| Topic: |
Religions > Atheism |
| User: |
"J Young" |
| Date: |
06 Jan 2006 10:04:14 PM |
| Object: |
'He is a war criminal and he should die violently |
'He is a war criminal and he should die violently'
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2006/01/07/wmid207.xml&sSheet=/news/2006/01/07/ixnewstop.html
Riven by violence and factional infighting, Palestinians were united
yesterday in their loathing of the ailing Ariel Sharon.
As Mr Sharon underwent further surgery yesterday, there was no sympathy from
Palestinians for whom his legacy is anything but the peace, courage and
leadership for which he has been feted since falling ill.
For them, the list of his achievements is more brutal and violent.
"Sharon is a war criminal, a killer," said Saaed Hamani, in his fifties, who
was turned back by Israeli border guards as he tried to enter east Jerusalem
to attend Friday prayers at the Al-Aqsa Mosque.
"Dogs can pass to Jerusalem but not us. How can we remember with anything
but animosity and hatred?"
The "separation barrier", which snakes through the West Bank and has choked
Palestinians' freedom of movement, is a focus of hatred, and yesterday there
was nothing but vitriol for the man who ordered it built.
"He mustn't die in hospital," said Feras Astoun, a resident of east
Jerusalem.
"As he killed so many Palestinians, so must he be killed. He should die
violently. It is the unfortunate truth but most people feel this way."
A minority of Palestinians have echoed the concerns of their president
Mahmoud Abbas, however, and tempered their hatred of Mr Sharon with a
pragmatic assessment of his ability to impose some kind of peace.
"Sharon is to blame for a lot of Palestinian misery," said Rajaee Abdul
Hamid, 32, who lives in the shadow of the wall, and of the continually
expanding Israeli settlement of Maale Adumim near Jerusalem.
"But despite the house demolitions, killings, arrests and the wall, his
vision is more practical for reaching a peace settlement than other Israeli
leaders."
Mr Hamid said a return to power by Benjamin Netanyahu would shatter the
process.
Militants, such as Hamas, have greeted Mr Sharon's health problems with
glee.
"The Middle East is a much more comfortable place without Sharon," said
Hamas spokesman in Gaza Sami Abu Zuhri. "He never added anything positive to
the region."
In Ramallah, Ghassan Khatib, a Palestinian minister, said: "Sharon achieved
neither peace nor security for his people or ours. He simply managed to
convince the world that avoiding negotiations by imposing a unilateral
policy was fair."
--
"Honesty, Integrity, Compassion, and Decency"
.
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| User: "Paul Duca" |
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| Title: Re: 'He is a war criminal and he should die violently |
07 Jan 2006 03:52:52 PM |
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Words that get J Yo creaming in his jeans...
Paul
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| User: "Freewill" |
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| Title: Re: 'He is a war criminal and he should die violently |
07 Jan 2006 09:29:47 AM |
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"J Young" <youngopinions@aol.com> wrote in message
news:gp6dnb0-RYE5oCLeRVn-tg@giganews.com...
'He is a war criminal and he should die violently'
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2006/01/07/wmid207.xml&sSheet=/news/2006/01/07/ixnewstop.html
Riven by violence and factional infighting, Palestinians were united
yesterday in their loathing of the ailing Ariel Sharon.
As Mr Sharon underwent further surgery yesterday, there was no sympathy
from
Palestinians for whom his legacy is anything but the peace, courage and
leadership for which he has been feted since falling ill.
For them, the list of his achievements is more brutal and violent.
"Sharon is a war criminal, a killer," said Saaed Hamani, in his fifties,
who
was turned back by Israeli border guards as he tried to enter east
Jerusalem
to attend Friday prayers at the Al-Aqsa Mosque.
"Dogs can pass to Jerusalem but not us. How can we remember with anything
but animosity and hatred?"
The "separation barrier", which snakes through the West Bank and has
choked
Palestinians' freedom of movement, is a focus of hatred, and yesterday
there
was nothing but vitriol for the man who ordered it built.
"He mustn't die in hospital," said Feras Astoun, a resident of east
Jerusalem.
"As he killed so many Palestinians, so must he be killed. He should die
violently. It is the unfortunate truth but most people feel this way."
A minority of Palestinians have echoed the concerns of their president
Mahmoud Abbas, however, and tempered their hatred of Mr Sharon with a
pragmatic assessment of his ability to impose some kind of peace.
"Sharon is to blame for a lot of Palestinian misery," said Rajaee Abdul
Hamid, 32, who lives in the shadow of the wall, and of the continually
expanding Israeli settlement of Maale Adumim near Jerusalem.
"But despite the house demolitions, killings, arrests and the wall, his
vision is more practical for reaching a peace settlement than other
Israeli
leaders."
Mr Hamid said a return to power by Benjamin Netanyahu would shatter the
process.
Militants, such as Hamas, have greeted Mr Sharon's health problems with
glee.
"The Middle East is a much more comfortable place without Sharon," said
Hamas spokesman in Gaza Sami Abu Zuhri. "He never added anything positive
to
the region."
In Ramallah, Ghassan Khatib, a Palestinian minister, said: "Sharon
achieved
neither peace nor security for his people or ours. He simply managed to
convince the world that avoiding negotiations by imposing a unilateral
policy was fair."
Psycho "Palestinians".
The declare war (intifada).
Lose.
And then blame the leader of those they attacked for their losses.
Fucking delusional.
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| User: "Michael Martin-Smith" |
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| Title: Re: 'He is a war criminal and he should die violently |
07 Jan 2006 10:05:31 AM |
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It would be fascinating to see what would happen if Mr Sharon by some chance
recovered. Very unlikely, I agree - but impossible?
If he did, he would have a very good chance of claiming Messiahship and not
being laughed at.
It would be worth it to see the look on Mr Ahmadinejad's face.
Imagine the would-be 12th Imam with his "bright inner divine light" trumped
at the last minute by a would-be Messiah...with his resurrection from a
widely anticipated death.
Oh well, nice try.
"J Young" <youngopinions@aol.com> wrote in message
news:gp6dnb0-RYE5oCLeRVn-tg@giganews.com...
'He is a war criminal and he should die violently'
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2006/01/07/wmid207.xml&sSheet=/news/2006/01/07/ixnewstop.html
Riven by violence and factional infighting, Palestinians were united
yesterday in their loathing of the ailing Ariel Sharon.
As Mr Sharon underwent further surgery yesterday, there was no sympathy
from
Palestinians for whom his legacy is anything but the peace, courage and
leadership for which he has been feted since falling ill.
For them, the list of his achievements is more brutal and violent.
"Sharon is a war criminal, a killer," said Saaed Hamani, in his fifties,
who
was turned back by Israeli border guards as he tried to enter east
Jerusalem
to attend Friday prayers at the Al-Aqsa Mosque.
"Dogs can pass to Jerusalem but not us. How can we remember with anything
but animosity and hatred?"
The "separation barrier", which snakes through the West Bank and has
choked
Palestinians' freedom of movement, is a focus of hatred, and yesterday
there
was nothing but vitriol for the man who ordered it built.
"He mustn't die in hospital," said Feras Astoun, a resident of east
Jerusalem.
"As he killed so many Palestinians, so must he be killed. He should die
violently. It is the unfortunate truth but most people feel this way."
A minority of Palestinians have echoed the concerns of their president
Mahmoud Abbas, however, and tempered their hatred of Mr Sharon with a
pragmatic assessment of his ability to impose some kind of peace.
"Sharon is to blame for a lot of Palestinian misery," said Rajaee Abdul
Hamid, 32, who lives in the shadow of the wall, and of the continually
expanding Israeli settlement of Maale Adumim near Jerusalem.
"But despite the house demolitions, killings, arrests and the wall, his
vision is more practical for reaching a peace settlement than other
Israeli
leaders."
Mr Hamid said a return to power by Benjamin Netanyahu would shatter the
process.
Militants, such as Hamas, have greeted Mr Sharon's health problems with
glee.
"The Middle East is a much more comfortable place without Sharon," said
Hamas spokesman in Gaza Sami Abu Zuhri. "He never added anything positive
to
the region."
In Ramallah, Ghassan Khatib, a Palestinian minister, said: "Sharon
achieved
neither peace nor security for his people or ours. He simply managed to
convince the world that avoiding negotiations by imposing a unilateral
policy was fair."
--
"Honesty, Integrity, Compassion, and Decency"
.
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