-Caveat Lector-

http://www.khilafah.com/1421/category.php?DocumentID=2335&TagID=2



Innocent Afghans pay for the terrorist attacks in US


PESHAWAR: Wrapped in rags and tied with a cloth strip from chest to legs,
the little baby is fast asleep in his mother's lap near her tent at a
squalid camp a couple of yards off the British era railway track near the
posh Hayatabad Township. Named Jehangir -- means conqueror of the world --
the infant was born seven days ago in a truck which was carrying his
pregnant mother and other family members who were fleeing from Kabul to
Peshawar to save their lives in wake of the threat of US attack on
Afghanistan.

Jehangir spent the first two days of his seven-day life in the truck that
brought his family along with their belongings to Peshawar via Parachinar
on Pak-Afghan border. His family neither had means nor resources to take
him to the doctor for medical check-up during that period. The next five
days were even troublesome. After reaching Peshawar the family members had
to search for some place to settle down. And when they found a vacant plot
in midst of a residential area near Hayatabad town in Peshawar, they had
more pressing things to do. It took sometime for them to erect wooden polls
and casing and stretching cord and sheet to turn it into a place for
shelter. The next challenge staring them in the eye was getting food for
which they had no resources. The easier and immediate solution with the
infant's father was to resort to begging in the local market and bazaars.

It is but natural for both Jehangir and his mother, Pasta Gul, in this
situation to go the background. Both the mother and the child and also the
rest of the four siblings in the family are not getting enough food. They
have no cots in their tents and sleep on a mat on the ground in their about
4x4 metre tent. The rest of the residents are also not in a less precarious
situation.

The settlement that sprouted during the 10 days houses about 100 families
in cloth and sheet tents. The residents mostly belong to Kotah Sangi area
in Kabul. Keeping in view the closure of Torkham border most of them
trekked a long route to cross over to Pakistan via Miranshah and
Parachinar.

Their small quarters are situated adjacent to each other. Their small tents
house not only about eight to 10 persons of the family but also all of
their belongings that they could carry along from Kabul. Old wooden crates
and boxes, dirty bedspreads and quilts, kitchen utensils, a lantern, etc,
are common in these tents beside the humans. Many of the residents have
brought quail in cages and hens and cocks all the way from Kabul.

The small passages between the rows of the tents serve both as kitchen and
washroom. They wash -- which they rarely do -- their clothes and prepare
their food here. Many residents tie their sheep and goats with the tent
pegs and wooden polls in the daytime. They take the cattle inside the tent
in the night to protect them from thieves.

Most of the residents, particularly children, are dressed in extremely
shabby and torn-out clothes. Their skin is seemingly turning pale and their
faces, feet and hands have gathered layers of dirt. The majority has no
footwear. They gaze with empty and uncertain eyes.

There is no bathroom and sanitation system available in the settlement. So
is the case with water both for drinking and washing. The immigrants have
to bring water from the nearby mosque in buckets, etc. Over and above, the
settlement has been established in a residential area without any official
approval and is thus devoid of legal cover. This not only makes them
illegal immigrants but also divests them of any assistance in case of
international aid for refugees. Thus more miseries.

The threat of US attack seems to have catalysed the humanitarian crisis
that was set off by more than 20 years of war and continued drought in
Afghanistan. Strike or no strike, the Afghans are paying for the September
11 terrorist incident in Washington and New York that was presumably
carried out by some Arab nationals. Miseries seem to have learnt the art of
remaining in close liaison with the Afghans. If not how could an
unfortunate incident involving the US and Arabs ended in suffering for the
destitute people of the war-afflicted country.

Source:  The News

------------------------------------------------------------

Uzbeks imprisoned for religious activities

http://www.khilafah.com/1421/category.php?DocumentID=2340&TagID=2

A court in Uzbekistan has sentenced nine people to prison terms of between
nine and 12 years for alleged membership of the outlawed Islamic group,
Hezbut-Tahrir.

The defendants acknowledged they were, or had been, members of the group,
which the Uzbek authorities accuse of recruiting thousands of young Uzbeks
to its cause of setting up a pan-Islamic state, or caliphate.

But the defendants denied they had been involved in anti-constitutional
activities - as the prosecution alleged.

The trial was the latest in a wave of prosecutions in Uzbekistan in the
past two years of Muslims accused of religious activities

Source:  BBC

================================================================
             Kadosh, Kadosh, Kadosh, YHVH, TZEVAOT

   FROM THE DESK OF:

           *Michael Spitzer* <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

  The Best Way To Destroy Enemies Is To Change Them To Friends
================================================================
----- Original Message -----
From: "toni howard" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "acas" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Friday, October 05, 2001 10:04 AM
Subject: CAS: Innocent Afghans pay for the terrorist attacks in US


> I wonder if Osama bin Laden had used just half of his resources and
energy
> for rebuilding Afghanistan instead of developing a terrorist network, at
the
> good he could have done for the country instead of this: ~ Toni
>
>
> Innocent Afghans pay for the terrorist attacks in US
>
> http://www.khilafah.com/1421/category.php?DocumentID=2335&TagID=2
>
> PESHAWAR: Wrapped in rags and tied with a cloth strip from chest to legs,
> the little baby is fast asleep in his mother's lap near her tent at a
> squalid camp a couple of yards off the British era railway track near the
> posh Hayatabad Township. Named Jehangir -- means conqueror of the
world --
> the infant was born seven days ago in a truck which was carrying his
> pregnant mother and other family members who were fleeing from Kabul to
> Peshawar to save their lives in wake of the threat of US attack on
> Afghanistan.
>
> Jehangir spent the first two days of his seven-day life in the truck that
> brought his family along with their belongings to Peshawar via Parachinar
on
> Pak-Afghan border. His family neither had means nor resources to take him
to
> the doctor for medical check-up during that period. The next five days
were
> even troublesome. After reaching Peshawar the family members had to
search
> for some place to settle down. And when they found a vacant plot in midst
of
> a residential area near Hayatabad town in Peshawar, they had more
pressing
> things to do. It took sometime for them to erect wooden polls and casing
and
> stretching cord and sheet to turn it into a place for shelter. The next
> challenge staring them in the eye was getting food for which they had no
> resources. The easier and immediate solution with the infant's father was
to
> resort to begging in the local market and bazaars.
>
> It is but natural for both Jehangir and his mother, Pasta Gul, in this
> situation to go the background. Both the mother and the child and also
the
> rest of the four siblings in the family are not getting enough food. They
> have no cots in their tents and sleep on a mat on the ground in their
about
> 4x4 metre tent. The rest of the residents are also not in a less
precarious
> situation.
>
> The settlement that sprouted during the 10 days houses about 100 families
in
> cloth and sheet tents. The residents mostly belong to Kotah Sangi area in
> Kabul. Keeping in view the closure of Torkham border most of them trekked
a
> long route to cross over to Pakistan via Miranshah and Parachinar.
>
> Their small quarters are situated adjacent to each other. Their small
tents
> house not only about eight to 10 persons of the family but also all of
their
> belongings that they could carry along from Kabul. Old wooden crates and
> boxes, dirty bedspreads and quilts, kitchen utensils, a lantern, etc, are
> common in these tents beside the humans. Many of the residents have
brought
> quail in cages and hens and cocks all the way from Kabul.
>
> The small passages between the rows of the tents serve both as kitchen
and
> washroom. They wash -- which they rarely do -- their clothes and prepare
> their food here. Many residents tie their sheep and goats with the tent
pegs
> and wooden polls in the daytime. They take the cattle inside the tent in
the
> night to protect them from thieves.
>
> Most of the residents, particularly children, are dressed in extremely
> shabby and torn-out clothes. Their skin is seemingly turning pale and
their
> faces, feet and hands have gathered layers of dirt. The majority has no
> footwear. They gaze with empty and uncertain eyes.
>
> There is no bathroom and sanitation system available in the settlement.
So
> is the case with water both for drinking and washing. The immigrants have
to
> bring water from the nearby mosque in buckets, etc. Over and above, the
> settlement has been established in a residential area without any
official
> approval and is thus devoid of legal cover. This not only makes them
illegal
> immigrants but also divests them of any assistance in case of
international
> aid for refugees. Thus more miseries.
>
> The threat of US attack seems to have catalysed the humanitarian crisis
that
> was set off by more than 20 years of war and continued drought in
> Afghanistan. Strike or no strike, the Afghans are paying for the
September
> 11 terrorist incident in Washington and New York that was presumably
carried
> out by some Arab nationals. Miseries seem to have learnt the art of
> remaining in close liaison with the Afghans. If not how could an
unfortunate
> incident involving the US and Arabs ended in suffering for the destitute
> people of the war-afflicted country.
>
> Source:  The News
>
> ------------------------------------------------------------
>
> Uzbeks imprisoned for religious activities
> http://www.khilafah.com/1421/category.php?DocumentID=2340&TagID=2
> A court in Uzbekistan has sentenced nine people to prison terms of
between
> nine and 12 years for alleged membership of the outlawed Islamic group,
Hezb
> ut-Tahrir.
>
> The defendants acknowledged they were, or had been, members of the group,
> which the Uzbek authorities accuse of recruiting thousands of young
Uzbeks
> to its cause of setting up a pan-Islamic state, or caliphate.
>
> But the defendants denied they had been involved in anti-constitutional
> activities - as the prosecution alleged.
>
> The trial was the latest in a wave of prosecutions in Uzbekistan in the
past
> two years of Muslims accused of religious activities
>
> Source:  BBC
> ----------------------------------------------------------------
>
==========================================================================
> This mailing list is for discussion of Clinton Administration Scandals.
If
> you wish to unsubscribe from this mailing list, send electronic mail to
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]  In the message body put: unsubscribe cas

<A HREF="http://www.ctrl.org/";>www.ctrl.org</A>
DECLARATION & DISCLAIMER
==========
CTRL is a discussion & informational exchange list. Proselytizing propagandic
screeds are unwelcomed. Substance—not soap-boxing—please!  These are
sordid matters and 'conspiracy theory'—with its many half-truths, mis-
directions and outright frauds—is used politically by different groups with
major and minor effects spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought.
That being said, CTRLgives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and
always suggests to readers; be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no
credence to Holocaust denial and nazi's need not apply.

Let us please be civil and as always, Caveat Lector.
========================================================================
Archives Available at:
http://peach.ease.lsoft.com/archives/ctrl.html
 <A HREF="http://peach.ease.lsoft.com/archives/ctrl.html";>Archives of
[EMAIL PROTECTED]</A>

http:[EMAIL PROTECTED]/
 <A HREF="http:[EMAIL PROTECTED]/";>ctrl</A>
========================================================================
To subscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SUBSCRIBE CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

To UNsubscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SIGNOFF CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Om

Reply via email to