Orang Islam disini pada berebut meributkan pertandingan sepak bola, saat mereka 
mestinya menatap kenyataan pahit lagi mengerikan: ajaran agama Islamlah yang 
menjadikan ummat Islam diseantero dunia suka menyebar teror, membantai atau 
saling berbunuhan...

Di Sudan, di Siria....dimana-mama.


--- In [email protected], item abu <itemabu@...> wrote:
>
> Orang Islam ngebantai orang Nuba di Sudan.
>  
> Lalu, apa reaksi orang2 Islam dan anjing2 piaraan mereka di milis ini? 
> Paling2 nuduh dan ngefitnah sambil anjing piaraan mereka akan ngejilat pantat 
> Islam.
>  
>  
> http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2012/jun/06/act-now-stop-genocide-sudan-nuba
>  
> We must act now to stop the genocide of Sudan's Nuba people
> The international community has ignored Khartoum's attack on the Nuba people 
> for too long â€" now humanitarian disaster looms
>  
>       * 
>       *       * Giles Fraser 
>       * guardian.co.uk, Wednesday 6 June 2012 14.10 BST 
>  
> In the early 1900s, a young Winston Churchill, then a soldier in north 
> Africa, described how a group of Sudanese troops requiring target practice 
> were sent to attack those living in the Nuba mountains. A century later and 
> history is repeating itself. This time, however, the aim is not target 
> practice â€" the aim is annihilation.
>  
> Khartoum's bombs began raining on the Nuba people on 6 June last year. Since 
> then half a million civilians have been displaced, fleeing their homes from 
> more than 1,000 confirmed aerial bombings by MIG fighter jets and Antonov 
> warplanes. With little to protect them, people have resorted to digging holes 
> in the ground or making their homes in caves just to hide from government 
> forces. Unsurprisingly, food is scarce. With villagers unable to farm and 
> President Omar Hassan al-Bashir preventing humanitarian aid from reaching the 
> region, widespread famine and disease are ever-present threats.
>  
> This is just the latest chapter of the Nuba people's bloodstained 
> relationship with Khartoum. In the late 1980s and early 1990s, major military 
> campaigns were waged against the region. Nuba leaders were executed en masse, 
> the population forcibly displaced, and villages burnt to the ground to 
> prevent people returning. This culminated in January 1992 with South Kordofan 
> governor Lieutenant General al-Hussein formally declaring holy war in the 
> Nuba mountains and advocating wholesale murder, abduction, rape, family 
> separation and forced religious conversion.
>  
> The main intent, then as now, was a racially pure Arab Islamist state through 
> ethnic cleansing of Sudan's traditional patchwork of peoples.
>  
> Any doubt about Khartoum's aim was laid bare last October with South Kordofan 
> governor Ahmed Haroun's broadcast on government radio when he issued a 
> rallying cry to his troops: "When you go on your mission, if you find them, 
> kill them, sweep them away, eat them. Do not bring me any prisoners of war. 
> We have no quarter for them."
>  
> How many more warnings from organisations such as Waging Peace â€" a human 
> rights group that campaigns against genocide and systematic human rights 
> violations, of which I am patron â€" will be necessary for the world to take 
> notice? The Nuba people cannot afford another year to pass before the 
> international community acts. Delay would risk yet again ignoring the pledge 
> we make and break every time genocide takes place: "Never again".
>  
> The UK and international community must act now. Pressure should be applied 
> on Khartoum to allow access for humanitarian aid agencies.
>  
> Hundreds of thousands of people are in dire need. Unless their most basic 
> food, water and health needs are met urgently, we risk humanitarian 
> catastrophe. In addition, a no-fly zone should be established to stop the 
> government's aerial attacks, while UN sanctions should be applied to stop the 
> flow of weapons to the government.
>  
> These actions would do much to prevent the situation deteriorating further. 
> But ultimately, we must stop appeasing Bashir's regime. The world has averted 
> its gaze from Sudan for too long in the hope Bashir would be more 
> conciliatory. Yet it has led only to more belligerence, more bloodshed, and 
> more terror for those living under his power.
>  
> Perhaps we should not be surprised. Conciliatory diplomacy was ineffective in 
> Darfur â€" evidence shows trouble in the region is far from over. It is 
> likely to be ineffective in the Nuba mountains.
>  
> Addressing the underlying cause of Sudan's troubles means ensuring Bashir and 
> others in his regime are brought to justice at the international criminal 
> court to stand trial for his crimes against humanity â€" otherwise we risk 
> sitting idly by as they get away with murder.
> 
> [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
>




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