The post here in 2530, where I tried to copy Jills site.
The link is from Pez in 2526.
Velveeta, said it was from a movie, sang by the "DC 5".
and that is a strange bunch of messages, that you posted,
what does Honda have to do with muslims?
LOL
I think it has been 30 years or more, since I went to a movie theater....very few video's at home, so can't even guess at what is in them.
and that is a strange bunch of messages, that you posted,
what does Honda have to do with muslims?
Rebels linking up with foreign jihadists, says PNP official
http://www.abs-cbnnews.com/topofthehour.aspx?StoryId=14015
A lethal mix of militant groups is emerging in Mindanao, a senior
police intelligence official said, warning of attacks as foreign and local
jihadists share resources, talents and capabilities, a Reuters report
said Monday.
The intelligence official, who declined to be identified, said foreign
Islamic militants, mostly Indonesians, were building alliances with
several homegrown Moro rebels to survive government offensives in the
south.
Since July, troops backed by US aerial surveillance vehicles have been
combing coastal and mountain villages in Maguindanao province for about
30 rebels from the al-Qaeda-linked Abu Sayyaf group, who are thought to
be operating with a handful of Indonesian militants.
"These militants are now crossing organizational lines to exchange and
share manpower, expertise and resources," the intelligence official
told Reuters late on Sunday.
"If governments in the region are cooperating to eliminate these
threats, we are now seeing that terrorists are also sharing their 'best
practices' to fight back".
A senior US diplomat in Manila drew an angry reaction from government
leaders earlier this year when he said Mindanao risked turning into "an
Afghanistan situation".
The intelligence official said there were intelligence reports that
Rajah Solaiman Revolutionary Movement, a group of radical Moro converts,
had merged with the Abu Sayyaf group led by Khaddafy Janjalani.
This, he said, had increased the threat of attacks in Manila because
most of the converts were based around the capital.
Janjalani, long the subject of manhunt operations on Mindanao, is also
thought to have developed close links with Indonesian militants
belonging to different jihadist groups, including Jemaah Islamiah (JI).
A classified security report shown to Reuters said JI instructors had
taught about 60 of Janjalani's followers how to handle crude bombs
fashioned out of unexploded mortar rounds.
JI has been blamed for several of the deadliest attacks in southeast
Asia, including the October 2002 Bali bombing that nearly killed 200
people, mostly Australian tourists.
Officials said foreign militants were forced to seek out other rebel
groups in Mindanao because the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF), the
country's largest Moro rebel group, which is in talks with the
government, started pushing them to leave.
But they said rogue MILF elements continued to protect the foreign
militants, allowing them to hide in a marshy area in Maguindanao province.
"We always believed the leadership of MILF is determined to cut its
ties with these militants," said Rodolfo Garcia, a member of the
government's peace panel negotiating with the MILF.
The government has said it will resume informal talks with the MILF
within a month in Malaysia on a proposed ancestral homeland for Muslims in
Mindanao to help end the conflict that has killed more than 120,000
people since the late 1960s.
Monday, August 22, 2005
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2005/08/22/BAGTDEBAFG1.DTL
A 22-year-old Lodi man arrested in a federal terror probe "swore that
he would go to jihad" in conversations that were recorded by a secret
witness, and he later strongly indicated that he had been accepted to a
terrorist training camp in Pakistan, prosecutors say.
The new allegations are made by U.S. Attorney McGregor W. Scott in a
court filing that asks a federal judge in Sacramento to continue holding
Hamid Hayat and his father, 47-year-old Umer Hayat, without bail. Both
are charged with lying about the son's alleged attendance at a training
camp.
Attorneys for the father and son denied the allegations Sunday and said
their clients had no connection to terrorism. They said they have
learned from the Hayats that the witness befriended many Muslims in Lodi and
got so close to the Hayats that he once spent the night at their house.
The attorneys said the witness was aggressive and leading in his
conversations.
The new government filing marks the first time prosecutors have spoken
of a cooperating witness in the case. They say the witness recorded
Hamid Hayat when he was in the United States in March and April of 2003,
and recorded him over the phone when he was in Pakistan in late April
2003.
(snipped)