சங்கபரிவார இந்து பயங்கரவாதிகளுக்கு குவாய்த் மறுவாழ்வு, மறு போதனை அளித்து மனம் மாற்ற ஏராளமான பணம் செலவிட உள்ளது
(இஸ்லாமிய பயங்கரவாதிகள் என்று யாருமே இல்லை. எல்லாம் சங்கபரிவாரத்தினர் செய்யும் செயல்கள் என்றுதானே இஸ்லாமிய பயங்கரவாதிகளும், புத்திசாலிகளும் கூறுகிறார்கள்? ஆகையால் இவர்கள் இந்து பயங்கரவாதிகளாகத்தானே இருக்கவேண்டும்?)
Kuwait to rehabilitate extremists
KUWAIT CITY, Oct 13, (Agencies): Kuwait says it has approved a plan to rehabilitate the country’s Muslim extremists and “remove destructive ideas” from their heads. The state-owned Kuwait News Agency says the Cabinet approved the program in a meeting Monday. However, the agency did not provide further details, and it was not immediately clear who the government had in mind or how many people would be affected. Scores of Kuwaitis have fought alongside Muslim militants in Afghanistan, Bosnia and Iraq. Kuwait has been a major ally of Washington since the 1991 Gulf War that liberated it from a seven-month Iraqi occupation, but religious extremism has gained considerable ground since.
The Cabinet adopted a decision to set up the program at the Interior Ministry, with the participation of Ministries of Foreign Affairs, Education, Justice, Labor and Social Affairs and Endowments and Islamic Affairs. The program will be tasked with fighting extremist thinking, coordinate efforts to remove the destructive ideas and deepen the values of the Islamic faith as well as substantiating affiliation to the homeland and preventing young people from succumbing to misguided thinking through legal, psychological, social, cultural and public awareness programs.
Showing posts with label குவாய்த். Show all posts
Showing posts with label குவாய்த். Show all posts
Wednesday, October 15, 2008
Thursday, November 29, 2007
இமாம் மெஹ்தி சொன்னதால்தான் குடும்பத்தை கொன்றேன் - அப்பா வாக்குமூலம்
இமாம் மெஹ்தி என்ற இறுதி இறைதூதர் கனவில் வந்து சொன்னதால்தான் குடும்பத்தை கொன்றேன் என்று குவாய்தை சேர்ந்த ஒரு தந்தை வாக்குமூலம் கொடுத்துள்ளார்
இமாம் மெஹ்தியாவது ஒன்றாவது என்று கோர்ட் இவருக்கு தூக்கு தண்டனை விதித்துள்ளது.
Dad said Imam Mahdi ordered him to kill his family
Kuwait's 'dream killer' must hang: court
KUWAIT CITY (AFP)
Kuwait's appeals court on Monday upheld a death sentence handed down against a Shiite Muslim who said he had been ordered in a dream to kill his wife and two children.
Dhaher al-Fadhli, 47, shot and killed his 38-year-old wife Badriya, his eldest son Waleed, 21, and 16-year-old daughter Baida in December 2004, claiming he was ordered to do so in a dream by Imam al-Mahdi, the "hidden imam" and a central figure in the Shiite faith.
Fadhli also shot at another daughter but missed. He then fled with three more daughters to the Gulf shore where he expected the imam to arrive to "bless" his deed.
The sentence must be now approved by the court of cassation, the emirate's highest court, before he is executed by hanging.
Fadhli, a "bidoon" or stateless Arab, worked as a computer engineer in the Kuwaiti army until 1999 when he was fired after being allegedly involved in a drug case.
Shiites believe that Imam al-Mahdi, a descendant of the Prophet Mohammed (PBUH) and the 12th imam of Shiite Islam, will one day return to take charge of the world as its just leader.
இமாம் மெஹ்தியாவது ஒன்றாவது என்று கோர்ட் இவருக்கு தூக்கு தண்டனை விதித்துள்ளது.
Dad said Imam Mahdi ordered him to kill his family
Kuwait's 'dream killer' must hang: court
KUWAIT CITY (AFP)
Kuwait's appeals court on Monday upheld a death sentence handed down against a Shiite Muslim who said he had been ordered in a dream to kill his wife and two children.
Dhaher al-Fadhli, 47, shot and killed his 38-year-old wife Badriya, his eldest son Waleed, 21, and 16-year-old daughter Baida in December 2004, claiming he was ordered to do so in a dream by Imam al-Mahdi, the "hidden imam" and a central figure in the Shiite faith.
Fadhli also shot at another daughter but missed. He then fled with three more daughters to the Gulf shore where he expected the imam to arrive to "bless" his deed.
The sentence must be now approved by the court of cassation, the emirate's highest court, before he is executed by hanging.
Fadhli, a "bidoon" or stateless Arab, worked as a computer engineer in the Kuwaiti army until 1999 when he was fired after being allegedly involved in a drug case.
Shiites believe that Imam al-Mahdi, a descendant of the Prophet Mohammed (PBUH) and the 12th imam of Shiite Islam, will one day return to take charge of the world as its just leader.
குறிச்சொற்கள்:
இமாம் மெஹ்தி,
இஸ்லாம்,
குவாய்த்
Thursday, November 15, 2007
வளைகுடாவில் இலங்கையிலிருந்து செல்லும் வீட்டு அடிமைப்பெண்கள் சித்திரவதை கொடூரம்
சவுதி அரேபியா, அமீரகம், குவாய்த், லெபனான் ஆகிய இஸ்லாமிய நாடுகளுக்கு வேலைக்குச் செல்லும் இலங்கை பெண்கள் கொடூரமாக சித்திரவதை செய்யப்படுகிறார்கள். பாலுறவு பலாத்காரம் செய்யப்படுகிறார்கள். அடிமையினும் கொடுமையாக நடத்தபப்டுகிறார்கள்.
இவர்கள் மீது அரபியர்கள் செலுத்தும் வன்முறையை தடுக்க அரசாங்கங்கள் எந்த நடவடிக்கையும் எடுப்பதில்லை என்று அறிக்கைகள் தெரிவிக்கின்றன
Sri Lanka abuse 'rampant' in Gulf

Tales of torture and abuse have emerged from the Gulf
Gulf states are failing to curb serious abuses of Sri Lankan migrant workers employed as maids in their countries, a Human Rights Watch report has said.
The US-based group says abuse of maids is rampant in the United Arab Emirates, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait and Lebanon.
Employers routinely confiscate domestic workers' passports and confine them to the workplace, the rights group says.
The UAE has denied the charges, saying Human Rights Watch has ignored its efforts to improve workers' conditions.
More than 660,000 Sri Lankan women work abroad as maids, nearly 90% of them in the Gulf countries.
Abusive employers
The 131-page report - called Exported and Exposed - documents the serious abuses that domestic workers face at every step of the migration process.
Thousands of Sri Lankans head overseas for work each year
"Governments in the Gulf expose Sri Lankan domestic workers to abuse by refusing to guarantee a weekly rest day, limits to the workday freedom of movement and other rights that most workers take for granted," said Jennifer Turner, a women's rights researcher at Human Rights Watch.
"Too many abusive employers and unscrupulous labour agents get away with exploiting these workers without any real punishment."
The report is based on 170 interviews with domestic workers, government officials, and labour recruiters conducted in Sri Lanka and in the Middle East.
"Domestic workers typically labour for 16 to 21 hours a day, without rest breaks or days off, for extremely low wages of 15 to 30 US cents per hour," the report says.
'Reform laws'
Some domestic workers told Human Rights Watch how they were subjected to forced confinement, food deprivation, physical and verbal abuse, forced labour, and sexual harassment and rape by their employers.
"The Gulf countries need to do a lot more to stop abuse of domestic workers," Ms Turner said.
"The governments of Saudi Arabia, Kuwait and the UAE should extend labour laws to domestic workers, ensure their complaints can be heard and reform immigration laws so that workers aren't tied to employers."
The rights group has also urged the Sri Lankan government to improve regulation and monitoring of recruitment agents, as well as services for abused workers in consulates abroad.
The UAE has dismissed the charges.
In response, it said Human Rights Watch has "once again chosen to ignore many of the positive steps adopted by the UAE in recent months to improve conditions for temporary foreign workers in the country".
Many of HRW's recommendations have already been met or are in progress, the UAE's state news agency WAM quoted Anwar Gargash, minister of state for Federal National Council affairs, as saying.
Migrant workers make up the largest net foreign exchange earner for Sri Lanka.
The country has a huge unemployment problem, and often cannot dictate terms to richer nations.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
இவர்கள் மீது அரபியர்கள் செலுத்தும் வன்முறையை தடுக்க அரசாங்கங்கள் எந்த நடவடிக்கையும் எடுப்பதில்லை என்று அறிக்கைகள் தெரிவிக்கின்றன
Sri Lanka abuse 'rampant' in Gulf

Tales of torture and abuse have emerged from the Gulf
Gulf states are failing to curb serious abuses of Sri Lankan migrant workers employed as maids in their countries, a Human Rights Watch report has said.
The US-based group says abuse of maids is rampant in the United Arab Emirates, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait and Lebanon.
Employers routinely confiscate domestic workers' passports and confine them to the workplace, the rights group says.
The UAE has denied the charges, saying Human Rights Watch has ignored its efforts to improve workers' conditions.
More than 660,000 Sri Lankan women work abroad as maids, nearly 90% of them in the Gulf countries.
Abusive employers
The 131-page report - called Exported and Exposed - documents the serious abuses that domestic workers face at every step of the migration process.
Thousands of Sri Lankans head overseas for work each year
"Governments in the Gulf expose Sri Lankan domestic workers to abuse by refusing to guarantee a weekly rest day, limits to the workday freedom of movement and other rights that most workers take for granted," said Jennifer Turner, a women's rights researcher at Human Rights Watch.
"Too many abusive employers and unscrupulous labour agents get away with exploiting these workers without any real punishment."
The report is based on 170 interviews with domestic workers, government officials, and labour recruiters conducted in Sri Lanka and in the Middle East.
"Domestic workers typically labour for 16 to 21 hours a day, without rest breaks or days off, for extremely low wages of 15 to 30 US cents per hour," the report says.
'Reform laws'
Some domestic workers told Human Rights Watch how they were subjected to forced confinement, food deprivation, physical and verbal abuse, forced labour, and sexual harassment and rape by their employers.
"The Gulf countries need to do a lot more to stop abuse of domestic workers," Ms Turner said.
"The governments of Saudi Arabia, Kuwait and the UAE should extend labour laws to domestic workers, ensure their complaints can be heard and reform immigration laws so that workers aren't tied to employers."
The rights group has also urged the Sri Lankan government to improve regulation and monitoring of recruitment agents, as well as services for abused workers in consulates abroad.
The UAE has dismissed the charges.
In response, it said Human Rights Watch has "once again chosen to ignore many of the positive steps adopted by the UAE in recent months to improve conditions for temporary foreign workers in the country".
Many of HRW's recommendations have already been met or are in progress, the UAE's state news agency WAM quoted Anwar Gargash, minister of state for Federal National Council affairs, as saying.
Migrant workers make up the largest net foreign exchange earner for Sri Lanka.
The country has a huge unemployment problem, and often cannot dictate terms to richer nations.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
குறிச்சொற்கள்:
அடிமைப்பெண்கள்,
அமீரகம்,
குவாய்த்,
சவுதி அரேபியா,
லெபனான்
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