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Wednesday, April 03, 2013
If religious instruction were not allowed until the child had attained the age of reason, we would be living in a quite different world.

Hitchens

BEIRUT - Syrian rebel forces killed a pro-regime Sunni cleric in the city of Aleppo, with some reports suggesting he was beheaded, and then dragged his body through the streets. <nation.com.pk>

Do you care? I don't give a damn if they kill each other with arms smuggled from Iran. I don't care that Kerry is a bit annoyed that Baghdad is turning a blind eye to arms smuggling. It's OK by me that Tehran sends military equipment through Iraqi airspace to Iran who sends it on to their henchmen in Syria while Maliki shrugs, puffs on his hookah and spits on Kerry's shoe.
Sheikh Hassan Seifeddin, imam of a mosque in the northern Aleppo neighbourhood of Sheikh Maqsud, “was killed overnight Friday by rebel fighters in the east of the area and his body was dragged through the streets,” the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said.
Syrian state news agency SANA reported that Seifeddin was “assassinated by terrorists who mutilated his body afterwards,” while official television station Al-Ikhbariya said he had been “slaughtered” and beheaded. “The ulema (clerics) of Aleppo denounce this despicable crime committed by the enemies of humanity who assassinated Sheikh Hassan Seifeddin and laid his head on the minaret of Al-Hassan mosque in Sheikh Maqsud,” the station reported.
Sheikh Maqsud is a majority Kurdish district of Aleppo, and fierce battles between rebels and regime forces have been raging since Friday in its eastern quarter where much of the district’s non-Kurdish Sunni residents live.



The ulema called on the Syrian army to “liberate Syria from the criminal mercenaries with obscurantist ideas,” in an apparent reference to hardline jihadist groups amongst the armed opposition.
A March 22 suicide bomb attack on a central Damascus mosque claimed by militants killed 42 people, including the country’s most prominent pro-regime Sunni cleric.
The Observatory said 31 people had been killed in Sheikh Maqsud in 24 hours, including 10 civilians, 14 pro-regime gunman and seven rebels.
At least 157 people were killed through Syria on Friday, according to the watchdog group which gathers its information from a network of activists and medics on the ground.
Iraq said on Saturday it will step up searches of Iranian flights via its airspace to Syria
Iraq said on Saturday it will step up searches of Iranian flights via its airspace to Syria, days after US Secretary of State John Kerry publicly criticised Baghdad for turning a blind eye to them. But while Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki’s spokesman spoke of newly tightened restrictions on Iranian flights to Syria, the head of Iraq’s civil aviation authority acknowledged that no planes had been searched since October.
“Because of a lot of information which referred to transportation of weapons, we have increased the activity of inspections,” Maliki’s spokesman Ali Mussawi told AFP.
“We will carry out more random searches, to be assured that there is no weapons transfer.” Asked if the move was in response to Kerry’s comments last Sunday during a surprise visit to Baghdad, Mussawi replied: “No one has provided us with evidence — just information.”
Kerry had told reporters while in Baghdad that he “made very clear to the prime minister that the overflights from Iran are in fact helping to sustain President (Bashar) al-Assad and his regime.” He told Maliki that American politicians were “watching what Iraq is doing” and noted that anything that helped Assad was “problematic” For months, Washington has accused Baghdad of turning a blind eye as Tehran sends military equipment through Iraqi airspace, and has called on authorities to make random, unannounced inspections.
“They are suspending their disbelief, looking the other way, and averting their gaze,” a US official said, speaking on condition of anonymity.
liberate Syria from the criminal mercenaries with obscurantist ideas
Iraq announced two inspections of aircraft, both in October, but the New York Times reported in December that Iran appears to have been tipped off by Iraqi officials as to when inspections would be conducted, helping Tehran avoid detection.
Nasser Bandar, the head of Iraq’s civil aviation authority, told AFP that no planes had been searched since October because “we have not seen any suspicious flights since then.” “We will inspect the flights we have suspicions about,” he added. Bandar said for the past several days there had been no cargo flights from Iran bound for Syria, and that air traffic between the two countries had been limited to passenger aircraft, which are not searched.
Iran has remained a steadfast ally of Assad’s regime despite the conflict in his country which according to the United Nations has killed more than 70,000 people since it erupted in March 2011.

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