Saturday, July 31, 2010

Indonesia: Rights Commission Urges Authorities to be Strict on Sectarian Attack

Thousands of people from different islamic group which are against the Ahmadiyah sect attacked a group of people after a religious gathering by the Ahmadiyah group in Manis Lor Village on Thursday (29/7).

Ahmadiyya Times | News Watch | Int'l Desk
Source & Credit: TEMPO Interactive | Jakarta
Courtesy The Persecution.Org | July 30, 2010


TEMPO Interactive, Jakarta — The National Human Rights Commission has responded to a renewed attack on the banned Islamic sect the Ahmadiyah yesterday (29/7) in West Java which involved thousands from different islamic organisations in Kuningan Regency.

Stanley Adi Prasetyo a commissioner with the national body said today (30/7) “even law enforcement apparatus could not curb certain belief of faith let alone those who are not part of the authority.”

Thousands of people from different islamic group which are against the Ahmadiyah sect attacked a group of people after a religious gathering by the Ahmadiyah group in Manis Lor Village on Thursday (29/7). Attacks on the group have been reported since 2007.

Stanley said authorities should take strict measure against those who take the law into their own hands radically which he said will affect those outside the conflict.

 -- ARIE FIRDAUS


-- The Persecution

Read original post here: Rights Commission Urges Authorities to be Strict on Sectarian Attack

Indonesian President: Hit Back at West Java ‘Anarchy’

Amid pressure from Muslim groups, the government in 2008 prohibited members of Ahmadiyah from practicing their faith in public or proselytizing, but stopped short of banning the sect that many mainstream Muslims consider deviant.

Ahmadiyya Times | News Watch | Int'l Desk
Source & Credit: The Jakarta Globe
By Camelia Pasandaran July 31, 2010

Jakarta. Amid rising tensions in Kuningan, West Java, following the closure of Ahmadiyah mosques there by security officials, President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono on Friday called for firm police action.

Djoko Suyanto, coordinating minister for political, legal and security affairs, said the president had instructed him to order the police to take resolute action against the unrest.

“In my opinion, anarchy — no matter by whom or where — should be handled firmly,” the minister quoted Yudhoyono as saying.

The Kuningan Police have already been told of their duties, Djoko said, adding that he had confidence they would be able to contain the situation.

Nigeria: Fashola leads Muslim delegation to UK

In the words of the founder of the Ahmadiyya Muslim Jama’at (The Promised Messiah), Hazrat Mirza Ghulam Ahmad “the primary purpose of this Convention is to enable every sincere individual to personally experience religious benefits.

Ahmadiyya Times | News Watch |
Source & Credit: Vanguard | Nigeria
By Sam Eyoboka | July 31, 2010

THE Amir (head) of the Ahmadiyya Muslim Jama’at Nigeria, Dr. Mashuud Fashola  is leading the Nigerian delegation to the 44th annual conference (Jalsa Salana) holding  at the Hadeeqa-tul-Mahdi, Alton Hampshire, United Kingdom beginning today till Sunday.

In the words of the founder of the Ahmadiyya Muslim Jama’at (The Promised Messiah), Hazrat Mirza Ghulam Ahmad “the primary purpose of this Convention is to enable every sincere individual to personally experience religious benefits. They may enhance their knowledge and—due to their being blessed and enabled by Allah, The Exalted; their perception (of Allah) may progress.

Among its secondary benefits is that this congregational meeting together will promote mutual introduction among all brothers, and it will strengthen the fraternal ties within this Community.”




Read original post here: Fashola leads Muslim delegation to UK

Indonesia: Minority Islamic sect under fire in Indonesia | The Washington Post

Most people practice a moderate form of the faith, but a small but vocal extremist fringe has gained influence in recent years because the government relies heavily on Muslim parties in parliament.

Ahmadiyya Times | News Watch | Int'l Desk
Source & Credit: The Washington Post
By Achmad Ibrahim | AP | July 30, 2010

MANISLOR, Indonesia -- A minority Islamic sect told followers Friday to prepare for war after rock-throwing mobs attacked one of their mosques in central Indonesia, calling its members heretics.

The weeklong violence in Manislor, a village in West Java province, peaked Thursday after more than 500 hard-liners from the Islamic Defenders Front, known as FPI, clashed with 3,000 Ahmadiyah sect followers.

At least eight people were injured, including three police.

"We have to defend ourselves and our mosques," said Deden Sujana, who heads security for the sect, saying hard-liners have "gone too far."

Indonesia: Setara Institute condemns attacks on Ahmadiyya, forced closure of Ahmadiyah mosque

The Setara Institute for Democracy and Peace condemned the attack on Ahmadiyah followers and the forced closure of their mosque in Kuningan, and called on authorities to end the use of violence against the minority group.

Ahmadiyya Times | News Watch | Int'l Desk
Source & Credit: The Jakarta Post | Jakarta
By Ridwan Max Sijabat and Dicky Christanto
Edited by Ahmadiyya Times | July 31, 2010

The Setara Institute for Democracy and Peace condemned the attack on Ahmadiyah followers and the forced closure of their mosque in Kuningan, and called on authorities to end the use of violence against the minority group. “The use of violence will not solve the dispute,” Setara deputy chairman Bonar Tigor Naipospos said Friday.

However, the Religious Affairs Minister Suryadharma Ali called Ahmadiyah apostate to Islamic teaching and said followers should stop propagating their faith.

Eye on deception: An important clarification for Daily Ummat, Karachi Pakistan

One of the chief objectives for starting Ahmadiyya Times was to battle the questionable media practices from within and to counter unsubstantiated and sometimes all together made-up facts and reports - by the likes of Daily Ummat.

Ahmadiyya Times | News Watch | Int'l Desk
Source: Daily Ummat, Pak | Ahmadiyya Times
By Imran Jattala, Editor | July 31, 2010

In its July 30th publication, Daily Ummat, an Urdu newspaper published from Karachi, Pakistan, has made several unsubstantiated statements in its reporting of anti-Ahmadiyya agitation news from Indonesia.

The focus of this clarification is primarily the description attributed to Ahmadiyya Times in the story, wherein Daily Ummat described Ahmadiyya Times as “a worldwide newspaper [or magazine] of Qadianis [Ahmadis].”

This description by Daily Ummat is utterly incorrect.

Although a clear disclaimer has always been prominently displayed on the front Page of Ahmadiyya Times, the editorial staff, once again, clarifies that Ahmadiyya Times is an independently run website and does not claim to represent the official views of the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community. Furthermore, Ahmadiyya Times assumes full responsibility for the contents of its web pages.

The Indonesian Ulema Council deplores attack on Ahmadiyah

The way to settle the problem could be through dialog between representatives of the regional government and Ahmadiyah members as well as members of mainstream Muslim organizations.

Ahmadiyya Times | News Watch |
Source & Credit: The Jakarta Post
By Berto Wedhatama | July 30, 2010

The Indonesian Ulema Council (MUI) deplored on Friday an incident of attack against members of the Islamic sect Jamaah Ahmadiyah at Manislor village, Jakalaksana district, Kuningan regency, West Java, a day earlier.

“It should have been settled persuasively,” said Slamet Effendi Yusuf, head of MUI's Inter-religious Harmony Commission as quoted by tempointeraktif.com news portal.

The way to settle the problem could be through dialog between representatives of the regional government and Ahmadiyah members as well as members of mainstream Muslim organizations, he said.

Friday, July 30, 2010

UK: Morden mosque prepares tribute for murdered Southfields man

Ahmadiyya Muslims will publicly pledge to reject extremism, weeks after Southfields businessman Muhammad Ashraf Bilal was one of 86 worshipers massacred by Taliban militants in Pakistan in May.

Ahmadiyya Times | News Watch |
Source & Credit: Wimbledon Guardian News
By Guardian | July 30, 2010

As a tribute to a Southfields man killed by terrorists in Pakistan in May, volunteers at a Morden mosque have been preparing for the UK’s largest Islamic convention this weekend.

Meals and entertainment are being prepared for an estimated 30,000 visitors from 80 countries visiting the annual Jalsa Salana, in Alton, Hampshire, from Friday, July 30, to Sunday, August 1.

Ahmadiyya Muslims will publicly pledge to reject extremism, weeks after Southfields businessman Muhammad Ashraf Bilal was one of 86 worshippers massacred by Taliban militants in Pakistan in May.

Hadhrat Mirza Masroor Ahmad, global supreme head of the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community, said: “Extremists are creating havoc and seek to destroy those who disagree with their dogma.

“We will continue to respond with patience and prayer and let never give up our belief and trust in God.”


Read original post here: Morden mosque prepares tribute for murdered Southfields man

PAKISTAN: The Mad Mullahs | Archives - 1953

Spellbinding mullahs whipped up crowds in Lahore’s many mosques, and in a few days wild processions were shouting anti-Ahmadiya slogans.

Ahmadiyya Times | News Watch | Archives
Source & Credit: TIMES | Archives
By Time Report on Lahore – 1953

March 30, 1953 - For two days last week, a wild mob ruled the Pakistan city of Lahore (pop. 849,000). Surging through the streets, hungry Moslems stoned and stabbed police, burned buses and automobiles, ripped up railroad tracks, cut telegraph wires, smashed traffic lights and forcibly blackened the faces of anyone caught riding a bicycle or automobile. All shops closed and public officials fled. The city’s 300 police, disarmed by the mob, were withdrawn from the streets. All communication with the outside world was cut off.

AhmadiyyatIslam: 1st day success of UK Ahmadiyya Annual Convention updated on Twitter

The Twitter-imposed 140 characters limit on the text of the messages did not impede AhmadiyyatIslam in any way in conveying the essence of the day’s proceedings in just 5 rapid-fired tweets.

Ahmadiyya Times | News Watch | UK Desk
Source & Credit: AhmadiyyatIslam on Twitter
By Ahmadiyya Times staff | July 30, 2010

The day one of the Ahmadiyya Muslim Jalsa Salana (Annual Convention) in the UK completed successfully, AhmadiyyatIslam reported in the day's concluding updates on Twitter.

The event, which began with Friday Sermon and Opening Address, both delivered by Hadhrat  Mirza Masroor Ahmad, Head of the worldwide Ahmadiyya Muslim Community, was broadcast live by Muslim Television Ahmadiyya (MTA).

According to the updates by AhmadiyyatIslam on Twitter at the conclusion of the first day, His Holiness spoke of the courage exhibited by the Lahore Ahmadi martyrs and how the May 28 attacks had inspired the community to become even more unified and devoted to the cause of Islam.

Hadhrat Mirza Masroor Ahmad said: ‘Opponents had hoped that attacks on Ahmadis would lead to fear, but let it be clear Ahmadis are not scared of anyone except Allah.’

The weather on day one of the convention turned out to be very pleasant with hardly any rain, the updates by AhmadiyyaIslam reported. However, it did get warm inside the main marquee where the convention attendees were listening to the proceedings, the tweets added.

The "translation of Jalsa Salana proceedings [is being made available] in various languages," was stated in the final twitter update. "Full Jalsa Coverage on MTA (UK - Sky 787) mta.tv," was the signoff message by AhmadiyyaIslam for the evening.

The Twitter-imposed 140 characters limit on the text of the messages did not impede AhmadiyyatIslam in any way in conveying the essence of the day’s proceedings in just 5 rapid-fired tweets.


  -- Ahmadiyya Times staff



Follow AhmadiyyatIslam on Twitter:  http://twitter.com/AhmadiyyatIslam

UK: Three day Muslim conference begins in Hampshire

“Those who persecute us had hoped and expected that after the Lahore attacks we would become scared and fearful. But in the wake of that tragedy our true spirit has emerged, that we are not scared of anyone or anything except God Almighty.” [His Holiness, Mirza Masroor Ahmad]

Ahmadiyya Times | News Watch | UK Desk
Source & Credit: Ahmadiyya Muslim Community | UK
By AMA Press Desk | Press Release | July 30, 2101

Hadhrat Mirza Masroor Ahmad spoke of the courage of Ahmadis in the wake of the Lahore attacks

Earlier today, His Holiness, Hadhrat Mirza Masroor Ahmad inaugurated the 44th Annual Convention (Jalsa Salana) of the Ahmadiyya Muslim Jamaat UK. In a powerful and emotional speech His Holiness spoke about the courage displayed by the 86 Ahmadi Muslims who were brutally martyred in Lahore on May 28.

The three day international event is being held at Hadeeqatul Mahdi in Alton, Hampshire and has attracted great interest with at least 30,000 delegates expected from over 80 countries. The event began with His Holiness leading the Friday prayers (Jumma) at 1pm.

Bangladesh indicts Jamaat-e-Islami four on war crimes

A senior court official, Mohammed Shahinur Islam, told the BBC on Monday the four would not be able to apply for bail under Monday's warrants.

Ahmadiyya Times | News Watch | Int'l Desk
Source & Credit: BBC News | South Asia
By BBC |  July 26 2010

Bangladesh's war crimes tribunal, which is investigating the country's 1971 liberation struggle against Pakistan, has issued its first arrest warrants.

Court officials told the BBC the war crimes indictments targeted four leaders of Islamist political party Jamaat-e-Islami, already in custody.

The tribunal was set up in March to try people accused of atrocities.

Bangladesh was part of Pakistan until the nine-month war of secession, which left up to three million people dead.

The four accused - Jamaat leader Motiur Rahman Nizami; his deputy Ali Ahsan Mohammad Mujahid; and two other senior leaders, Muhammad Kamaruzzaman and Abdul Quader Mollah - were detained last month on unrelated charges.

Pakistan: Blasphemy law revisited

Is it not time for the learned ulema to re-examine their thesis that the blasphemy law can stop private citizens from killing suspects? Surely they do not wish their faith to be defamed.

Ahmadiyya Times | News Watch |
Source & Credit: Daily Dawn | Pakistan
By I.A. Rehman | July 29, 2010

Is it not time for the Ulema to re-examine their thesis that the blasphemy law can stop private citizens from killing suspects? Surely they do not wish their faith to be defamed.

THE recent killing of two blasphemy accused in police custody and the case of a mentally unstable woman who spent 14 years in confinement on a charge she could not understand have underscored the need to revisit the blasphemy law.

Bangladesh's Islamist parties face ban after court rules against religion-based politics

Since then Bangladesh has seen the emergence of more than two dozen Islamist parties, some demanding the establishment of Islamic Shariah law in the predominantly Muslim country governed by liberal secular laws.

Ahmadiyya Times | News Watch |
Source & Credit: Canadian Press
By Farid Hossain (CP) | July 30, 2010

DHAKA, Bangladesh — Islamist parties in Bangladesh face a ban from politics after the Supreme Court ruled religion-based organizations cannot participate in political life, the law minister said Thursday.

Bangladesh banned religion-based politics after it gained independence from Pakistan in 1971, but an amendment to the country's constitution in 1979 allowed Islamic parties to operate again.

Since then Bangladesh has seen the emergence of more than two dozen Islamist parties, some demanding the establishment of Islamic Shariah law in the predominantly Muslim country governed by liberal secular laws.

In a ruling released Wednesday, the Supreme Court struck down the 1979 amendment saying it contradicted secularism, one of Bangladesh's four founding pillars.

Indonesia: Hard-line groups renew attack on Ahmadiyah

The clash erupted after 500 protesters from several hard-line Islamic groups pushed their way into the sect’s complex at Manis Lor village, located some 40 kilometers south of nearby Cirebon city and home to the 3,000 Ahmadiyah adherents since 1954, the largest Ahmadiyah community in the country.

Ahmadiyya Times | News Watch | Int'l Desk
Source & Credit:The Jakarta Post | Headlines
By Nana Rukmana | Kuningan | July 30, 2010

Three people were allegedly injured and houses damaged when clashes broke out between an angry mob and members of Islamic sect Jamaah Ahmadiyah in Kuningan regency, West Java, on Thursday.

Coordinating Political, Legal and Security Affairs Minister Djoko Suyanto slammed the incident and told people to stop resorting to violence.

“The problem should be taken care of peacefully, not through violence,” he told Antara news agency.

UK: Muslims urged to unite against violence

 "Those who love and yearn for peace should stand united against terror and 'jihadist' violence. Extremists are creating havoc and seek to destroy those who disagree with their dogma." [His Holiness Mirza Masroor Ahmad]

Ahmadiyya Times | News Watch | UK Desk
Source & Credit: Community Newswire
By Emma Foster | July 30, 2010

Muslims have been urged to unite against terror and violence, ahead of a an Islamic convention taking place in Hampshire this weekend.

Thousands of people are expected at the Ahmadiyya Muslim annual convention, which is being held at a temporary village on a 210-acre site near Alton, from today until Sunday.

The world leader of the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community Hadhrat Mirza Masroor Ahmad is calling on Muslims around the world to unite against terrorist attacks, just weeks after more than 200 Ahmadi Muslims were murdered and injured in a gun, grenade and suicide attack on two mosques in Lahore, Pakistan.

Indonesian Hard-line Muslim Group Attacks Ahmadiyahs

The Setara Institute for Peace and Democracy recorded 33 cases of attacks on Ahmadiyahs last year and many other instances of religious discrimination of Christians.

Ahmadiyya Times | News Watch |
Source & Credit: RTT News Service
By RTT Staff Writer | July 30, 2010

(RTTNews) - Over 300 Indonesian Islamists, trying to attack a mosque being used by members of the minority Ahmadiyah sect, clashed Thursday with the police in the village of Manis Lor in Kuningan district of West Java.

The mob from Kuningan, Ciamis and Indramayu districts gathered at the village to protest the continued existence of the Ahmadiyah community, and pelted stones at the An-Nur mosque, prompting an hour-long confrontation with the police.

Meanwhile, 200 Ahmadiyah followers along with Kuningan police and local Public Order Agency (Satpol PP) office remained on guard against any possible attack on the mosque.

UK: 30,000 Muslims are gathering in Alton to condemn terrorism.

"Islam is a totally peaceful religion, it allows total freedom of thought, it allows everybody to have their own opinions and it does not allow the use of force."

Ahmadiyya Times | News Watch | UK Desk
Source & Credit: 96.4 Eagle Radio News
Local News | July 30, 2010


Its the Annual convention of Ahmadiyya Muslims in the UK - and this year they're focussing on their motto, love for all hatred for none.

Dr Basharat Nazir says they want to set the record straight about Islam: "Islam is not what a few of the terrorists are making you believe.

"Islam is a totally peaceful religion, it allows total freedom of thought, it allows everybody to have their own opinions and it does not allow the use of force."

The 3 day talks start today with a flag raising ceremony and prayers.


Read original post here: Muslims meet in Alton with anti-terror message

Thursday, July 29, 2010

Eye on extremism: Cameron warns Pakistan over insurgent funding

India has also long been concerned that billions of dollars of military aid given to Pakistan to help fight militants on its territory is misdirected to insurgents, or funds defence programmes designed to counter India.

Ahmadiyya Times | News Watch | Int'l Desk
Source & Credit: Daily Dawn | Pakistan
By Dawn | July 28, 2010

BANGALORE: British Prime Minister David Cameron said Wednesday that Pakistan must not “look two ways” in Afghanistan by publicly working to stabilise the country while secretly funding insurgents.

US documents leaked to Internet whistleblower site WikiLeaks this week accuse Pakistan's Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) of secretly helping the Afghan insurgency.

“It's unacceptable for anything to happen within Pakistan that's about supporting terrorism elsewhere,” Cameron told BBC radio during a trip to India.

Eye on extremism: Attacks continue on Ahmadiyah in Indonesia

After a failed attempt to seal the sect’s mosques in a village in Kuningan on Monday, police and the Public Order Agency (Satpol PP) followed through with the closures on Wednesday, meeting fierce resistance.

Ahmadiyya Times | News Watch | Int'l Desk
Source & Credit: The Jakarta Globe | July 30, 2010
By Nurfika Osman, Ronna Nirmala & Camelia Pasandaran
Title edited by Ahmadiyya Times to correct erroneous perception

As the standoff between West Java villagers and followers of the Ahmadiyah sect entered its fourth day, the Ministry of Religious Affairs said it was trying to mediate the week-long dispute, which flared into violence again on Thursday.

Religious Affairs Minister Suryadharma Ali said the tension was essentially a “political problem.” He did not elaborate further but urged the warring parties to settle their dispute peacefully.

Indonesia: Local conflicts put investment at risk


...[I]t is important that the government should manage the standoff between followers of the Ahmadiyah sect and locals in West Java before it escalates into a larger problem.


Ahmadiyya Times | News Watch | Int'l Desk
Source & Credit: The Jakarta Globe
Editorial: July 29, 2010


Foreign direct investment may not be gushing into Indonesia but they are certainly picking up.

Gita Wirjawan, head of the Investment Coordinating Board (BKPM), has said FDI was expected to reach Rp 118.4 trillion ($13.1 billion) in 2010, an increase of 25 percent over last year’s $10.5 billion.

The government had expected FDI to rise only 15 percent. With only half the year gone, the signs look promising.

Surging consumption, competitive labor costs and confidence in Indonesia’s political stability are attracting foreign investments, particularly from Asian and Middle Eastern electronics, infrastructure and energy firms.

Ahmadiyya under siege: Indonesia mob attacks Muslim sect

Village's 3,000 Ahmadiyah followers were ready to help the police if needed but would not respond to the violence.

Ahmadiyya Times | News Watch |
Source & Credit: Al-Jazeera |  Asia-Pacific
By Al Jazeera | AFP | July 29, 2010

Indonesian police have clashed with about 200 people trying to attack a mosque used by a minority Islamic sect known as Ahmadiya.

The mob hurled stones at the mosque in Manislor village in Kuningan district in West Java, prompting an hour-long confrontation with police, a local Ahmadiya official said.

"About 200 people pelted stones at our mosque and clashed with the police for about an hour. It is not clear yet who was the organiser of the mob," Nurahim, the local general secretary of the sect, told the AFP news agency.

UK: Former Dixons City Academy pupil has new mountain to climb

The son of Dr Abdul Bary Malik MBE, chairman of Bradford’s Ahmadiyya Muslim Association, he was among the first crop of pupils to study at City Technology College when it opened 20 years ago.

Ahmadiyya Times | News Watch | UK Desk
Source & Credit: The Telegraph & Argus
By Ben Barnett | July 28, 2010

A former Bradford school teacher has landed a high-profile job at a prestigious international school.

Raised in Great Horton, Hadi Malik, 31, is swapping his home city for Switzerland, where he has been appointed head of lower school PE at the International School Basel.

The son of Dr Abdul Bary Malik MBE, chairman of Bradford’s Ahmadiyya Muslim Association, he was among the first crop of pupils to study at City Technology College when it opened 20 years ago.

He left for the University of Bradford, taking a degree in law and marketing.

Mr Malik went to London when he graduated to join the police force via a graduate programme, but it did not suit him and he played reserve team football for Dagenham & Redbridge.

Indonesia: Failed sealing of Ahmadiyah Mosque

This sealing effort is the second time after the last failed on Monday due to unrest in the area. The sealing of the facility initially went well but quickly people got together and the fights erupted. 

Ahmadiyya Times | News Watch |
Source & Credit: Indosiar | Indonesia
Edited by Ahmadiyya Times | July 28, 2010

Ahmadiyya Muslim Villagers from Manis Lor, Kuningan, West Java resisted with Public Order Agency (Satpol PP) and Police on Wednesday morning and foiled Islamist extremists' attempt to have the mosque sealed.

The disturbance of July 28 occurred when a mosque belonging to the Ahmadiyya Community was attempted to be sealed by the authorities at the behest of Islamic Defenders front and several other extremist Islamist groups in Indonesia.

The angry mob from several extremist factions pelted stones at the mosque and at the Ahmadi residents and the officers fired tear gas in return.

USA: 'Anti-Islamic' bus ads appear in major cities

A group called 'Stop Islamization of America' is promoting ads on major city public transportation that urge people to leave the Muslim faith. The anti-Islamic campaign is sparking thought about the religion's place in American society.

Ahmadiyya Times | News Watch |
Source & Credit: The Christian Science Monitor
By Stephanie Rice | July 28, 2010 | San Francisco

The growing debate over Islam's place in America, which is escalating in light of plans to build a mosque near ground zero, is increasingly playing out on city streets across the country. On the sides of buses, to be precise.

Several groups are engaging in something of a religious ad war over the merits and misconceptions of Islam, a religion that remains a mystery to many Americans.

Ads by a group calling itself Stop Islamization of America, which aims to provide refuge for former Muslims, read: "Fatwa on your head? Is your family or community threatening you? Leaving Islam? Got questions? Get answers!"

Bangladesh court bans religion in politics

This week, the four leaders of the country's largest Islamic party, Jamaat-i-Islami, were arrested by the country's fledgling war crimes court, set up to try those responsible for atrocities during the 1971 independence war.

Ahmadiyya Times | News Watch |
Source & Credit: Daily Dawn | Pakistan
By Dawn | July 29, 2010

DHAKA: Bangladesh's Supreme Court has reinstated a ban on Islamic political parties after striking down a key constitutional amendment, law minister Shafiq Ahmed told AFP on Thursday.

In a detailed verdict released late Wednesday, the Supreme Court scrapped the bulk of the 1979 fifth amendment, including provisions that had allowed religious political parties to flourish and legalised military rule.

“Secularism will again be the cornerstone of our constitution,” Ahmed said.

Indonesia: Situation in Manis Lor remains tense as Ahmadi hold firm

Meanwhile, in front of the An-Nur Mosque, 200 Ahmadiyah followers remained on guard, along with Kuningan Police and local Public Order Agency (Satpol PP) officers.

Ahmadiyya Times | News Watch |
Source & Credit: The Jakarta Globe
By JG | July 29, 2010

The stand-off between locals and followers of the Ahmadiyah sect in Manis Lor village, Kuningan, West Java, is continuing.

On Thursday, 300 Islamic activists from Kuningan, Ciamis and Indramayu districts gathered at the village to protest against the continued existence of the Ahmadiyah community.

Ahmadiyah is seen as a deviant sect by mainstream Muslims. The government has banned the group from holding its rituals in public but has stopped short of banning it altogether.

Hundreds attack Ahmadiyah mosque in Indonesia

"About 200 people pelted stones at our mosque and clashed with the police for about an hour. It's not clear yet who was the organiser of the mob."

Ahmadiyya Times | News Watch |
Source & Credit: Saigon Daily
By SD | AFP | AT

JAKARTA, July 29, 2010 (AFP) - Indonesian police clashed with about 200 people Thursday as the mob tried to attack a mosque in West Java belonging to a minority Islamic sect.

The crowd hurled stones at an Ahmadiyah mosque in Manislor village in Kuningan district, leading to an hour-long conflict with police, said local general secretary of the Ahmadiyah sect, Nurahim.

"About 200 people pelted stones at our mosque and clashed with the police for about an hour. It's not clear yet who was the organiser of the mob," Nurahim, who goes by one name, told AFP.

"The police were able to secure the mosque and handle the people. The situation, however, is still tense now," he said.

UK: Thirty Thousand expected at a temporary village of marquees, dining halls, bazaars near Alton, Hampshire

..[T]he focuses of this year's convention would be on programmes for nurturing the new generation of enlightened Muslims, says the media advisory.

Ahmadiyya Times | News Watch | UK Desk
Source: Ahmadiyya Muslim Association, UK
By Ahmadiyya Times | July 29, 2010

Alton, Hampshire - A temporary village full of marquees, dining halls and bazaars has been setup for a week at a 210-acre site named Hadeeqatul Mahdi in East Worldham village area.

The location commonly known to the local residents as Oakland Farm will host 30,000 expected visitors to this year’s Ahmadiyya Muslim convention, said a media advisory issued by the Ahmadiyya Muslim Association (AMA) in UK.

According to Dr Basharat Nazir, press secretary for the AMA, about 60% of the attendance is expected to be made up of women and children.

Wednesday, July 28, 2010

Eye on Extremism: Christians burn the Koran: A Muslim responds

Lesson 1 for Pastor Jones: If you hate Islam and consider it your enemy, Jesus requires that you love Muslims, bless Muslims, do good to them, and pray for them.

Ahmadiyya Times | News Watch | Opinion
Source & Credit: Islam Examiner
By Qasim Rashid | July 28, 2010

I have just been informed that Islam is of the Devil.  That is, at least according to Pastor Jones at the Dove World Outreach Center in Florida.  I must have missed the part of Jesus' Sermon on the Mount when he said, "Blessed are the bigots, for they shall cause disorder in the Earth."

But seriously, in his vain attempt to 'attack' Islam, Pastor Jones has only succeeded in proving that he knows nothing about Islam.  This is, of course, not surprising.  However, it is quite surprising that a Christian Pastor would prove himself to know nothing of Jesus Christ, as Pastor Jones has proven.

Therefore, I would like to take a moment to remind Pastor Jones of Jesus' actual teachings...just in case he forgot.  Hopefully after this reminder, he will also follow in Jesus' footsteps and promote love, not incite discord.

Lesson 1 for Pastor Jones: If you hate Islam and consider it your enemy, Jesus requires that you love Muslims, bless Muslims, do good to them, and pray for them.

Pakistan: Analysis - It’s society’s fault

Between 1927 and 1986 there were less than 10 reported cases of blasphemy. From 1986 onwards, however, as many as 4,000 cases have been reported.

Ahmadiyya Times | News Watch | Opinion
Source & Credit: Daily Dawn | Pakistan
By Sana Saleem | July 27, 2010

For over six decades we have confused, manipulated and twisted the ideology behind the creation of our state. We denied principles that could have prevented us from reaching the brink. In February 1948 in a broadcast to the people of the US on Pakistan , Jinnah said the following:

“The constitution of Pakistan has yet to be framed by the Pakistan Constituent Assembly. I do not know what the ultimate shape of this constitution is going to be, but I am sure that it will be of a democratic type, embodying the essential principle of Islam.

Indonesia: Tense standoff in West Java as police close Ahmadiyah mosques

The Setara Institute for Peace and Democracy recorded 33 cases of attacks against Ahmadiyah members last year.

Ahmadiyya Times | News Watch | Int'l Desk
Source & Credit: The Jakarta Globe
By Ronna Nirmala | July 29, 2010

Jakarta. After having failed on Monday to seal off mosques belonging to the Ahmadiyah sect in a village in Kuningan, West Java, police and public order officers followed through with the closures on Wednesday but met with strong resistance from sect members.

An attempt to shut down the mosques on Monday failed after hundreds of men from the local Ahmadiyah sect blocked police from carrying out the operation.

Pakistan: Lahore High Court seeks report on plea against Facebook

The petitioner contends that failure on part of Pakistani authorities encouraged the owners of Facebook as they again announced a blasphemous contest and also displayed profane pictures of Khana-e-Kaaba.

Ahmadiyya Times | News Watch |
Source & Credit: The News International
By The News correspondent | July 28, 2010

LAHORE: The Lahore High Court on Tuesday sought a report and comments from the Ministry of Information Technology and Pakistan Telecommunication Authority by August 4 on a writ petition seeking a permanent ban on access to Facebook, a social networking website, in Pakistan for announcing another anti-Islam competition on the website.

The website had already faced an interim ban in the country for holding a blasphemous caricature competition, hurting religious sentiments of the whole Muslim community, especially in Pakistan.

Petition for permanent banning of Facebook in Pakistan

Acting on the petition filed by Judicial Activism Panel chairman Muhammad Azhar Siddique, Justice Ijaz Ahmed Chaudhry of the Lahore High Court on Tuesday sought the stance of the Pakistan Telecommunication Authority to the demand for a permanent ban on Facebook.

Ahmadiyya Times | News Watch |
Source & Credit: Press Trust of India
By PTI | July 27, 2010

Lahore:  Even as the Jamaat-ud-Dawah mounts pressure on Pakistani authorities to slap a ban on Facebook, a petition filed in a court has sought a permanent bar on access to the social networking website due to the launch of an "anti-Islam competition".

Acting on the petition filed by Judicial Activism Panel chairman Muhammad Azhar Siddique, Justice Ijaz Ahmed Chaudhry of the Lahore High Court on Tuesday sought the stance of the Pakistan Telecommunication Authority to the demand for a permanent ban on Facebook.

Bangladesh: 4 Jamaat-e Islami arrested leaders ordered held for '71 genocide

Nizami, Mojahid, Kamaruzzaman and Molla might create obstruction to investigation that started about their alleged crimes committed during the Liberation War.

Ahmadiyya Times | News Watch | Int'l Desk
Source & Credit: The Daily Start | Bangladesh
By Julfikar Ali Manik and Ashutosh Sarkar

The International Crimes Tribunal yesterday issued arrest warrants against already detained four Jamaat-e-Islami leaders on charges of committing genocide and crimes against humanity and peace during the Liberation War.

"Warrants of arrest should be issued against these four people to ensure effective and proper investigation," Tribunal Chairman Justice Nizamul Huq said allowing the prosecution prayer after submission of Chief Prosecutor Golam Arif Tipu.

The four Jamaat leaders are Ameer Motiur Rahman Nizami, Secretary General Ali Ahsan Muhammad Mojahid and senior assistant secretaries general Muhammad Kamaruzzaman and Abdul Quader Molla.

The tribunal directed to send copies of the arrest warrants to the detainees' addresses and also to their place of detention. A notice was issued to the Dhaka metropolitan Police commissioner yesterday afternoon from the Tribunal to implement the order.

Indonesia: Tense standoff in West Java after police attempt to close Ahmadiyah mosque

It was the local government’s second attempt to seal the mosque in the past three days. On Monday, the officers were forced to abort the plan because hundreds of people blocked the street.

Ahmadiyya Times | News Watch | Int'l Desk
Source & Credit: The Jakarta Globe
By JG | July 28, 2010

Kuningan, West Java. Violent scenes erupted in Kuningan, West Java, early on Wednesday morning when police and local government security officers attempted to seal a mosque belonging to a branch of Islam considered deviant by mainstream Indonesian Muslims.

As police and Public Order Agency (Satpol PP) officers moved in on the Ahmadiyah mosque in Manislor village, enraged followers began pelting them with rocks and sticks.

Ahmadiyah is a controversial sect that believes its founder, Mirza Ghulam Ahmad, was the last prophet of Islam, a claim that contradicts mainstream Muslim beliefs.

Tuesday, July 27, 2010

Pakistan: Passenger plane crashes in Islamabad; 152 on board

The plane was flying from Karachi to Islamabad and the exact cause of the crash was not immediately clear.

Ahmadiyya Times | News Watch | Int'l Desk
Source & Credit: Daily Dawn | Pakistan
By Dawn Report | July 28, 2010

ISLAMABAD: A passenger plane crashed in the Margalla Hills in Islamabad on Wednesday, reports said.

At least 152 people were on board, said Pervez George, a civil aviation official.

The 152 included 146 passengers along with six crew members, George said.

Rescue workers arrived at the scene and managed to pull out four injured passengers from under the rubble.

The plane was flying from Karachi to Islamabad and the exact cause of the crash was not immediately clear, George said.

The aircraft had lost contact with the control tower during the crash which occurred amid thick fog and heavy rainfall in Islamabad.

Guards with the forestry service said they had found some wreckage and seen some bodies, police official Mohammad Saeed said. The army said it was sending special troops to the area to help out along with helicopters.

Mohammed Usman, an official at the Benazir Bhutto International Airport said dozens of relatives of passengers gathered there were crying and desperate to get information about their loved ones.

One Saqlain Altaf told a private television news channel that he was on a family outing in the hills when he saw the plane, looking unsteady in the air.

''The plane had lost balance, and then we saw it going down,'' he said, adding he heard the crash.

Thick clouds of smoke were rising from the Margalla Hills.

Airblue could not immediately be reached for comment.



Read original post here: Passenger plane crashes in Islamabad; 152 on board

Faith and science: Scientists inch towards finding "God particle"

...[T]hey are still not capable of reaching the low-mass region which many people believe is home to the Higgs -- a theoretical energy particle which many scientists believe helped give mass to the disparate matter spawned by the Big Bang.

Ahmadiyya Times | News Watch | Research
Source & Credit: Reuters | Paris
By Daniel Flynn | July 26, 2010

PARIS (Reuters) - Scientists working with particle accelerators in Europe and the United States said on Monday they may be closing in on the elusive Higgs Boson, the "God particle" believed crucial to forming the cosmos after the Big Bang.

Researchers from the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) project near Geneva said in just three months of experiments they had already detected all the particles at the heart of our current understanding of physics, the Standard Model.

Rolf Heuer, director-general of the European Center for Nuclear Research (CERN) which runs the LHC, told the International Conference on High Energy Physics in Paris experiments were progressing faster than expected and entering a stage in which "new physics" would emerge.

This could include long-awaited proof of the existence of the Higgs Boson and the detection of dark matter, believed to make up about a quarter of the universe alongside an observable 5 percent and 70 percent consisting of invisible dark energy.

Eye on freedom: An ironic protest

...[W]hen it comes to stereotyping, Pakistani filmmakers aren’t far behind. It is rare to find a Lollywood film that depicts India or the West in a fair, let alone positive light, but these films are allowed to screen in the country.

Ahmadiyya Times | News Watch |
Source & Credit: The Express Tribune
By Express | July 27, 2010

Photo: While films like Tere Bin allegedly misrepresent Pakistani society, others such as From Paris With Love stereotype Pakistanis as terrorists.

According to a report in the Daily Express, concerned citizens have protested against Pakistan being depicted as a terrorist state in Hollywood films.

As with all trends, people in Pakistan seem to have woken up to it far too late. Pakistanis and Arabs have long-replaced Hollywood’s first favourite – Communists – as the bad guys in productions.

While there have been several attempts by the Arab-American community to protest against the way the Middle East is depicted on celluloid, they have not been able to stop imaginative Hollywood screenwriters from getting their way. One notable example to the contrary though, is the American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee’s efforts in having a line from the opening song of Disney’s Aladdin changed.

The latest bone of contention for Pakistani critics is John Travolta’s From Paris With Love, which released this February. According to Wikipedia, it reportedly depicts Pakistanis as part of a “labyrinth of cocaine and prostitution, and (who) hang around with explosive vests on their tables. Furthermore, their plot is to infiltrate the US Embassy with explosives hidden beneath their burqas.”

A review in the McGill Tribune was scathing in its criticism. “The film upholds the paranoid mentality that any Middle Eastern person could be a suicide bomber, no matter how innocent they may appear. This is most disturbingly exemplified when an enjoyable dinner party is interrupted by Wax (Travolta) abruptly shooting a gorgeous female guest in the head. Reece’s (played by Jonathan Rhys Meyers) girlfriend shouts, ‘Just because she’s Pakistani doesn’t mean she’s a terrorist!’ But every on-screen Pakistani in the film is, in fact, a terrorist.”

Earlier this year, rumours circulated that the release of Iron Man 2 had been blocked in Pakistan because it depicted a Soviet physicist who had sold Pakistan weapons. However, the reports were denied by Box-Office, which was distributing the film in Pakistan.

Ali Zafar’s Tere Bin has been blocked for release in Pakistan because among many reasons cited by the censor board, it inaccurately depicts Pakistani society. APP reported last week, “The movie was reviewed by a panel of the film censor board and all the members unanimously found the film unsuitable for exhibition in Pakistan as its tone and tenor was offensive and also portrayed the Pakistani society as an embodiment of retrogression where there is not an iota of enlightenment.”

But when it comes to stereotyping, Pakistani filmmakers aren’t far behind. It is rare to find a Lollywood film that depicts India or the West in a fair, let alone positive light, but these films are allowed to screen in the country. Actors such as Shaan, who have starred in anti-Hindu films like Moosa Khan, have no qualms about their role in perpetuating stereotypes or propagating misconceptions.

Anti-Pakistan content has not been a major factor for blocking films. In recent years, the films that have been blocked are those that deal with religion, such as The Da Vinci Code.

The 1956 film The Ten Commandments was blocked for release in Pakistan, and according to the Turner Channel Movies website, “In October 1958, Hollywood Reporter announced that Pakistan was ‘the first country in the free world to bar exhibition’ of The Ten Commandments. The article reported that the action was not ‘levelled against the picture because of its content, but because Pakistan fears the exhibition of the film at this time may incite a small group of illiterate fanatics.’”


Published in The Express Tribune, July 27th, 2010.




Read original post here: An ironic protest

USA: Politician calls Islam 'cult:' Church to burn Quran

"My concern is that far too much of Islam has come to resemble a violent political philosophy more than peace-loving religion. It's time for American Muslims who love this country to publicly renounce violent jihadism and to drum those who seek to do America harm out of their faith community." [Tennessee Lt. Gov. Ron Ramsey]

Ahmadiyya Times | News Watch | US Desk
Source & Credit: WTSP 10 NEWS | Tempa Bay
By Christopher Collette | July 27, 2010

Tennessee Lt. Gov. Ron Ramsey, lagging in polls in the Republican gubernatorial primary race, according to Talking Points Memo, says he's not sure if Constitutional guarantees of freedom of religion apply to Islam, since, he says, Islam may be a cult, not actually a religion:

"Now, you could even argue whether being a Muslim is actually a religion, or is it a nationality, way of life, cult whatever you want to call it."

Ramsey did not dispute the video of his remarks posted at TPM and answered its request for comment with an email:

Eye on Extremism: Church plans to burn Quran: Is this evangelism?

Brent Michael Dykes, blogging at Yahoo's The Upshot, observes Christians might be surprised to discover the Quran mentions Jesus 25 times and considers him a prophet, great spiritual leader and teacher. 

Ahmadiyya Times | News Watch | US Desk
Source & Credit: USA Today
Published July 27, 2010

A Gainesville, Fla, pastor claims the Bible's lesson of brotherly love and truth commands it to burn the Quran on an Islamic holy day.

Evidently, the Dove World Outreach Center, which calls itself "a New Testament, Charismatic, Non-Denominational Church that believes in the whole Bible," was not content with the outrage prompted by a roadside sign posted this month, "Islam is of the Devil."

Now, according to Religion News Service, the church is planning "International Burn A Quran Day," on the ninth anniversary of the Sept. 11 attacks this year -- smack during Eid al-Fitr, the Islamic feast days at the conclusion of the Ramadan fast.

Pakistan Telecommunications Authority to advise courts on permanent ban on Facebook

A petition was filed in the Lahore High Court, seeking a permanent ban on Facebook on Monday. The petition is being taken by Justice Ijaz Ahmad Chaudhry.

Ahmadiyya Times | News Watch |
Source & Credit: The Express Tribune
By Express | July 27, 2010


LAHORE: The Lahore High Court (LHC)  has sought the stance of Pakistan Telecommunications Authority (PTA) on a permanent ban on Facebook.

A petition was filed in the Lahore High Court, seeking a permanent ban on Facebook on Monday. The petition is being taken by Justice Ijaz Ahmad Chaudhry.

The petitioner prayed that Facebook might be permanently blocked in Pakistan for placing objectionable and blasphemous caricatures.

Re.: From liberals and feminists, unsettling silence on rending the Muslim veil

Just as the Taliban coerced women to wear the veil, France and this author promote forcing women to not wear. Neither way is right and both are extreme views. 

Ahmadiyya Times | News Watch | Opinion
Source & Credit: Mashood Toor | Facebook
By Richard Reno | July 17, 2010 | Cross-Opinion

Reference: "From liberals and feminists, unsettling silence on rending the Muslim veil"

Richard Reno, President of the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community of Portland, OR writes in response to an article published by the Washington Post on July 17, 2010, entitled "From liberals and feminists, unsettling silence on rending the Muslim veil" by by Mona Eltahawy:

I would take exception to the following statement: "The strains of Islam that promote face veils do not believe in the concept of a woman's right to choose and describe women as needing to be hidden to prove their "worth." Salafism and Wahhabism preach that women will burn in hell if they are not covered from head to toe -- whether they live in Saudi Arabia or France. There is no choice in such conditioning."
The Ahmadiyya Muslim Community believes wearing the the face veil is optional and entirely up to the woman and entirely rejects the ridiculous theological aspect of the statement.

UK: Ahmadi Muslims Meet in Wake of Terror Attacks

Security High After Extremists Target Community That has Pledged Itself to Peace - 
"We are a community of peace, even in the face of such adversity. By spreading a message of peace, we can extinguish the flames of hatred." [His Holiness, Mirza Masroor Ahmad]


Ahmadiyya Times | News Watch | UK Desk
Source & Credit: Ahmadiyya Muslim Community - UK
Via PR Newswire | July 27, 2010

ALTON, England, July 27, 2010 /PRNewswire/ -- Members of a Muslim Community in Britain are meeting in the wake of the worst terrorist attacks in their history.

200 people were killed or injured in a double suicide and gun attack on Ahmadiyya mosques in Lahore in May.

Now 30,000 Ahmadi Muslims are expected to gather in Hampshire to hear Muslim scholars discuss Islam's response to such crises.

The community, which unites under the banner Love for All, Hatred for None, has pledged to stand resolute in their commitment to peace and not to retaliate against extremism.

The worldwide Head of the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community, Hadhrat Mirza Masroor Ahmad, has told followers that they must not be deflected from the central belief that Islam is a religion of peace and this must be put it into practice.

He said: "Those who love and yearn for peace should stand united against terror and 'jihadist' violence. Extremists are creating havoc and seek to destroy those who disagree with their dogma. We will continue to respond with patience and prayer and will never give up our belief and trust in God.

Bradford, UK: Ahmadiyyas meet to adopt a policy of non-violence after 86 die in bombings

Hadhrat Mirza Masroor Ahmad, the supreme head of the world-wide Ahmadiyya Muslim community, who will address the convention over all three days, said: “Those who love and yearn for peace should stand united against terror and jihadist violence.

Ahmadiyya Times | News Watch | UK Desk
Source & Credit: The Telegraph & Argus
By Tanya O'Rourke | July 27, 2010

Members of Bradford’s Ahmadiyya Muslim community will head to one of the UK’s largest Islamic conventions to make a pledge of peace this weekend.

The Ahmadiyya Muslim Association worshippers will publicly pledge to adopt non-violence and reject all forms of extremism – just weeks after 86 people were massacred and more than 100 injured in terror attacks on two Ahmadi mosques in Lahore, Pakistan.

Several members of the Bradford Ahmadi mosque, in Rees Way, off Otley Road, Bradford, lost friends and family members in the tragedy.

Dr Mohammed Iqbal, president of the Ahmadiyya Muslim Association in Bradford, said: “Those who murder in the name of Allah, and those who incite others to hatred, are not only enemies of Islam but of all of humanity.

Pakistan: Lahore High Court moved against Facebook again

The petitioner prayed that Facebook might be permanently blocked/banned in Pakistan for placing objectionable and blasphemous caricatures of our Khana Kaaba.

Ahmadiyya Times | News Watch | Int'l Desk
Source & Credit: The News International
News Correspondent | LAHORE
Edited for relevance |  July 27, 2010


A PETITION has been filed in the Lahore High Court, seeking a permanent ban on Facebook, a social networking website, in the country pointing out another anti-Islam competition on the website.

Facebook had already faced an interim ban in the country for holding a blasphemous caricature competition, hurting religious sentiments of the whole Muslim community.

Monday, July 26, 2010

Indonesia: Toward a more open society

Indonesia has a long history in recognizing diversity and promoting tolerance. It is unacceptable for the differences that have emerged to result in acts of violence for the benefit of a particular religion or group and to the detriment of all others.

Ahmadiyya Times | News Watch | Opinion
Source & Credit: The Jakarta Post
By Usman Hamid, Bogor | July 26, 2010

On July 7, I had a chance to meet Switzerland President Doris Leuthard during her visit to Indonesia.

The topic of the meeting was about today’s world’s most important issue: Islam and pluralism. Leuthard’s visit was crucial because the minaret referendum in Switzerland had become a controversy in Indonesia sometime ago.

Other participants, included prominent scholars such as Franz Magnis Suseno, Yenny Wahid and Goenawan Mohammad.

We expressed concern about the development of the issues of freedom of religion and of the tendency to disrespect principles of the rule of law, equality for all citizens and human dignity.

Pakistan: Doctor admits playing role in Lahore attacks

Dr Abdullah also revealed the names of professors who taught him medicine, religious studies and managed his training during his degree at Allama Iqbal Medical College (AIMC) in  Lahore. The source of his inspiration came in the form of lectures delivered by Professor Zafar Iqbal Chaudhry, allegedly a pioneer of the Jamaat-ud-Dawa (JD).

Ahmadiyya Times | News Watch | Int'l Desk
Source & Credit: The Express Tribune
By Express | Abdul Mannan | July 26, 2010

LAHORE: A detained doctor has confessed playing the role of facilitator in four suicide attacks in Lahore, sources said on Monday. He also admitted having facilitated the terrorists who attacked the hospital to free or kill a comrade who was injured in the May 28 attack in Model Town.

Sources revealed that Dr Ali Abdullah had been involved in two suicide attacks in Model Town and one in R A bazaar. Investigators are keeping mum about the fourth suicide attack because they fear that any such information would compromise their on-going investigation.

USA: Ahmadiyya "Muslims for Peace" Campaign in full swing

Ahmadiyya Muslim Community continues nationwide "Muslims for Peace" campaign by commemorating the roots of religious freedom in America.

Ahmadiyya Times | News Watch | US Desk
Source & Credit: AMC - USA
By PR Newswire | Ahmadiyya Times

Silver Spring, MD, July 26, 2010 --(PR.com)-- More than 6,000 delegates and dozens of community leaders and lawmakers gathered in Chantilly, Virginia last weekend at the 62nd annual convention of the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community USA. A major theme of this year’s convention was religious freedom in America.

“America and Islam share a remarkably similar approach to freedom,” said Amjad Mahmood Khan, national director of public affairs for the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community USA. “It is an approach grounded in absolute freedom of conscience and belief, the free exercise of religion for all people, freedom from state control of religion and mutual respect, cooperation and peace.”

US condemns leak alleging Pakistan backed Taliban

US senator John Kerry, chair of the powerful Senate Foreign Relations Committee, said the leaks “raise serious questions about the reality of America’s policy toward Pakistan and Afghanistan. 

Ahmadiyya Times | News Watch | Int'l Desk
Source & Credit: The Express Tribune
By Express | July 25, 2010

WASHINGTON: The White House denounced a massive leak of secret military files Sunday that allegedly describe how Pakistan’s spy service aids the Afghan insurgency, but said the information was no surprise.

In all, some 92,000 documents were released by the web whistleblower Wikileaks, containing previously untold details of the Afghan war through Pentagon files and field reports spanning from 2004 to 2010.

According to the New York Times, one of the first three media outlets to review and report on the leaks, they “suggest that Pakistan, an ostensible ally of the United States, allows representatives of its spy service to meet directly with the Taliban.”

Top Stories

Top stories during last 7 days