Masih ngotot memeluk agama najis Islam itu?
Masih ngimpi mau menegakkkan kembali khilafah?
Bodoh.
Lihat kenyataan, lihat perkembangan yang terjadi..
Para kafir bergiat menjadikan dar al-Kufr sebagai dar al Amn.
Eropa Barat sudah enam puluh lima tahun menjadi dar al Amn...
Dan sekarang Obama dan Xi berjabatan tangan
Korea Utara dan Korea Selatan juga mulai cari jalan damai...
Sedangkan RRT dan India yang abad yagn lalu suka memalu genderang
perang sekarang juga sudah berjabatan tangan..
Sementara itu orang Islam terus saja saling berbunuhan dan
menjadikan dar al Islam sebagai neraka...
Indonesia juga mereka jadikan sebagai sarang teroris.
Sekali lagi: Islam itu adalah malapetakan untuk ummat manusia,
artinya juga malapetaka untuk orang Islam sendiri.
---
Last Update: Thursday, 20 June 2013 KSA 15:53 - GMT 12:53
Saudi to expel Hezbollah supporters over Syria war
Thursday, 20 June 2013
Shiite Hezbollah fighters were instrumental in a recent regime
victory when Syrian government forces regained control of the strategic
town of Qusayr near the Lebanese border. (File photo: AFP)
*
The Associated Press, Beirut
Saudi Arabia plans to deport Lebanese citizens who support
Hezbollah because of the militant group’s role in the Syrian civil war,
the kingdom’s envoy to Lebanon said.
The warning comes amid
Hezbollah’s increasingly prominent participation in the Syrian conflict,
with members of the group fighting on the side of President Bashar
Assad’s government forces.
Saudi Arabia is a strong backer of
the mostly-Sunni Syrian opposition trying to remove Assad from power.
Assad belongs to the minority Alawite sect, an offshoot of Shiite Islam.
Shiite Hezbollah fighters were instrumental in a recent regime victory
when Syrian government forces regained control of the strategic town of
Qusayr near the Lebanese border.
Saudi Arabia will deport
“those who financially support this party,” Ambassador Ali Awad Assiri
told Lebanon’s Future TV late Wednesday.
He added that
Hezbollah bears full responsibility for recent restrictive measures
adopted by Gulf Arab countries against the group.
The Gulf
Cooperation Council - which includes Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Bahrain,
Qatar, Oman and the United Arab Emirates - earlier this month said they
would revoke residency permits for Hezbollah members in the Gulf and
limit their “financial and business transactions.”
For its
part, Hezbollah says it has no businesses in the Gulf nations. However,
there are more than half a million Lebanese working in the Gulf Arab
nations, including tens of thousands in Saudi Arabia. Many of the
Lebanese there are Shiites. Some have been living in the kingdom for
decades.
“This is a serious decision and will be implemented in
detail whether by the embassy [in Beirut] or in the kingdom,” Assiri
said, without specifying when the deportations would begin. “The aim is
not to humiliate Lebanese citizens or make them kneel. Acts are being
committed against innocent Syrian people.”
Lebanon’s Foreign
Minister Adnan Mansour told reporters Thursday he was in contact with
Gulf officials over the matter and that he rejects “charges that
Hezbollah will be made responsible for the deportations, in case they
happen.”
Syria’s 2-year civil war, which has killed nearly
93,000 people, is increasingly pitting Sunni against Shiite Muslims and
threatening the stability of Syria’s neighbors. Assad draws his support
largely from fellow Alawites as well as Christians and Shiites. He is
backed by Shiite Iran, Hezbollah and Iraqi Shiites.
U.S.
officials estimate that 5,000 Hezbollah members are fighting alongside
Assad's regime, while thousands of Sunni foreign fighters are also
believed to be in Syria - including members of Jabhat al-Nusra, an
al-Qaida affiliate that is believed to be among the most effective rebel
factions.
In 2009, the Emirates deported scores of Lebanese,
most of them Shiites. One of the deportees said at the time that more
than 300 Lebanese were forced to leave the Emirates, claiming they were
asked to inform on fellow Lebanese Shiites living in the country and on
Iranian-backed Hezbollah.
In Syria, activists reported violence
between government forces and rebels in different parts of the country
on Thursday, mostly near the capital, Damascus, and in the northern city
of Aleppo, Syria’s largest.
The Britain-based Syrian
Observatory for Human Rights urged the International Committee of the
Red Cross and other humanitarian organizations to intervene and take
medicine and food to Aleppo’s central prison. Heavy fighting around the
prison has been taking place for weeks and there have been casualties
among the prisoners, the activists said.
The Observatory, which
has a network of activists around the country, said three detainees
died this week from tuberculosis and that scabies was spreading in the
jail, which holds thousands of prisoners.
The prison, which is
besieged by rebels, relies on food and medicine brought in drop-offs by
army helicopters. The Observatory said more than 100 detainees have been
killed since April when the fighting around the prison began.
Meanwhile, Syrian rebels and Kurdish gunmen reached an agreement to end a
rebel siege on the northern predominantly Kurdish region of Afrin that
triggered a shortage of food and medicine there, the Observatory said.
The Afrin flare-up began when rebels wanted to pass through it to
attack the predominantly Shiite villages of Nubul and Zahra, controlled
by Assad loyalists, the head of the Observatory, Rami Abdul-Rahman,
said. After Kurdish groups refused, rebels attacked Kurdish checkpoints
and laid siege, beginning May 25.
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
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