".... Sudan (a Muslim nation with an independent foreign policy which supports Palestinian rights). To an overwhelming degree, the propaganda campaign behind the so-called “Darfur genocide campaign’ is the Israeli state and its political apparatus in the US, namely the ZPC. Most of the media celebrities, led by prominent Hollywood Zionist director Steven Spielberg, have engaged in an exercise of selective moral indignation – supporting Israel, while ignoring its starvation blockade of Gaza, supporting the US occupation of Afghanistan and Iraq while attacking China for its ‘immoral’ oil contracts with the Sudan.
The CPMAJO has focused on the Darfur ‘genocide’ because by doing so it favors the brutal separatists in southern Sudan, armed and advised by Israel, as a means of depriving pro-Palestinian Sudan of a large oil rich region in the south of the country. The Darfur campaign deliberately and systematically excludes any mention of the Israeli Supreme Court’s approval of Israel’s food and fuel blockade and deliberate prevention of the movement of medical personnel in Gaza and the West Bank, its approval of Israel’s practice of torture (‘forceful interrogations’), armed assaults on the vital infrastructure and civilian population centers of Gaza. Hollywood’s Darfur sideshow is a sham propaganda effort at selective humanitarian concern...."
Now read this from the Zionist-controlled AmeriKan War Daily:
"Sudan says it will bar Danes"
"by Mohamed Osman, Associated Press | February 28, 2008
KHARTOUM, Sudan - President Omar al-Bashir vowed yesterday to ban Danes from Sudan and called for a Muslim boycott of Denmark as a crowd of tens of thousands denounced the country at a government-backed protest against a cartoon satirizing the Prophet Mohammed.
How come there was no fuss over this cartoon, readers?
See where this is going?
It's so easy to see now, isn't it, readers?
The rally outside Bashir's palace in Khartoum was the largest protest in the Muslim world since Danish papers reprinted the cartoon, seen by many Muslims as insulting to their religion's most revered figure. The demonstration raised fears that renewed protests over the cartoon - so far small and scattered - could grow.
"We urge all Muslims around the world to boycott Danish commodities, goods, companies, institutions, organizations and personalities," Bashir told the crowd.
"Down, down, Denmark!" shouted the protesters. Al-Bashir vowed that "not a single Danish foot will from now on desecrate the land of Sudan."
It was not clear whether Bashir would expel the two dozen Danes who work in Sudan, mostly in aid organizations and as peacekeepers in southern Sudan and Darfur. The Danish charge d'affaires in Khartoum, Karin Soerensen, said her mission had not been notified of any order for Danes to leave and would not comment whether there were any plans to evacuate them.
Bashir's Islamist government has frequently used perceived insults to Mohammed to rally support for the regime and opposition to international pressure to accept UN peacekeepers' presence. He has barred peacekeepers from Sweden and Norway from a joint UN-African force in the Darfur region because papers in those countries published similar cartoons in the past.
Khartoum began enforcing a ban on Danish products Tuesday.
If Sudan moves to try to expel Danes from the peacekeeping force in the south or from the Darfur force, known as UNAMID, it would further strain ties with the United Nations.
Adrian Edwards, a UNAMID spokesman, said the United Nations had not received any official notification about an expulsion of Danish subjects from Sudan.
The Danish government did not respond to Bashir's statements yesterday.
Earlier this month, 17 Danish newspapers reprinted the cartoon showing Mohammed wearing a bomb-shaped turban - a gesture of solidarity after police in the Scandinavian country said they uncovered a plot to kill the cartoon's artist.
Sudan was one of the nations where large protests were held against Denmark in 2006, when the cartoon and 11 others depicting Mohammed and Islam were first published.
In riots that followed around the Muslim world, dozens of people were killed and several Danish embassies were attacked, while Danish goods were boycotted.
Khartoum's protest was peaceful yesterday, ending after several hours. The rally failed to muster the 1 million participants sought by the organizers, the Popular Front for the Defense of Faith and Religion, which backs Bashir's ruling National Congress party.
The protesters carried banners reading: "We love you our dear prophet," and shouted, "We will protect our prophet, we will not be intimidated by America!"And look at how the Jew Daily turns this into an American issue!
That'll get Americans dander fired up.
We don't intimidate people (well, we do); we just INVADE and MURDER THEM!
I didn't comment or highlight much because I'm just tired off the Zionist spin.
Read it again if you are not convinced.
I don't have to anymore, and I won't.
I'm not buying the Zionist-controlled War Dailies anymore, and I'm not even going to visit the websites after today's posts.
Finally done for good, readers!