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Posts Tagged ‘Islamic hypocrisy’

Now Hillary Clinton trashes Israel

by Phantom Ace ( 5 Comments › )
Filed under Dhimmitude, Headlines, Leftist-Islamic Alliance at December 4th, 2011 - 2:01 pm

When it rains, it  pours. Leon Panetta trashed Israel this week. Now it’s another Obama Regime figure’s turn. Hillary Clinton attacked Israel  at a conference. She accused Israel of treating women as 2nd class.

In a closed session at the Saban Forum attended both by Israeli and American decision-makers Clinton addressed the issue of discrimination against Israeli women. She expressed concern for Israel’s social climate in the wake of limitations on female public singing and gender segregation on public transport.

[….]

Clinton, a longtime advocate for women’s rights, noted she was shocked at the fact that some Jerusalem buses have assigned separate seating areas for women. “It’s reminiscent of Rosa Parks,” she said, referring to the black American woman who refused to give up her seat to white passengers in the 1950s.

Referring to the decision of some IDF soldiers to leave an event where female soldiers were singing, she said it reminded her of the situation in Iran.

Clinton compared Israel to Iran?  Has she been to beaches in Tel Aviv? Why don’t she and other Obama Regime members criticize  Saudi Arabia? Oh that’s right! She can’t insult the masters of America’s elites.

This is another example of the US throwing another Non Islamic nation under the bus. It was Serbia in the 90’s, Iraqi Christians in the 2000’s and now it’s Israel turn. The tentacles of the House of Saud reach deep into the American political system.

The KLA and Organ Trafficking Update

by coldwarrior ( 108 Comments › )
Filed under Balkans, Breaking News, Crime, Islam, Kosovo, Serbia, United Nations at December 28th, 2010 - 2:00 pm

It appears that the Organ Trafficking story about Kosovo and the KLA just got a new player and a new organization that helped in the cover up: Soren Jessen Petersen, the head of the UN’s mission in Kosovo (UNMIK) from 2004 to 2006. Apparently, the Serbs are claiming that  the UN and Mr Petersen were involved in covering up the actions of Prime Minister Hashim Thaci who is known to have “headed  Kosovo Liberation Army faction which controlled secret detention centers in Albania where human organ trafficking was alleged to have taken place in the aftermath of the 1998-99 war between the guerrillas and Serbian forces.”

As of yesterday, Serbia has requested that the international war crimes court investigate Soren Jessen Petersen, former head of UNMIK. Isn’t this nice! Now it appears that the UN was also in on the criminal activities of the KLA. I wonder if the UN chiefs on the ground were getting any narcotics money as bribes?

I had to dig down to AFP and the Pakistani news service to get this story, then i found it on Breitbart. I am pretty sure that means that Christian Ammanpour wont be breathlessly gushing over the details of this story on CNN.  I wonder how this would be covered if it were the Serbs trafficking in organs?

UN covered up organ trafficking report, says Serbia

Serbia asked the international war crimes court for the former Yugoslavia to investigate a former UN chief in Kosovo for covering up a report on organ trafficking, a report said on Sunday.

Serbia’s minister for cooperation with the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY) wrote to chief prosecutor Serge Brammertz seeking an inquest into Soren Jessen Petersen, the head of the UN’s mission in Kosovo (UNMIK) from 2004 to 2006, Blic newspaper reported.

“We are waiting for ICTY to open an inquest into UNMIK officials at the time for contempt of court,” minister Rasim Ljajic told the newspaper.

Council of Europe rapporteur Dick Marty published a report earlier this month that linked Kosovo Prime Minister Hashim Thaci to organ trading and organised crime, which Thaci has denied.

UNMIK investigated possible organ trafficking in 2004, but it did not take it further citing lack of evidence.

“At the time, UNMIK said it did not have a report on organ trafficking and had no proof … But in 2008 our war crimes prosecutor obtained 16 pages of this report,” Ljajic said.

Marty’s report said Thaci headed a Kosovo Liberation Army faction which controlled secret detention centres in Albania, where the human organ trafficking was alleged to have taken place in the aftermath of the 1998-99 war between the guerrillas and Serbian forces.


Earlier this month, Council of Europe reporter Dick Marty, who led the two-year effort to uncover alleged crimes committed by Kosovo Prime Minister Hashim Thaci, published a report linking the premier to organ trading and organized crime.
Marty implicated Thaci in organ trafficking, accusing him of being a top organized crime boss.
The report released just days after the first general election in Kosovo since it declared independence from Serbia in 2008.
Thaci was said to have headed a Kosovo Liberation Army faction which controlled secret detention centers in Albania where human organ trafficking was alleged to have taken place in the aftermath of the 1998-99 war between the guerrillas and Serbian forces.
Thaci has denied the allegations and denounced them as a smear campaign launched against him and the Kosovo Liberation Army (KLA).

17 December 2010 | 19:22 | Source: B92, Tanjug
BELGRADE — National Hague Cooperation Council Chairman Rasim Ljajić says he will ask the Hague Tribunal to initiate “contempt of court proceedings”.

They would be launched “against all those who interfered with the investigation into the illegal human organs trafficking in Kosovo”.

The report on this issue published on Thursday concerns the killing and organ harvesting from a large number of Serbs and other civilians kidnapped in Kosovo by the ethnic Albanian KLA, in 1999 and 2000.

Speaking for B92 on Friday evening, Ljajić said he will on Monday request that proceedings be launched against former heads of UNMIK, including Chief Soren Jessen-Petersen “and several other persons who interfered with the investigation because the policy of the international community in Kosovo at the time put stability before justice”.

“They knew about all these charges and suspicions, but they did nothing to prosecute or examine them. On the contrary, they did all they could to cover up the whole thing and to prevent witnesses from participating and testifying about the crimes committed at the time,” Ljajić said.

Special Political Adviser to the Hague Tribunal Chief Prosecutor Frederick Swinnen meanwhile told Tanjug that this office is “monitoring Belgrade’s moves, but will not voice its stand until it receives the request to launch the proceedings which the Serbian authorities announced”.

Here is some more background on Prime Minister Thaci:

The report by the Council of Europe has named Kosovo’s Prime Minister Hashim Thaci as the “boss” of the criminal underworld behind the grisly trade.

Thaci was the political leader of the KLA during the Kosovo war in 1998-1999.

The Kosovo government has dismissed as “baseless and defamatory” the draft report, which was obtained by the British newspaper The Guardian.

Pristina has also issued a warning, saying it will take legal and political measures against what it called the “slanders.”

The report, which is the result of a two-year-long investigation by the special rapporteur of the Council of Europe, Dick Marty, is due to be published on Thursday.

It charges the KLA of secretly transferring its Serbian and Albanian prisoners from Kosovo to Albania, where they were murdered for their body parts.

Those organs were later sold on the black market to people in Canada, Germany and Israel.

The alleged crimes occurred after the Kosovo war ended in 1999.

The KLA has also been accused of involvement in heroin trade, and there is evidence that its activities in organized crime continue to the present day.

Marty is set to give his report to the legal and human rights committee of the Council of Europe in Strasbourg on Thursday.

The development comes as Thaci’s Democratic Party (PDK) won Kosovo’s parliamentary elections held on Sunday.

Kosovo opposition parties have cried fraud, claiming that the PDK has cheated.

In February 2008, Kosovo unilaterally declared independence from Serbia, and has so far been recognized by 68 countries, including the United States and a vast majority of the European Union.

The vote constituted the country’s first parliamentary elections since it proclaimed independence in 2008.

UK foundation to distribute textbook that lauds Muslim world’s scientific and cultural heritage

by tqcincinnatus ( 53 Comments › )
Filed under Islamic hypocrisy, Islamic Supremacism, Islamists, Science at September 3rd, 2009 - 5:00 am

This sounds like a great idea!  But honestly, how many pages can you devote to the invention of the electric prayer rug before it gets monotonous?

An educational foundation in the UK has announced plans to distribute to high schools a free book that highlights the scientific and cultural legacies of Muslim civilization.

1001 Inventions: Muslim Heritage in Our World is the creation of the Foundation for Science Technology and Civilization (FSTC), a Manchester-based organization set up to raise awareness of the contributions of the Muslim world to modern civilization.

FSTC said the contribution that Muslim and other civilizations have made to the modern world has been widely overlooked and that its team of academics has focused on debunking the myth of the so-called “Dark Ages of Civilization.”

“The period between the 7th and 17th centuries – which has been erroneously labelled ‘the Dark Ages’ – was in fact a time of exceptional scientific and cultural advancement in China, India and the Arab world,” Prof. Salim Al-Hassani, chief editor of the book, said.

“This is the period in history that gave us the first manned flight, huge advances in engineering, the development of robotics and the foundations of modern mathematics, chemistry and physics.”

In a technical sense, the book is correct – between the 7th and 17th centuries, there was scientific advancement in China, India, and the Arab World.  Unfortunately for the integrity and honesty of this book’s publisher and promotors, nearly all of that advancement was in China and India.  Nevertheless, the overall premise is simply shoddy.  Robotics?  Manned flight?  Suuuuuure.   While the Muslim world did make some contributions to fields such as optics, chemistry, and mathematics (and they DID, let’s be fair), the al-taqiyya represented here reaches ridiculous proportions.

Further, we should note that for the period between the 7th and 17th centuries in Europe, it is equally erroneous to call these “the Dark Ages.”  Of course, from the 15th century on, Europe was having its own Renaissance, and had already far outstripped the Muslim world intellectually.  But even in the earlier part of the Middle Ages, Europe was advancing in science and culture as much as the rest of the world.  Medieval Europe saw advances in mathematics, physics (especially mechanics and ballistics), engineering, astronomy, and navigation (the technology for Columbus to sail across the Atlantic didn’t appear out of nowhere….)  European construction technology was far superior to that of the Islamic world in the High Middle Ages (12-13th centuries), enabling the Europeans to produce huge and intricate castles and cathedrals that the Muslims could not have begun to match.   Europe led the way in early industrialisation, too.  In the 13th century, London had enough productive industry that it already suffered from air pollution caused by the burning of wood for fuel in forges and other industrial concerns. 

In fact, Europe’s problem in the Middle Ages was not that it was backwards and behind the times – instead, the problem was that the continent was so politically divided that Europeans were unable to project significant power beyond the confines of their own continent until they reached the point where they had a decisive enough technological advantage that small numbers of them could defeat much larger non-European forces. 

Basically, this book represents two seemingly contrary trends in Islamic apologetics that nevertheless seem to converge quite frequently – the attempt to put across the superiority of Islamic culture historically, but doing so in a way that essentially submits Islamic culture and history to the confines of Western ideas of progress and goodness.  Even when lying to downgrade Western contributions at the expense of their own, the Muslims still have to define themselves by Western ideals.  Even in “winning”, they lose.

And really, if you think about it, I don’t see why they think this book would be helpful to their cause.  As anyone can see, the Muslim world today is one of the most backwards, kleptocratic, corrupt regions on the face of the earth.  What does it say about their civilisation’s long-term competency if it can go from having magical robotic manned flight back in the Middle Ages and being the supposedly premiere culture in the world, to having a combined gross national product among its 57 members that is less than that of the Great Satan alone, and being unable to maintain a functioning cellular service without the Great Satan’s technicians?