Sabtu, 25 September 2010

Obama Calls on UN To Support Middle East Peace Talks

Barack Obama has challenged the countries of the United Nations to unite around peace efforts to create an independent Palestine and a secure Israel – within a year. In a speech to the UN general assembly, the US president urged fellow world leaders to press forward with renewed determination in the quest for peace in the Middle East. Without an agreement, Obama said, "more blood will be shed", and "this Holy Land will remain a symbol of our differences, instead of our common humanity".

Israel did not have a representative in the hall, owing to the Jewish holiday of Sukkot, but the Palestinian president, Mahmoud Abbas, listened to the speech through a translator. Obama's call for a Palestinian state drew a burst of applause from throughout the hall.
Abbas has threatened to walk out of the latest round of talks if Israel does not extend a moratorium on the construction of Jewish settlements in the West Bank, a moratorium that is set to expire next week. The Israeli prime minister, Binyamin Netanyahu, has said he will not extend the freeze.

Obama repeated the White House position that the settlement moratorium should be extended. "It has made a difference on the ground and improved the atmosphere for talks," he said. Faced with the possibility of the collapse of negotiations, Obama implored the international community to get behind the idea of peace, and forget favouritism.

"Those of us who are friends of Israel must understand that true security for the Jewish state requires an independent Palestine," he said. "And those of us who are friends of the Palestinians must understand that the rights of the Palestinian people will be won only through peaceful means – including genuine reconciliation with a secure Israel."Obama also called for the promotion of human rights, open government and democracy.He defended his administration's approach to engaging Iran in negotiations over its nuclear programme. "The door remains open to diplomacy should Iran choose to walk through it," he said. "But the Iranian government must demonstrate a clear and credible commitment and confirm to the world the peaceful intent of its nuclear programme."
Read More...

Hamas arrests Israel ‘spies’ in Gaza

Hamas has said it had arrested ‘many’ Palestinians in Gaza on suspicion of collaborating with Israel to kill senior members of the enclave’s Islamist rulers and bomb training sites and government offices.The announcement came as a Hamas military court sentenced a Palestinian man accused of assisting Israel’s secret service to death by firing squard, security sources said. Ehab Al Ghsain, spokesman for Gaza’s interior ministry, said some of the suspected collaborators were accused of aiding Israel in a late 2008 war in which 1,400 Palestinians and 13 Israelis were killed.

‘The phenomena (collaboration) is small but we have arrested many,’ Abu Abdallah Lafi, a senior official in Hamas internal security service, told a news conference. He would not say how many people were detained but said they included some women.

Ghsain asserted the suspects posed ‘a real danger to the unity of the pople and their resistance’ against Israel, which has sealed off the narrow coastal enclave by land, sea and air.

Hamas security organs had obtained ‘serious confessions and uncovered many collaborators who stood behind assassinations of some leaders of resistance and implemented policies of the enemy’s intelligence service against our people’, Ghsain said.

Some of the suspects had planted bombs at training camps and government offices that caused Palestinian casualties, while others had helped to facilitate Israeli raids into Gaza and assassinations of militants, he said.

Investigations were continuing.

Among those Israel had killed with Palestinian assistance, Ghsain said, was the ex-commander of the Islamic Jihad group, Majed Al Harazeen, whose car was hit in a 2007 air strike aided by an informer who provided his license plate number.

Lafi showed reporters a display of what he described as Israeli-made communication equipment he said had been used by the alleged collaborators.

Ghsain said some suspects who surrendered to the authorities would be ‘rehabilitated’ rather than prosecuted, and their identities would not be published.

In April, Hamas authorities executed two Palestinians convicted of collaborating with Israel.

Hamas seized control of Gaza in 2007 after a brief civil war with the forces of Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, whose authority the Islamists no longer recognise.

Abbas’s mainstream Fatah movement controls the West Bank, except for areas taken up by Israeli settlements.
Read More...

Kamis, 16 September 2010

Thoughts on the Eid Day

It's Eid Day at the end of the month-long fasting and my heart is sore. I think of the Muslims all over the world and I find little comfort.

I think of the Shia-Sunni divide profusely bleeding the ummah every moment. I shudder at the thought that some groups on both sides in Pakistan or elsewhere might not hesitate to shed each others' blood even on this day of joy and festivity. I think of those rulers in the heartland of Islam, Arabia, who would rather cooperate with Israel than endure the thought of Iran surviving and thriving. I cannot forget how this Shia-Sunni divide has been exploited by Islam's common enemies for centuries and has facilitated their conquest and domination of the Muslims, and continues to do so today. On this Eid Day I sit down alone and lament the blindness and the perversion of our hearts that this Shia-Sunni divide has caused.

I think of the plight of the Muslim lands - Palestine, Kashmir, Chechnya, Mindanao, Afghanistan, Pakistan, Iraq, Somalia and Yemen, ravaged by internal strife and humiliated by foreign occupation and domination, the killing fields that these places have become. Killing in the Muslim lands has become an easy sport. I think of the fear, insecurity, misery, humiliation and helplessness of so many of my brothers and sisters, too many to count. I think of the long dark night in their lives with no sign of an approaching morning.

I think of the beleaguered Muslim masses around the world. The Muslim societies in Muslim lands are no longer a unified whole; they are torn up into conflicting segments in which the masses always lose. The ruling elite in these lands have a tenuous connection with Islam and stand as a class apart only to serve themselves. Their insensitivity and heartlessness to those they rule over is mind-numbing. Likewise, Muslims living outside the Muslim world have a precarious existence and are under constant threat. At every step they need to prove themselves as sufficiently human, sufficiently American or European or whatever; they are regarded with suspicion, ridicule and even outright hostility.

I think of my brothers and sisters in so many places of the world in staggering poverty and suffering one natural calamity after another. I see my millions of flood-affected brothers and sisters in Pakistan, mostly poor, pitifully neglected by successive governments and by the rich and powerful in their communities who exploit them but refuse to stand by them in their distress. Where are Muslims who are humble in power and generous in wealth, as Islam teaches? I think of the waste and ostentation that go on all year round, culminating in Ramadan and on the Eid Day, even when neighbours are suffering unspeakably.

I think of the breed of politicians in the Muslim lands who ferociously compete with each other to lead the Muslims. Barring a few exceptions here and there, they range from insane to clownish. They display their talent best in groveling at the feet of their foreign masters while creating division and strife at home. They beg without shame from their foreign masters only to fatten themselves and their cronies. They utterly lack any sense of self-respect and are incapable of behaving in a dignified manner. In their own base interest they mortgage the fate of the millions of their fellow Muslims. They lead only to destroy. I think of the way Muslim rulers in the oil rich states squander their wealth in useless and wasteful projects. I grieve at the inhuman treatment millions of desperate expatriate Muslim workers receive at the hands of many Muslim governments.


I think of the government offices that will open soon after the Eid vacation. I will not speak of the incompetence and corruption in these places. I only shudder to think of the indignity and humiliation an ordinary Muslim is meted out by the people sitting in chairs in these places. An encounter with them is enough to take away one's joy of living.

I miss the loss of community, its integrity and cohesion that Allah (Subhanahu wa ta'ala) and His noble Messenger (Sallallahu alayhi wassallam) repeatedly enjoin on Muslims. Muslims oppress other Muslims without hesitation, inflict pain on each other, make each other's burdens heavier with no feeling of shame or remorse. Muslims go hungry in the midst of plenty and waste, get sick without succor, cry bitterly and in vain for redress and justice. I find Muslims today living side by side without even being aware of each others' existence. We pray together in the masjid, but have no real communion with one another.

I think of the Muslim people split up and caged into national entities, even so much so that at Hajj they are deprived of any opportunity to come close to each other because they are consigned to enclaves by nationality. I smell the air in which the concept of the ummah has been given a foul odor and has become dangerous to breathe in. It has become a crime to think of oneself as an integral part of a unified body of Muslims, universal and timeless.

I miss the ulema who are supposed to be the heirs of our noble Prophet Muhammad (saws) in all the aspects of his life and life's work. I long to see a body of the ulema who understand Islam, live by it, understand their own people and their tradition and know the contemporary world for what it is. I long to see them breaking out of their isolation in their own regional confines and forming a close bond with the ulema in all parts of the Muslim world, sit together and discuss issues and concerns that need to be addressed unitedly and firmly. I long to see them, and them alone, lead the Muslims. Muslim masses are hungry for leadership that does not come. There are many individuals and groups active in Islamic work, but there are not many who present Islam in its entirety, faithfully and truly. It is as if we are engaged in creating an Islam of our own inclinations, as if we are not comfortable with Islam as it is.

I remember what Allah (swt) has called the Muslims, the best ummah raised for mankind (Quran 3:110). Can we make any claim to being the best of anything? This Eid Day will pass and another day will begin, and thus another week, month and year. On this auspicious day we need to examine ourselves and ask what groundwork we have done for that noble role during the month of Ramadan that we have just bidden farewell to.
Read More...