Monday, May 30, 2011

Analysis: Sex abuse in Kenyan schools


Analysis: Sex abuse in Kenyan schools

MIGORI/NAIROBI, 30 May 2011 (IRIN) - Since discovering that her 13-year-old daughter was pregnant about a month ago, Juanita* has paid several visits to the local chief in her village in western Kenya, seeking justice for her daughter and punishment for the man who abused her.

 "She told me it was her teacher who did it. I confronted him and he admitted [he was the father] - he told me we could just settle it as adults," Juanita, 47, told IRIN at her home in Migori District.

 "We have been going to the chief because the teacher tells me he wants to marry my daughter and take care of the child, but I don't want that. Let him take care of the child who is a result of his bad behaviour, but leave my daughter alone because I want her to go on [with her education]," she added. "I am poor and now both my daughter's and my future have been ruined by somebody I respected most."

 Recent media reports implicating an HIV-positive teacher in western Kenya in the sexual abuse of five girls aged between seven and 13, and a Muslim scholar in the country's eastern Coast Province in the sexual abuse of a dozen boys, have left Kenyan parents questioning just how safe their children are in school.

 A 2009/2010 government report showed that at least 1,000 teachers had been dismissed from duty in that period for sexually abusing children. A separate study conducted between 2003 and 2009 revealed that 12,660 girls were sexually abused by their teachers, yet only 633 teachers were charged with sexual offences. Furthermore, 90 percent of sexual abuse cases involving teachers never reached the Teachers' Service Commission (TSC), responsible for monitoring and implementing teachers' codes of conduct.

 Several laws [ http://www.anppcankenya.co.ke/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=21&Itemid=26 ], including the Children's Act and the Sexual Offences Act, criminalize sex with children under the age of 18, and in 2010, the TSC issued guidelines designed to protect children from sexual abuse in schools. The new rules ban students from visiting teachers' homes, warn teachers against using the promise of academic progress to coerce children into sexual liaisons and stipulate that any sexual abuse of a child should be reported to the commission within 24 hours.

 "Any time we get reports about a teacher abusing a child, we will carry out our investigations and take appropriate action... We have released a circular to all schools detailing measures that should be implemented to reduce cases of sexual abuse of children in learning institutions, and we have prosecuted some offenders," said Nkatha Murungi, the TSC's public relations officer. "Any head teacher or any teacher for that matter who knows that a sexual offence has occurred within their school and fails to report it [will face disciplinary action]; TSC rules are very clear on this."

 Few consequences

 A 2009 study [ http://home.hiroshima-u.ac.jp/cice/e-publications/12-1Sara.pdf ] by Kenyatta University of more than 1,200 girls in 70 schools across 10 Kenyan districts found that when girls were impregnated by teachers, 45 percent of teachers suffered minor consequences, either a demotion, a transfer to another school or marrying the pregnant girl; an estimated 32 percent of teachers faced no consequences, while 25 percent were sacked. On the other hand, an estimated 76 percent of girls dropped out of school, with many others getting married, procuring abortions and even committing suicide; only 1 percent of those who left were able to rejoin school.

 While the study found that 22 percent of teachers who impregnated girls were arrested, government and NGO officials say convictions for teachers who abuse children are rare, mainly due to the fact that unless a girl is pregnant, sexual abuse is difficult to prove. In addition, stigma means many families would rather keep the abuse under wraps and teachers often pay families to keep the cases out of court.

 "Schools are the second highest after the family set-up where children are sexually abused. The authority over children exhibited at home is extended to school and amorous teachers are using this authority to sexually abuse children under their care," said Irene Nyamu, executive director of the NGO, Childline Kenya. "But we should extend this spotlight to religious institutions because even here, boys are getting sodomised and those reports are in the public domain.

 "Orphaned children and those from poor backgrounds are very vulnerable because they lack basic needs and a teacher can use that to coerce them into a sexual relationship, putting them in danger of getting pregnant or getting infected and dropping out of school eventually," she added.

 Sex for grades, goods

 One of the reasons children rarely report sexual abuse by their teachers is because sex is often in exchange for good grades or material gain.

 Esther*, Juanita's daughter, said: "He used to buy me good things like pens, shoes and he used to give me pocket money too; later he told me to take water to his house and while there, he started touching me and that is the first time we had sex," she told IRIN. "He said I would be his girlfriend because his wife was away; I feared him and would do everything he told me to."

 According to Patricia Nyamolo, coordinator of Positive Mentors, a local NGO providing life skills to young girls, shame is another factor that prevents children and families from reporting these crimes.

 "Many families still view sexual abuse of children as too stigmatizing to be made public and they don't report [it], making it extremely hard to implement the law... so it is kept under the rug and only when the child becomes HIV-positive or pregnant is it realized that someone must have been sexually abusing them.

 "Head teachers rarely report abuse of children, either because they are the culprits or are acting to protect the image of the school," she added. "Many schools in Kenya are also sponsored by religious institutions who would normally want to keep such cases under wraps."

 Geoffrey Cherongis, provincial director of education in Kenya's western Nyanza Province, says the failure to report sexual abuse makes his department's work that much more difficult. "The government has made it clear that it will not condone the sexual abuse of children in school... but we can't know unless it is reported to us.

 "There are cases where parents collude with a teacher after the child becomes pregnant, and say the teacher will take care of the child," he added. "Some parents also benefit from gifts or money a child gets from a teacher... It is important to discourage parents from such arrangements."

 Call centre

 In 2008, Childline Kenya and the government set up a toll-free call centre where children can report abuse or others can report suspected cases of child abuse.

 "Initially, it was hard to report abuse of children but since we set up a call centre, it is now easy to see the extent of these cases of abuse," said Ahmed Hussein, director of children's services at the Ministry of Gender. "It is refreshing because the TSC is now more proactive in dismissing abusive teachers from within its fraternity."

 In 2009, out of the 28,988 calls made to the centre, 697 reported the sexual abuse of a child. Childline has since carried out awareness-raising campaigns in schools to increase the use of the service.

 "There will be more initiatives to create knowledge about the existence of the call centre to increase its use," Hussein added.

 More action needed

 The initiative is limited, however, as in many rural areas, children cannot access telephones. While NGOs applaud the initiative, they say much remains to be done.

 "The provision of a toll-free line has helped, but schools must also put measures within their systems that make it easy for victims to report abuse without feeling intimidated," said Positive Mentors' Nyamolo. "They must employ counsellors or designate a teacher for that role and at the same time provide suggestion boxes through which students can report [an abuser] either in school or at home."

 Childline's Nyamu added that it was important to sensitize parents about the rights of their children. "It doesn't matter whether the culprit says they will take care of the child or marry them, it is important to sensitize parents to know that seeking justice for the child is the most important thing," she said. "Culprits must not be allowed to get way with such offences... Otherwise we continue hushing it up and put more children in danger."

 ko/kr/mw

  

Sunday, May 29, 2011

Israel marks Jerusalem 'reunification' with cash

Israel marks Jerusalem 'reunification' with cash

By Gavin Rabinowitz (AFP) – 2 hours ago

JERUSALEM — Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Sunday reaffirmed his intent to keep Jerusalem the "undivided capital" of Israel, authorising a $100-million investment package for the disputed holy city.

Speaking at a special meeting of his cabinet held inside the Old City walls, Netanyahu repeatedly vowed that he would not divide the city, despite international pressure for Israel and the Palestinians to share Jerusalem.

 

Israel captured east Jerusalem during the 1967 Six Day War, later annexing it in a move not recognised by the international community.

It marks the city's "reunification" on Jerusalem Day, which this year falls on June 1.

"The city was united 44 years ago, and we returned to our ancestral lands. Since then Jerusalem has flourished," Netanyahu said at the beginning of the cabinet meeting at the Tower of David museum in the Old City.

"Today we are strengthening its foundations and assisting its residents," he said announcing the multi-year package, which includes funding to boost tourism, grants for students, and incentives for bio-technology companies.

"It is important the entire world knows that the Jewish people and our friends around the world stand together, faithful to Jerusalem and our heritage, steadfast in their positions, insisting on our security and extending a hand in genuine peace to our neighbours," Netanyahu said.

"We will rehabilitate heritage sites that are important to the state of Israel and our people," he said, adding that "the government and the people are bound as one to build up Jerusalem, the heart of the nation."

Israeli projects in Jerusalem are often controversial, with the Palestinians describing them as attempts to strengthen Israeli control over the eastern part of the city.

Israel captured east Jerusalem on June 7, 1967, the third day of the Six Day War, and unilaterally annexed the sector.

It has since established settlement neighbourhoods in east Jerusalem and even passed a law in 1980 stating Jerusalem was Israel's "eternal and indivisible" capital.

Israeli human rights groups say Palestinian residents of Jerusalem suffer from discrimination, in particular being routinely denied housing permits.

Israeli projects in east Jerusalem have frequently sparked clashes between police and Palestinians in flashpoint neighbourhoods including Silwan and Sheikh Jarrah.

And Israel's ongoing authorisation of settlement construction in neighbourhoods in the city's eastern sector has drawn criticism from the Palestinians and the international community.

 

Suspected Al-Qaida Militants Take Over Yemen Coastal Town

Suspected Al-Qaida Militants Take Over Yemen Coastal Town

Anti-government protestors, shout slogans during a demonstration demanding the resignation of Yemeni President Ali Abdullah Saleh, in Sanaa, Yemen, May 28, 2011

Photo: AP

Anti-government protestors, shout slogans during a demonstration demanding the resignation of Yemeni President Ali Abdullah Saleh, in Sanaa, Yemen, May 28, 2011

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·         Yemen President, Tribal Chief Agree to End Clashes

·         Analysts: Fighting in Yemen Tilts Country Toward Civil War

·         Yemen Protests Rage as President Resists Calls to Quit

Witnesses in Yemen say suspected Al-Qaida militants have taken over the coastal city of Zinjibar.

Residents say hundreds of militants gained control of Zinjibar on Friday. 

There are reports of fighting lasting into Saturday, resulting in casualties.

Zinjibar is the capital of Abyan province in southern Yemen, one of the areas considered a stronghold of al-Qaida.

In another development, a mediator said Saturday Yemen's president and the country's most powerful tribal leader have agreed to end five days of urban gun battles that threatened to push the country into civil war.  More than 100 people have died in the clashes.

The battles pitted President Ali Abdullah Saleh's security forces against those of Sheikh Sadeq al-Ahmar, the leader of the Hashid tribe. The battles have become the most serious threat to President Saleh's grasp on power after three months of opposition protests.

The two sides agreed to withdraw their forces from the Hassaba neighborhood in the capital, Sana'a, starting Sunday. 

The tribal leader, a former ally of Saleh, has joined the protesters who want the Yemeni president to step down after 32 years of authoritarian rule.

 

 

Two remain in custody on suspicion of murdering Birmingham teenager

Two remain in custody on suspicion of murdering Birmingham teenager  

Mercury
Sunday, May 29, 2011

TWO men last night remained in custody on suspicion of murder after a Birmingham teenager was shot in the head.

Mohammed Abdi Farah, 19, and his friend Amin Ahmed Ismail, 18, died after being shot as they fled down an alleyway in Milton Keynes, Buckinghamshire on Thursday night.

The pair were chased into the path of the waiting killer, who coldly blasted both in the head with a 9mm handgun.

He first shot Mr Farah at point-blank range before firing at Mr Ismail, who collapsed on top of his friend's body.

Mohammed died at the scene. Amin, who had suffered a gunshot wound to the head, hung on but lost his battle for life after being taken to Milton Keynes Hospital.

The men being quizzed by cops, aged 33 and 21, were arrested on Friday night by armed officers from Thames Valley Police.

A 13-year-old boy, also arrested on Friday, has been released on police bail until the middle of June, a force spokesman said.

Mohammed's uncle, Rashid Hirad, last night revealed that his nephew had been in hiding for the last few weeks.

He said Mohammed had been beaten up repeatedly, and that his mother had moved to Birmingham in an attempt to avoid the trouble – but he kept returning to Milton Keynes to visit friends.

Mr Hirad said: "Mohammed's mother decided to move from Milton Keynes to Birmingham because she wanted to run away from these people – but she couldn't. All the time he was coming back to Milton Keynes to visit friends and at last it happened."

The two adult suspects were arrested late on Friday and remain in police custody, Thames Valley Police said.

Detective Superintendent Rob Mason, who is leading the police probe, said: "Although we have made a number of arrests, I am keen to stress that we are still in the very early stages of the investigation.

"I would continue to urge anyone with information about the incident to contact police as a matter of urgency.

"We have made significant progress this afternoon and we are continuing to follow up on a number of leads. I would like to emphasise that this is still very much a live investigation."

Both victims were known to police for low-level incidents and friends of the pair said that they were killed after being chased in a gangland mix-up. Detectives, however, have ruled out the killings being gang-related at this stage.

Police have placed two videos, one in English and one in Somali, on YouTube to appeal for witnesses to the shooting.

At many places in the Qur’an, Haqq ta’ala commends knowledge



At many places in the Qur'an, Haqq ta'ala commends knowledge and lore;

Encouraging towards learning, the Most Beloved Messenger's directions galore.

Know this: ignorance is Islam's enemy, and also the most formidable,

For the disease its virus spreads is such a disaster mostdeplorable!

"Wheresoever cometh ignorance, leaveth Islam thereof," said the Messenger.

He who loveth Islam ought also to love knowledge and be a science learner!

"Paradise lies in the shadow of swords." Is it not a hadith that sayeth so?

Predicting atomic bombs and jet planes, and a succinct command also!

Ignorance is the only malady whereby Islam will suffer disgrace!

O you, plight of nescience, what a shame, this nation has fallen into darkness!

So bad is the state you have led us to, neither faith nor chastity survives!

O thou, the sinister gloom, so baleful is thy oppression on Muslims' lives!

O thou, the arch enemy, to kill thee, over all else, takes priority;

Thou, alone, hast over us given disbelievers this superiority!

Wake up, o you, nation, or else a victim of your endemic oblivion!

Beside the harm, you are being stigmatized as 'hidebound' into the bargain!

Feel shame before Allah, and let go of Islam, you, 'dog in the manger'!

Like maggotty carcass, sink into soil, why should it join you in the danger!

To this caustic remark of mine, however, the unlearned will turn a deaf ear;

For, "Shame before Allah," is a maxim which requires learning to hear.


Make (things) easy! Do not make (them) difficult! 
Hadith-i-sharif

Sweden: Muslim youth org to return grants received from state gambling profits

 

Sweden: Muslim youth org to return grants received from gambling

Via Tro och Politik (Swedish):

The Young Muslims of Sweden organization (Sveriges unga muslimer) is going to give back a million kroner they've received in grants from the state via Svenska Spel, the government's gambling monopoly.

"The grant is morally questionable since gambling addiction has become more widespread," says Mohammed Kharraki, president of Young Muslims of Sweden.

Every year the Swedish National Board for Youth Affairs grants money to youth organizations for their activities. About two thirds come from Svenska Spel's profits. In 2010 Young Muslims of Sweden received 1.5 million kroner.

Mohammed Kharraki says that for a while they've been having internal discussion on whether to take the money. Young people in particular are susceptible to gambling addiction, and they don't want to build their organization on money which comes from the suffering of others.

He says there are more youth organizations in the same situation. They take the money even though they do not want to, because they depend on government assistance to survive. But that means they support a system they should reject.

Last year Young Muslims of Sweden decided to save on their 2010 activities, so they'll be able to pay back the money coming from Svenska Spel.

Mohammed Kharraki says they did so by getting more sponsors for their events and by using money they've saved in the past. They did not need to cut down on any of their major activities: they organized a summer camp and theme weekends around the country, and held their annual conference as usual.

Mohammed Kharraki says that the members and clubs are happy with the decision. The Youth Affairs Board thought it was strange to get money back

The government decided from now on not to earmark money for organizations. Also, the money won't come just from Svenska Spel, but from the general budget.

Mohammed Kharraki welcomes the decision and says that they can't do without this money every year. He adds that it's a sensible decision, even if it probably didn't come due to their protests, but rather from the fact that Svenska Spel is at risk of losing its monopoly.

 

Serbia: Genocide suspect Ratko Mladic arrested

 

 

Feed: Islam in Europe
Posted on: Thursday, May 26, 2011 7:37 PM
Author: Esther
Subject: Serbia: Genocide suspect Ratko Mladic arrested

 

Serbia: Genocide suspect Ratko Mladic arrested


Via VOA:

Former Bosnian-Serb military leader Ratko Mladic has been arrested on charges of genocide, crimes against humanity and war crimes for his role in the Srebrenica massacre and the siege of Sarajevo during the Bosnian civil war in the early 1990s.

Ratko Mladic was one of Europe's most wanted war crimes fugitives. He has been on the run for more than 15 years, since he was indicted by the United Nations war crimes tribunal at The Hague in 1995.

(...)

Mladic is a former Bosnian-Serb general. During the Bosnian war in the early 1990s he oversaw the siege of Bosnia's capital, Sarajevo, which lasted more than three years and is the longest in the history of modern warfare.

He's also accused of having played a key role in the bloody attack in 1995 of Srebrenica, where thousands of Muslim men and boys were killed in Europe's worst massacre of civilians since the Second World War.

(source)

 

Friday, May 27, 2011

REJECTION OF AN EXCUSE

REJECTION OF AN EXCUSE


    Rejecting an excuse shown by a Muslim is makruh
 [1]. It is stated in a hadith-i-sharif [2]: “It is a sin not to accept an excuse shown by your Muslim Brother.” Accepting excuses and overlooking faults are Attributes of Allahu ta’ala. Allahu ta’ala will be wrathful towards a person who does not adapt himself to these Attributes, and He will torment him. There are three ways of showing excuses. The first way is to rue, saying, “Why did I do so,”or to explain yourself, saying, “I did so for this (or that) reason.” The second way is to apologize, saying,“I wish I hadn’t done so,” or“Yes, I did so, but I shall not do so again.” The third way is to deny what you have done. Saying “I did it but I will not do it again,” would be tawba [3]. A Believer will wait for an excuse to be shown in order to forgive the offender. Hypocrites want others’ faults to be exposed. Rasulullah ‘sall- Allahu ’alaihi wa sal-lam’ states in the following hadith-i-sharifs: “You should be chaste. Do not commit ugly things. Also, make your wives chaste.” And “If you yourselves are chaste, your wives will also be chaste. If you are kind to your parents, your children will also be kind to you. A person who does not accept an excuse of another Muslim will not drink water from the Kawthar lake in the Hereafter ‘Akhirat’.”This hadith-i-sharif concerns the Muslim who does not know that his Muslim brother committed an evil action and also he doesn’t know that his excuse is a lie. For rejecting his excuse would mean su-i-zan about another Muslim.” Accepting his excuse although you know that he is lying means to forgive him. Forgiving in such cases is not obligatory (wajib); yet it is a meritorious act (mustahab), (which yields much thawab, reward).


GLOSSARY

[1] makruh: (act, thing) improper, disliked and abstained by the Prophet (‘alaihi ‘s-salam); makruh tahrima: prohibited with much stress.
[2] hadith (sharif): i) a saying of the Prophet (‘alaihi ‘s-salam).; al-Hadith ash-sharif: all the hadiths as a whole; ii) ‘ilm al-hadith; iii) Books of the hadith ash-sharif. iv) Al-hadith al-qudsi, as-sahih, al-hasan: kinds of hadiths (for which, see Endless Bliss, II).
[3] Tawba: (after committing a sin) to repent, to promise Allah not to do it again, to entreat Him for forgiveness. Everyone does his tawba by himself.

 

Thursday, May 26, 2011

Egypt to open Rafah border permanently - Middle East - Al Jazeera English

Egypt to open Rafah border permanently - Middle East - Al Jazeera English

http://islaamdoon.blogspot.com/

Munich: Airport opens mosque

 

Munich: Airport opens mosque


Via AeroMorning (h/t EuropeNews):

Munich Airport makes Muslim guests feel welcome: Airport CEO Dr Michael Kerkloh (left) officially opened the newly completed Muslim prayer room in Terminal 1. Mohammed A. Al Romaithi, the General Consul of the United Arab Emirates, Ahmad Al-Khalifa, the head of the Munich Islamic Center, and Salah Elenany, the Vice President of the Bavarian Arabic Society (l. to r.) attended the ceremony.

Last year alone, routes to the Near East accounted for some 870,000 arriving and departing passengers at Munich Airport, and the traffic continues to increase. Serving as a gateway to the Arab world is Module C in Terminal 1, where airlines such as Emirates, Etihad Airways and Oman Air offer flights to major centers in the Gulf states. In addition to signage in German, English and Arabic, the food services in departure area feature halal menu selections. The prayer room now completes the facilities.

(source)

 

Serbia: Genocide suspect Ratko Mladic arrested

 

Serbia: Genocide suspect Ratko Mladic arrested


Via VOA:

Former Bosnian-Serb military leader Ratko Mladic has been arrested on charges of genocide, crimes against humanity and war crimes for his role in the Srebrenica massacre and the siege of Sarajevo during the Bosnian civil war in the early 1990s.

Ratko Mladic was one of Europe's most wanted war crimes fugitives. He has been on the run for more than 15 years, since he was indicted by the United Nations war crimes tribunal at The Hague in 1995.

(...)

Mladic is a former Bosnian-Serb general. During the Bosnian war in the early 1990s he oversaw the siege of Bosnia's capital, Sarajevo, which lasted more than three years and is the longest in the history of modern warfare.

He's also accused of having played a key role in the bloody attack in 1995 of Srebrenica, where thousands of Muslim men and boys were killed in Europe's worst massacre of civilians since the Second World War.

(source)

 

Wednesday, May 25, 2011

First female Muslim Lord Mayor

 

UK: First female Muslim Lord Mayor


Via the Daily Mail (h/t LibertyPhile):

Bradford council has announced that the city has appointed the UK's first female Muslim Lord Mayor.

Councillor Naveeda Ikram was nominated by the council's Labour Group to serve as Lord Mayor in the West Yorkshire city.

The mother-of-three, who was born in the UK, was given the title during a ceremony at Bradford City Hall today.

Cllr Ikram spent some of her teenage years in the Punjab, but has lived in Bradford for most of her life.

A psychology and sociology graduate, Mrs Ikram has served as deputy Lord Mayor of Bradford since 2009.

She will serve as Mayor for at least one year, with her husband Saqib Salam Shah serving as her consort.

(source)

 

Syria death toll 'surpasses 1,000'

 

Rights groups say they have documented names of civilians allegedly killed by security forces since protests erupted.


View article...

Syria site was 'very likely' atomic reactor

 

Leaked UN nuclear watchdog report says site bombed by Israel in 2007 was "very likely" to have been a nuclear reactor.


View article...

Ramadan: Muslims replacing Jews as Europe's scapegoat

 

Ramadan: Muslims replacing Jews as Europe's scapegoat

Via the Hurriyet Daily News:

Muslims in Europe have replaced the continent's Jews of yesteryear as the largest target of discrimination and prejudice, according to a prominent Swiss academic and Islamic expert.

"There are new alliances in Europe against the Muslim presence, and people who were against Judaism are now against the Muslim presence in Europe," Tariq Ramadan, an Oxford professor and grandson of Hasan al-Banna, the founder of Egypt's Muslim Brotherhood, said Friday at a seminar at Istanbul Bilgi University.

"[These discriminatory European attitudes] are not only about Islamism; they are about a power struggle. It is not integrated into people's minds that Islam is also a Western religion," Ramadan said, criticizing the attitudes of some Europeans he described as "Islamophobic."

"People like the head of France's far-right National Front Party, Marine Le Pen, and Dutch politician Geert Wilders are imposing the politics of fear against Islam and this is very dangerous," the academic said. He added that what lies beneath the growing anti-Islamism in Europe is the changing demographics of the continent's Muslim population.

"The more Muslims become European, the more Islam becomes a problem for Europeans," Ramadan said.

(source)

 

Denmark: Gov't campaign to change immigrant attitudes towards women

Denmark: Gov't campaign to change immigrant attitudes towards women

Via JP (Denmark):

Educators, teachers and campaigns will convince immigrants that their attitude towards women is wrong, says the government.Link
Let by Integration Minister Søren Pind (V) and with support from several ministers, the government will attack the attitude towards women that - they say - is prevalent among some immigrants of Muslim culture.

The "national strategy against forced marriages and oppression' will combat such things as reeducation trips, and have teachers, educators and campaigns to convince immigrants that their attitude towards women is outdated. This will prevent forced marriages and other types of oppression.

Integration minister Søren Pind (V) says that it's not a dialog, but an effort at influencing. People have been very afraid of it, because they fear entering people's personal space, but we also can't accept our society changing this way. There are some cultural norms surrounding Islam which are a huge problem for women. He stressed that it's possible to be a Muslim without oppressing women.

Pind says he doesn't have a problem with the state working on changing attitudes. "There is right and wrong, because there's freedom and lack of freedom. It's as simple as that."

Equality minister Lykke Friis (V) agrees, saying that it's part of our overall confrontation with passive tolerance, when we are reluctant to specify the norms and values of Danish society. Friis fears that more immigrant women are in trouble, after increasing numbers of reports to shelters and hotlines.

Denmarks' teacher's union rejected the strategy as 'populist'. Chairman Anders Bondo Christensen said he's against campaigns for specific populations, and that there are Danish women who are oppressed.


View article...

Tajikistan: The Changing Insurgent Threats

 

INTERNATIONAL CRISIS GROUP - NEW REPORT

Tajikistan: The Changing Insurgent Threats

Bishkek/Brussels, 24 May 2011: Tajikistan, Central Asia’s poorest state and a key logistical link for international forces in Afghanistan, faces a growing security threat from both local and external rebels.

Tajikistan: The Changing Insurgent Threats, the latest report from the International Crisis Group, examines the deteriorating situation and warns that the country is profoundly vulnerable socially, economically, politically and militarily. The fact that it shares a long, poorly protected border with Afghanistan amplifies its problems and risks contaminating an already complicated region.

“Tajikistan is increasingly incapable of providing basic services to its population”, says Paul Quinn-Judge, Crisis Group Central Asia Project Director. “Corruption remains at a breathtaking level; and recent unsuccessful military operations in the east of the country against warlords and a small group of young insurgents underline its inability to handle even a modest security threat. President Emomali Rakhmon did a deal to bring a temporary peace to the area earlier this year, but he may soon face a tougher challenge from the resurgent Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan (IMU), a group with a vision of an Islamist caliphate that is fighting in Afghanistan alongside the Taliban. Tajikistan must hope it remains preoccupied there”.

With the war in Afghanistan lapping up against the 1,400km border with Tajikistan, an escalation of violence cannot be ruled out. Steady small-scale infiltration of fighters from Afghanistan has been going on for several years. Most seem to be moving on to other parts of the region, but a weakened Tajikistan will increasingly be an attractive base area for Central Asian guerrillas trained in Pakistan and Afghanistan.

One of the Tajik leadership’s most cherished beliefs has already been shattered: that Tajiks would never revolt against a government, no matter how bad, because of the scars left by the 1992-1997 civil war. The guerrillas who are crossing and the local people who are turning to violence are too young to have clear memories of that conflict. Meanwhile, facing a swift growth in observant Islam, the leadership is responding by marginalising the Islamic Renaissance Party and limiting religious activities as well as democratic freedoms - measures likely to exacerbate the situation.

Insecurity is only one of many problems. The economy is moribund, the regime a byword for corruption. The U.S. China and Russia, each with serious interests in the country, need to consult, share intelligence on Islamist insurgents and examine joint measures to respond to the growing insecurity. Donors should make aid conditionality the norm, penalising corruption or misuse. The U.S. and other members of the international coalition in Afghanistan should raise with the highest levels of the Tajik government the widespread belief that the narcotics trade is protected by very senior officials. The government should hold public dialogue with all Islamist groups that explicitly repudiate violence; repeal laws banning such organisations; and encourage their free participation in all forms of political and social life.

“President Rakhmon denies that the North African scenario of popular unrest and revolt could happen in Tajikistan”, says Robert Templer, Crisis Group’s Asia Program Director. “But Tajikistan is so vulnerable that a small, localised problem could quickly spiral into a threat to the regime’s existence. The speed with which the popular mood can move from passivity to anger has been demonstrated not just in the Middle East, but much closer to home, in Kyrgyzstan last year. Tajikistan is not immune”.



Sunday, May 22, 2011

Norway: Imam wins compensation for children beating accusations

 

Norway: Imam wins compensation for children beating accusations

Via VG (Norwegian):
In 2009 Imam Ghulam Nabi, of the Islamic Culture Society Buskerud & Vestfold, was accused of beating children with a cane during Koran studies. However, after some time, police dropped the charges.

The imam sued the state and will get 15,000 Kroner (~$2600) in compensation, reports Drammens Tidende.

His lawyer, Svein Duesund, says that the sum is too low, and is considering appealing. Duesund says that the police immediately went to the media, and that had it been a common Norwegian priest, the compensation would have been much higher. Duesund had demanded 100,000 kroner for his client.


View article...

Ticino: Votes gathered for referendum to ban burqa in canton

 

Ticino: Votes gathered for referendum to ban burqa in canton

Via the Local:

A petition in Canton Ticino could force a referendum on prohibiting women from wearing burqas in public, a first for the country.

A local committee in Ticino, Switzerland's Italian-speaking region, said it has collected 11,316 signatures, over a thousand more the required number to launch a referendum. Canton authorities will check the signatures over the next few days, reports say and could then call for a referendum.

(source)

 

Italy: First Italian food halal supplier

Italy: First Italian food halal supplier


Via AKI:

Italy's first-ever 'halal' supplier has opened for business in Italy's northern city of Bologna, selling meals prepared according to Islamic principles to restaurants and canteens in Italy and abroad.

"Integration is also being able to eat as one should and to be at peace with God," Hamza Piccardo, told Adnkronos International (AKI).

Piccardo, an Italian convert to Islam, is the director of the 'Tre Alfieri Halal', which is based in Bologna, a renowned gastronomic centre.

"Our new company wants to be a triumph of integration: to combine Italy's great cuisine and Islam's rules without losing the flavours of the former and the spiritual rigour of the latter," he said.

(source)

 

Friday, May 20, 2011

Moldova: Controversy over recognition of Muslim community

Moldova: Controversy over recognition of Muslim community

(protest against the formal recognition of the Muslim community)

Via RFE/RL:

An unexpected new fault line has opened up on Moldova's divided political landscape and the country's tiny Muslim community is finding itself caught in the middle.

The controversy began last month when the Justice Ministry officially registered the Islamic League, an NGO representing Moldova's Muslims. The group had been seeking government recognition since 2008.

Ismail Abdel Wahab is a Jordanian-born Muslim living in the capital, Chisinau. He says the Western-leaning government's move is a welcome change in his community.

"We practiced Islam before they registered us, but it was a strange feeling to pray without the approval of the state," Wahab says. "But now we are registered and we can gather together and hold our prayers. We can celebrate together freely. We can feel as if we have all the rights of any Moldovan citizen without outside interference."

Representatives of the Orthodox Church were outraged at the government's decision. The head of the church, Metropolitan Vladimir, called the move "a humiliation" for the country's Christian majority, while other church officials said the Muslim association would "cause trouble" in Moldova.

(source)

 

Sunday, May 15, 2011

[World Beat] After Osama: China?



After Osama: China?
World Beat
by JOHN FEFFER

If the killing of Osama bin Laden were a Hollywood murder mystery, the shootout scene in Abbottabad would be followed by the unveiling of the sponsor who arranged for the al-Qaeda safe house. Is it the Pakistani intelligence officer who appears early in the movie to assure his U.S. counterparts that he is fully committed to bringing bin Laden to justice? Is it the Saudi construction magnate who owes several major favors to the bin Laden family? Or perhaps it's the U.S. embassy official who, it might turn out, believes that Osama is more useful alive than dead—until finally, he is useful no longer.

Who could possibly benefit from the care and feeding of the al-Qaeda legend? Audiences know to look for the suspect who benefits the most. The more intricate the conspiracy the better.

As the Navy SEALs dispose of bin Laden's body at sea, we follow the simultaneous action in Islamabad where bin Laden's secret sponsor is sitting in an office, back turned to the camera, passing over a final payment to the safe house owner. The music builds. It's hard to pinpoint the sponsor's accent. And then the camera pulls back and we realize that the action is taking place in an embassy. The flag on the wall, the sentries posted out front, and finally the placard with the embassy's name: The People's Republic of China.

Of course, bin Laden's death was not a Hollywood movie, however much the Obama administration presented it as such (the brave soldiers, the cowardly villain, the suspenseful hunt). And China has no love for al-Qaeda, particularly given its own battles against alleged terrorists in Xinjiang and elsewhere.

But perhaps the only country in the world that has benefited from the last decade of war against al-Qaeda is China, and it has benefitted big time. Beijing has watched the United States spend more than $3 trillion on the war on terrorism, devote its military resources to the Middle East, and neglect pretty much every other part of the globe (except where al-Qaeda and its friends hang out). The United States is now mired in debt, stuck in a recession, and paralyzed by partisan politics.

Over that same period, meanwhile, China has quickly become the second largest economy in the world. In 2001, Goldman Sachs predicted that the Chinese economy would rival that of Germany by 2011. Boy, was that a lowball estimate. Last month, the International Monetary Fund looked again into the crystal ball and announced that the Chinese economy would become the world's largest in 2016.

China's overtaking of the United States "will effectively end the 'Age of America' a decade before most analysts had expected," writes David Gardner in the British Daily Mail. "It means that whoever wins the 2012 presidential election will have the dubious honor of presiding over the fall of the United States." 

Memo from Beijing: Mission Accomplished!

Naturally, since this is no movie, it's not so cut and dried. As demonstrated by its huge investments into this country—including $45 billion worth of deals back in January—China doesn't want a bankrupt United States. Indeed, U.S. budget deficits and low interest rates have fueled global inflation, driving up food prices and creating precisely the kind of instability that makes China uncomfortable. Beijing needs American consumers, the relative security of American bonds, and the occasional stability provided by American troops. But remember: all of that can be provided by the world's second leading economy and number one military spender.

The Obama administration is well aware of these trends. Indeed, as National Security Advisor Tom Donilon recently told Ryan Lizza of The New Yorker, the United States should be refocusing on Asia. "One of Donilon's overriding beliefs, which Obama adopted as his own, was that America needed to rebuild its reputation, extricate itself from the Middle East and Afghanistan, and turn its attention toward Asia and China's unchecked influence in the region. America was 'overweighted' in the former and 'underweighted' in the latter." Asia hands like Kurt Campbell, before he became the current assistant secretary of state for East Asian and Pacific Affairs, routinely castigated the George W. Bush administration for ignoring East Asia. But the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, the hunt for bin Laden, the continuing drone strikes in Pakistan and Yemen, and now the Arab Spring have all kept the focus away from China's rapid rise.

Those in the Obama administration looking for a global reset of U.S. foreign policy are forced to adopt a posture of "strategic patience." This, of course, is also the official U.S. policy toward North Korea. Basically, Washington is waiting for North Korea to bend to economic and military pressure, though there is not much precedent for such a North Korean response. "Strategic patience" is really just a fancy way of describing a policy of neglect. The United States is largely ignoring North Korea and, relatively speaking, the rest of Asia as well while we engage in some more battles, kill a few more terrorists (and civilian bystanders), enforce a no-fly zone, and otherwise behave like a moth attracted to the Middle East flame.

The Obama administration's desire to shift focus to East Asia—and its current inability to do so—explains a lot. The administration soured relations with Japan and caused the downfall of one Japanese prime minister (so far) because of a refusal to cancel a military base relocation plan on Okinawa opposed by the vast majority of the island's residents. The administration has made little headway on North Korea's nuclear program, allowing a conservative South Korean administration to bring the region close to the brink of war (with North Korea cooperating with brinksmanship of its own).

It's not as if the United States is an indispensible power in Asia. Indonesia has taken the lead in trying to mediate the border dispute between Thailand and Cambodia. The Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) continues to slog away at untangling the dispute over islands in the South China Sea. Japan and Russia are perfectly capable of clearing up their own conflict over the Kurile Islands.

And the notion that the United States has to balance China in the region in some old-fashioned Cold War sense is certainly not necessary. China is not about to gobble up the region, beginning with Taiwan as an expensive appetizer. Beijing has watched Washington suffer considerable indigestion when it bit off more than it could chew (and the rest of the world could stomach). Competitive eating is not unknown in the world of geopolitics—see Age of Colonialism—but China has so far shown a measure of restraint.

If the United States intends to refocus on East Asia only to screw it up royally in the same way we've made a mess of the Middle East, it would be in everyone's interest if we fail to reorient our policy. But the United States still could play a constructive role as a Pacific power. At the current bilateral summit here in Washington, the two countries are trading charges over human rights and the value of each other's currency. These are critical issues. But Washington and Beijing, as the two leading military spenders in the world, should also discuss how to restrain the global arms race. Agreeing to a mutual code of conduct on arms trade and development issues would be valuable as well. And the Obama administration could help kick-start the Six-Party Talks, with China's help, so that we don't have to deal with the anomaly of North Korea, the world's only starving nuclear power.

The Osama bin Laden Era is over, and with it will end the Age of America. Here's one sign of the transformation: a child in Shanghai, writes Nicholas Kristof in a sobering op-ed, will now statistically outlive a child in the United States. China remains corrupt, intermittently oppressive, and subject to the same economic disparities and financial bubbles as the United States. But while we were fighting the chimera of a caliphate, China was going about its business and eating our lunch.

Osama Continued

Last week, I quoted from my 2002 analysis of Osama bin Laden's secret strategy—to bankrupt the United States. Foreign Policy In Focus (FPIF) columnist Walden Bello, in Osama's No Martyr, But the Man Prevailed, also dug up an essay he wrote in October 2001 that outlined the no-win situation that the Bush administration set up for itself.

If the United States "kills bin Laden, he becomes a martyr, a source of never-ending inspiration, especially to young Muslims," Bello wrote. "If it captures him alive, freeing him will become a massive focus of resistance that will prevent the imposition of capital punishment without triggering massive revolts throughout the Islamic world. If it fails to kill or capture him, he will secure an aura of invincibility, as somebody favored by God, and whose cause is therefore just…"

Perhaps now that Osama is gone, a very different kind of leader can emerge in the Arab world. "The Arab world has had its caliphs, sultans, and sheikhs, but it has not had a Voltaire," FPIF contributor Islam Qasem writes in Where Is the Arab Voltaire? "Never has the Arab world more urgently needed an Arab Voltaire who can break the false dichotomy between tradition and progress. This Arab Voltaire is not against public piety but speaks out for the separation between religion and state. His mission is to bring Arab society to the forefront of the 21st century without marginalizing its cultural values or its Islamic tradition and yet standing steadfastly against fanaticism, backwardness, and intolerance."

In our coverage of the killing of Osama bin Laden, FPIF has a wide variety of offerings: David Vine on the reaction of students at American University, Russ Wellen on the language of decapitation, Conn Hallinan on the implications for peace in Afghanistan, Laurence Hull on the generational response to the killing, Ian Williams on the impact on the U.S.-Israel relationship, and Stephen Zunes on the enduring grievances of bin Laden. And if you prefer to get your news from YouTube, here's a short interview with me about bin Laden, Pakistan, and U.S. foreign policy.

. . .

Foreign Policy In Focus is a network for research, analysis and action that brings together more than 700 scholars, advocates and activists who strive to make the United States a more responsible global partner. It is a project of the Institute for Policy Studies (IPS) in Washington. www.fpif.org

The Institute for Policy Studies is a community of public scholars and organizers linking peace, justice and the environment in the U.S. and globally. It works with social movements to promote democracy and challenge concentrated wealth, corporate and military power. www.ips-dc.org


UN OFFICIALS STRESS SECURITY COUNCIL’S ROLE IN PROTECTING CIVILIANS DURING ARMED CONFLICT


UN OFFICIALS STRESS SECURITY COUNCIL'S ROLE IN PROTECTING CIVILIANS DURING ARMED CONFLICT

The recent unrest in North Africa and the Middle East and the post-electoral crisis in Cote d'Ivoire highlight the need to protect civilians during armed conflicts, top United Nations officials said today as they stressed the key role of the Security Council on the issue.

"The events of the last few months have provided a compelling reminder of the fundamental and enduring importance of the Council's protection of civilians agenda," the Under-Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs and Emergency Relief Coordinator, Valerie Amos, <"http://www.un.org/News/Press/docs//2011/sc10245.doc.htm">told Council members.

"Moreover, they have underscored the need to ensure that the commitments therein… translate into concerted Council action in response to violations of the law, as we have seen in Côte d'Ivoire and Libya, Afghanistan, the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) and Somalia."

Ms. Amos made her remarks during an open debate on the protection of civilians in armed conflict. Other UN officials addressing the meeting were the Under-Secretary-General for Peacekeeping Operations, Alain Le Roy, and the Assistant Secretary-General for Human Rights, Ivan Å imonovic, who spoke on behalf of the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Navi Pillay.

On 17 March, the Council adopted a resolution authorizing Member States to take "all necessary measures" to protect civilians in Libya, and since then several countries have carried out air strikes as part of their efforts to implement the resolution.

Also earlier this year, the UN Operation in Côte d'Ivoire (UNOCI) undertook all necessary measures, as directed by unanimous Security Council resolutions, to protect its assets and fulfil its mandate, particularly with regards to protection of civilians during the West African country's recent political upheaval.

These actions came in the wake of a presidential statement adopted last November, when the Council renewed its call on parties to conflict to take steps to protect civilians affected by hostilities, demanding they put an end to practices such as sexual violence, forced recruitment and other violations of international humanitarian law.

In her remarks to the meeting, Ms. Amos focused on the need to ensure more effective protection for civilians. She cited violence in Bahrain, Yemen and Syria, as well as the situations in Côte d'Ivoire and Libya.

"The deliberate targeting of civilians or other flagrant disregard for well-being in violation of international humanitarian law during hostilities results in hundreds killed, injured, maimed and traumatized every week," Ms. Amos said. "This initial failure to respect the law is almost always the precursor to further violence, suffering and trauma inflicted upon civilians, including massive displacement within and across borders."

Ms. Amos also highlighted the plight of civilians in other conflicts who continue to be killed or injured as parties fail to comply with their obligations in the conduct of hostilities.

Listing cases such as Somalia, the DRC, Sudan, Colombia, Gaza and southern Israel, Afghanistan and Sri Lanka, Ms. Amos said the Security Council has a responsibility to promote compliance.

"First, by using all available opportunities to condemn violations and to remind parties of, and demand compliance with, their obligations," Ms. Amos said. "Second, by applying targeted sanctions against the leadership of parties that routinely violate their obligations to respect civilians.

"And third, by promoting accountability, including by mandating commissions of inquiry to examine situations where concerns exist regarding serious violations, with a view to identifying the perpetrators and ensuring their prosecution at the national level, or referring the situation to the International Criminal Court."

In his remarks to the Council, Mr. Le Roy said that UN peacekeeping operations have been working closely with those countries which provide troops to serve as peacekeepers to improve the blue helmets' understanding and implementation of protection of civilian mandates. This includes through measures such as providing guidance to missions on developing comprehensive protection strategies and training scenarios.

However, noting that the protection of civilians in UN peacekeeping operations is often carried out in extremely challenging environments, and in many cases with tremendous political complexities, Mr. Le Roy said such efforts must be complemented by the Council's sustained political support.

"Ultimately, protection of civilians is assured by stable political outcomes, and the Security Council's role in ensuring that parties stay on the path to peace is always critical," Mr. Le Roy said. "The Council's unflagging support in these situations is a sine qua non if we are to take forward our mandated tasks and improve the lives of civilians whom we are deployed to support."

In her statement to the Council's meeting, delivered by Mr. Å imonovic, Ms. Pillay said recent events illustrated that the denial of human rights – including civil, cultural, economic, political and social rights – is a root cause of discord, unrest, violence and ultimately armed conflict.

"Protecting human rights prevents conflicts, and accountability for violations of human rights breaks the cycle of violence," she said. "In recent years, almost every integrated peace mission has included a human rights component, appropriately reflecting our shared conviction that the maintenance of peace and security depends upon respect for human rights – this positive development must continue."

Ms. Pillay also commended the Council for its "swift and decisive" actions to promote the protection of civilians and noted her office's readiness to assist the Council with information on the human rights situation in places where the Council establishes or renews the mandate of a peace mission.

Superiority of Knowledge Over Devotions

Superiority of Knowledge Over Devotions  
The following is excerpted from the book "Reliance of the Traveler." The Classic Manual of Islamic Law 'Umdat al-Salik by Ahmed ibn Naqib al-Misri (d769/1368) English translation by Nuh Ha Mim Keller.

a2.1 (Nawawi:) Allah Most High says: 

(1) "Say, 'Are those who know and those who do not know equal?' " (Koran 39:9). 

(2)  "Only the knowledgeable of His slaves fear Allah" (Koran35:28). 

(3) "Allah raises those of you who believe and those who have been given knowledge whole degrees" (Koran 58:11). 

a2.2 The Prophet (Allah bless him and give him peace) said: 

(1) "Whoever Allah wishes well, He gives knowledge of religion." 

(2) The superiority of the learned Muslim over the devotee is as my superiority over the least of you." Then the Prophet (Allah bless him and give him peace) said, "Allah and His angels, the inhabitants of the heavens and the earth, the very ant in its anthill and the fish bless those who teach people what is good." 

(3) "When a human being dies his work comes to an end except for three things: ongoing charity, knowledge benefitted from, or a pious son who prays for him." 

(4) "A single learned Muslim is harder on the Devil than a thousand worshippers." 

Click HERE to read full article. 

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AHL AS-SUNNAT



   It is first necessary for someone who becomes a Muslim, or for Muslims’ children who reach the age of maturity called ’aqil-baligh, to say the Kalima-i shahadat
[1], learn its meaning and believe in it. Then, they have to learn and believe in the knowledge written in the books of the Ahl as-sunnat [2] savants regarding i’tiqad [3], that is, the tenets of belief. Then, they have to learn fiqh knowledge from the books of any one of the four Madhhabs [4], that is, the five commandments of Islam, and they must observe these commandments.

   Those who deny that it is necessary to learn and obey these things and those who do not pay due attention to these points become murtads
[5]. That is, after they become Muslims upon saying the Kalima-i shahadat, they become kafirs again. The knowledge of i’tiqad in the four Madhhabs is the same. Someone who follows the knowledge of iman and fiqh of any of the four Madhhabs is called Ahl as-sunnat or Sunni.

   Belief of those who do not follow one of these four Madhhabs is wrong. They are either Ahl-i bid’at
[6] -bid’at holders- or murtads. In both cases, they will certainly go to Hell to be punished in the fire, if they die without repentance.

   While doing something, due to certain excuses, a person coming across difficulties in doing that thing according to his own Madhhab’s rules can do it according to the rules of one of the other three. Then, he has to follow all the rules related to this thing in this second Madhhab. If it is difficult to obey one of these rules, but this rule is easier in his own Madhhab, then he can do it. In this case two Madhhabs are joined on an obligatory basis. If it is also difficult in his own Madhhab, then it is jaiz for him to forgo the first rule of his own Madhhab. A better way, however, is to consider a permission likely to exist in the ijtihad
[7] of one of the As-hab-i-kiram [8].


GLOSSARY

[1] kalimat ash-shahada: the phrase beginning with “Ashhadu...” The first of the five fundamentals of Islam; declaring one’s belief in Islam.
[2] Ahl as-Sunna (wa’l-Jama’a): the true pious Muslims who follow as-Sahabat al-kiram. These are called Sunni Muslims. A Sunni Muslim adapts himself to one of the four Madhhabs. These madhhabs are Hanafi, Maliki, Shafi’i and Hanbali.
[3] i’tiqad: faith, iman.
[4] madhhab: all of what a profound ‘alim of (especially) Fiqh (usually one of the four-Hanafi, Shafi’i, Maliki, Hanbali) or iman (one of the two, namely Ash-ari, Maturidi) communicated.
[5] Murtad: apostate.
[6] bid’at: (pl. bida’) heresy; false, disliked belief or practice that did not exist in the four sources of Islam but which has been introduced later as an Islamic belief or ‘ibada in expectation of thawab (blessings) ; heresy.
[7] ijtihad: (meaning or conclusion drawn by a mujtahid by) endeavouring to understand the hidden meaning in an ayat or a hadith.
[8] As’hab-i kiram: (as-Sahabat al-kiram); the Companions of Rasulullah.

 

Anybody who makes ghusl and goes to the mosque early on Friday will gain a reward of giving a camel as charity.
Hadith-i-sharif


'One should carefully choose whom to love, and share the love accordingly'

'What is important is whom you are with, not who you are.'

'Kalam-i kibar, kibar-i kalamast.'

(The words of the superiors are the superior words.)

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