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Israel-Palestine-Jordan
In first, Saudi academic publishes paper in Israeli journal
2020-07-14
[Jpost] It is unprecedented for a Saudi researcher to choose to publish his article in an Israeli academic journal, in order to bring the two nations closer.

A professor from King Saud University in Riyadh published an article in Hebrew in an Israeli academic journal, which is unprecedented, according to Tel Aviv University.

Prof. Mohammed Ibrahim Alghbban, Head of Near Eastern Languages and Civilization and Hebrew Studies at King Saud University wrote the article in Kesher, the journal of the Shalom Rosenfeld Institute for Research of Jewish Media and Communication at Tel Aviv University.

Prof. Raanan Rein, head of Shalom Rosenfeld Institute, said it is unprecedented for a Saudi researcher to choose to publish his article in an Israeli academic journal, in order to bring the two nations closer.

"I hope that this academic cooperation is another step towards economic and political cooperation," Rein stated.

Kesher’s editor Prof. Gideon Kouts has met Alghbban at academic Hebrew Studies conferences and on a visit to Riyadh in 2015. The Hebrew Studies program Alghbban heads is taught only to male students, and its curriculum includes works by Yosef Haim Brenner, Shmuel Yosef Agnon and Etgar Keret.

Alghbban’s paper comes amid increasing calls in Soddy Arabia
...a kingdom taking up the bulk of the Arabian peninsula. Its primary economic activity involves exporting oil and soaking Islamic rubes on the annual hajj pilgrimage. The country supports a large number of princes in whatcha might call princely splendor. When the oil runs out the rest of the world is going to kick sand in the Soddy national face...
and other Gulf States for greater cooperation with Jews and Israel to achieve peace. Israel and Gulf States have grown closer in recent years, despite not having diplomatic relations, as they face a common enemy: Iran. But the increased ties have led to partnerships in other fields, such as companies in Israeli and the United Arab Emirates working together on treating coronavirus (aka COVID19 or Chinese Plague)
...the twenty first century equivalent of bubonic plague, only instead of killing off a third of the population of Europe it kills 3.4 percent of those who notice they have it. It seems to be fond of the elderly, especially Iranian politicians and holy men...
The article is titled "Contribution to Prophet Muhammad’s Image Improvement in the Eyes of the Israeli Public: Muhammad’s Alliances and Mail Exchanges with Jews from the Arabian Peninsula," in which Alghbban argues that the prophet had good relations with Jews and his festivities with them were political, not religious.

The Saudi professor said he wrote the article to improve Muhammad’s image among Israelis, which he said is currently based on "erroneous assumptions about the origins of Islam proposed by Oriental Studies researchers, " which "led to a distorted understanding of manuscripts, wrong methodology and negative influences on Hebrew-speaking Middle Eastern Studies researchers."

As such, he translated letters written by Muhammad into Hebrew in his article.
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Arabia
Saudi king orders cabinet shakeup after Khashoggi's killing
2018-12-28
[DAWN] Soddy Arabia
...a kingdom taking up the bulk of the Arabian peninsula. Its primary economic activity involves exporting oil and soaking Islamic rubes on the annual hajj pilgrimage. The country supports a large number of princes in whatcha might call princely splendor. When the oil runs out the rest of the world is going to kick sand in the Soddy national face...
's King Salman
...either the largest species of Pacific salmon or the current Sheikh of the Burnin' Sands, Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques and Lord of Most of the Arabians....
issued a wide-ranging overhaul of top government posts on Thursday, including naming a new foreign minister, following international fallout from the killing of Saudi writer Jamal Khashoggi nearly three months ago.

He also ordered a shakeup of the kingdom's two supreme councils that oversee matters related to the economy and security, respectively. Both councils are headed by the king's son, Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman
...Crown Prince of Saudi Arabia as of 2016....
, whose powers, including roles as deputy prime minister and defense minister, were untouched in the overhaul.

The changes appear to further consolidate the crown prince's grip on power by appointing advisers and members of the royal family seen as close to him.

Adel al-Jubeir, the soft-spoken foreign minister who took over the post in 2015 from the late Prince Saud al-Faisal, was replaced by Ibrahim al-Assaf, formerly a longtime finance minister. al-Jubeir was appointed to the rank of minister of state for foreign affairs.

Al-Assaf had been serving as a minister of state prior to being named foreign minister. He holds a seat on the boards of state-owned oil-giant Saudi Aramco and the kingdom's sovereign wealth fund, the Public Investment Fund. The crown prince oversees both entities.

Al-Assaf's biography on Aramco's website says he holds a PhD in economics from Colorado State University, a master's degree in economics from the University of Denver and a bachelor's degree from King Saud University.

The changes, which impact several key ministries, come as the king and his son, the crown prince, were looking to announce a major reshuffle following Khashoggi's killing by Saudi agents in Istanbul.

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Arabia
Saudi authorities arrest assistant professor in crackdown on dissent
2018-07-22
[PRESSTV] Saudi authorities have tossed in the calaboose
Drop the heater, Studs, or you're hist'try!
a university lecturer as part of an ongoing crackdown against Moslem preachers and intellectuals led by Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman
...Crown Prince of Soddy Arabia
...a kingdom taking up the bulk of the Arabian peninsula. Its primary economic activity involves exporting oil and soaking Islamic rubes on the annual hajj pilgrimage. The country supports a large number of princes in whatcha might call princely splendor. When the oil runs out the rest of the world is going to kick sand in the Soddy national face...
as of 2016....

The rights group ALQST, which is an independent non-governmental organization advocating human rights
...which often include carefully measured allowances of freedom at the convenience of the state...
in Saudi Arabia, announced in a post on its official Twitter page on Saturday that Dr. Musaed al-Tayyar were tossed into the calaboose.

The post added that the 53-year-old Tayyar is an associate professor at King Saud University in the Saudi capital Riyadh. He has written many books on Islamic teachings and participated in debates on the Holy Koran, the holy book of Moslems.

The academic is not known to have commented on political issues, which raises questions about the motives behind his arrest.

Saudi Arabia has recently stepped up politically-motivated arrests, prosecution, and conviction of peaceful dissident writers and human rights campaigners.

Saudi officials have also intensified security measures in the kingdom’s Shia-populated Eastern Province.

Eastern Province has been the scene of peaceful demonstrations since February 2011. Protesters have been demanding reforms, freedom of expression, the release of political prisoners, and an end to economic and religious discrimination against the oil-rich region.

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Arabia
Saudi deputy minister of Islamic affairs: Political Islam caused much bloodshed
2017-02-21
[ENGLISH.ALARABIYA.NET] Deputy Minister of Islamic Affairs in Soddy Arabia
...a kingdom taking up the bulk of the Arabian peninsula. Its primary economic activity involves exporting oil and soaking Islamic rubes on the annual hajj pilgrimage. The country supports a large number of princes in whatcha might call princely splendor. When the oil runs out the rest of the world is going to kick sand in the Soddy national face...
Dr. Tawfiq al-Sudairi has expressed his disapproval for the "political interpretation of Islam" slogan, arguing that it is a "self-serving interpretation" for religion which resulted in a bloodbath of the impeccable.

Al Sudairi explained, during a seminar held in cooperation with King Saud University on the sidelines of the National Festival for Heritage and Culture Festival, that political Islam as a theory has influenced a lot of Moslems’ paths. And it is regarded as the crux of numerous theories and opinions that have ignited uprisings, were established by its theoreticians and advocates: Jamal al-Din al-Afghani, Abul A'la Maududi, Sayyid Qutb and Hassan al-Banna.

He pointed out that the embracing of political Islam that prevailed in the corridors of contemporary Islamic philosophy, launching platforms for an assortment of Islamic movements, resulted in beliefs, creeds, worship and all Islamic laws, being considered as methods to institute a political system. Al Sudairi cited Wahiduddin Khan’s statement in his book "The political interpretation of religion, which was a rebuttal to Abul A'la Maududi, the spiritual leader of the political Islam movement.

However,
women are made to be loved, not understood...
he viewed political aspects as a prime pillar of religion, the goal of the prophetic message cannot be defined without politics as well as understanding the full meaning of the beliefs and the significance of prayers and other acts of worship, to sum up, he added "without politics religion becomes void and unintelligible.’

The official considered such arrangement as an oblique utilitarian interpretation as observing the chief principle of religion as empowerment on earth, and not for people to worship the Creator, which is unfeasible but through a political coup, regime change, and the establishment of fair governments.

The beginning with al-Afghani
Dr. al-Sudairi regarded the Iranian abolitionist Jamal al Din al Afghani as the father of the interpretation of utilitarian political Islam gained through his connection with political movements, philosophy, Western contemplation and Masonic associations which, as a whole, represents the Western Philosophy stance from religion.

He considered "al-Afghani" as the inspiration for the political Islam movements, whose majority members are immensely motivated by his influence, nonetheless, his elitist rhetoric was not palatable by the ordinary Moslems, until the emerge of Hussan al Banna, the founder of "Moslem Brüderbund" movement, who transformed al Afghani’s intellectual theories about reform and changes from its scientific domain to general principles and concepts, to a youthful and popular movement distant from the Ulma’a
Al-Banna’s admiration for al-Afghani

Al-Banna’s admiration for al Afghan’s essence were clearly underscored on his writing where he mentioned in his memoir (advocacy and preacher): "Mustafa Kamel and Farid, before them Jamal aluldin al Afghani and Sheikh Mohammed Abdu built the renaissance of Egypt, if continue moving forward in this path without any shift, goals would be achieved, the least to say, it won’t retreat, made gains rather than losses."

In this context, Dr. al-Sudairi said: "Quite obviously Hassan al-Banna has resurrected al-Afghani’s dogma and marched with it away from the Ulams’ parade despite his young age, 22-year-old at the time, at the same time, lacking the religious understanding while influenced by the eastern and western ideas prevailing at the time."

"Perhaps the general circumstances led him to contextualize the interpretation of political utilitarian form his concept of Islam particularly after the fall of the Ottoman Empire, when the Moslem Brüderbund movement, soon after being founded, moved to fill the political vacuum, raising the issue of political power, governance, sociology, economy and the reconstruction of the land, establishing justice in the mundane affairs of life, the central core of inclusive religion, which is the goal of the prophecy, the message, the worship, and Shariah even the judgment day, resurrection, heaven and hell," he added.
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Arabia
Critical shortage of cybercrime experts
2015-04-29
[ARABNEWS] Experts warned at a conference on Tuesday of a critical shortage of global specialists trained to confront increasingly malicious cyber security threats.

"Some reports say that we have globally less than 1,000 people who are truly qualified, whereas we need over 30,000 to address the problem," said Mark Goodwin, of Virginia Tech university in the United States.

"What we're seeing is cyber espionage and cyber sabotage that warrants that we have increasingly skilled people to address this threat," said Goodwin, deputy director of a university program that aims to address the shortage. His comments were made at a symposium on command and control and countersecurity organized by King Saud University with the Interior Ministry.

There is "growing complexity" to the maneuvers of cyberattackers, which reflects the need for effective intelligence, Gregoire Germain, director of information technology and security at French company Thales, told the forum.

Prince Bandar bin Abdullah bin Mushari, assistant interior minister for technology, said: "The security of cyber systems is crucial for the safety of our country. So, fighting cybercrime is a prime responsibility of every citizen. This principle of citizen responsibility stems from the famous saying of the late former Interior Minister Prince Naif that the citizen is the first security officer in society."

He added that technology has dominated our lives as we make it, use it, and benefit from it. "But it has also become a target of suspicious use whether in the field of politics, business or social communication. So, the responsibility for security and safety of our society is on the shoulders of each of us."

Saleh Ibrahim Al-Motairi, general director of the Kingdom's National Cybersecurity Center, said: "We need a national framework for capacity building."

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Arabia
Saudi Woman Dies after Ambulance Denied Access
2014-02-08
[An Nahar] The death of an ailing woman student at a Saudi university has stirred controversy on social media after an ambulance was denied access under the conservative Mohammedan kingdom's segregation laws.

Amna Bawazeer, 24, died of a heart attack in the compound of the social sciences faculty of Riyadh's King Saud University.

Local media said medics in an ambulance were denied access because they were not accompanied by a "mahram", a legal guardian or male member of her family.

Angry female students have gone on Twitter to blame faculty officials for Bawazeer's death.

But the university's administration hit back in a statement to stress that the student had suffered from a heart condition from the age of four.

She had died of a heart attack which proved fatal, despite the best efforts of the faculty's own infirmary to save her life.
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Fukushima disaster prompts GCC fears over Iranian reactor
2011-03-19
[Arab News] Saudi and Kuwaiti environmentalists have expressed serious concern about the safety of Iran's nuclear reactor at Bushehr, some 250 km on the other side of the Gulf from the Saudi-Kuwait border. This follows the kabooms at Japan's Fukushima Daiichi nuclear reactor as a result of earthquake and tsunami damage last Friday.

Like the Japanese reactor, the Iranian one is built in an area of seismic activity. The concern is accentuated by the fact that while Japan has the highest standards in the world for the design and construction of buildings in earthquake zones, Iran does not. In the Bam earthquake in 2003, 30,000 people died as buildings collapsed all about them. In the one in Manjil in 1990 over 40,000 people perished.

While thousands have died in Japan as a result of the tsunami on Friday, very few did so because of the earthquake. An kaboom at Bushehr would have disastrous consequences, according to Jassem Al-Awadhi, a Professor of Geology and the Environment at Kuwait University's science faculty. The outcome would be "similar to those of the Chernobyl disaster for the whole region," he said. According to Al-Awadhi, the Kuwait Institute for Scientific Research's seismological center has detected daily seismic activity in the coastal area of western Iran bordering the Gulf. "This is caused by this site being the meeting point of three continental plates -- Arabian, African and Eurasian plates," he said. He wanted to know whether ineffective International Atomic Energy Agency standards were followed in Bushehr's construction.

Abu Dhabi and Dubai are the most threatened if there were an kaboom at Bushehr, given the prevailing northwesterly winds in the Gulf, but radioactive fallout could easily hit the cities and oilfield of the Eastern Province necessitating mass evacuation. Bahrain, and Qatar could also be hit.

Dr Ibrahim Aref, from the forestry and environmental studies department at King Saud University in Riyadh fears it could be worse. An kaboom would affect not just the Eastern Province, he says, but the whole Kingdom. He points out that carbon deposits from the 1991 oil well fires in Kuwait were found as far away as Asir.

In the 1996 Chernobyl disaster, even Iceland was affected by radioactive fallout.

What also worries Aref is that few people across the Kingdom are aware of the risk, and even fewer take it seriously. "People need to be concerned," he says. "There needs to be more awareness of a possible disaster at Bushehr. If Japan which is well equipped cannot cope, why expect Iran, which is not, to be able to do so?"

Contingency plans need to be made, he said. Equipment, such as breathing masks needs to be held ready in case of an emergency. All towns across the country should have equipment to monitor radioactivity. He called on Soddy Arabia and the other GCC countries to set up an inquiry into the possible consequences of an kaboom at Bushehr. Concern about safety standards at Bushehr and the potential dangers are being publicly voiced in Eastern Province, he added. "Bushehr sits on an active tectonic plate and should, God forbid, something like Japan happen there, we in Soddy Arabia's Eastern Province and in Kuwait will be the first ones to get the radiation-laden wind blast," said Abdul Aziz A. Al-Khalidi a science teacher in Alkhobar. "Weather experts have confirmed in recent articles in newspapers and websites that the wind blows in our direction from Bushehr and we are therefore quite alarmed. Nature's fury can wreak havoc any time and there are lessons to be learned from what is happening in Japan. We are therefore highly concerned about Bushehr nuclear plant," he said. Scientists should alert both the public and the government about the dangers posed by the reactor, and specifically to the Eastern Province.

The head of the Saudi National Society for Human Rights, Moflih Al-Qahtani, also wants the GCC to investigate the potential dangers at Bushehr if there were an earthquake. "Should leaks take place, lives could be lost and there would be high risk of cancer" he said. Soddy Arabia and other GCC state had every right to have their concerns addressed by Iran. If necessary, the GCC should take them to the UN and the ineffective International Atomic Energy Agency.

On Tuesday, Iran's diminutive President Ahmadinejad claimed that the reactor was safer than the damaged Japanese one. "All safety rules and regulations and the highest standards have been applied to the Bushehr power plant," he told Spanish television broadcaster TVE. "The security standards there are the standards of today. We have to take into account that the Japanese nuclear plants were built 40 years ago with the standards of yesterday."

In fact, Bushehr was first started by German companies in 1975, then abandoned after the Iranian revolution, was seriously damaged by Iraqi bombing during the Iran-Iraq war, and is today is today in part a Russian construction. The Russians agreed to take over the project in 1995. The merging of Russian and German technologies has not been easy. After 25 years in the make, the reactor was only finally launched last August but is still not in production. Just three weeks ago, Rostom, the Russian energy company rebuilding the plant said that one of the four main cooling pump had been damaged, necessitating the remove of the fuel core, further delaying the project.

Bushehr is the only reactor Iran admits to. A second plant, Bushehr II, was originally planned but has been effectively shelved. Nineteen other reactors for civil use are planned, the next being at Darkhovin, less than 100 kilometers from Basra in Iraq.

Bushehr is located on the eastern edge of the Arabian Tectonic Plate that is slowly colliding with the very mobile Eurasian and Iranian Plates a short distance inland east. According to Allan Jack, a geologist with Bariq Mining, any area close to the edge of a moving tectonic plate is at major risk of increased seismic activity.

Rob Willmot, an industrial electromechanical consultant said that the Japanese plant was built to withstand earthquakes and in his opinion did so. "The problem seems to be that the tsunami took out the generators supplying the pumps that power the cooling system for the reactors," he told Arab News. He added that the Fukushima Daiichi plant was built to the world's highest standards of earthquake proof construction.

Willmot's observations echo the focus on cooling-system pumps. Those in the Iranian facility were "supplied to Bushehr in the 1970's and, under the current contract, Russia was obliged to integrate them into the project," Rosatom, said in a Feb. 28 statement following the pump failure three weeks ago.

"To cut costs the Russians had to agree to use certain parts supplied by the Germans," said Bill Horak, chairman of the nuclear science and technology department at Brookhaven National Laboratory in New York and an expert on Russian-built reactors.

"The rest of the world is depending on the Russian Federation for policing the nuclear safety of this reactor," said Mark Hibbs, an expert on Iranian nuclear issues at the Carnegie Endowment for World Peace. The pump failure, he added, raised questions about the decisions the Russians made to move forward with emergency coolant system that was 30 years old.

A senior engineer for a Saudi-based construction company, who requested anonymity, was less than sanguine about the quality of the work on the Bushehr plant. "We have just seen the immense power of seismic activity and its devastating effect on infrastructure", he said, "and this was in a country that has the toughest building regulations in the world and enforces them to the letter. I doubt that the Bushehr plant is built to anything like the same standards." He added that he would not want to live anywhere downwind of the facility.
Link


Africa North
Evil eye cast on Libya, says Qaddafi
2011-02-26
[Arab News] Abandoned by some of his staunchest supporters and losing his grip on much of the country, Libyan leader Muammar Qadaffy on Thursday blamed the unprecedented revolt against his 42-year rule on an "evil eye." In a telephone interview with state TV, he said: "The village is the victim of an evil eye."

In a rambling appeal for calm, he also said Al-Qaeda leader Osama Bin Laden was behind the unrest and and that protesters were fueled by milk and Nescafe spiked with hallucinogenic drugs.

Saudis reacted with anger and disbelief. "Qadaffy does not know what he's talking about. He's blaming Bin Laden when he should look at himself instead and ask why widespread Libyan protests are tearing the country apart," Ali Al-Enagy, a professor at the King Saud University (KSU), said.

Hezab Sadoun, a professor of mass communications at a university in Riyadh, said that Qadaffy was way off the mark with his claims. "There's no foreigner or foreign force involved in the turmoil that has engulfed Libya. What stokes the anger of the Libyan people who have risen in arms against him is top-level corruption," he said.

Qadaffy, who just two days ago vowed in a televised address to crush the revolt and fight to the last, showed none of the fist-thumping rage of that speech. This time, he spoke to state television by telephone without appearing in person, and his tone seemed more conciliatory.

"Their ages are 17. They give them pills at night, they put hallucinatory pills in their drinks, their milk, their coffee, their Nescafe," Qadaffy said.

A Tripoli resident said: "It seems like he realized that his speech yesterday with the strong language had no effect on the people. He's realizing it's going to be a matter of time before the final chapter: the battle of Tripoli."

Qadaffy's forces launched a fierce counterattack on Thursday, fighting gunbattles with protesters who have threatened the Libyan leader by seizing important towns close to the capital.

The opposition forces were already in control of major centers in the east, including the regional capital Benghazi, and reports that the towns of Misrata and Zuara in the west had also fallen brought the tide of rebellion closer to Qadaffy's power base.

Gunbattles in Zawiyah, an oil terminal 50 km from the capital, left 10 people dead, a Libyan newspaper said.
Link


Arabia
Saudi releases 11 rehabilitated ex-Jihadists
2010-10-14
[Al Arabiya] The Saudi Prince Mohamed bin Nayef Counseling and Care Center released Tuesday 11 of the 16th group of former jihadists after completing the state-sponsored rehabilitation program that aims at reintegrating them into society.
Based on historical data, we should expect at least two of them to fall back into old habits. These days they tend to end up in Yemen instead of Iraq or Afghanistan -- it's safer for jihadis, it's not as far, and they speak the same language.
Media front man of the Prince Mohamed Bin Nayef center announced Tuesday that 11 of the group currently receiving therapy, the sixteenth to attend the rehabilitation program, displayed signs of progress and proved that they benefited from the training courses offered at the center.

According to the front man, several of the 11 performed the pilgrimage ritual as part of the several services offered by the center to the trainees and their families.

Two of them were enrolled in Imam Mohamed bin Saud University and three were registered in an advanced computer course at the Community Service Center, affiliated to King Saud University.

After their release, the former Jihadists are scheduled to attend additional programs that prepare them psychologically and socially to the new life they are about to start.

The center was initiated by Prince Mohamed bin Nayef, deputy interior minister for security affairs, with the aim of rehabilitating Saudi citizens who fell prey to turban ideas, commonly known as "deviant thought", and engaged in terrorist activities.
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Arabia
68 Percent of Saudi Girls Drop Last Name on Facebook
2010-01-20
[Asharq al-Aswat] Are you on Facebook under your real name? This is the question that continues to haunt a large number of Saudi Arabian women, despite the fact that internet social networking sites rely primarily on factual personal information. However a recent study carried out in Saudi Arabia shows that 68 percent of Saudi girls prefer to withhold their family name due to the sensitivity of this information, in comparison to just 32 percent of girls who appear on Facebook under their own full names. The study revealed that 16 percent of girls polled were members of Facebook under aliases or false identities. As for the Saudi Arabian boys who use Facebook, the study showed that 60 percent of those questioned were members of Facebook under their own full name, with just 4 percent appearing under an alias or a false name.

This information was disclosed as part of a study entitled "The Methodology of Saudi Youth When Utilizing Social Networking Sites" which was carried out by a group of students at the School of Computer Science at the King Saud University in Riyadh. The group of students surveyed a number of Saudi students, half of whom were studying at the King Saud University, while the other half were studying at secondary schools in Riyadh.

Ahoud al-Shaheel, a Professor of Communication at King Saud University, told Asharq Al-Awsat that the latest statistics on the Facebook phenomenon indicate that membership of the site is experiencing an annual growth of 9 percent amongst the youth. According to these statistics, there is one Saudi female for every 5 Saudi males registered on Facebook as of the end of 2009.

Al-Shaheel confirmed that she wanted to shed light on the methods which the Saudi youth were utilizing social networking sites, as a response to these sites gaining popularity, and more people spending more time on them.

The study highlighted how young men and women in Saudi Arabia are utilizing the social networking website Facebook. The study revealed that of the university student polled, 60 percent of male students uploaded a real picture of themselves, in comparison to just 5 percent of female students. While 10 percent of male students used an image of a famous person, while 10 percent of female students use an image of somebody from their family, their father, brother, or another family-member, with the remaining 8 percent utilizing an "ineligible image" [such as a drawing or cartoon or close-up of an eye etc].
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Arabia
Butt Boomer's Dad in Denial
2009-09-02
[Asharq al-Aswat] Asharq Al-Awsat- The father of the alleged Jeddah suicide bomber who attempted to assassinate Saudi Assistant Minister of the Interior for Security Affairs, Prince Mohammed Bin Naif, is torn between acceptance and disbelief at the Al Qaeda statement which named his son, Abdullah al-Asiri as "the perpetrator of the attack." This uncertainty is because DNA analysis on the identity of the bomber has yet to be released, and this will confirm or refute whether al-Asiri was in fact the perpetrator or not.

Hassan al-Asiri, the father of the alleged suicide bomber, did not hesitate to meet with Asharq Al-Awsat yesterday at his home in eastern Riyadh. Al-Asiri is a man of advanced years who walks with the aid of a cane; he also suffers from a neurological disease, the symptoms of which include involuntary hand movements.

Despite the Al Qaeda statement confirming that his son, Abdullah al-Asiri, was responsible for carrying out the failed attack on the Assistant Minister of the Interior for Security Affairs, Hassan al-Asiri told Asharq Al-Awsat that he hopes that this is not true.

Hassan al-Asiri also confirmed to Asharq Al-Awsat that both his sons, Abdullah "the alleged suicide bomber" and his brother, Ibrahim, were included on the list of 85 most wanted suspects issued by the Saudi Interior Ministry. Al-Asiri added that prior to their mutual disappearance almost 3 years ago, he did not notice any change in the ideological belief of his sons.

Security information indicates that the al-Asiri brothers were last seen in Yemen. Hassan al-Asiri also revealed that his son, Abdullah, had reached the third year of university education prior to dropping out, whilst Ibrahim al-Asiri had been studying at King Saud University's Faculty of Science.

The father of the two men who are wanted by the Saudi Arabian security apparatus informed Asharq Al-Awsat that they both had a passion for doing charitable works, and during Ramadan of each year, would stand at the traffic lights and help to distribute food to those who were fasting. Hassan al-Asiri also said that he did not know what had promoted his two sons to join the Al Qaeda organization.

Al-Asiri also told Asharq Al-Awsat of his hope that his son would return to their senses, saying "I hope that it is not long before they return to their previous convictions, and do not allow the devils to continue exploiting them.'

Hassan al-Asiri also told Asharq Al-Awsat that he last spoke to his sons, Abdullah and Ibrahim, one and a half years ago. He said that during this telephone conversation he attempted to convince them to return, but they had rejected this idea, and have not contacted the family since.

Asked whether he would like to send a message to Prince Mohammed Bin Naif, Hassan al-Asiri said "This man is a model that should be emulated to achieve goodness, a man of perfect qualities, and I pray to God that he does not suffer any harm."
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Down Under
Muslim leaders in Australia on Saudi payroll
2008-05-18
Six Australian-based Muslim clerics who are leaders of the Islamic community in the country are on the payroll of the Saudi Government, receiving allowances of up to $2000 a month. The Australian can reveal for the first time the identity of the clerics - some paid through the Saudi embassy in Canberra, others directly from Riyadh's Dawah (preaching) Office - who receive between 3500 and 7000 Saudi riyal ($1975) a month. The payments to the six - who include former Howard government adviser Amin Hady and Melbourne Somali imam Isse Musse - are part of Saudi Arabia's multi-billion-dollar campaign to transform its hardline image in the West. However, Sheik Hady told The Australian there were as many as 14 others in the country being paid by the Saudis.

The other four clerics on the list provided early last year by the embassy to the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade are understood to be Yousef Hussein, from al-Taqwa Mosque in Melbourne's southwest; Indian imam Mohammad Anas, from Auburn's Omar Mosque in Sydney's west; Mohammad Mahet Dahir, from the Albanian Australian Islamic Society; and West Australian Somali community leader Mohammad Abdullah Ahmed. Security contacts say ASIO held no concerns about the clerics.

Saudi Arabia has pumped more than $120 million into Australia since the 1970s to fund mosques, Islamic groups and clerics to propagate Wahhabism, the puritanical brand of Islam espoused by al-Qa'ida. The Malaysian and Indonesian governments have also funded Islamic initiatives in Australia.

Sheik Hady defended the allowance he has received since his arrival in Australia more than 25 years ago, saying it came with no strings attached. "So far, they never tell any of the preachers what to say and what to do," said the Indonesian imam at Zetland Mosque, in Sydney's inner south. "We are fully independent of what we do ... they never instruct that this is what we should teach and this is what we should not. I don't think there is any notion with Wahhabism being imposed by anyone." He refused to be drawn on how much money he received from the Saudis, but said there were as many as 20 clerics on Riyadh's books. "There are many - there are 15 to 20 people," he said. While Sheik Hady refused to name others on the Saudi payroll, it is understood that Canberra cleric Mohammad Swaiti - revealed in April last year praising jihadists in a sermon - was being paid by Riyadh.

Sheik Hussein said he dealt directly with Riyadh's Dawah Office, which employed him on its programs to teach Islam before he migrated to Australia 23 years ago. The Jordanian-born imam, a graduate of Saudi Arabia's Islamic University of Madinah, said he gave his allowance from Riyadh to the community. "There's an opinion about taking money for teaching Koran and is it halal (permissible) or haram (forbidden)," he said in an interview conducted in Arabic and English. Asked if he received any orders about what to preach, he said: "No, we're Muslim, we don't say what we want, we say what the Koran and the prophet Mohammed want us to understand and to say, and that is what we teach the people. We don't teach people our opinion."

Sheik Dahir migrated to Australia a decade ago after graduating from King Saud University in Riyadh, and admitted having received an allowance from the embassy, but said he was no longer on the payroll. Sheik Anas said he received an "irregular" monthly clerical allowance of between $1500 and $1600 for "for the betterment of Muslims on the grounds of religious education".
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