Bukalah link di bawah ini dan saksikan berita serta videonya.Inilah wajah asli 
Islam. Ga ada kepalsuan.Bangkitlah dunia.. Lihatlah. Dan Sadarlah.Musuh 
peradaban dunia ada di depanmu!


 
  
   
  
  
  http://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-4321181,00.html

  Jihadi
  leader to Christians: Convert to Islam or die
  
 


 

Syria resident Ahmad Al
Baghdadi Al Hassani's comments seem to indicate growing anti-Christian
sentiment in Muslim world

jn1.tv


 
  
  
   
    
    Published: 
    
    
    12.18.12,
    01:12 / Israel News
    
   
  
  
 


 

VIDEO - Jihadi leader Ahmad Al Baghdadi Al Hassani referred to Christians as
polytheists and "friends of the Zionists."

 

In a recent Egyptian TV address, the extremist
leader stressed that Christians must choose "Islam
or death," while their women and daughters may legitimately be regarded as
wives of Muslims.

 

Related
articles:


 Analysis: Jihadists'
     goal - Israel-Egypt war
 Salafist leader: First we take Damascus, then Tel Aviv 


 

Al Hassani
resides in Syria and supports the armed opposition.
--------------------------------------------------------
Bukan Pedanda <bukan.peda...@yahoo.com> 

: Bukan Pedanda <bukan.peda...@yahoo.com>
 [proletar] al- arabiya.. Sunni-Shiite rift on Syria risks regional chaos:
role...@yahoogroups.com" <proletar@yahoogroups.com>

















 



  


    
      
      
        * Dan masih saja banyak orang Indonesia yang memeluk agama najis yang 
dari mula sejarahnya tidak henti-hentinya menjadikan dar al Islam itu neraka 
bagi orang Islam sendiri..

        * Sekali lagi:  yang kudu diturutkan itu adalah para kafir yang sibuk 
menjadikan dar al Kufr menjadi dar al Aman.



Last Update: Monday, 10 June 2013 KSA 13:23 - GMT 10:23

Sunni-Shiite rift on Syria risks regional chaos



Monday, 10 June 2013

 The Iran-backed Shiite movement Hezbollah has openly said it is 

fighting alongside President Bashar al-Assad’s forces. (File photo: AFP) 

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        * 



AFP, Dubai

The foray into Syria’s civil war by Lebanon’s Hezbollah has fuelled a 
Sunni-Shiite polarization that threatens to feed extremism on both 

sides and export the conflict to the wider region, analysts warn.



The Iran-backed Shiite movement has openly said it is fighting 

alongside President Bashar al-Assad’s forces, while Shiite Iraqi 

fighters are also reported to be in Syria, supporting the regime against

 the mostly-Sunni rebels.



These interventions have prompted calls for a united Sunni stance against the 
Shiite groups involved, particularly Hezbollah.



Sunni-dominated Saudi Arabia’s top cleric Abdulaziz al-Shaikh has urged

 governments to punish the “repulsive sectarian group” while Qatar-based

 Sunni cleric Yusuf al-Qaradawi called on Sunnis to join the rebels.



George Sabra, interim head of the opposition Syrian National Coalition,

 charged Hezbollah, along with majority-Shiite Iraq and Iran, of pushing

 the situation towards a “sectarian conflict.”



“What we are 

fearing now is that the whole region could drown in a sectarian-fuelled 

conflict which in effect is a series of civil wars including Lebanon, 

Iraq, and of course Syria itself,” says Salman Shaikh, director of the 

Brookings Doha Centre.



Fighters from Shiite Hezbollah openly 

spearheaded a 17-day assault on the Syrian town of Qusayr near the 

Lebanese border which culminated on Wednesday with its recapture from 

the rebels by pro-government forces.



The battle for Qusayr further stoked the already-simmering sectarian tension 
across the region, the analysts say. 



Assad's regime is dominated by members of the Alawite minority, an 

offshoot of Shiite Islam, while Sunnis make up the majority in Syria and

 the Muslim world.



Hezbollah’s “association with the conflict 

on sectarian lines is creating tensions in Lebanon and in the wider Arab

 world,” says Shaikh.

The Iraqi storm

Iraqi Prime 

Minister Nuri al-Maliki, whose Shiite government is facing a wide 

Sunni-led opposition, warned Sunday of “a storm passing through the 

region. It is a brutal sectarian storm.”



Funerals were held in Iraq last month for men killed in Syria fighting 
alongside Assad’s forces. 



Emirati political science professor Abdulkhaleq Abdulla says that “the 

sectarian line-up has recently reached worrying levels.” 



Although a historical conflict, the Sunni-Shiite divide is “now 

different... because it has become based more on a political background 

than a religious one,” says Abdulla.



Saudi Arabia, home to 

Islam’s holiest sites, is seen the regional power protecting Sunnis 

while Iran has become a reference for all Shiites, he says.



Lebanese columnist Hazem Sagheye sees that the Syrian crisis “has morphed into 
a cross-border Sunni-Shiite line-up.”



He argues that Damascus can stir trouble in surrounding countries through 
“holding cards” - groups loyal to Assad’s regime. 



Lebanon officially adopted a position of neutrality towards Syria’s 

conflict but its people are sharply divided with Shiites mostly backing 

Assad while most of the Sunnis support the rebellion.



Fighters from both sects have joined the battle on opposite sides.



This division is clearly reflected in frequent deadly clashes in 

Lebanon’s second-largest city, Tripoli, between Sunni and Alawite 

gunmen. The army warned on Friday of a plot to embroil Lebanon in the 

26-month Syrian conflict.



And while Sunni figures roundly 

condemned Hezbollah's involvement, news of the fall of Qusayr sparked 

celebrations in Lebanon's Shiite districts.

Reaction from the Gulf

Reaction also came from the Gulf kingdom of Bahrain - the scene of unrest 

between a Shiite opposition and the Sunni monarchy - with the Shiite 

Unitary National Democratic Assembly issuing a congratulatory statement.



“What is scary is that the rise in sectarianism could once more ignite 

Al-Qaeda and extremism, posing a danger to the region,” says prominent 

Saudi columnist Tariq Alhomayed.



And a decades-long standoff 

between Iran and Saudi Arabia appears now to be playing out by proxy in 

Syria, Yemen, Bahrain and Lebanon, where the rivals are supporting 

opposing political strands.



The Syrian opposition recently 

charged that the battle in their country has even attracted Shiite Zaidi

 rebels from Yemen to join the fight alongside Assad’s troops. Zaidis 

have denied the claims. 



But while Shiite armed groups fighting

 in Syria are openly backed by Iran, Sunni Islamist fighters trickle 

into Syria as individuals and mostly against the wish of their own 

states.



Saudi Arabia has repeatedly warned its citizens against taking part in the 
conflict.



Damascus’ brutal repression of protests, in addition to Iran’s full 

support to Assad and Hezbollah’s intervention, have “emphasized the 

Sunni character of the other side,” says Sagheye.



With the 

stirring of sectarian sentiment across the region and the mushrooming of

 armed extremist Sunni and Shiite groups, the region risks “a collapse 

of the concept of the state, with every group having its own media 

outlets and militias,” warns Alhomayed.



“We are moving closer towards chaos in the Arab world.”



[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]





    
     

    
    






  










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