- While Iraq has accused the mythical Abu Musab al-Zarqawi
and of course Al Qaida of carrying out coordinated car bombings at churches
in Iraq that killed at least 11 people on Sunday, Muslim leaders and Iraqis
voiced a different opinion that being that both the US and Israeli agents
which are operating inside have both the motive and the wreckless disregard
for human life to perpetrate the actions.
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- A group calling itself the "Planning and Follow-up
Committee in Iraq" claimed responsible for the attacks on a website
registered to an US host on Monday. The authenticity of the claim could
not be verified.
- .
- The car bombs, not martyrdom operations but remote controlled
explosions, hit at least five churches, including four in Baghdad and killed
at least 11 people and wounded 55 others. The police defused two more bombs
outside other churches, one in Baghdad and the other in Mosul.
-
- I spoke with locals following the blast at one of the
Syrian Catholic Church in Baghdad on Monday. This is not Muslims this is
the Americans and the Jew peoplesaid Jassem Ali Ahmad, a local merchant.
The Muslims and the Christians have always lived in peace in Iraq. We would
not hurt them. This is the American dogs trying to stir up trouble so they
can keep their troops here to steal our oil and keep us living under their
occupationhe said. First Saddam and now the Americans. The Americans are
worse. They will do anything to our people. They dont care about Iraqis.he
added.
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- Iraqi Sunni and Shiite religious leaders Monday denounced
the bombing as criminal acts aimed at undermining Iraqi unity.
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- "We condemn these attacks regardless of the party
standing behind them," said Mohammed Bashar al-Faidi, spokesman for
the Muslim Ulemas in Iraq which is the highest Sunni religious authority.
-
- Al-Faidi denied allegations the church bombings might
be linked to attempts by American and European missionaries to preach Christianity
in Iraq.
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- "The aim of the church bombings is strictly political,
not religious, and like similar bombings that targeted mosques, they are
meant to instigate sectarian and confessional strife among the one Iraqi
people," he said.
- Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani, the powerful Shiite cleric
who has pointed his finger at US incitement previously also condemned the
first ever coordinated attacks on the minority Christian community's churches.
Al-Sistani in a statement urged Iraqis to close ranks and reject attempts
to draw create divisions and sectarian strife.
-
- US black opsis widely suspected in many of the attacks
that pit Muslim against Mulsim and fall outside the laws of Islam. With
Israels Mossad known to be active inside the country, and with the US elections
approaching, the need to keep terrorismfront and centre is mission critical.
America and Israel are the ones who benefit from incidents like Sundays
bombings.
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- Recently, similar attacks have been blamed on al-Zarqawi,
a Jordanian was killed in October 2002 and who the US has transformed into
the new No 1 enemy which they blame for a multitude of attacks. Iraqi resistance
has said repeatedly that al-Zarqawi is not operating with them and not
in the country however this fall on deaf ears amid the mass misinformation
pumped out by mainstream press.
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