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MEAN STREETS MEDIA

Saturday, October 25, 2014

Syrian-Kurdish family names newborn ‘Obama’

A Syrian-Kurdish woman, one of thousands who fled their hometown of Kobane in Syria, named her newborn after U.S. President Barack Obama, Agence-France Presse reported.
“We named him Muhammed Obama Muslim,” father Mahmut Beko said.
Obama is the seventh child in his family, and owes his name to the U.S.-led coalition that has been striking Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS) militants who continue to battle Kurdish forces for control over Kobane.
“I gave my son this name from my heart. I will never change this name,” the shy 35-year-old told AFP in a refugee camp in the Turkish city of Suruc.
“He dispatched planes, aid for us. Because of his help maybe we will get rid of this cruelty and get back to our homes,” she said, as she held her three-day-old son.
The family fled their home almost a month ago along with almost 200,000 Kurds who escaped ISIS’ notorious reputation of mass killings and abductions.
“We were stranded at the border for days, without water or food,” said the young mother.
“We did not take any clothes to wear. We did not have any blankets ... I was pregnant and had no chance of taking a bath.”

“Nobody helped us but Obama”

“We want Obama to help us so that we can get back home. We are also human beings. We, the Kurds, attacked whom, fight against whom?” Obama’s father cried out.
Obama now lives with his family at the “Rojova Cadir Kenti” refugee camp where thousands of displaced rejoice over U.S.-led coalition air strikes have killed more than 500 ISIS militants during a month-long campaign in Syria.
U.S. planes have also dropped bundles of supplies, which include ammunitions and weapons, to help Syrian Kurdish fighters trying to defend Kobane from the ISIS, the extremist Sunni Muslim group that has seized control of large parts of Syria and Iraq.
Turkey, long at odds with Kurdish separatists, has criticized the air drops and officials said some of the supplies have fallen into ISIS hands.
Near Suruc, both Turkish and Syrian Kurds watch from hilltops, breaking out in cheers, whistles and chanting, “Obama, Obama” at each airstrike.
“Like the Americans, the whole world should help the Kurds in Kobane. We have no true friends other than the Americans,” said Selami Altay, a Turkish Kurd, sitting on a rock watching the battles.
Sultan Muslim, meanwhile, said despite all she had an easy birth, taken by ambulance from the tent city to a hospital in Suruc.
And despite the miserable conditions and uncertainty, she has dreams for her baby.
“The day will come when he grows up and becomes like him [President Obama] and saves people from cruelty.”
“Nobody helped us, but him,” she said.

U.S. calls for probe into Palestinian-American's death

The U.S. State Department called for an expedited and transparent investigation into the death of a 14-year-old Palestinian American after confirming he had been shot and killed by Israeli forces, a statement said.
Orwah Hammad, was shot in the head in the village of Silwad, north of the Palestinian city of Ramallah.
U.S. State Department spokeswoman Jen Psaki called for a "speedy and transparent investigation."
"The United States expresses its deepest condolences to the family of a U.S. citizen minor who was killed by the Israeli Defense Forces during clashes in Silwad on October 24," Psaki said in a statement posted on the State Department website.
U.S. officials would remain "closely engaged with the local authorities, who have the lead on this investigation," she added.
According to the Israeli army, the shot “managed to prevent an attack when they encountered a Palestinian man hurling a molotov cocktail at them on the main road next to Silwad. They opened fire and they confirmed a hit,” Reuters news agency reported.
This is one of many clashes in the Arab neighborhoods in and around Jerusalem where several people were injured.
Tensions in the West Bank escalated as the Jewish Sukkot holiday saw an increase in visits by Jews escorted by Israeli police to the Jerusalem holy site known to them as Temple Mount and to Muslims as Noble Sanctuary, with its al-Aqsa mosque complex, the third holiest site in Islam. 

Palestinians are weary of the visits in addition to Israeli settlers moving in to already an already crowded Arab district near the holy compound, aim to deepen Israel's claim to the city as its eternal and indivisible capital.

Palestinians want East Jerusalem, which was occupied by Israel in a 1967 war and later annexed in a move not recognized by the international community. 

After an Israeli motorist ran over and killed five-year-old Palestinian Enas Shawkat, a Jewish baby girl was killed and eight people were hurt when a Palestinian man slammed his car into pedestrians at a Jerusalem light railway stop on Wednesday, in what police said was a deliberate attack.
The driver was shot dead.

The Israeli motorist was cleared as investigators insisted the incident was an accident. 

The Palestinian Authority seeks to establish a state in the West Bank and Gaza, territories Israel occupied in the 1967 war.
Israel withdrew soldiers and settlers from Gaza in 2005 but has since expanded settlement in the West Bank and East Jerusalem.

Hospitality from both sides has surged following the July-August Israeli military assault in Gaza which claimed the lives of more than 2,000 Palestinians - mostly civilians - and over 70 Israelis, almost all of them soldiers.

Iraqi Kurdish forces retake town from ISIS

Iraqi Kurdish forces on Saturday retook the northern town of Zumar from Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS) extremists after weeks of fighting, a senior officer said.
Meanwhile, Iraqi security forces have retaken most of the town of Jurf al-Sakhar near Baghdad from ISIS militants, the biggest gains in months of fighting for the strategic area, senior local officials said on Saturday.
“We have managed to push out Islamic State terrorists from the town of Jurf al-Sakhar today and now we are raising the Iraqi flag over the government offices,” Reuters quoted provincial governor Sadiq Madloul as saying.
Major General Karim Atuti of the Peshmerga security forces told AFP that“ after clashes that began this morning and with American air support, we were able to force (ISIS) militants from the center” of Zumar and 11 surrounding villages.
Zumar is located some 60 kilometers northwest of Mosul, the first city to fall in an ISIS offensive in June.

Sparking offensive

Federal troops withdrew from Zumar, and Peshmerga forces occupied it. But ISIS drove them out during a new campaign in August, pushing them back toward regional capital Erbil.
That helped to spark an U.S.-led air campaign in Iraq that now involves several countries and has been expanded to Syria.
Kurdish forces have since regained some ground, but it has been slow going, and ISIS still holds significant areas in northern Iraq and elsewhere in the country.
Despite heavy fighting still ahead in Iraq, the Kurds plan to deploy up to 200 Peshmerga to help defend Kobane in neighboring Syria, a Kurdish border town under assault by ISIS

Friday, October 24, 2014

Women sex slaves in Iraq

Islamic State jihadists have given detailed theological reasons justifying why they have taken thousands of women from the Iraqi Yazidi minority and sold them into sex slavery.
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A new article in the Islamic State English-language online magazine Dabiq not only admits the practice but justifies it according to the theological rulings of early Islam.
“After capture, the Yazidi women and children were then divided according to the Sharia amongst the fighters of the Islamic State who participated,” the article says.

Phoenix man arrested in sexual attack

Adrian Lamar HutsonPolice say a Phoenix woman helped prevent a sexual assault earlier this week when she grabbed on to her attacker's genitals.
The alleged attacker, Adrian Lamar Hutson, 21, is on probation and not allowed to have any contact with the woman, whom he is convicted of victimizing in three previous domestic-violence incidents, records show.
Police say Hutson went to the woman's home one recent morning and began undressing her in an attempt to sexually assault her.
The woman was able to fight back by grabbing onto Hutson's genitalia and squeezing until he screamed in pain, police reports said.
Reports state that Hutson then punched her in the head and repeatedly hit, slapped and kicked her.
When the woman made an attempt to call authorities, Hutson ripped the phone wires out of the wall and continued to pull the victim towards him, police said. The woman was eventually able to reach her cell phone and called police.
Hutson fled but returned days later to the scene, where officers arrested him on Thursday, records show.
When questioned by investigators, Hutson told police he went to the woman's home but denied trying to have sex with her and said she attacked him, records show.
Hutson was booked into a Maricopa County jail on suspicion of sexual assault, kidnapping, aggravated assault, aggravated domestic violence, assault and interference with a 911 call, according to police documents. He is being held on a $25,000 bond.

Rash of acid-throwing incidents attributed to one man


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Hossein Zolfaghari
The deputy head of Iran’s Security forces says investigations regarding the incidents of acid throwing in Isfahan have revealed that the crimes were committed by a single individual and not by an organized group.
IRNA quotes Hossein Zolfaghari saying: “The information we have gathered points toward actions by a single individual [and] as investigations progress, we will find out if there were any abettors.”
He added that news of similar acts in other cities was merely rumour and not true.
The office of the deputy commander in chief of police announced that the perpetrator of the acid-throwing incidents in Isfahan has been identified and those attacks were in no way linked to the issue of hijab.
Mahmoud Alizadeh reported that the individual has not yet been arrested, adding that despite the culprit’s precautions, he soon will be arrested.

Drone strike kills three al Qaeda-linked militants-tribal sources

A U.S. drone strike killed three suspected members of the al Qaeda-linked group near their battlefront with arch-rivals from the Shi’ite Muslim Houthi group, tribal sources said.
The sources said the drone was used in the al-Manasseh area against Ansar al-Sharia, the local wing of al-Qaeda in the Arab Peninsula (AQAP).
The drone was still circling the area, they said.
This was believed to be the first U.S. air strike against the militant group in Yemen since the Houthis engaged al-Qaeda-linked militants in central Yemen after they captured the capital Sanaa last month.
Washington has acknowledged using drones in Yemen. AQAP is believed to be among the most active wings of the network founded by Osama bin Laden.
In the last known drone strike in Yemen in August, three suspected al-Qaeda militants were killed in the country’s eastern Hadramout province.
In April, a series of drone strikes killed about 65 militants in southern and central provinces. The Yemeni army followed up with an air and ground offensive to dislodge AQAP fighters from their main strongholds in the south.
The Houthis, who hail from the Zaydi branch of Shi’ite Islam, captured the capital Sanaa in September.
Last Update: Saturday, 25 October 2014 KSA 01:10 - GMT 22:10