Re: La illaha illa allah - Siniora addua allah




La illaha illa allah - Hasan Nasrallah addua allah

"BM" <m-e-d-a-w-a-r@xxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:fnmddr$37a$1@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
This was a chant repeated by young ladies during a funeral
and caught on LBC news. Any more questions? Is it possible
to find anything in common with those brainwashed young ladies.
One wonders. What will take to deprogram those ladies?

See Naharnet/AP story:

http://www.naharnet.com/domino/tn/NewsDesk.nsf/getstory?openform&C4FC01F238EAB761C22573DE0058630B

Saniora Is 'Allah's Enemy' To Mourners

To the crackle of automatic rifle fire and chants of "Saniora is the enemy
of Allah," the AMAL movement on Monday buried two of its members who were
killed in riots the day before.
Mourners attacking Premier Fouad Saniora and shooting automatic rifles in
the air, to express anger, buried the two, Ahmed Hamza and Ahmed Ajouz, in
the Shahidein grave yard in south Beirut amidst chants.

AMAL politburo member Jamil Hayek accused the March 14 majority alliance,
without mentioning it by name, of seeking to use the army against the
opposition.

"You want to use the army as a stick .. to continue with your dominance,"
Hayek said in his speech eulogizing the two victims.

"You know that security in Lebanon is a political issue that you keep
blocking by usurping powers," Hayek added.

He called for a "swift, but not hasty, investigation by security
administrations" into the Sunday riots that resulted in the killing of
seven people and wounding more than 20.

"We want the whole truth about who attacked them . Only the truth can
provide the rights for all," he added.

Other than the shooting-in-the air practice and anti-Saniora chants, the
mood was somber but peaceful as hundreds of people took part in the
funerals.

Women threw rice, and Koranic verses blared from loudspeakers as three
other funeral processions got under way.

Traffic was thinner than usual throughout Beirut. In the troubled
neighborhoods, troops were on the streets, shops were closed and some
residents were clearing broken glass and inspecting their property.

"Why did I have to bear the brunt of their anger?" Samir Adada said Monday
as he stood next to his gutted Cherokee Jeep that was damaged in Sunday's
riots.

Saniora had declared a day of national mourning, and calm returned to the
Mar Mikhael district, where riots initially broke out.

Sunday's death toll was the highest for a street disturbance since the
country plunged into a crisis three years ago with the assassination of
former Prime Minister Rafik Hariri, a turning point in Lebanese politics
that sparked local and international outrage and forced the Syrian army to
withdraw after 30 years of control.

What started as an angry protest by anti-government protestors against
electricity rationing quickly degenerated into street violence and clashes
with troops.

The fighting ignited memories of the 1975-90 civil war and came as Lebanon
is in the middle of a political fight over who will become its next
president.

The clashes erupted along the war's former demarcation line between
Christian and Muslim areas and near a district where the bloody conflict,
which killed 150,000, began. A hand grenade tossed by rioters into that
district, Ein el-Rummaneh, injured seven people.

Lebanon is embroiled in its worst political crisis since the civil war.
Former President Emile Lahoud left office on Nov. 23 without a successor,
and parliament has so far failed to elect the army chief to replace him
amid bickering between the parliament majority and the
opposition.(Naharnet-AP)


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