P4Z-0hy22ZRyqh5IUeLwjcY3L_M

P4Z-0hy22ZRyqh5IUeLwjcY3L_M
MEAN STREETS MEDIA

Sunday, December 14, 2014

Killing of U.S. woman stirs niqab debate in UAE

Some local newspapers in the UAE are pondering whether a ban on the Islamic face veil would enhance security after the stabbing of an American woman by a burqa-clad suspect seen on surveillance camera.
On Wednesday, an English-language newspaper, Gulf News, asked: “Should niqab not be worn for security reasons?”
The paper said “the stabbing death of an American school teacher by a niqab-clad assailant in a women’s restroom at an Abu Dhabi mall is drawing mixed reactions across the country as to whether or not the niqab should be worn for security reasons.”
“The niqab crime, and the niqab is a crime,” read one title by columnist Ali bin Tamim on 24.ae website, saying it is time the issue is placed on the negotiations table to discuss its validity, citing “horrendous” crime that happened in Abu Dhabi.
Also read: 
Another columnist, Sami al-Riyami for Emarat Alyoum, wrote an article titled “Niqab and extremism or security and moderation.”
Riyami urged the security forces to cover this “void” in the security situation. He said crimes perpetrated by niqab-protected criminals are not only seen in the UAE but in other Muslims countries because of culprits being able to keep their identity withheld.

Saturday, December 13, 2014

Three Youths Found Executed in Chihuahua ( one a student )



Three youths were found dead in Chihuahua, which caused great social indignation when it was found out that one of the victims was a student.

The youths were kidnapped last Saturday by an armed group according to reports by authorities of the state.  They were found Thursday morning wrapped up in blankets and with a coup de grâce.

Élmer García was executed along with his brother Edgar Iván García Archuleta and his cousin Gabriel Gándara Archuleta.  The three were from Valle de Juárez.

Élmer García was a student studying psychology at the Autonomous University of Ciudad Juárez, and was just days from graduating.  He was greatly recognized by his peers for his leadership by having participated in the Network of Youth Groups, participating as an activist and speaker at various forums addressing insecurity issues.

The death of these young people had a great impact on the university community.

Gabriel Gándara was the brother of Érica Gándara, a police officer who was abducted in 2010 and later murdered, being the only woman in the corporation after 24 police officers were killed during 2008-2010.

IS Beheads Syrian Accused of Killing 196 People



BEIRUT – Islamic State jihadists on Friday executed a man in the north Syrian town of Al-Bab for allegedly collaborating with Assad regime forces by using an electronic device allowing rockets from regime warplanes to home in on their targets.

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said the man was beheaded after Friday prayers in Al-Bab.

Other sources indicated he had been declared guilty of causing the deaths of 196 people who were killed in airstrikes carried out by forces loyal to Syrian president Bashar al-Assad.

In an internet forum, the jihadists published footage of the man taken before his death as he holds up a microchip that supposedly guided the aircraft to targets in the area.

He appeared in another photo with a license, issued by the Syrian military, for possessing a weapon.

The jihadists described their victim as one of the “Shabiha,” a term coined to refer to groups of armed militia supporting Syria’s secular Ba’ath Party government.

Meanwhile, at least nine IS members were killed in Deir al-Zour province in northeastern Syria, when they attacked a military airport controlled by regime forces.

The Observatory said that two Tunisians and a Moroccan were among the fighters killed in the attack on the airport that IS had attempted to overrun a week ago but was turned back by government troops.

In late June, the IS proclaimed an “Islamic caliphate” in the territories that have fallen under its control in Iraq and Syria.

UK to send hundreds of troops to Iraq

Britain will send hundreds of troops to train Iraqi and Kurdish forces in Iraq, Defence Secretary Michael Fallon told The Daily Telegraph newspaper on Saturday, in a bid to step up the battle against Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS) fighters.
U.S President Barack Obama has already authorized the deployment of over 3,000 troops to the country and the top U.S
commander guiding the coalition effort said earlier this week that allies would send about 1,500 additional troops.
Fallon said troops in the “very low hundreds” would be sent next month.
He said that following air strikes by U.S.-led forces including Britain, ISIS had changed its methods, moving away from use of large formations in open space.
“They are increasingly tucked away in towns and villages.  That means they have got to be rooted out by ground troops.
“This has to be done by an own-grown army, not by western groups.”

Continued gains

On Saturday, ISIS fighters killed at least 19 policemen in a town in Western Iraq, as the group continues to seize territory in the region, despite aerial strikes.
Fallon told the newspaper that the exact number of Britons to be sent had not been finalised but that one of four teams would provide training in a Kurdish area and the remaining three in locations nearer to Baghdad.
“A key skill we are going to be helping with is counter-IED (improvised explosive devices), particularly vehicle explosive 
devices which the Iraqi army hasn't come across for some time,” Fallon was quoted as saying.

Friday, December 12, 2014

Iran 7.Dec.14 Students throwing out a Basiji milits from their student gathering

Phoenix mother and baby shot " Suspect wanted "

Kazakhstan Backs U.S. in Struggle with Islamic State



WASHINGTON – Kazakhstan supports the United States in the struggle against Islamic State, the Central Asian nation’s foreign minister said Wednesday in Washington, where he also took the opportunity to urge a “peaceful solution” to the crisis in Ukraine.

Erlan Idrissov addressed those issues, among others, in a meeting with U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry.

“Terrorism is a global phenomenon. The so-called Islamic State is a very ugly face of that unfortunate illness,” Kazakhstan’s top diplomat told Efe after his discussion with Kerry.

“The IS,” Idrissov stressed, “has become an international issue. Consequently, we welcome and we support the international community’s efforts to battle against the so-called Islamic State.”

Asked whether Washington has requested Kazakh military support for U.S.-led operations against IS in Syria and Iraq, Idrissov said: “The United States has made a universal appeal to all members of the international community to participate.”

“We have our way of addressing that matter, especially via cooperation between our respective agencies. That is very important,” the foreign minister said, without offering any details.

“Terrorism doesn’t recognize borders. It has become a global threat. Therefore, joining forces is a very wise and indispensable way of confronting that challenge,” he said, insisting that IS “does not deserve the name of Islam, because Islam is a very peaceful religion.”

Speaking to reporters before the meeting at the State Department, Kerry hailed the “growing security partnership” between the United States and Kazakhstan.

“We are working on the challenge of ISIL (Washington’s term for Islamic State), of counterterrorism,” the secretary said.

The two officials also discussed the conflict in Ukraine, a dispute that “makes life in Eurasia very complicated,” Idrissov told Efe.

“Kazakhstan is very unhappy with the fact that this crisis has still not been resolved,” he said, though adding that he was optimistic about a possible solution.

More than 4,300 combatants and civilians have been killed since ethnic Russians in eastern Ukraine rose up in April against the new government in Kiev, while hundreds of thousands of people have been forced from their homes.

“We expect a compromise and a peaceful solution to the crisis in Ukraine to be reached through dialogue among the parties,” the foreign minister said.

He reiterated Kazakh opposition to the sanctions the United States and the European Union have imposed on Russia over Ukraine.

Kazakhstan, a close ally of Moscow, “does not support the sanctions, because we believe they are not producing a result,” Idrissov said.

“We understand,” he said, “that sanctions can be used sometimes in an extreme situation as a last resort. But in this situation, the sanctions don’t help anyone. They don’t help Europe, they don’t help Russia, they don’t help Ukraine. The crisis continues there.”

“We encourage the United States, Europe, Russia and Ukraine to find a solution,” the Kazakh foreign minister said.

Idrissov and Kerry also talked about the situation in Afghanistan, where Astana is supporting the security forces, as well as nuclear proliferation, Iran’s nuclear program and the Ebola epidemic in West Africa.

The minister’s agenda in Washington includes securing U.S. backing for energy-rich Kazakhstan’s bid to join the World Trade Organization.

“This is a very important point in our bilateral dialogue,” Idrissov said. “The U.S. supports Kazakhstan’s accession, but this matter is technically very complex. I hope that Kazakhstan enters the WTO sooner rather than later.”

President Barack Obama’s administration is “working hard on Kazakhstan’s accession to the WTO,” Kerry said at the State Department.