Top Post,sorry.
But never let the NAZI Christians of the hook even for half a paragraph!
The faciest Christians are just as evil as the faciest Islamics or Jews!
"Don't Blame Clayton...He Didn't Vote For The Rat Faced *****"
<cjfat@SPAMBLOCKphonyemail.com> wrote in message
news:416b1c32$0$26323$afc38c87@news.optusnet.com.au...
Just like 9/11 there are many who claim the atrocity in Bali two years ago
today, where 202 people (including 88 Australians who were the main
targets)
had nothing to do with religion, despite being carried out by Islamic
fundamentalists. Here is an article about part of the testimony of one of
the main bombers Amrozi who at this time was trying to make out that the
bombing was actually part of a Jewish/American conspiracy who set off a
nuclear device, but then says that it was a good thing to happen because
of
the immoral behaviour of the westerners and how it turned people back to
God. Drinking and nudity are evil, but mass murder is good! Nothing
else
captures the true nature of religion better!
http://www.abc.net.au/worldtoday/content/2003/s901603.htm
Amrozi gives defence at his trial
The World Today Archive - Monday, 14 July , 2003 12:18:11
Reporter: Tim Palmer
HAMISH ROBERTSON: Staying with terrorism and indeed with the Bali bombing
in
the island of Bali last October, the accused bomber Amrozi, it seems, has
made some startlingly suggestions in his defence at his trial.
He's claimed that the bomb that killed 202 people last October may have
been
planted by America or Israel and that some benefits he said, had come out
of
the Kuta attacks.
Well our Indonesia Correspondent, Tim Palmer, joins me now on phone from
Bali.
Tim, in that case why does Amrozi not see himself responsible for the
deaths
of 202 people in that attack?
TIM PALMER: Well, this is quite right. I mean this is remarkable from a
man
who went into the trial, his lawyers saying is a person prepared to die
and
with the martyr today, he appeared to want to shift the blame somewhere
else
instead, in what is effectively his last chance to present his case before
the verdict, expected now in a couple of weeks' time.
He did make some admissions in line with what the prosecution said. He
agrees that he put together this shipment of explosives of potassium
chlorate and other substances and purchased the van the prosecutors say
was
used to make the bomb and that he shipped those to Bali.
Although, he's denied any involvement in any planning meetings: those
planning meetings in particular being the meetings that would put him in
the
planning level of this plot, and therefore possibly more likely to get the
death penalty as a result of this court case. What's more, he's denied any
knowledge of the organisation, Jemaah Islamiyah, saying he only ever heard
of that from newspapers and the police.
That's as far as his admissions went. Instead, what he suggested the
actual
extent of the blast was something he could have never expected from the
bomb
that they made and he said that his understanding was that the only people
with the technology to make that sort of explosion were probably the
Americans and the Israelis planting a nuclear device.
He suggested you couldn't be blamed that possibly the Americans or the
Israelis had detected the van that he'd sent somewhere along the way by
satellite technology, and thereafter had planted some sort of nuclear
device
instead.
HAMISH ROBERTSON: And he did make this very odd statement, which must be
deeply offensive to the victims' relatives, by asking the judges to
consider
the positives as well as the negatives of the attack.
TIM PALMER: Yes, quite an extraordinary thing to say, especially as there
were some relatives of Australian victims in court today. Although, they
may
not have, they might not have had the translation as he said it.
But, what he said was that some good comes out of everything essentially,
and he suggested a series of benefits and his one was that people would
turn
back to religion. At a time when bars and casinos were full of people and
places of worship were nearly empty, that this explosion would make people
more conscious of God.
Secondly, he suggested that this would disrupt an evil plan of forcing
people to turn away from Islam, which was essentially the plan of Jews who
attempted to master, who were attempting to master the world, and that the
bomb would possibly disrupt that for some time.
And finally, he suggested that the kind of tourism that had been in Bali,
leading up to the bombing, was immoral - that it was people who came and
bared their bodies and that if people wanted to come and be tourists in
Indonesia, they had to play by its rules, not by their rules and that this
bombing had achieved something there.
So, really, in all 22 minutes of quite extraordinary evidence from this
man,
who is now only a few weeks from receiving a verdict.
HAMISH ROBERTSON: Certainly some very strange and twisted logic. Tim
Palmer
in Bali, many thanks.
.