[ppi] [ppiindia] Re: sebaiknya jangan dipanasi oleh oknum 2/ tertentu, gunakan pencarian kebenaran

** Milis Nasional Indonesia ppi-india **
  
Mario Gagho
Political Science,
Agra University, India

---------------------------------
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Date: Wed, 31 Mar 2004 01:23:11 -0000
Subject: [ppiindia] Re: sebaiknya jangan dipanasi oleh oknum 2/ tertentu, 
gunakan  pencarian kebenaran
Reply-To: ppiindia@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
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Soal putar memutar balikkan kebenaran adalah keahlian para intel AS,=20
Inggris dan Israel......Semuanya demi tujuan mereka (the end=20
justifies the means...) Malah kan masih ada yang penasaran, jjangan-
jangan peristiwa 9/11 di WTC itu conspiracy Israel dan USA=20
sendiri ....
Lha Israel yang terang2 adalah negara terror oleh USA dibiarkan saja,=20
malah dia memveto resolusi DK yang akan mengutuk Isral. How can we=20
trust the US with all its lies, deception and flip=3Dflpos????
Tapi, kita harus asabar dan tawakkal ...


--- In ppiindia@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx, "peace" <hutan007@xxxx> wrote:
>=20
>   sangat diperlukan untuk menggunakan penyuplaian informasi Islam=20
> sebab mengapa seandainya adanya pejuang dikatakan teroris yang=20
> menyerang Uzbekistan adalah salah satu negara Islam.=20
>=20
>   Bisa mengalihkan perhatian umat umat ke arah tidak perlu atau=20
> sebagai bebeapa alasan perlu diwaspadai.
>=20
>  Ini perlu diwaspada kalau ada oknum (intelijin Israel, al q0eda,=20
Us,=20
> irak dll) yang ingin merusak citra tertentu, dan perlu digunakan=20
> penyuplaian informasi kebenaran dan kesadaran yang benar pada umat=20
> umat bangsa di sana.=20
>=20
>   Teror tersebut terjadi di Uzbekistan diharapkan tidak=20
> mempersulitkan proses perdamaian di Irak, Palestina yang=20
berlangsung.
>=20
> semoga ada yang turut membantu menciptakan perdamaian, kebenaran=20
dan=20
> keadilan di sana.
>=20
>=20
> wassalam,
>=20
>=20
>=20=20=20
> -----------------------------------------------------
> At Least 23 Killed in Uzbekistan Clashes=20=20=20=20
>=20
> TASHKENT, Uzbekistan - Police and military clashed with suspected=20
> terrorists, including three female suicide bombers, and 23 people=20
> were killed in a third day of violence Tuesday that rattled the=20
Uzbek=20
> capital during a sweep to round up Islamic militants, witnesses and=20
> authorities said.=20
>=20
> Government forces besieged an apartment building near the=20
> presidential residence in northern Tashkent for nearly five hours=20
> after confronting the suicide bombers. Gunfire and explosions were=20
> heard throughout the day.=20
>=20
> Attacks on Sunday and Monday had killed another 19 people and=20
wounded=20
> 26 in the worst unrest in this majority Muslim country since the=20
> secular government became a staunch U.S. ally after the Sept. 11,=20
> 2001, attacks. Uzbekistan hosts hundreds of U.S. troops at a=20
tightly=20
> secured military base near the Afghan border.=20
>=20
> Tuesday's violence was centered in the northern Yalangach=20
> neighborhood, near the official home of President Islam Karimov. An=20
> Associated Press reporter saw four separate sites of fighting in=20
the=20
> district.=20
>=20
> The Interior Ministry said in a statement read on state-run TV that=20
> 20 terrorists and three police were killed in the confrontations=20
that=20
> began about 7:20 a.m. Another five police were wounded, the=20
statement=20
> said.=20
>=20
> The statement did not say how long the operation lasted, but=20
> witnesses indicated it ended after several hours.=20
>=20
> The militants blew themselves up with homemade explosives while=20
> police tried to arrest them, the ministry said, without=20
elaborating.=20
> It said the investigation was continuing.=20
>=20
> Police stopped a small car and two alleged terrorists jumped out=20
and=20
> detonated explosive-laden belts, killing themselves and three=20
police=20
> officers and injuring five more policemen, said a National Security=20
> Service officer at the scene who declined to give his name.=20
>=20
> In a separate nearby bombing, neighborhood resident Farida=20
> Raupkhajayeva said four women in a red car had driven up to a=20
police=20
> checkpoint. One of the women, dressed entirely in black, got out of=20
> the car and approached a bus that was stopped there, Raupkhajayeva=20
> said.=20
>=20
> When she ignored a police request to stop, they shot her in the=20
legs,=20
> then she set off a bomb, said Raupkhajayeva, 50. The other three=20
> women then ran into an apartment building, where police began the=20
> nearly five-hour standoff with the suspects.=20
>=20
> An Interior Ministry officer said 16 suspected terrorists =97 11 men=20
> and five women =97 had been killed in the apartment building about=20
100=20
> yards away from the suicide bombing site. Some had been shot by=20
> police but others killed themselves with grenades, said the=20
officer,=20
> who refused to give his name.=20
>=20
> An AP reporter saw five corpses on a sidewalk outside the building.=20
> Police investigators and plainclothes security officers with=20
> Kalashnikov assault rifles milled about as a white-coated medical=20
> official put the bodies on stretchers.=20
>=20
> Five men escaped, said a building resident who refused to give her=20
> name. She said the women in the car were wearing hijab veils, only=20
> revealing their eyes, which is rare in secular Uzbekistan. She said=20
> they were speaking another Central Asian language she could not=20
> understand.=20
>=20
> A house several hundred yards away showed signs of heavy fighting,=20
> its walls blackened by fire and pocked by dozens of bullet holes.=20
> Neighbors who were cleaning up charred books and other debris said=20
> four young men had been killed inside the house and that none of=20
its=20
> regular residents had been home at the time of the shootout.=20
>=20
> It was unclear whether the four were among the 16 dead the Interior=20
> Ministry officer said had been killed in the siege.=20
>=20
> Foreign Ministry spokesman Ilkhom Zakirov said empty trucks and an=20
> armored personnel carrier were used to block the route to Karimov's=20
> residence.=20
>=20
> Security was increased across the city, with soldiers on patrol and=20
> hotels deploying metal detectors and not allowing vehicles to=20
> approach. Soldiers with dogs patrolled the airport, but flights=20
> continued.=20
>=20
> Several security operations were under way in Tashkent and the=20
> surrounding area Tuesday, said Svetlana Atikova, spokeswoman for=20
the=20
> prosecutor-general's office, without elaborating.=20
>=20
> Authorities turned off water, gas and electricity in the district=20
> where Tuesday's attacks occurred, and residents were forced to cook=20
> their evening meals over wood fires in the streets.=20
>=20
> The lack of official information led to fear and confusion.=20
>=20
> "I don't understand who is killing whom. We learn about things only=20
> from rumors and we panic," said Faya Vaganova, a 47-year-old=20
> resident.=20
>=20
> The violence has left at least 40 dead since Sunday evening in a=20
> series of clashes between militants and police, as well as an=20
> explosion at a bomb-making hideaway.=20
>=20
> The violence began Sunday night with a blast that killed 10 people=20
at=20
> a house used by alleged terrorists in the central region of=20
Bukhara,=20
> Prosecutor-General Rashid Kadyrov said.=20
>=20
> Police found materials for bombs and instructions on assembling=20
them,=20
> a Kalashnikov rifle, two pistols, ammunition and extremist Islamic=20
> literature, he said.=20
>=20
> The two assaults on police took place at a factory Sunday night and=20
a=20
> traffic checkpoint early Monday. Three officers were killed.=20
>=20
> The suicide bombings, carried out 30 minutes apart Monday at a bus=20
> stop and the Children's World store in Tashkent's Old City, killed=20
> three police and a young child, in addition to the two female=20
> attackers, Kadyrov said.=20
>=20
> They were the first suicide bombings ever reported in the five=20
> Central Asian nations once ruled by the Soviet Union, which also=20
> include Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan and Turkmenistan.=20
>=20
> Karimov has blamed the violence on Islamic extremists, and said=20
> several arrests had been made.=20
>=20
> Karimov said Monday that backing for the attacks might have come=20
from=20
> a banned radical group that has never before been linked to=20
terrorist=20
> acts =97 Hizb ut-Tahrir, or the Party of Liberation. The group denied=20
> involvement.=20
>=20
> Russian President Vladimir Putin (news - web sites) offered=20
> condolences to Karimov in a telephone conversation Tuesday, and the=20
> two discussed cooperating "in fighting terrorism."=20
>=20
> All the attacks appeared targeted at authorities, including the=20
> suicide bombings =97 the first of which was timed for when police=20
> normally gather outside the children's store for their daily=20
morning=20
> briefing.=20
>=20
> Karimov alleged the attacks were planned six to eight months ago,=20
and=20
> said the organization and funding required to carry out such=20
attacks=20
> also indicated they had outside support.=20
>=20
> Raupkhajayeva said Tuesday's violence belied Karimov's statements a=20
> day earlier that the situation was stable.=20
>=20
> "Yesterday, Karimov said everything was fine in Uzbekistan and=20
today=20
> it is happening again," Raupkhajayeva said. "We are afraid. We are=20
> afraid there will still be more."=20
>=20
> The violence was the most serious in Tashkent since a bombings in=20
> February 1999 that killed 16 allegedly targeting the president.=20
>=20
> Uzbek authorities claim Hizb ut-Tahrir is a breeding ground for=20
> terrorists and have sought so far unsuccessfully to have Washington=20
> label it a terrorist group.=20
>=20
> Imram Waheed, a Hizb ut-Tahrir spokesman in London, said his=20
> group "has wide support throughout Uzbekistan and Central Asia and=20
> the government ... is trying to dent that support and malign the=20
> organization by linking it with these terrorist acts.=20
>=20
> "There is a history of the government orchestrating such=20
(terrorist)=20
> activities in the past," he said, saying evidence suggested a=20
> government link to the 1999 Tashkent bombing. "We feel the=20
government=20
> would have no qualms in undertaking such actions, killing=20
civilians."=20
>=20
> Uzbekistan's tiny opposition, banned by Karimov's authoritarian=20
> regime from working openly, fears the attacks will deepen a=20
> widespread crackdown against dissent and independent Islamic=20
mosques.=20
> Thousands have been jailed, drawing international condemnation.=20
>=20
> New York-based Human Rights Watch released a new report March 24=20
> documenting the government's campaign of religious persecution,=20
> including torture and arrests of people engaged in legitimate=20
> religious activity.


--FFwItj1soJjca6BrU-FYlcNXH90EGnP3nd30ZH6
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<html><body>


<tt>
Soal putar memutar balikkan kebenaran adalah keahlian para intel AS, <BR>
Inggris dan Israel......Semuanya demi tujuan mereka (the end <BR>
justifies the means...) Malah kan masih ada yang penasaran, jjangan-<BR>
jangan peristiwa 9/11 di WTC itu conspiracy Israel dan USA <BR>
sendiri ....<BR>
Lha Israel yang terang2 adalah negara terror oleh USA dibiarkan saja, <BR>
malah dia memveto resolusi DK yang akan mengutuk Isral. How can we <BR>
trust the US with all its lies, deception and flip=3Dflpos????<BR>
Tapi, kita harus asabar dan tawakkal ...<BR>
<BR>
<BR>
--- In ppiindia@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx, &quot;peace&quot; &lt;hutan007@xxxx&gt; wr=
ote:<BR>
&gt; <BR>
&gt;&nbsp;&nbsp; sangat diperlukan untuk menggunakan penyuplaian informasi =
Islam <BR>
&gt; sebab mengapa seandainya adanya pejuang dikatakan teroris yang <BR>
&gt; menyerang Uzbekistan adalah salah satu negara Islam. <BR>
&gt; <BR>
&gt;&nbsp;&nbsp; Bisa mengalihkan perhatian umat umat ke arah tidak perlu a=
tau <BR>
&gt; sebagai bebeapa alasan perlu diwaspadai.<BR>
&gt; <BR>
&gt;&nbsp; Ini perlu diwaspada kalau ada oknum (intelijin Israel, al q0eda,=
 <BR>
Us, <BR>
&gt; irak dll) yang ingin merusak citra tertentu, dan perlu digunakan <BR>
&gt; penyuplaian informasi kebenaran dan kesadaran yang benar pada umat <BR=
>
&gt; umat bangsa di sana. <BR>
&gt; <BR>
&gt;&nbsp;&nbsp; Teror tersebut terjadi di Uzbekistan diharapkan tidak <BR>
&gt; mempersulitkan proses perdamaian di Irak, Palestina yang <BR>
berlangsung.<BR>
&gt; <BR>
&gt; semoga ada yang turut membantu menciptakan perdamaian, kebenaran <BR>
dan <BR>
&gt; keadilan di sana.<BR>
&gt; <BR>
&gt; <BR>
&gt; wassalam,<BR>
&gt; <BR>
&gt; <BR>
&gt;&nbsp;&nbsp; <BR>
&gt; -----------------------------------------------------<BR>
&gt; At Least 23 Killed in Uzbekistan Clashes&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <BR>
&gt; <BR>
&gt; TASHKENT, Uzbekistan - Police and military clashed with suspected <BR>
&gt; terrorists, including three female suicide bombers, and 23 people <BR>
&gt; were killed in a third day of violence Tuesday that rattled the <BR>
Uzbek <BR>
&gt; capital during a sweep to round up Islamic militants, witnesses and <B=
R>
&gt; authorities said. <BR>
&gt; <BR>
&gt; Government forces besieged an apartment building near the <BR>
&gt; presidential residence in northern Tashkent for nearly five hours <BR>
&gt; after confronting the suicide bombers. Gunfire and explosions were <BR=
>
&gt; heard throughout the day. <BR>
&gt; <BR>
&gt; Attacks on Sunday and Monday had killed another 19 people and <BR>
wounded <BR>
&gt; 26 in the worst unrest in this majority Muslim country since the <BR>
&gt; secular government became a staunch U.S. ally after the Sept. 11, <BR>
&gt; 2001, attacks. Uzbekistan hosts hundreds of U.S. troops at a <BR>
tightly <BR>
&gt; secured military base near the Afghan border. <BR>
&gt; <BR>
&gt; Tuesday's violence was centered in the northern Yalangach <BR>
&gt; neighborhood, near the official home of President Islam Karimov. An <B=
R>
&gt; Associated Press reporter saw four separate sites of fighting in <BR>
the <BR>
&gt; district. <BR>
&gt; <BR>
&gt; The Interior Ministry said in a statement read on state-run TV that <B=
R>
&gt; 20 terrorists and three police were killed in the confrontations <BR>
that <BR>
&gt; began about 7:20 a.m. Another five police were wounded, the <BR>
statement <BR>
&gt; said. <BR>
&gt; <BR>
&gt; The statement did not say how long the operation lasted, but <BR>
&gt; witnesses indicated it ended after several hours. <BR>
&gt; <BR>
&gt; The militants blew themselves up with homemade explosives while <BR>
&gt; police tried to arrest them, the ministry said, without <BR>
elaborating. <BR>
&gt; It said the investigation was continuing. <BR>
&gt; <BR>
&gt; Police stopped a small car and two alleged terrorists jumped out <BR>
and <BR>
&gt; detonated explosive-laden belts, killing themselves and three <BR>
police <BR>
&gt; officers and injuring five more policemen, said a National Security <B=
R>
&gt; Service officer at the scene who declined to give his name. <BR>
&gt; <BR>
&gt; In a separate nearby bombing, neighborhood resident Farida <BR>
&gt; Raupkhajayeva said four women in a red car had driven up to a <BR>
police <BR>
&gt; checkpoint. One of the women, dressed entirely in black, got out of <B=
R>
&gt; the car and approached a bus that was stopped there, Raupkhajayeva <BR=
>
&gt; said. <BR>
&gt; <BR>
&gt; When she ignored a police request to stop, they shot her in the <BR>
legs, <BR>
&gt; then she set off a bomb, said Raupkhajayeva, 50. The other three <BR>
&gt; women then ran into an apartment building, where police began the <BR>
&gt; nearly five-hour standoff with the suspects. <BR>
&gt; <BR>
&gt; An Interior Ministry officer said 16 suspected terrorists =97 11 men <=
BR>
&gt; and five women =97 had been killed in the apartment building about <BR=
>
100 <BR>
&gt; yards away from the suicide bombing site. Some had been shot by <BR>
&gt; police but others killed themselves with grenades, said the <BR>
officer, <BR>
&gt; who refused to give his name. <BR>
&gt; <BR>
&gt; An AP reporter saw five corpses on a sidewalk outside the building. <B=
R>
&gt; Police investigators and plainclothes security officers with <BR>
&gt; Kalashnikov assault rifles milled about as a white-coated medical <BR>
&gt; official put the bodies on stretchers. <BR>
&gt; <BR>
&gt; Five men escaped, said a building resident who refused to give her <BR=
>
&gt; name. She said the women in the car were wearing hijab veils, only <BR=
>
&gt; revealing their eyes, which is rare in secular Uzbekistan. She said <B=
R>
&gt; they were speaking another Central Asian language she could not <BR>
&gt; understand. <BR>
&gt; <BR>
&gt; A house several hundred yards away showed signs of heavy fighting, <BR=
>
&gt; its walls blackened by fire and pocked by dozens of bullet holes. <BR>
&gt; Neighbors who were cleaning up charred books and other debris said <BR=
>
&gt; four young men had been killed inside the house and that none of <BR>
its <BR>
&gt; regular residents had been home at the time of the shootout. <BR>
&gt; <BR>
&gt; It was unclear whether the four were among the 16 dead the Interior <B=
R>
&gt; Ministry officer said had been killed in the siege. <BR>
&gt; <BR>
&gt; Foreign Ministry spokesman Ilkhom Zakirov said empty trucks and an <BR=
>
&gt; armored personnel carrier were used to block the route to Karimov's <B=
R>
&gt; residence. <BR>
&gt; <BR>
&gt; Security was increased across the city, with soldiers on patrol and <B=
R>
&gt; hotels deploying metal detectors and not allowing vehicles to <BR>
&gt; approach. Soldiers with dogs patrolled the airport, but flights <BR>
&gt; continued. <BR>
&gt; <BR>
&gt; Several security operations were under way in Tashkent and the <BR>
&gt; surrounding area Tuesday, said Svetlana Atikova, spokeswoman for <BR>
the <BR>
&gt; prosecutor-general's office, without elaborating. <BR>
&gt; <BR>
&gt; Authorities turned off water, gas and electricity in the district <BR>
&gt; where Tuesday's attacks occurred, and residents were forced to cook <B=
R>
&gt; their evening meals over wood fires in the streets. <BR>
&gt; <BR>
&gt; The lack of official information led to fear and confusion. <BR>
&gt; <BR>
&gt; &quot;I don't understand who is killing whom. We learn about things on=
ly <BR>
&gt; from rumors and we panic,&quot; said Faya Vaganova, a 47-year-old <BR>
&gt; resident. <BR>
&gt; <BR>
&gt; The violence has left at least 40 dead since Sunday evening in a <BR>
&gt; series of clashes between militants and police, as well as an <BR>
&gt; explosion at a bomb-making hideaway. <BR>
&gt; <BR>
&gt; The violence began Sunday night with a blast that killed 10 people <BR=
>
at <BR>
&gt; a house used by alleged terrorists in the central region of <BR>
Bukhara, <BR>
&gt; Prosecutor-General Rashid Kadyrov said. <BR>
&gt; <BR>
&gt; Police found materials for bombs and instructions on assembling <BR>
them, <BR>
&gt; a Kalashnikov rifle, two pistols, ammunition and extremist Islamic <BR=
>
&gt; literature, he said. <BR>
&gt; <BR>
&gt; The two assaults on police took place at a factory Sunday night and <B=
R>
a <BR>
&gt; traffic checkpoint early Monday. Three officers were killed. <BR>
&gt; <BR>
&gt; The suicide bombings, carried out 30 minutes apart Monday at a bus <BR=
>
&gt; stop and the Children's World store in Tashkent's Old City, killed <BR=
>
&gt; three police and a young child, in addition to the two female <BR>
&gt; attackers, Kadyrov said. <BR>
&gt; <BR>
&gt; They were the first suicide bombings ever reported in the five <BR>
&gt; Central Asian nations once ruled by the Soviet Union, which also <BR>
&gt; include Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan and Turkmenistan. <BR>
&gt; <BR>
&gt; Karimov has blamed the violence on Islamic extremists, and said <BR>
&gt; several arrests had been made. <BR>
&gt; <BR>
&gt; Karimov said Monday that backing for the attacks might have come <BR>
from <BR>
&gt; a banned radical group that has never before been linked to <BR>
terrorist <BR>
&gt; acts =97 Hizb ut-Tahrir, or the Party of Liberation. The group denied =
<BR>
&gt; involvement. <BR>
&gt; <BR>
&gt; Russian President Vladimir Putin (news - web sites) offered <BR>
&gt; condolences to Karimov in a telephone conversation Tuesday, and the <B=
R>
&gt; two discussed cooperating &quot;in fighting terrorism.&quot; <BR>
&gt; <BR>
&gt; All the attacks appeared targeted at authorities, including the <BR>
&gt; suicide bombings =97 the first of which was timed for when police <BR>
&gt; normally gather outside the children's store for their daily <BR>
morning <BR>
&gt; briefing. <BR>
&gt; <BR>
&gt; Karimov alleged the attacks were planned six to eight months ago, <BR>
and <BR>
&gt; said the organization and funding required to carry out such <BR>
attacks <BR>
&gt; also indicated they had outside support. <BR>
&gt; <BR>
&gt; Raupkhajayeva said Tuesday's violence belied Karimov's statements a <B=
R>
&gt; day earlier that the situation was stable. <BR>
&gt; <BR>
&gt; &quot;Yesterday, Karimov said everything was fine in Uzbekistan and <B=
R>
today <BR>
&gt; it is happening again,&quot; Raupkhajayeva said. &quot;We are afraid. =
We are <BR>
&gt; afraid there will still be more.&quot; <BR>
&gt; <BR>
&gt; The violence was the most serious in Tashkent since a bombings in <BR>
&gt; February 1999 that killed 16 allegedly targeting the president. <BR>
&gt; <BR>
&gt; Uzbek authorities claim Hizb ut-Tahrir is a breeding ground for <BR>
&gt; terrorists and have sought so far unsuccessfully to have Washington <B=
R>
&gt; label it a terrorist group. <BR>
&gt; <BR>
&gt; Imram Waheed, a Hizb ut-Tahrir spokesman in London, said his <BR>
&gt; group &quot;has wide support throughout Uzbekistan and Central Asia an=
d <BR>
&gt; the government ... is trying to dent that support and malign the <BR>
&gt; organization by linking it with these terrorist acts. <BR>
&gt; <BR>
&gt; &quot;There is a history of the government orchestrating such <BR>
(terrorist) <BR>
&gt; activities in the past,&quot; he said, saying evidence suggested a <BR=
>
&gt; government link to the 1999 Tashkent bombing. &quot;We feel the <BR>
government <BR>
&gt; would have no qualms in undertaking such actions, killing <BR>
civilians.&quot; <BR>
&gt; <BR>
&gt; Uzbekistan's tiny opposition, banned by Karimov's authoritarian <BR>
&gt; regime from working openly, fears the attacks will deepen a <BR>
&gt; widespread crackdown against dissent and independent Islamic <BR>
mosques. <BR>
&gt; Thousands have been jailed, drawing international condemnation. <BR>
&gt; <BR>
&gt; New York-based Human Rights Watch released a new report March 24 <BR>
&gt; documenting the government's campaign of religious persecution, <BR>
&gt; including torture and arrests of people engaged in legitimate <BR>
&gt; religious activity.<BR>
<BR>
</tt>

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