Sunday, April 22, 2007

12 வயது இஸ்லாமிய தீவிரவாதி பையன் செய்த கழுத்தறுப்பு

குலாம் நபி என்பவர் அமெரிக்காவுக்கு ஆதரவாக இருந்தார் என்ற குற்றச்சாட்டை வைத்து தாலிபான்கள் ஒரு 12 வயது பையனை வைத்து அவரது கழுத்தை அறுத்துள்ளார்கள்.

இந்த 12 வயது பையன் தாலிபானின் தீவிர ஆதரவாளர் என்று பாகிஸ்தானில் வசிக்கும் அந்த பையனின் தந்தை கூறுகிறார்.

இவ்வாறு அந்த பையன் அந்த நபரது கழுத்தை அறுப்பதை வீடியோ எடுத்து அரபி தொலைக்காட்சிகளில் தாலிபான்கள் ஒளிபரப்பி வருகிறார்கள்..

உலகம் எங்கே செல்கிறது என்று தெரியவில்லை!

கூகுள் செய்திக்கதம்பம்

ஏபிஸி நியூஸ்

The footage shows Nabi making what is described as a confession, being blindfolded with a checkered scarf.

"He is an American spy. Those who do this kind of thing will get this kind of fate," says his baby-faced executioner, who is not identified.

A continuous 2 1/2-minute shot then shows the victim lying on his side on a patch of rubble-strewn ground. A man holds Nabi by his beard while the boy, wearing a camouflage military jacket and oversized white sneakers, cuts into the throat. Other men and boys call out "Allahu akbar!" "God is great!" as blood spurts from the wound.

The film, overlain with jihadi songs, then shows the boy hacking and slashing at the man's neck until the head is severed.
..

பாகிஸ்தான் நியூஸ்
The video then shows the boy literally cutting the man's throat as he is held by older men, all dressed in military fatigues. The shot then shows the boy hacking at the man's throat till he is decapitated. Amid cries of "God is great", the boy then holds the man's head by the hair, telling the camera that others who spy for America will meet the same fate.

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

ஆச்சரியமென்ன?

மூளைச்சலவை செய்யப்பட்ட 5 வயது சிறுமி யூதர்களை குரங்குகள், அவர்களை கொல்லவேண்டும் என்று சொல்லுவதைக் காட்டும் அரபு டிவி நிகழ்ச்சிகள் ஏராளம்.

இவர்கள் மீது பரிதாபப்படத்தான் தோன்றுகிறது..

எழில் said...

அப்படியும் போதிக்கிறார்களா?
அடப்பாவமே!

எப்போதுதான் இவர்கள் மனிதர்களை மனிதர்களாக மதிக்கப்போகிறார்களோ?

எழில் said...

Afghans enraged over Taliban video
Reuters

April 26, 2007 at 8:50 AM EDT

SPIN BOLDAK, Afghanistan — A Taliban video of a 12-year-old boy beheading a man accused of spying has angered many Afghans, drawing condemnation from tribal and religious leaders.

"It's very wrong for the Taliban to use a small boy to behead a man," religious teacher Mullah Attullah told Reuters on Thursday. "I appeal to the Taliban to please stop this because non-Muslims will think Islam is a cruel and terrorist religion.

"The Taliban do not follow the laws of Islam."

The video released this week shows the boy in a camouflage jacket and a white headband using a knife to behead a blindfolded man accused of being a spy for foreign forces as men cry "Allahu Akbar! (God is Great)."

The Taliban frequently behead suspected spies and often release video footage of the act.

A tribal leader in the south, the Taliban's heartland, said the beheading was un-Islamic.

"The Taliban are doing very bad things and it is against Islam to behead a man by a very young boy," Haji Saeed Jan told Reuters.

"Islam does not allow anyone to behead any man. The Taliban show the wrong image of Islam to the world. We condemn this."

In the border town of Spin Boldak, near Pakistan, a young man, Abdul Ghafur, was appalled by the footage.

"After I watched this, I could not eat any food for two days," he said. Some television stations broadcast clips from the footage.

Taliban commander Mullah Hayatullah Khan said the Taliban would kill anyone helping foreign forces in order to protect their guerrilla fighters.

"We showed the beheading video to warn others," he said by satellite phone from a secret location.

Asked why the Taliban used a boy, he said:

"We want to tell the non-Muslims that our youngsters are also mujahedeen (holy warriors) and fight with us against you."

"These youngsters will be our Holy War commanders in the future and continue the jihad for freedom. Islam allow boys and women to do jihad against occupying non-Muslim troops and their spies and puppets."

Last year was the bloodiest since U.S.-led forces ousted the Taliban in 2001, and many security analysts expect this year to be worse, with the Taliban and other militant groups bolstered by money from another record opium crop.


http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20070426.wafghslay0426/BNStory/International/home