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To: MEG33
MEG if you pinged me, thank you very much. I receivd other pings to this article also. But I started reading from the very beginning of it and was turned off until I read Long Cuts post. That made my day. Frankly I had backed off from reading the threads about this subject in disgust and actually had logged off. I logged back on when I heard about the car bomb tonight at the Green Zone.

What the hades is the following about?

U.S. Demands Retraction for Abuse Photos

Wed May 5, 8:15 PM ET

By MAAMOUN YOUSSEF, Associated Press Writer

CAIRO, Egypt - The U.S. Embassy demanded a retraction Wednesday for photographs published in the Egyptian press that it said were faked pictures of American soldiers sexually abusing female prisoners in Iraq.

But editors of two of the three publications involved said Wednesday they saw no grounds for a retraction. The editor-in-chief of the third publication, Al-Wafd, was not available.

"We have done a thorough investigation of the origin of these photos and have conclusive evidence that they originated on a pornographic Web site," the embassy said in a statement. "They are clearly staged photos, done by actors, as the site itself states."

"Their publication needlessly inflames an already heated atmosphere," the statement added, referring to Arab outrage over the revelation last weekend that U.S. soldiers had sexually humiliated male prisoners in Iraq. The U.S. television network CBS broadcast photographs of the abuse at Abu Ghraib prison, just west of Baghdad.

U.S. authorities have condemned the soldiers' actions and promised to bring them to justice.

The editor of the Egyptian weekly Al-Osboa, Mustafa Bakri, dismissed the U.S. Embassy's complaint. His newspaper published at least one photograph of a man, purportedly an American soldier, taking sexual advantage of a woman as one of a series run across three pages on May 3.

"We have published, maybe, one picture from the Internet, which was one of several pictures published by the media," Bakri told The Associated Press. "The kind of pictures on CBS made us believe that any other picture is authentic.

"Now the U.S. Embassy is speaking about pictures that were published only on the Internet. OK, let us agree on what CBS published, aren't they enough?"

The editor of Al-Mussawar, Makram Mohammed Ahmed, said he was not aware of the U.S. Embassy complaint. This week, his magazine published a picture of a partially naked woman with parts of her body blacked out.

Ahmed said he would not rule out that fake pictures were circulating.

The AP could not reach its editor-in-chief, Abbas el-Tarabili, on Wednesday night and staff at the newspaper said only he was authorized to speak about the matter.

198 posted on 05/05/2004 11:56:18 PM PDT by TexKat (Just because you did not see it or read it, that does not mean it did or did not happen.)
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To: TexKat
I had heard of this.They are taking pictures from porno sites and saying they are our guys.It's enough already.

I was looking for an example of Iraq terror and googled.It was a revelation how many sites(not iraqi) offered rape pictures,torture,it must be very popular.Gag I did not click on!
200 posted on 05/06/2004 12:03:19 AM PDT by MEG33 (John Kerry's been AWOL for two decades on issues of National Security!)
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