Author: Gunner

  • Playwright Hiding after Sikh Fury Shuts Play

    Well, it seems as if the Sikhs in Britain have stolen a page from the all-too-typical Moslem playbook.

    The author of a play that triggered violent protests by Sikhs in Birmingham, central England, has gone into hiding amid threats against her life, friends were quoted as saying.

    Word that Gurpreet Kaur Bhatti had fled her home on the advice of police emerged a day after the Birmingham Repertory Theatre said it was abandoning further performances of her black comedy “Behzti” (Dishonour).

    Sikh anger at the play’s depiction of rape and murder in a fictional gurdwara, or Sikh temple, turned violent on Saturday, with several hundred protesters trying to storm the theatre.

    Three men were arrested, five police officers hurt, the sell-out audience of some 600 evacuated, and several hundred pounds worth of theatre equipment damaged.

    “She has been threatened with murder and told to go into hiding by the police,” said filmmaker Shakila Taranum Mann, a friend of Bhatti, an actress turned playwright who is herself Sikh.

    “She is personally paying a high price. She feels this is an attempt to censor her. It is mob rule,” Mann was quoted by London’s Evening Standard newspaper as saying.

    “I spoke to her after the play was axed and she feels she is in the eye of the storm,” added another friend, Nirjay Mahindra.

    Stuart Rogers, executive director of the Birmingham Repertory Company, said Monday his company had decided “very reluctantly” to cancel the play “purely on safety grounds” and not under pressure over its content.

    As ugly as this affair has been, here is where the Sikhs are so sadly reminiscent of the Moslems.

    Britain is home to some 336,000 Sikhs, most of whom trace their roots to Punjab, with a handful via West Africa. An estimated 40,000 live in the Birmingham area.

    Sikhs make up 19 million of India’s billion-plus population.

    The Sikh Federation in Britain said in a statement it felt the theatre “has incited racial hatred”, arguing that it “knew full well” the play’s subject matter would offend Sikhs.

    The group, which describes itself as the sole Sikh political party in the country, said it was moved to speak out in response to press reports of the protest.

    “The violent scenes by a small minority of the protesters on Saturday have been blown out of all proportion,” it said.

    No apologies for the violence. No condemnation of the radicals. Only finger-pointing towards others.

    To be honest, I know little of the Sikh faith, but their actions certainly ring familiar.

  • Attack on US Base Near Mosul Kills 22

    Today was a bloody and tragic day for U.S. forces in Iraq.

    An explosion in the northern Iraqi city of Mosul has killed at least 22 people and wounded at least 60 more. Although it was initially reported to be a rocket or mortar attack, military officials now say the cause of the blast is unknown. Reports from Baghdad an Iraqi militant group has claimed responsibility.

    The blast at Forward Operating Base Marez occurred as hundreds of soldiers were in a dining tent for lunch. An embedded American newspaper reporter on the scene said the force of the explosion blew soldiers out of their chairs.

    The commander of U.S. forces in Mosul, Brigadier General Carter Ham, said casualties include U.S. soldiers, American and foreign civilian contractors, and members of the Iraqi Army.

    ….

    General Ham called it tragic and a sad day in Mosul. But he said the troops responded bravely, with wounded soldiers caring for those more severely wounded.

    “And in that chaos that followed that attack, there was no differentiation by nationality, whether one wore a uniform or civilian clothes. They were all brothers in arms, taking care of one another, and I think that is something that all Americans, and indeed all Iraqis can be very proud of,” he said.

    An Iraqi militant group known as Ansar al-Sunna has claimed responsibility for what it says was a suicide operation. Ansar al-Sunnah is a Sunni extremist group that also took responsibility for beheading 12 Nepalese hostages in August. It is believed to have split off from another group, Ansar al-Islam, which U.S. officials say has ties to al-Qaida.

    This story, which lists the dead as including “15 [American] military service members and five civilians, as well as two Iraqi security force members,” says that the relatively soft mess hall was only days away from being replaced by a safer, sturdier facility.

    Iraqi insurgents have attacked several U.S. military dining hall tents in recent months and the Pentagon was finishing a hardened bunker to replace the dining tent at the base near Mosul attacked Tuesday, military officials said.

    Days before the hardened dining hall was scheduled to be completed, a 122mm rocket slammed into the tent at Forward Operating Base Marez near Mosul where hundreds of troops were sitting down to lunch.

    The story also points out that, while the results were unprecedented in the Iraq campaign, the attack itself was not.

    Attacks from rockets or mortars — what the military calls “indirect fire” — have been commonplace for months at U.S. bases in the Mosul area as well as other insurgency hot spots in Iraq. Dining halls are a prime target because they offer a readily identifiable place where lots of troops congregate at predictable times.

    For example, a mortar round hit near the mess hall of a U.S. base in Tikrit during dinner one night in March. The round didn’t explode and no one was injured. Insurgents also launched rockets that month which exploded near a large military dining hall within Baghdad’s Green Zone where U.S. and Iraqi government offices are located. Another mortar round injured three soldiers at a dining hall on another Baghdad base in February.

    At many bases — including Marez — troops have been required to wear their body armor and helmets while in the dining hall because of the threat of attack. Most of the attacks don’t hit any structures or cause any injuries, however.

    As is so often the case, a unlucky shot at an unlucky time results in tragedy.

    Jeremy Redmon, reporter for the Richmond Times-Dispatch, was embedded at the base and filed this wrenching description of the carnage.

    “I can’t hear! I can’t hear!” a soldier cried as she was held by a friend. All around them, people were screaming for medics.

    It was a brilliant day of warmer-than-usual weather in the northern city of Mosul, and hundreds of U.S. soldiers had just sat down for lunch when the mess tent was struck in a suspected rocket attack. The force of the explosion knocked soldiers off their feet and out of their seats. A fireball enveloped the top of the tent, and shrapnel sprayed those below.

    Amid the screaming and smoke that followed, soldiers scrambled, turning their tables upside down, placing the wounded on them and carrying them into the parking lot.

    “Medic! Medic!” soldiers shouted.

    Medics rushed into the tent, where puddles of bright red blood covered lunch trays, overturned tables and chairs on the floor.

    Go read it.

    EDIT: Here’s an even more powerful, emotionally draining tale of the aftermath by a chaplain on the scene (hat tip to Chapomatic).

    Even as an atheist, I had nothing but admiration for every single chaplain I’ve met. They are an amazing breed — gentle peacefulness and kindness complemented by an iron strength.

  • Tipping the Hat to the 10K

    Congrats to Phil over at Shades of Gray (Umbrae Canarum), one of the earliest bloggers to notice Target Centermass. Shades of Gray passed the 10,000-hit mark yesterday and, yes, he’s noticed.

    Well done, Phil, you deserve many more hits. Still, I’m hoping to pass you one day [insert insipid winking emoticon here].

    Anyway, that should wrap up blogging for the night, as I now must turn to wrapping up presents.

  • Yemeni Youths Seeking Martyrdom in Iraq

    Looking for evidence of foreign involvement in Iraq’s troubles? There’s this pathetic tale.

    For weeks, Mohammed Ahmed Abdul-Rahman could only wonder where his son had gone. Then the mystery was solved in a will.

    “I am in Iraq, seeking martyrdom. I hope we are all forgiven,” Abdul-Rahman quoted his son’s will as reading, saying in a weekend interview that an unknown caller from Jordan had told him how to find the document three weeks after 20-year-old Hossam Abdul-Rahman vanished in September. He said he doesn’t know whether his son is dead.

    While only a few cases of Yemenis going to Iraq to fight have been documented, security officials say they are keeping a close eye on travelers leaving this country at the tip of the Arabian peninsula, where Islamic teaching is strong.

    Abdul-Rahman has taken the rare step of going public with his story, and is accusing Islamic extremists of brainwashing his university son.

    Although its government supports the U.S.-led war on terror, Yemen has long been a center of Islamic militancy, and has suffered several attacks and bombings in recent years. The security officials say they are trying to determine whether Yemeni individuals or groups were financing trips to Iraq or helping with travel logistics.

    A group of Yemeni clerics recently endorsed a call by 26 Saudi religious leaders to support the insurgency in Iraq, saying the attacks on U.S.-led forces are a legitimate form of resistance.

    An Islamic activist in the capital said that while he was not aware of any direct attempts by Islamic groups to recruit Yemeni fighters to go to Iraq, he was supportive of such travel.

    “I support it, because it is a duty. They are going to fight occupiers of Arab and Muslim land,” said Ali al-Kurdi. “Any Muslim who is hesitant in helping Iraqis is a sinner.”

    He said recent reports in the local media have encouraged others to make the trip.

    According to figures compiled by The Associated Press, there have been at least 12 cases of Yemeni men who have made their way into Iraq. The security officials said that three people suspected of trying to join the insurgency in Iraq were detained at the airport. Others are reported to have died in Iraq.

    Authorities watching for travelers to Iraq are focusing on those leaving for Syria and Jordan, security officials said. Yemenis don’t need visas to travel to either country, which both neighbor Iraq.

    Sadly, some could read this and still believe the war against radical Islamic terror should solely be about Osama bin Laden.

  • Israel to Boycott Blair’s Peace Conference

    As I read this story, I did not understand the usage of the word “boycott” and its negative connotations in the story’s headline.

    Tony Blair will take on the role of go-between for the Israelis and Palestinians as he tries to keep up the momentum of the Middle East peace process on a two-day visit to the region starting today.

    Meanwhile, the Israeli Prime Minister, Ariel Sharon announced yesterday that Israel would not attend the Middle East conference Mr Blair plans to host in London after next month’s Palestinian presidential election. The conference is due to discuss how the Palestinian Authority can meet its obligations under the internationally backed road map to peace.

    As Mr Blair prepared for a flying visit to Jerusalem and Ramallah, British diplomats received the news of Mr Sharon’s announcement with equanimity. It was seen as a logical outcome of preliminary talks last week between Israeli leaders and Sir Nigel Sheinwald, the Prime Minister’s senior foreign affairs adviser.

    “Mr Sharon’s decision neither surprises me nor disturbs me,” an official at the British embassy in Tel Aviv told The Independent. “It indicates an understanding on the part of the Israeli government of the purpose and scope of the London conference. It was always our intention that it should be a conference preparing the Palestinians for the day after Israel disengages from Gaza.”

    The summit will be attended by foreign ministers of donor countries and representatives of the quartet that drafted the road map – the United States, the European Union, Russia and the United Nations.

    Neither Israel nor Britain wanted to turn the road map into an alternative political initiative. They feared that Israeli participation would change the emphasis, which is meant to be on Palestinian democratisation, economic reform and reconstruction under a new leadership.

    A senior source in Mr Sharon’s office said that the Israeli decision had been co-ordinated with Downing Street in an extensive exchange of letters. “We support this conference,” he said, “but we see no purpose for us to participate. It’s between the Palestinians and the donor countries.” The Prime Minister will promise Israel that it will not be “bounced” into premature final-status negotiations before it is ready or before the emergence of a moderate Palestinian leadership committed to making political progress.

    At the same time, Mr Blair will offer to help the Palestinians to “fill the vacuum” when Israel implements Mr Sharon’s plan to withdraw more than 7,000 settlers from Gaza. His talks with the Palestinians will cover assistance on security, political reform and economic infrastructure. Mr Blair hopes these proposals will reassure Israel and the US that the Palestinians have a credible, non-militant leadership.

    The British say the Israelis aren’t needed. The Israelis agree, and even expressed support for the conference. So why call it a boycott?

    The press continues looking for a problem.

    Asked whether the timing of Mr Sharon’s announcement – during a meeting yesterday with the Czech Foreign Minister, Cyril Svoboda, might be seen as a snub to Mr Blair, he replied: “We decided to publicise the content of the letters in order to dispel all the rumours and misconceptions circulating about the purpose and scope of the conference.”

    Still no problem. So, why the headline? Well, there is this bit.

    No one, however, seems to have told the Palestinians. Saeb Erakat, their chief negotiator, denounced Mr Sharon’s decision as “very unfortunate”. The Palestinians, he said, believed a conference was the best way to restart peace talks. “We want to focus on reviving the peace process and resuming permanent status negotiations,” he said.

    So, it’s an Israeli boycott, as the press decides to shun the British and Israeli stances and view the matter through the eyes of the Palestinians. Very telling but not very surprising.

  • 50 Held for Iraq Blasts

    In a fast reaction to yesterday’s bombings, Iraqi authorities have rounded up 50 suspects, including some said to be rather unusual.

    Iraqi authorities detained 50 suspects in connection with an explosion in the Shia holy city of Najaf that killed at least 54 people and wounded 142, and thousands of mourners attended funerals for the victims on Monday.

    Najaf police chief Ghalib al-Jazaari said those arrested included “elements” who had allegedly confessed to having links with the intelligence services of neighbouring Syria and Iran.

    This is no proof positive of the oft-denied involvement of Iraq’s neighbors in the country’s struggles. However, the circumstantial evidence mounts, providing more and more support to the obvious conclusion.

  • The Gift of the Season, 2004 Edition

    We’ve had Cabbage Patch Kids and Tickle-Me Elmos. What is the gift of the 2004 Christmas shopping season?

    Apparently, it’s poker.

    Is there any freakin’ kind of store out there that isn’t carrying casino-style chips and Texas Hold’em sets? Heck, even Bed, Bath & Beyond has a selection. Cool game, but this craze really needs to tone down already.

    No offense intended to the Fat Guy and his obsession.

  • 62 Die in Iraq Car Bomb Blasts

    It was a bloodier-than-usual day in Iraq as the terrorists desperately work to stave off the pending elections.

    Suicide car bombers struck Iraq’s two main Shi’ite holy cities of Najaf and Karbala yesterday, killing at least 62 people and wounding nearly 130, six weeks before a historic election.

    Both bombs, which went off about two hours apart, exploded near crowded bus stations in a seemingly co-ordinated attempt to cause as much bloodshed as possible among Shi’ites, a long-oppressed majority expected to dominate the January 30 vote.

    Earlier in Baghdad, gunmen killed three Electoral Commission employees after hauling them from a car on a busy street.

    In Najaf, the suicide bomber detonated his vehicle about 300 metres from the Imam Ali shrine, near crowds of people queuing for buses and taxis and not far from busy offices.

    Medical officials said there were at least 48 dead and 90 wounded in the blast. Police imposed a curfew in Najaf’s old city.

    In Karbala, where a suicide bomber stuck about two hours earlier, the main hospital said 14 people were killed and 39 wounded. A hospital official said all appeared to be civilians with many women and children among them.

    In an unrelated occurrence, I’ve just about finished my Christmas shopping.

  • Target Centermass: On the Move Again

    A little over a week ago, I announced the problem I was facing with the pending closing of my hosting service and lack of control of the domain targetcentermass.com. Because of the positive feedback to that post, along with the fact that I’m not yet tired of telling y’all what I think, I’ve decided to move to a new host and a somewhat new domain.

    I’d like to announce the new site targetcentermass.net is going live starting … now. Yeah, there’s still some problems to be worked out and more issues are expected, but time is running out on me. I will continue to face these issues as they arise and as I am able, but all posts from now on will be cross-posted on both sites until targetcentermass.com goes away (expected to be Jan. 1, 2005).

    I would ask that any who have done me the honor of linking or blogrolling me be so kind as to update my listing to targetcentermass.net. I would also like to thank my new hosting service, Total Choice Hosting, for their receptiveness and responsiveness to date.