May 20, 2013

Al-Qaeda leader urges holy war over Prophet film

759dbb6239ba17b47b4332a18de53aef Al Qaeda leader urges holy war over Prophet film
(Photo: Visual News )
Story Highlights

Al- urges Muslims to wage holy war against the U.S. and Israel
Ayman al-Zawahri calls for action over a film that insulted Islam’s
The “Innocence of Muslims” was made by an Egyptian-born

CAIRO (AP) — The leader of Al-Qaeda has urged Muslims to wage holy war against the United States and Israel over a film that insulted Islam’s Prophet Muhammad.

Ayman al-Zawahri praised as “honest and zealous” who breached the U.S and attackers who stormed the U.S. “embassy” in in violence linked to the film. The American ambassador and three others died in the Sept. 11 attack on the U.S. Consulate in the Libyan city.

The amateur film “Innocence of Muslims” was made by an Egyptian-born American citizen.

In an released by al-Qaeda’ arm As-Sahab and posted on militant websites early Saturday, al-Zawahri claimed Washington allowed the film’s production under the pretext of , “but this freedom did not prevent them from torturing Muslim prisoners.”

Olympic: IOC probes black market Olympic ticket scandal

 Olympic: IOC probes black market Olympic ticket scandal

LONDON (AP) — International have opened a high-level that authorized representatives in more than 50 countries – including a national Olympic committee – were involved in selling tickets on the black market for profit.

The convened an Saturday to discuss a dossier of evidence presented to it by Britain’s Sunday Times. The newspaper published an investigation Sunday claiming that officials have been offering tickets for the July 27-Aug. 12 , including highly sought-after events such as the men’s 100-meter final, at vastly inflated prices.

One of the most damaging allegations was against Spyros Capralos, the Greek Olympic and top organizer for the 2004 Athens .

He was quoted as saying he had “pulled strings” with London organizing chairman to obtain an extra batch of premium tickets for official agents in Greece, on the that demand in his country had outstripped expectations.

The paper said Capralos acknowledged in talks with its undercover reporters that demand had actually been very low and that many of the tickets were subsequently sold to people outside Greece for profit.

The London said Capralos’ alleged boasts of discussions with Coe were untrue. Coe had told the Greek Olympic Committee that tickets were allocated in accordance with IOC ticketing policies, it said.

“There was no further contact – either formal or informal – on this subject,” it said in a statement.

Capralos was not immediately available for comment. A Greek Olympic Committee official, speaking on condition of because of the ongoing investigation, denied that anything untoward had taken place.

At issue are ticket allocations given to each of the 205 to sell in their . The committees appoint an organization within their countries to sell the tickets, a process meant to ensure equity.

IOC rules forbid national committees from selling tickets abroad, inflating ticket prices or selling tickets to unauthorized resellers.

But the Sunday Times said its undercover reporters, who posed as illegal ticket-sellers acting for clients in the Middle East, caught officials red-handed. It said it has presented the IOC with a dossier of evidence on 27 officials controlling the tickets for 54 countries.

The paper even posted on its website videos of its reporters’ negotiations with Capralos and some of the agents. They include official ticket agents in Serbia, Lithuania and China, who offered to sell the undercover reporters premium tickets for up to 6,000 British pounds ($9,407) each.

Official ticket prices for the games range from 20.12 pounds to 2,012 pounds.

One of those accused of falling for the newspaper’s ruse was former Olympic swimmer Yoav Bruck, who is authorized to sell tickets in Israel and Cyprus. He denied allegations that he offered the Sunday Times reporters the best seats to the 100 final.

“The report is swamped with untruths, lies and inventions that cries to the heavens,” he told Israel’s Channel 2 TV. “I am saying that we are clean … we are not selling anything we are not allowed to.”

The report also alleged that Greg Harney, an executive at travel company Cartan Tours and a former top official at the U.S. Olympic Committee, told the undercover reporters how to conceal an illegal ticket sale.

The IOC said in a statement on its website that it “takes these allegations very seriously and has immediately taken the first steps to investigate.”

The report was the latest in a string of similar allegations. In May, a top Ukrainian Olympic official resigned following allegations that he offered to sell thousands of dollars’ worth of tickets for the on the black market.

Volodymyr Gerashchenko, secretary general of Ukraine’s national Olympic committee, was accused in a BBC television report of telling an undercover reporter posing as an unauthorized dealer that he was willing to sell up to 100 tickets for cash.

Ticketing problems have plagued London’s organizers for months, with many people in Britain complaining about the official website’s intractable computer problems and its inability to cope with huge demand.

Many Britons have been frustrated that they couldn’t attend an event that is costing the nation 9.3 billion pounds ($14.6 billion) to host, and ticketing problems have prompted some London officials to demand more transparency on how the tickets were allocated.

Organizers had promised a full accounting once the games are done, but members of the London Assembly, a public watchdog group, have been demanding an accounting of how many tickets have been sold so far and at what price. Critics of the London organizers believe a disproportionate number of tickets have been sold in higher price brackets.

The issue is now in the hands of the IOC ethics commission, which investigates and makes recommendations to the ruling executive board. The IOC has asked the British newspaper to supply all the evidence from its undercover probe.

The IOC is not expected to complete its full investigation until after the , but the committee could provisionally take action against certain individuals before the games. Officials could be suspended and barred from attending the Olympics, sanctions which the IOC has taken in previous ethics cases.

In addition, the IOC is considering suspending the ticket sales process for the 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi, Russia, until the current investigation is completed, a senior IOC official told The Associated Press. The official spoke on condition of because he was not authorized to discuss the matter publicly.

Olympic: IOC probes black market Olympic ticket scandal is a post from: PhatzRadio.com

 Olympic: IOC probes black market Olympic ticket scandal

help Olympic: IOC probes black market Olympic ticket scandal
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help Olympic: IOC probes black market Olympic ticket scandal
1df4af0e6e8f900d91267ca68edfd555 Olympic: IOC probes black market Olympic ticket scandal
help Olympic: IOC probes black market Olympic ticket scandal
7f14bbf0b0c13fca3af83ff82c0b71ca Olympic: IOC probes black market Olympic ticket scandal
help Olympic: IOC probes black market Olympic ticket scandal
7c7d24e16ce9807a51c9caae4d336d4f Olympic: IOC probes black market Olympic ticket scandal
help Olympic: IOC probes black market Olympic ticket scandal
325472601571f31e1bf00674c368d335 Olympic: IOC probes black market Olympic ticket scandal

325472601571f31e1bf00674c368d335 Olympic: IOC probes black market Olympic ticket scandal

Afghanistan’s allies pledge to stay for long haul

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(Reuters) – Foreign governments pledged on Monday to support Afghanistan long after go home, with or without a political settlement with insurgents once seen as the best way to prevent a new civil war.

At a conference of more than 80 countries but boycotted by Pakistan, they said even after most foreign leave in 2014, the Afghan government will not be allowed to meet the fate of its Soviet-era predecessor, which collapsed in 1992.

“The United States intends to stay the course with our friends in Afghanistan,” Secretary of State said. “We will be there with you as you make the hard decisions that are necessary for your future.”

Hosts Germany sought to signal Western staying power in the country, where al Qaeda sheltered under Taliban protection before the , at the gathering in Bonn.

“We send a clear message to the : We will not leave you on your own. We will not leave you in the ,” said German Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle.

Ten years after a similar conference held to rebuild Afghanistan, the Afghan war is becoming increasingly unpopular in Western public opinion — especially since U.S. forces found and killed al Osama bin Laden in Pakistan on May 2 in a raid that removed a central of the 2001 invasion.

Western countries are under pressure to spend money reviving flagging economies at home rather than propping up a government in Kabul widely criticized for being corrupt and ineffective.

And as expected, delegates at the steered clear of making specific pledges to make up a in funding for Afghanistan estimated by the World Bank at some $7 billion a year from the end of 2014.

For now, nobody wants to show their hand too clearly in the hope that someone else — from the United States to Europe, the Gulf to Asia — will come forward to foot a share of the bill.

Brewing pitting Washington against Pakistan and Iran, two of Afghanistan’s most influential neighbors, have also added to despondency over the outlook for the war.

Pakistan boycotted the meeting after NATO aircraft killed 24 of its soldiers on the border with Afghanistan in a November 26 attack the alliance called a “tragic” accident.

But delegates from Russia to Iran to China, all uneasy about the U.S. military presence in their neighborhood, were nonetheless able to agree with Western powers “the main threat to Afghanistan’s security and stability is terrorism.”

“In this regard, we recognize the regional dimensions of terrorism and extremism, including terrorist safe havens, and emphasize the need for sincere and result-oriented regional cooperation…” a conference statement.

Pakistan is accused by Washington and Kabul of providing “safe havens” to insurgents to use to counter the influence of rival India. Pakistan says it being used as a scapegoat for the U.S. failure to bring stability to Afghanistan.

SCALING BACK OBJECTIVES

The mood at the Bonn conference was a far cry from the early days of the Afghan war when, fresh from toppling the Taliban, Western powers hoped to bring permanent peace to a country which has now been at war for more than three decades.

But with problems of insecurity, governance, corruption and narcotics inside Afghanistan, compounded by insurgent sanctuaries in Pakistan, objectives have been scaled back.

By the time of a conference in London on Afghanistan in January 2010, Western governments had agreed insurgents could be brought into peace talks if they were willing to cut ties with al Qaeda, give up violence and respect the Afghan constitution.

But even that goal has proved elusive. Embroynic contacts with the Taliban have yielded little, and foreign governments have been preparing increasingly for a scenario in which there is no peace settlement with the Taliban even before the before most foreign combat troops leave in 2014.

The aim now is to leave behind a government which is just about good enough to survive, even if fighting persists in parts of the country and the Taliban insurgency remains active.

Some are still hoping Pakistan will use its influence to deliver the Afghan Taliban into a political settlement.

Afghan President Hamid Karzai told reporters Pakistan had missed a good opportunity to discuss its own issues and the future of Afghanistan by not attending the Bonn conference. “But it will not stop us from cooperating together,” he said.

Asked what he wanted Pakistan to do to help bring peace in Afghanistan, he said: “Close the sanctuaries, arrange a purposeful dialogue with those Taliban who are in Pakistan.”

Clinton said she expected Pakistan to play a constructive role in Afghanistan, even as she voiced disappointment that Islamabad chose not to attend the conference.

But British Foreign Secretary William Hague said that Afghanistan could still have a bright future even if the Taliban were not brought into a political settlement.

“It may take a longer time to bring about our objectives but we should not be deterred at all by Taliban reluctance to come to the table…” he told the BBC.

Foreign governments were also determined to try to dispel at least some of the pessimism seeping into the Afghan project.

Indian Foreign Minister S.M. Krishna, whose country became the first to sign a strategic partnership agreement with Afghanistan — much to the irritation of Pakistan — pledged India would keep up its heavy investment in a country whose mineral wealth and trade routes made it “a land of opportunity.”

In a rare positive development, Clinton said the United States would resume paying into a World Bank-administered Reconstruction Trust Fund for Afghanistan, a decision that U.S. officials said would allow for the disbursement of roughly $650 million to $700 million in suspended U.S. aid.

The United States and other big donors stopped paying into the fund in June, when the International Monetary Fund suspended its program with Afghanistan because of concerns about Afghanistan’s troubled Kabul Bank.

IRAN ROW OVERSHADOWS CONFERENCE

In a sign of quite how difficult it will be to bring peace to Afghanistan, the conference was nearly overshadowed before it started by a row with Iran — increasingly at odds with the United States and European powers over its nuclear program.

Tehran said on Sunday it shot down a U.S. spy drone in its airspace and threatened to respond. [ID:nL5E7N40D9] International forces in Kabul said the drone may have been one lost last week while flying over western Afghanistan.

Iran has been accused in the past of providing low-level backing to the Taliban insurgency, and diplomats and analysts have suggested Tehran could ratchet up this support if it wanted to put serious pressure on U.S. forces in Afghanistan.

Foreign Minister Ali Akbar Salehi on Monday also reiterated Iran’s opposition to the United States keeping some forces in Afghanistan after 2014.

Simon Gass, NATO’s senior civilian representative in Kabul and former British ambassador to Tehran, downplayed the prospect of Tehran acting as a spoiler in any Afghan settlement.

He recalled Iran was a historic foe of the Taliban, which has a record of hostility to Afghan Shi’ites, Iran’s co-religionists.

Despite its dislike of the Taliban “Iran has a history in Afghanistan of supporting some Taliban groups in different ways. That could continue. We shall have to see,” he said.

“But what I would say is that my quite long experience of Iran is that Iranians are realists, and once the international agreements are in place which define the security architecture for Afghanistan after 2014, my belief is that Iran will begin to adjust to those new realities,” he told Reuters.

(Additional reporting by David Brunnstrom, Arshad Mohammed, Sabine Siebold, Missy Ryan and William Maclean; Writing by Myra MacDonald; Editing by William Maclean)

Walkout at U.N. as Ahmadinejad speaks

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U.N. delegates walk out on Ahmadinejad
STORY HIGHLIGHTS

NEW: Ahmadinejad refers to the U.S. government as having “no
NEW: Ahmadinejad says the U.S. killed bin Laden instead of assigning a fact-finding team on the 9-11 attacks
Ahmadinejad’s meeting with university students and faculty Wednesday was generally lighthearted
His depiction of Iran’s 2009 crackdown on protests differs from the U.S. version

United Nations (CNN) — from the United States and several European nations walked out of the U.N. General Assembly Thursday during ’s speech, in which he repeatedly condemned the United States and said some countries use the Holocaust as an “excuse to pay ransom… to .”

Delegates from France, Germany, and the United Kingdom were among those who walked out. Delegations from Canada and Israel were not present from the beginning.

In his remarks, Ahmadinejad called the September 11, 2001, attacks “mysterious” and said they were a for a U.S.-led war against Afghanistan and Iraq.

He said the United States killed al Osama bin Laden instead of assigning a fact-finding team to investigate “hidden elements involved in September 11.”

He also placed blame on the United States for numerous global problems including the financial crisis, criticizing it for dominating the world’s “policy-making establishments,” overspending on the military, and “printing of dollars” that triggered inflation, according to an English translation of his speech provided by Iran’s U.N. mission.

Ahmadinejad said the U.S. government views Zionism as “sacred,” and that “European countries still use the Holocaust after six decades as the excuse to pay (a) fine or ransom to the Zionists.”

After assailing the United States, Ahmadinejad said “the main question is the quest for the of such attitudes. The should be sought in the beliefs and tendencies of the establishment. An assembly of people in contradiction with the inner human instincts and disposition who also have no faith in God and in the path of the divine prophets, replace their lust for power and materialistic ends with heavenly values. To them, only power and wealth prevail, and every attempt must bring into focus these sinister goals.”

On the eve of the address, the Iranian president declared his country to be “a new model for life to the world.”

He also said that the United States might be willing to “hijack” the Middle East uprisings, according to the Iranian state-run news agency IRNA, but did not further explain his assertion.

Ahmadinejad’s appearance at the United Nations in New York comes a day after two U.S. hikers, held in an Iranian prison for more than two years, were released.

Wednesday evening, Ahmadinejad met with a group of U.S. university students, and then gave an interview to Iranian satellite television.

RELATED TOPICS

Iran
Nuclear Weapons
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad

The Iranian leader said “that the world is in need of change, and Marxism, liberalism, humanism and the West could not solve man’s problems,” his office said. Ahmadinejad added that “relying on its culture and rich civilization,” Iran is “the only nation” that “can offer a new model for life to the world.”

He told the students “that the U.S. may be willing to hijack the regional uprisings but a stormy movement is under way,” IRNA reported.

“Elsewhere in his speech, he said that the U.N. was set up with the objective of preventing bullying in the world, but this did not happen,” IRNA reported.

About 100 undergraduate and graduate students, along with some professors, attended the invitation-only dinner and question-and-answer session in New York, moderated by an Iranian U.N. official. Ahmadinejad did not eat with the guests.

Students who spoke with CNN afterward expressed excitement about the event. At the end, the guests were given hand-painted plates from Iran and books about theology.

The mood was jovial and positive, people who were there said. While some questions were asked about nuclear issues, the economy, and Israel, the tone remained positive. Ahmadinejad joked and laughed at times.

Participants included students and staff from Princeton, Fordham, Hofstra, Columbia, New York University, and other schools.

Strict security measures included the collection of phones and cameras before the event.

It was described as a very different experience from Ahmadinejad’s controversial 2007 appearance at Columbia University. That year, the school’s president, Lee Bollinger, challenged him on human rights, on his statements questioning whether the Holocaust happened, and on his call for Israel to be “wiped off the map” as a Jewish state. Bollinger told Ahmadinejad he exhibits “all the signs of a petty and cruel dictator.”

Large protests against Ahmadinejad’s regime took place surrounding that event.

The group United Against Nuclear Iran — whose founders include former CIA Director Jim Woolsey and the late Ambassador Richard Holbrooke — slammed Wednesday’s event.

The participants “should be ashamed of themselves,” said David Ibsen, the group’s executive director, describing it as “a propagandistic attempt by the regime to improve its image. Anyone claiming to support liberty, tolerance, and human rights should strongly oppose a dictator who oppresses women, kills homosexuals, violates his citizens’ basic rights and religious freedoms, and pursues nuclear weapons.”

Ahmadinejad also gave an interview to New York Times op-ed columnist Nicholas Kristof in which he discussed the dispute over Iran’s nuclear activities. He said that if the United States gives Iran 20% enriched uranium, “we will cease the domestic enrichment of uranium of up to 20% this very week. We only want the 20% enrichment for our domestic consumption. If they give it to us according to international law, according to IAEA laws, without preconditions, we will cease domestic enrichment.”

The IAEA — International Atomic Energy Agency — is the U.N. entity that monitors nuclear activity in the world.

Many countries, including the United States, believe Iran is trying to create a nuclear weapons program, but Tehran insists its activities are only to provide energy for the country.

When asked about the uprising in Syria, Ahmadinejad told Kristof that the Syrian government, “just like any other country,” should engage in dialogue. “With clashes and confrontations problems will not be solved. They will be multiplied. Differences will be multiplied and magnified. And certainly foreigners must not intervene. Intervention of foreigners will only make the problem that much bigger, and will never solve it.”

After the 2009 elections that kept Ahmadinejad in office, Iranian forces launched a violent crackdown on street protests. The 2011 U.S. State Department human rights report on Iran says “scores of protesters and non-protesting bystanders were killed, especially during anti-government rallies. Government sources reported the death toll at 37, opposition groups reported approximately 70 individuals died, and human rights organizations suggested as many as 388.”

Ahmadinejad, in his interview with Kristof, painted a very different picture. “In total there were 33 lives lost,” he said. “More than two-thirds of those killed belonged to the security forces and innocent bystanders. Less than one-third were those who clashed with the security/police forces. So they were a very, very small minority.”

Defiant Taliban accuse U.S. of crimes as Americans mark 9/11

be23282ff78cbe7f95176528a6cca922 Defiant Taliban accuse U.S. of crimes as Americans mark 9/11

The effect of 9/11 on Afghanistan
STORY HIGHLIGHTS

The Taliban accuse the U.S. of “shedding the blood of tens of thousands” of Afghans
The of September 11 are a murky pretext for the violence, they say
The Afghan people have the stamina to fight on, the Taliban say
U.S. and coalition forces have been battling the Taliban for almost a decade

Kabul () — The Taliban have accused the United States of killing tens of thousands of Afghans and brutally torturing others in a defiant statement marking the of the 9/11 terror attacks against the United States.

The statement accuses the United States of using the as a pretext for violence against Muslims.

It says the Afghan people have “an endless stamina for a long war” and could rise up as a nation “to send the Americans to the dustbin of history.”

“It will remain a permanent stigma on the face of the Western democracy that America and her allies martyred tens of thousands of Muslims under the pretext of this ambiguous and murky event,” the statement says, referring to 9/11.

RELATED TOPICS

The Taliban
September 11 Attacks
Afghanistan

Children, , women and babies are among the victims of U.S.-led attacks in Afghanistan, which also destroy homes, villages and “under the unjustified name of war on terror,” the Taliban say.

The statement comes as the United States remembers the events of 10 years ago and warn of a “credible” threat of another attack on U.S. soil.

U.S. and international forces have been battling the for almost a decade, with the loss of almost 2,700 lives across the coalition, more than 1,700 of them American.

Figures released by the United Nations mission in Afghanistan for the first six months of this year showed 1,462 civilians had died, with anti-government insurgents responsible for 80% of the .

While were the leading cause of at the hands of international forces, the majority of those who died as a result of insurgent action were killed by homemade explosive devices and suicide attacks, the UN Assistance Mission in Afghanistan report said.

The U.S.-led bombing of Afghanistan began in October 2001, within weeks of the attacks on New York and Washington D.C., as American forces sought al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden.

The Taliban were forced from government soon afterward but continue to lead the insurgency against NATO-led forces in Afghanistan.

Taliban leaders granted bin Laden sanctuary in Afghanistan for several years, despite U.S. requests for his extradition over previous terror attacks, and declined to hand him over when he became the main suspect in the 9/11 attacks.

The Taliban, Islamic fundamentalists who come mainly from Afghanistan’s Pashtun ethnic group, rose to power in Afghanistan in the 1990s after the Soviet withdrawal from the country.

They gave bin Laden, exiled from his native Saudi Arabia, a safe haven in Afghanistan from 1996 and allowed his al Qaeda followers to live and set up training camps there.

Why do women complain so much

aff3dfdfb5fe6e1ec00d919eaea74d82 Why do women complain so much

(Phatforums Blog/ Cyberspace) – Once, in a small family gathering, my mother was complaining to my father about my and was nagging him continuously. My father sat there, deep in thought, listening quietly to my mother, when all of a sudden his thoughts spoke out, “why do women complain so much?” Then and there all of us burst into a which irritated my mother and she left grumbling “like father, like daughter”.

But the question struck my mind with such an that I sat thinking- when it comes to complaining, why is it always associated with us alone? Its not that only we complain, men also complain but we never hear anyone asking why men complain. Or is it simply because we are more sensitive than men and seek for emotional dependance.

The moment we hear the word “woman”, the first thing that strikes our mind is someone accompanied with the gift of the gab. One who likes to brag and nag all the time, who is more interested in talking about herself, her , her children, and her family, than . One who can keep on talking on anything right from the of a petticoat to how often the woman, who lives in the next village, visits her parental home!!! (One who likes to complain about the silliest thing)

We have tagged a lot of things with a woman’s identity. But have we ever thought why women do so? Is it the for women to complain always?

The question to which most of the men would answer, is ‘yes’.

These sensitive creatures have been misunderstood on this . It is not a woman actually who is always complaining, but has led her to behave like that. In a family, it is ‘She’ who keeps the family intact. And so each and every member of the family is kept under her . She is always answerable to whatever good or bad happens at home. But why? Is she to be blamed for everything? Is that all fair?

When a man is being questioned, he feels that his wife is complaining, as men do not really like the idea of women interfering in their professional lives.

Being the weaker sex, they often feel insecure about themselves, as men prefer to spend most of the time outside. Which men sometimes fail to understand and this compels women to start nagging and bickering constantly. As a result of which, men develop extramarital affairs for they feel that their wives at their homes are trying to control them.

So, if we sit down and ponder upon the question above, the answer is, because men find it difficult to adjust to the desires and personality of women. There are flaws in both the sexes, however, men must try to understand what women want and compromise with them for all this, while women have been compromising with men.

But, exceptions are always there.