Protesters condemn Quran burning by US pastor
April 7, 2011 by Trend PK
Filed under World News
KABUL: Protesters in Afghanistan held a peaceful demonstration on Thursday in the capital Kabul, to further condemn the burning of a Quran at a small Florida church last month.
The desecration of Islam’s holy book has inflamed days of protests across Afghanistan.
There have been almost daily protests across Afghanistan against the act last month at a small church in Gainesville, Florida.
Most have not turned violent, but 10 people were killed in two days of protests in the southern city of Kandahar.
Protesters on Thursday held banners reading “We strongly condemn the act of burning Quran”. AGENCIES
US Koran burning ignites explosive Afghan cocktail
April 7, 2011 by Trend PK
Filed under World News
KABUL: Afghan fury over the burning of a Koran in the US has been fuelled by disillusion with the West over the war, public outrage by President Hamid Karzai, and the rising voice of radicalism, experts say.
While there has been little violent reaction in the rest of the Islamic world to the stunt by an obscure Florida pastor, at least 24 people have been killed in Afghanistan in recent days, including seven United Nations employees.
The wave of bloody demonstrations started with last week’s UN attack in the relatively peaceful northern city of Mazar-i-Sharif, eight days after Karzai condemned as “disrespectful and abhorrent” the burning of the Koran.
There had been scant coverage of the burning of the holy book in Afghanistan before Karzai, who has a history of anti-Western outbursts, launched his fresh salvo against the United States.
Some experts suggest he drew attention to the incident in a bid to boost his own popularity in his country, which has declined during nearly 10 years of a US-led war.
Karzai’s spokesman Waheed Omer has defended his boss by saying that people in Afghanistan would have found out about the Koran burning even if Karzai had not spoken about it.
But political analyst Haroun Mir said: “Suddenly after the Afghan president… talked about it, then there was a wind in Afghanistan.”
Mir added that since Karzai’s re-election in 2009, the president’s criticism of Western institutions had increased, while the voices of radical elements at work in Afghanistan have become louder.
It is these ultra-conservatives who have been at the forefront of the protests, while moderates have not dared to venture out to make public statements against the mob anger.
“A number of groups are using this event, I mean the burning of the holy Koran, in order to incite violence,” Mir added.
“And unfortunately, there is a total absence of moderate voices in the country right now that could counter this.”
That is also linked to rising anti-Western feeling in Afghanistan, where 130,000 international troops, around two-thirds from the United States, are stationed fighting the Taliban insurgency, other experts say.
Thomas Ruttig of the Afghanistan Analysts Network said there was a “general frustration about what the international community has achieved and not achieved in this country.”
He highlighted little improvement in the lives of most ordinary Afghans, who still live in grinding poverty, in the past decade.
In addition, mistaken killings of Afghan civilians in military operations by NATO-led forces have been high on the news agenda recently, along with reports of an alleged rogue US army unit “kill team” targeting civilians.
Both have been sharply and publicly condemned by Karzai.
Ruttig added that the intense sensitivity of religious issues in Afghanistan should not be overlooked as a factor in why the protests have snowballed.
“Afghanistan is not a secularised society,” he said. “This kind of provocation and attacks on the holy book are taken very seriously and are very sensitive.”
The attacks have been widely condemned, while the White House has criticised the Koran burning as “un-American” and Karzai has ordered an investigation into violence in Mazar-i-Sharif and Kandahar, where the worst incidents happened.
More demonstrations are feared — several hundred people gathered in Kabul Tuesday although that passed off peacefully.
However, Mir sounded a note of warning, saying: “It doesn’t mean that if until now there’s nothing going on in Kabul, nothing will happen.” AGENCIES
Quran burning could amount to another Abu Ghraib: Petraeus
September 9, 2010 by Trend PK
Filed under World News
WASHINGTON: The top US commander in Afghanistan warned Wednesday that a Florida Pastor’s plan to burn copies of the Quran could be as harmful to the US as the Abu Ghraib prison scandal in Iraq.
General David Petraeus told NBC television that images of the Quran burning would be used by Islamic extremists to fuel anti-Americanism and harm the US mission in Afghanistan and other areas in the world.
‘We’re concerned that the images from the burning of a Quran would be used in the same way that extremists used images from Abu Ghraib that they would in a sense be indelible,’ Petraeus told NBC.
‘They would be used by those who wish us ill, to incite violence and to inflame public opinion against us and against our mission here in Afghanistan, as well as our missions undoubtedly around the world,’ he added.
Photos emerged in 2004 showing US soldiers
Lane Kiffin Press Conference
Lane Kiffin’s Press Conference RIOT! Lane Kiffin’s Press Conference turned into a riot tonight requiring fire, police, and more as the situation became reportedly violent, moving, and continuing.
The Lane Kiffin Press Conference was to announce his resignation from UT. But fans “burned Lane Kiffin T-shirts, a mattress.
“Dozens of students and fans marched into the sports complex chanting obscenities at Kiffin”, one called Kiffin a traitor, another called for burning “Let’s burn this —- down. I don’t care.”
blocked his exit “the crowd turned to Kiffin’s pending exit from the sports complex, blocking the one route from the building. That’s when the burning started and the Knoxville Fire Department was called to the scene.” He needed an escort to get out of the property.
Lane Kiffin Press Conference was first posted on January 13, 2010 at 1:06 pm.
5 Young Americans Detained In Pakistan Over Alleged Terrorist
December 11, 2009 by Trend PK
Filed under World News
TrendPK.com 5 Young Americans Detained In Pakistan Over Alleged Terrorist:Five young Americans detained in Pakistan over alleged terrorist links will most likely be deported, a local police chief said Friday. The men have allegedly told investigators they tried to connect with al-Qaida-linked militant groups in Pakistan and were intending to cross the border
TrendPK.com 5 Young Americans Detained In Pakistan Over Alleged Terrorist:Five young Americans detained in Pakistan over alleged terrorist links will most likely be deported, a local police chief said Friday.
The men have allegedly told investigators they tried to connect with al-Qaida-linked militant groups in Pakistan and were intending to cross the border [...]
Co-Host Diane Sawyer Bids Goodbye To GMA
December 11, 2009 by Trend PK
Filed under World News
TrendPK.com Co-Host Diane Sawyer Bids Goodbye To GMA:The charismatic co-host of Good Morning America (GMA) Diane Sawyer bid goodbye to the show after years of diligently hosting the show.
TrendPK.com Co-Host Diane Sawyer Bids Goodbye To GMA:The charismatic co-host of Good Morning America (GMA) Diane Sawyer bid goodbye to the show after years of diligently hosting the show.
“And for one more time, Good Morning America,” Sawyer said as she began Friday morning’s show. “This morning I am beaming at all of [...]
Brian Kelly Press Conference,Notre Dame Press Conference
December 11, 2009 by Trend PK
Filed under World News
TrendPK.com Brian Kelly Press Conference,Notre Dame Press Conference:Or at least that’s what a lot of you think about Brian Kelly on this Friday.
TrendPK.com Brian Kelly Press Conference,Notre Dame Press Conference:Or at least that’s what a lot of you think about Brian Kelly on this Friday. I’m in South Bend and will attend Kelly’s introductory press conference at Notre Dame. In the meantime, let’s get to some emails on this burning topic:
Mark from Morgantown writes: [...]

