Home Africa Political Comments
Political Comments
Political Comment - Events in Tunisia PDF  | Print |  E-mail

Bismillah al-Rahman al-Raheem

The Political Comment

The Tunisian Prime Minister, Mohammed al-Ghanoushi, formed a new cabinet yesterday after he had inherited the interim throne vacated by the tyrant, Zein el-Abideen, who fled the Islamic lands of Tunisia for good. Zein al-Abideen and his surrogates from among the radical secularists who had embraced the banner of “drying up the sources of Islam”, subjected people to hunger, stripped them of their dignity and fought their Islam with all their might. Their impudence and hatred for Islam and the Muslims drove one of them, namely the minister of religious affairs in the government of Ben Ali, to declare in the Council of Advisors, the second chamber in Tunisia’s parliament, that the “Athan” amounted to “some form of noise pollution”.

Read more...
 
The Splitting of Sudan PDF  | Print |  E-mail

Bismillah al-Rahman al-Raheem

The Political Comment

The leaders of the Sudan People’s Liberation Movement (SPLM) have recently made several statements on the future of Southern Sudan, indicating clearly that Southern Sudan is proceeding towards secession, which is exactly what America has been scheming for. This crime could not have been perpetrated had it not been for the treason of the Sudanese rulers, headed by Omar al-Bashir, and for their collaboration with America. His empty rhetoric of heroism is but a ploy to deceive the Ummah and absorb her anger in Sudan and abroad, and a botched attempt to absolve himself of the blame for adopting on 9 January 2005, together with his cronies, the Naivasha Agreement, which stipulated that the fate of a section of the Muslims’ lands should be put to an independence referendum.

Read more...
 
Sudan and the issue of Darfur PDF  | Print |  E-mail

Bismillahi Al-Rahman Al-Raheem

Political Comment

The Security Council issued on 30th July 2004 a resolution demanding from the government of Sudan to end the issue of Darfur within one month. The United Nations Secretary General had previously signed an agreement with the Sudanese government, giving it three months to end the crisis.  No sooner the resolution was issued, than the French president Jacques Chirac declared that France would deploy its forces in Chad, on the Sudanese/Chadian borders.

Read more...