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  • 17
    May
    2013
    11:23am, EDT

    Nigeria sends jets, attack helicopters to war against Islamist militants

    Tim Cocks / Reuters, file

    Nigerian forces gather Monday in the Islamist stronghold of Maiduguri. Soldiers poured in this weeek before the military on Friday launched a major offensive against the insurgents.

    By Lanre Ola, Reuters

    MAIDUGURI, Nigeria -- Nigerian forces used jets and attack helicopters to bombard Islamist militant camps in the northeast on Friday, in their biggest military offensive since Boko Haram launched an uprising in 2009.

    "A number of insurgents have been killed," the defense headquarters spokesman said, including at the Sambisa game reserve in Borno state, the epicenter of the insurgency.

    "It is not just Sambisa. Every camp is under attack. But we have not done the mopping-up operations on the ground to determine the numbers killed," Brig. Gen. Chris Olukolade said by telephone. Another military source, who declined to be named, said at least 30 insurgents had been killed.

    Nigerian forces are trying to regain territory controlled by increasingly well-armed Boko Haram Islamist insurgents in their northeastern stronghold states of Borno, Yobe and Adamawa, put under a state of emergency by President Goodluck Jonathan on Wednesday.

    More troops arrived in the Borno state capital, Maiduguri, on Friday, witnesses said.

    "I saw more than 20 trucks loaded with soldiers fully kitted for battle towards Marte. I wish them luck in ending this BH (Boko Haram) madness," resident Ahmed Ibrahim said by telephone.

    Beyond the region covered by the state of emergency, gunmen stormed a police station and a bank, the army said, a sign the offensive could provoke violence by smaller militant cells across the north.

    Boko Haram, other Islamist militant groups such as al-Qaeda-linked Ansaru and associated criminal gangs have become the biggest threat to stability in Africa's top oil-producing nation.

    Thousands have been killed since Boko Haram launched an uprising almost four years ago in an effort to create an Islamic state in a country of about 170 million split roughly equally between Christians, who are the majority in the south, and Muslims, who predominate in the north.

    Violence has mostly happened far from the commercial hub, Lagos, or political capital, Abuja, and hundreds of miles away from oilfields in the southeast.

    Military jets, helicopter gunships and thousands of troops are involved in the current offensive, which may answer some critics who accuse Jonathan, a southern Christian, of underestimating the severity of the crisis in the Muslim north.

    Rights groups are concerned the state of emergency will lead to more abuses they have document by Nigerian forces.

    Related:

    • 185 killed in fighting between military, extremists
    • Family kidnapped by Nigerian Islamists released
    • Nigerian Islamists kill American, European hostages
    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    46 comments

    Good for them. Kill these Islamic nut cases anywhere and everywhere you find them.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: nigeria, violence, militants, insurgents, attacks, featured, islamists, boko-haram
  • Updated
    6
    May
    2013
    11:12am, EDT

    Explosion kills at least 25 people at Islamist party election rally in Pakistan

    By Mustaq Yusufzai, Producer, NBC News

    PESHAWAR, Pakistan -- A suicide bombing at an Islamist party's election rally killed at least 25 people and injured 65 others Monday in Pakistan's Kurram tribal region, local officials said.

    Ulfat Hussai, an administrative official, said the leader of the Jamiat Ulema-e-Islam (JUI-F) party, a candidate for the National Assembly from the region, was among the injured.

    Another government official said a suicide bomber blew himself up as JUI-F leader Munir Hussain Orakzai was about to leave the gathering in the village of Sewak after his speech to local tribesmen.

    Dr. Inayatullah Khan, administrator of the Agency Headquarters Hospital in Sadda, said 20 bodies and 65 injured had been brought to his hospital while the bodies of five others had been taken directly to their homes by relatives.

    Khan said the death toll could rise as half a dozen of the injured were still in critical condition.

    Officials at the scene said many of the dead appeared to have succumbed to blood loss. The village is in a remote mountainous area, making it impossible to quickly get victims to hospitals.

    Dr. Abdul Qadir, younger brother of Orakzai, said by telephone that he, his brother, two bodyguards and six close relatives were injured in the blast.

    "They have been taken to the hospital and their condition is out of danger," Qadir said from Parachinar, the headquarters of Kurram tribal region, which is near the Afghan border.

    He said the injured were being taken to hospitals in Parachinar and Sadda, the second-largest town of the volatile region.

    The Pakistani prosecutor investigating the assassination of the country's former Prime Minister, Benazir Bhutto, has been shot and killed.  Chaudry Zulfikar Ali had also been involved in the investigation into the Mumbai massacre in 2008. His killing comes at a tense time as Pakistan prepares for national elections next week. An anti-Taliban candidate in Karachi was also murdered today. Sarah Smith has this report.

    Monday’s incident marked the first time a political gathering of a religious party such as JUI-F, considered pro-Taliban, had been targeted in the tribal areas.

    Taliban spokesman Ihsanullah Ihsan called NBC News and claimed responsibility for the suicide attack.

    Ishan said Orakzai was their target, claiming that in the past five years, he had been involved with three major secular parties that the Taliban considers pro-American.

    The Taliban launched has launched an offensive that has killed several leaders and activists belonging to the three parties: the Pakistan People's Party, Mutahidda Qaumi Movement and Awami National Party. 

    Related:

    • Prosecutor probing Pakistan ex-PM's assassination slain in 'targeted killing'
    • Afghan and Pakistani forces clash in deadly border firefight

    This story was originally published on Mon May 6, 2013 10:46 AM EDT

    62 comments

    In Islam, the Imam's power is elevated by being the most restrictive or bellicose. They end up with endless rules that condemn any cultural activity as being "un-Islamic". For cultures that do not identify with the religion, the end result is a repulsive and repressive cultrue devoid of any open dis …

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    Explore related topics: pakistan, violence, taliban, bombing, featured, islamists, updated, jui-f, kurram
  • Updated
    6
    May
    2013
    1:31pm, EDT

    At least 20 dead, hundreds hurt as Islamists demand religious laws in Bangladesh

    At least 20 people have died in violence between police and Islamic hardliners demanding that Bangladesh implement an anti-blasphemy law. NBCNews.com's Richard Lui reports.

    By Ruma Paul, Reuters

    DHAKA, Bangladesh -- At least 20 people were killed Sunday and Monday in clashes in Bangladesh between police and hard-line Islamists demanding new laws that critics say would amount to the "Talibanization" of a country that maintains secularism as state policy.

    Clashes began on Sunday after about 200,000 Islamist supporters marched toward Dhaka, the capital, to press their demands and were met by lines of police firing tear gas and rubber bullets.

    AFP - Getty Images

    Islamist protesters throw bricks and stones toward Bangladeshi police during clashes outside Dhaka on Monday. Since Sunday, at least 20 people have died as the hard-liners demand laws based on religion.

    On Monday, hundreds of protesters, many wearing white Muslim skull caps and throwing stones, regrouped and police again fired tear gas, rubber bullets and water cannons to disperse them.

    Violence spread from the capital, where at least 13 died. Five people were killed in Chittagong and another two in Bagerhat.

    Protesters set fire to vehicles, including two police cars, and stormed a police post on the outskirts of the capital, police said.

    Two policemen and a member of a paramilitary force were among the people killed on Monday, said police official Shah Mohammad Manzur Kader. Four people were killed on Sunday, and hundreds have been injured, hospital officials said.

    The protests are led by a group called Hefajat-e-Islam, which set a May 5 deadline for the government to introduce a new blasphemy law, reinstate pledges to Allah in the constitution, ban women from mixing freely with men and make Islamic education mandatory.

    Munir Uz Zaman / AFP - Getty Images

    Islamist protesters gather Sunday on a highway at an entry point to the Bangladeshi capital, Dhaka, as they try to enforce a siege in demand of religious laws. The country has a secular government.

    The government of the overwhelmingly Muslim country has rejected the demands.

    The clash of ideologies could plunge Bangladesh into a cycle of violence as the two main political parties, locked in decades of mutual distrust, exploit the tension between secularists and Islamists ahead of elections that are due by next January.

    Bangladesh has been rocked by protests and counter-protests since January, when a tribunal set up by the government to investigate abuses during a 1971 war of independence from Pakistan sentenced to death in absentia a leader of the main Muslim party, the Jamaat-e-Islami.

    Jamaat opposed Bangladeshi independence from Pakistan in the war but denies accusations that some of its leaders committed murder, rape and torture during the conflict.

    The Hefajat-e-Islam emerged from the protests over the tribunal.

    More than 100 people have been killed in the clashes this year, most of them Islamist party activists and members of the security forces.

    This story was originally published on Mon May 6, 2013 8:54 AM EDT

    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    146 comments

    Here we go again. The religion of peace, and coming to a town near you!!!

    Show more
    Explore related topics: bangladesh, religion, riots, secularists, featured, ideology, islamists, shariah, updated, dhaka, religious-law, blashphemy
  • 19
    Apr
    2013
    9:38am, EDT

    'Immense relief': French family kidnapped by Islamists in Cameroon freed after 4 months

    Reinnier Kaze / AFP - Getty Images

    (From left) Former French hostages Tanguy Moulin-Fournier, his wife Albane and his brother Cyril pose at the French embassy in Yaounde on Friday. The family of seven were kidnapped in Cameroon in February by an Islamist movement from neighboring Nigeria.

    By Tansa Musa and Bate Felix, Reuters

    YAOUNDE, Cameroon -- A French family of seven, including four children, have been released in Cameroon following secret talks, France said on Friday, ending two months of captivity in the hands of Nigerian Islamist militants.

    Armed men on motorcycles snatched the family on February 19 while they were on holiday near the Waza national park in north Cameroon, some 6 miles from the Nigerian border.

    "I spoke to the father this morning ... He told me how happy and relieved he was," French President Francois Hollande told a news conference in Paris on Friday. "This is an immense relief. This will redouble our determination to free the hostages who remain."

    Eight French hostages remain held by al Qaeda-linked Islamist militant groups in the Sahel region.

    Hollande said there had been contacts over the last few weeks to discreetly free the family under French terms and denied any ransom was paid.

    "France has not changed its position, which is not to pay ransoms," he said.

    The father of the kidnapped family, Tanguy Moulin-Fournier, worked in Cameroon for French utility firm GDF Suez. He was kidnapped with his wife, two daughters and two sons, and his brother, who was visiting them on holiday.

    "We are very happy to be released. I want to thank (Cameroon) President Paul Biya for making all the effort to ensure our release," his tired-looking wife, Albane Moulin-Fournier, said on Cameroon television, holding her smallest child.

    Both adult males of the family had thick beards while the children looked drawn, and wore flip-flops, knee-length trousers and tee-shirts.

    Ferdinand Ngoh Ngoh, secretary-general of Cameroon's presidency, said all family members were well.

    State television showed the family descending from a plane where they were greeted on the tarmac by the French ambassador who took them to the embassy in the capital Yaounde.

    French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius was due to meet them there, a French official said, and they would be repatriated to France as soon as possible.

    The release of the hostages is a rare piece of good news for Hollande's government, which is struggling to cut unemployment and has been hit by a tax fraud scandal which has forced its budget minister to resign.

    Mostly Muslim northern Cameroon is considered an area within the operational sphere of Islamist militants including Boko Haram, Nigeria's biggest security threat.

    Gunmen claiming to be from Boko Haram released videos of the family in March, threatening to kill them unless Nigeria and Cameroon released Muslim militants held in detention.

    Cameroon denied it was holding any militants and it was unclear if any of the group's demands had been met.

    Additional reporting by John Irish and Brian Love in Paris.

    Related:

    Nigeria in 'massive manhunt' for French hostages

    French special forces join search for family of 7 kidnapped in Africa

    French family with 4 children kidnapped by Islamists in Africa

    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    75 comments

    Glad to see the family was released unharmed. A word to the parents though. Next time you take a family vacation, try Disneyland or Sea World! Heck of a lot safer than taking your wife and family to an Islamist militant infested pest hole in Africa.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: france, nigeria, cameroon, africa, release, hostage, al-qaeda, featured, islamists, boko-haram
  • 20
    Feb
    2013
    11:39am, EST

    French special forces join search for family of 7 kidnapped in Africa

    Marc Preel / AFP - Getty Images

    The French family, including four children, kidnapped in Cameroon on Tuesday were visiting Waza National Park, a source at the nature preserve said.

    By Tansa Musa and Bate Felix, Reuters

    French special forces arrived in northern Cameroon on Wednesday to try to help locate a French family of seven, including four children, who were kidnapped by people thought to be Islamist militants and taken into Nigeria, officials in Cameroon said.

    The abduction highlights the growing risk of attacks on French nationals and interests in Africa since Paris sent forces into Mali to oust Islamist rebels occupying the country's north.

    Ian Langsdon / EPA

    French Foreign Affairs Minister Laurent Fabius confirmed the abduction in Cameroon of the family of seven at a Tuesday news conference.

    Speaking on French television, Joseph Dion Ngute, a junior minister at the foreign ministry, said the kidnappers had put the hostages on motorcycles after their car broke down.

    "They then took another woman hostage with her car and fled into Nigeria," he said. "Our forces and the Nigerian forces were alerted, but before they reacted the kidnappers had vanished."

    It was not clear what had happened to the additional female hostage.

    Security in the Dabanga area, six miles from the Nigerian border, where they were taken has been reinforced and "urgent measures" to locate the family have been put in place, he said.

    It is the first case of foreigners being seized in the mostly Muslim north of Cameroon, a former French colony. But the region -- like others in West and North Africa with typically porous borders -- is considered to be within the operational sphere of Nigerian Islamist militant groups Boko Haram and Ansaru.

    The father of the family, which included four children ages 5 to 12, worked for utility firm GDF Suez. French television reported that the father was from a family of winemakers in the Burgundy region.

    Nigerian army spokesman Col. Sagir Musa said the armed forces were on alert, "ready to apprehend any criminal elements or terrorists that come into our areas."

    Related:

    French family with 4 children kidnapped in Africa

    Gunmen kill 9 polio health workers in Nigeria 

    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    23 comments

    Wishing safety to this family. Traveling out of your home country is just NOT a safe thing to do right now. Home countries aren't necessaily safe anyway, but traveling to other countries is dangerous. Hoping for a successful rescue of all involved. Safety for the rescuers as well!

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    Explore related topics: france, nigeria, cameroon, africa, special-forces, featured, islamists, family-kidnapped
  • 6
    Feb
    2013
    4:27am, EST

    Banned no longer: Soccer brings joy, hope to war-ravaged Mali

    Rebecca Blackwell / AP

    Malian players celebrate after defeating host nation South Africa on penalties in their Africa Cup of Nations quarterfinal on Saturday. They are due to play Nigeria in Wednesday's semi-final.

    By Rohit Kachroo, Correspondent, NBC News

    Published at 4:40 a.m. ET: TIMBUKTU, Mali -- The lights are flickering in the hotels of Timbuktu. As night falls, the power is returning. Fleeing jihadists had cut the supplies. 

    The television screens are switching back to life in time for people to witness an important national event.

    It has already been an incredible day in this fabled city. Francois Hollande, the French president, toured its ancient streets a few hours beforehand. He was cheered and even embraced by the people of the town, three weeks after France launched aerial bombardments against Islamist militants.

    Now, after ten months of jihadist control, during which playing football and taking part in public celebrations were banned, people are bursting onto the streets beeping their car horns and cheering loudly.

    Mali's national soccer team has just beaten South Africa in the Africa Cup of Nations, the continental championships which are held every two years. The tournament is being staged in South Africa, so Mali's opponents had home advantage, making victory all the sweeter.

    At a time of crisis for the country, the success of the national side in Mali's favorite sport has helped to promote a sense of unity and pride.

    "We will win everything. First we will win the war, then we will win the cup," tourist guide Mamadou Tapily said. "It will ... bring us all together"

    Adbullah Cisse, a soccer fanatic who watched Saturday's game wearing the national shirt, said: "Our success has allowed people to lift their spirits and it has given hope to our country at a difficult time. It seems that with the war and the football, suddenly everything is going well for Mali."

    Eric Feferberg / AFP - Getty Images

    Fans watch the Africa Cup of Nations soccer match between Mali and Ghana in Segou, Mali, on Jan. 24.

    Groups of children, inspired by the national success, play soccer matches close to Timbuktu's sand dunes at the edge of the Sahara desert. Their enthusiasm for the sport is only enhanced by claims that Mali's soccer stars have agreed to accept smaller bonuses than agreed in order to help the costs of the country's war efforts. In the minds of many Malians, their decision has cemented the link between military and sporting victories.

    Mali's soccer stars will face Nigeria, considered continental giants, in Wednesday's semi-final. If they are defeated they are likely to be celebrated as gallant losers. 

    If they win, national pride across Mali is certain to reach new heights.

    Update at 12:10 p.m. ET: Mali lost 4-1 to Nigeria.

    Three weeks after French troops began their assault on northern Mali, Timbuktu is no longer controlled by an extremist group linked to al-Qaida. NBC's Rohit Kachroo reports.

    Related:

    Full soccer coverage from NBC Sports

    'We were so terrified': Jihadists leave trail of destruction, brutality in Mali town

    Why extreme Islamists are intent on destroying cultural artifacts

     

    14 comments

    Now if Mali would only shake off the rest of the yoke of Islam and make women equal, the country just MIGHT move forward!

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    Explore related topics: africa, featured, mali, islamists, africa-cup-of-nations, rohit-kachroo
  • 5
    Feb
    2013
    4:42am, EST

    Two fleeing Islamist leaders seized in Mali

    Alain Amontchi / Reuters

    Malian soldiers escort prisoners, who are suspected al-Qaeda-allied fighters, in front of a military cell in Mopti, Monday.

    By Cheikh Diouara and John Irish, Reuters

    Tuareg rebels in northern Mali said on Monday they had captured two senior Islamist insurgents fleeing French air strikes toward the Algerian border as France pressed ahead with its bombing campaign against al-Qaida's Saharan desert camps.

    Pro-autonomy Tuareg MNLA rebels said one of their patrols seized Mohamed Moussa Ag Mohamed, an Islamist leader who imposed harsh Shariah (Islamic) in the desert town of Timbuktu, and Oumeini Ould Baba Akhmed, thought to be responsible for the kidnapping of a French hostage by al-Qaida splinter group MUJWA.


    "We chased an Islamist convoy close to the frontier and arrested the two men the day before yesterday," Ibrahim Ag Assaleh, spokesman for the MNLA, told Reuters from Ouagadougou in Burkina Faso. "They have been questioned and sent to Kidal."

    France has deployed nearly 4,000 ground troops, as well as warplanes and armored vehicles in its three-week-old operation to break Islamist militants' 10-month grip on northern towns and return the country to normal.

    It is now due to gradually hand over to a U.N.-backed African force of some 8,000 troops, known as AFISMA, of which around 3,800 have already been deployed.

    Paris and its international partners want to prevent the Islamists from using Mali's vast desert north as a base to launch attacks on neighboring African countries and the West.

    After meeting French President Francois Hollande in Paris, U.S. Vice President Joe Biden praised the "decisiveness and incredible competence" of France's operations. He backed France's call for U.N. peacekeepers to be deployed in Mali.

    The legendary Timbuktu has come back to life after the French drove Islamist extremists out. Many priceless manuscripts were  saved from being destroyed— some hidden or smuggled to safety. NBC's Rohit Kachroo reports.

    "We agreed on the need to, as quickly as reasonably possible, establish an African-led mission to Mali and, as quickly as is prudent, transition that mission to the United Nations," Biden said, flanked by Hollande.

    Paris believes that deploying U.N. peacekeepers to Mali could eliminate problems over funding the African mission and fears of ethnic reprisals by Malian troops against light-skinned Tuaregs and Arabs associated with the Islamists.

    The MNLA, which seized control of northern Mali last year only to be pushed aside by better-armed Islamist groups, regained control of its northern stronghold of Kidal last week when Islamist fighters fled French air strikes into hideouts in the nearby desert and rugged Adrar des Ifoghas mountains.

    The Tuareg group says it is willing to help the French-led mission by hunting down Islamists. It has offered to hold peace talks with the government in a bid to heal wounds between Mali's restive Saharan north and the black African-dominated south.

    "Until there is a peace deal, we cannot hold national elections," Ag Assaleh said, referring to interim Malian President Dioncounda Traore's plan to hold polls on July 31.

    Many in the southern capital Bamako -- including army leaders who blame the MNLA for executing some of their troops at the Saharan town of Aguelhoc last year -- strongly reject any talks.

    "One of the first conditions for reconciliation is to disarm rebel groups," Malian Foreign Minister Tieman Hubert Coulibaly told Reuters in Paris. "We must first liberate the north of Mali and then we can organize elections." 

    Related:

    French troops enter last Islamist stronghold in northern Mali

    French-led forces in Mali seal off Timbuktu; rebels torch ancient library

    US to provide aerial refueling for French Mali effort

    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    31 comments

    Now that they are captured question them & then execute them. It is the only way to make them stop abusing & murdering all who fall within their sphere of influence. Don't repeat the mistakes of the past. Leave no survivors.

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    Explore related topics: france, europe, world, al-qaida, africa, featured, mali, islamists, timbuktu
  • 4
    Feb
    2013
    8:42pm, EST

    Timbuktu comes back to life after extremists expelled

    The legendary Timbuktu has come back to life after the French drove Islamist extremists out. Many priceless manuscripts were saved from being destroyed — some hidden or smuggled to safety. NBC's Rohit Kachroo reports.

    2 comments

    "The legendary Timbuktu has come back to life after the French drove Islamist extremists out. Many priceless manuscripts were saved from being destroyed — some hidden or smuggled to safety" It is a temporary lull. Sunni Arab Islamists will again sneak in to invent enemies to hate and kill! It  …

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    Explore related topics: mali, islamists
  • 2
    Feb
    2013
    5:18am, EST

    Why extreme Islamists are intent on destroying cultural artifacts

    Saeed Khan / AFP - Getty Images, file

    A member of the Taliban stands near the remnants of a Buddha statue in Bamiyan, Afghanistan, in March 2001. The militia blew up two ancient Buddhas after a decree from their supreme commander to destroy all of the country's statues.

    By Ian Johnston, Staff Writer, NBC News

    LONDON -- They have destroyed the iconic Buddhas of Bamiyan, smashed down the fabled “end of the world” gate in the ancient city of Timbuktu and even called for the destruction of Egypt’s ancient pyramids and the Sphinx.

    Extreme Islamist movements across the world have developed a reputation for the destruction of historic artifacts, monuments and buildings.

    This week, officials confirmed that up to 2,000 manuscripts at Mali's Ahmed Baba Institute had been destroyed or looted during a 10-month occupation of Timbuktu by Islamist fighters. Some experts have compared the texts to the Dead Sea Scrolls.

    To many in the West, such actions are simply wanton vandalism. However, experts say the thinking behind it is actually part of a wider tradition of rooting out idol-worship and superstition found in Christianity and Judaism as well as Islam.

    French and Malian troops have retaken control of Timbuktu from Islamist rebels. In the ancient city, much damage has been done, thousands of priceless manuscripts have been destroyed. Tim Ewart reports.

    Usama Hasan -- an Islamist for about 20 years, who now works to counter extremism at the U.K.’s Quilliam Foundation -- said most Muslims had “a kind of tolerant attitude" and a "live-and-let-live" approach toward such things.

    "Mainstream Muslim thinking tends to tolerate these historic artifacts," he said. "Even if they don’t agree with the superstitions, they don’t want to provoke the community and don’t see it as a big deal."

    But Hasan said he understood the mindset of those condemned as cultural vandals “very well” as he “used to subscribe to it.”

    He said that during his Islamist days he would say things like: “Yes, let’s destroy the pyramids when we take over Egypt.”

    "It’s very sad. You lose all that cultural heritage, music, history, art, ancient books. If they (Islamists) don’t agree with what’s in them … they seem to think it’s OK to burn these books," he said. "If you’re not Muslim or don’t subscribe to the same narrow interpretation the militants do, they will oppose everything you do and do so violently if they need to."

    Hasan said there were a number of stories explaining how the Sphinx lost its nose, but one account suggests that a religious figure in the 14th century, Saim El-Dahr, tried to get rid of it.

    “There was a common belief that the Sphinx had some power over the level of the River Nile … he wanted to smash the locals’ superstitious belief in the power of the Sphinx and tried to destroy it,” he said.

    Nov. 8: Until the fundamentalist Taliban government and its al-Qaida allies destroyed them in 2001, two immensely important Buddha statues were nestled in the Bamyan valley of Afghanistan. As NBC's Richard Engel reports, the region is slowly coming back to life as the restoration of the figures begins.

    Similar reasoning was likely behind some actions of Islamists in Mali. Breaking down the gate in Timbuktu was probably designed to show any local people who still believed in the fable that it was not actually true, Hasan said.

    But while the Taliban justified the 2001 demolition of the Buddhas of Bamiyan by saying they were idols, Hasan said there was more to it.

    “The Taliban’s destruction of the statues was a political gesture. The United Nations had sent money to restore these statues at the same time there were sanctions [against Afghanistan],” he said. “The Taliban said children were dying because of this … and the U.N. was more concerned about statues than people.”

    Noah Charney, professor of art history at the American University of Rome, said that the destruction of idols dated back to biblical times, when warring factions would destroy monuments of rivals that were thought to have religious power.

    NBC's Richard Engel travels to the legendary city of Timbuktu, which is cradled within one of West Africa's poorest nations.

    The Ten Commandments include a proscription against making “any graven image” of anything in heaven or on Earth, but Charney said this had been “quickly forgotten” or interpreted to mean only images of “false idols” by many Christians.

    The reason many Ancient Greek and Roman statues of gods are missing their heads and arms is not faulty construction, Charney said. Instead, it is often the legacy of the 6th-century Pope Gregory the Great.

    “He found the classical statuary to be very beautiful, but there was a danger people would revert back to their pagan ways” and start worshiping them, Charney said. By removing the head and arms, which often held items identifying the deity, the statue “lost all its power because you don’t know which god it is.”

    In seventh century Byzantium, clashes between Christians over the alleged worship of icons gave rise to the term “iconoclasm,” meaning the destruction of religious images.

    The Reformation in the 16th century also saw many statues in churches literally defaced by Protestants in Europe.

    Benoit Tessier / Reuters

    A museum guard displays a burned ancient manuscript at the Ahmed Baba Institute in Timbuktu, Mali, on Thursday.

    The city of Timbuktu has borne the brunt of recent Islamist iconoclasts, with rebel forces in Mali setting fire to its historic library as they retreated in the face of French and Malian government troops this month.

    After the militants took the city last year, they destroyed mausoleums and a gate that local superstition said would only open at the end of the world.

    In November, an ultraconservative religious figure in Egypt, Murgan Salem al-Gohary, told local television that the Sphinx and pyramids at Giza should be leveled, an idea that sparked headlines but is shared by only a tiny minority of Egyptians.

    “All Muslims are charged with applying the teachings of Islam to remove such idols, as we did in Afghanistan when we destroyed the Buddha statues,” he said.

    While he celebrated the destruction of the two 6th-century statues -- one 180 feet, the other 125 feet high -- in Afghanistan’s Bamiyan Valley in March 2001, world cultural body UNESCO described it as a “tragic” act that “shook the world.” 

    Beyond the ugliness of the fighting between the U.S. and the Taliban sits Bamiyan Province, a national treasure in a nation divided by war. NBC's chief foreign correspondent Richard Engel tours the region and speaks with its people about their hopes and dreams.

    The wrecking ball has also been swung to significant effect in the holy cities of Mecca and Medina in Saudi Arabia.

    According to an estimate in 2005 by Sami Angawi, an expert on Islamic architecture, at least 300 historic buildings were demolished over the previous 50 years. 

    The reason, espoused by the Wahhabi movement within Islam, was that people might start idolatrously worshipping structures associated with Muhammad, rather than God.

    David Thomas, professor of Christianity and Islam at the U.K.’s Birmingham University, said iconoclasm was “a strain in all religions unfortunately,” but added that was “present at the moment in Islam more than anywhere else.”

    President Francois Hollande went on a sort of victory tour through Timbuktu, in Mali, recently held by extremists connected with al-Qaida. NBC's Rohit Kachroo reports from Mali.

    In contrast, he said that there were “teachings in the Quran that are actually very open and tolerant. There are teachings that accept other ways than the way given to Muhammad.”

    And Thomas said some Islamists were in danger of committing the very sin they despise.

    “The Taliban have an attitude that almost shades into idolatry itself. They are saying they know what the truth is, that they have a monopoly on the truth and that they can therefore almost take the place of God in judging who is right and who is wrong.”

    Related:

    Timbuktu: A journey to Africa's lost city of gold

    Dynamited Afghan Buddha statue may be saved

    Post-revolution, Egypt pyramids back in business

    1186 comments

    Vandalism? No, these ultra-islamists (Wahhabis,Salafists) are toeing the line of the Imamas telling them to destroy 'heretics' mausoleums.graveyards, shrines,libraries,historical World Heritage sites. They want to impose their worldviews on other muslims (especially the Sufis). Afghanistan had their …

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  • 25
    Jan
    2013
    11:07am, EST

    Violence, protesters return to Tahrir Square, Suez as Egypt marks revolution

    Thousands of anti-government protesters gathered in Tahrir Square to mark the 2011 uprising that led to Egypt's change in power. NBCNews.com's Dara Brown reports. 

    By Ahmed el-Shemi and Tom Perry, Reuters

    Five people were shot dead in the Egyptian city of Suez during nationwide protests against President Mohamed Morsi on Friday, the second anniversary of the uprising that toppled Hosni Mubarak.

    One of the dead was a member of the security forces, medics said. Another 280 civilians and 55 security personnel were injured, officials said, in demonstrations fueled by anger at the president and his Islamist allies in the Muslim Brotherhood.



    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    Thousands of opponents of Morsi massed in Cairo's Tahrir Square - the cradle of the revolt against Mubarak - to rekindle the demands of a revolution they say has been hijacked by Islamists who have betrayed its goals.

    Street battles erupted in Cairo, Alexandria, Suez and Port Said. Arsonists attacked at least two state-owned buildings as symbols of government were targeted. An office used by the Muslim Brotherhood's political party was also torched.

    The Jan. 25 anniversary laid bare the divide between the Islamists and their secular rivals.

    This schism is hindering the efforts of Morsi, elected in June, to revive an economy in crisis and reverse a plunge in Egypt's currency by enticing back investors and tourists.

    Inspired by the popular uprising in Tunisia, Egypt's revolution spurred further revolts across the Arab world. But the sense of common purpose that united Egyptians two years ago has given way to internal strife that had already triggered bloody street battles last month.

    "Our revolution is continuing. We reject the domination of any party over this state. We say no to the Brotherhood state," Hamdeen Sabahy, a popular leftist leader, told Reuters.

    PhotoBlog: Protesters fill Tahrir Square on anniversary of Egyptian revolution

    Ed Giles / Getty Images

    An Egyptian protester runs with a live tear gas canister during clashes with riot police around Cairo's Tahrir Square on Friday.

    The Brotherhood decided against mobilizing for the anniversary, wary of the scope for more conflict after December's violence, stoked by Morsi's decision to fast-track an Islamist-tinged constitution rejected by his opponents.

    The Brotherhood denies accusations that it is seeking to dominate Egypt, labeling them a smear campaign by its rivals.

    Death in Suez
    There were conflicting accounts of the lethal shooting in Suez. Some witnesses said security forces had opened fire in response to gunfire from masked men.

    News of the deaths capped a day of violence which started in the early hours. Before dawn in Cairo, police battled protesters who threw petrol bombs and firecrackers as they approached a wall blocking access to government buildings near Tahrir Square.

    Clouds of tear gas filled the air. At one point, riot police used one of the incendiaries thrown at them to set ablaze at least two tents erected by youths, a Reuters witness said.

    Yuka Tachibana / NBC News

    A boy is draped in the Egyptian flag as protesters gather in Tahrir Square in Cairo on Friday. Despite clashes around the square, the atmosphere inside was festive at times.

    Skirmishes between stone-throwing youths and the police continued in streets around the square into the day. Ambulances ferried away a steady stream of casualties.

    Protesters echoed the chants of 2011's historic 18-day uprising. "The people want to bring down the regime," they chanted. "Leave! Leave! Leave!" chanted others as they marched towards the square.

    "We are not here to celebrate but to force those in power to submit to the will of the people. Egypt now must never be like Egypt during Mubarak's rule," said Mohamed Fahmy, an activist.

    There were similar scenes in Suez and Alexandria, where protesters and riot police clashed near local government offices. Black smoke billowed from tires set ablaze by youths.

    In Cairo, police fired tear gas to disperse a few dozen protesters trying to remove barbed-wire barriers protecting the presidential palace, witnesses said. A few masked men got as far as the gates before they were beaten back.

    Tear gas was also fired at protesters who tried to remove metal barriers outside the state television building.

    Outside Cairo, protesters broke into the offices of provincial governors in Ismailia and Kafr el-Sheikhin the Nile Delta. A local government building was torched in the Nile Delta city of al-Mahalla al-Kubra.

    Badie calls for 'serious competition'
    With an eye on parliamentary elections likely to begin in April, the Brotherhood marked the anniversary with a charity drive across the nation. It plans to deliver medical aid to one million people and distribute affordable basic foodstuffs.

    Writing in Al-Ahram, Egypt's flagship state-run daily, Brotherhood leader Mohamed Badiesaid the country was in need of "practical, serious competition" to reform the corrupt state left by the Mubarak era.

    Slideshow: Tempers flare in Egypt's Tahrir Square

    Asmaa Waguih / Reuters

    On the second anniversary of the uprising that toppled Hosni Mubarak, hundreds of youths clash with police.

    Launch slideshow

    "The differences of opinion and vision that Egypt is passing through is a characteristic at the core of transitions from dictatorship to democracy, and clearly expresses the variety of Egyptian culture," he wrote.

    Morsi's opponents say he and his group are seeking to dominate the post-Mubarak order. They accuse him of showing some of the autocratic impulses of the deposed leader by, for example, driving through the new constitution last month.

    "I am taking part in today's marches to reject the warped constitution, the 'Brotherhoodisation'of the state, the attack on the rule of law, and the disregard of the president and his government for the demands for social justice," Amr Hamzawy, a prominent liberal politician, wrote on his Twitter feed.

    The Brotherhood says its rivals are failing to respect the rules of the new democracy that put the Islamists in the driving seat via free elections.

    Six months into office, Morsi is also being held responsible for an economic crisis caused by two years of turmoil. The Egyptian pound has sunk to record lows against the dollar.

    The parties that called for Friday's protests list demands including a complete overhaul of the constitution.

    Critics say the constitution, which was approved in a referendum, offers inadequate protection for human rights, grants the president too many privileges and fails to curb the power of a military establishment supreme in the Mubarak era.

    Morsi'ssupporters say enacting the constitution quickly was crucial to restoring stability needed for economic recovery. 

    Related:

    PhotoBlog: Egypt riot police set fire to protest tents in Tahrir Square, witness says

    Egyptians fear decades of Muslim Brotherhood rule, warn Morsi is no friend to US

    'Egypt is free,' crowds cheer after Mubarak quits

    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    287 comments

    "Opponents of President Mohammed Morsi and his Muslim Brotherhood allies are expected to mass in Tahrir Square later on Friday to revive the demands of a revolution that they say has been betrayed by the Islamists." Don't permit these seventh century Sunni Islamic barbarians and one-way traffic Isla …

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    Explore related topics: egypt, muslim-brotherhood, cairo, featured, islamists, tahrir-square, mohammed-morsi
  • 25
    Jan
    2013
    5:10am, EST

    Malians praise French troops: 'If they leave, I will leave'

    Eric Gaillard / Reuters

    A woman waves to French soldiers Thursday as they head toward the recently liberated town of Diabaly. Some Malians are so grateful for the job the French have done routing Islamist insurgents, they say they hope the troops never leave.

    By Richard Valdmanis, Reuters

    DIABALY, Mali — Residents of Diabaly feared for their lives when French airstrikes pounded their small town in central Mali, shaking their homes and turning the pickup trucks of Islamist fighters into burning, twisted metal.

    Despite that, they are grateful to France.

    Children in bare feet and tattered T-shirts now play among the trucks' charred wreckage — a visible reminder that the town was the focus of the French-led war against al-Qaida-linked rebels bent on carving an Islamist state out of the Sahara.


    "I've told the children not to play with the trucks, but I can't stop them," said Adama Nantume, a retired farmer whose home was blackened by the laser-guided airstrikes that landed yards from his door. "Everyone here is happy about what the French have done."

    Diabaly, once a buzzing trading and agriculture hub, is now a forward headquarters for French troops piling into Mali since the Islamist rebels launched a dramatic offensive toward the capital in early January.

    Nic Bothma / EPA

    Manjou Cisse, 13, was wounded by shrapnel during fighting in Diabaly, which was recently liberated by French troops.

    French airstrikes halted the Islamist advance and Paris has vowed to rid Mali's north of the militants for fear they will create a base for international attacks.

    France has said its military will leave once the Islamists are defeated and Mali is returned to stability, with the aid of an African force.

    But many Diabaly residents say they don't want them to go.

    "I hope that the French stay for eternity. If they leave, I will leave," said Alou Gindou, a 46-year-old driver. "If it were not for the French, we would not be sitting here today."

    Many residents waved and roadside boutiques flew the France's tricolor flag as a column of French armored personnel carriers, jeeps and supply trucks trundled north along the route from the capital Bamako to reinforce Diabaly on Thursday.

    'Ground was shaking'
    Nantume was sitting beneath his mango tree when the convoy of Islamist rebels first arrived and sped past him toward the center of town on the evening of Jan. 14, extending their reach south from their desert strongholds of Kidal, Gao and Timbuktu.

    "Everybody panicked and people began to flee," he said. "I went into my room and crouched in a corner. Bullets were flying everywhere and hitting the house."

    He said the airstrikes began not long afterward as night fell and lasted until the rebels melted away two days later.

    "As the planes circled, the jihadists tried to hide their trucks and they hid some here next to my house. The ground was shaking, the air was filled will bullets, and there were explosions," he said, massaging his palms nervously. "The inside of the house was incredibly hot. I thought I would die."

    Related:

    Jihadists leave trail of destruction, brutality

    Analysis: Why France is taking on Mali extremists

    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    24 comments

    You dear people have no idea what you are talking about. Robert Fowler, a Canadian diplomat who was kidnapped by al Qaida in the Islamic Magreb in 2009, said his captors told him their hope was to create an Islamic emirate that spanned Africa. Their goal was to spread chaos from the Atlantic to the  …

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    Explore related topics: france, africa, featured, mali, islamists, diabaly
  • 17
    Jan
    2013
    7:23pm, EST

    US sending military cargo planes to help French in Mali offensive

    Joe Penney / Reuters

    French military pass the the town of Konobougou on their way to Segou, Mali, on Jan. 17. European Union states will send more than 200 military personnel to train Mali government forces in the fight against Islamist rebels.

    By Jim Miklaszewski and Courtney Kube, NBC News

    U.S. military support for French military operations in Mali will soon include an airlift — U.S. military planes will fly French personnel and equipment to the area.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    A U.S. defense official told NBC News that the military is in the planning stages of an effort to transport the equivalent of about 30 C-17-sized planeloads of French troops and gear from France to Mali.


    Most of the U.S. military planes will fly from the continental U.S. over to France for the mission, but least two Marine Corps KC-130 transport planes from a Navy base in Sigonella, Italy, are also likely to be called in to help. The U.S.-based planes are likely to be a mix of C-17s and C-5s, the U.S. defense official said.

    The U.S. cargo planes may not land inside Mali, one U.S. official said, explaining that the U.S. is not interested in putting boots on the ground as the French fight Islamist militants in their former colony. The cargo planes would need support on the ground to unload, so the military is working out options, including landing the planes in Niger or Senegal.

    The U.S. military is also awaiting orders to help the French military with re-fueling French planes.

    Several U.S. military and defense officials have also told NBC News that a Marine Corps Fleet Anti-Terrorism Security Team remains ready to deploy to Mali to help with embassy security if necessary.

    After tripling its number of troops to help stop Islamist fighters advancing on Mali's capital, the French president has pledged to stay in Mali until stability has returned. Meanwhile, A UK transport has arrived and thousands of African troops are on the way. ITV's Rohit Kachroo reports from Mali's capital

    Related content:

    • African forces begin arriving in Mali to aid battle against rebels
    • In Mali, land of 'gangster-jihadists,' ransoms help fuel the movement
    • France launches 'tough' ground offensive against Mali's Islamist rebels
    • Western hostages reported killed in Algerian raid at gas plant

     

    18 comments

    This isn't the first time the US has helped France with logistical support in Africa. For all the tit-for-tat that has gone on between France and the US, both have helped each other. In 1978, US aircraft supported the French intervention in Zaire. The French co-opted the Beirut operation in 1983, an …

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