unflinching idealism ... since 1997 archivessitemapabouthelpfeedback
all are welcome to read, write and think
  • Home
  • InFocus
  • Themes
  • Columns
  • Articles
  • Fiction
  • iLogs
  • Gallery
  • Unplugged
  • Writers
  • Interactors
  • Tags
Sign in | Join Chowk
web chowk
  • Article
  • Interact
  • read writer comments
  • add to favorites
  • get rss feeds
  • print
  • email this link

Mumbai Rocked by Seven Bomb Blasts

Chowk Staff July 11, 2006

Latest comments   flat   threaded   latest   oldest   all
listing 1-16   1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11

#633 Posted by zeemax on July 21, 2006 12:38:15 pm
#632 by number

Since you`ve given up, or have not tried the empirical method of reaching Allah, let me tell you that when you split atoms and make bangs and arrive at smaller particles, then when you make even bigger accelerators and split them even further you get to even smaller particles. At the same time the life-span of each particle keeps getting smaller and smaller so it`s increasingly difficult to catch and split, because it appears and disappears, is born and gone, all in an instant.

When you finally arrive at the smallest, tiniest weeniest particle, within our own tissue, which when split cannot be split further because at that point it does not have any life left, that`s eternity. Its everywhere and nowhere. And it`ll create such a big bang that it will blow your socks off. That`s when you`ll find Allah.

Wassalam.
reply to this interact write a new interact add to favorites flag objectionable content
#634 Posted by number on July 24, 2006 8:53:52 am
Re: # 633 by zeemax

I do not need any proof of the existence of Allah (swt). I am more certain of His existence
than mine. I am still wondering about the relevance of golden rectangle and golden mean
to this topic.

Khuda Hafiz
reply to this interact write a new interact add to favorites flag objectionable content
#631 Posted by zeemax on July 20, 2006 10:53:53 pm
#624 by number

Yaar Numberi Bhai .... we KNOW what Fibonacci numbers are ... I use them every day in calculating corrections to a major trend. We ALSO know what Golden triangle and Mean is, and believe us we ALSO know that in a Mendelbrot set the patterns from zero till eternity are EXACTLY the same and equally complex and you can`t reach the end where they stop. Bhai we KNOW all that. AND above all we also know how to Google .... but NONE of the above solves our problem:-(

We were looking forward to you enlightening us as to WHERE these things COME from ...

Now please don`t tell me Fibonacci got the idea from observing breeding patterns of rabbits inside a well ... (which he actually did BTW). But it`s a bit odd that breeding habits of rabbits should apply universally to movements of sophisticated markets !!!!!!Of all kinds!!!!

What we want to know from your multi-disciplinary knowledge is whether these have something to do with the real Big Daddy ... you know .. the Big Guy!
reply to this interact write a new interact add to favorites flag objectionable content
#632 Posted by number on July 21, 2006 5:42:19 am
Re: # 631 by zeemax

Until now I did not know how much you know about Fibonacci numbers etc.

I have no idea if this has anything to do with Allah (swt).
reply to this interact write a new interact add to favorites flag objectionable content
#630 Posted by nature_lover on July 20, 2006 5:51:57 pm
This kind of vicious and indiscriminate attacks on humanity shall never be accepted.

Blackmailers and bullies must be told that they are basically enemies of peace, beauty and harmony on this earth.

Why can`t all children of this earth live peacefully in Kashmir, and why can`t rule of law prevail there rather than hegemony of a single group.

Various ``qabza groups``, bullies and land mafias have their eyes on the innocent valley of Kashmir.

Vale of Kashmir is burning, its centuries old priceless structures are burning to ashes, blood is flowing every where.

Evil and selfish spirits want to grab and destroy the beauty of this sparrow,this bird of heaven, known as Kashmir, which God made, to make kings happy.

Kashmir is a world heritage, it must be liberated from all bullies and peace loving people must be able to pay homage to its eternal beauty and grandeur.

O my vale, O my dale of Kashmir you are burning, you are bleeding, but never forget that hearts bleed for you too, and we are helpless, and although we won`t to able to see each others face in this life time, and we will keep on raising moans and cries for you, until we die.
reply to this interact write a new interact add to favorites flag objectionable content
#627 Posted by echoboom on July 20, 2006 3:10:41 pm
Professor Numberoodripud:

agar aap hUm tamaam larRkoan ko eik saath bulaa kr lecture dai-daiN toa achha ho. Aap ko bhee bar bar hUr class meiN jaa kar hur larRkay ko 5 second kaa lecture naheeN dainaa parRay gaa.

Mumbai ,yaa BUmBaee, bumoaN sey BHUsum ho gyaa aur CHOWK pUr bhee bum girr rahai haiN.

`` Voh soorataiN ilaahi, kis dais bUstiaaN
Ub jin ko daikhnay ko aankhaiN trastiaaN haiN.``
reply to this interact write a new interact add to favorites flag objectionable content
#629 Posted by number on July 20, 2006 3:47:15 pm
Re: # 627 by echoboom

Please tell me what the word following professor means.

Aap log kahan hein mujhey kya maloom?

Agar aap batayein aap kahan hein tow phir aagay baday gein.
reply to this interact write a new interact add to favorites flag objectionable content
#623 Posted by echoboom on July 20, 2006 11:22:18 am
and now you know the full story


Kidnapped by Israel

The British Media and The Invasion Of Gaza


by Jonathan Cook July 20, 2006 Media Lens
`Kidnapped by Israel

sendarticle(`sendEmailLink`,

`Kidnapped by IsraelEmail this article to a friend
Print this article Few readers of a British newspaper would have noticed the story. In the Observer of 25 June, it merited a mere paragraph hidden in the “World in brief” section, revealing that the previous day a team of Israeli commandos had entered the Gaza Strip to “detain” two Palestinians Israel claims are members of Hamas.


The significance of the mission was alluded to in a final phrase describing this as “the first arrest raid in the territory since Israel pulled out of the area a year ago”. More precisely, it was the first time the Israeli army had re-entered the Gaza Strip, directly violating Palestinian control of the territory, since it supposedly left in August last year.


As the Observer landed on doorsteps around the UK, however, another daring mission was being launched in Gaza that would attract far more attention from the British media – and prompt far more concern.


Shortly before dawn, armed Palestinians slipped past Israeli military defences to launch an attack on an army post close by Gaza called Kerem Shalom. They sneaked through a half-mile underground tunnel dug under an Israeli-built electronic fence that surrounds the Strip and threw grenades at a tank, killing two soldiers inside. Seizing another, wounded soldier the gunmen then disappeared back into Gaza.


Whereas the Israeli “arrest raid” had passed with barely a murmur, the Palestinian attack a day later received very different coverage. The BBC’s correspondent in Gaza, Alan Johnstone, started the ball rolling later the same day in broadcasts in which he referred to the Palestinian attack as “a major escalation in cross-border tensions”. (BBC World news, 10am GMT, 25 June 2006)


Johnstone did not explain why the Palestinian attack on an Israeli army post was an escalation, while the Israeli raid into Gaza the previous day was not. Both were similar actions: violations of a neighbour’s territory.


The Palestinians could justify attacking the military post because the Israeli army has been using it and other fortified positions to fire hundreds of shells into Gaza that have contributed to some 30 civilian deaths over the preceding weeks. Israel could justify launching its mission into Gaza because it blames the two men it seized for being behind some of the hundreds of home-made Qassam rockets that have been fired out of Gaza, mostly ineffectually, but occasionally harming Israeli civilians in the border town of Sderot.


So why was the Palestinian attack, and not the earlier Israeli raid, an escalation? The clue came in the same report from Johnstone, in which he warned that Israel would feel compelled to launch “retaliations” for the attack, implying that a re-invasion of the Gaza Strip was all but inevitable.


So, in fact, the “escalation” and “retaliation” were one and the same thing. Although Johnstone kept repeating that the Palestinian attack had created an escalation, what he actually meant was that Israel was choosing to escalate its response. Both sides could continue their rocket fire, but only Israel was in a position to reinvade with tanks and ground forces.


There was another intriguing aspect to Johnstone’s framework for interpreting these fast-moving events, one that would be adopted by all the British media. He noted that the coming Israeli “retaliation” -- the reinvasion -- had a specific cause: the escalation prompted by the brief Palestinian attack that left two Israeli soldiers dead and a third captured.


But what about the Palestinian attack: did it not have a cause too? According to the British media, apparently not. Apart from making vague references to the Israeli artillery bombardment of the Gaza Strip over the previous weeks, Johnstone and other reporters offered no context for the Palestinian attack. It had no obvious cause or explanation. It appeared to come out of nowhere, born presumably only of Palestinian malice.


Or as a Guardian editorial phrased it: “Confusion surrounds the precise motives of the gunmen from the Islamist group Hamas and two other armed organisations who captured the Israeli corporal and killed two other soldiers on Sunday. But it was clearly intended to provoke a reaction, as is the firing of rockets from Gaza into Israel.” (`Storm over Gaza,` 29 June 2006)


It was not as though Johnstone or the Guardian had far to look for reasons for the Palestinian attack, explanations that might frame it as a retaliation no different from the Israeli one. In addition to the shelling that has caused some 30 civilian deaths and inflicted yet more trauma on a generation of Palestinian children, Israel has been blockading Gaza’s borders to prevent food and medicines from reaching the population and it has successfully pressured international donors to cut off desperately needed funds to the Palestinian government. Then, of course, there was also the matter of the Israeli army’s violation of Palestinian-controlled territory in Gaza the day before.


None of this context surfaced to help audiences distinguish cause and effect, and assess for themselves who was doing the escalating and who the retaliating.


That may have been because all of these explanations make sense only in the context of Israel’s continuing occupation of Gaza. But that context conflicts with a guiding assumption in the British media: that the occupation finished with Israel’s disengagement from Gaza in August last year. With the occupation over, all grounds for Palestinian “retaliation” become redundant.


The Guardian’s diplomatic editor, Ewen MacAskill certainly took the view that Israel should be able to expect quiet after its disengagement. “Having pulled out of Gaza last year, the Israelis would have been justified in thinking they might enjoy a bit of peace on their southern border.” (`An understandable over-reaction,` Comment is Free, 28 June 2006)


Never mind that Gaza’s borders, airspace, electromagnetic frequencies, electricity and water are all under continuing Israeli control, or that the Palestinians are not allowed an army, or that Israel is still preventing Gazans from having any contact with Palestinians in the West Bank and East Jerusalem. Meetings of the Palestinian parliament have to be conducted over video links because Israel will not allow MPs in Gaza to travel to Ramallah in the West Bank.


These factors might have helped to explain continuing Palestinian anger, but in British coverage of the conflict they appear to be unmentionables.


Arrested, Detained Or Kidnapped?


There was another notable asymmetry in the media’s use of language and their treatment of the weekend of raids by the Palestinians and the Israelis. In the Observer, we learnt that Israel had “detained” the two Palestinians in an “arrest raid”. These were presented as the legitimate actions of a state that is enforcing the law within the sphere of its sovereignty (notably, in stark contrast to the other media assumption that the occupation of Gaza is over).


So how did the media describe the Palestinians’ seizure of the Israeli soldier the next day? According to Donald MacIntyre of the Independent, Corporal Gilad Shalit was “kidnapped” (`Israel set for military raid over kidnapped soldier, Independent,` 27 June 2006). His colleague Eric Silver considered the soldier “abducted” (`Israel hunts for abducted soldier after dawn raid by militants,` 26 June 2006). Conal Urquhart of the Guardian, referred to him as a “hostage” (`Palestinians hunt for Israeli hostage,` Guardian, 26 June 2006). And BBC online believed him “abducted” and “kidnapped” (`Israel warns of ``extreme action``,` 28 June 2006)


It was a revealing choice of terminology. Soldiers who are seized by an enemy are usually considered to have been captured; along with being killed, it’s an occupational hazard for a soldier. But Britain’s liberal media preferred to use words that misleadingly suggested Cpl Shalit was a victim, an innocent whose status as a soldier was not relevant to his fate. The Palestinians, as kidnappers and hostage-takers, were clearly not behaving in a legitimate manner.


That this was a deviation from normal usage, at least when applied to Palestinians, is suggested by the following report from the BBC in 2003, when Israel seized Hamas political leader Sheikh Mohammed Taha: “Israeli troops have captured a founder member of the Islamic militant group Hamas during an incursion into the Gaza Strip.” This brief “incursion” included the deaths of eight Palestinians, including a pregnant woman and a child, according to the same report. (`Israel captures Hamas founder,` BBC online, 3 March 2003).


But one does not need to look back three years to spot the double standard being applied by the British media. On the Thursday following Sunday’s Palestinian attack on Kerem Shalom, the Israeli army invaded Gaza and the West Bank to grab dozens of Palestinian leaders, including cabinet ministers. Were they being kidnapped or taken hostage by the Israeli army?


This is what a breaking news report from the Guardian had to say: “Israeli troops today arrested dozens of Hamas ministers and MPs as they stepped up attempts to free a soldier kidnapped by militants in Gaza at the weekend. The Israeli army said 64 Hamas officials, including seven ministers and 20 other MPs, had been detained in a series of early morning arrests.” (David Fickling and agencies, `Israel detains Hamas ministers,` 29 June 2006).


BBC World took the same view. In its late morning report, Lyse Doucet told viewers that in response to the attack in which an Israeli soldier had been “kidnapped”, the Israeli army “have been detaining Palestinian cabinet ministers”. In the same broadcast, another reporter, Wyre Davies, referred to “Thirty Hamas politicians, including eight ministers, detained in the West Bank”, calling this an attempt by Israel at “keeping up the pressure”. (BBC World news, 10am GMT, 29 June 2006)


“Arrested” and “detained”? What exactly was the crime committed by these Palestinian politicians from the West Bank? Were they somehow accomplices to Cpl Shalit’s “kidnap” by Palestinian militants in the separate territory of Gaza? And if so, was Israel intending to prove it in a court of law? In any case, what was the jurisdiction of the Israeli army in “arresting” Palestinians in Palestinian-controlled territory?


None of those questions needed addressing because in truth none of the media had any doubts about the answer. It was clear to all the reporters that the purpose of seizing the Palestinian politicians was to hold them as bargaining chips for the return for Cpl Shalit.


In the Guardian, Conal Urquhart wrote: “Israeli forces today arrested more than 60 Hamas politicians in the West Bank and bombed targets in the Gaza Strip. The moves were designed to increase pressure on Palestinian militants to release an Israeli soldier held captive since Sunday.” (`Israel rounds up Hamas politicians,` 3.45pm update, 29 June 2006)


The BBC’s Lyse Doucet in Jerusalem referred to the “arrests” as “keeping up the pressure on the Palestinians on all fronts”, and Middle East editor Jeremy Bowen argued that the detention of the Hamas MPs and ministers “sends out a very strong message about who’s boss around here. The message is: If Israel wants you, it can get you.” (BBC World News, 6pm GMT, 29 June 2006)


Siding With The Strong


So why have the British media adopted such differing terminology for the two sides, language in which the Palestinians are consistently portrayed as criminals while the Israelis are seen as law-enforcers?


Interestingly, the language used by the British media mirrors that used by the Israeli media. The words “retaliation”, “escalation”, “pressure”, “kidnap” and “hostage” are all drawn from the lexicon of the Israeli press when talking about the Palestinians. The only Israeli term avoided in British coverage is the label “terrorists” for the Palestinian militants who attacked the army post near Gaza on 25 June.


In other words, the British media have adopted the same terminology as Israeli media organisations, even though the latter proudly declare their role as cheerleading for their army against the Palestinian enemy.


The replication by British reporters of Israeli language in covering the conflict is mostly unconscious. It happens because of several factors in the way foreign correspondents operate in conflict zones, factors that almost always favour the stronger side over the weaker, independently of (and often in opposition to) other important contexts, such as international law and common sense.


The causes of this bias can be divided into four pressures on foreign correspondents: identification with, and assimilation into, the stronger side’s culture; over-reliance on the stronger side’s sources of information; peer pressure and competition; and, most importantly, the pressure to satisfy the expectations of editors back home in the media organisation.


The first pressure derives from the fact that British correspondents, as well as the news agencies they frequently rely on, are almost exclusively based in Israeli locations, such as West Jerusalem and Tel Aviv, where they share the daily rituals of the host population. Correspondents have Israeli neighbours, not Palestinian ones; they drink and eat in Israeli, not Palestinian, bars and restaurants; they watch Israeli, not Palestinian, TV; and they fear Palestinian suicide attacks, not Israeli army “incursions”.


Another aspect of this assimilation – this one unmentionable in newsrooms – is the long-standing tendency, though admittedly one now finally waning, by British media organisations to prefer Jewish reporters for the “Jerusalem beat”. The media justify this to themselves on several grounds: often a senior Jewish reporter on the staff wants to be based in Jerusalem, in some cases as a prelude to receiving Israeli citizenship; he or she may already speak some Hebrew; and, as a Jew living in a self-declared Jewish state, he or she is likely to find it easier to gain access to officials.


The obvious danger that Jewish reporters who already feel an affinity with Israel before their posting may quickly start to identify with Israel and its goals is not considered an acceptable line of inquiry. Anyone raising it is certain to be dismissed as an anti-Semite.


The second pressure involves the wide range of sources of information foreign correspondents come to rely on in their daily reporting, from the Israeli media to the Israeli army and government press offices. Most of the big Israeli newspapers now have daily editions in English that arrive at reporters’ doors before breakfast and update all day on the internet. The Palestinians do not have the resources to produce competing information. Israeli officials, again unlike their Palestinian counterparts, are usually fluent in English and ready with a statement on any subject.


This asymmetry between Israeli and Palestinian sources of information is compounded by the fact that foreign correspondents usually consider Israeli spokespeople to be more “useful”. It is, after all, Israeli decision-makers who are shaping and determining the course of events. The army’s spokesperson can speak with authority about the timing of the next Gaza invasion, and the government press office knows by heart the themes of the prime minister’s latest unilateral plans.


Palestinian spokespeople, by contrast, are far less effective: they usually know nothing more about Israeli decisions than what they have read in the Israeli papers; they are rarely at the scene of Israeli military “retaliations”, and are often unreliable in the ensuing confusion; and internal political disputes, and a lack of clear hierarchies, often leave spokespeople unsure of what the official Palestinian line is.


Given these differences, the Israeli “version” is usually the first one to hit the headlines, both in the Israeli media and on the international TV channels. Which brings us to the third pressure.


News is not an independent category of information journalists search for; it is the information that journalists collectively decide is worth seeking out. So correspondents look to each other to determine what is the “big story”. This is why reporters tend to hunt in packs.


The problem for British journalists is that they are playing second fiddle to the largest contingent of English-language correspondents: those from America. What makes the headlines in the US papers is the main story, and as a result British journalists tend to follow the same leads, trying to beat the American majors to the best lines of inquiry.


The effect is not hard to predict: British coverage largely mirrors American coverage. And given the close identification of US politicians, business and media with Israel, American coverage is skewed very keenly towards a pro-Israel agenda. That has direct repercussions for British reporting. (It does, however, allow for occasional innovation in the British media too: for example, whereas American reporters were concerned to promote the largely discredited account by the Israeli army of how seven members of a Palestinian family were killed during artillery bombardment of a beach in Gaza on 9 June, their British colleagues had a freer hand to investigate the same events.)


Closely related to this sympathy of coverage between the British and American media is the fourth pressure. No reporter who cares about his or her career is entirely immune from the cumulative pressure of expectations from the news desk in London. The editors back home read the American dailies closely; they imbibe as authoritative the views of the major American columnists, like Thomas Friedman, who promote Israel’s and Washington’s agenda while sitting thousands of miles away from the events they analyse; and they watch the wire services, which are equally slanted towards the American and Israeli interpretation of events.


The reporter who rings the news desk each day to offer the best “pitch” quickly learns which angles and subjects “fly” and which don’t. “Professional” journalists of the type that get high-profile jobs, like Jerusalem correspondent, have learnt long ago the predilections of the desk editors. If our correspondent really believes in a story, he or she will fight the desk vigorously to have it included. But there are only so many battles correspondents who value their jobs are prepared to engage in.


Collective Punishment


Within this model for understanding the work of British correspondents, we can explain the confused sense of events that informs the recent reporting of the Independent’s Donald MacIntyre.


He points out an obvious fact that seems to have eluded many of his colleagues: Israel’s reinvasion of Gaza, its bombing of the only electricity station, and disruption to the water supply, its bombing of the main bridges linking north and south Gaza, and its terrifying sonic bombs over Gaza City are all forms of collective punishment of the civilian Palestinian population that are illegal under international law.


Derar Abu Sisi, who runs the power station in Gaza, tells MacIntyre it will take a “minimum of three to six months” to restore electricity supplies. (`Israeli missiles pound Gaza into a new Dark Age in ``collective punishment``, 29 June 2006). The same piece includes a warning that the petrol needed to run generators will soon run out, shutting off the power to hospitals and other vital services.


This is more than the Guardian’s coverage managed on the same day. Conal Urquhart writes simply: “Israel reoccupied areas of southern Gaza yesterday and bombed bridges and an electricity plant to force Palestinian militants to free the abducted soldier.” Blithely, Urquhart continues: “In Gaza there was an uneasy calm as Israeli aircraft and forces operated without harming anyone. Missiles were fired at buildings, roads and open fields, but ground forces made no attempt to enter built-up areas.” (`Israel rounds up Hamas politicians,` 11.45am, 29 June 2006)


In MacIntyre’s article, despite his acknowledgment of Israel’s “collective punishment” of Gaza (note even this statement of the obvious needs quotation marks in the Independent’s piece to remove any suggestion that it can be attributed directly to the paper), he also refers to a Hamas call for a prisoner swap to end the stand-off as an “escalation” of the “crisis”, and he describes the seizure of a Hamas politician by Israel as an “arrest” and a “retaliation”.


In a similarly indulgent tone, the Guardian’s Ewen MacAskill calls Israel’s re-invasion of Gaza “an understandable over-reaction”: “Israel has good cause for taking tough action against the Palestinians in Gaza” – presumably because of their “escalation” by firing Qassam rockets. MacAskill does, however, pause to criticise the invasion, pointing out that “Israel has to allow the Palestinians a degree of sovereignty.” (`An understandable over-reaction,` Comment is Free, www.guardian.co.uk, 28 June 2006)


Not full sovereignty, note, just a degree of it. In MacAskill’s view, invasions are out, but by implication “targeted assassinations”, air strikes and artillery fire, all of which have claimed dozens of Palestinian civilian lives over the past weeks, are allowed as they only partially violate Palestinian sovereignty.


But MacAskill finds a small sliver of hope for the future from what has come to be known as the “Prisoners’ Document”, an agreement between the various Palestinian factions that implicitly limits Palestinian territorial ambitions to the West Bank, Gaza and East Jerusalem. “The ambiguous document agreed between Hamas and Fatah yesterday does not recognize Israel`s right to exist but it is a step in the right direction,” writes MacAskill. (ibid)


A step in which direction? Answer: Israel’s direction. Israel has been demanding three concessions from the Palestinians before it says it will negotiate with them: a recognition of Israel’s right to exist; a renunciation of violence; and a decision to abide by previous agreements.


A Guardian editorial shares MacAskill’s assessment: “Implicit recognition [of Israel] coupled with an end to violence [by the Palestinians] would be a solid basis on which to proceed.” (`Storm over Gaza,` 29 June 2006)


If the Palestinians are being faulted for their half-hearted commitment to these three yardsticks by which progress can be judged, how does Israel’s own commitment compare?


First, whereas the long-dominant Palestinian faction Fatah recognised Israel nearly 20 years ago, and Hamas appears ready to agree a similar recognition, Israel has made no comparable concession. It has never recognised the Palestinians right to exist as a people or as a state, from Golda Meir’s infamous dictum to Ehud Olmert’s plans for stealing yet more Palestinian land in the West Bank to create a series of Palestinian ghettos there.


Second, whereas the Palestinians have a right under international law to use violence to liberate themselves from Israel’s continuing occupation, the various factions are now agreeing in the Prisoners’ Document to limit that right to actions within the occupied territories. Israel, meanwhile, is employing violence on a daily basis against the general population of Gaza, harming civilians and militants alike, even though under international law it has a responsibility to look after the occupied population no different from its duties towards its own citizens.


Third, whereas the Palestinians have been keen since the signing of the Oslo accords to have their agreements with Israel honoured -- most assume that they are their only hope of winning statehood -- Israel has flagrantly and consistently ignored its commitments. During Oslo it missed all its deadlines for withdrawing from Palestinian territory, and during the Oslo and current Road Map peace negotiations it has continued to build and extend its illegal settlements on Palestinian land.


In other words, Israel has not recognised the Palestinians, it has refused to renounce its illegitimate use of violence against the population it occupies, and it has abrogated its recent international agreements.


Doubtless, however, we will have to wait some time for a Guardian editorial prepared to demand of Israel an “implicit recognition [of the Palestinians] coupled with an end to violence as a solid basis on which to proceed.”



Jonathan Cook is a former journalist with the Observer and Guardian newspapers, now based in Nazareth, Israel. He has also written for the Times, the International Herald Tribune, Le Monde diplomatique, and Aljazeera.net. His book “Blood and Religion: The Unmasking of the Jewish and Democratic State” was recently published by Pluto Press. His website is www.jkcook.net

reply to this interact write a new interact add to favorites flag objectionable content
#621 Posted by kaptain on July 20, 2006 8:28:03 am
Sarkaar hee sub kee dushman hai..

Maano..

Woh missile kidher gaya jis ney China jaana tha..??

ussay chupaanay ke liye kitnay roshan chehray gull hogaye..
reply to this interact write a new interact add to favorites flag objectionable content
#622 Posted by iron_mask on July 20, 2006 10:18:40 am
Re: # 621
are cheen forget about...this is what should worry most people

reply to this interact write a new interact add to favorites flag objectionable content
#619 Posted by omar_r_quraishi on July 20, 2006 5:21:35 am
For the RSS/VHP/Bajrang Dal members here on this board - it is infested with them

Youth arrested for Mumbai blast claim hoax

By Jawed Naqvi

NEW DELHI, July 19: India began a clampdown on selected internet websites and blogs on Wednesday amid fears of growing censorship following the devastating Mumbai blasts on July 11.

In separate developments, TV channels reported two arrests in connection with the blasts; their names suggested they were Hindus.

NDTV’s Hindi channel briefly reported in the afternoon the arrest of one Nitin Mohan at the Delhi airport, but then quickly went quiet about it.

Unconfirmed reports said the alleged arrest may have been related to blasts some years ago in another city.

Perhaps even stranger was the arrest of a youth in Bhopal who is said to have admitted to sending false emails to a newspaper and a TV channel in which he had cooked up the story of an unheard of group called Lashkar-i-Qahar which he claimed had owned up its role in the Mumbai blasts.

United News of India said Sumit Tamrakar, possibly a Maharashtrian by his name, was arrested in connection with the email.

Prima facie, it appeared that the youth had sent the email to create sensation. The tone of the report suggested it was a case of juvenile delinquency.

“Sumit, who studied up to class XII before leaving his studies three years back, does not have a past criminal record,” the report pleaded.

On July 15 the same email mischief, if that is what it merely was, had caused chaos. A top Hindi channel had gone to town on the basis of the email, linking the Lashkar-i-Qahar with Lashkar-i-Taiba.

According to the TV channel, the email message was received on Saturday claiming that the outfit was associated with the Lashkar-i-Taiba. According to the report, the Lashkar-i-Qahar said 16 people had triggered seven blasts in local trains.

“The organisation said it was making their involvement public since all the 16 people involved in the operation were now safe,” the news channel had said.

If this was nerve-wracking for investigators, the government appeared to have found a ready solution by seeking to deter the use of internet.

reply to this interact write a new interact add to favorites flag objectionable content
#618 Posted by zeemax on July 20, 2006 12:45:27 am
#608 by number

The simple answer is: He is the one who created the universe, you and me.

Number saheb, we chowkies are too far gone to be interested in simple answers. We want the tough answers. Don`t worry, we still have some grey matter left despite our various undesirable pre-dilections ...

In the words of echoboom #609 .....aap kay apnay afkaar pata krnaa chah rahay thhay. yahaaN Aap nay humaaraa hee google ....
reply to this interact write a new interact add to favorites flag objectionable content
#624 Posted by number on July 20, 2006 2:28:59 pm
Re: # 618 by zeemax

I did not know that you wanted me to tell you about golden rectangle etc. I thought that
the reference about google would suffice. Obviously it did not. It is not easy for me to
write mathematics on a computer. For instance, Fibonacci numbers are defined as
1,1,2,3,5,8,......, that is, first one is 1, the second is also 1, and from the third onwards,
each term is the sum of the preceding two terms. Writing in symbols, F(1)=1, F(2)=1,
........F(n)=F(n-1)+F(n-2) for n>2.

I fail to understand the relevance of this with the subject under discussion.
reply to this interact write a new interact add to favorites flag objectionable content
#617 Posted by harish_hyd on July 19, 2006 11:42:16 pm
#595 by number

Dear Nephew: I am glad that the battle (or is it war?) between uncle and nephew is over.
It would be nice to know who we are interacting with.


Uncle ji, there never was any war to begin with. You misunderstood my post and construed it to mean that we were at war, that`s all! As for me, I`m a humble code coolie, now based in Hyderabad, South India.
reply to this interact write a new interact add to favorites flag objectionable content
#625 Posted by number on July 20, 2006 2:43:13 pm
Re: # 617 by harish_hyd

Dear Nephew:

I am sorry for the misunderstanding.
reply to this interact write a new interact add to favorites flag objectionable content
#616 Posted by echoboom on July 19, 2006 10:14:26 pm
The word`s most racist, most aparthied, most arrogant & the worst muslim-model.

The saudis--
The King on a string
The princes who are puppets

The Klansmen in arab robes& are busy lynching the world.


From the New Statesman

You have probably never heard of Mohammed Jameel. He is president and chief executive of the Abdul Latif Jameel Group, which in 2004 donated £5.4m to the Victoria and Albert Museum in London for a display of Islamic art. The new Jameel Gallery, dedicated to the memory of his parents, is magnificent to behold. Housing the museum`s distinguished collection of Islamic artefacts, it has to be seen to be believed. The Saudis are not renowned for being patrons of the arts, so Jameel`s generosity comes as something of a surprise.


Over the past five decades, the Saudis` interest in art (which most of them think is un-Islamic) or literature (which leaves them cold) or science and research (which they want, but think can be bought) has been marginal at best. That is not to say they aren`t exceptionally giving people - but their generosity has been expressed purely in religious terms.


During the 1970s and 1980s, the Saudis gave astronomical sums to Islamic causes. The royal family, the government and individuals helped build countless mosques, seminaries (madrasas) and Islamic universities throughout the Muslim world, as well as in Europe. The Faisal Mosque that dominates the skyline of Islamabad, the International Islamic University in Kuala Lumpur and the London Central Mosque in Regent`s Park are all products of Saudi benevolence. The money came with a string attached, however: Saudi-funded institutions had to promote a literalist version of Islam, or Wahhabism.


The cause that attracted the most funds was, unsurprisingly, mosques, followed by Islamic schools, jihad in Afghanistan, Islamic universities and professorships, and conferences on Islamic themes. The Saudis never gave money to build hospitals or modern schools, for scientific research or museums, or to eradicate poverty.


The people who benefited also followed a strict hierarchy. I call it the Saudi Sandwich: it is, in fact, a large, multi-layered club sandwich. The top layer is occupied by the Saudis themselves - Saudis tend to be most generous to other Saudis. Immediately underneath this are the Americans. The Saudis have been very partial to America, and the bulk of their funding in the past has gone to prestigious projects at prestigious institutions such as the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Harvard and the University of California, Berkeley (many Saudi ministers and businessmen studied at these institutions).


The third layer is occupied by white converts to Islam. The Saudis love converts because, as one sheikh told me, ``they demonstrate the superiority of Islam``. White converts also provide living proof that European civilisation is rotten to the core.


The fourth layer is occupied by other Arabs - because they speak Arabic. Beneath them, in strict order, come Pakistanis, Indians, Indonesians, Bangladeshis and Africans. At the bottom of the sandwich are the poor Saudi Bedouins -

I have witnessed this hierarchy at work. During the 1980s and 1990s, I was involved in raising money for a number of intellectual and cultural causes. I would see a white celebrity convert walk into a Saudi sheikh`s office and walk out with millions, while British Pakistanis and Bangla deshis would be kept waiting for weeks, then sent away with peanuts.


All this changed after 9/11. Many Saudis have lost the will to make donations to Americans, and they, in turn, do not want money from the Saudis. The benefactors have
also been forced to realise that many of the mosques and semi naries they helped build are doing more harm than good - and the rage of the fanatics they have nursed and nourished is as much directed against the kingdom as it is aimed at the west.


Enter Jameel, a new kind of Saudi philanthropist. He realises that science and culture serve as much-needed bridges between Islam and the west, and his cash is reaching parts that past Saudi generosity failed to reach. Apart from the V&A gallery, he has initiated the ALJ Arab Technology Start-Up Fund through the Arab Science and Technology Foundation, and is supporting the Poverty Action Lab at MIT (where he studied civil engineering).


Mohammed Jameel is a beacon. I hope other Saudis follow his guiding light.


The Jameel Gallery of Islamic Art opens at the V&A, London SW7 (020 7942 2000), on 20 July
reply to this interact write a new interact add to favorites flag objectionable content
listing 1-16   1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11

Interact Index

    #633 zeemax
    #634 number
    #631 zeemax
    #632 number
    #630 nature_lover
    #627 echoboom
    #629 number
    #623 echoboom
    #621 kaptain
    #622 iron_mask
    #619 omar_r_quraishi
    #618 zeemax
    #624 number
    #617 harish_hyd
    #625 number
    #616 echoboom
    #614 echoboom
    #612 AlephNull
    #611 echoboom
    #610 AlephNull
    #609 echoboom
    #626 number
    #620 aquaris
    #601 echoboom
    #600 zeemax
    #599 zeemax
    #607 number
    #598 echoboom
    #606 number
    #597 zeemax
    #596 zeemax
    #608 number
    #594 echoboom
    #588 zeemax
    #587 harish_hyd
    #586 zeemax
    #590 wiseguyin
    #585 harish_hyd
    #584 zeemax
    #583 zeemax
    #582 AlephNull
    #589 number
    #581 harish_hyd
    #580 harish_hyd
    #591 number
    #579 harish_hyd
    #592 number
    #593 wiseguyin
    #605 number
    #613 wiseguyin
    #628 number
    #578 harish_hyd
    #577 harish_hyd
    #595 number
    #576 arjun_m
    #575 AlephNull
    #604 number
    #573 echoboom
    #569 zeemax
    #568 zeemax
    #572 Urstruly
    #574 Urstruly
    #567 sadna
    #566 Salim_Chauhan
    #564 zeemax
    #565 Urstruly
    #563 zeemax
    #562 MantoLives
    #561 MantoLives
    #615 nb
    #560 harish_hyd
    #559 zeemax
    #558 harish_hyd
    #557 zeemax
    #603 number
    #556 harish_hyd
    #571 number
    #555 zeemax
    #602 number
    #554 harish_hyd
    #570 number
    #553 harish_hyd
    #550 nasah
    #549 Raw_Dust
    #551 number
    #545 Raw_Dust
    #548 number
    #544 HP
    #543 number
    #546 mohar11
    #547 number
    #542 sadna
    #541 Raw_Dust
    #540 sadna
    #539 HP
    #538 MantoLives
    #552 anil
    #537 sadna
    #535 MantoLives
    #534 MantoLives
    #533 sadna
    #532 TheOne
    #531 harish_hyd
    #530 MantoLives
    #529 MantoLives
    #528 sadna
    #527 MantoLives
    #526 krishna_abcd
    #525 MantoLives
    #536 anil
    #523 sadna
    #522 sadna
    #520 kabuliwallah
    #518 bharath
    #517 hamidm2
    #519 anil
    #521 hamidm2
    #524 anil
    #515 zeemax
    #514 zeemax
    #516 hamidm2
    #512 HP
    #511 HP
    #513 ballukhan
    #509 krishna_abcd
    #508 HP
    #510 ballukhan
    #507 krishna_abcd
    #506 echoboom
    #505 HP
    #504 bjk
    #503 bjk
    #502 ballukhan
    #498 echoboom
    #497 hamidm2
    #496 bjk
    #495 echoboom
    #494 bjk
    #493 echoboom
    #492 bharath
    #491 tahmed32
    #490 tahmed32
    #499 PewResearch
    #489 krishna_abcd
    #488 krishna_abcd
    #484 omar_r_quraishi
    #486 queen_cut_paste
    #483 HisExcellency
    #482 bjk
    #478 omar_r_quraishi
    #481 queen_cut_paste
    #479 queen_cut_paste
    #480 queen_cut_paste
    #477 zeemax
    #487 ballukhan
    #500 ballukhan
    #501 ballukhan
    #476 parthaab
    #475 krishna_abcd
    #474 krishna_abcd
    #473 Ramanujan
    #472 ballukhan
    #469 tahmed32
    #485 PewResearch
    #466 einsteinwallah
    #465 bharath
    #463 tahmed32
    #464 PewResearch
    #462 jang
    #460 tahmed32
    #459 tahmed32
    #458 tahmed32
    #461 PewResearch
    #456 HisExcellency
    #455 soysauce
    #454 stuka
    #452 HisExcellency
    #450 khamkhwa
    #451 shishapa
    #449 tahmed32
    #453 PewResearch
    #457 bharath
    #448 HisExcellency
    #468 vivek
    #447 Indian
    #446 tahmed32
    #444 tahmed32
    #443 bharath
    #442 bharath
    #440 vivek
    #438 HisExcellency
    #437 HP
    #467 ballukhan
    #436 avkrishna
    #435 shishapa
    #434 zeemax
    #432 tahmed32
    #439 PewResearch
    #430 zeemax
    #441 mohar11
    #433 shishapa
    #428 Raw_Dust
    #427 khamkhwa
    #431 shishapa
    #445 khamkhwa
    #426 samosa
    #425 HP
    #424 zeemax
    #422 Raw_Dust
    #423 tahmed32
    #429 PewResearch
    #421 zeemax
    #419 Raw_Dust
    #417 zeemax
    #423 mohar11
    #420 hamidm2
    #418 hamidm2
    #415 Salim_Chauhan
    #470 anil
    #416 hamidm2
    #414 tahmed32
    #413 Salim_Chauhan
    #412 hamidm2
    #411 vivek
    #410 Salim_Chauhan
    #407 mohar11
    #405 saharanpuri
    #404 VRV
    #403 bongdongs
    #406 mohar11
    #402 Salim_Chauhan
    #408 saharanpuri
    #400 tahmed32
    #409 PewResearch
    #399 tahmed32
    #398 PewResearch
    #397 saharanpuri
    #395 wiseguyin
    #396 vivek
    #401 mohar11
    #394 Aangaara
    #393 vivek
    #392 Salim_Chauhan
    #391 Indian007
    #388 hamidm2
    #471 anil
    #386 harish_hyd
    #385 injun
    #384 bjk
    #383 injun
    #382 tahmed32
    #387 ballukhan
    #381 tahmed32
    #380 tahmed32
    #379 harish_hyd
    #377 tahmed32
    #376 tahmed32
    #375 bjk
    #374 bjk
    #373 injun
    #372 harish_hyd
    #371 tahmed32
    #369 harish_hyd
    #368 MantoLives
    #367 injun
    #370 ballukhan
    #366 tahmed32
    #365 khadiboli
    #364 ballukhan
    #363 tahmed32
    #362 harish_hyd
    #360 MantoLives
    #361 ballukhan
    #359 khadiboli
    #358 injun
    #357 ballukhan
    #356 injun
    #378 Indian007
    #355 harish_hyd
    #353 Indian007
    #352 ferozk
    #351 injun
    #354 Indian007
    #350 Indian007
    #349 ballukhan
    #347 MantoLives
    #346 zeemax
    #345 harish_hyd
    #389 mohar11
    #343 krishna_abcd
    #342 echoboom
    #341 bjk
    #339 echoboom
    #338 hamidm2
    #340 mohar11
    #337 tahmed32
    #390 anil
    #336 anil
    #335 bjk
    #334 tahmed32
    #332 bjk
    #331 Behram1
    #333 swarrier
    #330 sadna
    #325 Aangaara
    #324 bjk
    #322 tahmed32
    #321 tahmed32
    #320 HisExcellency
    #319 bjk
    #318 tahmed32
    #317 bjk
    #316 AlephNull
    #315 tahmed32
    #314 Salim_Chauhan
    #313 tahmed32
    #311 bjk
    #310 Salim_Chauhan
    #309 Salim_Chauhan
    #308 Salim_Chauhan
    #307 Salim_Chauhan
    #306 Salim_Chauhan
    #305 HP
    #304 sadna
    #303 HP
    #302 bongdongs
    #301 sadna
    #300 MantoLives
    #299 bongdongs
    #298 MantoLives
    #297 sadna
    #296 bjk
    #295 MantoLives
    #294 sadna
    #293 sadna
    #292 khamkhwa
    #291 MantoLives
    #290 sadna
    #289 sadna
    #288 khamkhwa
    #323 mohar11
    #287 MantoLives
    #285 sadna
    #284 MantoLives
    #283 zeemax
    #286 mohar11
    #282 Raw_Dust
    #281 MantoLives
    #280 MantoLives
    #279 echoboom
    #278 sadna
    #277 tahmed32
    #326 anil
    #276 Raw_Dust
    #275 sadna
    #274 anil
    #273 zeemax
    #272 zeemax
    #271 Salim_Chauhan
    #270 echoboom
    #268 zeemax
    #267 zeemax
    #266 zeemax
    #269 swarrier
    #265 echoboom
    #262 zeemax
    #261 zeemax
    #260 tahmed32
    #264 swarrier
    #259 Salim_Chauhan
    #258 Salim_Chauhan
    #263 anil
    #257 khamkhwa
    #256 Salim_Chauhan
    #255 mohar11
    #253 bongdongs
    #252 tahmed32
    #250 tahmed32
    #254 swarrier
    #249 tahmed32
    #247 hamidm2
    #246 MantoLives
    #248 ballukhan
    #244 MantoLives
    #245 ballukhan
    #242 omar_r_quraishi
    #241 MantoLives
    #243 ballukhan
    #240 ballukhan
    #239 MantoLives
    #238 saharanpuri
    #237 omar_r_quraishi
    #236 MantoLives
    #235 harish_hyd
    #234 MantoLives
    #233 zeemax
    #232 khadiboli
    #231 zeemax
    #230 khadiboli
    #227 MantoLives
    #226 ballukhan
    #229 devkant
    #224 ferozk
    #312 swarrier
    #344 ferozk
    #225 ballukhan
    #348 ferozk
    #223 khadiboli
    #222 khadiboli
    #228 ballukhan
    #219 Ranjit
    #221 devkant
    #220 ballukhan
    #218 devkant
    #216 Ranjit
    #329 Behram1
    #217 ballukhan
    #215 Indian007
    #214 mannyd
    #212 echoboom
    #213 ballukhan
    #211 AlephNull
    #210 vagabond786
    #207 bongdongs
    #328 Behram1
    #206 arstoo
    #205 krishna_abcd
    #327 Behram1
    #203 sadna
    #202 tahmed32
    #204 ShoreSahib
    #201 tahmed32
    #199 tahmed32
    #198 echoboom
    #197 echoboom
    #196 arstoo
    #194 swarrier
    #209 Indian007
    #200 Behram1
    #251 swarrier
    #208 Indian007
    #193 khamkhwa
    #192 bhairav
    #195 swarrier
    #191 Behram1
    #190 hamidm2
    #189 ShoreSahib
    #186 Ranjit
    #185 Netizen
    #184 echoboom
    #183 tahmed32
    #182 jainav
    #181 kalyan
    #180 Salim_Chauhan
    #179 tahmed32
    #178 bongdongs
    #176 tahmed32
    #175 tahmed32
    #177 hamidm2
    #174 jang
    #173 bongdongs
    #172 bongdongs
    #171 Salim_Chauhan
    #170 Salim_Chauhan
    #169 bongdongs
    #188 Behram1
    #168 dullabhatti
    #187 Behram1
    #167 kaurasach
    #166 Salim_Chauhan
    #165 Salim_Chauhan
    #164 kaurasach
    #163 Salim_Chauhan
    #162 echoboom
    #161 Salim_Chauhan
    #160 Salim_Chauhan
    #159 dullabhatti
    #158 einsteinwallah
    #157 Salim_Chauhan
    #156 echoboom
    #154 hamidm2
    #153 echoboom
    #150 Salim_Chauhan
    #149 Salim_Chauhan
    #148 iron_mask
    #147 Salim_Chauhan
    #151 hamidm2
    #146 soysauce
    #145 echoboom
    #143 saharanpuri
    #142 soysauce
    #144 saharanpuri
    #141 tahmed32
    #155 delhiwala
    #152 Urstruly
    #140 echoboom
    #139 echoboom
    #138 learner
    #136 avkrishna
    #133 tahmed32
    #135 Urstruly
    #132 tahmed32
    #131 hamidm2
    #131 tahmed32
    #128 learner
    #130 Urstruly
    #129 delhiwala
    #127 burpinder
    #134 giani_240
    #126 HisExcellency
    #125 Urstruly
    #124 delhiwala
    #137 mohar11
    #123 krishna_abcd
    #121 asimqadri
    #120 stuka
    #119 zeemax
    #119 kaptain
    #118 Ally
    #117 MantoLives
    #116 khamkhwa
    #115 zeemax
    #114 MantoLives
    #112 veeresh
    #111 masanamuthu
    #110 zeemax
    #109 zeemax
    #107 Maharana
    #103 Indian007
    #102 kaptain
    #106 vivek
    #108 ballukhan
    #113 vivek
    #105 ballukhan
    #104 devkant
    #101 AlephNull
    #98 AlephNull
    #99 ballukhan
    #97 einsteinwallah
    #96 Ally
    #100 devkant
    #94 Nasruminallah
    #93 zeemax
    #95 devkant
    #91 devkant
    #92 irfanhamid
    #90 tahmed32
    #89 ballukhan
    #88 tahmed32
    #87 khadiboli
    #86 irfanhamid
    #85 khadiboli
    #84 zeemax
    #82 khadiboli
    #81 MantoLives
    #79 khadiboli
    #78 tahmed32
    #80 ballukhan
    #77 khadiboli
    #83 devkant
    #76 devkant
    #75 harish_hyd
    #73 harish_hyd
    #72 khadiboli
    #71 MantoLives
    #69 ballukhan
    #70 devkant
    #74 ballukhan
    #66 harish_hyd
    #65 devkant
    #67 ballukhan
    #68 devkant
    #64 khadiboli
    #63 ballukhan
    #60 Ranjit
    #59 khadiboli
    #58 Ranjit
    #57 harish_hyd
    #61 ballukhan
    #55 ferozk
    #53 khadiboli
    #52 burpinder
    #51 Ranjit
    #50 MantoLives
    #49 nexus
    #47 nafisa2
    #46 Ranjit
    #48 ballukhan
    #54 ballukhan
    #56 ballukhan
    #45 burpinder
    #44 khadiboli
    #42 stuka
    #41 krishna_abcd
    #40 stuka
    #39 krishna_abcd
    #38 echoboom
    #36 MantoLives
    #35 harish_hyd
    #34 kabuliwallah
    #33 khadiboli
    #37 burpinder
    #31 khadiboli
    #30 dullabhatti
    #29 ijaz_gul
    #28 teshah
    #27 Behram1
    #32 burpinder
    #26 tahmed32
    #25 stuka
    #24 vagabond786
    #23 Raw_Dust
    #20 Raw_Dust
    #18 jang
    #22 swarrier
    #16 stuka
    #19 swarrier
    #15 stuka
    #12 avkrishna