkel's Christian Democrats, and Merkel struck a power-sharing deal
Monday to become Germany's first female chancellor. ``I will not
belong to the next government, definitely not,'' Schroeder said to
loud applause. He thanked union members for their support during his
seven years of government and urged the new leadership to push
through economic reforms while maintaining the nation's social
welfare programs. The chancellor gave no indication of what he
planned to do in the future, although he has said he would
participate in upcoming formal coalition talks ``so that they turn
out well.'' Schroeder hinted Tuesday evening he did not want to take
a Cabinet post in the new government. Eight posts in Merkel's
government will go to Schroeder's party. Although Schroeder's
governing coalition with the Greens was voted out of power last
month, voters failed to give any party a clear majority, forcing the
formation of a ``grand coalition'' between the parties of Schroeder
and Merkel.
- Pakistan
rocked by new earthquake as weather hampers relief efforts (October
12, 2005)
- A FRESH earthquake hit Pakistan last night as stormy weather
hampered the efforts of rescuers searching for survivors from the
original shock. No casualties were reported from the new quake,
which measured 5.1 on the Richter scale and hit the south-west of
the country, but the death toll from Saturday's earthquake in the
north has risen above 30,000 and there were suggestions that as many
as 40,000 may have died. The United Nations has launched a
"flash appeal" for £151 million for Pakistan in response
to the devastation across the country. The UK's Disasters Emergency
Committee (DEC) also formally launched its Asia Quake Appeal. The
British government has doubled its commitment to the relief effort
to £2.1 million and hundreds of Britons have been granted emergency
visas so they can fly to the affected areas. One, Jamil Ahmed, from
London, was yesterday reported to have lost 150 relatives in the
quake and feared 100 more may be dead. The bad weather hindered the
continuing rescue efforts but there were occasional successes.
British rescuers pulled a 75-year-old grandmother and her daughter
from the wreckage of an Islamabad apartment block more than three
days after the quake struck. It took 16 hours to free Maha Bibi and
her daughter Khalida Begum, 55. "I'm so sorry to put you
through all this trouble," Mrs Begum told her rescuer, John
Holland of Rapid-UK. The first relief flight chartered by the
Department for International Development left for Islamabad from
Nottingham East Midlands Airport yesterday afternoon, carrying 800
winter tents for Oxfam and 19,000 blankets for Islamic Relief. more...
- Syria
warns 'gates of hell will open' if U.S. attacks (October
12, 2005)
- In the latest official Syrian comment on the increasing pressure
on Damascus, Premier Naji Otari said "all the gates of hell
will open on the U.S. if it attempts to attack Syria." Otari
was replying to a report this week in Newsweek magazine revealing
that Washington had debated launching military strikes inside Syria
against camps used by insurgents operating in Iraq. Citing unnamed
government sources, the magazine reported that U.S. Secretary of
State Condoleezza Rice had managed to block the proposal during a
meeting of senior U.S. officials on October 1. Speaking to reporters
in Shanon, Ireland, on a four-nation tour, Rice said: "I am not
going to comment on internal deliberations in the
administration." Otari also accused Lebanese officials of being
unable to make an independent decision, saying they were answerable
to the French and U.S. ambassadors to Lebanon. Addressing his
Lebanese counterpart Fouad Siniora, the Syrian premier said:
"Apparently Siniora forgot all of what we have discussed when
he visited Damascus after his recent return from a visit to the
U.S." Siniora had held talks with several officials in Damascus
to resolve a border dispute between the two countries in June.
Pan-Arab daily Al-Hayat reported yesterday Otari had refused to
answer repeated phone calls from Siniora on Monday. The paper quoted
unidentified "informed Syrian sources in Damascus" as
saying the Assad regime believes Siniora has reneged on promises he
made to the Syrian president during a visit on July 31. more...
- Iraq's
Zarqawi Urged to Prepare for Islamic Rule: US (October
12, 2005)
- "We must be ready starting now, before events overtake us,
and before we are surprised by the conspiracies of the Americans and
the United Nations, and their plans to fill the void behind
them," Zawahri told Abu Musab al-Zarqawi in a July 9 letter
that U.S. officials say was obtained during counterterrorism
operations in Iraq. "The aftermath of collapse of American
power in Vietnam -- and how they ran and left their agents -- is
noteworthy," the letter said. "I stress again to you and
all your brothers the need to direct the political action equally
with the military action," it said. The Pentagon disclosed the
letter's existence on October 6, telling reporters it appeared to be
authentic. But military and intelligence officials have not released
details of where, when, how or by whom it was obtained. Zarqawi, a
Jordanian militant whose insurgent network was endorsed by al Qaeda
leader Osama bin Laden last year, has emerged as the most prominent
leader of an increasingly deadly Sunni Arab insurgency. His
affiliation with al Qaeda has allowed him to expand his network by
incorporating indigenous Iraqi groups, intelligence officials say.
But the Zawahri letter, released by the office of U.S. intelligence
chief John Negroponte, appeared to show divisions between Zarqawi
and al Qaeda's top leaders on issues such as the killing of Shi'ite
civilians and hostages. The document endorsed the formation of a
Muslim state in Iraq that could grow to encompass the Arabian
Peninsula, Egypt and the Levant. more...
Reported from Steve Quayle:
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