Constitutionally, freedom of religion is guaranteed. But in reality, conversion out of Islam comes under the ambit of sharia or Islamic courts. And under sharia law, renouncing the Islamic faith is punishable by fines or jail. It isn’t an option.“If Islam were to grant permission for Muslims to change religion at will, it would imply it has no dignity, no self-esteem,” said Wan Azhar Wan Ahmad, senior fellow at Malaysia’s Institute of Islamic Understanding
From the monthly archives:
August 2006
Malaysia Awaits Nervously
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Al-Bashir Urges Support To Unity Government
He said that the peace agreements which were signed in Sudan have ended the war and paved the way for peace, security and development.He stressed the importance of the unity of rank and stance as well as adherence to love, accord and peace between the Sudanese people.
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Attacks Stopped Thanks To Muslim Tip
My whole family and I are very happy that the “infidel” authorities together with Pakistani intelligence stopped this evil plan. Anyone who supports or even sympathizes with such insane people disgusts me. If you’re offended by my previous sentence then you can gladly click that “X” on the top right corner of the screen. Moreover if you can, please shoot yourself. We don’t need your types on this earth.
Back to hitting the books again. Tons of assignments to submit this Monday.
PS: Dear Muslims, I would like you to know that I’m not a fan of Bush nor do I like current US foreign policy. However what the “West’s bombs” are doing to us, is NOT an excuse for terrorism. It’s simply not. The Iraq War and continuous Israeli atrocities committed against our brothers and sisters certainly contribute to breeding more terrorists BUT they are NOT the root cause. Extremist interpretations of Islam are. We MUST direct our efforts within our own communities to stop this culture of hate. We MUST revive back the true meaning of Islam. (Ya I know shocking to all you anti-Islam and anti-Muhammad people out there)!
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What Happens After October?
The AU mission costs just under $40 million a month to run, but in order to do the job properly the AU also asked for more equipment like attack helicopters.
U.N. officials said without additional funding, almost 3.6 million Darfuris could see a period where troops were withdrawn or unable to work to deter rape, murder and pillage in Sudan’s remote west.
And it’s good because it will become a turning point in negotiations between the Khartoum government and the UN. I believe it’s highly possible that the head banging between Bashir and Kofi Anan will stop. That’s badly needed at this time. The best solution remains reinforcing the current AU troops.
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Sudanese Sand Monsters
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Sudan & Chad Normalize Relations
The only rebel leader to have signed onto a peace deal for Darfur was sworn in Monday 7 August as a senior aide to the Sudanese president. Menawi said that his assumption to the position [The Senior Assistant of the President and Chairman of the Interim Regional Authority in Darfur] was marking the start to implement Darfur peace agreement on the ground.Minawi said that his work priorities include the handling of the humanitarian situation, support to the return of the refugees and displaced people to their villages and towns, rehabilitation of the war-affected areas as well as the improvement of services in Darfur.
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It’s Funny How X Wants To Look Like Y & Y Wants To Look Like X
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Sudanese Stupidity & Hypocrisy
Before you is the stupid effect of Pan-Arabism. Pictured above is a demonstration in Khartoum voicing support for Hezbollah. You can notice some holding up pictures of Nasrallah. At the top right corner the sign reads “Shahada Shahada Shahada (martydom)” and the one left to it reads “Lebanon is the enemy’s graveyard”. The big blue banner roughly reads “Sudan’s youth (top). We are all Shia against the invaders (yellow and orange). National Congress (bottom).” Question, since when did we become Shia? Gee never mind, don’t even get me started with the stupid and ignorant Sunni Saudi fatwa labeling Shias as infidels and devil followers. { 8 comments }
Excellent Article About Sudan In the Economist
Aug 3, 2006 (KHARTOUM) — The conversations tend to be very different, but very predictable, when Khartoum’s bourgeoisie gathers for espressos and croissants at the trendy new Ozone café. Americans and Europeans, mostly aid-workers, swap horror stories about the latest depredations in Darfur, Sudan’s war-ravaged western region, or bemoan southern Sudan’s “lack of capacity”. At the Sudanese tables, however, Arab men, and often women, josh about their city’s brand-new traffic lights, which most still ignore, share information about new government privatisations and greet old friends who have returned to live in the Sudanese capital after years abroad.
Both views of Sudan, Africa’s largest country, are valid. It is just that the Western focus on Darfur, where about 2m people are living in refugee camps as the result of a still unresolved war in the region, has obscured another fact about Sudan: the country is booming. With low inflation, GDP growth of 8% in 2005 and 13% projected by the IMF this year, Sudan is one of the fastest-growing economies in Africa. Furthermore, this success has been achieved despite the fact that the country has been subject to American sanctions since 1986, the year that the IMF ended financial assistance to the country.
Oil undoubtedly plays a big part in this boom, accounting for about 80% of the country’s exports, but it does not explain all the gains. Indeed, the IMF has given guarded praise to the policies initiated by Sudan’s government to liberalise the economy. It is not the kind of attention that the Islamist regime in Khartoum, accused of genocide by America for its actions in Darfur, is accustomed to.
Oil, structural adjustments that began in 1998 and the relative political stability that followed the signing of a peace deal with rebels in the south last year are encouraging foreign investment, particularly from China and the Gulf states. More needs to be done to tackle corruption and eliminate stifling regulations, yet new economic opportunities are enticing thousands of the country’s rich and educated diaspora to return. More and more, Sudan’s ruling National Congress Party is toning down its hitherto robust Islamist language; the new emphasis is on economic development.
However, it is almost exclusively the Arab heart of the country that is benefiting from the boom. Nearly $3 billion of foreign direct investment has come to Sudan, but well over half of it has gone to the capital and its hinterland. In the past year hotels, telecoms companies, light industries and even a Thai massage parlour have opened in a city that is still nominally ruled by sharia law.
The development that most epitomises Khartoum’s new dynamism is Alsunut. Meaning “point of meeting” in Arabic, this behemoth of a residential and office project is now under construction on 65 hectares (160 acres) of land where the Blue and White Niles converge. The $4 billion project, the result of a public-private partnership between the government and DAL Group, Sudan’s leading company, will transform the city by adding 63 towers varying between 15 and 35 floors in height. Over half the office space has already been sold to local and foreign companies.
However, for all the new prosperity in Khartoum, evidence of the boom outside the capital is hard to find. Progress towards improving the lot of the majority of poor Sudanese is plodding. For most people, electricity is still rare and most schools still hold classes under trees.
And, crucially, Sudan’s improved economic outlook has not had any discernible impact on the mainly Christian and animist south. Hundreds of thousands of displaced southern Sudanese are leaving their refugee camps in the north and returning to what remains one of the poorest areas in Africa. Indeed, the pace of recovery in the south is so slow that some aid agencies report that villagers have started throwing sticks and stones at their passing convoys as a form of protest.
The inequitable distribution of the country’s wealth has always been a large factor in stoking rebellions in the south, in Darfur and in the east against the central government in Khartoum. If that remains true of this current boom-which may last only as long as the high price of oil-it will be a huge missed opportunity to reduce some of the inequalities that still threaten to pull the country apart, with disastrous consequences for all Sudanese.
(The Economist)
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Amarji: The Reason I Don’t Criticize Israel!
The establishment of the State of Israel has always been quite problematic for us, but our reaction to its establishment has been far more problematic and costly, and has only helped Israel become more powerful and us more weak. Meanwhile, Israel’s international backers made quite sure that its military adventures did not impinge on its ability to develop itself, its infrastructure and its economy. We, on the other hand, have only our internal resources to rely on, and they will have to suffice. For this reason, the greed and ineptness of our ruling elites need to be combated. Much has been squandered already with little to show for it, in most cases. It is about time we held our ruling elites accountable for their disastrous performance over the last few decades. It is about time we set our priorities right. Freedom from internal oppression and development should come first. Our campaign to retrieve our occupied land could and should run concurrently with that, but it should not come at the expense of that.
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Pathetically Drowned In Anti-Semitism
I decided to play a little game so I was like:
Friend: Ya very funny
Me: No seriously, it does and that’s why he sings about Zion and he praises it.
Friend: Silence…
Me: That’s why Rastafaris also style their hair similarly to how religious Jews and Rabbis do.
Friend: Still silent with a puzzled look.
Me: Yup, check this video. Look at the Star of Zion on Damien Marley’s jacket.
Friend: SHOCKED! Switch off this sh*t! I ain’t listening to this bullsh*t anymore!! Man, f*ck Bob Marely.
Me: Laughing out loudly.
Friend: What’s so funny man? Do you actually find it funny? Man, you should be against everything related to them.
Me: Oh well in that case, throw away your PC since it contains an Intel processor. Stop eating Pizza Hut. Stop drinking Pepsi. Stop using your Yahoo mail. Stop buying petrol from Shell. Stop taking your medication. Basically stop everything because all these multi-national companies have Jewish shareholders benefiting from your money. Gee you evil monster, giving your money so the evil Jooooz can use it to kill our Muslim brothers and sisters in Lebanon and Palestine. (Me jokingly giving him a dirty and disappointed look)
Friend: Man, whatever you f*cking Jew.
You know I really don’t mind complaining. It’s human nature to complain. Hell, even I like to complain… but just complaining alone 24/7 and doing nothing else? Grrr that’s just plain dumb and stooooooooopid. Blinded by hatred indeed he is. When are we going to stop the habbit of criticising what we don’t like without even feeling the need to criticize ourselves too.
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Malcolm X (1925-1965)
Malcolm X is much misunderstood for his comment he made after the assassination of John F. Kennedy: “The chickens have come to roost.” After the media published this remark and interpreted it to be meant for Kennedy, Malcolm X insisted to his friends that he meant something different. Osman, who was a close contact of Malcolm during that time, says in a recent interview, “Malcolm X did not mean to applaud Kennedy’s death. Far from it. He meant only that you harvest what you sow, that Kennedy was the victim of the racist extremism that pervaded the nation.” (Paul Findley, “silent no more”).
After his coming back from the pilgrimage and re-discovery of Islam, Malcolm now completely detached himself from Nation of Islam and took up his work again for the civil rights of African-Americans, but now as an orthodox non-racist Muslim. But the new Malcolm hardly started his task when a spray of bullets ended his bright future as a powerful Muslim leader of America while he was giving a speech in Audubon Ballroom in Harlem. He was only 40.
“If I can die having brought any light, having exposed any meaningful truth that will help to destroy the racist cancer that is malignant in the body of America, then all credit is due to Allah. Only the mistakes have been mine.”- Malcolm X (quoted by Paul Findley, “silent no more”).
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It’s CHINA people!!
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The “Labeling” War
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A Reply To Michael Herzog
Why should Sudan be held together? Why not let it split along its natural fault lines?
After all, have not “anti-colonialists” been telling us over and over again that the borders in Africa were drawn by them evil European powers without regard for conditions on the ground?
Why not rectify some of this when an opportunity presents itself?
Drima’s cherished Ingrid Jones is little more than a particulary articulate spokesperson for a continuation of Arab Nile Valley domestic imperialism in Sudan.
Rebels are no angels either? Deplorable, but hardly a surprise. (Garang’s record, too, was quite a bit stained.) But this doesn’t affect the basic legitimacy of their cause. did the Apartheid regime of South Africa become any more legitimate because much of the ANC were unsavory people?
Not as simple as Arab-African? When you look at the micro-level, that’s certainly true; there’s always some blurring of lines on the ground. However, with regard to the big picture this description of the conflict line is valid. What’s more, it’s increasingly incorporated into the view Darfurians themselves have of the conflict.
Michael Herzog
Here’s what I had to say:
Michael, interesting comment. Well where do I even begin?
You seem to have me all “figured out”. I’m guessing you’re new to this blog and haven’t read much of my old posts.
First of all who said anything about holding Sudan together dude?
Secondly, I do support the rebels’ in principle but not in the unethical ways they’ve carried out their rebelion. Politically I’m with them simply because I’m against the current ruling regime and I want democracy. However and it’s a very big however, if you want to talk about Darfur from a humanitarian perspective, then I’m against both the Khartoum government and the rebels as both were involved in sick atrocities committed against innocent civilians.
Thirdly, when I was talking about people in power being ex-rebels, I was merely wishing that power would come to those who deserve it through elections and not having them grab it by the gun. Makes sense so far?
Fourthly, how do you even come to the conclusion that the description of the conflict is valid? How? From the lovely “accurate” media? The description of a genocide raged by Arabs against Africans is retarded, even when looking at it from the big picture. A genocide is an aggression committed by an ethnic group against another with the intent of wiping it out. Do you really think the Khartoum government is interested in carrying out a so called genocide against people in Darfur and why now? This also brings us to the question of how do you define an Arab and an African in Sudan? How? By basing it on the color of skin? Is it because Darfurians are generally a little darker than northerners? If yes then that’s absolutely ridiculous. It’s not about skin color or being an Arab or African. In an ethnic sense this is about tribes and tribal alliances. In a political sense it’s corrupted Bashir and the gang against rebels from impoverished Darfur who were inspired by the victory of the SPLM. Makes sense so far?
Fifthly, you should feel sorry for yourself because of your ignorant, stupid and sarcastic comment regarding Ingrid Jones being a spokesperson for Arab imperialism in Sudan when you yourself clearly lack proper knowledge of what’s going on in my country. Not agreeing with her opinion is one thing but trying to throw sarcastic comments and insults is another. It shows what kind of stuck up character you possess.
Lastly, next time you drop by, face me with a proper argument rather than dropping random sarcastic questions here and there.
Alright Michael? Good day!
Thank you to the great corporate media. I love you and I hate you. I love you for bringing Darfur to the world’s attention and I hate you for exagerating it at the same time. Ah the irony. If it wasn’t for the latter, the former wouldn’t be possible would it?
Too much exageration causes frustration. Lovely right? Bleh whatever!
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SudaneseThinker
SudaneseThinker



