Saturday, April 14, 2012

இந்து மாணவியின் கண்ணை தோண்டிய கிறிஸ்துவ ஆசிரியை

கிறிஸ்துவத்துக்கு போனாலே தமிழர்களுக்கு கிறுக்கு பிடித்துவிடும், அரக்க குணம் வந்துவிடும் போலிருக்கிறது..

தமிழர்களே எச்சரிக்கையாக இருங்கள்.



குச்சியால் அடித்ததில் மாணவிக்கு கண் பார்வை பறிபோனது...ஆசிரியை கைது!

வெள்ளிக்கிழமை, ஏப்ரல் 13, 2012, 10:50 [IST]
TEACHER KILLED OVER PERFORMING HIS DUTY .flv
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நாந்குநேரி: நெல்லை மாவட்டம் பரப்பாடியில் உள்ள தனியார் பள்ளியில் படிக்கும் எல்கேஜி மாணவியை ஆசிரியை குச்சியால் அடித்ததில் சிறுமியின் கண்பார்வை பாதிக்கப்பட்டது. இதனையடுத்து பள்ளி ஆசிரியை கைது செய்யப்பட்டார்.

நெல்லை மாவட்டம் பரப்பாடி அருகேயுள்ள பொத்தையடி ஆலங்குளத்தை சேர்ந்தவர் தர்மராஜ் மகன் கண்ணபிரான் (42). இவருக்கு மூன்று குழந்தைகள் உள்ளனர். இதில் 2வது குழந்தை பிரியதர்ஷினி (4).

பரப்பாடியில் உள்ள தனியார் மெட்ரிக் பள்ளியில் எல்கேஜி படித்து வருகிறார். கடந்த மார்ச் மாதம் 1ம் தேதியன்று மாணவி பிரியதர்ஷினி சரியாக படிக்காததால் ஆங்கில ஆசிரியை பிரீத்தா ஆரோக்கிய மேரி (24) குச்சியால் மாணவியை அடித்துள்ளார்.

இதில் பிரியதர்ஷினிக்கு வலது கண்ணில் காயம் ஏற்பட்டுள்ளது. இதனையடுத்து உடனடியாக நெல்லையில் உள்ள தனியார் கண் ஆஸ்பத்திரியில் சிகிச்சைக்காக அனுமதிக்கப்பட்டார். மேல் சிகிச்சைக்காக சென்னையில் உள்ள தனியார் கண் ஆஸ்பத்திரியில் அனுமதிக்கப்பட்டு சிகிச்சை பெற்று வந்தார். இந்நிலையில் கண்ணிற்கு செல்லும் நரம்பு கட் ஆனதால் மாணவியின் வலது கண் பார்வை பறிபோனது.

இதுகுறித்து மாணவியின் தந்தை கண்ணபிரான் விஜயநாராயணம் போலீசில் புகார் செய்தார். சப்-இன்ஸ்பெக்டர் வெள்ளத்துரை வழக்குப்பதிவு செய்து ஆசிரியை பிரீத்தாவை கைது செய்து நான்குநேரி கோர்ட்டில் ஆஜர்படுத்தினார்.

நாங்குநேரி மாஜிஸ்திரேட் ஆசிரியை பிரீத்தாவை 15 நாள் காவலில் வைக்க உத்தரவிட்டார். இவ்வழக்கு தொடர்பாக பள்ளி நிர்வாகியை போலீசார் தேடி வருகின்றனர்.

Pakistan: Forced conversions spark anger


Pakistan: Forced conversions spark anger

last update: April 13, 15:36
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Lahore, 13 April (AKI/Dawn) - Prof. Ashok Kumar is not afraid of taking a prominent stance on the Rinkle Kumari issue.

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Fear, he says, is secondary compared to what is happening to the Hindu community in Pakistan, in particular Sindh. “We can’t just sit back and watch what our community is going through,” he says.
The recent case of Rinkle Kumari is not altogether an uncommon occurrence. Several young Hindu girls have been kidnapped in the dead of night from their homes, and dragged off to be forcibly converted to Islam, as they and their family members have later alleged. Usually this conversion is accompanied by a signing of the ‘nikahnama’ which strengthens the kidnappers’ side of the story, but still does not provide any kind of proof whether the marriage was done under duress or not.
On Thursday, protesters belonging to the Hindu and Christian communities in Lahore, accompanied by representatives of the Joint Action Committee (a group of social organisations), gathered outside the Lahore Press Club and shouted slogans in response to the slow treatment of the case, venting anger at religious fascism, forcible conversion, and a lack of support from the government.
Ashok Kumar, a professor of Sindhi language in the Linguistics Department of the Punjab University, is one of the protesters.
There are others too, students, professionals, young women, social workers, but the turnout has not been very high.
“We only decided this last night so couldn’t inform everyone on such short notice,” said Shahtaj Qizalbash from AGHS Legal Aid.
But Tanveer Jahan, also a member of the JAC, gives a more direct reply. “When it comes to minority rights, or any such sensitive issue, one just cannot expect any mass participation in Pakistan,” she says.
“You can just forget about the masses.” She says that both sides of the picture are grim – one side which does not support, and only watches the situation passively, while the other side which does come out on the streets but does so for its own vested interests and exploitation. “It is social workers like us who are stuck in the middle.”
“Down with mullah-ism!” shout the protesters, and a small number of drivers slow down on the busy section of the Simla Hill roundabout to see what the commotion is about. While many simply shake their heads and carry on, some are affected nevertheless, like Mehr Muhammad, a contractor.
“It is a sin to take away anyone’s rights like that,” he says, as he stands by watching the protest. “No religion allows this trampling of religious freedom. These girls should not be kidnapped and converted through force…how is it even conversion?” he questions, his brow furrowing over the worrying situation.
But another man has a completely different opinion. “Isn’t it a blessing if anyone is being converted into a Muslim?” he questions.
The Supreme Court on Tuesday rejected two petitions, one filed by Rinkle’s husband, and the other filed by the father of another Hindu girl Dr Lata, from Jacobabad.
The two wanted to meet the girls, but the apex court observed that the two girls should be allowed to make a decision on whether they want to go with their parents or husbands based on a freewill therefore they were sent to Panah, a shelter home run by human rights lawyer Dr Majida Rizvi, where they will stay isolated till the court summons them again. The matter is to be taken up again on April 18.
The matter has been tangled yet further with the alleged involvement of Mian Mithu, a PPP MNA from Ghotki, where Rinkle was kidnapped, and also one Naveed Shah, who was a close associate of Mithu.
“Even when Nafisa Shah and some other PPP MNAs tried to move a resolution against this issue in the assembly, Mian Mithu did not support it,” says Tanveer Jahan. “I simply ask if an FIR has already been lodged against these two then why are they not under arrest?”
Another girl, Asha is still missing and Dr Ashok says: “The state of the Hindu girls being converted is terrible. Since January there have been at least 47 kidnappings. Another point to observe is that this is only happening to young girls, never boys or elders.”
Peter Jacob, worker for minorities’ rights, says this forcible conversion is not restricted to just Hindus and in Sindh. “In the last five years, there have been up to 400 to 500 conversions of Christians. And something equally horrifying, I know of: forcible circumcision of young men in Punjab and one in Balochistan…where are we going, one asks.”
In feudal terms, owning another party’s woman is having the upper hand. That coupled with marriage, gives the perpetrator more strength. No one knows what becomes of many of the girls after being married. Meanwhile, many Hindus feel that they are simply being harassed so they leave the country forever.
“But this is not just an issue restricted to Sindh,” says one. “This protest is meant to be calling out to the whole nation…Why does no one raise their voices for our rights too?” he asks.

Tuesday, April 10, 2012

எட்டே நாளில் ஆயிரக்கணக்கான முஸ்லீம்களை கொன்றவனுக்கு உலகம் பாராட்டு?


Syrian opposition says 1,000 killed in last 8 days

By Associated Press
Tuesday, April 10, 2012 - 
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GENEVA — Syria’s main opposition group says 1,000 people have been killed by government forces in the last eight days.
A spokeswoman for the Syrian National Council says troops loyal to President Bashar Assad have intensified their onslaught in opposition areas despite saying it would accept a U.N. peace plan.
SNC spokeswoman Bassma Kodmani says 160 people were killed in Syria on Monday alone.
Kodmani told reporters in Geneva on Tuesday that regime forces have used heavy weapons including anti-aircraft guns against civilians in apparent defiance of an agreement to begin a cease-fire April 10.
She says the humanitarian situation on the ground is "dramatically deteriorating"
© Copyright 2012 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

தலையில் முக்காடு போடாத பெண் என்ன சொல்கிறாளாம்?

Islamic Police Hold Sway in Indonesia’s Aceh
Arlina Arshad | April 09, 2012
Banda Aceh.
 In Indonesia’s only province ruled by strict Islamic law, the sight of the “morals police” prompts women to quickly adjust their headscarves and male and female companions to move apart.

In Aceh on the northern tip of Sumatra island, it is the job of the 1,000-strong Wilayatul Hisbah, or Islamic police, to enforce Shariah laws that mandate public modesty for women, and forbid unmarried couples from socializing.

In the capital Banda Aceh last week, a woman peeled away from her husband, reached for a scarf and quickly wrapped it around her head as a patrol approached; a petrified couple hopped on a motorcycle and fled.

But another pair hiding behind a large rock on the beach were not so lucky.

“Are you married?” roared a burly officer, wearing a khaki uniform and sporting a thick moustache, as he approached the cringing couple who shook their heads.

“This is unacceptable in Aceh, we have Shariah laws here. Go along now, go home,” he said, after examining their identity cards.

Because small violations earn usually no more than a reprimand, it is not uncommon to spot women without headscarves, or couples together in cafes or other public places.

Nevertheless Aceh, an autonomous region on the western edge of the scattered Indonesian archipelago, remains an anomaly in a country where most of the 240 million people practise a moderate form of Islam.

Alcohol is freely sold in the rest of Indonesia, the world’s most populous Muslim-majority nation, but it is banned in Aceh. In some of the province’s regions, women are forbidden from wearing tight trousers.

Gamblers and imbibers are publicly caned. Debate still churns in Aceh over whether adulterers should continue to be publicly flogged, or stoned to death.

In elections on Monday to pick a governor and 17 district heads and deputies, voters will decide whether they want leaders who advocate stricter Shariah laws.

They are Aceh’s second polls since the province was devastated by a tsunami in 2004 that killed 170,000 people in the province and the end in 2005 of a 30-year separatist war against Indonesian rule that claimed 15,000 lives.

Incumbent governor Irwandi Yusuf, who supports Shariah but rejects stricter laws including stoning, will face contenders such as Teungku Ahmad Tajuddin, a cleric who will not say outright whether he backs stiffer laws but opposes Yusuf for rejecting them.

The regular patrols by the Islamic police, which critics say infringe civil liberties, are embraced for the most part by the fervently religious population of five million.

“The Shariah police are working for the good of Aceh and I support them,” said Andara, a 27-year-old woman who works as a restaurant cashier, and like many Indonesians goes by one name.

“If nobody controls the people, they will do and wear as they please and what will happen to the Islamic Shariah we have for so long defended?”

In this conservative outpost, children are educated about Shariah laws in elementary school.

In December, 64 male and female punk-rock fans picked up at a concert in Banda Aceh were “morally rehabilitated” by the Islamic police — they were forced to have their hair cut, bathe in a lake, change their clothes and pray.

Extreme views are rife in the province where there are no cinemas, music concerts are few, and billboards depict females in headscarves.

“Women who don’t wear headscarves are inviting men to touch their breasts,” said 47-year-old teacher Tarmizi Mohammad.

“I think we should enforce Shariah laws further and stone adulterers and chop off the hands of thieves,” he added.

But the morals police faced a setback in 2010 after two officers were jailed for gang-raping a woman in custody.

Sharia police chief Khalidin Loong said that recruitment regulations had been tightened since then, and defended stiff punishments. “The lashings are symbolic, to cause more shame than pain,” he said.

Not everyone in the province likes the Shariah police, however, and some refuse to live according to Shariah law — even if it gets them into trouble.

“People called me a dog, the bringer of disasters, the inviter of the next tsunami. I have been picked up by the Shariah police many times,” said 20-year-old student Dila, who defiantly walks around in miniskirts and without a headscarf.

Wearing a T-shirt and jeans, and without a headscarf, 22-year-old Dia Fatiya said the people of Aceh accepted the way she dressed and it was only the Shariah police that protested.

“The Acehnese people have become more open-minded and they never fuss over whether I am dressed properly or not,” she said.

“I dislike the Shariah police. I hope they will disappear,” she added, between puffs on a cigarette at a cafe.

Agence France-Presse

திட்டியதால் பெண்ணுக்குதண்டனை : 50 கசையடிகள் : இஸ்லாமிய நீதி


Woman to be lashed 50 times for swearing

A Saudi court sentenced a local woman to 50 lashes for swearing at her friend following an argument, a newspaper reported on Monday.
The two Saudi women, aged 33 and 31 years, had decided to go out with their children for a week end night but differed on where to go.
“An argument ensued and the two women decided to split…one of them later sent a text to her friend's mobile phone swearing at her,” Kabar daily said.
“The other woman went to court and showed the judge the message…although that woman said she was joking, the court ordered her lashed 50 times.”
Kabar said the court gave the sentenced woman the right to appeal the verdict.

இந்திய கலாச்சாரமும் எகிப்திய கலாச்சாரமும்


Woman wanted Indian driver, got Egyptian, got raped

Kuwaiti widow says she was raped by Egyptian driver for four hours

An ill Kuwaiti widow who wanted to shuttle between her house and the hospital went to a taxi company and asked them to assign her an Indian driver. Instead, they sent her an Egyptian, who raped her at gun point for four hours. 
The woman, suffering from Atherosclerosis (artery disease), recounted her ordeal with the driver, who was arrested but could be released for lack of evidence. She said the man raped her late night and left her in a deserted area after she refused to voluntarily have sex with him. 
“I had gone to that company and asked for an Indian driver but they sent me an Egyptian one…when I protested, they said that was the only one available,” the unnamed woman told the Kuwaiti Al Rai newspaper. 
“I had no choice because that company is the cheapest in town…one night, the Egyptian driver took me to hospital and then returned to take me back home…it was after midnight and he started to press me to have sex with him.” 
The woman said she rebuked him and replied that she is suffering from serious illness, adding that he suddenly pulled a gun and aimed it at her head. 
“He then put a piece of cloth on my mouth and I lost consciousness…when I woke up four hours later, I found myself naked with him…he then said to me ‘I slept with you by force….what happened has happened and you have no choice but to keep sleeping with me and keep your mouth shut.” 
The woman said the driver then left her in a deserted area, adding that she waved for many cars to stop but they did not. 
“They thought I was drunk because I was still swaying…finally a driver stopped and gave me a lift back home…I could not stop crying that night and on the next morning, I told my sister, who took me to the police station.” 
She said she had been told that the rapist could be released soon. “I don’t know what to say…after all that he had done to me, they want to free him…I am an ill woman, who had been kidnapped and raped…I will fight for my rights."
Wife seeks divorce over dress
A newly-wed Kuwait woman told her husband in public to divorce her immediately after he refused to buy her an expensive dress while shopping in a crowded mall, a newspaper in the oil-rich Gulf emirate reported on Tuesday.
The couple, who have been married for only a few days, were shopping in Salimyya area in Kuwait City when the wife saw that dress.
“She asked her husband to buy it for her but he refused because of its high price and asked her to forget it,” Alwatan daily said.
“Suddenly, she grabbed his shoulder and screamed at him…she then said ‘why did you marry me if you can not buy a dress’….she then asked him to divorce her at once,” the Arabic language daily said.
“She also phoned her brother, who sided with her…a heated argument developed and police were called to the scene….police told them to go home and resolve their problems or they will take them to the police station.”
Two harassers to “wash the dead” for one week
A judge in Riyadh went out of the way and ordered two Saudi teen age boys caught harassing women at a busy shopping mall to serve on week at a dead washing centre, a newspaper reported on Tuesday.
The two were arrested harassing girls at the mall in the capital Riyadh just two weeks after authorities decided to lift a ban on the entry of bachelors to malls.
More than 20 men have been sentenced to brief jail terms and lashing over the past week for molesting and harassing women at malls.
“The judge ordered the two boys to serve one week at the capital’s dead washing centre for harassing girls,” Sabq daily said.
Two Saudi brothers beheaded for murder
Two Saudi brothers were beheaded on Monday after they were convicted of murdering another Saudi man, the official media reported on Tuesday.
Mohammed Al Muthairbi and his brother Saleem were executed in the western Red Sea port of Jeddah for using a hammer and knives to kill Saad bin Fadghoush during a fight, the Saudi press agency said.
The sentence by the general court in the city was endorsed by the Gulf Kingdom’s top judiciary and King Abdullah, the agency said without mentioning the age of the brothers and the victim.
Killers are executed in Saudi Arabia under Islamic law but they could walk free if pardoned by the victim’s relatives in return for diya (blood money).