Nova Scotia Chronicle Herald reports: “Cross-burning suspects remanded until Monday”
— “Two men charged in a Hants County cross-burning are going to stay in jail until Monday.”
— “Nathan Neil Rehberg, 20, and Justin Chad Rehberg, 19, appeared in Kentville provincial court late this afternoon for a bail hearing.”
— “The brothers, both of Avondale, Hants County, are charged with public incitement of hatred, mischief and uttering threats.”
— “Kentville provincial court Judge Alan T. Tufts told the court that he was not satisfied with their bail proposal, which the Crown had opposed, and adjourned the hearing shortly before 6 p.m.”
— “He ordered that the brothers return to provincial court, this time in Windsor, on Monday and that they be remanded to a provincial jail until that time.”
— “A couple who looked outside to find a flaming cross on their lawn Sunday morning were in court this morning to see the two men accused of the crime.”
— “Shayne Howe and Michelle Lyon, the victims of the crime, were both in court, and Lyon was visibly shaken, crying as she sat looking at the two men. As Howe left the courtroom, he could be heard saying ‘they better not make bail.'”
— “The crime has horrified people across Canada.”
— “Someone put a large wooden cross on the front lawn of their home in Poplar Grove, Hants County, near Avondale, and lit it on fire, reminiscent of Ku Klux Klan racial hatred in the southern United States.”
— “Before leaving, while the cross burned, one man yelled, ‘Die n*gger die.'”
— “She said the two accused and the victims are known to each other and the incident was not a random act of violence.”
— “The couple and their five children were horrified by the incident and now fear for their safety. The family is considering moving unless the perpetrators are caught and punished.”
Terrorists Joseph Stack (Austin Terror Attack – left) and Nidal Hasan (Fort Hood Terror Attack – right) — Both Attacked U.S. Govt Sites in Texas, Killing U.S. Govt Employees
We cannot decide one is “terrorism” and one is not, based on political sympathy, political correctness, or political appeasement to one view or another — whether it is Nidal Hasan or Joseph Stacks. We cannot ignore that terrorist attacks of political violence have been committed and simply dismiss them as a “crime.” Most of all, we cannot have a double standard on terrorism, and be outraged by some terrorist attacks, and flippantly dismiss terrorist attacks by others. There is no “good” terrorism; there is no “acceptable” terrorism. Terrorism is terrorism, and terrorism is wrong.
As the son of murdered IRS employee Vernon Hunter states, “How is it heroic to take upon acts that Al Qaeda used on September 11 of 2001? What makes that heroic?” Ken Hunter continues “Are you telling me that an American citizen committing an attack of terrorism against the United States is heroic?”
Collage of Just a FEW Screen Shots from “White Nationalist Hate Group” Stormfront Members Praising Joseph Stacks’ Terrorism and Supporting Future Terrorist Attacks on America
If these were comments on an Islamic group’s web site, there would be widespread calls for investigations into those praising and promoting acts of “terrorism”, but when such comments are on a non-Islamic group’s web site, the response is (to be most generous) “muted.”
How would we have felt if that was our father, Vernon Hunter, who was murdered by Stark’s terrorist attack? How would we have felt if it was an attack on our town, where we worked, or someone we knew, and we heard people call the attacker a “hero,” or we heard people dismissing the terrorists’ suicide bombing as “going out with a bang”?
Vernon Hunter, Vietnam Veteran Murdered in Austin Terrorist Attack
Has our nation’s people become so heartless, so vindictive, so merciless, and so cruel?
What type of a nation are we living in that we can accept this as civilized discussion?
An attack on the U.S. government is an attack on all Americans, because whether you like it or not, whether you agree with it or not, it is your representative government. That is what it means to live in a democracy. The majority make decisions to choose our representative government. If you don’t like those decisions, you have many political means to effect change yourself.
But a terrorist attack that murders one our fellow Americans is an attack on all Americans, because the message sent by the terrorist is they don’t respect human life – theirs or ours – and they will take it at will.
If America is a nation that is responsible for equality and liberty, it is also nation of people who also love our inalienable right to life. In its defining declaration, America is a nation that loves life, not death. A nation where life itself is an inalienable right that defines our very identity can never afford a double standard on the deadly disease of terrorism, which ultimately seeks political and ideological change through death.
CAIR’s Nihad Awad’s Double Standard on Terrorism – Praising Hamas Terrorist Group, While Condemning Joseph Stacks’ Terror Attack (Source: Investigative Project on Terrorism)
But I also recognize that, if it had been a Muslim-American flying a jet into a U.S. government building and killing a U.S. government employee, there would have been little hesitancy among many Americans in deciding whether or not it was an act of “terrorism.” Everyone reading this knows this is a fact. We cannot hold a double-standard on terrorism where we can assume terrorism for some, but not for others, based on their different ideologies. Terrorism is terrorism.
Certainly in America, a nation that suffered repeated attacks by planes flown into commercial and government buildings on 9/11, one would think that Americans would be uniquely sensitive and outraged at those who seek to use planes as terrorist weapons against our government, regardless of their political views. Given the untold millions who have been endlessly inconvenienced by terrorist use of planes demanding extraordinary security measures for the traveling public, one would think that Americans would be furious at anyone who dared to try to use a plane again to attack Americans, whether it is Farouk Abdulmutallab in Detroit or Joseph Stacks in Austin. The muted response by Americans and the world to this latest abuse of air travel by the terrorist Joseph Stacks is disturbing and disheartening.
But Mr. Fitzgerald didn’t leave it at that. Instead, he had to offer his own double standard as an answer to CAIR’s double standard, dismissing Stack’s terrorist attack, not as terrorism, but as “simply Going Out with a Bang.” Mr. Fitzgerald pointed out in comments later below his posting that it should be “obvious” that he did not “promote” such activity by Joseph Stack, but simply was dismissing it as “terrorism.”
Jihad Watch’s Hugh Fitzgerald Dismisses Joseph Stack’s Terrorist Attack as “simply Going Out with a Bang”
I was stunned, gap-mouthed as I read the posting by a group that states that it seeks to oppose jihadist terrorism, who simply dismissed the suicide bombing by Joseph Stack as “going out with a bang.” Unbelievable. Mr. Fitzgerald argues that unless you are “inculcated from a young age with hatred” or unless you have a well-understood political ideology, this means that attacks of political violence against U.S. federal government offices are somehow not “terrorism.”
In his rambling political manifesto, terrorist Joseph Stacks called for Americans to “revolt,” stating that it takes “a body count” to effect political change against “a government full of hypocrites,” and appears to be defending his terrorist actions as one of those “dying for their freedom in this country.” But for Mr. Fitzgerald that is not a sufficient political ideology to constitute Joseph Stacks’ actions as “terrorism.” If it had been another ideological argument by Violent Extremists, there is no doubt that “Jihad Watch” would have little hesitation in defining it as “terrorism.”
I had contacted Jihad Watch and strongly suggested that Mr. Fitzgerald should revisit his posting and reconsider the comments in his article dismissing Joseph Stack’s murderous attack on America’s government as something less than “terrorism.” But that has not happened. I continue to urge Jihad Watch to reconsider what Mr. Fitzgerald has stated on Joseph Stack’s terrorist attack on U.S. government offices in Austin, Texas.
Imagine if it had been any Muslim group or CAIR writing on their website, dismissing a terrorist attack on America by a Muslim-American using a plane, as someone “simply going out with a bang,” while stating that they did not “promote” such activity. There would be a hue and cry across the nation’s airwaves, and calls for an investigation. But when this is stated about a non-Muslim terrorist attack, there is merely a shrugging of shoulders. We must not have a double standard on terrorism, and certainly we must never answer a double standard with a double standard of our own.
I recognize that it will not make me popular to point this out, or to criticize Mr. Fitzgerald’s own double standard on Joseph Stack’s terrorist attack in Austin. But our human rights mission prioritizes consistency and credibility first. Like all people, I and my organizations would also wish to have popularity. But as the recent debacle with Amnesty International has shown, there are no shortcuts to credibility and consistency on human rights issues. I would rather stand alone with my conscience than compromise our credibility on human rights to look the other way at those who would praise or to those who would dismiss terrorist attacks.
There are many who believe that to challenge those who would promote jihad, we must never criticize or challenge those perceived as leaders against jihad. The argument goes that if you criticize, challenge, or disagree with someone viewed as a leader against jihad, then you are somehow “helping the enemy,” and you are better off “to look the other way.” The idea that we can have frank and honest debate is not even considered as an option by some who seek to be fighting for our freedom against jihadists. The very idea that anyone leading the “anti-jihad community” could be wrong is not an idea that some leaders will even countenance. To those challenging violent extremism, that has to change. You won’t ever influence others by tactics which are only designed to close your ranks and keep them that way.
I have worked at recognizing my own limitations and imperfections. I make mistakes like other normal human beings. Moreover, I frequently publicly apologize for such mistakes, which I have found some to find quite infuriating. But that won’t stop me from apologizing or also from making other human mistakes as all of us do from time to time. I learned years ago if you are afraid to be wrong, you will also be afraid to do anything in your life. But courage is not the same as arrogance. We must all be willing to recognize when we need to make corrections in things we say or do.
So here is another one of my own apologies. From a public perspective, I have been one of those who has too often “looked the other way” at mistakes by some within the “anti-jihad community.” Instead, I have often tried to privately communicate and hope to influence others. But sometimes there has to be a moment where one can no longer “look the other way” at such mistakes. Today, this is mine here.
I think of Vernon Hunter’s wife and son. I think of the congregation that prayed for him Sunday in Texas. I think of all of those around the country who don’t even know his name or anything about him as a victim of a terrorist attack. I think of those who dismiss the terrorist attack against our government, murdering a veteran in our armed forces as someone “simply going out with a bang.” No, Vernon Hunter and our government deserve more respect, more dignity, and more mercy than such comments.
And to those at Stormfront and elsewhere who view the terrorist Joseph Stack as a “hero,” I feel sorry for you and your hate. I urge you to release the hate from your heart, and learn that in the civilized world of humanity, “heroes” are not terrorist murderers.
There comes a time when you must face a fork in the road in your life’s journey as to what direction you will head. Sometimes you have decide whether you want to spend your life fighting against something or fighting for something. I would rather be for something.
Shaikh Abdul-Rahman al-Barrak calls for death for those "mixing" sexes (Photo: Reuters)
Saudi cleric backs gender segregation with fatwa
A prominent Saudi cleric has issued an edict calling for opponents of the kingdom’s strict segregation of men and women to be put to death if they refuse to abandon their ideas.
Shaikh Abdul-Rahman al-Barrak said in a fatwa the mixing of genders at the workplace or in education “as advocated by modernisers” is prohibited because it allows “sight of what is forbidden, and forbidden talk between men and women.”
” Whoever allows this mixing … allows forbidden things, and whoever allows them is an infidel and this means defection from Islam … Either he retracts or he must be killed … because he disavows and does not observe the Shariah “
“All of this leads to whatever ensues,” he said in the text of the fatwa published on his website (albarrak.islamlight.net).
“Whoever allows this mixing … allows forbidden things, and whoever allows them is an infidel and this means defection from Islam … Either he retracts or he must be killed … because he disavows and does not observe the Shariah,” Barrak said.
“Anyone who accepts that his daughter, sister or wife works with men or attend mixed-gender schooling cares little about his honor and this is a type of pimping,” Barrak said.
Writing exclusively in the Daily Telegraph , Kai Eide said plans to use financial incentives to persuade militants to abandon their war would not succeed without negotiations with their leaders.
His comments challenge President Barack Obama’s “carrot and stick” strategy of military surge while offering jobs, retraining, resettlement and protection to Taliban figures who break away from Mullah Omar’s insurgency.
According to Mr Eide, who will stand down as the UN Secretary General’s special representative next month, the strategy could actually strengthen the insurgency.
He said the West has underestimated the number of Taliban fighters driven by conviction rather than simply money. He said attempting to bribe them may actually backfire.
“Often, such motivation stems from a conviction that the [Afghan] government is corrupt and unable to provide law and order combined with a sense of foreign invasion – not only in military terms, but in terms of disrespect for Afghanistan’s culture, values and religion,” he said.
The “Reintegration Trust Fund” announced at last month’s London Conference would only help if offered alongside talks with the Taliban’s political leadership, he said.
The fund was not a “game changer” but could help if combined with talks with those ideologically-driven Taliban and “if at some point that process involves the political structures of the insurgency. If you want relevant and sustainable results, you will have to involve relevant people with authority in an appropriate way,” he said.
He has proposed a series of confidence-building measures to improve the atmosphere for talks, including a pledge by Mullah Omar’s Taliban to stop attacking schools and hospitals, freeing some Taliban figures from the American Bagram Detention Centre and removing Taliban leaders from the UN’s sanctions list.
Last month US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said there was no place in the reintegration scheme for Mullah Omar or his Taliban leadership.
“You have to begin to go right at the insurgents and peel those off who are willing to renounce violence, renounce al Qaeda That is not going to happen with (Taliban chief) Mullah Omar and the like,” she said, but it could tempt those who fight because the Taliban pays better wages than they could earn peacefully.
Mr Eide’s challenge to the current strategy in Afghanistan follows dramatic developments in Pakistan in the last two weeks where the Taliban’s military leader Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar was captured in Karachi along with four other senior leaders. The raids marked a new understanding on greater co-operation between Washington and the Taliban’s former allies in Islamabad.
Michael Semple, a leading authority on the Taliban and a former European Union diplomat, welcomed Mr Eide’s comments but questioned whether the Karzai government was ready to talk about peace.
“Kai Eide’s political process would specifically engage the Taliban who are committed to their movement and consider it a moral force,” he said.
“The political process to solve this conflict will have to be protected from spoilers on all sides including from those on the Kabul government side who so far have been content for the conflict to drag on, while the bulk of the military and fiscal burden is borne by the United States,” he said.
Taliban Terrorist Leader Mullah Mohammed OmarU.S. Government's "Rewards for Justice" Offers a $10 Million Reward for Information Leading to Location of Taliban's Mullah Omar
Mr. Roodt –
I am well aware of who you are and your positions in South Africa, and I have written about you before. I thank you for taking the time to write to me.
What you do not know is who I am and my positions, although they are quitely clearly detailed on Responsible for Equality And Liberty (R.E.A.L.)’s website at RealCourage.org. You seem to believe that I am “left-wing,” because I support equality and liberty, and defy racial supremacist views, along with our defiance against religious extremism, Communist totalitarianism, and misogyny. None of these are exclusively “left-wing,” and the tunnel-vision that you display in thinking this demonstrates your limitations more than anything I could say or do. But since R.E.A.L. will be around for a while, perhaps you should take the time to get to know our views, as we have no intent of backing off from challenging groups that promote racial supremacism and hate.
I am sorry for your inconvenience in your travels.
However, we need to advise you that Responsible for Equality And Liberty (R.E.A.L.) will continue to defy those promoting racial supremacism. The American Renaissance and Mr. Taylor has long had a history of making derogatory and belittling remarks towards black and Hispanic Americans. That is and has been his freedom of speech. However, we also have the freedom of speech to defy such views and also to hold public awareness campaigns to the public and local businesses making them aware of such views. We promote racial harmony, and we believe that must necessitate also defying racial hate.
There was no denial of Mr. Taylor’s freedom to speak. In fact, I repeatedly invited him to our outdoor public awareness event on February 19 at 12 noon. We provided him detailed directions on how to get there in Washington DC. He declined to show up, even after the AmRen conference was cancelled at the Capitol Skyline. This was his choice, and he was the one who challenged me to a public debate that he then feared to attend himself. Moreover, we have also invited the public to our public rally at the Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool Steps were Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. spoke. We had originally planned this for April 4, but since that is Easter Sunday this year, we will be holding our event on March 28 at 2 PM. More details, including a map, will soon be at our website at RealCourage.org.
Freedom of speech also includes our freedom of speech, a fact that the American Renaissance, Mr. Taylor, and you seem to find inconvenient. We made no threats to any hotels, we made no efforts to boycott any hotels. We simply advised them that the New Century Foundation was in fact the American Renaissance, a fact that most hotels did not know and told us that Mr. Taylor did not share with them. In fact, they seemed to not know anything about the American Renaissance, let alone its views, its links to the Stormfront organization (which has been linked repeatedly to terrorism in the United States), and its role in being monitored by law enforcement agencies in the Washington DC area. After advising them who and what the American Renaissance was, we asked for the opportunity to have space to offer a counter-message of racial harmony, diversity, and love for our fellow human beings.
Furthermore, we have no control over what other groups or individuals may do in their response to hate groups. Certainly we reject all hate, and all threats, and we have done so repeatedly on our web site, in our discussions with hotels and the public, on the radio, in our public awareness event on the street, and in my personal telephone conversations with Jared Taylor as well. Perhaps Mr. Taylor forgot to mention any of this to you. In fact, when we have heard of rumors of threats to any hotels, we have contacted them and offered our help to aid the police in finding anyone who would threaten those supporting the American Renaissance. Mr. Taylor is also well aware of this. I told him this myself. But our response, whether it is in response to threats from extremist groups against American Renaissance, or whether it is in response to threats from supporters and scheduled speakers from the American Renaissance conference to us, is to urge all, to Choose Love, Not Hate.
Our group has sufficient courage to defy a national “white nationalist” group and to reject their racist views against others, including of course, those who have supported and served as apologists for Apartheid. The global condemnation of Apartheid is so wide-spread that the very word “apartheid” has become a noun associated with a form of organized hate against another identity group. The growing global consensus in rejection of racial supremacism is growing and will continue to grow.
Certainly, after the June 2009 white supremacist terrorist attack on Washington DC, local activists for equality and human rights have had heightened concern about white supremacist organizations, as has law enforcement agencies. This is no doubt part of the reason why the American Renaissance organization itself if monitored by law enforcement agencies tracking terrorist threats. Moreover, the American Renaissance and Jared Taylor has been closely linked with its partner organization Stormfront, and Mr. Taylor appears on Stormfront radio programs as an invited guest to promote the American Renassance group. This is the same Stormfront led by former American Nazi and KKK leader Don Black, whose group has been associated with the foiled Tennessee mass terrorist plot by a Stormfront member and his associate (who will be coming to trial soon), the Stormfront member who murdered police officers in April 2009, and praise by Stormfront members of James Von Brunn’s terrorist attack on Washington DC. This is also the same Stormfront whose members praise the 9/11 jihadists, Oklahoma City bomber Timothy McVeigh’s terrorist attack, and most recently widely praised the terrorist attack in Austin, Texas. This is also the same Stormfront organization whose members are even now openly calling for more terrorist attacks in Washington DC and around America.
One of the American Renaissance scheduled speakers was an individual who spoke an event that inspired James Von Brunn, who was the white supremacist terrorist that attacked Washington DC in June 2009. Another American Renaissance scheduled speaker openly called for violence against me. This is what you have gotten yourself associated with Mr. Roodt. While we never demanded the cancellation of American Renaissance, I believe our public awareness campaign may indeed have done you a favor, unless you think it is wise for you to be associated with such organizations.
The very idea that American Renaissance would insult Washington DC citizens who promote racial harmony after the June 2009 white supremacist terrorist attack on our city, was no less outrageous than if hate group Hizb ut-Tahrir sought to hold a public convention of hate against others in NYC after the 9/11 attacks. The tide has turned and is continuing to turn on the white supremacist groups. Just as the 9/11 attacks awoken many Americans to the threat of jihad, the June 2009 terrorist attack, the recent terrorist attack in Austin, and other plots foiled by white supremacist terrorists has awoken many Americans to the threat of white supremacist hate here in America. Increasingly, Americans have had enough of white supremacists in our nation founded on the truth that all men are created equal.
Certainly, we understand that the answer to fighting terrorism begins with addressing the ideologies behind them… whether we are dealing with violent jihad or white supremacist terrorism. Our goal to fight terrorism is to reject ideologies of hate, and to offer our universal human rights of equality and liberty as alternatives to ideologies of hate.
While we reject the hate ideology of white supremacism, as we reject all racial supremacism, in support of equality and liberty – our rejection of ideologies of hate are never rejection of our fellow human beings. Our universal human rights are your human rights as well. We do not offer an upraised fist, but an outstretched to all those who would drop the burden of hate from their hearts, and respect our fellow human beings equality, liberty, and dignity.
We urge all to Choose Love, Not Hate.
Love Wins.
Regards,
Jeffrey Imm
Responsible for Equality And Liberty (R.E.A.L.)
https://www.realcourage.org
— “The murder of two Sikhs by the Taliban in the restless tribal belt highlights the plight of the minorities there. Rajeev Sharma writes on the situation there.”
— “Two new and disturbing trends pertaining to Hindu and Sikh minorities in Pakistan have come to the notice of the government of India.”
— “One, Hindu families residing in Balochistan have become desperate due to law and order situation in the province and have started to migrate to India after seeking ‘visit’ visas. Two, Pakistani Hindus have started converting from Hinduism to Sikhism.”
— “Here are a few details. Hindus in Balochistan are a harassed lot. The Hindu community in Quetta has called upon the Balochistan government to check the increasing incidents of kidnapping for ransom and robbery incidents involving its members. In this connection, a group of Hindu community leaders met Minorities Minister of Balochistan Province Basant Lal Gulshan on February 9 sought protection. Hindu leaders stressed that despite their commitment and contribution to the country, they are being discriminated socially and religiously.”
— “The deteriorating law and order problem in Balochistan prompted businessmen of Quetta to observe a day-long shutter-down strike on February 10 in Quetta and other cities of the province. The confederation of traders/businessman ‘Anjuman-e-Tajiran’ had called for the strike against target killing and kidnapping for ransom of traders. The strike had support of Pakhtunkhwa Milli Awami Party, Jamaat-e- Islami, Awami National Party and Shia Ulema Council and evoked good response.”
— “Another interesting trend is that more and more Pakistani Hindus are converting from Hinduism to Sikhism. This trend is visible among Hindus in the North Western Frontier Province/Federally Administered Tribal Areas and Balochistan. It is felt that in Pakistan Hindus are more vulnerable to problems than Sikhs. The logic behind this is that by changing religion their interests will be served both in Pakistan as well as India. The Pakistan government woos the miniscule Sikh community. Once Pakistani Sikhs migrate to India, they are fiercely protected by local Sikh community from expulsion by the Indian government after expiry of their ‘visit visa’.”
— “Pakistan’s treatment of its minorities has been shabby since its birth in 1947 on communal lines. The fundamentalist forces have once again upped their ante in past few months. In April 2009, in a painful case of history repeating itself, Taliban started levying ‘Jaziya’ (tax) on minority Sikh families in the NWFP.”
— “Taliban militants in their first-ever attack on the Sikh community, resorted to forcible occupation of ten of their houses in Samar Ferozkhel area of lower Orakzai Agency. The militants also took their leader Sardar Kalyan Singh [ Images ] as hostage and demanded Rs 6 crore as ransom. The incidents triggered off an exodus by the Sikh community from the area.”
— “A report by the Daily Times on April 15, 2009 from Hangu said Sikh families living in Orakzai Agency left the area after the Taliban demanded Rs 5 crore as ‘Jaziya’ from them.”
— “Residents of Ferozekhel area in Lower Orakzai Agency told Daily Times that ten Sikh families left the place after Taliban told them that they were a minority and liable to pay tax for living in the area in accordance with Sharia. The Pakistani newspaper quoted the locals as saying that of the 15 Sikh families in Ferozekhel, ten had shifted while the rest were preparing to do so. On April 30, 2009, Taliban in Orakzai Agency of FATA banished 50 Sikh families from the agency for not paying Jaziya and even auctioned their goods to recover a fraction of the Rs 12 million taxes originally demanded.”
— “The government of India broke its silence on May 1, 2009 when the ministry of external affairs came up with a one-line reaction: ‘On seeing reports about Sikh families in Pakistan being driven out of their homes and being subject to Jaziya and other such impositions, the government of India has taken up the question of treatment of minorities with the government of Pakistan.'”
— “According to a private Pakistani television channel’s report in April 2009, Taliban in Orakzai occupied houses and shops of the Sikhs and auctioned their valuables for Rs 8 lakhs in Qasim Khel and Feroz Khel areas. Taliban had demanded Rs 12 million from the Sikh community but they had only paid Rs 6.7 million to the Taliban, the channel said. In the wake of this 21st century apartheid treatment being meted out to them, the Sikh families living in lower Orakzai Agency for centuries started leaving their village following threats and forced occupation of their shops and houses by the Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan. Eventually, the TTP destroyed 11 houses of the Sikh community, which forced 60 to 65 Sikhs to auction their shops and leave the Feroze Khel area permanently.”
“Two Sikhs who were kidnapped for ransom were found beheaded by the Pakistani Taliban in Pakistan’s restive tribal belt in yet another brutal act by the militants.”
“Some more members of the minority community are still in the custody of the rebels. The body of Jaspal Singh was found in the Khyber tribal region, located a short distance from the provincial capital of Peshawar, while the body of Mahal Singh was found in the Aurakzai Agency, sources told PTI on Satrurday night.”
“There was some confusion about the total number of Sikhs who were kidnapped for ransom from the Bara area of Khyber Agency by the Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan.”
“A source said four Sikhs were abducted while another report said the total number of kidnapped persons was six. The Sikhs were kidnapped 34 days ago and the Taliban had demanded Rs 30 million as ransom for their release.”
“Two of the kidnapped Sikhs were beheaded after the expiry of the deadline for the payment of the ransom, sources said.”
KVDR reports “Racist letter prompts fear, anger at Johnson & Wales University”: — “Black students at Johnson & Wales University met with school administrators Thursday after a racist letter was slipped under the door of a black student’s dorm room door. It has students upset, afraid, and confused about the school’s response.”
— “The university offered to buy one student a bus ticket home if she felt unsafe on campus.”
— “The letter was shoved under the student’s dorm room door while she was at class. It was filled with several uses of the N-word, among other expletives, telling Black students to leave the campus.”
— ” ‘We can’t believe that in 2010 there are people still out there who think this way,’ said Candyze Harris. ‘I am afraid for my safety now when I am alone on campus, and I never felt this way during my first year on campus.’ “