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MEAN STREETS MEDIA

Sunday, February 14, 2016

Rebecca Zahau murder case moves forward in Federal Court !!!!!

Image result for Rebecca Zahau 2015

North Korea ‘executes’ army chief, Seoul reports

Speech by Mark Williams at UK Parliamentarians meeting with Maryam Rajavi, Iranian opposition leader

EIFA: Iran-backed groups in Iraq main cause of sectarian conflicts

Source: President of the European Iraqi Freedom Association (EIFA)
Iran-backed paramilitary forces which operate as criminal groups or in the guise of popular mobilization forces are today the main cause of sectarian conflicts, killing and murder, ethnic cleansing and population displacement in Iraq. They are driving the country towards internal conflict and ultimate collapse. In addition, these groups have turned into mafia-style murderers, kidnappers, robbers and drug-traffickers.
Regrettably, the government of Haider al-Abadi has not taken action to dissolve the paramilitary groups despite international demands and calls by religious authorities and political forces in Iraq. The popular mobilization forces are now a tool in the hands of criminal elements such as Nouri al-Maliki, Hadi Al-Ameri, and Abu-Mahdi Mohandess, who are in turn the most important agents coordinating the destruction of Iraq, fueling sectarian war and facilitating the emergence of DAESH. The people of Iraq have been demanding their prosecution in their weekly demonstrations for many months.
In a new act of aggression, the paramilitary forces backed by the Iranian regime have taken control of the houses and commercial buildings belonging to Christians in Baghdad. These Christians left Iraqi due to the appalling security situation. (Al-Jazeera TV and Al-Hayat, February 7, 2016).
Human Rights Watch (HRW) World Report 2016 that was published on January 27 states: “Mostly Shia militias fighting ISIS, such as Badr Brigades, League of the Righteous, or Imam Ali Battalions, carried out widespread and systematic violations of human rights and international humanitarian law, in particular, demolishing homes and shops in recaptured Sunni areas.”
The European Iraqi Freedom Association (EIFA) calls on the government and Prime Minister of Iraq to immediately disband paramilitary and popular mobilization forces, as barriers to reforms, national reconciliation in Iraq, and victory over Daesh. Otherwise any international aid package would have the same destiny as previous ones.
EIFA also calls on the Iraqi government to attend without delay to the humanitarian conditions in Fallujah, which has been taken over by these paramilitary forces to prevent the starvation of tens of thousands of citizens. Dozens of people have starved to death so far. According to Faleh al-Essawi, vice president of the Provincial Council of al-Anbar, starvation is prevalent in Fallujah and there are no food supplies or medical equipment in the city. (Al-Arabiya TV, February 1, 2016).
Struan Stevenson
President of the European Iraqi Freedom Association (EIFA)

(Struan Stevenson was a Member of the European Parliament from 1999 to 2014 and was President of the European Parliament’s Delegation for Relations with Iraq from 2009 to 2014.)

School teaching or abuse ?

Saturday, February 13, 2016

MASSAGE PRANK by pretty girl

Acehnese Authorities Publicly Whip 32 Men for Gambling



MEULABOH, Indonesia – Some 32 men in Aceh were publicly whipped on Friday as punishment for gambling, a violation of Islamic Sharia law as practiced in Indonesia’s semi-autonomous province of Aceh on Sumatra Island.

Black-masked punishers, locally known as algojo, lashed the men’s backs in front of a crowd of onlookers at Baitul Makmur Mosque at Meulaboh, the capital city of West Aceh Regency, according to witnesses.

Aceh – the only province in Indonesia which implements Islamic Sharia law – has over the past decade increasingly cracked down on “un-Islamic” practices, with whipping being one of many corporal punishments for violating laws including the public dress code or meetings between unmarried individuals, according to Human Rights Watch (HRW) in Indonesia.

In 2010, a university student was apprehended for being on an isolated road with her boyfriend and taken into police custody.

“A Sharia police officer ... told my mom and me that I should be buried and stoned to death. I said, ‘Sir, I was only trying to look for a shortcut, and I should be stoned for that? What about the officers who raped me last night?’” said Nita, 20, explaining that she had been sexually abused by authorities while in detention, as quoted by HRW.

Aceh introduced Sharia Law after it was granted autonomy from the rest of Indonesia in 2005, as part of a deal to end the separatist insurgency that had wracked the northwestern tip of the archipelago since 1976.