Mazaqah

The world is going brown

Iran predicts Hezbollah will destroy Israel April 9, 2008

Filed under: Hezbollah, Iran, Iraq, Islam, Israel, Religion, Syria — Mazaqah @ 7:27 am

TEHRAN (AFP) — Iran’s Revolutionary Guards on Monday predicted Hezbollah would destroy Israel, in a new verbal onslaught against the Jewish state after the murder of a top commander of Lebanon’s Shiite militant group.

“In the near future, we will witness the destruction of Israel, the aggressor, this cancerous microbe Israel, at the able hands of the soldiers of the community of Hezbollah,” the ideological force’s commander, Mohammad Ali Jafari, was quoted by the Fars news agency as saying.

Jafari’s comments came in a condolence message to Hezbollah chief Hassan Nasrallah after the murder last week in Damascus of top commander Imad Mughnieh, who has been blamed for a string of anti militant attacks on US and Jewish intrests.

“With the martyrdom of this true Muslim, the intentions of all revolutionary and combatant Muslims, especially the comrades of this dear martyr, will without doubt become firmer against the Zionist regime,” Jafari said.

Iran’s supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei has already blamed Israel for killing Mughnieh, hailing him as a “great” man whose his death would serve to increase resistance against the Jewish state.

In a sign of Iran’s respect for Mughnieh, Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki attended his funeral in the Shiite suburbs of Beirut on Thursday and gave a speech.

The Islamic republic has a longstanding policy of non-recognition of Israel but its rhetoric against the Jewish state has sharpened during the presidency of Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.

Ahmadinejad has provoked international outrage by repeatedly predicting that Israel is doomed to disappear. He also courted more controversy by playing down the scale of the Holocaust.

Iran insists its position is in no way anti-Semitic but anti-Zionist, pointing to the continued existence in the country of the largest Jewish community in the Middle East after Israel.

Mughnieh, who was killed in a car bombing in Damascus on Tuesday, was suspected of masterminding the abduction of Western hostages in Lebanon in the 1980s and of the 1992 bombing of the Israeli embassy in Buenos Aires that killed 29 people.

He was also linked to the bombing of the US marine barracks at Beirut airport in 1983, in which 241 American servicemen died and the hijacking of TWA Flight 847 in 1985, in which a US navy diver was killed.

Israel, while welcoming the death of Mughnieh, has denied any link to his murder. Meanwhile, the US intelligence chief has publicly suggested that internal elements in Syria or even Hezbollah could be to blame.

“There’s some evidence that it may have been internal Hezbollah. It may have been Syria. We don’t know yet, and we’re trying to sort that out,” Director of National Intelligence Mike McConnell told Fox News.

The Syrian pro-government Al-Watan newspaper reported on Sunday that the authorities have detained Arab suspects for questioning in connection with the murder.

The events come amid growing US frustration with Iran’s activities in Shiite majority Iraq and in Lebanon which has a substantial Shiite community.

The United States accuses Iran, along with its regional ally Syria, of arming and financing Hezbollah, as well as working to destabilise Lebanon in its current political crisis.

Overwhelmingly Shiite Iran jubilantly cheered Hezbollah’s resistance against Israel in the 2006 war but insists it only gives the Lebanese group political support and not military aid.

Washington also accuses Tehran of being a leading sponsor of terror and developing technology that could be used to make nuclear weapons, another allegation that Iran vehemently denies.

“We are not harbouring any illusions about the Tehran regime’s true intentions nor its extremist agenda,” commented Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert’s spokesman Mark Regev.

 

Israel: We’ll ‘destroy’ Iran April 9, 2008

Filed under: Hezbollah, Iran, Islam, Israel, Lebanon, Relegion, Syria, war — Mazaqah @ 7:25 am

JERUSALEM – Israel will “destroy” Iran if Tehran decided to launch a war against the Jewish state, Israeli Infrastructure Minister Benjamin Ben-Eliezer said today.

The unusually harsh warning from Ben-Eliezer, a former defense minister, was delivered as the official visited his ministry’s war room, which took part today in a massive, nationwide, weeklong drill that is set to include simulated chemical missile attacks on central Israel.

“The Iranians won’t rush to attack Israel, because they understand the significance such action would have and are well aware of our strength,” Ben-Eliezer told reporters. “However, Iran continues to aggravate the situation by supplying arms to Syria and Hezbollah, and we must deal with this.”

The minister said this week’s war drill “is not a meaningless spectacle or a fictional scenario. The future reality is likely to be a number of times harsher than that which we recognize now. We are confronted with a situation where the home front becomes the front line.”

“In a future war, it will be much safer to live in (the northern towns of) Nahariya and Shlomi instead of Jerusalem and Tel Aviv, since I expect that in the opening attack hundreds of missiles will strike Israel,” Eliezer said. “There will be no place in the country which is not within range of Syria and Hezbollah’s rockets.”

Israel’s current war drill is the country’s largest-ever. It aims to prepare the public and government and army institutions for the possibility of a future war. The drills reportedly include testing of missile alert sirens, Israel Defense Force war simulations, Homefront Command, police and emergency services responses and drills in hospitals and emergency centers.

As part of the drill, Israel will simulate a massive missile bombardment, including a chemical missile attack.

The drill and Ben-Eliezer’s warning come as Syria, Lebanon and Israel increased their alertness along a joint border zone amid a possible breakout of hostilities.

The countries are preparing for the possibility of Hezbollah attacking Israel in retaliation for the assassination of arch-Hezbollah terrorist Imad Mughniyeh, who was killed in a car bomb in Syria in February.

According to Israeli security officials, Israel has warned Syria, which sends Iranian weapons to Hezbollah, that Damascus would be held accountable for any Hezbollah attack on Israeli soil.

Deputy IDF Chief of Staff Dan Harel warned last week Israel will “respond with a heavy hand” against anyone trying to target Israel.

Touring Israel’s northern border with Lebanon and Syria, Defense Minister Ehud Barak stated last week Israel is the most powerful country in the Middle East and warned against challenging it.

Barak was to travel last week to Berlin for strategic talks about the Middle East but postponed the trip due to tensions with Syria, his aides said.

 

UN outrage over Dutch MP’s anti-Islam film March 29, 2008

Filed under: Ban Ki-moon, Geert Wilder, Iran, Pakistan, United Nations — Mazaqah @ 12:30 am

aleqm5gqt88nyqujwb3x-arfijpvssfd9w.jpgTHE HAGUE (AFP) — UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon on Friday joined Muslim nations in expressing outrage over an anti-Islam film posted on the Internet by a far-right Dutch MP.

UN chief Ban called Geert Wilders’ film offensive while Iran and Bangladesh warned it could have grave consequences and Pakistan protested to the Dutch ambassador.

“I condemn in the strongest terms the airing of Geert Wilders’ offensively anti-Islamic film,” Ban said in a statement.

“There is no justification for hate speech or incitement to violence. The right of free speech is not at stake here.”

The screening was a calculated “insult to the 1.3 billion Muslims in the world,” according to the 57-nation Organisation of the Islamic Conference (OIC).

“The film is a deliberate act of discrimination against Muslims, incitement for hatred and an act of defamation of religions which is solely intended to incite and provoke unrest and intolerance among people of different religious beliefs,” said OIC Secretary General Ekmeleddin Ihsanoglu.

 

Muslim nations condemn Dutch Koran film March 28, 2008

Filed under: Fitna, Geert Wilder, Indonesia, Iran, Islam, Muslim, Pakistan, Religion, US — Mazaqah @ 5:52 pm

AMSTERDAM, March 28 (Reuters) – Iran, Pakistan and Indonesia on Friday condemned a film by a Dutch lawmaker that accuses the Koran of inciting violence, as Dutch Muslim leaders urged restraint.

Islam critic Geert Wilders launched his short video on the Internet on Thursday evening. Titled “Fitna”, an Arabic term sometimes translated as “strife”, it intersperses images of the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks on the United States and Islamist bombings with quotations from the Koran, Islam’s holy book.

The film urges Muslims to tear out “hate-filled” verses from the Koran and starts and finishes with a cartoon of the Prophet Mohammad with a bomb under his turban, accompanied by the sound of ticking.

The cartoon, first published in Danish newspapers, ignited violent protests around the world and a boycott of Danish products in 2006. Many Muslims regard any depiction of the Prophet as offensive.

Iran called the film heinous, blasphemous and anti-Islamic and called on European governments to block any further showing. Pakistan’s Foreign Office summoned the Dutch ambassador to lodge a protest.

Indonesia, the world’s most populous Muslim nation and a former Dutch colony, also condemned the film.

“We are of the view that the film has a racist flavour and is an insult to Islam, hidden under the cover of freedom of expression,” a Foreign Ministry spokesman said. “We call on Indonesian people not to be incited.”

Dutch Muslim leaders appealed for calm and called on Muslims worldwide not to target Dutch interests. The Netherlands is home to about 1 million Muslims out of a population of 16 million.

“Our call to Muslims abroad is follow our strategy and don’t frustrate it with any violent incidents,” Mohammed Rabbae, a Dutch Moroccan leader, told journalists in an Amsterdam mosque.

“Looking for conflict there is looking for conflict with us,” he said before an imam made a similar appeal in Arabic.

The Dutch Islamic Federation went to court on Friday to try to stop Wilders from comparing Islam to fascism, saying he incited hatred of Muslims.

 

Gas pipeline: Pakistan invites India for talks March 25, 2008

Filed under: Gas, India, Iran, Pakistan, Peace pipeine — Mazaqah @ 8:48 pm

March 25th, 2008

Source: The Hindu

NEW DELHI: In a major development that could result in a breakthrough, Pakistan has invited India for talks on finalising the $7.4 billion Iran-Pakistan-India pipeline deal.

“I received an invitation from Pakistan’s Energy Minister to visit Islamabad to finalise the transit fee issue so that the IPI pipeline deal could be wrapped up soon,” Petroleum and Natural Gas Minister Murli Deora said on Monday.

The Minister was supposed to visit Pakistan in February first week to hold talks on the issue but it was cancelled at the last moment.

Mr. Deora said he hoped to resume negotiations on the issue as soon as the new government in Pakistan was installed.

“I will visit Pakistan sometime next month to hold talks and hope to wrap up the issue of transit fee and related matters as soon as possible and sign a formal agreement to make the project happen.”

The issue of “transportation fee” was sorted out by the two governments and now the focus of the talks would be on the “transit fee” sought to be levied for gas transported from Iran to the India-Pakistan border.

India and Pakistan had, in principle, reached an agreement on the transportation charges that New Delhi would be paying to Islamabad.

New clause

A point of mutual concern for both nations was the incorporation of a new clause sought to be incorporated by Iran on revision of natural gas price every three years.

 

Female Suicide Bomber Kills 43 in Iraq March 18, 2008

Filed under: Iran, Iraq, US — Mazaqah @ 12:10 am

BAGHDAD (AP) — A female suicide bomber struck Shiite worshippers in the holy city of Karbala on Monday, an official and a witness said, killing at least 43 people and leaving pools of blood on the street leading to one of Iraq’s most revered mosques.

The blast was the deadliest in a series of attacks that left at least 72 Iraqis dead, including six youths killed when mortar rounds slammed into a soccer field in eastern Baghdad.

Two U.S. soldiers also were killed Monday in a roadside bombing north of Baghdad, bringing the American death toll closer to 4,000 as the U.S.-led war enters its sixth year. At least 3,990 members of the U.S. military have died since the beginning of the Iraq war in March 2003, according to an Associated Press count.

The violence marred overlapping trips by Vice President Dick Cheney and Sen. John McCain to Baghdad. Their visits were aimed at touting recent security gains and stressing Washington’s long-term commitment to fighting insurgents in Iraq.

The U.S. Embassy and military issued a joint statement blaming al-Qaida in Iraq for the Karbala attack.

The bomber struck after the worshippers had gathered at a sacred historical site about half a mile from the golden domed shrine of Imam Hussein, a grandson of the Prophet Muhammad who was killed in a seventh-century battle.

A police officer, speaking on condition of anonymity because he wasn’t authorized to release the information, said the attacker was a woman — as did a witness.

The U.S. military described the attack as a suicide operation but put the casualty toll at 40 Iraqis killed and 65 wounded. The U.S. statement said the identity of the bomber remained unknown.

Brig. Gen. Raed Shakir Jawdat, Karbala’s police chief, said 43 people were killed and 73 wounded. He denied it was a suicide attack, saying a bomb had been planted in the area. The discrepancies could not immediately be resolved.

Karim Khazim, the city’s chief health official, said seven of those killed were Iranian pilgrims who had traveled to the holy site.

AP Television News footage showed a man carefully picking up pieces of flesh and wires apparently from a fuse as evening prayer services were broadcast from loudspeakers nearby.

The witness, who did not identify himself, told AP Television News that a woman in the crowd had blown herself up.

If true, it would be among the deadliest attacks carried out by women during the Iraq conflict.

Female suicide bombers have been involved in at least 20 attacks or attempted attacks since the war began, including the grisly bombings of two pet markets in Baghdad that killed nearly 100 people last month.

The U.S. military has warned that insurgents are using female attackers because they can more easily avoid checkpoint searches and can hide the explosives under traditional all-encompassing black Islamic robes.

Police closed the area around the twin golden dome mosques and blocked all roads leading to the sites, which include tombs of Imam Hussein and his half brother, also a Shiite saint.

Ali Hassan, 30, a clothing merchant who was wounded in the blast, said he was standing near his stall “when I heard a big explosion and I felt strong fire throwing me in the air.”

“The only thing I know is there was a big explosion and I saw bodies flying in the air,” said Hassan Khazim, 36, who was wounded in the face. “All the tight security measures designed to protect us were in vain.”

The predominantly Shiite city of Karbala, 50 miles south of Baghdad, enjoys tight security. Monday’s attack was the deadliest in Karbala since a suicide car bomber killed at least 63 people on April 28, 2007.

Explosions also struck earlier Monday not far from the capital’s heavily fortified Green Zone, shortly after Cheney arrived. Helicopter gunships circled central Baghdad.

Despite several high-profile bombings, violence levels have dropped sharply in recent months with a U.S. troop buildup, a Sunni revolt against al-Qaida in Iraq and a cease-fire by radical Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr’s Mahdi Army militia.

But noting the fragility of the security gains, Cheney warned against large drawdowns of American troops, saying it is very important that “we not quit before the job is done.”

McCain, the presumptive Republican presidential nominee who has linked his political future to military success in Iraq, also promised to uphold a long-term military commitment to the country so long as al-Qaida in Iraq is not defeated.

Both men met in back-to-back meetings with Shiite Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki, whose government has been accused of failing to make sufficient political progress.

Al-Maliki said he and the vice president discussed ongoing negotiations over a long-term security agreement between the two countries that would replace the U.N. mandate for foreign troops set to expire at the end of the year.

“This visit is very important. It is about the nature of the relations between the two countries, the future of those relations and the agreement in this respect,” the prime minister told reporters. “We also discussed the security in Iraq, the development of the economy and reconstruction and terrorism.”

McCain stressed it was important to maintain the U.S. commitment in Iraq, where a U.S.-Iraq operation is under way to clear al-Qaida in Iraq from what the military says is the terror group’s last urban stronghold of Mosul, 225 miles northwest of Baghdad.

“We recognize that al-Qaida is on the run, but they are not defeated,” McCain said after meeting al-Maliki. “Al-Qaida continues to pose a great threat to the security and very existence of Iraq as a democracy. So we know there’s still a lot more of work to be done.”

McCain, who arrived in Iraq on Sunday, told reporters that he also discussed with the Shiite leader the need for progress on political reforms, including laws on holding provincial elections and the equitable distribution of Iraq’s oil riches.

Sen. Carl Levin, D-Mich., speaking to reporters from Kuwait after a visit to Iraq, said Iraq should begin picking up more of the bills.

“We’re paying for things that Iraqis clearly should be paying for,” Levin said. “They have the capability, the surplus funds to do their own reconstruction, and to do their own weapons purchases and other things which we’re paying for and they need to pay for.”

 

Iranian conservatives set to retain majority March 17, 2008

Filed under: Iran — Mazaqah @ 4:46 am

TEHRAN, March 16: Conser-vatives appeared to be winning a majority in Iran’s parliament, showing Iranians’ defiance of the West, state television said on Sunday. The United States and Europe called the vote unfair after a number of pro-West reformists were barred from running.

Partial results from Tehran showed a resounding victory for conservatives, with parliament speaker Gholam Ali Hadad Adel polling the most votes.

He was followed by 13 other conservatives, including four members of the Sweet Scent of Service list of diehard Ahmadinejad loyalists, who were set to be elected directly to parliament without having to go into a run-off.

Iran’s former top nuclear negotiator Ali Larijani, standing for conservatives in the holy city of Qom and tipped as a future speaker, was elected by a landslide 70 per cent-plus of the vote.

Reformists, who seek closer ties with the US and its Western allies, were likely to retain a small bloc in the new parliament.

The reform movement’s leaders painted the result as a victory, saying the Guardian Council, a body of clerics and jurists, had thrown out its 1,700 candidates for insufficient loyalty to Islam and Iran’s 1979 Islamic Revolution.

Washington said Iran’s leadership had “cooked” the election by barring reformists.

The European Union said on Sunday the vote was “neither fair nor free” because the disqualifications prevented Iranians “from being able to choose freely amongst the full range of political views.”

Iran’s Interior Ministry reported the turnout in Friday’s vote at around 60 per cent, up somewhat from 51 per cent in the 2004 elections.

Iran’s President Ahmadinejad said the election turnout had “placed a sign of disgrace on the foreheads of our enemies,” the state news agency IRNA reported on Sunday.

Iran’s Supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, who had backed pro-Ahmadinejad candidates in the race, thanked Iranians for their massive participation in the election.

“Your epic and powerful presence overcame the enemy’s tricks and turned the enemy’s high-profile psychological war aimed at encouraging a low turnout into a vain bubble,” IRNA quoted Ayatollah Khamenei as saying.

With 190 of parliament’s 290 seats decided, 113 went to conservatives — around 70 to a list dominated by pro-Ahmadinejad hard-liners and the rest to a slate led by his conservative critics, according to individual results announced by state television and the official news agency IRNA. The numbers are not firm because some winners ran on both lists.

Reformists won 31 seats, according to the results. Another 39 winners were independents whose political leanings were not immediately known. Five other seats dedicated to Iran’s Jewish, Zoroastrian and Christian minorities have been decided.

Races for more than 70 seats will go to a run-off vote set for April or May.

Iranian officials have hailed the election as a victory over the United States, the Islamic Republic’s arch-foe.

“More than 70 percent of parliament seats belong to principlists,” Shahabeddin Sadr, projected to win a seat for the conservatives in Tehran, said.

“It is a great honour that people put their trust in us again.”

It remains to be seen how supportive the new parliament will be of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.—Agencies

 

Iran to Sign Final Gas Sales Agreement With Pakistan March 11, 2008

Filed under: India, Iran, Pakistan — Mazaqah @ 12:04 pm

Source: BloombergBy Dinakar Sethuraman

March 11 (Bloomberg) — Iran, the world’s No. 2 holder of oil and gas reserves, will sign a final agreement to export gas via pipeline to Pakistan in April, an official from the National Iranian Gas Co. said.

Iran has completed half of the pipeline, which will have a capacity to carry 110 million cubic meters of gas a day to Pakistan, Vahid Zeydifard, a senior pipelines expert at National Iranian Gas, said in an interview at the Gastech conference in Bangkok today. Iran plans to start exporting gas to Pakistan from 2011.

The $7.4 billion project, known as the “Peace Pipeline”, will carry gas from Iran to Pakistan and India to meet the growing energy demand of the two countries. The U.S., seeking to isolate Iran because of its pursuit of a nuclear program, wants India and Pakistan to pull out of the project.

“Negotiations are at a final stage,” Zeydifard said. “Pakistan needs 50 million cubic meters of gas a day, and we can supply the rest to India if they want it.” India currently uses about 108 million cubic meters of gas a day, according to BP Statistical Review of World Energy June 2007.

Iran is unable to commission gas export projects either via pipeline or in liquefied form because U.S. sanctions are preventing international lenders and investors from releasing funds, Zeydifard said. Pakistan is facing a shortage of gas as domestic fields decline and may have to depend on Iranian fuel to meet demand, which is expanding by 5 percent a year.

The U.S. sanctions and coming presidential elections in America make it difficult to take a final investment decisions on gas projects in Iran, Yves Cerf-Mayer, vice president of LNG Marketing North East Asia at Total SA, said at the Bangkok conference. Total has delayed a decision to invest in the South Pars LNG project in Iran.

India has yet to agree on pipeline gas imports from Iran via Pakistan because it wants to resolve “pending issues” with its South Asian neighbor, the Iranian Oil Ministry said on Sept. 26.

Iran and Pakistan have agreed on the pricing formula for transporting natural gas through the proposed pipeline, the official Islamic Republic News Agency reported on Oct. 23.

The National Iranian Oil Co. is developing the Kish field, which will transport gas via a 900-kilometer (410 miles) pipeline from Assaluyeh to Iranshar once it is completed, said Zeydifard, whose company transports gas in Iran.

“Pakistan can start receiving the gas when Iran completes a 400-kilometer section from Iranshar to the Pakistani border,” Zeydifard said.

Iran halted gas exports to Turkey in January to meet soaring domestic demand due to extreme winter weather.

“We have started exporting gas to Turkey again,” said Zeydifard. “We had supply problems because of the cold weather and disruption of gas supplies from Turkmenistan.”

Turkmenistan stopped exporting 25 million cubic meters of gas a day to Iran as it wants to charge more for the fuel, Zeydifard said. Iran sells gas domestically at 20 cents a million British thermal units. The benchmark gas price at Henry Hub, Louisiana, a gas trading point, is $10 a million Btu.

Iran may increase exports of gas this year to Turkey by 30 percent to 10 billion cubic meters, Zeydifard said.

 

var staf_confirmtext = ‘E-mail sent!’ #stafBlock { position: absolute !important; z-index: 100000; display: none; width: 200px; } #stafForm { background-color: #EEEEEE; border: 1px solid #000000; padding: 5px; margin:0; } #stafForm h2 { margin: 0; } #stafForm input, #stafForm label, #stafForm h2 { font-family: ‘Lucida Grande’, Verdana, Arial, Sans-Serif; font-size: 1em; color: #222222; } #stafForm input { width: 90px; height: 15px; margin-top: 5px; border: 1px solid #ccc; } #stafForm label { float: left; display: block; width: 90px; line-height: 16px; } #stafClose { float: right; margin-right: 5px; }