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  • 14
    Jan
    2013
    11:46am, EST

    Bomb destroys war memorial in divided Bosnian town

    /

    A Bosnian woman passes the remains of a monument in southern city Mostar, 65 miles from the capital of Sarajevo, on Monday. A bomb blast destroyed earlier in the day destroyed the memorial honoring soldiers of Bosnia's Muslim-dominated wartime army.

    By Maja Zuvela, Reuters

    SARAJEVO, Bosnia-Herzegovina — A bomb blast destroyed a monument to fallen soldiers of Bosnia's Muslim-dominated wartime army on Monday in the southern town of Mostar, where divisions between ethnic Croats and Muslims still run deep.


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    Police said an "explosive device" had destroyed the lily-shaped monument in front of Mostar's city hall in the early hours of Monday morning.

    Bosnia's international peace overseer, Valentin Inzko, said he was "appalled" by the attack and appealed for calm.

    "This violence must not be allowed to spread," Inzko said in a statement.


    Home to around 70,000 people, Mostar saw heavy fighting during Bosnia's 1992-95 war.

    Despite Western efforts to encourage reintegration, the town remains largely divided between Bosnian Muslims (Bosniaks) on the east bank of the Neretva river and Croats on the west, where the city hall is located.

    No one was injured in the explosion.

    "Police are investigating the circumstances and hope to locate the perpetrator soon," Srecko Bosnjak, spokesman for the Mostar police, said.

    The monument to the Bosnian army was built last year, next to a memorial in honor of Croat veterans of the conflict.

    Post-war violence in Mostar has been largely confined to clashes between rival football fans, but political leaders continue to resist the efforts of Western overseers to unify the town.

    Each community has its own utility services, electricity provider and education system.

    Ethnic politicking has paralyzed the town more than once, and in October last year Mostar was the only town in Bosnia where local elections were postponed due to a dispute over how to hold the vote.

    Related stories:
    Synonymous with genocide: Bosnians bury 520 Srebrenica victims
    'Butcher of Bosnia' Ratko Mladic goes on trial over slaughter at Srebrenica
    PhotoBlog: 'Line of blood': 11,541 red chairs symbolize victims of siege of Sarajevo

    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    8 comments

    European Liberals are just as stupid as liberals here.

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    Explore related topics: muslim, europe, bomb, war, monument, bosnia-herzegovina, mostar, featured, serb, croat, bosniak
  • 31
    Dec
    2012
    4:21am, EST

    From alcohol to kites: An A to Z guide to the Islamic Republic of 'Banistan'

    Getty Images, file

    All of these things have been banned in Pakistan at one time or another. Clockwise from top left: Long-haired musicians, 'The Da Vinci Code,' kite-flying, Salman Rushdie's 'Satanic Verses,' India (usually in the form of its newspapers and TV channels) and alcohol.

    By Waj S. Khan, NBC News

    ISLAMABAD, Pakistan — Last month, it was cellphones. Before that, it was motorcycles, shawls and jackets. Earlier this year, it was the BBC, Twitter and YouTube. In 2011, it was porn websites. In 2010, it was Facebook. In the 1990s, it was Indian television and musicians with long hair. In the 1980s, it was Salman Rushdie's "Satanic Verses."  And in the 1970s, it was booze.

    All banned. In Pakistan. By Pakistan.

    Through the decades. Pakistan's state and non-state actors have found a way to regulate, boycott, ban or completely outlaw technology, information, literature, media and even entire communities.


    The result? The Islamic Republic of Pakistan, once imagined as a secular, democratic haven for India's minority Muslim population, may well have become the land of "Banistan."


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    Babar Sattar, a Harvard-educated lawyer, is one of "Zia's Children" — the generation who grew up during the 1970s and 1980s when the culture of forbiddance took root through ironclad legislation passed by the country's Islamist dictator of the time, Muhammad Zia-ul-Haq.

    "The proclivity to ban is the continuing manifestation of expanding religion-driven morality at the expense of personal liberty," Sattar told NBC News. "We don't even recognize that there exists a need not to allow collective outrage or shame to pillage individual rights."

    Here's an A to Z of what's been curtailed in "Banistan." 

    Alcohol: Pakistan was a pretty wet place until the late premier Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto banned alcohol — days before he was removed by an Islamist general in a coup in 1977. Though a heavy drinker himself, Bhutto's ban was meant to move him closer to the religious margins of the country. The political strategizing didn't work for him (he was executed), but prohibition in Pakistan stuck. Still, booze is available for the connected and the rich.

    The only brewery in Pakistan is a 150-year-old tradition.  Business is booming despite strict prohibition laws.  NBC's Amna Nawaz reports.     

    BlackBerry services: Pakistan's blasphemy laws are regarded as the toughest in the Muslim world. But when hundreds of websites were banned in May 2010 for "blasphemous content'" that was appearing on social networks, Pakistan decided to do away with BlackBerry services, too. 

    Cellphones: This year saw Pakistan's  interior minister slam a blanket ban on cellphone services across the country to prevent handsets being used to detonate suicide bombs. On at least two religious occasions in 2012, Eid and Ashura, when terrorist attacks were expected, almost 120 million Pakistanis couldn't use their cellphones, even in case of emergency. 

    Arif Ali / AFP - Getty Images, file

    Pakistani Christians shout slogans as they protest against the movie 'The Da Vinci Code' in Lahore on June 3, 2006. The screen adaptation for the bestselling book by the same name -- starring Tom Hanks as the professor who comes across the Jesus Christ/Mary Magdalene union imagined by author Dan Brown -- was banned in 2004.

    'Da Vinci Code, The': The screen adaptation for the bestselling "The Da Vinci Code," starring Tom Hanks as the professor who comes across the Jesus Christ/Mary Magdalene union imagined by author Dan Brown, was banned in 2004. 

    In Pakistan's largest city, 'Old Glory' is flammable and profitable

    Erotica: In 2011, the country's Internet regulator placed a blanket ban on thousands of pornography sites.  Meanwhile, print and DVD/CD formats of porn are available across the country, and the country manages to maintain an underground porn industry.

    Food [& Beverages]: As in much of the Muslim world, pork products are banned in Pakistan. But 2012 saw even some "Halal" products boycotted by a lawyers' association in Lahore as well the campus of a major university because they were made by Shezan foods, a brand owned by Pakistan's minority Ahmadi sect. (Ahmadis don't think that Mohammad is Islam's final prophet and have been persecuted by successive Pakistani governments for such ideas.) Other products, including Pepsi, were also boycotted for being "Jewish."

    Gambling: Once legal, gambling is now banned (thanks in large part to late prime minister Bhutto's attempts to appease the religious right in the late 1970s). However, Pakistan is a joint capital (with India) of the lucrative illegal cricket betting industry in which millions bet billions, especially when archrivals India and Pakistan play. 

    Daniel Berehulak / Getty Images, file

    Ali Azmat and Salman Ahmad of the rock band Junoon perform in Mumbai, India, in December 2003. The popular band and all musicians with long hair were banned in the 1990s.

    Hair: In his own bid to transform what was left of secular Pakistan after the Islamist Zia regime, the 1990s saw prime minister Nawaz Sharif (tipped to be the next premier in upcoming elections) try to implement selective Shariah law by banning popular rock band, Junoon, and all musicians with long hair. The ban on Junoon was politically inspired, as it had campaigned for the financial accountability of those in elected office.  But it all proved to be rather cosmetic. Rock and roll continued to flourish in Pakistan, and the shutdown only helped Junoon polish off their bad-boy image until they broke up. Meanwhile, Sharif got a hair transplant. The 2000s, however, saw a more complicated and violent hair ban, this time implemented in Pakistan's northwest by Taliban militants, who even bombed and fined barber shops for shaving men.

    Pakistan's Generation Y battles to shape country's future

    India: The world's largest democracy enjoys a special place in the Islamic Republic's banning regime. Some bans look to be permanent, including all Indian news channels, certain news websites and books, and all printed newspapers and magazines (India reciprocates most of these bans). 

    Slideshow: Pakistan: A nation in turmoil

    Muhammed Muheisen / AP

    Images of daily life, political pursuits, religious rites and deadly violence.

    Launch slideshow

    Jokes: Forwarding a joke via text message, email or blog can result in a 14-year prison sentence. But only if it targets the country's leadership. 

    Rumors of plot to sterilize Muslims with polio vaccine sparks killings

    Kites: The centuries-old spring festival of kite flying, Basant, based out of Pakistan's cultural capital Lahore, was also banned by the Supreme Court in 2005 when petitions were filed highlighting the dangerous after-effects of kite flying, including death by strangulation. The Supreme Court reversed the ban earlier this year.

    Carl De Souza / AFP/Getty Images

    A boy flies a kite on a hill overlooking a large relief camp run by The National Rural Support Program in September 2010.

    LGBT rights: Rights for the lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender community are curbed by social taboos in the Islamic Republic, but Pakistan's laws don't help either. The colonial-era Pakistan Penal Code of 1860, designed by the British, imposes a prison sentence for sodomy. But while lesbians have been low-profile in their run-ins with the law of the land, Pakistani transgenders made history in 2012 by successfully lobbying for a landmark Supreme Court judgment in their favor that allows them to both identify themselves and vote as a third sex -- transgender, and not male or female, as they were forced to in the past.

    Minorities: First legally pronounced to be non-Muslims in the 1970s, the persecuted Ahmadi sect was further limited in its actions and exercise of religious freedoms by several laws in the 1980s. They were not allowed to say the Muslim greeting aloud, nor call their houses of worship mosques. Ahmadis continue to be targets of notorious blasphemy laws, under which other religious minorities, particularly Christians, are also targeted. 

    Nipples: Customs agents usually redact images of female nipples from foreign publications available on local newsstands. Bottoms usually are overlooked, but full-frontal nudity is not.

    Osama: As the embarrassment of Operation Neptune Spear set in after May 2011, Pakistani authorities first cordoned off Bin Laden's Abbottabad compound, then forbade foreigners in Abbottabad, then forbade non-Abottabadis in Abbotabad, then forbade all and sundry from visiting the location. Finally, they just razed the building.

    One year after Osama bin Laden's death, questions remain about his life at the heavily guarded compound in Abbottabad, Pakistan.   NBC'S Amna Nawaz reports. 

    Parties: According to the regulators of the largest housing authority in Pakistan's largest city, "Marriages Ceremony," "Dance Party," and "Musical Evenings" are not allowed for citizens inside their own homes. However, "Birthday Party" and "Quran Khwani / Dars" (Quran recitals and religious lectures) are. 

    Quran burning: Pakistan's blasphemy laws, considered the toughest in the Islamic world, carry a potential death sentence for anyone insulting Islam. When a Christian teenage girl with limited learning abilities was accused of burning and desecrating the Quran, riots and controversy followed as the case of young Rimsha, initially charged with blasphemy, developed into a complicated legal battle. But it soon became became evident that an imam, who wanted Christians like Rimsha out of his neighborhood, had planted evidence on her. 

    For many Pakistanis, 'USA' means 'drones'

    Raymond Davis (along with other intelligence contractors and diplomats): When CIA contractor Raymond Davis shot and killed two petty criminals in broad daylight in Lahore in January 2011, the anti-American uproar was so severe that the United States had to dispatch its best diplomats, including John Kerry, to negotiate his release. And although Davis was let go only through the traditional Islamic method of payment of blood money to the victims' relatives, Pakistan subsequently clamped down on the movement and deployment of all Western diplomats, officials and contractors. Today, if you work for the U.S., or the Argentinian, or the Jamaican embassy, you will have to obtain a "No Objection Certificate" to attend a dinner if it's even one town over from where you are stationed.

    Raymond Davis, a CIA contractor who was charged with fatally shooting two men in Pakistan, has been released from prison after relatives of the victims agreed to a deal. NBC's Carol Grisanti reports.

    Social media: With almost 20 million Internet connections that reach even deep inside the volatile tribal areas adjoining Afghanistan, Pakistani authorities have tried in vain to regulate social media. And although Facebook recently shut down a page used for recruiting by the Pakistani Taliban, the government has never directly acted to disconnect those who support terror via social networks. 

    Demonstrators shout slogans and wave placards as they protest against Facebook in Lahore in May 2010.

    Shawls: In what was dubbed by the national press as the most desperate of recently taken security measures, a district in Pakistan's northwest actually banned coats and shawls, even in the dead of winter, under British colonial-era law designed for maintaining public discipline and security. The reason: their possible use to hide suicide jackets under the bulky clothing during a sensitive religious holiday.

    Can social media propel 'rock star' politician Imran Khan to power in Pakistan?

    Urinating: The absence of public toilets across the country, as well as the spread and social acceptance of a rural 'go anywhere' culture has created a messy challenge for government after government in Pakistan: how to stop millions from answering the call of nature when and where they please. The answer? A national ban, with threat of prosecution.

    Vaccinations: Days before 161,000 children were about to inoculated for polio this summer, the Taliban banned the vaccination campaign. Even though Pakistan remains one of the three countries in the world that still carries the debilitating virus, militants continue to target and kill anti-polio campaigners, claiming that the program is a U.S. cover for espionage, similar to the CIA using a Pakistani physician to help locate Osama bin Laden in Abbotabad last year. 

    It's been a tough year for Pakistan U.S. relations. Crucial NATO supply routes have been shuttered since November, there is tension over drone strikes and now the countries are at odds over the treason conviction of the Pakistani doctor who helped the U.S. locate Osama Bin Laden. 

    Weddings: Forget the five-course wedding dinner. Pakistan -- once the land of extravagant, multi-event weddings -- has a law that doesn't allow for more than one entrée at a wedding feast. The policy has been in place for several years but is only now being implemented earnestly by a provincial government that is focused on battling food wastage. 

    More Pakistan coverage from NBC News

    XXX: As porn is outlawed in Pakistan, "Tripple" is the code word nationally accepted for under-the-counter DVD and magazine purchases that are naughtier than usual.

    YouTube: YouTube is the only social networking site that continues to be blanket-banned in Pakistan since its owner, Google Inc., refused to block an anti-Islamic video last September. But Vimeo, YouTube's competitor network that offers similarly "blasphemous" material, remains rather functional and legal in Pakistani cyberspace.

    'Zero Dark Thirty': Though the new Kathryn Bigelow thriller is out, it probably won't be seen in a cinema near you in Pakistan. No theater has promoted the film, no television channel is carrying its trailers, and, so far, no DVD shops are selling even its pirated versions. The reason? Well, one guess. ... "Zero Dark Thirty" is military speak for 12.30 a.m., the time the Abbotabad raid targeting bin Laden commenced in May 2011.

    The Oscar-winning team of director/producer Kathryn Bigelow and writer/producer Mark Boal, along with cast members Jessica Chastain and Jason Clarke, talk about the film based on the decade-long search for Osama bin Laden, which already has critics buzzing and is stirring up controversy.

    More world stories from NBC News:

    • Body of India rape victim cremated in New Delhi
    • Pakistan militants kill 40 in mass execution, attack on Shiites
    • Statue of Hitler praying is displayed in former Warsaw ghetto to controversy
    • Putin signs law banning American adoptions
    • Video: Elephants play soccer at Nepal festival
    • US sailors sue Japan's TEPCO for post-quake radiation exposure

    Follow World News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

     

    228 comments

    It looks like the Islamic Republic of Pakistan missed one. The right to exist as an sentient being with free will, independent thought, and different religious beliefs. Oh wait, I forgot.Being thrown into prison, tortured, and death, are all gifts given to all who meet these conditions. They do …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: pakistan, muslim, banned, islam, censorship, featured, waj-khan
  • 19
    Dec
    2012
    4:41am, EST

    35,000 rapes, a handful of prosecutions: Bosnia war victims seek justice

    By Reuters

    TUZLA, Bosnia -- Fika was 15 years old, and her sister 17, when they were captured and repeatedly raped by Bosnian Serb soldiers who swept through eastern Bosnia early in the country's 1992-95 war.

    "We were forced to watch each other being raped, and I still feel my pain and the pain of my sister," she said. "They wanted us to admit we were spies, so they beat us till they knocked out our teeth."

    Twenty years on, Fika is among thousands of Bosnian Muslim women whose search for recognition and support from the Bosnian state is being blocked by Bosnian Serb leaders who fear a wave of compensation claims. Her sister died at the hands of their torturers.

    Rights groups are losing patience, warning that the psychological toll is only getting worse with time.

    "The silence surrounding the wartime rape of women in the Serb Republic ... is deafening," Amnesty International wrote in October.

    Fewer than 40 rape cases have been prosecuted in the 17 years since the war ended, and legislation at the state level to extend compensation and rehabilitation rights to rape victims of the war is gathering dust.

    On the 17th anniversary of Europe's worst massacre since World War II, Muslims in Bosnia attended funeral services for 520 newly identified victims. Msnbc.com's Dara Brown reports.

    The lesson of Bosnia has spurred a push by Britain to raise awareness of sexual violence in war when it takes over the chairmanship of the G8 group of nations next year.

    'Butcher of Bosnia' Ratko Mladic goes on trial over slaughter at Srebrenica

    The British government plans to send police officers, lawyers, psychologists and forensic experts to Bosnia and other conflict and post-conflict countries to work with local authorities.

    A delicate balance of Muslims, Serbs and Croats, Bosnia was torn apart as federal Yugoslavia dissolved. An estimated 100,000 people died, most of them Muslims. Some estimates put the number of women raped at up to 35,000, again the majority of them Muslims.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    With peace, the country was split into two autonomous regions - the Serb Republic and the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina, home to mainly Muslims and Croats. The country is ruled by a system of ethnic quotas, with each region enjoying a high level of autonomy and the central state often left powerless to legislate over the entire territory.

    The story of Fika, as she asked to be called, is indicative. She declined to give her real name, fearing the stigma attached to many wartime rape victims in Bosnia. Reuters reached her through a non-governmental organization that helps rape victims.

    Caught up in a wave of ethnic cleansing of Muslims from eastern Bosnia, Fika was captured and held at a Serb-run detention camp in the town of Vlasenica. She says she lost count of how many times she was raped by her captors.

    Finally released, Fika fled to the northern town of Tuzla, now part of the Federation, dropped out of school and struggled to support her mother and younger sister.

    Fifteen years ago Tuesday, a peace treaty negotiated by Ambassador Richard Holbrooke was signed, ending the war in Bosnia. NBC's Brian Williams reports.

    Horrors of Srebrenica massacre set out at Mladic trial

    Now 34 and a mother, she has not told her three children what happened to her, nor will she return to her home in Vlasenica, which is now part of the Serb Republic and where she believes her rapists still live.

    Three years ago, spurred by recurring nightmares, she raised the courage to report two of them to police in the region, but charges were never brought.

    She has been diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder and receives $330 per month from the Muslim-Croat Federation as compensation.

    Those like her who live in the Serb Republic receive nothing, however, because the law there only recognizes those who can prove damage to at least 60 percent of their body as civilian victims of war, disregarding psychological trauma.

    'Line of blood': 11,541 red chairs symbolize victims of siege of Sarajevo

    Fika told her husband what happened to her, but says she regrets doing so because of the toll it has taken on their marriage.

    "I have no idea what keeps me going," Fika said. "My heart is rotten."

    "For me, the war never ended. And it never will,” she added.

    At least three unsuccessful bids have been made in recent years to enshrine the rights of wartime rape victims in state law. Bosnian Muslims accuse the Serb Republic of blocking their efforts.

    Srebrenica: The story that will never end

    Amnesty International said the Serb Republic "is still failing to acknowledge the needs of wartime rape survivors - indeed, the existence of a problem at all."

    Bosnian Serb War Invalids Minister Petar Djokic said his government was exploring ways to resolve the issue.

    "We have already discussed this with some non-governmental organizations dealing with this problem to see how we can resolve this institutionally in the best way," Djokic told Reuters, "without creating another problem for ourselves through any attempted abuse of the social support system.”

    More world stories from NBC News:

    • Richard Engel, NBC News team freed from captors in Syria
    • 'We must restore the bond': Japan's new PM vows closer ties with US
    • Gift fit for a queen? UK monarch gets 60 place mats
    • Conn. massacre: Lessons from Israel, where guns are a way of life
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    • No more 'bunga bunga'? Italy's Berlusconi, 76, unveils girlfriend, 27

    Follow World News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    39 comments

    Sure, no victims on the other side. There were no muslim war criminals. No rapes of Serbian women. Right.

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  • 18
    Dec
    2012
    2:10pm, EST

    The unaffiliated rank third among world religion groups, Pew study says

    Jim Hollander / EPA

    Franciscan nuns and Nigerian Christians pray inside St. Catherine's Church, adjacent to the Church of the Nativity, traditionally accepted as the birthplace of Jesus Christ, in the West Bank town of Bethlehem on Monday.

    By Becky Bratu, Staff Writer, NBC News

    Roughly one in six people around the world has no religious affiliation, a new study by the Pew Research Center’s Forum on Religion & Public Life found, making the unaffiliated the third-largest religious group worldwide, behind Christians and Muslims, and about equal in size to the world’s Catholic population.


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    The religiously unaffiliated population includes atheists, agnostics and people who do not identify with any particular religion in surveys, the study issued Tuesday reads. Many of the religiously unaffiliated, however, hold religious or spiritual beliefs, the study emphasized.

    "For example, belief in God or a higher power is shared by 7 percent of Chinese unaffiliated adults, 30 percent of French unaffiliated adults and 68 percent of unaffiliated U.S. adults," it read.

    Making up 16.3 percent of the world population, this group comprises a majority of the population in six countries. China's number of religiously unaffiliated is the largest, with a 62 percent share.


    The Pew Forum's study is based on self-identification.

    Titled "The Global Religious Landscape," the study analyzed data available as of early 2012 from more than 2,500 national censuses and large-scale surveys, and found that Christians are the world's biggest religious group, with 2.2 billion people or 32 percent of the world’s population. The largest share of all Christians live in the United States, followed by Brazil and Mexico.

    About half of all Christians are Catholic, while an estimated 37 percent of Christians are Protestant, the study shows. Greek and Russian Orthodox Christians make up 12 percent of Christians.

    With 23 percent of the world's population, Muslims represent the second-largest religious group and are a majority in 49 countries, including 19 of the 20 countries in the Middle East and North Africa.

    Hindus make up 15 percent of the population, while the nearly 500 million Buddhists add up to 7 percent.

    The study also found that the median age of Muslims (23 years) and Hindus (26) is younger than the median age of the world’s overall population (28), and more than 12 years younger than the median age of Jews, which is 36 years old.

    "Muslims are going to grow as a share of the world's population, and an important part of that is this young age structure," Pew Forum demographer Conrad Hackett told Reuters.

    Judaism has the weakest growth prospects in comparison.

    There are about 15 million Jews in the world, or about 0.2 percent of the global population, and about 44 percent of them live in North America, while about 41 percent live mostly in Israel.

    The Pew Forum study also shows that an estimated 405 million people practice various folk or traditional religions, including African traditional religions, Chinese folk religions, Native American religions and Australian aboriginal religions. More than 70 percent of the world’s folk religion practitioners live in China.

    More world stories from NBC News:

    • Richard Engel and NBC News team freed from captors in Syria
    • Conn. massacre: Lessons from Israel, where guns are a way of life
    • 'I can only rely on myself': Insurance is expensive, unfamiliar in disaster-hit China
    • Queen Elizabeth given place mats by UK Cabinet as thanks for 60-year reign
    • Video: Street fighting, shelling in Syria capital
    • Conservatives sweep to power in faltering Japan
    • Luxury perfume makers create stink over Europe allergy laws

    Follow World News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

     

    75 comments

    So apparently, one in six of us actually have our heads on straight.

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    Explore related topics: muslim, religion, faith, christian, pew-center
  • 18
    Dec
    2012
    5:39am, EST

    Iraq President Talabani 'stable' after stroke

    Mike Segar / Reuters, file

    Iraq's President Jalal Talabani, seen here in September 2011, is in the hospital for a medical 'emergency'.

    Updated at 9:45 a.m. ET: BAGHDAD - Iraqi President Jalal Talabani -- a Kurd who has been a key player in mediating during the country's political crisis -- was in hospital on Tuesday after suffering a stroke that left him in "stable" condition, a lawmaker said.  

    Three un-named government sources said he was in critical condition, but his office said the 79-year-old president was stable under intensive medical supervision after receiving treatment for blocked arteries. 

    Without Talabani, Iraq would lose an influential peace-maker who often eased tensions in the fragile power-sharing government and negotiated in the growing rift over oil between Baghdad and the OPEC member country's autonomous Kurdistan region. 


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    "President Talabani has suffered a light stroke. His condition is stable now and doctors are closely monitoring him and if they decide he should be transferred outside then he'll go," veteran Kurdish politician Mahmoud Othman, a close Talabani associate who was in the Baghdad hospital. 

    Talabani had been suffering from ill health much of this year and received medical treatment overseas several times in the last two years.

    Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki visited the hospital earlier on Tuesday.

    Blasts hit Iraq's Kirkuk, disputed territories

    Under Iraq's constitution, the parliament should elect a new president if the post becomes vacant and Iraq's power-sharing deal calls for the presidency to go to a Kurd while two vice presidents are shared by a Sunni Muslim and a Shi'ite Muslim. 

    Political analysts said former Kurdistan prime minister Barham Salih is favored candidate to replace Talabani should the president be incapacitated.

    But his exit from Iraqi politics would come at a sensitive time and any succession would be complicated, a year after the last American troops left the country. 

    One year after the U.S. military pullout, Iraq teeters between statehood and failure. NBC News' Jim Maceda reports.

    "He is the most moderate among Iraqi politicians and the most able to defuse political shocks. I do not think any one will be able to fill his position as a president and as a politician," Iraqi analyst Ibrahim al-Sumaidaie said. 

    Iraq law would see one of the vice presidents take over Talabani's duties before the parliamentary vote. But Iraq's Sunni Vice President, Tareq al-Hashemi, is a fugitive outside of the country after he fled to escape charges he ran death squads. He was sentenced to death in absentia.

    A veteran of the Kurdish guerrilla movement, Talabani survived wars, exile and infighting in northern Iraq to become the country's first Kurdish president a few years after the 2003 invasion that toppled Saddam Hussein. 

    More world stories from NBC News:

    • Richard Engel and NBC News team freed from captors in Syria
    • Conn. massacre: Lessons from Israel, where guns are a way of life
    • 'I can only rely on myself': Insurance is expensive, unfamiliar in disaster-hit China
    • Video: Street fighting, shelling in Syria capital
    • Conservatives sweep to power in faltering Japan

    Follow World News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

    22 comments

    Does anybody know how to get rid of these "effin" ads that keep popping up in the middle of what I'm trying to read?

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    Explore related topics: iraq, middle-east, muslim, world, talabani, kurd, featured
  • 24
    Nov
    2012
    3:33pm, EST

    Bloody displays as Shiites flagellate themselves for Ashoura

    GRAPHIC WARNING: This post contains graphic images which some viewers may find disturbing. 

    S.sabawoon / EPA

    Afghan Shiite Muslims flagellate themselves during an Ashoura procession in Kabul on Nov. 24.

    Each year during Ashoura, Shiite Muslim men & boys whip their backs with chains and cut their heads with knives, drenching themselves in blood to mourn the loss of one of the faith's most revered figures, Imam Hussein, a grandson of the Prophet Mohammad, who was killed in the 7th century battle of Kerbala.

    Thaier Al-sudani / Reuters

    Shiite Muslim worshippers, covered in their own blood from self-inflicted wounds, hold knives during a procession to mark the Muslim festival of Ashoura in Baghdad's Sadr City on Nov. 24.

    Thaier Al-sudani / Reuters

    An Iraqi Shiite Muslim child gashes his forehead with a sword during a ceremony marking Ashoura in Baghdad's Sadr City on Nov. 24.

    Murad Sezer / Reuters

    Turkish Shiite women during an Ashoura procession in Istanbul on Nov. 24.

     

    Dar Yasin / AP

    Blood runs down the face of a Kashmiri Shiite Muslim as he participates in a procession in Srinagar, India, on Nov. 24.

    Related content:
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    • Hindus worship the sun god as night falls during Chhath Puja
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    26 comments

    What do shocking, senseless, scarring displays such as this say about us as a human race? . . . it says we really haven't crept up the evolutionary ladder as far as we'd thought we had. It's hard to imagine so-called "adults" doing this sort of thing to themselves, much less allowing their children  …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: muslim, religion, islam, world-news, shiite
  • 22
    Nov
    2012
    12:49am, EST

    'Like the world was ending': Taliban attack on Shiite procession kills 23

    T. Mughal / EPA

    People react at the site of a suicide bomb attack targeting a Shiite Muslim mourning procession in Rawalpindi, Pakistan, Wednesday.

    By The Associated Press

    Updated at 7:29 a.m. ET: A Taliban suicide bomber struck a procession near Pakistan's capital, killing 23 people in the latest of a series of bombings targeting Shiite Muslims during the sect's holiest month of the year, officials said Thursday. 


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    The bomber attacked the procession around midnight Wednesday in the city of Rawalpindi, said Deeba Shahnaz, a state rescue official.

    At least 62 people were wounded by the blast, including six police officers. Eight of the dead and wounded were children, Shahnaz said.


     

    Slideshow: Pakistan: A nation in turmoil

    Muhammed Muheisen / AP

    Images of daily life, political pursuits, religious rites and deadly violence.

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    Police tried to stop and search the bomber as he attempted to join the procession, but he ran past them and detonated his explosives, senior police official Haseeb Shah said. The attacker was also carrying grenades, some of which exploded, Shah said.

    Malala's wounded friends back in Pakistan school

    "I think the explosives combined with grenades caused the big loss," said Shah.

    Local TV footage showed the scene of the bombing littered with body parts and smeared with blood. Shiites beat their heads and chests in anguish.

    "It was like the world was ending," said one of the victims, Nasir Shah, describing the blast. He was being treated at a local hospital for wounds to his hands and legs.

    Officials in india say the lone surviving gunman from the 2008 terror attacks in Mumbai was executed. The Pakistani citizen was one of ten gunmen who went on a three-day killing rampage. TODAY's Natalie Morales reports.

    Earlier Wednesday, the Taliban set off two bombs within minutes outside a Shiite mosque in the southern city of Karachi, killing one person and wounding 15 others, senior police official Javed Odho said.

    Pakistani Taliban spokesman Ahsanullah Ahsan claimed responsibility for the attacks in Rawalpindi and Karachi.

    "We have a war of belief with Shiites," Ahsan told The Associated Press by telephone from an undisclosed location. "They are blasphemers. We will continue attacking them."

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    © 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

    75 comments

    The Pakistani people do not seem to be up in arms over this attack much as the drones. What a bunch of tools.

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    Explore related topics: pakistan, muslim, sectarian, bombing, islam, suicide-bomb, shittie, commentid-shittie
  • 10
    Nov
    2012
    3:40pm, EST

    Middle East nuclear talks called off

    By NBC News staff and wire reports

    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    Proposed high-level talks between Israel and its Muslim neighbors on a Middle East free of weapons of mass destruction have been called off, The Associated Press, citing diplomats, reported Saturday. 

    The diplomats said the U.S., one of the organizers, would likely make a formal announcement soon, stating that with tensions in the region high, "the time was not opportune" for such a gathering, AP reported.

    The meeting, to be held in Helsinki by year's end, was on shaky ground since it was agreed to in 2010 by the 189 member nations of the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty.


    The decision to scrap it cast doubt on the significance of the NPT conference and its attempts every five years to advance nonproliferation.

    Watch World News videos on NBCNews.com

    The diplomats demanded anonymity Saturday because they were not authorized to divulge the cancellation ahead of the formal announcement, AP reported.

    However, last Monday, The Guardian newspaper of London reported that Israeli and Iranian officials were taking part in two days of talks at a nuclear non-proliferation meeting in Brussels. One participant called the European Union Non-Proliferation Consortium as "respectful and positive," the Guardian reported.

    The Brussels meeting was intended to pave the way for a full international conference in the next few months on banning nuclear arms and other weapons of mass destruction from the Middle East, the Guardian reported.

    The handful of officials from Israel and Iran involved in the two-day event billed as an academic seminar included senior officials who had permission of their respective governments to take part in an informal discussion with representatives from about 10 Arab states about exploring the possibility of holding a United Nations-sponsored conference on establishing a WMD-free zone in the Middle East.

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    Iran has been under international pressure and U.S.-led sanctions to curb its nuclear program, which it says is peaceful.

    Experts from the International Atomic Energy Agency and Iran are scheduled to meet Dec. 13 in Tehran for a new round of negotiations, an IAEA spokesman said Friday.

    This story includes reporting by The Associated Press.

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    120 comments

    This propogandist article doesn't make it clear but I will. The US and Israel have been blocking the Mideast WMD-free zone proposal for over a decade, even before we invaded Iraq over WMD. If the Mideast were free of WMD we would have had to find another excuse to invade Iraq, threaten Iran and Isra …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: iran, muslim, treaty, non-proliferation, helsinki, nuclear-talks, isarel
  • 7
    Nov
    2012
    5:38pm, EST

    Man behind 'Innocence of Muslims' film sentenced to one year in prison for violating probation

    Mona Shafer Edwards / AFP - Getty Images file

    This Sept. 27 courtroom drawing shows Nakoula Basseley Nakoula in court on probation violation charges in Los Angeles.

    By The Associated Press and NBC News staff

    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    A California man who was behind an anti-Muslim film that spurred violent protests in the Middle East was sentenced on Wednesday to one year in prison for violating the terms of his probation stemming from a 2010 bank fraud conviction.

    Mark Basseley Youssef, a 55-year-old Egyptian-American, was sentenced by U.S. District Court Judge Christina Snyder after he admitted four of eight alleged violations including obtaining a fraudulent California driver's license.


    Youssef served most of a 21-month prison term in the bank fraud case. Federal authorities wanted Youssef to serve two years for the violations.

    A judge denied bail for the alleged producer of an anti-Muslim film that sparked Mideast outrage. He was arrested for violating probation from a bank fraud conviction. KNBC's Beverly White reports.

    None of the violations had to do with the content of "Innocence of Muslims," a 13-minute film that mocks the prophet Mohammad as a religious fraud, pedophile and a womanizer. The movie sparked a torrent of violence in Libya and other parts of the Middle East, and dozens died.

    Federal authorities have said they believe Youssef is responsible for the film, but they haven’t said whether he was the person who posted it online. He also wasn’t supposed to use any name other than his true legal name without the prior written approval of his probation officer.

    At least three names have been associated with Youssef since the film trailer surfaced — Sam Bacile, Nakoula Basseley Nakoula and Youssef. Bacile was the name attached to the YouTube account that posted the video.

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    169 comments

    Anti muslim is not a crime, no more than an anti christian. Bubba or not, he had the right to make whatever film he chooses. See the the word choose, we do have that freedom - remember. Sometimes the truth just hurts and you live with it.

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  • 25
    Oct
    2012
    8:18am, EDT

    'Mountain of Mercy': Hajj pilgrims make early-morning ascent

    Alaa Badarneh / EPA

    Muslim pilgrims arrive to pray at the Mountain of Mercy (formally known as Mount Arafat) during the Hajj, in Arafat, Saudi Arabia, on October 24, 2012.

    As the sun rose on Thursday morning, hundreds of Muslim pilgrims prayed on a rocky hill known as the Mountain of Mercy, located on the Plain of Arafat near Mecca.

    Saudi authorities say around 3.4 million pilgrims — some 1.7 million of them from abroad — have arrived in the holy cities of Mecca and Medina for this year's hajj pilgrimage. 

    Hassan Ammar / AP

    Muslim pilgrims pray on a rocky hill called the Mountain of Mercy, on the Plain of Arafat near the holy city of Mecca, in the early hours of Thursday, Oct. 25, 2012.

    Hassan Ammar / AP

    A pilgrim cries as he prays at sunrise on a rocky hill called the Mountain of Mercy on Oct. 25, 2012.

    Hassan Ammar / AP

    Pilgrims climb the Mountain of Mercy on Oct. 25, 2012.

    Hassan Ammar / AP

    Muslim pilgrims head to Mount Arafat ahead of the hajj main ritual in the holy city of Mecca on Oct. 24, 2012.

    Click here to see previous PhotoBlog posts on the hajj.

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    47 comments

    Muslims only believe in receiving mercy for themselves, but certainly never show any mercy to anyone else. What a sham.

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    Explore related topics: middle-east, muslim, religion, saudi-arabia, world-news, hajj, mecca, mount-arafat, mountain-of-mercy
  • 23
    Oct
    2012
    6:06am, EDT

    Millions descend on Mecca for Hajj pilgrimage

    Fayez Nureldine / AFP - Getty Images

    Muslim pilgrims wait for the start of prayers at the Grand Mosque in the Saudi holy city of Mecca on October 22, 2012.

    Muslim pilgrims are descending in droves on Mecca for the hajj pilgrimage, which Saudi Arabia insists will not be affected by instability rocking the region. 

    Stormy skies greet pilgrims at Mount Noor in Mecca

    The annual Islamic pilgrimage, which officially begins on Thursday, October 25, draws three million visitors each year, making it the largest annual gathering of people in the world.

    Hajj is among the five pillars of Islam and is required of all able-bodied Muslims at least once in their lifetime.

    -- Agence France Presse, The Associated Press

    Hassan Ammar / AP

    Muslim pilgrims leave the Grand mosque after the noon prayer in Mecca, Saudi Arabia, on Oct. 22, 2012.

    Alaa Badarneh / EPA

    A view of the Royal Hotel Clock Tower located near the Haram Sharif Mosque during sunset, as seen from the top of the Jabal-al-noor ('Mountain of Light' in Arabic), four days before the Hajj 2012 pilgrimage, near Mecca, Saudi Arabia, on October 21, 2012.

    Follow @NBCNewsPictures

    Sign up for the NBCNews.com Photos Newsletter

     

    1 comment

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    Explore related topics: middle-east, muslim, religion, saudi-arabia, world-news, hajj, mecca
  • 7
    Oct
    2012
    5:29am, EDT

    Philippines, Muslim rebels agree landmark deal to end 40-year conflict

    Jay Directo / AFP - Getty Images

    President Benigno Aquino announced on Sunday that a deal had been reached with Muslim separatist rebels group Moro Islamic Liberation Front to end a decades-long insurgency that has left more than 150,000 people dead.

    By Reuters

    MANILA - The Philippine government and Muslim rebels have agreed a peace deal to end a 40-year conflict that has killed more than 120,000 people, President Benigno Aquino said on Sunday, paving the way for a political and economic revival of the country's troubled south.

    The agreement sets in train a roadmap to create a new Bangsamoro autonomous region in Muslim-dominated areas of the south of the mainly Roman Catholic country before the end of Aquino's term in 2016. Bangsamoro refers to Muslim and non-Islamic minority people in the southern Philippines.



    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    Expectations are high that after nearly 15 years of violence-interrupted talks, both the government and the country's largest Muslim rebel group will work side-by-side to realize the promises contained in the agreement, to be signed on October 15 in Manila and witnessed by Aquino and Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak.

    The two sides reached the deal for the resource-rich region during talks in the Malaysian capital of Kuala Lumpur.

    "This agreement creates a new political entity and it deserves a name that symbolizes and honors the struggles of our forebears in Mindanao and celebrates the history and character of that part of our nation. That name will be Bangsamoro," Aquino announced via a live broadcast from the presidential palace.

    Report: US seeks military expansion in Philippines 

    "This framework agreement is about rising above our prejudices. It is about casting aside the distrust and myopia that has the plagued efforts of the past," said Aquino, surrounded by his cabinet ministers.

    While obstacles still lie ahead, the deal signals a major breakthrough in trust between the government and the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) separatists, who have long viewed Manila's motives in the talks with suspicion.

    Stringer / Philippines / Reuters

    Philippine soldiers patrol the town of Kauswagan in Lanao del Norte, southern Philippines, in August, 2008. The Philippine government and Muslim rebels have agreed a peace deal to end a 40-year conflict that has killed more than 120,000 people, President Benigno Aquino said on Sunday.

    Zainuddin Malang, executive director of the Mindanao Human Rights Action Cente, a civil society group monitoring an existing truce in the region says the two sides must take extra caution in their next steps.

    "This agreement is merely an opportunity to end the conflict. The actual end of the conflict can only come from its successful implementation. We can only hope this agreement won't suffer the fate of prior agreements," Malang said.

    Philippines: Top terrorist wanted by US is killed

    "What is very important here is that we have a president who has so much political capital, backing the framework agreement, so the chances are higher to end the conflict."

    New opportunities
    The deal comes as the Philippines defies its reputation as an economic laggard with strong growth and a resurgence in investor interest.

    The south's volatile and often violent politics could still hamper the plans. There is a risk that radical Islamic factions could split off from the MILF and continue fighting in a region that has a history of links with al Qaeda militants. Another threat comes from powerful clans who control some areas in the region and may fear a loss of political influence.

    Click here for more stories from the Asia-Pacific region

    After four decades of conflict, the MILF leaders are ageing and, analysts say, eager to see some fruit from the years of peace negotiations.

    The leadership may also be motivated by the prospect of royalties from huge untapped deposits of oil, gas and mineral resources in rebel areas, part of an estimated total of $312 billion in mineral wealth in Mindanao. France's Total has partnered with Malaysia's Mitra Energy Ltd. to explore oil and gas fields in the Sulu Sea off Mindanao.

    The deal will set up a 15-member Transition Commission, which has until 2015 to draft a law creating the new entity to replace the current autonomous region.

    The new entity and its jurisdiction will be determined through a plebiscite after the passage of the organic law.

    The Muslim area will gain more political and economic powers, including imposition of taxes to cut central government subsidies, a bigger share in revenues from natural resources and a more active role in internal security.

    "This framework agreement paves the way for a final, enduring peace in Mindanao," Aquino said. "It brings all former secessionist groups into the fold; no longer does the Moro Islamic Liberation Front aspire for a separate state.

    "This means that hands that once held rifles will be put to use tilling land, selling produce, manning work stations, and opening doorways of opportunity for other citizens."

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    58 comments

    There is a risk that radical Islamic factions could split off from the MILF and continue fighting in a region that has a history of links with al Qaeda militants. As Muslims continue their march toward world domination.

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    Explore related topics: muslim, philippines, rebels, featured, aquino
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