OT- Power of the Liberal Press kills people
- From: "Chuck" <chuckadams05@xxxxxxx>
- Date: 18 May 2005 10:30:38 -0700
It wasn't because it was the "Quran" that was it was flushed down the
toilet, it was because it was something of value that the detainees
cherished. It could have been pizza, diet-coke, drugs, a weekend pass,
or anything thing of value to the detainees. Leave it to the liberal
press to report it as an act of war against the Muslims/Quran only to
promote their own agenda.
Four Killed in Afghan Anti-U.S. Riots
Wednesday, May 11, 2005
JALALABAD, Afghanistan - Shouting "Death to America!" more than 1,000
demonstrators rioted and threw stones at a U.S. military convoy
Wednesday, as protests spread to four Afghan provinces over a report
that interrogators desecrated Islam's holy book at the U.S. prison at
Guantanamo Bay (search).
Police fired on the protesters, many of them students, trying to stifle
the biggest display of anti-American anger since the ouster of the
ruling Taliban militia 3 1/2 years ago. There were no reports of
American casualties, but the violence left four dead and 71 injured in
Jalalabad (search), a city 80 miles east of the capital, Kabul.
Mobs smashed car and shop windows and attacked government offices, the
Pakistani consulate and the offices of two U.N. agencies in Jalalabad.
Smoke billowed from the consulate and a U.N. building. More than 50
foreign aid workers were reportedly evacuated.
The protests may expand into neighboring Pakistan (search), where a
coalition of hard-line Islamic parties said it would hold nationwide
demonstrations Friday over the alleged desecration of the Quran.
Many of the 520 inmates in Guantanamo are Pakistanis and Afghans
captured after the Sept. 11 attacks. Despite both governments' support
of the U.S.-led war on terrorism, suspicion lingers in the conservative
Muslim nations about the American military.
Growing urban unrest could pose another security challenge for the
U.S.-backed Afghan government, which is already battling a
reinvigorated Taliban insurgency. About 18,000 U.S. troops are in
Afghanistan, fighting rebels and searching for Taliban and Al Qaeda
leaders, including Usama bin Laden.
President Hamid Karzai, who travels to Washington this month for talks
with President Bush, played down the violence.
"It is not the anti-American sentiment, it is a protest over news of
the desecration of the holy Quran," Karzai told reporters after talks
with NATO officials in Brussels, Belgium.
"Afghanistan is now a democratic country, people can come out and
protest and demonstrate and express themselves," Karzai said. "It also
shows that Afghanistan's institutions, the police, the army, are not
yet ready to handle protests and demonstrations."
The source of anger was a brief report in the May 9 edition of Newsweek
that interrogators at Guantanamo placed Qurans on toilets to rattle
suspects, and in at least one case "flushed a holy book down the
toilet."
Pentagon spokesman Lt. Cmdr. Flex Plexico said the U.S. military was
investigating. "This allegation is contrary to our respect for cultural
customs and fundamental belief in the freedom of religion," Plexico
said.
Last weekend, Pakistan's government said it was "deeply dismayed" about
the report and registered its disapproval to Washington. Many Afghans
read Pakistani papers and understand Pakistani broadcasts; access to
satellite TV has mushroomed since U.S.-led forces toppled the Taliban
in late 2001.
The report of the alleged Quran desecration at Guantanamo has had
little impact in the Arab world, however. The news stations Al-Jazeera
and Al-Arabiyya reported the protests in Afghanistan and said the U.S.
was investigating, but no mention was made in Islamic Web forums where
militants often comment on news reports.
Aid workers in Jalalabad suggested conservative clerics had been
agitating for days in the mosques of the city, which lies in a
Pashtun-dominated area that once welcomed the Taliban and Al Qaeda.
"They take things like that (reported abuse of the Quran) and link it
to the U.S. presence here," said Phil Halton of the Afghan NGO Security
Organization. "It's a familiar theme."
The unrest in Jalalabad began Tuesday, when protesters burned an effigy
of Bush. It flared again Wednesday, when more than 1,000 university and
high school students marched through the city and stoned a convoy of
U.S. military vehicles.
The American troops fired into the air to force the crowd back and
quickly left the scene, provincial intelligence chief Sardar Shah said.
U.S. military spokeswoman Lt. Cindy Moore said American forces were
ordered to their camps but had no information on whether any of them
were caught up in the unrest.
Associated Press Television News footage showed Afghan troops firing
dangerously low over the heads of fleeing demonstrators.
The Interior Ministry said four people were killed and that the 71
injured included six police officers.
Deputy provincial health chief Mohammed Ayub Shinwari said most of the
injured were students. He said two of the dead had been shot and many
of the injured also had suffered bullet wounds.
"There is a lot of damage to the city, they have burned a lot of
things," Shah said. "These are the enemies of peace and stability in
Afghanistan who don't want people to be able to get on with their lives
in peace."
Students held similar protests in three other provinces - Laghman,
Khost and Wardak - but there were no reports of violence.
Wednesday was not the first time Pakistan's diplomatic missions have
been targeted in Afghanistan. The two countries' bilateral relations
have historically been strained by border disputes.
An Afghan opposition leader claimed the demonstration reflected
frustration at the role of the United States and Karzai's plans for
military ties, which could include long-term U.S. bases.
"From the beginning, people have disagreed with these things, but when
the government makes one announcement after another, people lose
patience and explode," said former presidential candidate Mohammed
Mohaqeq.
Afghan leaders have long complained of heavy-handed search operations
and the deaths of civilians in U.S. operations. They have also called
for the release of those still held at Guantanamo, the naval base on
Cuba where the United States is detaining more than 500 prisoners from
its war on terror.
Some men who have been released from Guantanamo have accused their
American jailers of defacing Qurans as part of the alleged
psychological and physical abuse they endured during interrogation.
"They did everything to us - they tortured our bodies, they tortured
our minds, they tortured our ideas and our religion," former prisoner
Mohamed Khan told The Associated Press a year ago when he was among two
dozen Afghans sent home.
State Department spokesman Richard Boucher said Wednesday that U.S.
personnel assigned to Guantanamo go through training to ensure they
understand the procedures for protecting the rights and dignity of
detainees.
"There is an opportunity to worship. People can get copies of the
Quran. They get prayer beads," he added.
"The call to prayer is played over camp loudspeakers at the appropriate
times every day. And the detainees have stenciled arrows pointing in
the direction of Mecca so people are afforded the opportunity to pray
as they wish."
.
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