.

Islam itu barbar...

Islam itu adalah malapetaka untuk ummat mansuia, artinya juga malapetaka buat 
orang Islam sendiri...
 
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-middle-east-23139784
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BBC News Middle East
2 July 2013 Last updated at 04:22 GMT

The boy killed for an off-hand remark about Muhammad - Sharia spreads in Syria

The murder of a boy accused of blasphemy has come to symbolise concerns about 
the power of Islamist radicals in Syria's armed uprising. Paul Wood reports 
from Aleppo on how Sharia is spreading in rebel-held areas.

Mohammed Qataa's mother wanders the streets of Aleppo looking into strangers' 
faces as she tries to find her son's killers.

She knows she would recognise them. She was looking right at them when, in 
front of a dumbstruck and terrified crowd, Mohammed was shot dead, accused of 
blasphemy.

She remembers Mohammed as a happy, dutiful son, well known and well-liked in 
the Shaar neighbourhood where the men of the family scrape a living with a 
coffee cart.

He was 14 years old, but with no schooling possible because of the war he was 
usually to be found on the busy main thoroughfare through Shaar, selling the 
thick, sweet coffee they prefer here.

One day last month, someone asked him for a free cup. "Not even if the Prophet 
himself returns," he had replied, laughing. That remark was a death sentence.

It was overheard by three armed men. They dragged him to a car and took him 
away. Half-an-hour later, a badly beaten Mohammed was dumped back in the road 
by his cart.

The men, showing no fear that anyone would question what they were doing, 
summoned a crowd with shouts of "Oh People of Aleppo. Oh people of Shaar." 
Their bellows alerted Mohammed's mother.

Recalling what happened next, she buries her face in her hands and weeps.

"One of them shouted: 'Whoever insults the Prophet will be killed according to 
Sharia'," she told me.

"I ran down barefoot to the streets. I heard the first shot. I fell to the 
ground when I got there.

"One of them shot him again and kicked him. He shot him for a third time and 
stamped on him.

"I said: 'Why are you killing him? He's still a child!' The man shouted: 'He is 
not a Muslim - leave!'"
'Capital offence'

After the murder on 10 June, pictures of Mohammed's body went viral on Facebook 
and Twitter in Arabic.

He had been shot in the face, a hole where his nose and mouth should have been.

There was an outcry. It was claimed that the killers were from the main group 
linked to al-Qaeda here, the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria. Suspicion also 
fell on the Nusra Front, the biggest Islamist organisation in the uprising.

Both issued statements condemning the murder, as did almost all of Aleppo's 
rebel brigades, and the city's main Sharia court.

We met a judge there, a 26-year-old Islamic scholar barely out of university, 
with a wispy beard and round glasses.

He told me the men were regime militia, "shabiha", trying to foment trouble 
between jihadis and other fighters.

I found that explanation rather convenient, along with the disavowals of the 
murder by the two Islamist groups linked to al-Qaeda.

Would regime thugs really have risked entering the heart of opposition-held 
Aleppo to abduct a boy - and then have returned half-an-hour later to kill him 
in the street?

The family say the evidence is confusing. The men spoke the classical Arabic of 
the Koran, yet made simple mistakes. They made the odd statement that 
blaspheming against God could be forgiven but insulting the Prophet was a 
capital offence.

The four looked like jihadis but stopped to buy a packet of sunflower seeds. 
People explained that the truly pious would not eat sunflower seeds because 
they take so long to shell - and the Prophet said not to waste time.

But though the family don't know - or are too afraid to say - which armed group 
is to blame for Mohammed's death, they maintain that the rebel authorities bear 
ultimate responsibility.

"We have no freedom left," says Mohammed's older brother, Fouad.

"We had it when the rebels first took over in Aleppo but now we have nothing. 
What we have instead are countless [Sharia] committees, each following its own 
interpretation of religion."
Public flogging

Aleppo's main Sharia court has taken pains to stress that though Mohammed 
Qataa's murderers said they were acting in the name of Islam, the killing was 
un-Islamic, a criminal act.

But whatever the killers' real motives - whether a brutal trick by the regime 
or a cruel and extreme interpretation of Islam by jihadis - it is also true 
that Sharia is spreading in rebel-held parts of Syria.

A documentary team from BBC Arabic went to the northern town of Saraqeb to 
follow the work of the Sharia court there, gaining extraordinary access over a 
period of six weeks.

The court is run by a 27-year-old former preacher, Sheikh Abdullah Mohammed 
Ali, who hands out sentences dressed in Afghan-style shalwar kameez, a 
Kalashnikov at his side.

Four men convicted of trying to steal a taxi driver's car are brought before 
him. Although admitting their guilt, they claim to be members of a rebel 
brigade.

Sheikh Abdullah tells them their weapons will be confiscated and they will not 
be allowed to be part of any armed group in future.

He swiftly decides that the sentence will be a public flogging. The men are 
driven to the centre of Saraqeb for sentence to be carried out. The instrument 
of punishment is an electrical cable.

Sheikh Abdullah takes a megaphone to address a small crowd that has gathered.

"In the name of God," he says, reading out the names of the four prisoners 
standing in a row. "Fifty lashes for the leader of the gang. Forty for each of 
his men."

He declares: "God's law is the best protection for the weak."

The first of the prisoners is forced to his knees, a man on either side of him 
holding his arms. When it starts some of the crowd chant, "The Prophet is our 
leader". Others just count the lashes.

Afterwards, Sheikh Abdullah explains to the documentary crew that the 
punishment was actually quite lenient. They had been convicted of highway 
robbery. The normal penalty for that is death, he says.

"In wartime, punishments according to Sharia are suspended until peace 
returns," he says.

"Now, we are at war. We must concentrate on fighting the regime's army. Full 
punishments will be enforced as soon as the regime falls and an Islamic State 
is declared."
'Alternative to chaos'

The uprising's rural, conservative and religious supporters approve of Sharia's 
harsh penalties.

So too, perhaps, do many of those afraid of the criminal anarchy, the looting, 
killing, kidnapping and theft, that has become an everyday fact of life in 
rebel-held areas.

But many in Saraqeb are dismayed by the rise of the Islamists. There have been 
small street protests in the town against Sharia.

"We did not hope for what we have come to today," said Lyas Kadouni, an 
activist interviewed by BBC Arabic.

"The names of [rebel] brigades tell you how people think now - names like 
'Lovers of the Prophet Brigade' and so on. It is not necessary to throw 
religion into every corner of your life. This is killing our revolution."

Painfully earnest, Lyas Kadouni wants to tidy up Saraqeb's streets. "The most 
important thing is to practise the duties of citizenship," he says.

"We have to show… we have an alternative to chaos."

He says he is "100% certain they [foreign jihadis] will disappear". It could 
take a month, two, or three months, he says.

But the influence of relatively secular activists like Lyas Kadouni, always 
marginal, is waning still further.

Almost two years after peaceful protest became a civil war, they are still 
painting murals and handing out leaflets. Others, meanwhile, are taking power 
at the point of a gun.
Revenge

Things are not going entirely the Islamists' way, however. They have split and 
split again over the question of whether to unify with al-Qaeda. There is also 
a bitter ongoing battle with elements of the Free Syrian Army.

While most fighting on the rebel side are Muslim, many of those do not want a 
religious state.

The commander of one such unit told me the Islamist Nusra Front had sent a 
suicide bomber to one of his positions, killing a dozen of his men. Then his 
brother was kidnapped by the jihadis. After paying a ransom of tens of 
thousands of dollar to get his brother back, he would now seek revenge.

"There will be nowhere for them to hide."

Even as government forces sweep into previously opposition-held towns, the 
rebels are fighting amongst themselves, hardline jihadis against the relatively 
secular FSA, a civil war within the civil war.

The battle, though sporadic, seems just as bitter as that against the regime.

Its outcome will determine what kind of state Syria will become if the rebels 
win. In the meantime, though, Sharia justice is the only kind available in many 
parts of Syria.


BBC

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