السبت 20 صفر 1433هـ 
- 14 يناير 2012م

Inilah Ukhuwah Islamiyah itu: orang Islam yang saling berbunuhan..

Syiah membunuhi sunni, sunni membunuhi syiah...dan di Pakistan dan Indonesia 
Ahmadiyah juga dibunuhi orang Islam yang lain...

Islam itu, saya bilang dan saya ulang hanya pantas untuk anjing liar dan 
binatang buas dan sungguh tidak layak untuk manusia..

Dan agama biadab inilah yagn dianut Abbas Amin, Dipo, johny-indon, PAREWA 
PAREWA, rezameutia, Roman Proteus yang sekarang otaknya juga sudah pada rusak 
dan jadi busuk, nista lagi menjiikkan...

--

Violence against pilgrims continues in Iraq as suicide bomber kills 50 in Basra
About 15 million pilgrims will have passed through Karbala by the end of the 
commemorations, braving the threat of deadly violence targeting the Shiite 
community that has killed dozens in recent weeks. (Reuters)     

Al Arabiya with agencies

A suicide bomber disguised as a policeman killed at least 50 people in an 
attack that targeted Shiite Muslim pilgrims passing through a checkpoint in 
Iraq's southern city of Basra on Saturday, police said. "A terrorist wearing a 
police uniform and carrying fake police I.D. managed to reach a police 
checkpoint and blew himself up among police and pilgrims," said a police 
official at the scene of the bombing. Riyadh Abdulamir, head of the health 
department in Basra province, said 50 people were killed and 100 wounded in the 
9:00 am (0600 GMT) attack just west of Basra city. Women and children were 
among the casualties, he said, but did not give further details. The attacker, 
who had been distributing food to pilgrims walking to the Khutwa Imam Ali, a 
site on the outskirts of Basra venerated by believers for its associations with 
one of the key figures of their faith, blew himself up near a police 
checkpoint. Arbaeen has been a frequent target of militants since the U.S.-led 
invasion that ousted Sunni dictator Saddam Hussein. Scores of people have been 
killed in attacks on pilgrims in the last few weeks, including a suicide 
bombing which killed at least 70 people. Many of the attacks on pilgrims have 
used methods such as suicide bombings that are the signature of Iraq's al-Qaeda 
affiliate. Attacks targeting Shiites have also killed dozens of people since 
Shiite Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki's government issued an arrest warrant for 
a Sunni vice president, triggering a political crisis that risks scuttling a 
power-sharing agreement. Attacks had ebbed since the height of sectarian 
slaughter in 2006-2007 when thousands were killed in intercommunal violence 
among Shiite and Sunni. But the withdrawal of the last American troops in 
December has fanned worries of a spike in violence.

Millions throng Karbala

Shiite Muslims from across Iraq and the world thronged the shrine city of 
Karbala on Saturday for the conclusion of Arbaeen mourning rituals amid tight 
security for fear of insurgent attacks.

Officials said some 15 million pilgrims will have passed through Karbala by the 
end of the commemorations, braving the threat of deadly violence targeting the 
Shiite community that has killed dozens in recent weeks.

Arbaeen marks 40 days after the Ashura anniversary commemorating the slaying of 
Imam Hussein, one of Shiite Islam's most revered figures, by the armies of the 
caliph Yazid in 680 AD.

In recent days, waves of mourners have overflowed Hussein's shrine in Karbala, 
demonstrating their guilt and remorse for not defending him by beating their 
heads and chests in rituals of self-flagellation.

"I have been walking for 12 days," said Adil Salim, a devotee from Basra. 
"Despite the threats and the exhaustion, we insist on taking part in these 
commemorations."

"We will never stop, no matter what the terrorists do."

Sad songs blared from loudspeakers throughout the city and black flags 
fluttered alongside pictures of Hussein and his half-brother Imam Abbas, both 
of whom are buried in the city.

Karbala provincial governor Amal al-Din al-Har said he expected that some 15 
million pilgrims will have visited the shrine city in the two weeks running to 
Arbaeen's climax on Saturday.

Included in that figure, he said, were around 200,000 devotees from outside the 
country.

"All services are going smoothly," he told AFP, but noted that the province's 
electricity and transportation networks were overwhelmed by the sheer number of 
pilgrims.

Some 35,000 police officers and soldiers were handling security around the 
city, 110 kilometers (70 miles) south of Baghdad, and eponymous province as 
Shiite pilgrims carried out their traditional walk to Karbala.

High security alert

Iraq's security forces have also deployed 500 policewomen to assist in 
checkpoint searches, as well as sonar detectors and sniffer dogs, according to 
Lieutenant General Othman al-Ghanimi, who commands forces in five provinces 
across central Iraq, of which Karbala is one.

He said they have so far arrested 60 insurgents they alleged were planning 
attacks during the pilgrimage, and defused 14 roadside bombs.

Karbala itself has not suffered any attacks during Arbaeen rituals, but bomb 
attacks nationwide have targeted Iraq's majority Shiite community with assaults 
maiming Baghdad and south Iraq.

The seventh century battle near Karbala is at the heart of the historical 
division between Islam's Sunni and Shiite sects, a split that fuelled sectarian 
violence between Iraq's majority Shiite and smaller Sunni population since the 
2003 U.S.-led invasion.

Shiite pilgrims visiting Karbala are regularly targeted in attacks by Sunni 
extremists.

This year is the first time Iraqi troops have been solely charged with security 
for Arbaeen since the U.S.-led invasion of 2003. American troops, who 
previously helped with surveillance and reconnaissance, completed their 
withdrawal from Iraq last month.

Now-executed dictator Saddam Hussein's Sunni-dominated regime barred the vast 
majority of Ashura and Arbaeen commemorations.

Shiites make up around 15 percent of Muslims worldwide. They represent the 
majority populations in Iraq, Iran and Bahrain and form significant communities 
in Afghanistan, Lebanon, Pakistan, India and Saudi Arabia.

جميع الحقوق 
محفوظة لقناة 
العربية © 2010




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