Bleki elu bisa bahasa inggris kagak?

kayak nya ulasan elu jauh beda dengan isi berita
makanya jangan kebanyakan berhayal
untuk ngebedain yang sederhana saja lukagak mampu 
bikin malu orang prol

perbaiki bahasa inggris lu baru komentar.



________________________________
 From: item abu <[email protected]>
To: "[email protected]" <[email protected]> 
Sent: Wednesday, February 22, 2012 10:01 PM
Subject: [proletar] Al-Shabaab militia abducting teenage girls to marry fighters
 

  
Sbg pejihad di jalan auloh, orang2 Islam soleh ini tentunya berhak mendpt 
nikmatuloh, jadi mereka boleh nyulik cewek2 unt dijadikan bini. 
 
Nabi itu kan jg melakukan hal yg sama, misalnya dgn ngebantai keluarga Safiya 
dan ngambil si Safiya sbg bini. Tentunya si Safiya itu kegirangan sekali jadi 
bini nabi yg ngebantai keluarganya itu, krn nabi itu kan orang soleh yg 
berakhlak paling mulia.
 
Jadi pejihad2 ini jg mau jadi orang yg berakhlak mulia dgn ngebantai orang dan 
nyulik cewek unt dijadikan bini.
 
Islam itu emang agama yg benar, hehehe....
 
 
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/africaandindianocean/somalia/9096315/Al-Shabaab-militia-abducting-teenage-girls-to-marry-fighters.html
 
Al-Shabaab militia abducting teenage girls to marry fighters 
Gunmen from the Islamist al-Shabaab militia have routinely abducted teenage 
girls to work as servants on the frontline and forced them to marry fighters, 
according to a new report documenting the abuse of children in Somalia's civil 
war. 
 
The report by Human Rights Watch also found that as fighting has intensified 
over the past two years, al-Shabaab has increasingly targeted boys as young as 
10 for action on the frontline to join its dwindling ranks. Whole classrooms 
have been forced at gunpoint to leave school and fight. 
 
Researchers found that after several weeks of harsh training child recruits are 
sent for action where they often serve as "cannon fodder" to protect adult 
fighters. 
 
"It is a new, disturbing pattern using children as human shields," said 
Laetitia Bader, one of the principal authors and researchers of the report. 
 
Boys who escaped camps were either mown down or faced long and terrifying 
journeys to sanctuary elsewhere in Somalia or across the border in Kenya. 
 
Girls who resisted capture can face the most appalling consequences, Human 
Rights Watch found. A 16-year-old girl who refused to marry an al-Shabaab 
commander who was three times her age was killed by his men and beheaded. Her 
head was brought back to the school as a warning to others. 
 
"They assembled all of the girls and said 'this is an example of what will 
happen if you misbehave'," a teacher at the school told Human Rights Watch, 
which conducted more than 160 interviews with Somali refugees for the report, 
No Place for Children. 
 
A 19-year-old student from the Bakara district of the capital Mogadishu 
described how girls were taken from his school. 
 
"Girls were taken at gunpoint. One girl said she could not go and al-Shabaab 
shot her in the forehead in front of my class. They said that she was a spy for 
the government. She was 19 years old," he said. 
 
The forced marriage campaign by the al-Qaeda affiliate is part of its effort to 
impose its harsh version of Sharia on every aspect of the personal lives of 
women and girls, according to Human Rights Watch. 
 
The report depicts a nightmarish world where the childhoods of boys and girls 
are effectively ended at the barrel of a gun and in the short time it takes 
heavily armed fighters to force children from their classrooms and on to 
waiting trucks. 
 
Though al-Shabaab is guilty of the worst abuses, the Western-backed 
Transitional Federal Government (TFG) does not escape censure however. 
 
Researchers were repeatedly told that TFG forces have also recruited children 
though without using the same dire coercive tactics. 
 
"Al-Shabaab's abuses do not excuse the TFG's use of children as soldiers," said 
Zama Coursen-Neff, deputy childrens's rights director at Human Rights Watch. 
 
"The TFG should live up to its commitments to stop recruiting and using 
children as soldiers, and punish those who do." 
 
She added that governments such as Britain's who support the TFG should "make 
clear that abuses won't be tolerated". 
 
Activists have been disappointed that human rights barely feature on the agenda 
at Thursday's London conference on Somalia organised by David Cameron. 
 
"There needs to be much more monitoring and reporting on the human rights 
situation," said Ms Bader. 
 
Despite the multiple abuses and war crimes being committed on a daily basis in 
Somalia, the human rights branch of the United Nations has only five permanent 
staff working in neighbouring Kenya and the autonomous Somali regions of 
Puntland and Somaliland. 

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