[IslamCity] Re: DAJJAL BUSH REGIME STRANGLES 3 MUJAHIDEEN IN TORTURE CAMP

2006-06-20 Thread jumadaaloola1427
Assalamu aleikum.

There are 30 dajjals (antichrists) prophesied to come before the Day
of Judgment. Bush is unquestionably one of them. For about 1,660,000
internet listings on Bush as antichrist, copy and google these search
terms together without quotation marks: bush antichrist


--- In islamcity@yahoogroups.com, angelofansar wrote:

 Maybe Allah(swt) is waiting for when Isa comes back to the Central 
 Mosque in Damascus and there are 70,000 infidel troops coming there; 
 maybe Bush is not as important as what will come after his regime. 
 Allah knows best, and he sets up the evil for their day of punishment.
 
 angelofansar
 
 --- In islamcity@yahoogroups.com, Prathiba Sundaram wrote:
 
  World community should demand death to the International Terrorist 
 Bush.
 
Hundreds of Thousands of human beings are dreaming the death of 
 the Evil.
  
  jumadaaloola1427@ wrote:
DAJJAL BUSH REGIME STRANGLES 3 MUJAHIDEEN IN TORTURE CAMP
  
  Assalamu aleikum.
  
  In the US, the murder and subsequent coverup of inmates deaths by
  police has long been an art form. The Guantanamo Bay torture camp,
  which has been condemned even by the UN, is certainly no exception 
 to
  this rule. The three victims whom the Bush regime ordered murdered
  were naturally close eyewitnesses to the torture of other victims 
 over
  the past several years in the infamous Camp 1, and to attacks on 
 the
  Holy Qur'an. Their release would have led to further unfavorable
  publicity. Now the eyewitnesses are dead, supposed victims of
  suicide. All three. At once.
  
  The notion that 3 torture victims in the most secure part of the
  torture camp had the means to commit suicide is absurd. All the
  torture victims are under 24-hour surveillance.
  
  
  ---
  
  
  U.S.: 3 Guantanamo Inmates Commit Suicide
  By ANDREW SELSKY and JENNIFER LOVEN
  Associated Press
  06.10.2006
  http://www.forbes.com/work/feeds/ap/2006/06/10/ap2807112.html
  
  Three Guantanamo Bay detainees were found dead Saturday after
  apparently committing suicide, the U.S. military said. They were the
  first reported deaths among the suspected terrorists held at the 
 base
  in Cuba for up to 4 1/2 years without being charged.
  
  Two men from Saudi Arabia and one from Yemen were 
 found unresponsive
  and not breathing in their cells early Saturday, according to a
  statement from the Miami-based U.S. Southern Command, which has
  jurisdiction over the prison. Attempts were made to revive the
  prisoners, but failed.
  
  One defense official, who requested anonymity because the details 
 had
  not been made public yet, said that initial reports were that two of
  the detainees hanged themselves while the third suffocated or choked
  himself.
  
  Pentagon officials said the three men were in Camp 1, the highest
  maximum security prison at Guantanamo, and that none of them had 
 tried
  to commit suicide before. That camp was also the location where two
  detainees tried to commit suicide in mid-May, when a riot broke out 
 at
  the facility. The two men, who took overdoses of an anti-anxiety
  medication they hoarded, were found and received medical treatment 
 and
  were recovering.
  
  The United States is holding about 460 men on suspicion of links to
  al-Qaida and the Taliban at Guantanamo Bay, which has become a sore
  subject between President Bush and U.S. allies who otherwise are
  staunch supporters of his policies.
  
  The Defense Department's U.S. Southern Command in Miami, and the
  detention center's commander, Navy Rear Adm. Harry B. Harris,
  scheduled a briefing for later Saturday.
  
  The Pentagon also postponed the military tribunal of Binyam 
 Muhammad,
  an Ethiopian detainee, originally scheduled for next week. Muhammad 
 is
  charged with conspiring with Osama bin Laden and other al-Qaida
  leaders to attack civilians and commit other crimes.
  
  Bush, spending the weekend at Camp David, was notified of the
  incident. The State Department was consulting with the governments 
 of
  the home countries of the three prisoners, whose names were not 
 released.
  
  The military said in its statement that all lifesaving measures had
  been exhausted in the attempt to revive the detainees. The remains
  were being treated with the utmost respect, an issue important to
  Muslims. A cultural adviser was assisting the military.
  
  Though the military termed the deaths suicides, the Naval Criminal
  Investigative Service was investigating to establish the official
  cause and manner of death.
  
  A U.N. panel said May 19 that holding detainees indefinitely at
  Guantanamo violated the world's ban on torture. The panel said the
  United States should close the detention center.
  
  German Chancellor Angela Merkel, Danish Prime Minister Anders Fogh
  Rasmussen and British Prime Minister Tony Blair are among those who
  also recently have urged the United States to close the prison.
  
  On Friday, after the prison came up 

[IslamCity] Re: DAJJAL BUSH REGIME STRANGLES 3 MUJAHIDEEN IN TORTURE CAMP

2006-06-16 Thread angelofansar
Maybe Allah(swt) is waiting for when Isa comes back to the Central 
Mosque in Damascus and there are 70,000 infidel troops coming there; 
maybe Bush is not as important as what will come after his regime. 
Allah knows best, and he sets up the evil for their day of punishment.

angelofansar

--- In islamcity@yahoogroups.com, Prathiba Sundaram wrote:

 World community should demand death to the International Terrorist 
Bush.

   Hundreds of Thousands of human beings are dreaming the death of 
the Evil.
 
 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
   DAJJAL BUSH REGIME STRANGLES 3 MUJAHIDEEN IN TORTURE CAMP
 
 Assalamu aleikum.
 
 In the US, the murder and subsequent coverup of inmates deaths by
 police has long been an art form. The Guantanamo Bay torture camp,
 which has been condemned even by the UN, is certainly no exception 
to
 this rule. The three victims whom the Bush regime ordered murdered
 were naturally close eyewitnesses to the torture of other victims 
over
 the past several years in the infamous Camp 1, and to attacks on 
the
 Holy Qur'an. Their release would have led to further unfavorable
 publicity. Now the eyewitnesses are dead, supposed victims of
 suicide. All three. At once.
 
 The notion that 3 torture victims in the most secure part of the
 torture camp had the means to commit suicide is absurd. All the
 torture victims are under 24-hour surveillance.
 
 
 ---
 
 
 U.S.: 3 Guantanamo Inmates Commit Suicide
 By ANDREW SELSKY and JENNIFER LOVEN
 Associated Press
 06.10.2006
 http://www.forbes.com/work/feeds/ap/2006/06/10/ap2807112.html
 
 Three Guantanamo Bay detainees were found dead Saturday after
 apparently committing suicide, the U.S. military said. They were the
 first reported deaths among the suspected terrorists held at the 
base
 in Cuba for up to 4 1/2 years without being charged.
 
 Two men from Saudi Arabia and one from Yemen were 
found unresponsive
 and not breathing in their cells early Saturday, according to a
 statement from the Miami-based U.S. Southern Command, which has
 jurisdiction over the prison. Attempts were made to revive the
 prisoners, but failed.
 
 One defense official, who requested anonymity because the details 
had
 not been made public yet, said that initial reports were that two of
 the detainees hanged themselves while the third suffocated or choked
 himself.
 
 Pentagon officials said the three men were in Camp 1, the highest
 maximum security prison at Guantanamo, and that none of them had 
tried
 to commit suicide before. That camp was also the location where two
 detainees tried to commit suicide in mid-May, when a riot broke out 
at
 the facility. The two men, who took overdoses of an anti-anxiety
 medication they hoarded, were found and received medical treatment 
and
 were recovering.
 
 The United States is holding about 460 men on suspicion of links to
 al-Qaida and the Taliban at Guantanamo Bay, which has become a sore
 subject between President Bush and U.S. allies who otherwise are
 staunch supporters of his policies.
 
 The Defense Department's U.S. Southern Command in Miami, and the
 detention center's commander, Navy Rear Adm. Harry B. Harris,
 scheduled a briefing for later Saturday.
 
 The Pentagon also postponed the military tribunal of Binyam 
Muhammad,
 an Ethiopian detainee, originally scheduled for next week. Muhammad 
is
 charged with conspiring with Osama bin Laden and other al-Qaida
 leaders to attack civilians and commit other crimes.
 
 Bush, spending the weekend at Camp David, was notified of the
 incident. The State Department was consulting with the governments 
of
 the home countries of the three prisoners, whose names were not 
released.
 
 The military said in its statement that all lifesaving measures had
 been exhausted in the attempt to revive the detainees. The remains
 were being treated with the utmost respect, an issue important to
 Muslims. A cultural adviser was assisting the military.
 
 Though the military termed the deaths suicides, the Naval Criminal
 Investigative Service was investigating to establish the official
 cause and manner of death.
 
 A U.N. panel said May 19 that holding detainees indefinitely at
 Guantanamo violated the world's ban on torture. The panel said the
 United States should close the detention center.
 
 German Chancellor Angela Merkel, Danish Prime Minister Anders Fogh
 Rasmussen and British Prime Minister Tony Blair are among those who
 also recently have urged the United States to close the prison.
 
 On Friday, after the prison came up during a meeting with Fogh
 Rasmussen at Camp David, Bush said his goal is to do just that. A
 total of 759 detainees have been held there, with about 300 released
 or transferred.
 
 We would like to end the Guantanamo - we'd like it to be empty, 
Bush
 said. But he added: There are some that, if put out on the streets,
 would create grave harm to American citizens and other citizens of 
the
 world. And, therefore, I believe they ought to be tried in courts 

[IslamCity] Re: DAJJAL BUSH REGIME STRANGLES 3 MUJAHIDEEN IN TORTURE CAMP

2006-06-16 Thread angelofansar
--- In islamcity@yahoogroups.com, jumadaaloola1427 wrote:

 DAJJAL BUSH REGIME STRANGLES 3 MUJAHIDEEN IN TORTURE CAMP
Wa Alaikum Al Salaam,

What no one has even thought about is that they were found on 
Saturday.  What Muslim would commit suicide during the holiest day  
of prayers? Are we to believe they did their daybreak prayers and 
then hung themselves?

angelofansar   

 
 Assalamu aleikum.
 
 In the US, the murder and subsequent coverup of inmates deaths by
 police has long been an art form. The Guantanamo Bay torture camp,
 which has been condemned even by the UN, is certainly no exception 
to
 this rule. The three victims whom the Bush regime ordered murdered
 were naturally close eyewitnesses to the torture of other victims 
over
 the past several years in the infamous Camp 1, and to attacks on 
the
 Holy Qur'an. Their release would have led to further unfavorable
 publicity. Now the eyewitnesses are dead, supposed victims of
 suicide. All three. At once.
 
 The notion that 3 torture victims in the most secure part of the
 torture camp had the means to commit suicide is absurd. All the
 torture victims are under 24-hour surveillance.
 
 
 ---
 
 
 U.S.: 3 Guantanamo Inmates Commit Suicide
 By ANDREW SELSKY and JENNIFER LOVEN
 Associated Press
 06.10.2006
 http://www.forbes.com/work/feeds/ap/2006/06/10/ap2807112.html
 
 Three Guantanamo Bay detainees were found dead Saturday after
 apparently committing suicide, the U.S. military said. They were the
 first reported deaths among the suspected terrorists held at the 
base
 in Cuba for up to 4 1/2 years without being charged.
 
 Two men from Saudi Arabia and one from Yemen were 
found unresponsive
 and not breathing in their cells early Saturday, according to a
 statement from the Miami-based U.S. Southern Command, which has
 jurisdiction over the prison. Attempts were made to revive the
 prisoners, but failed.
 
 One defense official, who requested anonymity because the details 
had
 not been made public yet, said that initial reports were that two of
 the detainees hanged themselves while the third suffocated or choked
 himself.
 
 Pentagon officials said the three men were in Camp 1, the highest
 maximum security prison at Guantanamo, and that none of them had 
tried
 to commit suicide before. That camp was also the location where two
 detainees tried to commit suicide in mid-May, when a riot broke out 
at
 the facility. The two men, who took overdoses of an anti-anxiety
 medication they hoarded, were found and received medical treatment 
and
 were recovering.
 
 The United States is holding about 460 men on suspicion of links to
 al-Qaida and the Taliban at Guantanamo Bay, which has become a sore
 subject between President Bush and U.S. allies who otherwise are
 staunch supporters of his policies.
 
 The Defense Department's U.S. Southern Command in Miami, and the
 detention center's commander, Navy Rear Adm. Harry B. Harris,
 scheduled a briefing for later Saturday.
 
 The Pentagon also postponed the military tribunal of Binyam 
Muhammad,
 an Ethiopian detainee, originally scheduled for next week. Muhammad 
is
 charged with conspiring with Osama bin Laden and other al-Qaida
 leaders to attack civilians and commit other crimes.
 
 Bush, spending the weekend at Camp David, was notified of the
 incident. The State Department was consulting with the governments 
of
 the home countries of the three prisoners, whose names were not 
released.
 
 The military said in its statement that all lifesaving measures had
 been exhausted in the attempt to revive the detainees. The remains
 were being treated with the utmost respect, an issue important to
 Muslims. A cultural adviser was assisting the military.
 
 Though the military termed the deaths suicides, the Naval Criminal
 Investigative Service was investigating to establish the official
 cause and manner of death.
 
 A U.N. panel said May 19 that holding detainees indefinitely at
 Guantanamo violated the world's ban on torture. The panel said the
 United States should close the detention center.
 
 German Chancellor Angela Merkel, Danish Prime Minister Anders Fogh
 Rasmussen and British Prime Minister Tony Blair are among those who
 also recently have urged the United States to close the prison.
 
 On Friday, after the prison came up during a meeting with Fogh
 Rasmussen at Camp David, Bush said his goal is to do just that. A
 total of 759 detainees have been held there, with about 300 released
 or transferred.
 
 We would like to end the Guantanamo - we'd like it to be empty, 
Bush
 said. But he added: There are some that, if put out on the streets,
 would create grave harm to American citizens and other citizens of 
the
 world. And, therefore, I believe they ought to be tried in courts 
here
 in the United States.
 
 Bush said his administration was waiting for the Supreme Court to 
rule
 whether he overstepped his authority in ordering the detainees to be
 tried by U.S. military tribunals.
 
 The