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FLASH: DAJJAL PARTLY CAVES, RELEASES 6 WOMEN TORTURE VICTIMS

Islamic Community Net | 18.01.2006 17:24 | Anti-militarism | Gender | Repression | World

his is a signal historical event for it clarifies that Dajjal Bush CAN indeed be held to civilized standards by the judicious application of armed force. The official policy of "non-negotiation with terrorists" has fallen flat on its face and now enters the dustbin of history. It is now time for the mice to demand more cookies to end the torture camps for good.

FLASH: DAJJAL PARTLY CAVES, RELEASES 6 WOMEN TORTURE VICTIMS
Islamic Community Net
January 18, 2006
 http://groups.yahoo.com/group/islamiccommunitynet/message/9110

This is a signal historical event for it clarifies that Dajjal Bush CAN indeed be held to civilized standards by the judicious application of armed force.

The official policy of "non-negotiation with terrorists" has fallen flat on its face and now enters the dustbin of history. It is now time for the mice to demand more cookies to end the torture camps for good.

Of course, no one should be under the illusion that Dajjal Bush is imprisoning "only" 8 women in his multiple rape and torture camps. No doubt there are many thousands. Nor should anyone think that Bush cares anything at all about the fate of Jill Carrol, a critic whom he would actually love to see dead. What this release really shows is that application of sufficient pressure at a particular point is going to produce humiliating international pressure that can crack even a crude fascist barbarian like the antichrist of our age, George Bush.


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Female detainees set free in Iraq
BBC
January 18, 2006
 http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/4624716.stm

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photos:

Hostage takers demanded on Tuesday that women be freed. Jill Carroll in a still from a video shown on al-Jazeera
 http://newsimg.bbc.co.uk/media/images/41227000/jpg/_41227816_hostagegrab_203.jpg

Map showing location of Iraq and Baghdad
 http://newsimg.bbc.co.uk/media/images/41191000/gif/_41191438_iraq_baghdad_map203.gif
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Hostage takers demanded on Tuesday that women be freed
Iraq's ministry of justice has told the BBC that six of the eight women being held by coalition forces in Iraq have been released early.

The six were freed because there was insufficient evidence to charge them, a justice ministry spokesman said.

The US forces have refused to confirm the releases, but say they would not be based on any operational activities.

The group holding US journalist Jill Carroll has said she will die unless all Iraqi women prisoners are freed.

The status of prisoners held by coalition forces is reviewed twice a week by a committee made up of the justice, human rights and interior ministries, and a representative of the US-led coalition.

The justice ministry spokesman said it was this committee which had studied the cases of the six women and found insufficient evidence against them.

However, the US military stressed that decisions over such matters were a detailed process that were unrelated to any other operational activity.

The demand that all Iraqi female prisoners held by coalition forces should be released was made in a video of Ms Carroll which aired on Arab TV channel al-Jazeera on Tuesday.

Her captors said the 28-year-old journalist would be killed within 72 hours if their demand was not met.

The video showed Ms Carroll apparently speaking to the camera, but did not include her voice.

Al-Jazeera did not say where it got the tape. The station itself has called for her release.

It was the first sighting of Ms Carroll since gunmen abducted her in Baghdad 10 days earlier, fatally wounding her translator during the attack.

Past demands

She is the 31st foreign journalist kidnapped in Iraq since the invasion almost three years ago, according to Reporters Sans Frontieres.

Ms Carroll has been a freelance reporter for the Christian Science Monitor newspaper, among others.

She had been reporting from the Middle East for Jordanian, Italian and other media organisations for the past three years, the Christian Science Monitor said in a statement.

The Monitor describes itself as a non-religious newspaper.

It is not the first time that the abductors of Western hostages in Iraq have called for the release of women prisoners.

In October 2004, Briton Ken Bigley and two American hostages were beheaded by members of al-Qaeda in Iraq, who had demanded female prisoners be freed.

At the time the Bush administration said that only two women were being held in Iraq - Huda Salih Mahdi Ammash, nicknamed by the US "Mrs Anthrax" and Rihab Taha, also known as "Dr Germ".

The pair were amongst a group of eight senior aides to former Iraqi President Saddam Hussein who were released in December 2005.

In November 2004, British aid worker Margaret Hassan was abducted and murdered in Iraq. Before her death she appeared in a similar hostage video calling for foreign troop withdrawals and the release of women prisoners.

 http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/4624716.stm

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