Fantastic work Cindy on yor recap and updates. Even a cursory glance at the titles for each gives details an eye-opening snippet of the relentless work of patriots who are diligently at work protecting us day and night. It also illuminates the determination of those who work tirelessly to obliterate infidels (anyone who isn’t them) from the face of the earth.
Thank you MamaDearest.
Generally speaking, the lame-stream-media seemed to not pay too much attention to the HLF trial.
LONDON - Police investigating the discovery of "potentially explosive material" at a house in northern England arrested a second suspect under anti-terrorism laws on Saturday. The 31-year-old man was detained in Dundee in the early hours, a Humberside Police spokeswoman said.
Another man, also 31, was arrested on Wednesday after police seized the unidentified material during a house search in the centre of Goole, East Yorkshire. Police sealed off the area around the house during the searches and tests are being carried out on the material. The men, both from Goole, have not been named. They were detained under the Terrorism Act 2000 and are being questioned at a West Yorkshire police station. Police said the house in Goole was searched as part of a separate criminal investigation.
"We would ask people to go about their business as usual," a police spokeswoman said. "However, we would always urge people to remain vigilant." Police stepped up patrols earlier this year after two car bombs were found in central London and a Jeep was rammed into a terminal at Glasgow Airport. The security service MI5 rates the current threat of a terrorist attack as severe, the second-highest level. That means an attack is thought to be "highly likely". p>http://www.christiantoday.com/article/second.man.arrested.in.uk.over.explosives.terrorism.fears/14367.htm
Sweden loses contact with embassy in Pakistan
3rd November 2007
Sweden's foreign office has been unable to contact the its embassy in Pakistan since president Pervez Musharraf declared emergency rule in the country on Saturday.
The Swedish ambassador in Islamabad, Anna Karin Eneström, was in Dubai as Pakistan is locked in constitutional crisis. "Both she and I have tried to get hold of the deputies at the embassy but we have not succeeded. I don't know if the telephone lines are working properly," said Sofia Karlberg at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs. Foreign minister Carl Bildt viewed developments in Pakistan as "seriously worrying". "We have not been able to establish contact with the embassy there. It's clearly a serious situation," said Bildt.
Excerpted
http://www.thelocal.se/8995/20071103/
Islamic militants capture 100 more security personnel in Pakistan
Nov 3, 2007
Islamabad - Islamic militants claimed Saturday that they had captured 100 more security personnel, a day after they released 48 captives in Pakistan's north-western valley of Swat. 'We did not want unnecessary bloodshed, and that is why we assured them that they would be allowed to return to their homes safely if they surrender,' said militant spokesman Maulana Sirajuddin. He said the captives would be released before the media later in the day.
The 100 troops, mainly police officers, were under siege since October 26 at a police station and hospital in the Matta area, after clashes erupted there following deployment of additional troops to curb a rebellion by radical cleric Maulana Fazlullah.
Excerpted