Wednesday, November 7, 2007

Afghanistan's Children, Part II

How odd that one day after I posted a blog on the kids, this would happen.

Yeah, things are getting better for the kids, Karzai!

This has FALSE-FLAG STENCH all over it!!

Because that's what TERROR ATTACKS ARE!

FALSE-FLAG OPERATIONS carried out by GOVERNMENTS!!

As you read the articles and commentary, ask yourself, CUI BONO?

WHO benefits from Muslims being portrayed this way?

Who is the source that brings you the report?

After that, it's pretty clear what is going on.

No mention of the
U.S. military's 75 air raids a day, and the five-fold increase in air bombings, though!

"Afghan legislators among 28 killed in bomb attack"

Did you see the picture of the boy, reader?


"A children's song, then a blast; Afghan legislators among 28 killed in bomb attack
By M. Karim Faiez and Henry Chu/Los Angeles Times November 7, 2007

KABUL, Afghanistan - At least 28 people, including five Afghan lawmakers and a number of children, were killed yesterday in one of the country's deadliest suicide attacks since the ouster of the Taliban, authorities said.

The bomber struck at a sugar factory in Baghlan province, north of Kabul, during a visit by a delegation from the lower house of Parliament. The legislators, on an economic fact-finding trip, were being greeted by local dignitaries and youths.

Zemeri Bashary, a spokesman for the Interior Ministry: "The explosion happened when the school students were singing songs to welcome the lawmakers to their province."

Some of the children shook hands with the guests and one teenager handed red, pink, and white roses to lawmaker Sayed Mustafa Kazimi - a former Afghan commerce minister and a powerful member of the opposition party National Front.

The teenager said loudly in the Afghan language of Dari: "On behalf of the Islam Qala school students, we welcome you here."

Moments later, Kazimi was dead.

Mohammad Yousuf Fayez, a doctor at Baghlan's main hospital: "The children were standing on both sides of the street, and were shaking the hands of the officials, then suddenly the explosion happened."

A video obtained by AP Television News shows dead and wounded schoolchildren on the ground. Shoes, sandals, hats, and notebooks were scattered about.

And the MSM KNOWS that gets Americans hopping mad about "enemies."

STINK!


At least 81 people were injured, including 42 children, said Fayez. Officials warned that the death toll could increase significantly.

President Hamid Karzai blamed the "the enemies of peace and security," a euphemism often used for the militant Taliban. But such a spectacular attack could also have been the work of Al Qaeda. The Taliban denied involvement.

An estimated 5,700 people were killed in Afghanistan this year, the highest toll since US-led forces overthrew the Taliban in December 2001.

That's 1oo more in less than a week!


White House press secretary Dana Perino:

"[The attack is] a despicable act of cowardice. It reminds us who the enemy is: extremists with evil in their hearts who target innocent Muslim men, women, and children."

And CUI BONO?

America NEEDING a REMINDER, huh?


The international forces and Afghan officials say the Taliban have taken heavy losses in fighting this year, leaving it more reliant on guerrilla tactics such as suicide attacks and roadside bombs.

Zemeri Bashary, an Interior Ministry spokesman, in a recent interview: "They have lost the power to attack our security forces in a face-to-face battle."

Please remember that lie for the end of the piece, readers!


But the switch to such attacks has sowed fear among ordinary Afghans, who rate public security as the country's No. 1 problem.

US Ambassador William B. Wood acknowledged during a round table with reporters in July:

"Terrorism, unfortunately, produces the terror that it seeks to produce. It is not an impotent tactic. It does not threaten national institutions, it does not threaten governance in the way that an insurgency or more serious warfare does, but it does create this gnawing insecurity, this sense of personal insecurity."

And CUI-fucking-BONO, readers? C'mon!


Earlier yesterday, dozens of Taliban militants reportedly overran a district center in central Afghanistan and cut off the town's main road. Also, in southern Kandahar province, rocket fire from insurgents narrowly missed Canadian Defense Minister Peter MacKay, who was visiting a small Canadian military outpost there."

I thought Bashary told us that the Taliban couldn't attack?! WTF, liar?

For more lies, check out this NYT beaut:


"Suicide Bomber Kills 26 in Northern Afghanistan" by ABDUL WAHEED WAFA

KABUL, Afghanistan, Nov. 6 — A suicide bomber threw himself at a delegation of lawmakers visiting a town in northern Afghanistan Tuesday, killing at least 26 people, including a leading opposition figure, and wounding scores more, many of them schoolchildren forming a welcome parade, local and regional Afghan officials said.

Such an attack, in the relatively peaceful neighborhood of New Baghlan, near Pul-i-Kumri, is unusual and appears to represent another effort by the Taliban to extend its reach to the north. There was an immediate denial of responsibility from a Taliban spokesman, but he has often been unreliable in the past, and no other group carries out suicide attacks in the country.

No "CIA-Duh?"

And does the Times every say this about our ever-lovin', lyin' Bush Administration?

The bias is a PUNGENT WAFTING of SHIT STINK, isn't it, reader?


The former minister of commerce, Sayed Mustafa Kazemi, was among the five members of Parliament who were killed. One female Parliament member, Shukria Isakhel, and an influential local commander, Amir Gul, were among the wounded, Afghan National Television reported in its evening news.

Witnesses described a scene of carnage outside the sugar factory where the bomber detonated his explosives midafternoon, and said the bodies of dead policemen were still lying on the ground three hours later.

The death of Mr. Kazemi is a blow to Afghanistan’s nascent political scene. A prominent member of the Northern Alliance movement, which had fought the Taliban, he was one of a younger generation of leaders eager to pull Afghanistan out of the poverty of war. He is one of the leaders and the spokesman of a recently formed opposition movement, the National Front, which was a coalition of representatives of the northern minorities and some prominent Pashtuns, the largest ethnic group in Afghanistan, including the grandson of the late king.

Ahhh, so he was one of our guys!

Now how would the Taliban know where he was going to be?


Mr. Kazemi and his delegation were walking toward the factory when the bomber attacked, said Shaheen, the deputy mayor of Pul-i-Kumri, who uses only one name. Mr. Shaheen confirmed that 10 people had been killed, including Mr. Kazemi. The governor, Muhammad Alam Eshaqzai, said more than 50 had been wounded. Reuters quoted the head of the town hospital, Dr. Khalilullah, as saying that it had received the bodies of 90 people and 50 wounded, but the governor would confirm only 10 dead.

A police officer, Cmdr. Kamin, said that he had counted 26 bodies at the scene and that there were 60 wounded at one hospital in New Baghlan, a newly developed part of the town of Baghlan where the factory lies.

Cmdr. Kamin, in a telephone interview: “Most of those killed are elders who gathered to welcome these parliamentarians in front of the factory, and schoolchildren, and especially children who were there to sing. Definitely it was a suicide attack; I saw the body of the attacker."

Farid Ahmad, a local reporter for Radio Good Morning Afghanistan, said he saw the bodies of three police soldiers lying on the ground at 6:30 p.m., some three hours after the explosion. “The area is chaotic,” he said. He estimated that 50 had been killed and 150 wounded.

The White House issued a statement on Tuesday condemning the attack:

The terrorist attack today in Afghanistan is a despicable act of cowardice, and it reminds us who the enemy is: extremists with evil in their hearts who target innocent Muslim men, women and children. The president expresses his sorrow for the grieving families of the victims.”

CUI BONO?
Who needs reminding?


Afghan National Television gave the names of the other members of Parliament killed as Abdul Mateen, a former communist engineer from the southern province of Helmand; Qudrutallah Zaki, from the northern province of Takhar; and Said Rahman Hehmat, from Kunar Province in the east. The fifth was Muhammad Arif Zarif from Kabul, Mr. Ahmad said.

Zabihullah Mujahid, a Taliban spokesman who has often made erroneous claims in the past, denied that the Taliban was responsible:

The Taliban has no involvement or no hands in the blast that killed civilians in Baghlan Province. We, the movement of the Taliban, condemn the action and whoever carried it out. It took the lives of ordinary people mostly.”

See how the lying Zionist Times repeats that mantra AGAIN!

But Bush never misled us! Bush is never an irresponsible liar!

So I discount what the New York Times says, especially when the denial is carried at the end of the piece.

And when the NYT reports that the Taliban,
the same "Taliban" that the New York Times described as:

"Something of a catchall term for loosely affiliated insurgents without a singular command structure. Often, the Afghan government favors the phrase 'enemies of the state' (New York Times July 24, 2007)?"

Get it now, readers?

Any "enemy" will do to shit shovel at the American people!