Bill Weinberg

Iraq: Islamo-gangsta rap promotes sectarian cleansing

On the subject of free speech. From The Telegraph, March 5:

Shia musicians in Iraq are raising sectarian tensions by producing "gangsta-rap" songs in which they call for Shias to kill Sunnis.

Propaganda and the Samarra blast

We recently noted that Iran's Ayatollah Ali Khamenei has blamed the US and Israel for the Samarra mosque attack. Now, right on cue, the Iranian armed opposition group Mujadedeen Khalq issues a statement (in the name of its ostensibly civilian wing, the National Council of Resistance) blaming the Iranian regime for the attack! The press release says the group's "president-elect" Maryam Rajavi "strongly condemned Iranian regime's meddling in Iraq and described the Samarra bombing, planned attacks on Sunni mosques, killing of religious leaders, political figures, journalists and others as part of a war that the ruling mullahs in Iran have initiated in Iraq against its people."

Israelis attack Christian shrine

I know some of you out there think "Islam is the problem." But stupidity, it appears, is an equal-opportunity employer. From AP, March 2:

NAZARETH, Israel, March 3 - A distraught Israeli couple entered one of Christianity's holiest sites on Friday and set off a series of small explosions, witnesses said, sparking a large riot that left six people wounded in this Arab town in northern Israel...

Pakistan blocks bloggers

From the BBC, March 3:

Pakistan telecom authorities have blocked several websites inviting people to draw cartoons of the Prophet Muhammad, it has emerged.

NYC: anthrax paranoia dims Hindu Festival of Colors

Once again this year, joyous rituals traditionally held at the celebration of Phagwah, the Hindu Festival of Colors, in the Queens neighborhood of Richmond Hill were proscribed by official paranoia over anthrax attack. From Newsday, March 2:

Anthrax fears have forced organizers of the Phagwah Parade in Queens to curtail the use of powder and water during the festive Hindu celebration in Richmond Hill.

"Farsi" or "Persian"?

Pejman Akbarzadeh, a member of the Tehran chapter of Artists Without Frontiers and the author of a two-volume work on Persian music, writes in response to Melody Zagami's review in our March issue of Nasrin Alavi's book We Are Iran: The Persian Blogs. Akbarzadeh takes issue with Zagami's use of the word "Farsi" rather than "Persian" to denote the language of Iran. He points us to a piece he wrote in December for the Iranian news and culture website Payvand.com entitled "Farsi" or "Persian"?:

British xenophobes distribute Danish cartoons

From the Times of India, March 2:

Britain's far right British National Party (BNP) has handed out thousands of leaflets showing the controversial Danish cartoons of the prophet Mohammed, reports said on Thursday.

US signs nuclear pact with India

From China's The Standard, March 3:

US President George W Bush and Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh Thursday sealed what they hailed as an "historic" nuclear deal, seen as the bedrock of a new strategic partnership.

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