Is Islamic Militant Returning Back?
By Hasan Yahya, Ph.D
TINA
International News Agency, Chicago,
February 23, 2009
Watching daily news, suicide
bombing one can observe a surge of new suicide bombers in several places around
the Muslim world. For example, in Iraq,
three troops and interpreter were killed recently in fighting northeast of Baghdad, the Iraqi
capital. Adding up to 4,250 members of the U.S. military list who have died in
the war since it began in March 2003.
In Somalia, Two bombers, one in a
car, target African Union troops in the attack. The soldiers are in Somalia to
support its fragile transitional government. A suicide car bomb attack against African Union
peacekeepers killed eleven Burundian soldiers and wounded 15, the incident was
described by news reports as the deadliest attack against AU troops since the
deployment two years ago.
In Cairo, Egypt,
A bomb exploded
in a bazaar near the historic Hussein mosque in Cairo,
killing a Frenchwoman, wounding 18 people and raising fears that Islamic
militants may be targeting Egypt's
tourist industry after several years of relative quiet. Some reports say four people were killed. The blast raises fears that it
may signal the return of Islamic militant attacks on Egypt's tourism industry, although
no group has claimed responsibility.
In
Kabul, Afghanistan — A man wrapped in
explosives walked into a compound filled with Afghan police officers on Monday
morning and detonated his payload, killing 21 officers and himself. The
Interior Ministry said the attacker was dressed in a police uniform and set off
the explosives during a training exercise in the compound. Eight other officers
were wounded. Another
man drove a car filled with explosives into a convoy carrying
French and Afghan soldiers on the southwestern edge of Kabul, the capital, killing himself and
injuring three other people, including a French soldier. Other incident, a suicide bomber
blew himself up outside the German Embassy in Kabul, killing an American serviceman and
four civilians.
Questions began to
rise such as: What happened to Osama Bin Laden? Is he still alive through his
legacy of bombing civilians and peaceful tourists? I hate to say this and to
sound like a conspiracy theorist, but I don’t believe that Bin Laden really
existed. He’s a seven foot diabetic ill person, lives in a cave where no
electricity, but his camcorder is fully charged!
Recent search to find
Bin Laden, used top sophisticated geographic theories
and techno-geographic methods to find him. I think if he died, his legacy still
alive from the above incidents in Baghdad, Afghanistan, Somalia,
and Egypt.
In conclusion, all
these incidents are committed on Muslim Soil, which raise the eyebrows, why is
this so? I can’t believe the news? Are justice lost in
these countries? Are governments still anarchic in their policies to suppress
parts of their citizens? Or is it external causes and powers incite these
attacks? It make me wonder for how long Muslims can
convince the world that they are not terrorists. It is not enough to say Islam
is tolerant to all humankind, while we observe the death as result of militant
attacks does not discriminate between Muslim and non-Muslim, old or young, male
or female. Is this what is called
tolerance of Islam as a great religion? I don’t think so. (554 words)
* Hasan Yahya is a culumnist at wordfuture.info and many other news agancies.
** Dr. Yahya email: askdryahya@yahoo.com
Webpage: www.hasanyahya.com
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