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Iraq
Zarqawi backers laying down sha'riah in Amariya
2006-05-25
Imams loyal to terrorist leader Abu Musab Zarqawi have issued threats in mosques in a western Baghdad neighborhood against anyone who does not follow Islamic law, terrified residents are saying. "They announced their loyalty to Zarqawi and put their rules on the street," said Sabah, 31, adding that supporters of the Jordanian-born leader of al Qaeda in Iraq had killed six men for wearing knee-length shorts in another Baghdad neighborhood on Tuesday.

"Everyone is talking about it," he said, adding that a friend of his had forbidden his brothers to go outside in shorts, despite the 106-degree weather. "Women must stay at home, and girls cannot go to school past primary school. People selling Iranian products will either have to throw them out or get killed," said Sabah, who asked that his last name not be used. He lives in the violent Sunni neighborhood of Amariya, where he said the threats were made.

Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki has taken a tough stance against militias and terrorists, vowing to implement sweeping counterterror laws to bring peace and stability to the country. For city residents, that promise seems much more tenuous than the direct threats being issued in their mosques. Amariya, close to Baghdad International Airport, was a mixed Sunni-Shi'ite neighborhood during the rule of Saddam Hussein. But most of the Shi'ites have been driven out or killed, and the area has become a Sunni stronghold.
And moving up on our list of neighborhoods to be cleaned out.
News of the imams' words has spread fast in this city of 6 million people, where many are traumatized after three years of war and sectarian killings. By yesterday, one of Sabah's friends was making plans to repaint his "swamp cooler" -- a fan that blows water-cooled air. The popular devices typically are painted green and white and widely known to be made in Iran.

Other rules laid down by the Zarqawi supporters forbid men from wearing orange or red clothes or using gel in their hair. Women no longer are allowed to work, and girls cannot study. "They are destroying their lives," said Amer Amoori, a 66-year-old former school headmaster who was fuming at the news. "They will destroy a whole generation." He said residents in these neighborhoods would have to stand up for themselves or risk losing everything.
Get out yer shootin' irons and go whack those imams. I bet things calm down after that.
Posted by:Dan Darling

#10  This is what these fools have to look forward to. They allowed the constitution they came up with to allow Islamic law to prevail. They will never have secular law or an ordered, civil society. Had they gone for secular precedence, they could handle this by monitoring imams. Once spittle starts gushing, quietly go in and have the imam eliminated. But, then, this would destroy Muzzie cult, wouldn't it. No pity for fools like these.
Posted by: SOP35/Rat   2006-05-25 13:40  

#9  Any thought in the hood about, I dunno,...getting together and killing the bastards?
Posted by: tu3031   2006-05-25 11:51  

#8  They are doing a marvelous job of not imitiating civilisation.
Posted by: Bright Pebbles   2006-05-25 10:36  

#7  the ban on wearing shorts is probably a derivative of the 'don't imitate the infidel'

Q 9:30 has the phrase '...they but imitate what the unbelievers of old used to say. Allah's curse be on them..." (this by the way is the part of the Quran which says that Jews believe Ezra is the son of God).
Posted by: mhw   2006-05-25 09:47  

#6  No crinkly bits invovled in biscuits, heh. :)
Posted by: Ebberemp Phinens2648   2006-05-25 07:47  

#5  Riiiiight - thanks for explaining ep2648 & Glenmore. In proper British Society you would never be seen to publicly dunk a biscuit in your tea. I doubt whether one would be shot for it though.
Posted by: Howard UK   2006-05-25 07:41  

#4  Oops, in proper Arab society, I should say. Exceptions are those who've fallen under wicked infidel incluences, such as Bahrain. They will be cleansed, I'm sure.
Posted by: Ebberemp Phinens2648   2006-05-25 07:35  

#3  Shorts are never allowed, for men or women, in Arab society.
Posted by: Ebberemp Phinens2648   2006-05-25 07:29  

#2  Howard,
All that matters is that it DOESN'T SAY Mo wore short pants, therefor short pants are forbidden. Or at least that's the kind of logic(?) I have heard. Somehow they miss the corrolary - the Koran also doesn't say anything about Mo shooting an AK-47 or blowing up cars full of artillery shells, so employing those weapons is also blasphemous and warrants the death penalty.
Posted by: glenmore   2006-05-25 07:26  

#1  Shorts? SHORTS? Jeebus! I didn't realise the fashion jihadis were in town..

Mmm that keffiyah don't go with those pants Abu.. Bang!. I ask you - where in the Koran does it say anything about short trousers?
Posted by: Howard UK   2006-05-25 04:06  

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