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Friday, 04 February 2011 16:04 |
By Tehmina Kazi
The assassination of Punjab Governor Salman Taseer is a wake-up call for anyone who doubted the virulence of Pakistan’s fanatics, or the fact that their influence has seeped into movements that are not normally associated with violence. Instead of being aligned with the usual suspects, Taseer’s killer Mumtaz Qadri was a member of Dawat-e-Islami, a movement which is characterised by missionary work and claims to be apolitical.
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Last Updated on Friday, 04 February 2011 16:15 |
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Wednesday, 02 February 2011 16:47 |
The democratic mobilisations in Tunisia, Egypt, Yemen and elsewhere are lighting a beacon across the middle east and north Africa. The way ahead lies through peaceful protest against extremism and authoritarianism, say Foulath Hadid and Mishana Hosseinioun.
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Last Updated on Friday, 04 February 2011 16:19 |
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Monday, 31 January 2011 09:13 |
By Dr Ilan Zvi Baron
Accusing minority groups of being a security risk because they are a minority group is not a new practice. Although most religious groups have been accussed of dual loyalty at some point we don't seem to learn from history. In Damascus in 1840, a Capuchin friar disappeared. A local Jewish barber was arrested and, after he was tortured, confessed to the disappearance. A mob subsequently attacked the local Jewish community and more Jews were arrested.
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Last Updated on Tuesday, 01 February 2011 14:20 |
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Sunday, 16 January 2011 18:29 |
By Max Blumenthal
As the tenth anniversary of 9/11 approaches, hysteria about Muslims in American life has gripped the country. With it has come an outburst of arson attacks on mosques, campaigns to stop their construction, and the branding of the overwhelmingly moderate Muslim-American community as a hotbed of potential terrorist recruits. The frenzy has raged from rural Tennessee to New York City, while in Oklahoma, voters even overwhelmingly approved a ballot measure banning the implementation of sharia law in American courts (not that such a prospect existed).
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Last Updated on Monday, 24 January 2011 14:29 |
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Thursday, 13 January 2011 15:35 |
By Rachel Reeves MP
The new year kicked into life this week in Parliament – but the City will be feeling like it is Christmas again. First, Bob Diamond confirmed to the Treasury select committee that at no point have the Chancellor or the prime minister asked him – or presumably any other banker – to show restraint in the size of his bonus. And second, George Osborne took to the floor of the House on Tuesday to confirm the huge shift from the pre-election rhetoric to the post election inaction.
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Last Updated on Saturday, 15 January 2011 16:49 |
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Tuesday, 11 January 2011 10:15 |
By Daniel Elton
Claire Sambrook of the End Child Detention campaign has written a lengthy dossier raising concerns over the government’s policy on the detention of the children of asylum seekers. The coalition’s promise to end the practice is pivotal to its argument to represent the ‘progressive wing’ of British politics, but it is more important to the hundreds of children who risk being imprisoned and harmed psychologically and physically as the result of a policy that David Cameron has called a “scandal“.
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Last Updated on Tuesday, 11 January 2011 10:23 |
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Tuesday, 11 January 2011 00:00 |
By Chris Dillow
These remarks by Jack Straw irritate me:
"There is a specific problem which involves Pakistani heritage men... who target vulnerable young white girls. We need to get the Pakistani community to think much more clearly about why this is going on and to be more open about the problems that are leading to a number of Pakistani heritage men thinking it is OK to target white girls in this way."
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Last Updated on Tuesday, 11 January 2011 10:15 |
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Monday, 10 January 2011 14:08 |
By Sadanand Dhume
Every time you think things can’t possibly get worse in Pakistan, along comes something to prove you wrong. On Tuesday, in possibly the country’s most consequential political shock since the 2007 murder of former Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto, Salman Taseer, the 65-year-old governor of Punjab province, was gunned down in an upscale Islamabad market by one of his police bodyguards. The reason: the governor’s plain-spoken defense of Asia Bibi, an illiterate Christian woman sentenced to death under Pakistan’s harsh blasphemy laws. According to press reports, Taseer’s killer pumped nine bullets into him for daring to call the blasphemy provision a “black law”.
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Last Updated on Friday, 14 January 2011 16:18 |
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Thursday, 06 January 2011 03:27 |
By Pervez Hoodbhoy
The Left has always been a marginal actor on Pakistan’s national scene. While this bald truth must be told, in no way do I wish to belittle the enormous sacrifices made by numerous progressive individuals, as well as small groups. They unionized industrial and railway workers, helped peasants organize against powerful landlords, inspired Pakistan’s minority provinces to demand their rights, set standards of writing and journalism, etc. But the Left has never had a national presence and, even at its peak during the 1970s, could not muster even a fraction of the street power of the Islamic or mainstream parties.
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Last Updated on Thursday, 06 January 2011 03:57 |
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