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 Post subject: Re: World news
PostPosted: Mon Feb 07, 2011 6:57 am 
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Breaking News Iran opens trial of 3 Americans on spy charges
JPost.comMiddle East
Photo by: MCT Iran bans state TV from teaching foreign recipes
By ASSOCIATED PRESS
02/06/2011 14:49


Cooking programs which provide recipes for foreign cuisine banned from 30 Iranian television stations by broadcasting authority.
TEHERAN, Iran — A state-owned news website on Saturday said Iran's broadcasting authority has banned Iranian TV channels from showing cooking programs that present recipes for foreign cuisine.

Jamejamonline reported that the deputy head of Iran's state broadcasting company, Ali Darabi, announced the ban during a visit to one of the country's 30 state-run TV channels.

RELATED:
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Some cooking programs on Iranian stations present recipes for foreign cuisine, such as Italian and French.


The ban is seen as part of a nationalistic campaign increasingly pushed by Iran's government in recent years.

Pizza, pasta and Western fast foods like hamburgers and hot-dogs are popular in Iran, and Teheran boasts many restaurants that serve Western or Asian food.


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 Post subject: Re: World news
PostPosted: Mon Aug 15, 2011 8:10 am 
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Breaking News 20:28 Report: Israel-
JPost.comMiddle East
Photo by: Reuters Syrian naval and tank assault on Latakia kills at least 21
By REUTERS
08/14/2011 15:39


Military crackdown on port city continues for second straight day as Assad employs gunships and tanks to quell dissent.
Talkbacks (7)
A Syrian tank and navy assault on the port city of Latakia to crush demonstrations against President Bashar Assad killed at least 21 civilians on Sunday, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said.

The Observatory said most of the casualties, including tens of wounded, were from big calibre machineguns fired from tanks on southern quarters of the city, which were also hit by Navy vessels.

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The Syrian Revolution Coordinating Union said it had the names of 19 people killed.

Residents and rights campaigners said the Syrian navy shelled two densely populated residential districts of the main Mediterranean port city of Latakia on Sunday , in the second day of a military assault to crush protests.


"I can see the silhouettes of two grey vessels. They are firing their guns and the impact is landing on al-Raml al-Filistini and al-Shaab neighbourhoods," one witness told Reuters by phone from Latakia, where tanks and armored vehicles deployed three months ago to crush dissent against President Bashar Assad.

Assad is from Syria's minority Alawite sect. Latakia is majority Sunni with a large Alawite population, encouraged by the state to move there with offers of cheap land and jobs.

Demonstrations against Assad during the five-month uprising against his autocratic rule have been biggest in Sunni neighborhoods of Latakia, including Salibiya in the center of the city and Raml al-Filistini and al-Shaab on the southern shore.

Troops and tanks have been besieging the two neighborhoods for months, residents say, with garbage going uncollected and electricity regularly being cut.

In March, leading Syrian opposition and civic figures, including Aref Dalila, a prominent economist from Latakia, issued a declaration denouncing sectarianism and committing to non-violent democratic change in the wake of disturbances involving an Alawite militia loyal to Assad, known as 'shabbiha'.

Dalila, an Alawite, has repeatedly warned against Latakia being used by the authorities to whip up sectarian fears among Alawites of a backlash against them if they lose power, instead of concentrating on transforming Syria into a democracy where all sects would enjoy equal treatment under a new constitution.

The Syrian state, the military and security apparatus are dominated by members of the minority Alawite sect, an offshoot of Islam. Sunni Muslims make up three-quarters of Syria's population.


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 Post subject: Re: World news
PostPosted: Sat Dec 03, 2011 10:35 pm 
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What if the news is incorrect at the headline and we are unable to see? The obligation of a news correspondent is to be present instantly and straight get to the conclusion of recapturing the incident. News cannot be manufactured but only to be introduce and then to wait on, for the consequences to happen.

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 Post subject: Re: World news
PostPosted: Wed Dec 21, 2011 6:38 pm 
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Hi all, I enjoyed the post, you have a nice site.World News is a common fact that every writer out there try's to discover the most appropriate world announcement. But it certainly is difficult to discover one. It requires a number of aspects. From press resources to the event and from asking questions to taking solutions, everything has to be on time and effectively thought out. Therefore, it will not be wrong to state that it is difficult to discover announcement rather than writing announcement. Information issues change every day! These days you might be looking for announcement that shares about engineering while the next day the coolest subject would be some star announcement.
thanks for the information, I’ll be making the necessary changes.

world news


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 Post subject: Re: World news
PostPosted: Tue Mar 27, 2012 7:50 am 
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Reaching Jordan, they can finally tell world about torture, abuse by regime. By REUTERS
IRBID, Jordan -- Ahmed’s friends call him the living martyr. A total of 16 bullets pierced his body when Syrian security forces attacked protesters in the southern city of Deraa last year. The 24-year-old activist was smuggled to Jordan for treatment after troops raided Deraa hospital in pursuit of injured activists.

Ahmed says his survival is a miracle after seeing parts of his guts burst out of his body as he was pummeled by a barrage of gunshots .The troops sprayed him and his friend with bullets “like they were giving away sweets,” he recalls now. Even from the safety of Jordan, where he is now a refugee, he asks not to be identified by his full name.

Related: •Turkey temporarily shuts embassy in Syria•Syrian leader revives father’s torture techniques“They noticed we were standing near a demonstration and started shooting randomly. I was injured and my friend was hit, too,” he says, recalling the panic and fear among his friends as they saw him bathed in his own blood. “The army noticed I was alive because I used my phone to call for an ambulance, but they shot at me again.”

He reveals to a visiting reporter scars across his back, legs, arms and abdomen. “They wanted to make sure I was dead,” the frail-looking young activist explains. His friends and colleagues were sure the army had succeeded. “Everybody was expecting me to die at any moment. They even had a funeral planned for when the official announcement of my death would come. I survived, and now my friends call me the living martyr.”

Ahmed arrived in Jordan last year to complete his treatment after it became impossible to be treated in health centers in Syria.

The Syrian army regularly raids public hospitals and clinics, arrests or shoots injured people, say activists from the southern city of Deraa, which was the cradle of anti-Assad protests that are now entering the second year. Jordan has provided a safe haven for hundreds of activists over the past months as they sought safety from prosecution and targeting by the Syrian army.

At least 28 civilians were reported killed in Syria on Saturday, with fighting stretching from the outskirts of the capital Damascus to Syria’s border with Turkey. On Sunday, Khaldiyeh, Hamidiyeh and Old Homs neighborhoods suffered heavy shelling by the army and explosions shook the whole city, the opposition Local Coordination Committees of Syria reported.



Most activists come from Deraa and more recently they have started to arrive from the war-torn city of Homs. The city is 200 kilometers (125 miles) from the Jordanian border, but activists are reluctant to go to nearby Lebanon after pro-Syria forces arrested there some and handed them back to Damascus.

As of March 15, the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees had registered 5,391 Syrians in Jordan and more than 2,000 were waiting for an appointment to register. But Jordanian authorities say more like 70,000 Syrians have arrived in the kingdom since the anti-Assad uprising started. Unofficially, the kingdom is constructing refugee camps in expectation that more will arrive and be staying for some time.

In the north-Jordan city of Irbid, activists have begun taking testimony from Syrian asylum seekers to document their suffering. It is effectively the only way to know what is happening in Syria, where the foreign press is officially banned and movement is severely restricted.

Two weeks ago, Amnesty International released a report based on interviews with torture victims now in Jordan. It based its conclusions on just a few-dozen interviews but said the number of victims is likely in the tens of thousands because nearly everyone who is arrested by the Syrian authorities faces some kind of torture.

Those families trying to cross the border legally, which is becoming increasingly difficult as the Syrian regime tries to stem the tide of refugees, have had to pay Syrian customs officials bribes of up to 50,000 Syrian pounds ($873) to cross, Khaled Fayez Ghanem, an official at the Islamic Charity Centre Society, told the IRIN news agency last week.

Wanted activists do not have that option: They have to traverse landmine-infested borders and cross illegally into Jordan. If they succeed, the Jordanian army on the northern border offers them cover, including families and individuals, when they are shot at by Syrian forces.

Islam, an activist from Deraa, has taken upon himself the task to meet as many refugees as possible in order to piece together what he calls the “systematic abuse by Syrian security forces.” Islam himself is a victim of torture. The activist said he was arrested twice last year and in each occasion torture was a common practice.

The first time he was arrested was in Damascus after speaking to a number of activists and foreign journalists.

“I was blindfolded and had my hands tied with painful plastic handcuffs. I was dumped in a small van alongside other activists. On the way to detention, beating and insults were frequent,” says Islam as he recalls the psychological torture inflicted on detainees.

Islam was placed in a small cell with a single window four meters (13 feet) above the floor. The only sounds he heard during his confinement were doors slamming and people screaming from pain. “They wanted us to collapse before even reaching the interrogation room,” he recalls.

Under investigation, detainees would be regularly beaten amid continued insults and threats to family members.

“They would threaten me to rape my sisters and wife if I didn’t cooperate. It was a true nightmare,” says Islam, who detailed methods of torture practiced that included sleep deprivation and mysterious injections that cause anxiety.

London based Amnesty detailed in its report 31 types of torture, including ‘crucifixion’-type beatings, electric shocks, use of pincers on flesh, sexual assaults with broken bottles or metal skewers. The scale of torture and other ill-treatment in Syria has risen to a level not witnessed for years and is reminiscent of the dark era of the 1980s and 1990s, said Amnesty.

In its report, Amnesty called on the United Nations Human Rights Council to extend the mandate of the UN Commission of Inquiry on Syria and reinforce its capacity to monitor, document and report, with a view to eventual prosecutions of those responsible for crimes under international law and other gross violations of human rights.

In spite of the risks and severe injuries he has received, Ahmed says he intends to return to Syria to join the revolution against President Bashar Assad and his regime. In the meantime, he is collecting donations to help the free army continue resisting authorities while at the same time reveal to the international community crimes committed by the regime.

“I was supposed to be dead long ago. I do not belong in Jordan or any other place of exile,” he says. “I want to go back and fight for my people.”


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 Post subject: Re: World news
PostPosted: Sat Apr 21, 2012 8:13 am 
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How the Media Whitewashes Muslim Persecution of Christians
by Raymond Ibrahim
April 13, 2012 at 5:00 am

http://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/3002/ ... christians

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While the MSM may report the most frugal facts concerning Christian persecution, they utilize their entire arsenal of semantic games, catch phrases, and convenient omissions that uphold the traditional narrative—that Muslim violence is anything but a byproduct of the Islamic indoctrination of intolerance.

When it comes to Muslim persecution of Christians, the mainstream media (MSM) has a long paper trail of obfuscating. While they may eventually state the bare-bone facts—if they ever report on the story in the first place, which is rare—they do so after creating and sustaining an aura of moral relativism that minimizes the Muslim role.

False Moral Equivalency

As previously discussed, one of the most obvious ways is to evoke "sectarian strife" between Muslims and Christians, a phrase that conjures images of two equally matched—and equally abused, and abusive—adversaries fighting one another. This hardly suffices to describe the reality of Muslim majorities persecuting largely passive Christian minorities.

Recently, for instance, in the context of the well-documented suffering of Christians in Egypt, an NPR report declared, "In Egypt, growing tensions between Muslims and Christians have led to sporadic violence [initiated by whom?]. Many Egyptians blame the interreligious strife on hooligans [who?] taking advantage of absent or weak security forces. Others believe it's because of a deep-seated mistrust between Muslims and the minority Christian community [how did the "mistrust" originate?]." Although the report does highlight cases in which Christians are victimized, the tone throughout—and even from the title of the report, "In Egypt, Christian-Muslim Tension is on the Rise"—suggest that examples of Muslims victimized by Christians could just as easily have been found (not true). The accompanying photo is of a group of angry Christians militantly holding a cross aloft—not Muslims destroying crosses, which is what prompts the Christians to such displays of solidarity.

Two more strategies that fall under the MSM's umbrella of obfuscating and minimizing Islam's role—strategies with which the reader should become acquainted—appeared in recent reports dealing with the jihadi group Boko Haram and its ongoing genocide of Nigeria's Christians.

First, some context: Boko Haram—acronym for "Western Education is a Sin", its full name in Arabic is "Sunnis for Da'wa [Islamization] and Jihad"—is a full-throated terrorist organization dedicated to the overthrow of the secular government and establishment of Sharia law. It has been slaughtering Christians for years, with an uptick since the Christmas Day church bombing in 2012, which left at least 40 Christians dead; followed by its New Year ultimatum that all Christians must evacuate the northern regions of Nigeria or die—an ultimatum Boko Haram has been living up to: hardly a day goes by without a terrorist attack on Christians or a church, most recently on Easter day, leaving 20 dead.

Blurring the Line Between Persecutor and Victim

Now consider some MSM strategies. The first one is to frame the conflict between Muslims and Christians in a way that blurs the line between persecutor and victim, as in, for example, a recent BBC report on one of Boko Haram's many church attacks that left three Christians dead, including a toddler. After stating the bare-bones facts in a couple of sentences, the report went on to describe how "the bombing sparked a riot by Christian youths, with reports that at least two Muslims were killed in the violence. The two men were dragged off their bikes after being stopped at a roadblock set up by the rioters, police said. A row of Muslim-owned shops was also burned…" The report goes on and on, with a special section about "very angry" Christians, until one all but confuses victims with persecutors, forgetting what the Christians are "very angry" about in the first place—unprovoked and nonstop terror attacks on their churches, and the murder of their women and children.

This broadcast is reminiscent of the Egyptian New Year's Eve church bombing that left over 20 Christians dead: the MSM reported it, but under headlines such as, "Christians clash with police in Egypt after attack on churchgoers kills 21"(Washington Post) and "Clashes grow as Egyptians remain angry after attack"(New York Times)—as if frustrated Christians lashing out against wholesale slaughter is as newsworthy or of the same value as the slaughter itself, implying that their angry reaction "evens" everything up.

Dissembling the Perpetrators' Motivation

The second MSM strategy involves dissembling over the jihadis' motivation. An AFP report describing a different Boko Haram church attack—another one, which also killed three Christians during Sunday service—does a fair job reporting the facts. But then it concludes: "Violence blamed on Boko Haram, whose goals remain largely unclear, has since 2009 claimed more than 1,000 lives, including more than 300 this year, according to figures tallied by AFP and rights groups."

Although Boko Haram has been howling its straightforward goals for a decade—enforcing Sharia law and subjugating, if not eliminating, Nigeria's Christians—the media with a straight face is claiming ignorance about these goals (similarly, the New York Times described Boko Haram's goals as "senseless"—even as the group continues justifying them on Islamic doctrinal grounds). One would have thought that a decade after the jihadi attacks of 9/11—in light if all the subsequent images of Muslims in militant attire shouting distinctly Islamic slogans such as "Allahu Akbar!" ["Allah is the Greatest!"] and calling for Sharia law and the subjugation of "infidels"—reporters would by now know what their goals are.

Of course, the media's obfuscation of jihadi goals serves a purpose: it leaves the way open for the politically correct, MSM-approved motivations for Muslim violence: "political oppression," "poverty," "frustration," and so on. From here, one can see why politicians such as former U.S. president Bill Clinton cite "poverty" as "what's fueling all this stuff" (a reference to Boko Haram's slaughter of Christians).

In short, while the MSM may report the most frugal facts concerning Christian persecution, they utilize their entire arsenal of semantic games, catch phrases, and convenient omissions that uphold the traditional narrative—that Muslim violence is anything but a byproduct of the Islamic indoctrination of intolerance.

Raymond Ibrahim is a Shillman Fellow at the David Horowitz Freedom Center and an Associate Fellow at the Middle East Forum


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 Post subject: Re: World news
PostPosted: Thu Jul 04, 2013 11:45 am 
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NEW PRAYER BULLETIN: IRAN CONVICTS CHRISTIANS July 03, 2013
Dear Friends:

A new Prayer Bulletin entitled "Iran Convicts Christians" has been added.




In June, the Revolutionary Court convicted four Christians of attending a house church, spreading Christianity, having contact with foreign ministries, spreading propaganda against the regime and disrupting national security. Mojtaba Seyyed-Alaedin Hossein, Mohammad-Reza Partoei (Koorosh), Vahid Hakkani and Homayoun Shokouhi were each sentenced to three years and eight months in prison. ...


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 Post subject: Re: World news
PostPosted: Thu Nov 07, 2013 10:40 am 
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NEW PRAYER BULLETIN: NIGERIA MAN KILLED November 06, 2013
Dear Friends:

A new Prayer Bulletin entitled "Nigeria Man Killed" has been added.

On Sept. 24, Boko Haram militants surrounded the home of 60-year-old Sunday Luka in Gwoza and set his house on fire. Luka died of smoke inhalation inside the burning house.

About three months earlier, Luka and his 14-year-old son fled their home in Gwoza after receiving death threats from Boko Haram. ...


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 Post subject: Re: World news
PostPosted: Fri Dec 20, 2013 10:40 am 
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Pastor Vruir Avanessian, 61, was sentenced to three and a half years in prison on Dec. 5, 2013 for anti-government activities and the promotion of ideas contrary to the sanctity of the Islamic Republic of Iran. Pastor Avanessian was arrested Dec. 27, 2012 as he gathered at a private home with other Christians to celebrate Christmas. The pastor is an ordained minister in the officially-registered Assemblies of God Church in Iran and of Armenian heritage, Iran’s largest Christian religious minority. He has served as a pastor for more than 17 years.
One of the most concerning aspects of Pastor Avanessian’s case is his serious medical condition. The pastor suffers from heart disease and diabetes. He undergoes kidney dialysis three times a week at a private clinic in Tehran, and has been retired from active ministry due to his medical condition. He was unable to attend his own court hearing because he was receiving dialysis at the time. ...


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 Post subject: Re: World news
PostPosted: Thu Jan 09, 2014 1:39 pm 
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A new Prayer Bulletin entitled "Kenya Pastors Killed" has been added.

On Oct. 19, the pastor of Vikwatani Redeemed Gospel Church was shot to death in his church. Pastor Charles Matole, 41, was found slumped in a chair with a Bible in his lap. According to his widow, Clarice, the pastor had received death threats in the months prior to his murder, and people had thrown stones at the church during prayer services. Clarice told a VOM worker that she thinks her husband was murdered to scare Christians away from the area. ...


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 Post subject: Re: World news
PostPosted: Fri Jan 24, 2014 7:48 am 
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UN Human Rights experts decry large number of executions in Iran
UN Human Rights experts recently issued a statement decrying the sharp increase in public hangings in Iran, where victims of state terror are often lynched on construction equipment, trees and even streetlights on busy highways as "examples" to the citizenry of what happens to those who break the clerical regime's laws. The statement said that at least 40 such hangings were carried out by regime security forces in Iran in the first two weeks of 2014. 652 executions were reported in Iran in 2013, including public stoning of women accused of adultery.


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 Post subject: Re: World news
PostPosted: Tue Feb 04, 2014 8:08 am 
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From The Jerusalem Post.
Iran’s President Hassan Rouhani ordered the hangings last Monday of a poet and a human rights activist from Iran’s Arabic-speaking ethnic minority Ahvazis.

The internationally acclaimed Iranian journalist Amir Taheri first reported on Tuesday on the hangings of Hashem Shaabani and Hadi Rashedi.

According to Taheri’s report in Asharq al-Awsat, Shaabani, the poet, was arrested in February 2011, and subjected to torture.

Shaabani wrote in a prison letter to his family that he could not ignore the “hideous crimes against Ahvazis, perpetrated by the Iranian authorities, particularly arbitrary and unjust executions.”

He continued: “I have tried to defend the legitimate right that every people in this world should have, which is the right to live freely with full civil rights. With all these miseries and tragedies, I have never used a weapon to fight these atrocious crimes except the pen.”

Rouhani has presided over an execution spree. The United Nations Special Rapporteur on the situation of human rights in Iran Ahmed Shaheed and the UN’s expert addressing executions Christof Heyns urged Iran last month to stop the surge in hangings since the start of 2014.

The UN experts said “at least 40 persons have been reportedly hanged in the first two weeks of January.”

In 2013, Iran executed 625 people, including 29 women and political prisoners. Iranians faced the death penalty for the crimes of Moharabeh – a catchall phrase for “enmity against God” – or the charge of threatening “national security.”

“It is deeply concerning that the Government proceeds with executions for crimes that do not meet the threshold of the ‘most serious crimes’ as required by international law and when serious concerns remain about due process rights,” said, Heyns.

The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps presented Shaabani on Iran’s Press TV in December 2011. He allegedly confessed to involvement in “separatist terrorism,” and contacts with former Egyptian leader Hosni Mubarak and Libya’s former president Muammar Gaddafi.

Shaabani wrote in a letter that he had “never participated in any armed activity, whatever the motives. I disagree with armed activities if there are other peaceful channels to make demands and express our wishes and aspirations.”

Taheri wrote, “Shaabani is not the first Iranian poet to be murdered by the mullahs. The left-wing poet Sa’id Sultanpur was abducted on the day of his wedding on Khomeini’s orders and shot dead in a Tehran prison.

Rahman Hatefi, writing under the pen-name of Heydar Mehregan, had his veins cut and was left to bleed to death in the Evin prison.”

He said former President Hashemi Rafsanjani “succeeded in eliminating more than a dozen writers and poets.

“The worst spate of killings happened under former Iranian president Mohammad Khatami, when more than 80 intellectuals including the poets Mohammad Mokhtari and Muhammad-Ja’far Pouyandeh were murdered


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 Post subject: Re: World news
PostPosted: Thu Mar 06, 2014 3:25 pm 
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NEW PRAYER BULLETIN: VILLAGE ATTACK IN NIGERIA March 05, 2014
Dear Friends:

A new Prayer Bulletin entitled "Village Attack in Nigeria" has been added.

Members of the Islamist terrorist group Boko Haram attacked the Christian village of Izghe, in Borno state, on Feb. 15, killing 106 residents. They also looted businesses and stole residents' vehicles.

Nearly 100 members of Boko Haram, which seeks to eradicate Christianity from Nigeria and establish Sharia law, entered Izghe on trucks and motorcycles, witness Ali Ndume reported to the BBC. They shot and hacked to death male residents who had gathered in the town square. ...


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 Post subject: Re: World news
PostPosted: Sat Mar 15, 2014 6:36 am 
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Iran executing growing number of prisoners, including children
Ahmed Shaheed, the UN special rapporteur on the situation of human rights in Iran, recently testified of a sharp rise in the number of executions in the Islamic Republic, including children. Highlighting the case of Farzaneh Moradi, a 15 year old girl who was recently hanged after confessing under duress to the murder of her husband who she had been forced into marrying against her will, Shaheed declared the need for "an immediate moratorium on the death penalty in the Islamic republic." According to UN statistics, at least 176 people have been hanged in Iran since the start of 2014, many after perfunctory trials which did not meet international standards.


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 Post subject: Re: World news
PostPosted: Wed Mar 19, 2014 6:44 am 
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WATCH: Children are Massacred in Syria
About five million children suffer daily in the Syrian civil war. Most of them are starving and facing abject poverty. Many of them live in war zones. Assad’s army committed a shocking massacre yesterday in Hama, slaughtering at least four children. Another baby was found dead in the suburbs of Damascus, after dying from malnutrition and lack of medicine.


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