Akui saja kalau anda benci (minimal tidak suka) yang ada mengandung istilah
'arab', palestina
atau dunia islam.. Sehingga kalau kejahatan terhadap yang anda benci/tidak
suka, anda tutup
mata.. Jangan melebarkan bahasan agar yang lain harus menjadi loper koran
seperti anda..

-- 
Wassalam,

Irwan.K
"Better team works could lead us to better results"
http://irwank.blogspot.com
fb/twitter/skype: irwank2k2

2010/6/1 sunny <am...@tele2.se>

>
>
> Anda hanya mau terima gampang harus tahu diri, tetapi kalau Anda mau turut
> menyumbang tenaga harus juga menyampaikan, bukankah begitu?
>
> Saya tidak berkewajiban!
>
> Jadi cari dan sampaikan, jangan hanya mengerutu..
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: Ary Setijadi Prihatmanto
> To: wanita-muslimah@yahoogroups.com <wanita-muslimah%40yahoogroups.com>
> Sent: Tuesday, June 01, 2010 10:38 AM
> Subject: Re: [wanita-muslimah] The US talks to us, claims leader of Hamas
> movement
>
> karena saya bukan tukang koran seperti Oom...
> saya tidak pernah kirim2 berita...
>
> kalo tukang korannya main politik, ngirim atau gak tergantung kepentingan
> dan siapa yang dibela,
> dimana integritasnya sebagai tukang koran? apa pelanggan hanya mau digiring
> sesuai keinginan tukang koran?
>
> kadang-kadang tukang koran juga harus introspeksi.
> jangan-jangan hanya teriak judulnya supaya laku, tapi gak pernah baca
> korannya...
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: sunny
> To: wanita-muslimah@yahoogroups.com <wanita-muslimah%40yahoogroups.com>
> Sent: Tuesday, June 01, 2010 1:12 PM
> Subject: Re: [wanita-muslimah] The US talks to us, claims leader of Hamas
> movement
>
> Tidak ada yang melarang Anda untuk turut mengirim.
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: Ary Setijadi Prihatmanto
> To: wanita-muslimah@yahoogroups.com <wanita-muslimah%40yahoogroups.com>
> Sent: Tuesday, June 01, 2010 12:13 AM
> Subject: Re: [wanita-muslimah] The US talks to us, claims leader of Hamas
> movement
>
> Oom Ambon,
> mana berita penyerangan Israel ke konvoy bantuan kemanusiaan untuk Gaza?
>
> Turut berduka cita untuk seluruh korban.
> :-((
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: sunny
> To: Undisclosed-Recipient:;
> Sent: Tuesday, June 01, 2010 2:29 AM
> Subject: [wanita-muslimah] The US talks to us, claims leader of Hamas
> movement
>
>
> http://www.smh.com.au/world/the-us-talks-to-us-claims-leader-of-hamas-movement-20100531-wrh8.html
>
> The US talks to us, claims leader of Hamas movement
> DAVID HEARST
> June 1, 2010
> DAMASCUS: The United States is sending a succession of envoys to engage
> with Hamas but lacks the bravery to talk to the Islamist movement openly,
> its leader, Khaled Meshal, says.
>
> Mr Meshal praised the Russian President, Dmitry Medvedev, for meeting him
> in Damascus and the Syrian President, Bashar al-Assad, for hosting the
> discussion 10 days ago.
>
> He told Mr Medvedev that the US was also talking to him.
>
> ''I . told him the Americans contact us, but are not brave enough to do so
> openly. I am confident that in the very near future, everyone will realise
> that they will have to deal with Hamas.''
>
> The claim that the US is engaging with a group it lists as a terrorist
> organisation will upset the Palestinian President, Mahmoud Abbas, whose
> forces have locked up and allegedly tortured Hamas members.
>
> But four years into Israel's blockade of Gaza, the revelation could be seen
> as a sign that cracks are opening in the western consensus that Hamas should
> remain isolated.
>
> Russia is a member of the Middle East Quartet, which demands recognition of
> Israel as a precondition to a seat at the negotiating table.
>
> Hamas says that recognising Israel was one of Fatah's biggest mistakes and
> resulted in 17 years of fruitless negotiation.
>
> Mr Meshal said the tectonic plates in the Middle East were shifting. Iran,
> Turkey and Syria were emerging as regional powers and Egypt was in the
> throes of a battle for succession that would paralyse it as a regional
> player. As a result, Israel was losing its power to impose conditions on a
> weakened Palestinian leadership in Ramallah.
>
> As it felt its power ebbing, Israel needed a war but was crippled by
> self-doubt. Mr Meshal claimed the attacks on Hezbollah in Lebanon in 2006
> and against Hamas in Gaza in 2009 had strengthened both organisations.
>
> ''Israel is conducting exercises threatening Hamas, Hezbollah and Syria. It
> needs a war, but choosing the front to fight on will not be a picnic and
> this reflects the crisis in Israel. It does not want peace, but the option
> of war is not easy for it,'' he said.
>
> ''A war in Gaza might appear the easy option. But that would be an
> illusion, not because we have adequate weapons, but because Israel this time
> would be fighting against a people with nothing to lose. Gaza is small in
> size but it has become a large symbol for the rest of the world.''
>
> The US President, Barack Obama, had made a brave speech in Cairo but within
> months had retreated and his officials had vetoed efforts to seek agreement
> between Fatah and Hamas on a unity government.
>
> Citing Fatah sources, he claimed George Mitchell, the US negotiator, had
> told the Palestinian Authority and Egypt that the US would cut off aid to
> the authority if it formed a unity government with Hamas and other militant
> Palestinian factions.
>
> ''Mahmoud Abbas is better for America's purpose without [Palestinian]
> reconciliation, because he is weak and a deal with Hamas would strengthen
> the Palestinian position in the negotiation.
>
> ''America prefers a weak Palestinian negotiating party, because it believes
> this is the best chance for a deal with an intransigent [Israeli Prime
> Minister, Benjamin] Netanyahu.''
>
> Hamas claims that nine or 10 of the 22 members of the Arab League back its
> formula for a unity government, not least Saudi Arabia, a country still
> thought to be furious with Hamas about its takeover of Gaza in 2007, which
> tore up an agreement with Fatah.
>
> Mr Meshal said that before the last Arab League summit in Libya, the Saudi
> Foreign Minister, Saud al-Faisal, had taken a Hamas document to Egypt that
> called for the creation of a Palestinian leadership representative of all
> factions, a high security council to reform Gaza security forces and a
> committee to organise elections. Palestinians outside the occupied
> territories could also vote.
>
> The Egyptians came back with three additions: that the new government
> recognise a two-state solution, the borders of 1967 and the Arab Peace
> Initiative. Mr Meshal said these demands were tantamount to a recognition of
> Israel.
>
> ''What Mahmoud Abbas is seeking is to restore his authority over Gaza and
> to draw Hamas into an electoral process in conditions in which it would
> lose.. Egypt's position is a real obstacle, too.''
>
> Guardian News & Media
>


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