Saturday, December 31, 2005

أسعد الله أياكم والبسكم ثوب العافية وحقق امالكم فى طاعته بأذنه الواحد الأحد. وخير دعوانا هوالحمد لله والصلاة والسلام على سيد الخلق الحبيب المصطفى
May the New Year bring you happiness, health & good fortune.


There could be a new job for me in the future, as a Wal-Mart Greeter. Picture taken at Wal-Mart's in Lampasas, TX. Posted by Picasa

Thursday, December 29, 2005

Oops, I did it - but not again

My niece has put me to shame a few minutes ago. Reason?, I forgot her birthday yesterday. Sorry, R. Happy Birthday.

The National Security Agency's Internet site has been placing files on visitors' computers that can track their Web surfing activity despite strict federal rules banning most files of that type. (NYT)

Women (in the US) narrow the Internet gender gap. (WP)

Two editorials today about Mubarak's democracy. NYT editorial titled "Hosni Mubarak's Democracy" and WP editorial titled "Stand Up t Mr. Mubarak".

The number of Guantanamo Bay prisoners taking part in a nearly 5-month-old hunger strike has surged to 84 since Christmas Day, the U.S. military said today. (AFP)

Austria marks Mozart's 250th birthday. (AFP)

PS: It took me a long while to realize that the music used in Saudi TV news broadcasts is his 40th Symphony.

Iraq's Deputy Justice Minister tells BBC "Iraq incapable of running jails" (BBC)

State of Bavaria shuts the Islamic Center "Muslim Kultur Haus" in Neu Ulm (DW)

10 greatest gadget ideas of the year 2005 (NYT)

توفت الى رحمة الله خالتى خيرية وأبن عمتى مجدى. رحمهم الله، ونور قبورهم، وبيض وجوههم ويمن كتابهم وجعل الفردوس جنتهم. ورحم الله امواتنا جميعا. انه سميع مجيب الدعاء

Wednesday, December 28, 2005

يقول صاحبى عن: أقباط المهجر

استضاف برنامج حوار على القناة الأولى، يوم الأحد 25/12/2005 ، مجموعة ممن وصفهم بأقباط المهجر. ومساء الأثنين استضاف برنامج دردشه على القناة الثانيه نفس المجموعه مضافا اليهم رجل اعمال. وجمع بين محاور الأولى ومحاور الثانية، عدم القدرة على الاصغاء. وبالتالى حتمية الخروج عن الموضوعيه. وبدا الفارق فى التجهم القهرى (شبه العدوانى) للأول ، والأستظراف (شبه العدوانى أيضا) للآخر. وأصر محاور الأولى على الالحاح فى سؤال الضيوف عما فعلوا "لمساعدة مصر" ، واصر محاور الثانيه على طرح نفس السؤال، لكن بالحاح قاتل اكبر ... أنهى به الحلقه مكررا طلب "الفلوس" بغير حياء
ولم يدلنا أى من المحاورين عمن فوضهما فى التسول نيابة عن "مصر"، من أى مصدر كان. فأن كان ابنا ثريا فمصر هى صاحبة الفضل والمنة (بعد الرزاق العليم)، وان كان متعطفا أجنبيا فمصر بفضل الله هى الأغنى. لكن علينا أن نفرق بين مصر الحقيقية (الأم، الموارد) ومصر "الفالصو"، ومن الواضح أن تسول المحاورين كان بأسم مصر الفاصو (الأبناء) وليس أبدا بأسم مصرنا الأم (الأرض والنهر والتاريخ) التى هى بلا ريب من أغنى بلاد الدنيا. ولا يمكن أن يقال هذا أبدا عن مصرهم التى يتسولون لها (ولأنفسهم ضمنا)، مصر الأمه والدولة، فهى حقا من أفقر أمم ودول الدنيا. ويمكن للجدل حول "من السبب فى الفقر" ألا ينتهى، تماما مثل قضية "البيضه والكتكوت". فهل الدولة هى التى أفقرت الأمه أم أن فقر
الدولة هو جريرة وخطيئة الأمة؟ ! وتاتى القرائن والشواهد، بغير حصر، لتضع الأثم على الدولة
ولأن اعظم الفقر انما اساسا فقر فى الفكر، تبقى الرؤية مشوشة. وهى مشوشه لأنها تتركز على الذات، متناهية القصر.ويعرف هذا جيدا من يحاول ان يقرا نصا مكتوبا، ملاصقا للوجه، وهكذا ترصد الظواهر بمعزل عن المحيط. والضيوف الكرام (المخلصون الملتزمون المتعقلون) لم يختلفوا عن أولئك الآخرين (المارقين) الا فى لون أداة الرصد (النظارة، وأن كانت بنبى أم معتمة)، فاختلفت بالتالى طبيعة التفاعل، بين الاعتدال والتطرف. فالفريقان لا يرصدان الا الظلم الواقع على فئة يرتبطون بها عقائديا، مرجعين الاستهداف بالظلم الى اختلاف العقيدة الدينية. وتجاهلوا من خلال هذه القراءة اللصيقة، مثلا، حقيقة أن المرأة فى مصر تخضع لظلم فاضح أكبر وأعظم وأشرس وأفدح، رغم أنها تمثل احصائيا نحو نصف المجتمع، وليست مجرد أقلية محدودة. والظلم بالطبع، مثل العدل تماما، لا يتجزأ : فمن ظلم نفسا كأنما ظلم الناس جميعا ومن أنصف نفسا فكأنما أنصف الناس جميعا. ويشهد الواقع الاحصائى، مثلا، بأن الاناث اكثر تفوقا فى الدراسة من الذكور، وكما لاحظ محاور القناة الثانية وهو يذيع مراسم الاحتفال بعيد العلم منذ ايام قلائل، فأن نسبتهن بين اوائل الخريجين فى الجامعات أعلى بكثير. وبالمنطق هن، لذلك، أولى وأحق بالتمييز فى المناصب العليا وفى القيادة والريادة. وبخلاف الظلم البين الواقع على المرأة، ليس صحيحا بالمرة أن المسيحيين المصريين هم وحدهم المستبعدون من المناصب العليا فى الدولة، فهناك ألوف المسلمين الأعلى كفاءة والأطهر يدا، ممن تبقى فرصهم فى الانصاف معدومة: لأنهم ليسوا من المقربين أو المحاسييب أو المتملقين المسبحين بحمد المهيمينين على الأمور فى البلاد
ومن الطبيعى أن توقع الرؤية الذاتية صاحبها فى ظلم الاخرين من المستضعفين، وهذا بالتمام ما وقع فيه أحد ضيوف
برنامج القناة الثانية، حيث أقحم أسم "الاخوان المسلمين" فى الحوار، كمثال للتطرف المقابل. وهذا حكم بالغ الجور، ليس فقط لأنه معمم، وأنما لوضوح أعتماد الضيف الكريم على الشائعات دون التعامل مباشرة مح ضحية ظلمها. وللأسف، هناك غرس فى نفوس المسيحيين المصريين كره "الاخوان المسلمين" بالذات ظلما وبغيا وعدوانا. ولأن قداسة البابا تعامل مع "الاخوان المسلمين" ويعرفهم جيدا على حقيقتهم، فلعل قداسته لا يبخل على العدل بشهادة حق .. يلقى قداسته بها وجه ربه
بقلم: ف ع أ

Having problems with Arabic in Windows? Here is an excellent article by al-Hussein N. Madhany of the University of Chicago. One day, I will succeed in getting my system to work.
(Link)

Myanmar (Burma) moves its capital from Rangoon to Pyinmana. The Foreign Ministry notified foreign diplomats that the capital had left town. Adding "You can communicate with the Myanmar government by letter. If you have an urgent matter, you can send a letter by fax," (WP)

نشرت الأذاعه البريطانيه أمس خبر انعقاد الأجتماع الأول للبرلمان العربى. ويتألف البرلمان من 88 عضو يمثلون 22 دولة عربيه، لكنه لا يتمتع بصلاحيات تشريعيه. ووصف الرئيس مبارك البرلمان بأنه خطوة رائده. وكان أول قرار أتخذه البرلمان هو حظر التدخين داخل الجلسه, وقد تم تمريره بالأجماع
وسوف يمر الوقت وفى المقر الدائم سيعلقون "وأمرهم شورى بينهم" لأن هذا فى كل مجالسهم. وربما كانت هذه هى المرة الأخيره لقرار أجماعى. ولو كان طيب الذكر محمد عبد الوهاب على قيد الحياة للحن أنشودة على غرار وطنى حبيبى. وأقول و أنا اضحك، لأن شرها ما يضحك. أقول وهل محصلة الأصفار ألا صفر
وأتذكر قول الحبيب المصطفى عليه أفضل الصلاة والتسليم : يوشك أن تداعى عليكم الأمم من كل أفق كما تداعى الأكلة على قصعتها ، قال : قلنا : يا رسول الله ، أمن قلة بنا يومئذ ؟ قال : أنتم يومئذ كثير و لكن تكونون غثاء كغثاء السيل ، تنتزع المهابة من قلوب عدوكم ، و يجعل في قلوبكم الوهن ، قال : قلنا : و ما الوهن ؟ قال : حب الحياة ، و كراهية الموت

Tuesday, December 27, 2005

The Face and Voice of Civilian Sacrifice in Iraq

"To these Iraqis, the debate over whether the war has been just or unjust, whether the blame lies with Saddam Hussein, or the Americans, or the insurgents, is a distant thing, carrying no promise of relief from their pain. Their faces, like their words, speak of what they have lost, but also, mutely, of their struggle to find new meaning in their lives, to fill the void that war's impact on noncombatants has always made of hope." From an article by John Burns in the NY Times

UK history teachers asked to move beyond Hitler. And now for something completely different.(Deutsche Welle)

Is US image problem in the Middle east rooted in history or media? While President Bush attributes the problems to the media, Ramzy Baroud claims that "the Arab & Muslim nations' disdain for the Bush administration is a natural human response to colonization, military oppression, and the degrading regimes they bring about. (Link)

The Falafel Club


Or at least 2/3 of the FC. The club meets every Mon., except for holidays. Meeting place Droubi's in the tunnel. New members not welcomed. Posted by Picasa

Sunday, December 25, 2005

Christmas 2005


In Lampasas for Christmas with four generations of the Mullins, Blunk & Nichols families. Gracious hostess, excellent company and as usual lots of good stuff to eat. Posted by Picasa

Tuesday, December 20, 2005

صوره من صديق



شكرا للصديق أ ب

 Posted by Picasa

Bizarre: Indonesia pilot jailed for murder

An Indonesian court has sentenced an off-duty airline pilot to 14 years' jail for murdering a rights activist. The court said Pollycarpus Priyanto poisoned a glass of orange juice served to Munir Thalib during a flight to Amsterdam last September. (BBC)

Legalized Euthanasia

Leading Swiss hospitals say they are considering whether to allow assisted suicide to take place within their walls. (SwissInfo)

Samih Sawiris

A wealthy Egyptian businessman has announced plans to build a luxury resort in Andermatt, which could rescue the economically depressed village. (SwissInfo)

From FactCheck.org : Do We Torture?

The President says "We do not torture." We look at what has surfaced so far.
December 19, 2005

Summary

President Bush has declared repeatedly, “we do not torture.” But claims of prisoner abuse continue to surface, Amnesty International has declared the US detention center in Cuba to be "a gulag," and the administration has yet to deny a news report that it holds scores of suspects in secret CIA prisons overseas.
Much of what goes on is classified, so we can't judge how accurately the President describes what is actually happening in US interrogation centers. But in this article we do present a summary of what has been said, and what has come to light so far.
Analysis

The President said at a press conference on November 29, 2005:
Bush : The United States of America does not torture. And that's important for people around the world to understand.
That unequivocal response is typical of all his public comments regarding torture. However, the actual record is more complicated.
Here we give a brief history of some key events in the evolution of recent US policy and practice regarding torture.

"The Dark Side"

Five days after the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001, Vice President Cheney said the US would need to operate on the "dark side" and "use any means at our disposal" to combat terrorism. In an interview with NBC's Tim Russert on September 16, 2001, Cheney said:
Cheney: We also have to work, though, sort of the dark side , if you will. We've got to spend time in the shadows in the intelligence world. A lot of what needs to be done here will have to be done quietly, without any discussion, using sources and methods that are available to our intelligence agencies, if we're going to be successful. That's the world these folks operate in, and so it's going to be vital for us to use any means at our disposal, basically, to achieve our objective.

"Enemy Combatants"

Within months of that interview, Bush issued a Presidential Order February 7, 2002 which stated that members of al Qaeda were not considered prisoners of war but were "enemy combatants" instead. As such they were not entitled to the Geneva Convention's prohibition on torture, which it defines as "any act by which severe pain or suffering, whether physical or mental, is intentionally inflicted on a person."
Meanwhile, some legal experts within the administration were arguing that the US interrogators might legally inflict pain short of "an extreme level," defined in graphic terms. A memo sent from the Justice Department to then-White House Counsel Alberto Gonzales on August 1, 2002 – which became known as the "Gonzales memo" because he requested it – laid out a permissive standard:
"Gonzales memo": We conclude that for an act to constitute torture . . . it must inflict pain that is difficult to endure. Physical pain amounting to torture must be equivalent in intensity to the pain accompanying severe physical injury, such as organ failure, impairment of bodily function, or even death .
The same memo went on to argue that US anti-torture law would not apply at all to interrogations of "enemy combatants" if ordered by the President in time of war, saying that the law "would be unconstitutional if it impermissibly encroached on the President's power to conduct a military campaign." It continued:
"Gonzales memo": As Commander-in-Chief, the President has the constitutional authority to order interrogations of enemy combatants to gain intelligence information concerning military plans of the enemy. The demands of the Commander-in-Chief power are especially pronounced in the middle of a war in which the nation has already suffered a direct attack. In such a case, the information gained from interrogations may prevent future attacks by foreign enemies. Any effort to apply [the law against torture] in a manner that interferes with the President's direction of such core war matters as the detention and interrogation of enemy combatants thus would be unconstitutional.
That memo, which seemed to argue that the President could legally order torture, caused a public outcry when it became public in 2004. The Justice Department then quickly withdrew it, and Gonzales publicly dismissed it as “abstract legal theory.” The Justice Department then issued a new memo in December 2004 which argued that inflicting "severe" pain would be illegal under the anti-torture law, in contrast to "extreme" pain as stated in the Gonzalez memo. But the new memo pointedly did not discuss whether or not the Constitution permits the President to order torture in time of war, saying any such discussion was "unnecessary." It added, "Consideration of the bounds of any such authority would be inconsistent with the President's unequivocal directive that United States personnel not engage in torture."

Abu Ghraib

The Gonzales memo surfaced just as the public began to learn of what happened at Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq. Later, Maj. Gen. Antonio Taguba investigated. His report on March, 2004, confirmed that prisoners had been abused at Abu Ghraib prison from August 2003 through February 2004. The report included the following list of abuses that he uncovered:
Taguba Report, March 2004: Breaking chemical lights and pouring the phosphoric liquid on detainees; Threatening detainees with a charged 9mm pistol; Pouring cold water on naked detainees; beating detainees with a broom handle and a chair; threatening male detainees with rape; allowing a military police guard to stitch the wound of a detainee who was injured after being slammed against the wall in his cell; sodomizing a detainee with a chemical light and perhaps a broom stick; using military working dogs to frighten and intimidate detainees with threats of attack, and in one instance actually biting a detainee.
Former Army Reserve Spc. Charles Graner, Jr. later testified in military court, "I nearly beat an MI [Military Intelligence] detainee to death with MI there" while he was at Abu Ghraib. Graner himself was sentenced to ten years in prison for his involvement. He testified at the sentencing hearing of former Pfc. Lynndie England in September 2005.
A total of nine enlisted service members were convicted at court-martial or plead guilty to charges of prisoner abuse, and were discharged from the Army. Eight of the nine were given prison terms that ranged from six month to Graner's 10-year term. In addition, Army Reserve Brigadier General Janis Karpinski was demoted to the rank of Colonel and subsequently retired.
The CIA has said publicly that it is conducting its own investigations and holding its people accountable, but as of December 2005 no member of the US intelligence community has been publicly tried or accused of involvement in the abuses at Abu Ghraib.

Allegations of Torture and Abuse

Detention centers at Guantلnamo Bay, Cuba have been the subject of torture allegations. Perhaps the most credible are in several files from the FBI which were declassified in December 2004. A letter sent from the Counterterrorism Center of the FBI to the Army described separate incidents reported by FBI agents who monitored Guantلnamo interrogations. The letter said one FBI agent watched on a TV monitor as a female interrogator questioned a handcuffed and shackled detainee who "on more than one occasion . . . appeared to be grimacing in pain." The FBI agent said a Marine – who was in the room and could see more clearly – later told him that the interrogator had "grabbed the detainee's thumbs and bent them backwards . . . she had also grabbed his genitals."
The FBI letter continued:
FBI Letter: The Marine also implied that her (the interrogator's) treatment of that detainee was less harsh than her treatment of others by indicating that he had seen her treatment of others result in detainees curling into a fetal position on the floor and crying in pain .

"Gulag of our times?"

An Amnesty International report released in May 2005 listed dozens of allegations of torture or abuse of prisoners by the US. The sources were various – including news reports, interviews conducted by Amnesty International with former prisoners, and notes taken by lawyers representing prisoners. These alleged incidents include punching, stomping, beatings with blunt objects, exposure to extreme cold weather for extended periods of time, stripping prisoners naked, sexual assaults, and sexual taunting in violation of Islamic customs. The report stopped short of accusing the US of ordering that prisoners be tortured, but said:
Amnesty International Report, May 2005: Amnesty International concludes that hypocrisy, an overarching war mentality, and a disregard for basic human rights principles and international legal obligations continue to mark the USA’s “war on terror”.
And in a forward to the report, Amnesty said, "The detention facility at Guantلnamo Bay has become the gulag of our times. "
That "gulag" remark especially angered Bush, who called the Amnesty report "absurd" and said it was based on claims by "people who hate America:"
Bush, May 31, 2005: I'm aware of the Amnesty International report, and it's absurd. It's an absurd allegation. The United States is a country that is -- promotes freedom around the world. When there's accusations made about certain actions by our people, they're fully investigated in a transparent way. It's just an absurd allegation.
In terms of the detainees, we've had thousands of people detained. We've investigated every single complaint against the detainees. It seemed like to me they based some of their decisions on the word of -- and the allegations -- by people who were held in detention, people who hate America, people that had been trained in some instances to disassemble (sic) -- that means not tell the truth. And so it was an absurd report. It just is.

Secret Prisons?

On Nov. 2, 2005, Dana Priest of The Washington Post reported that a secret prison system run by the CIA and spread throughout Eastern Europe, Thailand, Afghanistan and Guantلnamo Bay was holding suspected terrorists. The article reported that detainees who had been released from the secret prisons alleged that they were tortured, although whether that was by CIA personnel or others was not clear.
The Post said secret facilities in a total of eight countries had been used to detain more than 100 suspected terrorists. Roughly 30 of those are considered “major terrorism suspects” and more than 70 were described as “less important” with indirect ties to terrorism.
The State Department, CIA and White House would neither confirm nor deny the existence of the secret prisons. On Nov 8 Republican leaders in Congress demanded to an investigation of how the story got out. Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist, R-TN, and Speaker of the House J. Dennis Hastert sent a letter to the House and Senate Intelligence Committee chairmen saying:
Frist and Hastert Letter: As you know, if accurate, such an egregious disclosure could have long-term and far-reaching damaging and dangerous consequences, and will imperil our efforts to protect the American people and our homeland from terrorist attacks.

Renditions

The Post article raised new questions about the practice of “extraordinary rendition” – a process whereby the CIA or other U.S. government agencies may seize foreign nationals suspected of involvement in terrorism and ship them to detention centers for interrogation. Such centers may be in the US or overseas, including nations known for torturing their prisoners.
The practice was initiated and employed before the "war on terror" was touched off by the events of September 11, 2001. Presidential Decision Directives 39 and 62, written during the Clinton Administration, discuss rendition as a means to combat terrorism. The precise limits of the Clinton policy are not entirely clear: directive 39 states that all activities must be consistent with the procedures outlined in National Security Directive 77, but that document, issued by Bush's father when he was President, remains classified.
A chilling description of "rendition" surfaced in January, 2005 when the allegations of a German national, Khaled El-Masri, were reported in the British paper The Guardian . In December 2005, El-Masri filed a lawsuit against former CIA Director George Tenet in U.S. District Court. El-Masri said he was the victim of “inhumane conditions and coercive interrogation” when he was kidnapped by seven or eight men wearing black ski masks while he was on holiday in Macedonia, then flown to Afghanistan where he was detained in secret for months. El-Masri's legal brief states in part:
El-Masri allegation: He was beaten severely from all sides with fists and what felt like a thick stick. His clothes were sliced from his body with scissors or a knife, . . . his underwear was forcibly removed. He heard the sound of pictures being taken. He was thrown to the floor. His hands were pulled back and a boot was placed on his back. He then felt a firm object being forced into his anus.
. . . One of the men placed him in a diaper . . . [He] was marched to a waiting plane, with the shackles cutting into his ankles. Once inside, he was thrown to the floor face down and his legs and arms were spread-eagled and secured to the sides of the plane. He felt an injection in his shoulder, and became lightheaded. He felt a second injection that rendered him unconscious.
El-Masri claims to have been held in Afghanistan “in a single-person cell, with no reading or writing materials, and without once being permitted outside to breathe fresh air, for more than four months.” He was reminded that he was “in a country with no laws, and that no one knew where he was.” He lost 60 pounds as the result of a 37 day hunger strike he undertook after his requests for release, the chance to meet with an attorney, or for charges to be brought against him were continually ignored. He claims that his interrogations were “accompanied by threats, insults, pushing, and shoving.” He says he was finally released May 28th on a mountain road in Albania.
El-Masri was held even after his passport was confirmed as genuine and the case was discovered to be one of mistaken identity, according to several news organizations citing anonymous US government sources. And US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice all but confirmed the incident when asked about it at a news conference in Germany Dec. 6, where she appeared alongside German Chancellor Angela Merkel:
Secretary Rice: As to the case of Mr. El-Masri, I am not going to comment on any specific case. There are reports to -- newspaper reports and, of course, I believe this is going to be a matter for litigation, so it's properly handled in that channel. I did say to the Chancellor that when and if mistakes are made, we work very hard and as quickly as possible to rectify them. Any policy will sometimes have mistakes and it is our promise to our partners that should that be the case, that we will do everything that we can to rectify those mistakes. I believe that this will be handled in the proper courts here in Germany and if necessary in American courts as well.
Merkel hinted strongly that Rice had apologized for the incident, saying:
Merkel: The American Government, the American Administration, has admitted that this man had been erroneously taken and that as such the American Administration is not denying that it has taken place. I am also very pleased to note that the American Secretary of State has said that such a mistake, if it occurred, has to be rectified.

The "Torture Amendment"

While the President has flatly stated that the United States does not torture, his administration for weeks resisted an amendment introduced by Senator John McCain, R-AZ, to legally ban inhumane treatment of anyone in US military custody. The President threatened to veto the entire defense spending bill if the McCain amendment were attached. However, he later agreed to it after it was accepted by large margins in both the House and Senate, and after McCain agreed to guarantee legal counsel for interrogators accused of inflicting torture or inhumane treatment.
The McCain amendment not only bans torture of any individual in US military custody, it also prohibits “cruel, unusual, and inhumane treatment or punishment." It would establish the revised Army Field Manual on Interrogation as the uniform guide for interrogations, whether or not the interrogators are members of the military or of an intelligence agency. Recent proposed revisions to the manual following the Abu Ghraib affair reportedly would prohibit the stripping of detainees, the use of police dogs, sleep deprivation and dietary restrictions. McCain's amendment was approved 90-9 in a Senate vote, and in the House by a vote of 308 to122.
The day after the House vote the President, in an Oval Office press briefing with McCain, announced an agreement and dropped his threat of a veto. McCain described the compromise:
McCain: In our negotiations, there was legitimate concerns [sic] raised by the administration concerning the rights of interrogators. And taking language from the Uniform Code of Military Justice, we provide them with legal counsel and certain protections that a reasonable person might view as carrying out of orders, not to contradict the Nuremberg decision, which, of course, said that obeying orders is not a sufficient defense.
The rest of the amendment's language, however, remained intact.
Before Bush accepted the amendment, the administration reportedly attempted to persuade McCain to exempt CIA interrogators. The Washington Post reported Oct. 25 that Vice President Dick Cheney made that request of McCain, but McCain refused. McCain is a former Navy pilot who was captured by the North Vietnamese and held for five years. He was tortured, and to this day is unable to lift his arms more than chest-high.
-- by Justin Bank and Emi Kolawole


Sources

Badger, T.A. “Lynndie England sentenced to three years for Abu Ghraib abuses,” The Associated Press. BC Cycle: 27 September 2005.
Bernard, Jerome. “Ex-commander of Abu Ghraib prison says she was a scapegoat,” Agence-France Presse. 17 November 2005.
Fletcher, Michael A. “Bush Defends CIA’s Clandestine Prisons; ‘We Do Not Torture,’ President Says,” The Washington Post. Final: 8 November 2005.
Intelligence Policy: Staff Statement No. 7,” National Commission on Terrorist Attacks Upon the United States .
Memorandum of Admonishment,” Department of Defense. 17 January 2004.
Peirce, Paul. “Birthday celebration led to Abu Ghraib scandal,” Tribune-Review. 21 September 2005.
Myers, Lisa, "CIA Accused of Detaining Innocent Man," NBC News. 21 April 2005.
Press Availability with German Chancellor Angela Merkel,” US Department of State. Transcript. 6 December 2005.
Pelley, Scott. "'Rendition' Revisited," 60 Minutes. 19 Dec 2005.
Priest, Dana. “CIA Holds Terror Suspects in Secret Prisons; Debate Is Growing Within Agency About legality and Morality of Overseas System Set Up After 9/11,” The Washington Post. Final: 2 November 2005.
“Sen. Bill Frist, R-Tenn.; Rep. J. Dennis Hastert, R- Ill. Correspondence Directed to House Select Intelligence Committee; Senate Select Intelligence Committee,” Congressional Quarterly Top Docs. 8 November 2005.
Senate Amendment No. 1977. Text. Congressional Record. S11062.
Sullivan, Jennifer. “Abu Ghraib ex-commander defends herself at Town Hall,” The Seattle Times. Fourth Edition: 2 November 2005
White, Josh. “ Reservist Sentenced to 3 Years for Abu Ghraib Abuse; Pfc. England Apologizes for Photographed Mistreatment, Says Superior and Lover 'Used' Her ,” The Washington Post. 28 September 2005.

Sunday, December 18, 2005

In the middle of revelations from Washington about the imperial presidency, hope you noticed the Pentagon's mishandling of a counterterrorism database. (NY Times)

In the Movies

Brokeback Mountain. Heath Ledger & Jake Gyllenhaal (Ang Lee)

The Family Stone: Dermot Mulroney, Diane Keaton, Sarah Jessica Parker, Clair Danes & Luke Wilson (Thomas Bezucha)

King Kong: Naomi Watts, Jack Black, Adrian Brody & Jamie Bell (Peter Jackson)

Three articles by Neil MacFarquhar in the NY Times about reform in the Arab world. Articles deal with Saudi Arabia, Morocco & Jordan. If you need access to the full articles, let me know.

I always look forward to hear Bill Moyers on the Radio or TV. Here is the next best thing, the text of a speech given to the National Security Archive titled "In the Kingdom of the half-blind". (Free Press News)

Harper Collins will create a searchable digital library. (NY Times)

Alwaleed bin Talal gives millions to Harvard & Georgetown. It is good to build bridges between the East & the West, but shouldn't a similar gesture be made within the Arab world?
(NY Times)

Saturday, December 17, 2005

الغائبون الحاضرون


رحمهم الله وبيض وجوههم ويمن كتابهم وشرفهم برؤية وجهه الكريم وجعل الفردوس منزلهم والمصطفى المحبوب شفيعهم وشفيعنا يوم الحساب
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Wednesday, December 14, 2005

Photo homage for Mohammed Z


On the occasion of his upcoming wedding on Friday 17 December 2005. May Allah bless this bond and provide you with virtuous offsprings.

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Dutch politician working on 3rd installment of controversial Islam film . Ayaan Hirsi Ali, who wrote the script of a controversial film on Islam that sparked the murder of director Theo van Gogh, is working on a third installment of the "Submission" series. (AFP)

Muslim students at the University of Kentucky want to host the first campus chapter of the nation's only Islamic sorority. (NPR)

What are the Iranians after?. First they issue a postage stamp in honor of Sadat's assassin (Islambulli), and now an Iranian Islamist group announced it was working on a film about the 1981 assassination of Egyptian president Anwar Sadat entitled "34 Bullets for the Pharoah". (AFP)

In Germany, cash is king (Deutsche Welle)

Monday, December 12, 2005

Secret Prisons & Abductions

The raucous about the CIA's secret prisons and abductions in Europe goes on. Here is a story from Deutsche Welle .

All stories about the subject end with "prisoners have been relocated to North Africa" And the story ends there. Where in North Africa? Why no one is talking about the moved prisoners? Do human rights end at the southern shores of the Mediterranean?

Hypochondriacs, rejoice

Norwegian hosiptal provides cures for imagined illnesses (Deutsche Welle)

In the Movies

The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, The Witch and The Wardrobe (2005): Tilda Swinton, Jim Broadbent, Liam Nesson & Dawn French (Andrew Adamson)

Go For Zucker! (Alles auf Zuker!) (2005): Henry Huebchen, Hannelore Elsner, Udo Samel, Golda Tencer & Steffen Groth (Dani Levy)

Sarah Silverman: Jesus Is Magic (2005) : Sarah Silverman (Liam Lynch)

Syriana (2005): George Clooney, Matt Damon, Jeffrey Wright, Chris Cooper & William Hurt (Stephen Gaghan

Iraq Body Count, 12 December 2005

According to Iraq Body Count, civilians reported killed by military intervention in Iraq stand at a minimum of 27,383 and a maximum of 30,892

Wednesday, December 07, 2005

With Houston's Mayor Bill White


During the last campaign cycle, I did volunteer for Houston's Mayor White re-election campaign. Above are some of the pictures taken during the campaign. Mayor White was reelected by 91% of the vote for a second two-year term.

Mayor White was prominent on the national scene in the aftermath of hurricane Katrina. He opened the city for evacuees from New Orleans, and Houston was one of the first cities to welcome Louisiana evacuees. Posted by Picasa

Tuesday, December 06, 2005

Elizabeth Vargas and Bob Woodruff to anchor ABC News Jan. 3, 2006. I do like Ms. Vargas, not sure about Woodruff (Link)

Amusing stories from the Washington Post (today & yesterday) about the CIA's activities in Europe

From the NY Times, a harrowing story about the spread of AIDS in India along the highways

Sami Al-Arian, acquitted

After five months of the prosecution presenting its case and 3 weeks of jury deliberation, a Florida court acquitted al-Arian. He is a former Florida professor accused of helping lead a terrorist group that has carried out suicide bombings against Israel. al-Arian was acquitted on nearly half the charges against him and the jury deadlocked on the rest. (Link)

Add him to the list of accused and later acquitted Moslems that includes Imam James Yee, and attorney Brandon Mayfield.

Monday, December 05, 2005

Escape from Bagram

NY Times report by Eric Schmitt and Tim Golden about the escape of four detainees from prison on July 11, 2005. A former Bagram prisoner maintains that "American Intelligence officers had once proposed staging an escape to release a detainee whom they wanted to act as a double gent against Al Qaeda"

In the Movies

The Dying Gaul: Patricia Clarkson, Peter Sarsgaard, Campbell Scott (Craig Lucas)

Ellie Parker: Naomi Watts, Scott Coffey, Chevy Chase (Scott Coffey)

The Passenger (1975): Jack Nicholson, Maria Schneider (Michelangelo Antonioni)

The Protocols of Zion : (Documentary) Marc Levin

Thursday, December 01, 2005

Happy Birthday Aly Pasha


على باشا ..... كل سنه وجنابك طيب وبالفرنساوى

Joyeux Anniversaire

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سنه حلوه يا حلوه - يانور هانم

Happy birthday
Zum Geburtstag viel Gluek
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