January 31, 2016

PLO welcomes France's bid to recognize Palestine if peace initiative fails

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Monday 01 Feb 2016 - 10:56 Makkah mean time-22-4-1437

Bethlehem, (IINA) - The Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) welcomed calls made by French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius regarding a new peace initiative to end the ongoing Israeli military occupation, the failure of which would result in France's recognition of Palestine as a state, Ma’an News Agency reported.
“We welcome the call made by France for an inclusive and serious international involvement towards ending the Israeli occupation that began in 1967”, PLO Secretary General Saeb Erekat said in a statement, calling on the international community to participate in France’s efforts.
The initiative was rejected shortly after by Israeli officials due to France’s pledge to recognize Palestine as an independent state if the new plans failed, according to Israeli media reports.
Palestinian ambassador to France Salman Al-Harfi confirmed to Ma'an that France would recognize Palestine if the conflict was not resolved through the new bid, which would reportedly kick off with an international conference held within the next few weeks to renew diplomatic relations between the two sides.
It is noteworthy that Fabius pushed a UN resolution in 2014 and 2015, which laid out parameters for peace talks that failed after Palestinian leadership disagreed with the resolution's final amendments and the US and Israel pressured France to halt its efforts.
The UN resolution proposed by Fabius was slammed by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu who had said in June 2015: "The only way to reach an agreement is through bilateral negotiations, and we will forcibly reject any attempts to force upon us international dictates”.
Fabius’ efforts last year fell within months of declarations due to Netanyahu insisting that he would neither allow a Palestinian state nor a Palestinian capital in occupied East Jerusalem.
AG/IINA

UN envoy for Syria meets with High Negotiations Committee in Geneva

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Monday 01 Feb 2016 - 10:51 Makkah mean time-22-4-1437

UN envoy de Mistura (UN Photo)

Geneva (IINA) – UN Special Envoy for Syria Staffan de Mistura has met here with the delegation of the High Negotiations Committee (HNC) following their arrival on Saturday night in Geneva, where UN-mediated intra-Syrian talks began Friday after days of delays.
According to the envoy's spokesperson, de Mistura held a short meeting with the HNC delegation at their hotel to address issues relating to the intra-Syrian talks. 
Separately, UN Deputy Special Envoy for Syria Ramzy Ezzeldin Ramzy met with the delegation of the Syrian regime to discuss practical arrangements related to the next steps in the talks.
The Syrian regime delegation, headed by Permanent Representative of Syria to the UN Bashar Jaafari held a preparatory meeting with de Mistura on Friday at the opening of the talks.
“The issue is obviously that any type of ceasefire discussions, which is obviously something that we are aiming at, apart from substantive discussions on the future of Syria, need two interlocutors […] that is why for us it is very important to have an indication of where we are on the presence of the High Negotiations Committee (HNC),” said de Mistura responding to reporters' questions about discussions among the opposition about attending the Geneva talks.
One of their key concerns, he said, included the desire “to see a gesture from the government authorities regarding some type of improvement for the people in Syria during the talks, for instance release of prisoners, or for instance some lifting of sieges.”
The special envoy said the Geneva meetings will start with proximity talks and are expected to last for six months, with government and opposition delegations sitting in separate rooms and UN officials shuttling between them, with the immediate priorities being a broad ceasefire, humanitarian aid, and halting the threat posed by the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL).
AB/IINA

Nigerian Muslim women donate Bibles to Church in bid to strengthen religious tolerance

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Monday 01 Feb 2016 - 10:48 Makkah mean time-22-4-1437

Image from gistmania

Kaduna, Nigeria (IINA) - In a bid to strengthening religious tolerance and mutual understanding as the world marks International Interfaith Harmony week by the United Nations, a Muslim woman in Kaduna on Sunday donated 50 Bibles written in Hausa language to Church cleric and members, according to media reports.
The women who donated hundreds of prayer mats and plastic kettles to some mosques in Kaduna recently, attended Sunday Church service with Christian fellows at Christ Evangelical Intercessory Fellowship Ministry, Sabon Tasha, Kaduna-South this Sunday. They donated Bibles written in Hausa language to the Church Clerics.
Hajiya Ramatu Tijjani, accompanied by other women, said the World Interfaith Harmony was meant to donate important gifts, share love, unity, visit each other at places of worship, and encourage togetherness irrespective of faith organization in order to boost mutual understanding and inter-religious dialogue between the followers of the two religions, Information Nigeria news reported.
“I attended the Church service and give my own donation like every Christian just to encourage religious understanding and tolerance between Christians and Muslims for peaceful coexistence in the country and the world at large,” Tijjani said.
Ramatu said both religions preach peace, harmony, forgiveness and tolerance.
Receiving the Bibles, the general overseer of the Church, Pastor Yohanna Buru expressed satisfaction with the donation and appealed to Christians and Muslims to learn how to tolerate, accommodate and live in peace with one another in order to make the country great and peaceful.
SM/IINA

OIC, UNOSSC sign agreement to boost South-South cooperation

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Monday 01 Feb 2016 - 10:43 Makkah mean time-22-4-1437

OIC Chief Iyad Madani (R) during his meeting with UNOSSC Director Jorge Chediek

Jeddah (IINA) – Secretary General of the Organization of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) Iyad Ameen Madani received here last week Director of the United Nations Office for South-South Cooperation (UNOSSC) Jorge Chediek.
During the meeting, the two sides reviewed the cooperation between OIC and UNOSSC in various areas.
While recognizing that South-South cooperation serves as an important avenue for human and productive capacity-building, technical assistance and exchange of best practices among developing countries, Madani underscored the importance of OIC-wide and South-South cooperation for the implementation of its socio-economic programs.
On his part, Chediek confirmed the desire of UNOSSC to strengthen further cooperation with OIC as it is the largest South-South cooperation mechanism, in the light of the emerging dynamics of South-South cooperation.
Following the meeting, a memorandum of cooperation was signed between UNOSSC and OIC Department of Economic Affairs to boost South-South cooperation. Under this agreement, a regular mechanism of cooperation between UNOSSC and OIC Department of Economic Affairs will be created to carry out joint projects and capacity building programs in OIC member states.
AB/IINA

US Muslims in Baton Rouge dispel misconceptions about Islam

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Monday 01 Feb 2016 - 10:31 Makkah mean time-22-4-1437

Image from The Advocate

Baton Rouge city, Louisiana (IINA) - US Muslims at Baton Rouge city in Louisiana took the stage in a Methodist church hall on Sunday afternoon to explain their faith, answer questions and dispel misconceptions about Islam, The Advocate Baton Rouge News reported.
The meeting, organized by the Interfaith Federation of Greater Baton Rouge and attended by about 200 people, gave leaders from the Baton Rouge Muslim community an opportunity to address negative perceptions of their faith and a chance for curious non-Muslims to ask a range of frank questions.
“Our main goal was to dismiss some of the myths about Islam,” said Emad Nofal, chairman of the Islamic Center of Baton Rouge, who spoke during the program Sunday at Broadmoor United Methodist Church. “The misconceptions are out there. People don’t always go to good sources for their information. Events like this will help clear those up.”
In small group discussions, roughly 25 Baton Rouge Muslims spoke about everything from dietary restrictions to prayer habits. The frequent headlines linking the religion with terrorist groups like ISIS group drew plenty of questions as well.
Terrorist actions cut against the basic tenants of the faith, Nofal said, and are carried out by only a very tiny fraction of the more than 1.5 billion Muslims worldwide.
In the United States, Muslims have actively and consistently condemned and distanced themselves from terrorist groups, Nofal said.
“They do acts that are not acceptable to our dignity and our humanity,” Nofal said. “Muslims have been unjustly asked to always, always answer for the bad acts of a very few. We have done more than enough to isolate ourselves and distance ourselves from the bad guys and isolate them from us.
Nofal also highlighted the notable success of many Muslim immigrants in the United States and their outsized representation in professions like engineering, medicine and business.
The Rev. Fred Wideman, the senior pastor at Broadmoor United Methodist Church, which hosted the event, said widespread negative perceptions and misconceptions about Islam prompted the interfaith dialogue.
“There’s just so much fear and suspicion. You have to feel for our Muslim brothers and sisters right now, who are about 6,000 strong here in Baton Rouge,” Wideman said. “They need us right now and we need them.”
Tom Lusk, a recently retired history teacher, said he’d come to the event to get “a better understanding of the Muslim world view.”
“These people came here to help and contribute, not just to make better lives for themselves,” Nofal said. “And they’re thankful for their freedoms.”
SM/IINA

Davutoglu describes Turkey's ties with Saudi Arabia as extra-excellent

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Monday 01 Feb 2016 - 10:27 Makkah mean time-22-4-1437

Turkish PM Davutoglu (Image from Internet)

Riyadh (IINA) – Turkish Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu, who is on visit to Riyadh, described Turkey's relations with Saudi Arabia as extra-excellent, noting that his meeting with Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques King Salman was positive and excellent, Saudi Press Agency (SPA) reported.
In a meeting with the Saudi media, including editors in chief of newspapers and reporters as well as Saudi Press Agency, Davutoglu cast light on the outcome of his separate meetings with Deputy Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, second deputy premier and minister of defense; a number of officials and with a large number of Saudi businessmen. He described those meetings as fruitful and positive.
Davutoglu noted that Turkey has since 13 years ago made great strides in its openness towards Arab countries, confirming that his country's ties with Saudi Arabia is the most important step in this regard.
He asserted that Turkey attaches great attention to its relations with the Kingdom, noting the importance of high-level visit exchanges in all fields, including industry, energy, tourism, agriculture, infrastructure, real estate and others.
Davutoglu drew attention to the fact that both Turkey and Saudi Arabia are among the three Islamic countries enjoying the membership of the Group of Twenty (G20). He added that the economies of the two countries are complimentary to each other, pointing out that Turkey and Saudi Arabia also enjoy stability with their highest gross national product (GNP) among the Islamic nations.
Davutoglu confirmed that the viewpoints of Saudi Arabia and Turkey are identical on the ways of solving disputes and conflicts in the region. He added that the two countries stand side by side in the face of sectarianism and terrorism, stating that Saudi Arabia and Turkey are together working for the stability of the region.
The prime minister stressed that Turkey views the stability of the Gulf region as integral part of its own stability.
On the Syrian crisis, Davutoglu said the two countries support the moderate Syrian opposition, describing their recent meeting in Riyadh as very successful. He paid tribute to the position of the Saudi leadership in support of the Syrian people who are facing state terrorism and deteriorating living situations.
The prime miniser also affirmed the keenness of Turkey and Saudi Arabia to see a political solution in Iraq, restoration of legitimacy in Yemen and a stable reconciliatory government in Libya.
Commenting on the Islamic Alliance, Davutoglu said that Turkey will support any anti-terrorism coalition, regardless of the excuses or justifications made by terrorists.
He expressed pessimism about the forthcoming Geneva conference, saying that it would not bring about quick results to solve the Syrian crisis, given the international community's non-seriousness in this regard. He added that, since there is no other option for the time being, Saudi Arabia and Turkey have opted to support the Syrian opposition's participation in conference, hoping that it would strike success.
Davutoglu concluded that both Saudi Arabia and Turkey underscore the importance of respecting the territorial integrity of Syria and Iraq, demanding Iran to respect the unity of territories of all the countries and peoples in the region.
AB/IINA

16 people starve to death in besieged Syrian town of Madaya: MSF

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Sunday 31 Jan 2016 - 15:26 Makkah mean time-21-4-1437

Convoy from ICRC waiting on outskirts of Madaya, 11 Jan. 2016 (AFP image)

Damascus (IINA) – Some 16 people have died of starvation as a result of the siege on Syrian town of Madaya, north of the capital Damascus, China's Xinhua news agency reported citing a US-based humanitarian organization on Saturday.
"Residents of the besieged Syrian town of Madaya continue to die of sSome 16 people have died of starvation as a result of the siege on Syrian town of Madaya, north of the capital Damascus, China's Xinhua news agency reported citing a US-based humanitarian organization on Saturday.tarvation despite the provision of aid by convoys, while a Syrian government-led coalition blocks life-saving medical supplies from reaching the town," Doctors Without Borders (MSF) said.
MSF Director of operations Brice de le Vingne said of the estimated 320 cases of malnutrition in the town of 20,000 people, 33 are severe, meaning those people are in danger of dying if they do not receive prompt and effective treatment.
"It is totally unacceptable that people continue to die from starvation, and that critical medical cases remain in the town when they should have been evacuated weeks ago," he said
The warring parties in Syria have resorted to sieges to diminish one another's strength. The tactic has caused countless civilian population to fall victim to the dire consequences of the sieges.
It is to be noted that on January 11, after the images of emaciated children and adults prompted worldwide condemnation, the Syrian regime moved to allow the delivery of a UN convoy bearing humanitarian aid and food supplies into Madaya.
AB/IINA

Charlottesville Mosque in Virginia opens its door to community

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Sunday 31 Jan 2016 - 15:25 Makkah mean time-21-4-1437

Image from NBC29

Charlottesville City, Virginia (IINA) - Charlottesville’s mosque in Virginia USA, opened Saturday night its doors to the community for the first time to show what the Islamic faith is all about, NBC29 news reported.
For the first time since the mosque opened in 2012, Muslims who worship there welcomed the public to an "open house.” 
The common refrain was that Islam is a religion of peace. The mosque welcomed anyone who had doubts or questions about Islam’s intentions to learn about the religion firsthand and make up their own minds. 
With all of what's happening around us, especially this year, it's important to share our beliefs and to introduce Islam to the community at large,” said Saher Sabri, who attends the mosque. Visitors took a tour of the building, learned how Muslims pray, and experienced traditional foods.
There have been a lot of anti-Islamic comments being made in the media and we really wanted to really show that we appreciated the love and support that we got from the Charlottesville community,” said Saad Hussain.
Mosque leaders explained that women and men are separated not because the genders are unequal, but to respect the women when they lay down to pray.  For that same reason, only men may be filmed praying.
Being the only mosque in Charlottesville most members just wanted to share their faith with others.
“I want to be really good in my life and Islam is the word for peace, Islam the word, means peace,” said 11-year-old Karam Noori.
The mosque also houses a school and community center. There is even a boy scouts troop that meets at the mosque each week.
Mosque leaders say they were overwhelmed and thankful for the over 300 people who came out Saturday.
SM/IINA

Bahrain, Morocco sign sport cooperation agreement

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Sunday 31 Jan 2016 - 15:23 Makkah mean time-21-4-1437

Manama, (IINA) - Bahrain Self-Defence Federation (BSDF) and the Royal Moroccan Wrestling University (RMWU) have signed a cooperation agreement aimed at developing the game of wrestling in Bahrain, BNA reported.
BSDF President Eng. Ahmed Al-Khayat represented the Bahraini side and President of RMWU and Africa Wrestling Alliance Fouad Meskout represented the Moroccan side in the signing ceremony.
BSDF President expressed delight in signing the agreement, which will contribute to the development of the game of wrestling in Bahrain, especially in light of the huge support provided for the BSDF by the King's representative for charity and youth affairs, Chairman of Supreme Council for Youth and Sports (SCYS) and President of Bahrain Olympic Committee, Shaikh Nasser bin Hamad Al Khalifa, and the follow up of SCYS First Deputy Chairman, President of Bahrain Athletics Association, Shaikh Khalid bin Hamad Al Khalifa.
SM/IINA

Mosques across UK plans to open their doors to public to tackle Islamophobia

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Sunday 31 Jan 2016 - 15:02 Makkah mean time-21-4-1437

Image from Reuters

London, (IINA) - Mosques across Britain are planning to open their doors to the public in a bid to counter negative stereotypes about Muslims next week, against a backdrop of rising Islamophobia, Al Jazeera news reported.
Organized by the Muslim Council of Britain (MCB), more than 80 mosques will participate in the "Visit my Mosque" day on February 7 in England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland.
"It's an opportunity for Muslims in the UK to put themselves out there and reach out to their local neighbours," an MCB spokesman told Al Jazeera.
"The day will allow for people to meet face-to-face, get to know each other and tackle misconceptions."
Visitors of all faiths and none can visit one of the participating mosques, where they will be welcomed to ask questions, go on guided tours and have tea and snacks with volunteers and those who run the place of worship.
"We hope that the achievement will be that people of different faiths, and those with none, will better understand us, and we will be more integrated with everybody," Abdul Majid, chairman of the participating Camberley Mosque, told Al Jazeera.
Typically, around 300 people usually attend Friday prayers at his mosque in Surrey in the southeast of England.
"We live in a small town, so we don't have many problems in this area. But there has been some misunderstanding in the media about Muslims, and this is the whole reason we are doing this day to foster understanding."
Across the country, there have been more cases of Islamophobia following the attacks in Paris last November, which left 130 people dead.
According to figures by the Metropolitan Police, which is responsible for Greater London, there has been a sharp rise in Islamophobic crimes.
In December 2015, the force recorded some 158 offences across the capital, where the victims were known or perceived to be Muslim, more than 3 times as December 2014, when there were 50 Islamophobic crimes.
SM/IINA

CAIR urges South Carolina Assembly to drop unconstitutional anti-Islam legislation

Sunday 31 Jan 2016 - 14:59 Makkah mean time-21-4-1437

South Carolina, (IINA) - The Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) in a statement on Friday, called on the South Carolina General Assembly to drop an unconstitutional, anti-Islam bill (H. 3521), which is currently moved at the body, because it violates the establishment clause of the U.S. constitution.
The bill's sponsors, and the text of the legislation, make clear it is designed to attack the religious principles of Islam, or “Shariah.”
The bill, sponsored by Republican Rep. Chip Limehouse, came one step closer to becoming law after it passed 68-42 in the South Carolina House of Representatives yesterday. H. 3521 seeks “to prevent a court or other enforcement authority from enforcing foreign law including, but not limited to, Shariah law in this state from a forum outside of the United States or its territories under certain circumstances.”
Even the bill’s sponsors admit that there are no known cases of attorneys in South Carolina attempting to use international law or Shariah law in that state’s courts.
H. 3521 is one of many so-called “foreign law” bills introduced in state legislatures nationwide in a coordinated campaign to demonize Islam and to marginalize American Muslims. In 2015, more than 30 pieces of such legislation were introduced in 17 states.
In a letter sent to South Carolina Senate Majority Leader Harvey S. Peeler, Jr., Senate Judiciary Committee Chair Larry A. Martin and South Carolina Attorney General Alan Wilson, CAIR Senior Staff Attorney William Burgess wrote in part:
“I write to inform you that H. 3521, adopted on Thursday by the South Carolina House of Representatives, and currently pending before the South Carolina Senate, would if passed be in violation of the Establishment Clause of the United States Constitution. .
“This legislation is very similar to the Oklahoma anti-Sharia constitutional amendment that was struck down as a violation of the Establishment Clause in a federal court challenge brought by CAIR.
Deciding in favor of CAIR’s lawsuit challenging the amendment, U.S. District Judge Vicki Miles-LaGrange ruled that ‘the references to Sharia Law violated the Establishment Clause.’ Should this legislation become law, I expect that it would meet the same fate.
“As with the Oklahoma amendment, H. 3521 would send the unconstitutional message that Islam is an officially disfavored religion in the State of South Carolina. This would be in clear violation of the First Amendment’s command that government remain neutral in matters of religion.”
In 2011, the American Bar Association (ABA) passed a resolution opposing legislation like H. 3521, noting that it is "duplicative of safeguards that are already enshrined in federal and state law," saying, "Initiatives that target an entire religion or stigmatize an entire religious community, such as those explicitly aimed at 'Sharia law,' are inconsistent with some of the core principles and ideals of American jurisprudence."
CAIR noted that the bill’s sponsor has cited the Center for Security Policy (CSP) as a source of the legislation. In 2010, the FBI stated that CSP research is based on "outdated information" and "overstated" any threat Muslim observances pose to America.
CSP’s founder and president, Frank Gaffney, was also referred to by Chris Matthews of MSNBC's Hardball as "one of the country's leading anti-Muslim conspiracy theorists." Gaffney's conspiracy theories regarding Muslim infiltration of all aspects of American life are so overblown that he was banned from attending the Conservative Political Action Conference in 2011 after accusing its top leadership of being infiltrated by Islamists.
SM/IINA

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Al-Bashir, el-Sisi are keen to enhance bilateral cooperation

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Sunday 31 Jan 2016 - 13:53 Makkah mean time-21-4-1437

Presidents el Sisi (L), and al-Bahir (SUNA Image)

Addis Ababa (IINA) – Sudanese President Omer al-Bashir and Egyptian President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi underscored the keenness to maintain constant and good relations between Sudan and Egypt, and to continue cooperation and joint work for the development and wellbeing of the peoples of the two countries.
This came during a meeting that brought the two Presidents together on the sidelines of the 26th African Summit, held in the Ethiopian capital of Addis Ababa on Saturday.
Sudan's Foreign Minister Prof. Ibrahim Ghandour said in a statement to Sudan News Agency (SUNA) that the meeting reviewed bilateral relations between the two nations and the avenues to further boost them in a way benefittiing both sides. He drew attention to the directives given by the two presidents to their foreign ministers to prepare for a meeting of the Joint Sudanese-Egyptian Ministerial Committee, scheduled to be held next March.
Ghandour said that the Sudanese-Egyptian relations are deeply rooted and based on strong principles, saying that the two leaders are keen to upgrade the bilateral relations and cooperation to higher levels of coordination and exchange of benefits.
AB/IINA

Muslim population in UK exceeds 3 million

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Sunday 31 Jan 2016 - 13:12 Makkah mean time-21-4-1437

Image from mcb

London, (IINA) - England is now home to more than 3 million Muslims for the first time ever, The Express Tribune news reported citing the latest figures.
In some parts of London, nearly half the population is now Muslims, according to detailed analysis by the Office for National Statistics (ONS).  Based on recent trends, they will be the majority in those areas within a decade.
Half of the Muslims in England and Wales were born outside the abroad and more are under the age of 10 than in any other age group, indicating their numbers will grow still further.
The 3 million milestone, which means Muslims represent one in 20 people across the country, will reignite debate about the changing face of Britain amid growing demands for Muslims to integrate further into society.
The ONS has also identified 8 areas around the country where Muslims make up a substantial portion of local population. 
Muslims account for 29 percent of the population in Blackburn; 26 percent in Slough; 25.7 percent in Luton; 23 percent in Birmingham; 20 percent in Leicester; and 18 percent in Manchester.
Further, the Muslim population is expected to rise more as a result of the exceptional surge in refugees from Middle Eastern and North African countries trying to reach Western Europe in the previous year.
SM/IINA

US Muslims in Steelton gather with community members to build bridges

Sunday 31 Jan 2016 - 13:08 Makkah mean time-21-4-1437

Atizaz Mansoor, a spokesman for the Islamic Society of Greater Harrisburg. Image from PennLive

Steelton, Pennsylvania (IINA) - More than one hundred people gathered Saturday for an open house at the Islamic Society of Greater Harrisburg in Steelton, Pennsylvania, PA PennLive news reported.
The conversation on Saturday, held at the Steelton mosque along front street, followed the same narrative: a people of faith trying to debunk misconceptions and underscore not only the shared faith heritage but the commonalities. 
The event billed as an opportunity to "build bridges" brought together members of the region's Muslim community and non-Muslims from across government, academia and the community seeking to learn and understand one of the world's largest faith traditions.
One of about half a dozen speakers, Iftekar Hussain, a representative from the Council of American-Islamic Relations (CAIR), moderated a segment of the conversation on the current anti-Muslim rhetoric in the U.S.
Hussain said it was difficult to hear the voices of Muslims denouncing the violence and the terror because the American media simply does not cover it. "The media is not telling you about the hundreds of thousands of Muslims who denounce ISIS," Hussain said, answering a question from a member of the audience. The person asking the question - Joyce Davis, spokeswoman for the City of Harrisburg, said the American public generally wondered why there is no groundswell of outcry from the Muslim community against acts of terror.
"If 1.6 billion Muslims really believed in what ISIS says that all who are not Muslims should be killed, we wouldn't have a very safe world," Hussain said.
"Our goal was to open up a bit a community that is growing and settling into the American society and experience," said Atizaz Mansoor, a spokesman for the Islamic Society of Greater Harrisburg. "I was hoping it would be a chance for us to meet our neighbors, to let them know about us and us to learn about them and in that process, to start to embed ourselves into this American quilt and become part of the local society and broader society and be a positive influence within it."
The gathering featured a wide breadth of topics - from a presentation on the tenets faith, the challenges of following that faith, especially for women and young people in this country and the overall challenges faced by all Muslims in the face of a minute percentage of adherents who continue to commit acts of terrorism in its name.
Dr. Munima Nasir, one of the speakers, expounded on the challenges for Muslim women in this country specifically because in addition to all the obstacles faced by women of all faiths gender discrimination and sexual harassment Muslim women had to contend with "dress code" discrimination. The hijab or headscarf worn by Muslim women often makes them the target of hostility and violence.
The hijab, she said, has mistakenly become a symbol of radicalization.
Nasir, a physician, urged the non-Muslim guests to understand that Muslim women are called to don the headscarf as a sign of modesty.
Despite the challenges, she said, Muslim women "continue to grow within their communities," and to thrive and serve in volunteer and outreach positions in the community.
Daniel Thompson, who plays in a volleyball league held at the Steelton mosque, said he has cultivated friendships with young Muslims and accepted the invitation to attend the open house to help build relationships.
"As a Christian, I'm sorry we are not inviting Muslims to our churches," Thompson said. "It's amazing for a group of Muslims to invite Christians to their place of worship. I 'm happy to have this opportunity to build bridges and relationships."
He said the volleyball - and sports in general helps to tear down the barriers between faiths.
"Having an event like this helps us find common ground. It's why we came," Thompson said.
SM/IINA

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Russia urged to fully respect Turkish airspace amid reported violation

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Sunday 31 Jan 2016 - 12:30 Makkah mean time-21-4-1437

Turkish President Erdogan (AP Photo)

Ankara (IINA) – Turkish Foreign Ministry said that a Russian fighter jet violated Turkey's airspace on Friday, Anadolu Agency reported.
An official statement released on Saturday said that the Russian craft – a SU-34 fighter-bomber – was repeatedly warned by Turkish air radar units in Russian and English.
"A Russian SU-34 fighter jet violated Turkish airspace yesterday (29 January 2016) at 11.46 a.m. local time in Turkey [0946 GMT]," the statement read.
The Turkish Air Force has declared an "orange alert" in key bases around the country, military sources said.
Speaking to reporters at Istanbul Ataturk Airport before his departure for Chile, President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said the violation of Turkish airspace, which he also described as NATO airspace, was a result of Russian attempts to escalate existing tension in the region.
"Russia will have to bear the consequences if the violations continue," he said.
NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg also called on Russia “to act responsibly and to fully respect NATO airspace” but also urged “calm and de-escalation” of tensions between Moscow and Ankara.
“Russia must take all necessary measures to ensure that such violations do not happen again,” Stoltenberg said in a statement. “NATO stands in solidarity with Turkey and supports the territorial integrity of our ally, Turkey,” he added.
Erdogan said the Turkish Foreign Ministry had made contact with Russia to arrange a meeting with President Vladimir Putin to discuss the incident, but added that Ankara had yet to receive a response. 
Meanwhile, the Russian Defense Ministry has claimed that their fighter jet did not violate Turkish airspace. Ministry spokesperson Igor Konashenkov dismissed Ankara's statement as "propaganda", arguing that Russian and Syrian air radar units did not detect any violations and that there has long been no radio contact between Turkish and Russian air forces.
AB/IINA

First Spanish-speaking Islamic center opens in Houston, US

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Sunday 31 Jan 2016 - 12:09 Makkah mean time-21-4-1437

Image from vivala

Houston, (IINA) - A non-profit organization called IslamInSpanish has opened a centre on Saturday in Houston that will help educate Latinos about Islam in Spanish, World Bulletin online news reported.
After much deliberation, they decided to build the first ever Spanish-speaking mosque in the United States. The 5,000+sq ft. center includes a mosque, museum, lounge, information showroom, multi-purpose hall, and state of the art production studio that will aim to broadcast and live stream Spanish programs. The entire production will also be available online.
"The heart of what inspired IslamInSpanish was responding to the need for information on Islam in Spanish," says CEO Jaimie Fletcher, a Colombian-American who founded the organization, "My family had a lot of questions when I became Muslim. This is something that's foreign to a lot of Latinos."
After converting to Islam in order to help his father understand the religion in Spanish of which there were no books or audio material - Fletcher, who has a background in multimedia and film began to create audios translating books on Islam. What started off as one CD created to educate Fletcher's family and his wife's skeptical aunt, turned into a venture that saw him distributing the audio books across the country. Not long after, Fletcher was then invited to speak at conferences, universities, and various places of worship.
IslamInSpanish then began to have their own events and started meet-ups with hundreds of Spanish-speaking Latinos who were genuinely interested and curious about Islam.
"We're creating a whole new identity. It's a subculture literally, Latino Muslims," says Fletcher who realized it was time to create a center for everyone in the community to meet. The lack of materials and Spanish-speaking mosques made it difficult for Latinos to really learn about the religion.
"There was a huge need to have a center," adds Fletcher. We asked the community if they felt we needed a place and everyone raised their hand and said yes. For Latino converts, many of them feel alienated from their families who might think they left their culture to become Muslim and even in mosques where the majority of folks speak Arabic.
But the center doesn't just consist of a mosque, it will also feature an exhibition on the history of Islam in Latino America, along with a state-of-the-art production studio where they will be broadcasting and streaming live Spanish programs. People who are not able to visit the center will be able to access information directly online.
SM/IINA

UN allocates $100 million fund for vulnerable people in 9 neglected crises

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Sunday 31 Jan 2016 - 11:53 Makkah mean time-21-4-1437

UN Photo

New York (IINA) – UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon on Friday released $100 million from the UN Central Emergency Response Fund (CERF) for severely underfunded aid operations in nine neglected emergencies.
The funds will enable life-saving help for millions of people forced from their homes in Central and Eastern Africa, those affected by conflict and food insecurity in Libya and Mali, and the most vulnerable and at risk of malnutrition in North Korea.
“I am allocating $100 million from the Central Emergency Response Fund to meet critical humanitarian needs in nine underfunded emergencies,” said Ban in a press statement.
According to the United Nations, CERF pools donor contributions into a single fund so money is available to start or continue urgent relief work anywhere in the world at the onset of emergencies and for crises that have not attracted sufficient funding.
CERF allocated $64 million to allow humanitarian partners to respond to the displacement crises in Central and Eastern Africa caused by conflict and violence in South Sudan, Burundi and Congo. Urgently needed funds will help an estimated 1.7 million refugees, internally displaced people and host communities in Burundi, Ethiopia, Kenya, Sudan, Tanzania, and Uganda.
It also allocated $28 million to help relief agencies address the humanitarian needs of up to 350,000 people affected by conflict and food insecurity in Libya and in Mali, where an estimated 300,000 people will be assisted.
CERF further allocated $8 million to support urgent life-saving humanitarian assistance for more than 2.2 million vulnerable people in North Korea, including 1.8 million children who need urgent nutrition assistance.
According to UN News Center, 125 UN member states and observers, private-sector donors and regional governments have supported the Fund since 2006. CERF has allocated almost $4.2 billion for humanitarian operations in 94 countries and territories so far.
AB/IINA

Cumulative subscription to IDB's capital rises to $ 70 billion: IINA Report

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Sunday 31 Jan 2016 - 11:07 Makkah mean time-21-4-1437

IDB President DR Ahmad Mohamed Ali

Jeddah (IN) – The Jeddah-based Islamic Development Bank (IDB) said that the subscription and payment of member states to the capital of the Bank has exceeded 50.5 billion Islamic Dinars for the first time since its inception more than 40 years ago.
The Islamic Dinar is the unit of account of IDB, which is equivalent to one Special Drawing Right (SDR) of the International Monetary Fund (IMF). Each Islamic Dinar equaled to $ 1.38 in the IDB's latest report published on January 28. 
According to the report which was seen by the International Islamic News Agency (IINA), the IDB's data showed that total subscriptions increased to 50.582 billion Islamic dinars, equivalent to $ 69.90 billion, at the end of Financial Year 1436H (which is according to the lunar calendar the year ending on 13 October 2015), compared to 49.86 billion Islamic dinars ($ 68.90 billion) from the previous year.
Ten countries out of the 56 member states of IDB contribute 86.54 percent (about 43.78 billion Islamic dinars, or the equivalent of $ 60.50 billion) of the subscribed capital of the bank.
Saudi Arabia tops the list of the major shareholding states by 23.52 percent (11.896 billion dinars), followed by Libya 9.43 percent (4.77 billion dinars), Iran 8.25 percent (4.17 billion dinars), Nigeria 7.66 percent (3.87 billion dinars), United Arab Emirates 7.51 percent (3.8 billion dinars), Qatar 7.18 percent (3.63 billion dinars), Egypt, 7.08 percent (3.58 billion dinars), Kuwait 6.92 percent (3.5 billion dinars) Turkey 6.45 percent (3.26 billion dinars) and Algeria 2.54 percent (1.285 billion dinars).
The IDB’s Board of Governors had approved, in their meeting held in Dushanbe, Tajikistan, in May 2013 to more than triple the Bank’s authorized capital to 100 billion Islamic Dinars (about $150 billion) from 30 billion Dinars, to better serve Muslims in member and non-member countries.
The IDB Group consists of five entities, namely the Islamic Development Bank (IDB); Islamic Research & Training Institute (IRTI); Islamic Corporation for Development of the Private Sector (ICD); Islamic Corporation for Insurance of Investment and Export Credit (ICIEC) and International Islamic Trade Finance Corporation (ITFC).
Zayed Sultan/AB/IINA

Malaysia's deputy prime minister to begin China visit tomorrow

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Sunday 31 Jan 2016 - 11:03 Makkah mean time-21-4-1437

Malaysia Deputy PM Ahmad Zahid (Image from Internet)

Kuala Lumpur (IINA) – Malaysian Deputy Prime Minister Dr Ahmad Zahid Hamidi will begin a four-day visit to China on Monday, BERNAMA reported.
The Foreign Ministry said Sunday in a statement that this would be his first working visit to China as the deputy prime minister.
Ahmad Zahid, who will be accompanied by senior state officials from the Minitry of Foreign Affairs and the Ministry of Home Affairs, is scheduled to hold meetings with Central Political and Legal Affairs Secretary of the Communist Party of China Meng Jiangzhu and Minister of Public Security Gou Shengkun.
"The visit is to strengthen bilateral ties between the two nations, especially in the areas of security, counter-terrorism and immigration," the statement said.
Malaysia and China continues to enjoy close and cordial bilateral relations and cooperation in key areas which includes politics, economy and trade as well as defense and security. China has been Malaysia's largest trading partner since 2009, according to the Foreign Ministry.
Malaysia is China's eighth largest trading partner worldwide and the largest trading partner among the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN), largest source of imports and second largest export destination.
During the period from January to November 2015, Malaysia's total trade with China increased by 12 percent to $ 54.38 billion, compared with the corresponding period of 2014. The total exports increased by 11.6 percent to $ 24.02 billion, while imports grew 12.3 percent to $30.36 billion for the same period.
AB/IINA
 

Obama to make first visit to a U.S. mosque during his presidency on Wednesday

Sunday 31 Jan 2016 - 11:01 Makkah mean time-21-4-1437

President Obama during his visit to the National Mosque of Malaysia in Kuala Lumpur, on April 27, 2014. Image from Reuters

Washington, (IINA) - US President Barack Obama will make the first visit during his presidency to a U.S. mosque this week, the White House announced on Saturday.
On Wednesday, the president will visit the Islamic Society of Baltimore, a sprawling community center in the city’s western suburbs that serves thousands of people with a place of worship, a housing complex and schools, according to its website, The Washington Post reported.
It is one of the Mid-Atlantic region’s largest Muslim centers and describes itself as aspiring “to be the anchor of a growing Muslim community with diverse backgrounds, democratically governed, relating to one another with inclusiveness and tolerance, and interacting with neighbors in an Islamic exemplary manner.”
The president is making the visit “to celebrate the contributions Muslim Americans make to our nation and reaffirm the importance of religious freedom to our way of life,” a White House official wrote in an email Saturday. “The President believes that one of our nation’s greatest strengths is our rich diversity and the very idea that Americans of different faiths and backgrounds can thrive together  that we’re all part of the same American family. As the President has said, Muslim Americans are our friends, and neighbors; our co-workers, and sports heroes and our men and women in uniform defending our country.”
At the Islamic Society, the president will hold a roundtable discussion with community members, the official said.
“When politicians insult Muslims, whether abroad or our fellow citizens, when a mosque is vandalized or a kid bullied, that doesn’t make us safer,” Obama said in his State of the Union address earlier this month. “That’s not telling it like it is. It’s just wrong.
“It diminishes us in the eyes of the world. It makes it harder to achieve our goals. It betrays who we are as a country.”
Obama has visited mosques overseas, but never one in this country while serving as president.
“I think it would be enormously comforting and also send powerful message to Americans about recommitting to religious freedom especially if we had Bush and Obama visit together,” Farhana Khera, executive director of Muslim Advocates, a legal advocacy group, said last month when she met with the president’s aides.
Obama’s relationship with American Muslims has been complicated. They are among his most enthusiastic backers, but some feel he has not done enough to address their concerns at a time of social unrest.
However, concern about profiling and domestic surveillance at mosques has escalated under Obama, and some Muslim leaders expressed concern last year when he held a key summit about violent extremism that focused significantly on Muslim extremism.
SM/IINA

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January 30, 2016

British intelligence signing up teachers to tackle radicalization in Islamic schools

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Sunday 31 Jan 2016 - 10:57 Makkah mean time-21-4-1437

Image from Daily Star Sunday

London, (IINA) - British Security Service (MI5) has contacted dozens of teachers at Islamic schools across the UK who have voiced concerns about the rise of extremism, Daily Star Sunday (DSS) online news reported.
Many teachers have agreed to work as agents spying on fellow members of staff and are now sending intelligence reports on suspected jihadis to their handlers in London, the report has said. Some teachers are known to have contacted MI5 independently to volunteer their services but many others have been approached by the service seeking help.
The move was ordered by spy chiefs amid fears children as young as seven are being targeted by hate preachers. Some youngsters have been told all non-Muslims are the enemies of Islam.
Intelligence sources say there have even been reports that some teachers are showing execution videos to Muslim pupils as part of their religious education.
Children have also been told that Islam is in a holy war against the West and that it is the duty of every Muslim to join the fight. 
Intelligence sources told the Daily Star Sunday that Muslim religious schools have become recruiting grounds for extremist groups such ISIS and Al-Qaeda.
“Children are being brainwashed at a very young and vulnerable age by teachers who are effectively recruiting sergeants for ISIS. They are basically poisoning the minds of the young so that by the time they reach the age of 15 or 16 they have effectively rejected British society and want to join the holy war against the West.”
Last year, three east London pupils from the Bethnal Green Academy, which is not a religious school, fled to join ISIS in Syria.
Shamima Begum, 15 year-old, Kadiza Sultana, 16 year-old, and Amira Abase, 15 year-old, left Britain in February after deceiving their parents and siblings.
SM/IINA

Syrian opposition traveling to Geneva for peace talks

Saturday 30 Jan 2016 - 21:20 Makkah mean time-20-4-1437

Geneva (IINA) – Syria's main opposition bloc said it was travelling to Geneva on Saturday to assess the intentions of the government in implementing humanitarian measures that could allow it to join political negotiations, Al Jazeera reported.
A 17-strong team of Higher Negotiation Committee (HNC) members, including three rebel leaders, were expected to arrive in Switzerland at 16:00 GMT on Saturday, delegates said. On Friday, HNC member Farah Atassi said the delegation was coming "not to negotiate" with the government yet, but to talk to UN officials after receiving reassurances from the organization. Atassi spoke at a Geneva hotel not far from the UN offices where UN Syria envoy Staffan de Mistura and Syria's UN ambassador Bashar Jaafari were meeting. HNC spokesman Monzer Makhous said that the opposition had not changed a previous position that it would not travel to Switzerland if specific conditions for talking politics were not met. “Yes, we will go to Geneva to be present but we will not attend the talks at all unless the regime fulfils our humanitarian demands, which specify stoppage to bombings and starvation of civilians in besieged areas as a condition," Makhous said. “Today we received guarantees that these issues will be addressed in addition to political transition of power. We will not accept anything else unless we see these demands met on the ground.”
Mistura said he believed he would be able to meet the HNC on Sunday. Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Gennady Gatilov was quoted by Russian Interfax news agency as saying that no direct talks were expected in Geneva, only proxy talks. Gatilov said there were no preconditions for the Syrian talks and that Moscow welcomed the decision by HNC opposition coordinator, Riad Hijab, to take part in talks in Geneva. The talks are the first since two rounds of negotiations collapsed in 2014. Syria's conflict has killed more than 250,000 people, displaced millions and sent hundreds of thousands fleeing as refugees to Europe.
The meetings are part of a process outlined in a UN resolution last month that envisages an 18-month timetable for a political transition, including the drafting of a new constitution and elections. Disputes are ongoing over which opposition parties should attend, with the HNC bloc facing criticism from the Syrian government and Russia for including the Army of Islam group, which controls wide territory near the capital.Earlier on Friday, UN spokesman Ahmad Fawzi reflected the sense of chaos and confusion surrounding the beginning of the negotiations when he told reporters at a briefing: "I don't have a time, I don't have the exact location, and I can't tell you anything about the delegation."
Meanwhile, there was no let-up in the fighting in Syria. On Saturday, at least 15 people were killed and dozens more injured in suspected Russian air strikes targeting rebel positions near the northern city of Aleppo. In Syria's west, opposition fighters said they had taken control of several checkpoints around the city of Hama, which lies in a region where control is divided between government and opposition fighters. Further souths, residents of the besieged Syrian town of Madaya continued to die of starvation and a lack of medical supplies, despite the delivery of aid earlier this month, according to a leading humanitarian agency. Doctors without Borders (MSF) said on Saturday that at least 16 people - close to one person per day - have died since three aid convoys entered the town, near the Lebanese border, 40km northwest of Damascus, on January 11.The group said that an estimated 320 people in Madaya are suffering from malnutrition, 33 of whom are "are in danger of death if they do not receive prompt and effective treatment".
HA/IINA

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33 refugees drown as boat sinks off Turkey

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Saturday 30 Jan 2016 - 21:18 Makkah mean time-20-4-1437

Athens (IINA) – At least 33 refugees, including at least five children, have died after their boat sank in the Aegean Sea while trying to cross from Turkey to a Greek island, according to Turkish media.
The refugees had set off from the district of Ayvacik in Canakkale province in an apparent bid to reach the Greek island of Lesbos. State-run Anadolu Agency said that 75 refugees were saved and hospitalized by the Turkish coastguard on Saturday morning. With Saturday’s deaths included, the number of refugees who have died on their way to Europe so far this month is more than 250 - a January record. As of January 29, the International Organization for Migration (IOM) recorded the deaths of at least 244 refugees and migrants who tried to reach Europe via the Mediterranean Sea, almost three times higher than the 82 people who died last January, and overwhelmingly more than the 12 people who died in January 2014.
About 850,000 migrants and refugees crossed into Greece last year, paying smuggling gangs to ferry them over from Turkey in often frail boats. In a deal struck at the end of November, Turkey promised to help stem the flow of refugees to Europe in return for cash, visas and renewed talks on joining the EU. Turkey is host to 2.2 million Syrians and has spent around $8.5bn on feeding and housing them since the start of the civil war nearly five years ago.
HA/IINA

Merkel: Refugees must return home once war over

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Saturday 30 Jan 2016 - 21:17 Makkah mean time-20-4-1437

Berlin (IINA) – German Chancellor Angela Merkel on Saturday tried to placate the increasingly vocal critics of her open-door policy for refugees, insisting that asylum seekers from Syria and Iraq would go home once the conflicts there had ended.
Merkel, despite appearing increasingly isolated over her policy, has resisted pressure from some conservatives to cap the influx of refugees, or to close Germany's borders. A record 1.1 million migrants arrived in Germany last year. But growing concern about the country's ability to cope and worries about crime and security after assaults on women are weighing on support for Merkel's Christian Democratic Union (CDU) party and its Bavarian sister party, the Christian Social Union (CSU). Merkel said that despite efforts to integrate refugees and help them, it was important to stress that they had only been given permission to stay for a limited period of time. "We need ... to say to people that this is a temporary residential status and we expect that once there is peace in Syria again, once IS has been defeated in Iraq, that you go back to your home country with the knowledge that you have gained," she said at a meeting of CDU members in the state of Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania.
She said 70 percent of refugees that fled to Germany from the war in the former Yugoslavia in the 1990s had returned to their home countries. Her remarks come after Horst Seehofer, leader of the CSU, threatened to take her government to court if his demand to stem the flow of asylum seekers was not met. Support for the right-wing Alternative for Germany (AfD) has edged up into double digits. Its leader said in an interview published on Saturday that border guards should shoot at refugees to prevent them from illegally entering the country if need be.
Merkel has tried to convince other European countries to take in quotas of refugees, pushed for reception centers to be built on Europe's external borders, and led an EU campaign to try to convince Turkey to keep refugees from entering the bloc. But progress has been slow. Germany wants to limit migration from North Africa by declaring Morocco, Algeria and Tunisia "safe countries", which would end their citizens' chance of being granted asylum. Merkel said she had spoken to Morocco's king and that Morocco had said it was prepared to take back people from that country. 
HA/IINA

Madinah’s Islamic University hosts conference against disunity, factionalism

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Saturday 30 Jan 2016 - 21:13 Makkah mean time-20-4-1437

Madinah (IINA) – A conference to promote national unity held recently at the King Saud Conference Hall of the Islamic University of Madinah in the presence of Minister of Education Dr. Ahmad Bin Muhammad Al-Eisa.
The theme of the conference was “Achieving unity and leaving off partisanship and disunity is a legal obligation and national requirement”. Professor Ibrahim Bin Ali Al-Ubaid, acting president of the university, welcomed the guests. In his speech on the occasion, Al-Ubaid stressed the significance of the Islamic Unity and its achievement. He also underlined the need to cast off disunity and partisanship. The conference aims to unite Muslims and work together to avoid anything that might lead to disunity and factionalism, Al-Ubaid said. This, he said, can be achieved by establishing the tolerance of Islam upon which the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia was established “right from the reign of its founder King Abdul Aziz Bin Abdurrahman Al-Saud until this luminous era of Custodian of the two Holy Mosques King Salman”.
“The Kingdom of Saudi Arabia is a pivotal state, Islamically, regionally and globally. It functions in accordance with the lofty principles and values it derives from the Islamic faith,” he said. Al-Ubaid further said Saudi Arabia had paid “fabulous attention” to achieve unity among Muslims upon goodness and the honor Allah has bestowed upon it to be the custodian of the two holy mosques and to ensure the comfort of its visitors, serving Muslims from every nook and cranny of the world. In addition, Saudi scholars make tremendous efforts to explain the importance of Islamic unity and tolerance and that Islam is truly a religion that is fit for all places and times. It is a faith that embraces all mankind with its universality and moderation.
He further explained that while the Islamic University is organizing this conference, it wishes to emphasize its mission of inviting to the path of Allah with wisdom and beautiful preaching, to achieve the Islamic moderation, politeness in dealing with people and abstinence from arenas of tribulations an temptations. The organization of this conference came to stress the importance of preserving the fundamental Islamic principles and the risk involved in trying to tamper with them. Moreover, the conference also aims to portray the five basic tenets and expose the deadly consequences of encroachment upon the rights of the Muslim leader by passing fatwas and giving judgments, Al-Ubaid said. He explained the need for unity and the danger of disunity and factionalism, outlining the causes of deviation in understanding the concept of community and unity. He also emphasized the importance of enhancing national unity through the perspectives covered by the conference in its sessions, which the participating scholars and academics will provide.
Al-Ubaid expressed his thanks and appreciation to Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques King Salman, Crown Prince Muhammad bin Naif, deputy prime minister and minister of interior, and Deputy Crown Prince Muhammad bin Salman, second deputy prime minister and minister of defense, Madinah Emir Prince Faisal bin Salman and Minister of Education Dr. Ahmad Al-Eisa for the support and follow-up to the university.
HA/IINA

Italian scholars to boycott Israeli academic institutions

Rome (IINA) – A group of Italian professors and researchers are planning to boycott Israeli academic institutions, saying the schools are complicit in "violations of international law and human rights".
Some 170 scholars from more than 50 Italian universities and research organizations have signed a pledge committing to the boycott. The signatories described themselves as "a solid critical block of scholars" who were "no longer willing to tolerate Israeli academic complicity with Israel's state violence". "The utter lack of any serious condemnation on their part since the foundation of the state of Israel led to the initiative," the authors said in a statement. The academics - who teach and work at prominent universities, including the University of Bologna, the University of Rome and the University of Milan - noted that they were part of a growing global trend of scholars taking a stand for Palestinian rights, Al Jazeera reported.
"I think it is important that members of the Italian academia have joined the international boycott, because this is a sign that even in Italy, the BDS [boycott, divestment and sanctions] movement is becoming mainstream," said Federico Zanettin, an associate professor of English and translation at the University of Perugia. The BDS movement is a Palestinian-led campaign that calls for economic and political pressure on Israel to give equal rights to its Palestinian citizens, and to end its occupation of Palestinian and other Arab territories, including the Syrian Golan Heights. "The BDS movement brings back the real meaning and value to the notions of political agency and collective actions," said Alaa Tartir, programmes director at al-Shabaka Palestinian Policy Network. "The reality of popular ownership to one of the tools for the self-determination struggle, is a key factor that explains the success, legitimacy and influential role of BDS."
Tartir pointed to the spread of boycotts on campuses across Europe and the United States as evidence of the movement’s growing success. "This is how the relationship between the occupied and the occupier should be: a relationship based on continuous confrontation to realize rights," he said. "This is why it constitutes a major source of hope for Palestinians at home and in exile." Late last year, more than 300 academics from dozens of British universities pledged to boycott Israeli academic institutions to protest against what they called "intolerable human rights violations" against the Palestinian people. This came after a group of writers and academics, among them the renowned author JK Rowling, criticised boycotts that "singled out Israel" as "divisive and discriminatory".
Italy’s boycott proponents have also faced some resistance at home over the years. Italian author Umberto Eco criticised a cultural boycott of Israel at the 25th Jerusalem Book Fair in 2011. Eco, one of Italy's most celebrated authors, said: "I consider it absolutely crazy and fundamentally racist to identify a scholar, a private citizen, with the politics of his government." In Israel, the Association of University Heads condemned the BDS initiative, calling it "an aggressive global anti-Israel campaign, orchestrated by a fringe interest group, who for several years has supported the spreading of demonic lies against the State of Israel. "Over the past several years, the BDS movement has been leading a hate campaign on academic, political and economic fronts, in order to incite hatred towards Israel," the association said in a statement to Al Jazeera. "Such ideas have no place in academia. Academic boycotts clearly contradict both academic ethos and values and contaminate academic collaborations and international research overall." The association added: "It is both ironic and absurd that specifically those supporting such boycotts are using politics in an attempt to incite and introduce hatred and racism into the Israeli academia. With these actions, they are attempting to create a division where one does not exist."
The signatories say the initiative is particularly significant because of the special relationship between Israel and Italy. "Italy (is) one of Israel’s key military and academic partners in Europe," the declaration noted. "A military cooperation agreement between the two countries provides for joint military research, training exercises and development of weapons systems." In March, the Italian Society for Middle Eastern Studies will host a panel discussion on the general implications of academic and cultural boycott campaigns against Israel during its annual conference in Catania. This will mark the first time an academic association in Italy has publicly debated the Palestinian call for BDS.
Simona Taliani, assistant professor of anthropology at the University of Turin, said Italian academics had just started to become engaged in boycott efforts. "The campaign is important because it better informs academics in Italy," Taliani said. "It's so urgent to let people [become] aware of the complicity of Israeli universities in military investments and the repressive system against Palestinians." According to the signatories, the declaration also serves to support Palestinian scholars who "experience grave human rights violations and denial of their basic academic freedoms." The initiative, however, does allow for individual collaborations with Israeli peers
The boycott focuses specifically on the Haifa-based Technion-Israel Institute of Technology, which has developed technologies that have been employed by the Israeli military such as remote-controlled bulldozers used to demolish Palestinian houses. Some of Italy's largest universities have collaborated with Technion, "which develops dangerous technologies for the systematic... colonisation of Palestine", Gabriele Usberti, a professor at the University of Siena, said.
The signatories to the boycott pledge said that a number of Italian universities had cooperation agreements with Technion, including the Polytechnic Universities of Milano and Turin, and the universities of Cagliari, Florence, Perugia, Rome and Turin. A spokesman for Technion declined to comment on the allegations pertaining to the institute, and referred Al Jazeera to the Association of University Heads. For some of the signatories, the decision to take part was not easy. Francesca Biancani, an adjunct professor at Bologna University, said she decided to heed the call for a boycott after a "complex and at times painful process" and "long consideration", following 15 years of visits to Israel and the Palestinian territories."Episodes of racist comments made by academics, and measures approved by academic institutions - Tel Aviv University for one - to financially support students serving in the army in those days hit the bottom line in my view," said Biancani.
HA/IINA

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Attack on Saudi mosque in Al-Ahsa draws wide condemnation

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Saturday 30 Jan 2016 - 19:55 Makkah mean time-20-4-1437

Riyadh (IINA) – Friday’s terror attack on a mosque in Al-Ahsa that killed four people drew widespread condemnation across the world.
A suicide bombing and gun attack on Imam Rida mosque in Mahasen district also wounded at least 18 people, Saudi Interior Ministry spokesman said. There was no early claim of responsibility but it resembled previous attacks by Daesh (the so-called IS) militants. It came less than a month after Saudi Arabia executed 47 people, most of them Al-Qaeda militants convicted of attacks in the world’s biggest oil exporting state since 2003, as well as dissident cleric Nimr Al-Nimr. The Interior Ministry said security forces prevented two suicide bombers from entering the mosque, where one blew himself up, killing four people. Security forces exchanged fire with the second man and arrested him. Witnesses said one suicide bomber blew himself up outside the mosque, causing a power blackout inside. They said worshipers overpowered a second attacker after he opened fire in the mosque where 200 people were performing Friday prayers.
The general secretariat of the Board of Senior Ulema roundly condemned the attack, claiming it as a failed bid to undermine the security of the Kingdom and trigger sedition in the land of the Two Holy Mosques, the Saudi Press Agency reported. The board said in a press statement that such terror acts would only lead to increase the Saudi people’s faith in Allah Almighty, and close their ranks to rally behind their leaders in safeguarding the nation against the scourge of terrorism. The board urged scholars, intellectuals and thinkers to intensify awareness campaign and fight the dangerous terrorist doctrines and stop silence over acts that threaten the nation’s security and safety of the public.
Sheikh Abdurahman Bin Abdullah Al-Sind, head of the Presidency for Promotion of Virtue and Prevention of Vice (Haia), said the mosque attack is a blatant aggression that serves only the ulterior motives of the enemies of Islam. It is a grave sin to target mosques and try to create division among the people through such barbaric acts,” he said. German Foreign Minister FrankWalter Steinmeier denounced the Al-Ahsa mosque attack, describing it as a cowardice act that is unacceptable in any religion. “The perpetrators of such attacks want to incite hatred among the Saudi people. It is the responsibility of the international community to show solidarity with Saudi Arabia in fighting terror,” he said.
The Arab Inter-Parliamentary Union (AIPU) President and Speaker of Kuwait’s National Assembly (Majles Al-Ummah) Marzouq Al-Ghanim voiced strong condemnation of the mosque attack in Al-Ahsa. “We slam such cowardly and heinous attacks targeting unarmed worshipers, and express our total solidarity with Saudi Arabia in combating these vicious acts that are nothing to do with Islam,” he said while calling for regional and international collaboration and cooperation in stamping out the scourge of terror.While denouncing the Al-Ahsa attacks, Bahrain’s ministry of foreign affairs hoped that such terror attacks won’t be successful in undermining the security of Saudi Arabia or creating sedition or friction among members of the Saudi society. The ministry lauded the great efforts being exerted by the Kingdom in strengthening the security and stability of the Arab and Islamic states as well as to ensure the prosperity and welfare of their people and confronting the challenges faced by them, especially fighting terrorism.
In a statement, the foreign ministry of Qatar condemned the attack, saying that such criminal acts are contrary to all moral and humanitarian values and fundamental principles of all divine religions. The ministry expressed confidence that the Saudi security authorities are capable of foiling such attacks and bring the perpetrators to justice. Condemning the attack on innocent worshipers, Dr. Mohammad Al Momani, Jordanian government spokesman and minister of state for media affairs and communications, said that this shows that the blind terror wont’ spare anybody and instead targeting all. “Jordan will stand by the Kingdom against all such vicious terror acts,” he said.
HA/IINA

January 29, 2016

Janadriyah Festival to kick off Wednesday near Riyadh

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Friday 29 Jan 2016 - 16:14 Makkah mean time-19-4-1437

Riyadh, (IINA) - Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques King Salman is set to open the National Festival of Heritage and Culture (Janadriyah), organized by the Ministry of National Guard in Janadriyah, on the northern outskirts of capital, Riyadh, and the grand camel race next Wednesday, Al-Riyadh Newspaper reported.  
This was announced by Deputy Minister of National Guard Abdulmohsen Al-Tuwaijri, who is also deputy chairman of the festival's higher committee at a press conference in the attendance of Germany's representative Michael Omacht, Deputy Chief of Germany's diplomatic mission in Riyadh.
Al-Tuwaijri explained about programs and activities of the festival, saying that the King's patronage of the event is yet another evidence of his interest in the importance of knowledge and culture in the building of nations and proceeding with the country's march to consolidate the effective leading role of the Kingdom in the Arab and Islamic worlds. 
He welcomed the German delegation as the Federal Republic of Germany is the festival's state guest this year. He paid tribute to late King Abdullah  the initiator of the festival and long-lived supervisor of the event which he incepted in 1981. He also announced that Abu Abdulrahman bin Aqeel Al-Dhahiri will be honored as this year's cultural personality and will be awarded King Abdulaziz Grade I medal in recognition to his cultural, intellectual and literal contributions to enrich the cultural and scientific literature in the Kingdom.
German Ambassador to the Kingdom Boris Ruge thanked King Salman for hosting Germany as the honorary guest for Janadriyah 2016. He considered this as a special honor for Germany.
He said Germany’s pavilion in Janadriyah will showcase the country’s culture and history. He added that men of letters from Germany will participate in the festival, according to Saudi Gazette.
AG/IINA

Annual drug test mandatory for all public drivers in Saudi Arabia

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Friday 29 Jan 2016 - 16:07 Makkah mean time-19-4-1437

Jeddah, (IINA - The government of Saudi Arabia has decided to make all taxi, school and other public transport drivers undertake annual drug tests as part of measures to reduce road accidents, Arab News reported.
This followed a recommendation from a committee that had been set up to study the matter. The decision is subject to further change because the law overseeing public transport is expected to be amended in future, according to a report in a local publication on Wednesday.
Omar Bamasfar, director of public relations and press spokesman for the Ministry of Transport in Makkah, said that those who wish to operate public transport must undergo the drug test, and they must have no criminal record as well as a letter from their sponsors.
There has recently been a spate of accidents involving buses transporting students and teachers. This has forced the Ministry of Transport to take action, in cooperation with the Ministry of Education.
AG/IINA

EU concerned over Israel’s use of administrative detention

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Friday 29 Jan 2016 - 16:04 Makkah mean time-19-4-1437

Jerusalem, (IINA) - The EU’s missions in Jerusalem and Ramallah expressed on Wednesday their longstanding concern about Israel's extensive use of administrative detention without formal charge against Palestinians, WAFA reported.
“Beyond the well-known cases of Etraf Rimawi of the Palestinian Bisan Center for Research and Development, and Mohammed Abu Sakha, a trainer at the Palestinian Circus School, there are over 500 Palestinians, amongst them at least 4 minors, who are currently being held in administrative detention”, the EU mission said in a press release.
The mission said it was especially concerned about the deteriorating health condition of journalist Mohammed Al-Qiq, held in administrative detention in Israel for more than two months now, and on hunger strike since November 25, 2015.
“The EU calls for the full respect of international human rights obligations towards all prisoners. Detainees have the right to be informed about the charges underlying any detention, must be granted access to legal assistance, and be subject to a fair trial”.
Multiple human rights groups have accused Israel of using administrative detention as a form of collective punishment and mass detention of Palestinians, and that Israeli authorities use this kind of detention when they fail to obtain confessions in interrogations of Palestinian detainees.
Israeli officials claim the practice is an essential tool in preventing attacks and protecting sensitive intelligence, but it has been strongly criticized by the international community as well as by both Israeli and Palestinian rights groups.
The Israeli human rights organization, B’Tselem, said international law stipulates that administrative detention may be exercised only in very exceptional cases. Nevertheless, Israeli authorities routinely employ administrative detention on thousands of Palestinians.
AG/IINA

Cairo International Book Fair kicks off with record number of participating countries

Cairo, (IINA) - Egyptian Prime Minister Sherif Ismail inaugurated the 47th edition of the Cairo International Book Fair on Wednesday. With the presence of around 850 publishers from 34 countries, the fair witnesses the largest number of participating countries ever since its first edition, Ahram Online reported.
The details of this year's edition, which is set to conclude on February 10, were revealed in a press conference held by the General Egyptian Book Organization (GEBO), the official sponsor and organizer of the event.
It is noteworthy that the fair's opening date was changed for the second year in a row to avoid coinciding with the anniversary of the 25 January Revolution.
The fair's theme this year is "Culture on the Frontline". GEBO head Haitham El-Hajj Ali said that "culture is the main solution to the problems of society and the firewall against the extreme ideas".
Picking a theme for the fair is a new tradition set after the revolution, reflecting the political scene and mostly fighting radicalism with cultural endeavors. Last year, the fair's theme was 'Culture and Renovation', which reflected the ongoing demands of members of the political elite and intellectuals in Egypt to reform and renew religious discourse.
Reformist Imam Mohamed Abdou (1849 – 1905) was chosen as the fair's person of the year in 2015.
This edition's person of the year is iconic novelist Gamal El-Ghitani, who passed away in October last year.
The countries participating in the fair include 21 Arab states and 13 non-Arab countries, with 550 publishers from Egypt, 250 from the Arab world, and 50 foreign publishers, in addition to 118 kiosks for used books.
The list of participating countries include the United Arab Emirates, Kuwait, the UAE, Saudi Arabia, Tunisia, Oman, Palestine, Jordan, Libya, Yemen, Sudan, Somalia, Ethiopia, Algeria, Iraq, Morocco, Syria, Lebanon, Qatar, Eritrea and the guest of honor is Bahrain.
The non-Arab countries include Italy, Russia, India, Germany, France, Paraguay, Greece, China, and the Czech Republic. The American University in Cairo was also taking part. 
El-Hajj said that he is holding to the stance of Egyptian intellectuals of rejecting any Israeli participation in the fair, or any cultural relations with the country.
This year's guests include Chinese novelist Leo Gen Yun, Egyptian thinker Hassan Hanafi, Lebanese writer George Corm, Moroccan writer Hassan Orid, Tunisian Arabic-Booker winning novelist Shoukry El-Mabkhout, among many others who will participate in a very busy cultural agenda.
The fair will be open daily from 10 am till 7 pm for book selling, and until 9 pm for cultural events.
AG/IINA

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HRW report: Politics of fear threatens human rights

New York, (IINA) - The Human Rights Watch (HRW) released a report on Wednesday saying that the politics of fear led governments around the globe to roll back human rights during 2015. 
In the 659-page, titled “World Report 2016: Politics of Fear Threatens Rights”, HRW reviews human rights practices in more than 90 countries.
In his introductory essay, Executive Director Kenneth Roth writes that the spread of terrorist attacks beyond the Middle East and the massive flows of refugees spawned by repression and conflict led many governments to curtail rights in misguided efforts to protect their security. At the same time, authoritarian governments throughout the world, fearful of peaceful dissent that is often magnified by social media, embarked on the most intense crackdown on independent groups in recent times.
“Fear of terrorist attacks and mass refugee flows are driving many Western governments to roll back human rights protections”, Roth said. “These backward steps threaten the rights of all without any demonstrated effectiveness in protecting ordinary people”.
Significant refugee flows to Europe, spurred largely by the Syrian conflict, coupled with broadening attacks on civilians in the name of the extremist group ISIS, have led to growing fear-mongering and Islamophobia, HRW said.
However, as European governments close borders, they are reviving old patterns of shirking responsibility for refugees by passing the problem to countries on Europe’s periphery that are less equipped to house or protect refugees. The emphasis on the potential threat posed by refugees is also distracting European governments from addressing terrorist threats and the steps needed to avoid social marginalization of disaffected populations.
According to HRW, policymakers in the U.S have used the terrorism threat to try to reverse recent modest restrictions on intelligence agencies’ ability to engage in mass surveillance, while the UK and France have sought to expand monitoring powers. That would significantly undermine privacy rights without any demonstrated increase in the ability to curb terrorism. Indeed, in a number of recent attacks in Europe, the perpetrators were known to law enforcement authorities, but the police were too overwhelmed to follow up, suggesting that what’s needed is not more mass data but more capacity to pursue targeted leads.
“The tarring of entire immigrant or minority communities, wrong in itself, is also dangerous”, Roth said. “Vilifying whole communities for the actions of a few generates precisely the kind of division and animosity that terrorist recruiters love to exploit”.
Europe’s response to the influx of refugees has also been counterproductive. The effect of leaving most asylum seekers little choice but to risk their lives on rickety boats at sea to reach Europe has created a chaotic situation that terrorists can easily exploit.
“Creating a safe and orderly way for refugees to make their way to Europe would reduce lives lost at sea while helping immigration officials to screen out security risks, increasing security for everyone”, the Executive Director said.
Popular movements launched by civil society organizations with the aid of social media left many authoritarian governments running scared. The precedents of the Arab uprisings, Hong Kong’s “umbrella protests”, and Ukraine’s Maidan movement sparked a determination among many autocrats to prevent people from banding together to make their voices heard.
Abusive governments have tried to smother civic groups by enacting laws that restrict their activities and cut off their needed international funding. Russia and China are among the worst offenders, according to the report.
Repression of this intensity, including shuttering particular groups in Russia and arresting rights lawyers and activists in China, has not been seen in decades, HRW said.
Ethiopia and India, often using nationalistic rhetoric, have restricted foreign funding to fend off independent monitoring of government rights violations. Bolivia, Cambodia, Ecuador, Egypt, Kazakhstan, Kenya, Morocco, Sudan, and Venezuela have enacted vague and overly broad laws to rein in activists and undermine independent groups’ ability to operate. Western governments have been slow to speak out against these global threats.
Despite these enormous threats to rights, 2015 also brought positive developments. Landmark elections in Burma passed off peacefully in November, and Nigerians also celebrated the peaceful transfer of power to the opposition. In September, the UN adopted 17 ambitious development goals that for the first time are universal and grounded in human rights; they include goals to achieve gender equality and to provide access to justice for all.
Another great achievement was the UN climate summit in Paris, where governments agreed for the first time to “respect, promote and consider” human rights in their response to climate change, especially with regards to indigenous people, women, children, migrants, and others in vulnerable situations.
“The wisdom enshrined in international human rights law provides indispensable guidance to governments that seek to keep their nation safe and serve their people most effectively”, Roth said. “We abandon it at our peril”.
AG/IINA

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