Bismilahirrahmanirrahiim
Bagaimana respond NUR dan apadalilnya membunuh orang2 Civil ,anak2 wanita2
muslimah yang tidak berdosa dgn bom2 bunuh diri.
Inilah pemahaman Islam yang salah kaprah, yang merusak citra Islam oleh tangan2
yang mengaku pemebela islam atau penegak syariat Islam.
Sesungguhnya perbuatan2 mereka tidak lain adalah dorongan SETAN.
Semoga ALLAH memberikan pertnjuk2 kpd ulama2 Islam Fundamentalis Indonesia utk
kembali kejalan yg lurus dan benar.
salam=peace
--- In wanita-muslimah@yahoogroups.com, "sunny" wrote:
>
> http://arabnews.com/middleeast/article39811.ece
>
> 50 dead as Baghdad bombings stoke fears of warfare
>
> A woman reacts as residents gather near the site of a bomb attack in central
> Baghdad. (Reuters)
>
> By ASSOCIATED PRESS
>
> Published: Apr 6, 2010 14:45 Updated: Apr 7, 2010 04:56
>
> BAGHDAD: Bombs ripped through apartment buildings and a market in mostly
> Shiite areas of Baghdad on Tuesday, killing 50 people in postelection
> bloodshed that threatens to rekindle sectarian warfare that nearly destroyed
> the country three years ago.
>
> The attacks appeared to be an attempt by Al-Qaeda in Iraq or other extremists
> to exploit a power vacuum during what promises to be lengthy negotiations to
> form a new government. About 120 people have been killed in and around the
> capital over the past five days - some of the most brutal strikes on
> civilians in months.
>
> For two terrifying hours on a warm, sunny Tuesday morning, at least seven
> bombs rocked a broad swath of Baghdad. In a new tactic, several bombs were
> planted inside empty apartments after renters offered high prices for the
> properties, the government said.
>
> The explosions reduced one building to rubble, knocked out windows and doors
> and ripped off facades. People rushed to the blast sites, digging through the
> rubble with their hands to find loved ones.
>
> "Cars began to collide with one another in the street," said Ali Hussein, a
> 22-year-old college student who was riding the bus to school when one of the
> bombs went off.
>
> "We saw a cloud of fire and black smoke." With militants singling out entire
> families of both Muslim sects for slaughter, the recent violence is
> reminiscent of the far more widespread fighting that tore Iraq apart from
> 2005 to 2007 and prompted the United States to send tens of thousands more
> troops to this country.
>
> US officials sought to downplay the possibility that Iraq is sliding toward
> major sectarian fighting and insisted there were no plans to slow the
> withdrawal of American troops.
>
> White House spokesman Robert Gibbs said that Gen. Ray Odierno, the top US
> military official in Iraq, does not believe the violence threatens the
> ability of the US military to draw down its forces this year.
>
> The US military plans to reduce troop levels from 90,000 to 50,000 by Aug.
> 31, when it will end combat operations.
>
> As part of an agreement with Iraq, the US will withdraw all forces by the end
> of 2011.
>
> "We're obviously concerned but we don't see the parallels with what happened
> a few years ago," US Embassy spokesman Philip Frayne said. "We don't see a
> sectarian war breaking out again." While there was no claim of
> responsibility, the latest spike in attacks suggest to some analysts that
> Al-Qaeda or other extremists wish to provoke mayhem or otherwise sabotage
> negotiations to form a stable government after the March 7 parliamentary
> election that failed to produce a clear winner.
>
> "These attacks indicate a hopeless effort to mix cards and provoke sectarian
> dispute among people and turn Iraq again back to square one," said Dr. Hassan
> Kamil, a political analyst at Baghdad University.
>
> A secular bloc is currently holding talks with religious Shiite parties, a
> threatening prospect for insurgents whose stock-in-trade is rage, not peace.
> Such attacks might inflame sectarian tensions and make Shiite parties less
> likely to join former prime minister Ayad Allawi, a secular Shiite backed by
> Sunnis.
>
> Allawi's political coalition, Iraqiya, came out ahead in the vote, narrowly
> edging Prime Minister Nouri Al-Maliki's bloc by just two seats. Allawi raised
> the prospect that terror attacks will only increase if the negotiations drag
> on for months to form a new government.
>
> "This is blamed on the power vacuum, of course," Allawi told The Associated
> Press in an interview Tuesday.
>
> "Terrorists and Al-Qaeda are on the go. ... I think their operations will
> increase in Iraq." Allawi said the government was failing to secure the
> capital - a notion challenged by Al-Maliki adviser Sadiq al-Rikabi, who
> suggested that Allawi was exploiting the attacks for political purposes.
>
> "It is true that terrorism and attacks are attributed to the political
> situation the country is experiencing, and we have faced terrorism before
> elections as well," Al-