You asked a question about one million people killed. That is good from you. In 
fact we came to know that Bush and most Americans didn't understand the extreme 
protesting dimension of this event. It is so sad that news coverage explained 
almost nothing. You are not a usual American, because you fully understood the 
whole matter.
 
God bless you.

=======

S1000+ 

=======



--- On Wed, 12/17/08, Mercury.Sailor <[email protected]> wrote:

From: Mercury.Sailor <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: Iraqis have shoes to express their protest.
To: "World-thread" <[email protected]>
Date: Wednesday, December 17, 2008, 8:57 PM

PS/ While throwing the second shoe he shouted that that was from the
orphans and widows of Iraq caused by the war -


How can anyone NOT respect such a courageous man!! If our world had
more people like him we wouldn't have so many tribulations!



Sumerian what do you say to people who claim we killed over a million
people in Iraq JUST to protect them from that dictator, Saddam?




On Dec 17, 12:16 am, "Sumerian.." <[email protected]>
wrote:
> The Iraqi journalist was kidnapped in November and then released. He is
known for his reports against the occupation in TV station which broacasts from
Egypt. It is owned by Iraqis who are against the occupation. He is a Shiite and
was very upset from the statue of Saddam being hit by shoes under the American
ocupation, and he by this action retliates to that.
>  
> It is very funny and sad for the Americans when they will know that Bush
attended a meeting in Afganistan after this shoes event. All those who were
present were asked to take their shoes off.
>  
> S1000+
>  
>  http://www.brusselstribunal. org/Al-Zaidi. htm
>  Statement and appeal of the BRussells Tribunal, 15 December 2008.
>
>  
> Bush claims victory, he gets shoes
>  
> Demand for the immediate release of Muntather Al-Zaidi
>  
> In one magnificent act, Muntather Al-Zaidi, an Iraqi journalist with
Al-Baghdadiya television, epitomized the truth of the defeat of the United
States in Iraq and lifted the spirit of resistance within the hearts of all
Arabs, matching that of the Iraqi people who continue to resist imperialism and
colonialism and who refuse humiliation.
>  
>  It is Bush who is humiliated, and from it he cannot recover. He had
snuck into Iraq, unannounced, to sign an illegal treaty with his puppet stooge
aimed at institutionalizing the US occupation. Two flying shoes destroyed the
façade upon which he and his cronies claim victory in Iraq.
>  
> For the orphans and widows
> The greatest expression of contempt in Arab culture is wielding a shoe to
an adversary. Bush and his criminal cronies deserve contempt. Bush claims not to
know what Al-Zaidi’s “cause” is. Al-Zaidi made it clear: the shoes he
threw at Bush were for the orphans and widows of Bush’s imperial war that to
date has killed more than 1.2 million Iraqis and displaced six million more.
> The shoes were thrown equally in the direction of Bush’s local
puppets — proof that no government under occupation can be legitimate or
gain legitimacy, that resistance expresses the sovereignty of the Iraqi
people, exposing the Bush-Maliki agreement as worthless and devoid of
legality. Two flying shoes expressed the paradise that is resistance in
comparison to the ignominy of submission. Iraq is unbreakable, its people proven
proud and invincible.
>  
> Al-Zaidi needs protection
> Following five and a half years of relentless destruction and killing, it
is clear that Muntather Al-Zaidi, in daring to challenge the imperial United
States, took a step into that grey zone between the human right to life and the
permanent threat of death wielded by imperialism. Given the Maliki
government’s eagerness in summarily executing its political
opponents — including their lawyers — and as he is reportedly in the
direct custody of Maliki’s own security guards, we have firm reason to believe
that Al-Zaidi is in immediate danger of being tortured and/or assassinated.
> We remind all that Muntather Al-Zaidi is a protected person under
international humanitarian law, which governs the US occupation, and has
guaranteed rights under international human rights law.[1] International
humanitarian and human rights law outlaws torture and summary execution,
incommunicado detention, the ill treatment of detainees, or denial of access to
legal counsel. The US occupation is directly responsible for Al-Zaidi’s
welfare and must guarantee his security. As a journalist, he must be afforded
extra protection.
>
> Appeal for action 
> Following Al-Zaidi’s action, thousands have taken to the street in his
support and countless statements are being written in his defence. We salute
his courage, demand to know his exact location, and join millions in demanding
his immediate release.
>  
> We join all patriotic Arabs and the Iraqi people who today celebrate their
dignity, visually announced and reaffirmed in the public humiliation of a
disgraced American president.
> We call upon all human rights organizations and bodies, including
responsible organs of the United Nations, along with journalists’ syndicates
and associations, to defend the right to security and life of Muntather Al-Zaidi
and work to ensure his immediate release.
>  
> The BRussells Tribunal Committee
> 15 December 2008
>
> Please circulate this appeal widely.
>  
> Bush gets shoes: http://www.youtube. com/v/OM3Z_ Kskl_U
>
> =====================
> From Times Online
>
> December 16, 2008
>
> Journalist who threw shoes at Bush, Muntazer al-Zaidi, 'has broken arm
and ribs'
>  
> An Iraqi journalist who was filmed throwing his shoes at President Bush
appeared in court today and confessed to the attack.
>  
> Muntazer al-Zaidi rose to fame on Sunday when he threw his footwear at the
president during a Baghdad press conference, missing narrowly, in apparent
protest at the actions of US troops over the past few years.
>  
> “Al-Zaidi was brought today before the investigating judge in the
presence of a defence lawyer and a prosecutor,” said Abdul Satar Birqadr, a
spokesman for Iraq’s High Judicial Council. “He admits the action he carried
out.”
>  
> The journalist may have become a hero to millions of Iraqis but the
“shoe man” has had to spend a second night in detention, during which he
nursed a broken arm and ribs as well as cuts to his face, according to his
brother.
>  
> His sibling, Durgham al-Zaidi, said he was told that Mr al-Zaidi is being
held by Iraqi forces in the heavily fortified Green Zone compound in central
Baghdad, where the US embassy and most government offices are housed.
>  
> “He has got a broken arm and ribs and cuts to his eye and arm,” he
said. “He is being held by forces under the command of Muwafaq al-Rubaie
[Iraq’s national security adviser]." Television pictures from the press
conference show Mr al-Zaidi being carried away by prime ministerial guards but
there was no sign of excessive violence.
>  
> Thousands of Iraqis, both Sunni and Shia, took part in a second day of
street protests today demanding Mr Zaidi’s release and hailing him a national
hero. In Mosul, Iraq’s third largest city, north of Baghdad, an estimated
1,000 protesters carried banners and chanted slogans in his support.
>  
> Several hundred more also protested in Nasiriyah, a Shia city about 200
miles southeast of Baghdad, and in Fallujah, a Sunni area west of the capital.
“Muntazer al-Zaidi has expressed the feelings and ambitions of the Iraqi
people toward the symbol of tyranny,” said Nassar Afrawi, a protester in
Nasiriyah.
>  
> In Baghdad, the head of the Iraqi Union of Journalists described Mr
al-Zaidi’s action as “strange and unprofessional” but urged Prime Minister
Nouri al-Maliki to give him clemency.
>  
> “Even if he has committed a mistake, the Government and the judiciary
are broad-minded and we hope they consider his release because he has a family
and he is still young,” Mouyyad al-Lami said. “We hope this case ends before
going to court.”
>  
> Mr al-Zaidi’s action is a personal embarrassment to the Iraqi Prime
Minister, who was next to Mr Bush at the press conference. But, given that 2009
is an election in Iraq, Mr al-Zaidi’s popularity is likely to save him from a
long prison sentence.
>  
> In one example of Mr al-Zaidi’s status, a geography teacher at a Baghdad
elementary school asked her students if they had seen the footage of the
shoe-throwing. “All Iraqis should be proud of this Iraqi brave man, Muntazer.
History will remember him for ever,” she said.
>  
> Mr al-Zaidi’s action also won him widespread plaudits in the wider Arab
world. Lebanese television channel NTV, known for its opposition to Washington,
went as far as offering a job to the journalist. In its evening news bulletin on
Monday, it said that if he takes the job he will be paid “from the moment the
first shoe was thrown”.
>  
> Frrom The Times - UK:
> A reader said:
> So Iraq does have Weapons of Media Diversion after all. The worrying thing
is that with a population of 28 million (albeit in decline since 2003), Iraq is
estimated to have an arsenal of at least 56 million of these missiles. Be
afraid, be very afraid.
>
> Dan, Wimbledon,
Englandhttp://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/iraq/article5352043.ece
>  
> =========================================
>
> Iraqi reporter throws shoes at BushReuters | Monday, 15 December 2008
>
> Email a Friend | Printable View | Have Your Say
>
> Reuters
> DUCK DOWN: US President George W Bush had to take evasive action when a
disgruntled reporter threw his shoes at the him during a press conference.
>
> Related Links
>  
>
> Advertisement
> An Iraqi reporter has called visiting US President George W Bush a
"dog" in Arabic and threw his shoes at him during a news conference in
Baghdad.
> PS/ While throwing the second shoe he shouted that that was from the
orphans and widows of Iraq caused by the war -
S1000+http://www.stuff.co.nz/thepress/4793365a6428.html
>  
> =======
>
> S1000+
>
> =======
>
> =======
>
> S1000+
>
> =======
>
> --- On Tue, 12/16/08, Sumerian.. <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>  




      
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