Sri Lanka landslide kills over dozen

At least a dozen people have been killed and hundreds of others remain missing following heavy rains that caused a massive landslide in central Sri Lanka.

Rescue workers have begun their search for more than 300 people who are either missing or unaccounted for after the huge landslide hit the village of Koslanda Wednesday morning.

Koslanda is located some 200 kilometers east of the capital, Colombo.

“The area where the landslide has been reported was mostly occupied by tea estate laborers. It is most of them who have been reported missing,” said Sarath Lal Kumara, a spokesman for the Sri Lanka Disaster Management Center (DMC).

Residents in the surrounding villages have been ordered to evacuate the area as search operations continue.

Around 500 soldiers have been dispatched to assist the affected, said Major General Mano Perera.

Meanwhile, Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapaksa has directed the Defense Ministry and the Ministry of Disaster Management to allocate additional relief teams to help in the search and rescue operations.

Residents and aid workers expressed grief at the widespread devastation amid fears that the death toll could be much higher.

Sri Lanka has experienced massive landslides and monsoon rains in recent years.

In 2011, flooding killed over a dozen people and displaced more than one million others in many parts of the country.

Landslides and floods also killed nearly 20 people and forced more than 150,000 others from their homes in the southern districts of Galle and Kalutara, the southeastern districts of Kegalla and Ratnapura and the central hilly areas in 2008.

GMA/HSN/SS

Saudi Grand Mufti: ISIL, al-Qaeda, al-Nusra Takfiri groups have no connection to Islam

Saudi Arabia’s Grand Mufti Sheikh Abdul Aziz al-Sheikh says terrorist groups attempting to portray themselves as Islamic have no connection to Islam.

The well-known mufti made the remarks in response to a question by one of his disciples seeking his opinion on terrorist groups, including the ISIL Takfiri group and the al-Qaeda-linked al-Nusra Front, the Saudi-based newspaper Al-Hayat reported.

“If you were to have a thorough examining look, you would find that they do not have a shred of connection to Islam,” al-Sheikh said in reference to the terrorist groups.

“They have adorned their opinions and vanities with the robes of Islam in order to deceive the people. You would find them to be misguided, for they have shed blood, violated sanctities, looted funds, created mischief in the earth and stolen countries unlawfully,” the grand mufti said.

The ISIL terrorists currently control large swathes of territory across Syria and Iraq. They have committed terrible atrocities in both countries, including mass executions and beheading of local residents as well as foreign nationals. Al-Nusra Front is a branch of al-Qaeda that is mainly operating in Syria and Lebanon.

In his remarks, the Saudi mufti also referred to Muslim Brotherhood, which is considered by some Arab countries, including Saudi Arabia, as a terrorist group.

“All the methods of these groups are false. There are things behind them and there is no good in them. We do not trust them or trust their people. Whoever invites our youth to join these misguided factions is mistaken and is straying far away from the right path,” al-Sheikh said.

This is while senior Iraqi and Syrian leaders have blamed Saudi Arabia and Qatar for the security crisis and growing terrorism in their country, denouncing Riyadh as a major supporter of terrorist groups including ISIL.

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Lebanese Hezbollah slams Bahrain ruling to suspend al-Wefaq

The Lebanese resistance movement Hezbollah has denounced a ruling by the Bahraini regime to suspend the activities of the country’s prominent opposition party al-Wefaq ahead of the upcoming parliamentary elections in the Persian Gulf kingdom.

In a statement on Tuesday, Hezbollah said the ban on al-Wefaq party “proves that the elections (scheduled for November 22) are sham, pre-determined and far away from representing the will of the Bahraini people and the political powers.”

Hezbollah also said the ban indicates the repressive and totalitarian nature of the Al Khalifa regime, warning against the negative repercussions on the political future of the Persian Gulf state.

“The ruling authorities in Bahrain are not determined to make serious steps in order to solve the incurable political crisis,” said the statement.

On Tuesday, the Manama administrative court imposed the three-month ban on al-Wefaq after it threatened to boycott the November 22 elections.

The opposition party dismissed the ruling as “irrational and irresponsible”, saying, “The tyrannical dictatorship in Bahrain is ruling with an iron fist and moving to destroy the political and social life by blocking the people out.”

Eligible voters in the country will elect members of the 40-seat Council of Representatives in Bahrain next month for the first time after the beginning of anti-regime protests in the country.

In 2011, al-Wefaq pulled 18 of its representatives out of parliament after a deadly regime crackdown on Shia protesters demanding reforms in the country.

The Bahraini opposition has been demanding the formation of a constitutional monarchy, an independent election commission, as well as the appointment of a prime minister by parliamentary majority instead of the king.

Since mid-February 2011, thousands of protesters have held numerous demonstrations in the streets of Bahrain, calling on the Al Khalifa royal family to step down.

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France: Muslim funeral home in Orléans defaced with Islamophobic graffiti

Saphir News reports that last Friday night racist vandals broke into the office of the Muslim Assistance funeral home in Orléans and defaced the walls with Islamophobic graffiti.

The graffiti featured swastikas and Celtic crosses, and a drawing of a pig’s head, accompanied by slogans such as “Islam out”, “close or die” and “dirty Arabs”. Computer equipment was stolen and a photocopier damaged.

The manager of Muslim Assistance, Abdessamad Errich, later received anonymous phone calls boasting of the attack. Last month he had been subjected to telephone threats.

The vandalism may be connected to the fact that Errich publicly opposed the recent closure of a Muslim school at La Chapelle-Saint-Mesmin, which was itself the object of a graffiti attack at the end of September.


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Pakistani man killed in Kashmir

An elderly Pakistani man has been killed by Indian troops after a fresh exchange of fire between Pakistan and India along the de facto border in Kashmir region, Pakistani officials say.
 
Abdul Majeed Mughal, a senior Pakistani government official tasked to monitor cross-border fire in the region, said that the 75-year-old man was killed on Tuesday by “unprovoked” fire from Indian forces outside his home in the Chari Kot border village.

“A 75-year old man was killed due to Indian firing in Chari Kot,” Mughal said.

Pakistani officials also confirmed that Pakistani troops returned fire.

This month Kashmir has witnessed some of the worst frontier shelling in years, leaving at least 20 civilians dead, and forcing thousands to flee their homes.

Islamabad and New Delhi have fought two wars over Kashmir since their independence from British colonial rule in 1947. The archrivals lay claim to the whole region but each only controls its own section.

India and Pakistan agreed to a ceasefire along the Line of Control in 2003, and a year later launched talks aimed at brokering a regional peace.

The process was, however, suspended after over 160 people lost their lives in the 2008 Mumbai terrorist attacks, which New Delhi blamed on Pakistan-based militants.

YH/NN/HRB

A 9-month Old Shiite Girl Slains at Imam Hussain Majlis in Karachi

When children are killed in the hail of virulent hatred there is a special kind of barbarity. Children have no agency, not even the slightest shred of the responsibility or complicity that adults to one degree or another may possess for their beliefs. They are not yet old enough to question the choice their birth forced on them.

When children are attacked and lose their lives or their little legs, their arms, their eyes it is everybody’s tragedy and everybody’s burden.

According to their pronouncements, traits, situations, motivations, and actions – only Wahhabi-inspired takfiri militants are capable of such intent in today’s world.

A minor Shia Muslim baby embraced martyrdom and nine people, mostly women, have been injured in a blast perpetrated by takfiri nasbi terrorists of banned Sipah-e-Sahaba (ASWJ) near an Imam Bargah (Shia religious place for mourning) in Karachi on Tuesday night.

AIG Karachi Police Ghulam Qadir Thaibu said terrorists riding motorcycles threw a cracker near Islamic Research Center near Ayesha Manzil Bus Stop and fled the scene.

The cracker was lobbed near the entry-exit point of the Imam Bargah situated in the premises of Islamic Research Centre when mourners of Imam Hussain (AS) were leaving the Imam Bargah at the end of majlis.

The injured were rushed to the hospital for treatment. A 9 month old baby namely Kiran Fatima alias Batool breathed her last at a private hospital. Some of the injured were identified as Waqar Abbas son of Wafa Abbas, Ali Hassan, Zahra, Faiza and Sana Zaidi.

The blast angered Shia Muslims who complained that the blast occurred due to lack of security by the police and rangers near the Imam Bargah and on the road bridge in front of the Imam Bargah.

Shia parties and leaders condemned the blast that police and rangers considered either cracker or hand grenade. They said that eminent Shia leader Allama Hassan Zafar Naqvi was addressing the majlis-e-aza at the Imam Bargah and the terrorist attack was a veiled threat to Shia leader hence security officials need to make fool proof security arrangements to avoid such attacks at any place in future.

Majlis Wahdatul Muslimeen (MWM) has condemned the attack, seeking more security to Shia mourners during the holy month of Muharram. “We demand full security to the mourners from Sindh government,” said Allama Raja Nasir Abbas of MWM.

He also demanded a swift arrest of the culprits behind the attack.

On Sunday, police in Karachi claimed that they killed nine suspected extremists, who according to them were planning to target Muharram related events.

Main Ashura procession among other Muharram events have been attacked in Karachi in the past as well.

Every year during Muharram, Shia Muslims across the globe mourn the martyrdom of Hazrat Imam Hussain, the grandson of Prophet Mohammad, and his 72 followers in the battle of Karbala.

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Campaign in Germany about Imam Hussein’s (AS) Uprising

A campaign has been launched by a number of lecturers and students of the Islamic Studies Center in Hamburg, Germany, to introduce the objectives and features of Imam Hussein’s (AS) uprising.

72 lecturers and students of the scholarly center have planned sessions with the aim of disseminating the teachings of Ashura uprising.

The campaign began on the first night of Muharram, the first month in the lunar Hijri calendar, and will continue for five nights.
The organizers plan to hold the sessions in five great cities of Germany in next year’s Muharram.

Islam is the largest minority religion in the country. The large majority of Muslims in Germany are of Turkish origin followed by smaller groups from Pakistan, countries of the former Yugoslavia, Arab countries, Iran and Afghanistan.

Every year, millions of Muslims around the world mourn the martyrdom of Imam Hussein (AS) and his 72 faithful companions on Ashura, the tenth day of Muharram.

Ashura ceremonies symbolize eternal and unwavering stance of truth against falsehood and humanity’s struggle against tyranny realized by Imam Hussein (AS).

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Pakistan Must Act to Stop the Genocidal Campaign Against Shia Muslims

More than three dozen Shia Muslims have been killed by terrorists in Pakistan this month, pushing the number of victims over three hundred so far in 2014. This epidemic of suicide bombings, bomb explosions and targeted assassinations against the Shia community has extended to Karachi, Hyderabad, Khairpur, Rahim Yar Khan, Quetta, Peshawar, Kohat, and Gilgit, together with the main pilgrim routes.

Since 2008, extremist terrorists have openly declared on the social media that they intend ultimately to exterminate the whole Shia population of the country, numbering between 17 and 30million – unless they convert to the fundamentalist brand of Sunni Islam the terrorists espouse. Thousands have been murdered already, and their properties and places of worship destroyed. This campaign of religious cleansing also extends to other minorities, strikingly similar to what the Daesh are doing in Iraq and Syria. Its time the international community joined the dots, and recognised that we have to contend not only with the territorially based pseudo-caliphate in the Middle East, frightening as that is to all civilised people, but also with its metastasising growths in other vulnerable states, of which Pakistan is the main example.

Malik Ishaq, the leader of the most notorious anti-Shia extremist group Lashkar-e-Jhangvi (LeJ) says that Shia Muslims are “the greatest infidels on earth” and demands that the Pakistani state “declare Shia non-Muslims on the basis of their beliefs”. The LeJ is officially banned, yet Ishaq was released from prison in May when the prosecution failed to produce evidence against him and he was acquitted of charges including the master-minding of a bomb attack on Shias in Quetta which killed 90 people. Not a single one of the genocidal killers of the LeJ and other terrorist groups has been finally convicted and put behind bard: some are arrested and spend a few months in custody, but somehow they all get away with their heinous crimes in the end.

Ahle Sunnat wal Jamaat, the parent organisation of the LEJ, which was banned by Pakistan in March 2012, has nevertheless been staging public rallies in Quetta, Karachi and other cities by the Nawaz Sharif government, fomenting religious intolerance and extremism. At the same time the Army Chief General Raheel Sharif has launched an operation against the terrorists in North Waziristan, the lawless province in the northwest of the country bordering Afghanistan which is the cradle of terrorist activity. The government doesn’t see any inconsistency between giving terrorism a free rein to commit atrocities and spread their doctrine of hate in the main centres of population, while attempting to root them out in one remote area.

The same double-standard is the hallmark of Asif Ali Zardari, co-chairman of Pakistan Peoples’ Party, which has ruled Sindh since 2008. Addressing a gathering in Lahore, he says: “now there is a security threat to Sindh I am looking into it”. He has turned a blind eye for six years to the targeted killings of Shia Muslims in Karachi, now a daily occurrence. The construction of several thousand seminaries without permission is in full swing, aimed at radicalising the population of Sindh. What on earth is Zardari looking at and how long will he ignore the threat to the very existence of Pakistan as a democratic state?

Imran Khan, leader of the opposition, advocated negotiations with the terrorists during the election. He denounced them briefly as enemies of Islam in the early months of 2014, but lapsed into silence since then. He too fails to recognize that extremist outfits with an ideology almost identical to that of the Daesh in Syria and Iraq present an existential threat to Pakistan.
Today is the start of the holy month of Muharram, which has seen an upsurge of violence against traditional Shia ceremonies across the nation in recent years. The politicians should forget their differences and come together for once, appealing to their followers of whatever belief to join the processions as they used to do in the old days, in an act of defiance against the anti-Islamic merchants of hate.

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Bahrain regime suspends activities of Al Wefaq National Islamic Society

In a seriously concerning step, the Bahraini regime has suspended the activities of Al Wefaq National Islamic Society (the largest political group in Bahrain) for a period of 3 months.

Al Wefaq considers the measure irrational and irresponsible. Al Wefaq said the tyrannical dictatorship in Bahrain is ruling with an iron fist and moving to destroy the political and social life by blocking the people out. The regime is heading to a unilateral life and replacing the people with sham foundations and projects.

Al Wefaq will continue in its struggle for democratic transition and justice to build a democratic state for all Bahrainis and end the totalitarian rule that is excluding the people through harsh sentences and security measures that violate fundamental human rights.

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Brothers Hussam and Mahmood Suroor Targeted for Freedom of Expression in Bahrain

Americans for Democracy Human Rights in Bahrain (ADHRB), the Bahrain Center for Human Rights (BCHR) and the Bahrain Institute for Rights and Democracy (BIRD) express their concern over the Bahraini government’s ongoing campaign of targeting photographers, journalists and artists for documenting abuses and human rights violations committed by the government and security forces. The government arrested 17-year-old photographer Hussam Mahdi Suroor on 4 September 2014. His 26-years-old brother, artist Mahmood Suroor, was arrested and detained on 10 October 2014.

(Top photo: From right to left: Photo of the photographer Suroor; his brother, and artist, Mahmood.)

Suroor’s family told BCHR that security force stopped Hussam’s car near Duraz at approximately 22.00 on Thursday, 4 September 2014. Hussam and his friend were taken to an unofficial torture centre, known locally as ‘Khayala’, where security forces subjected them to severe beatings before transferring them to the Criminal Investigation building. Five days after the arrest, Hussam was finally permitted to contact his family. The government has ordered his detention for 60 days pending investigation, a practice now permissible due to the internationally condemned anti-terrorism law. Hussam is an amateur photographer who has risked government reprisal to document and publicize daily protests and human rights violations in Bahrain. He was previously arrested and tortured in 2012 before being released without charges.

Photographs of the ill-treatment and torture Hussam was subjected to during his arrest in 2012

On 10 October 2014, masked civilian forces accompanied by police raided Mahmood Suroor’s house without providing any a search warrant. Suroor, a 26-year-old artist, (1) was arrested and had his phone, camera, laptop and external hard drive confiscated. Security forces also searched Mahmood’s car before leaving the house. Mahmood was subjected to enforced disappearance for five days before being transferred to the Dry Dock prison. The Public Prosecution ordered his detention for 60 days pending investigation.

 

Photographs of the aftermath of the security forces illegal search of the Suroor household.

              

These ongoing reprisals against all forms of dissent have received international condemnation. In a recent statement, (2) Reporters without Borders condemned what they called revengeful acts against peaceful activists for documenting and exposing human rights violations. Bahrain 19, an organization that monitors violations of freedom of expression, demanded the release of the Suroor brothers and all those who have been detained for exercising their free speech rights.(3) As a result of such reprisals, Freedom House categorized Bahrain as one of the least free countries in the world in terms of civil liberties and political rights for five years in a row. (4)

The signed NGOs note the Bahraini government’s ongoing campaign of suppressing dissent by targeting freedom of expression stands in violation of international covenants and charters endorsed and signed by Bahrain. Specifically, such acts constitute a violation of Article 19 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, which states that: “Everyone has the right to freedom of opinion and expression; this right includes freedom to hold opinions without interference and to seek, receive and impart information and ideas through any media and regardless of frontiers.” (5) 

Americans for Democracy Human Rights in Bahrain (ADHRB), the Bahrain Center for Human Rights (BCHR) and the Bahrain Institute for Rights and Democracy (BIRD) call on the United Kingdom, the United States and all of Bahrain’s allies to pressure the Bahraini government to:

  1. Immediately and unconditionally release Hussam and Mahmood Suroor and to drop the charges against them, especially those directly related to their right to freedom of expression;
  2. Stop the systematic targeting of photographers, journalists and activists.