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Threat Matrix: Daily Terror Threat - Thread Twenty-Five

Posted on 03/05/2005 5:06:15 PM PST by nwctwx

Edited on 03/29/2005 8:49:43 PM PST by Jim Robinson. [history]

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Threat Matrix: Daily Terror Threat
Thread Twenty-Five (Index)

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The Threat Matrix

The title refers to a daily report given to the president of the United States detailing the most serious terrorist threats against the country. To tackle those threats, the government has formed a top-notch task force to infiltrate the terror cells and cut off the danger.

"Every morning, the president receives a list of the top ten terrorist threats - this list is known as the threat matrix."

We here at FR are trying to be in conjunction with the daily reports around the world that involve threats. We try to provide a storehouse of information that takes hours of research.

YOU be the judge and get informed!
Threat Matrix - Daily Terrorism Threat

U.S. works 'day and night' to rein in al-Qaida
Full Story

WASHINGTON - Prompted by new intelligence indicating Osama bin Laden reached out to the most feared terrorist in Iraq, President Bush charged Thursday that "al-Qaida still hopes to attack us on our own soil."

"Recently, we learned that Osama bin Laden has urged the terrorist Zarqawi to form a group to conduct attacks outside Iraq, including here in the United States," Bush said at the swearing-in of Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff.

The president vowed, "We're working every day and night to dismantle (bin Laden's) network and to bring him to justice."

Related:
Officials: Bin Laden Urges Zarqawi to Hit U.S.
Al-Qaeda's Completed Warning Cycle - Ready to Attack?


"I will never cower before any master nor bend to any threat."



TOPICS: News/Current Events; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: terror; threat; threatmatrix
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To: All

Thousands flee Sumatra volcano
http://www.cnn.com/2005/WORLD/asiapcf/04/12/sumatra.volcano.reut/


4,061 posted on 04/12/2005 8:58:08 PM PDT by Velveeta
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To: All; JesseP

crosspost:

MONITORING ISLAMIC EXTREMISM IN U.S., POLITICAL MOVEMENT SWEEPS ACROSS NATION.
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1382537/posts


I bet they lurk at TM ;-)


4,062 posted on 04/12/2005 9:05:08 PM PDT by Velveeta
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To: All

The next TM should be ready by tomorrow night. If anyone wants on or off the notification ping list, let me know!!


4,063 posted on 04/12/2005 9:44:17 PM PDT by nwctwx
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To: JustPiper
National campaign launched to stop senator as book in works could 'sink her candidacy'

No matter what disgusting minutiae is brought up about Hillary, she will be pretty much unaffected by it as 49% of our population thinks she and her maritally challenged husband can do no wrong.

4,064 posted on 04/12/2005 9:56:01 PM PDT by MamaDearest
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To: angcat
I love the idea. If I could join I would!

You're not the only one.

4,065 posted on 04/12/2005 10:01:28 PM PDT by MamaDearest
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To: freeperfromnj
Hopefully they'll throw the book at them./i>

Doubt we can do that. Aren't they to be treated with tender loving care until they are released on their own recognizance, per ACLU dictates, liberal judge whim?

4,066 posted on 04/12/2005 10:07:42 PM PDT by MamaDearest
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To: ladyjane
I'd be interested in hearing the other side of the argument, however.

We also have a large proportion of Americans with absolutely no health/medical insurance. Basic medical needs are just not part of their lives because they simply cannot afford it. This includes part-time and full-time American workers whose companies do not offer such benefits, or the costs are so high they are prohibitive to the average worker.

4,067 posted on 04/12/2005 10:16:26 PM PDT by MamaDearest
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To: Oorang

What is the thread url you picked that list of urls from?


4,068 posted on 04/12/2005 10:22:11 PM PDT by Cindy
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To: subsea06
Labs Urged to Destroy Pandemic Flu Strain

Lots of difference in the wording this "urged to destroy" as opposed to "instructed to destroy." This shouldn't be optional.

4,069 posted on 04/12/2005 10:25:19 PM PDT by MamaDearest
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To: Oorang
Electronic Pearl Harbor?

German police free girl hostages

4,070 posted on 04/12/2005 10:35:49 PM PDT by MamaDearest
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To: All
TOWNHALL.com: "IT'S ABOUT SECURITY, STUPID" -Column by Joel Mowbray (April 13, 2005) (Read More...)

4,071 posted on 04/12/2005 10:38:04 PM PDT by Cindy
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To: All

http://michellemalkin.com/archives/002059.htm

"UNHINGED LIBERAL PRODUCTS FOR SALE"
By Michelle Malkin   ·   April 12, 2005 07:15 AM


4,072 posted on 04/12/2005 10:55:35 PM PDT by Cindy
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To: backhoe; piasa; All

ON THE NET...

http://littlegreenfootballs.com/weblog/?entry=15420_The_Living_Legacy_of_Jihad_Slavery&only=yes

tuesday, april 12, 2005
"The Living Legacy of Jihad Slavery"

===
===

http://michellemalkin.com/archives/002066.htm

"WHEN SAUDI PRINCESSES ATTACK"
By Michelle Malkin   ·   April 12, 2005 12:34 PM


4,073 posted on 04/12/2005 11:41:10 PM PDT by Cindy
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To: All

PERSECUTION.ORG
http://www.persecution.org

===
===

Note: The following text is an exact quote:
---

http://www.assistnews.net/Stories/s05040062.htm

ASSIST News Service (ANS) - PO Box 2126, Garden Grove, CA 92842-2126 USA
Visit our web site at: www.assistnews.net -- E-mail: danjuma1@aol.com

Tuesday, April 12, 2005

FEARS OVER PLANNED SWEEPING NEW RESTRICTIONS ON RELIGION IN KAZAKHSTAN

By Michael Ireland
Chief Correspondent, ASSIST News Service

KAZAHKSTAN (ANS) -- A new draft religion law and other legal changes that significantly restrict believers' rights in Kazahkstan are likely to be considered at a session of the lower house of parliament on 16 April after current discussions in the parliamentary working group are complete.

According to Igor Rotar, writing for Forum 18 News Service, religious minority leaders and human rights activists have expressed fears over plans to require all religious communities to register before they can function and to ban missionary activity by both foreigners and local citizens unless it is licensed.

"Religious literature and recordings are also set to require approval. Such sweeping controls violate Kazakhstan's constitution and its international human rights commitments, including as a member of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE)," Rotar writes in a report obtaind by ASSIST News Service (ANS).

Rotar says that under the draft law "on the introduction of additions and amendments to several legal documents of the Republic of Kazakhstan relating to the provision of national security," substantial changes will be made to more than ten laws, including the current law on religion. The parliamentary working group, which is currently considering the amendments, consists of eighteen members and is chaired by Tokhtarkhan Nurakhmetov.

Article 4 of the draft amended religion law has a new sixth section that forbids the activity of unregistered religious organizations (Kazakhstan would thereby join two of the other Central Asian republics, Uzbekistan and Turkmenistan, whose laws on religion forbid the activity of unregistered religious organizations in defiance of international human rights commitments), Rotar says.

Rotar reports that Kazakhstan's prime minister Danial Akhmetov signed the draft law on 24 February but interestingly, the text became known to the general public only at the beginning of April, when it was published on the parliament's website.

Some see the hand of the National Security Committee secret police (KNB, the former KGB) in this tightening of state control over religious activity, Rotar said.

"This draft law was drawn up in the National Security Committee and has merely been signed by the prime minister," Ninel Fokina, head of the Almaty Helsinki Committee, told Forum 18 from the country's commercial capital on 9 April. "Essentially, today it is the former KGB that lays down religious policy in the country."

In a March letter to the head of the parliamentary working group, Protestant churches in Almaty complained that the proposed new restrictions on religious activity violated the country's constitution and international commitments, Rotar reports.

"The entire draft bears the clear imprint of mistrust of religious organizations and a desire to put them in a much worse legal position than other legal bodies," the letter declared.

It cited concerns over the requirement to register religious communities and missionaries, to submit religious literature and recordings for approval and the ease with which religious organizations could be liquidated "even for trivial violations." Protestant churches in Karaganda region wrote a similar complaint earlier in March.

As well as making registration of religious communities compulsory, the new draft law substantially restricts missionary activity (defined in the draft as "preaching and promotion of any faith-based doctrine by means of religious proselytizing activity"), Rotar said.

Additional articles are to be introduced into the religion law, which will oblige missionaries to register with the local authorities. Additionally, the local authorities will in future be able to control the activity of a religious organization. Thus, according to the legal amendment, "After registration the additional use of documents with a religious content must be agreed with the local authorities."

Rotar reported that in a significant new move, the amendment specifies that not just foreigners but also Kazakh citizens who are carrying out missionary work are to be considered missionaries. In other words, believers may only promote their views with the agreement of the authorities. This provision was confirmed on 11 April by the parliamentary working group considering the draft law after what local Khabar television described as "heated debate."

Rotar said the new draft law also makes corresponding changes to strengthen the administrative code of offences. A new article, 374-1, will be inserted into the administrative code. (Leadership and participation in the activity of public and religious associations that have not been registered in accordance with the law of the Republic of Kazakhstan, as well as financing their activity).

Under this article:

The leadership of the activity of public and religious associations that have not been registered in the proper manner, and also those organizations whose activity has been halted or banned will attract a fine amounting to 100 times the minimum monthly wage (currently 971 tenge or 7 US dollars). 
 

Participation in the activity of public and religious associations that have not been registered in the proper manner and also those organizations whose activity has been halted or banned will attract a fine amounting to 50 times the minimum monthly wage.
 

The financing of the activity of public and religious associations that have not been registered in the proper manner and also those organizations whose activity has been halted or banned will attract a fine amounting to 200 times the minimum monthly wage.



An addition is also proposed to Article 375 of the administrative code, an article, Rotar says, that already punishes violations of the religion law (including refusal to register a religious organization).

According to the new draft law "Missionary work carried out by citizens, foreign citizens and persons who have no citizenship, without the appropriate registration, will attract a fine of up to 15 times the monthly wage of a citizen, while foreigners and persons without citizenship will be fined up to 15 times the monthly wage and will be expelled beyond the borders of the Republic of Kazakhstan."

Rotar said Kazakhstan's first television channel identified the parliamentary deputy Amangeldi Aytaly as the author of one section of the draft law aimed at restricting the activities of religious communities.

In words closely echoing the earlier views of the KNB secret police, Aytaly told the channel on 11 April that various unnamed "sects" had installed themselves in Kazakhstan and had converted many people to "alien values." The report cited "official statistics" that half a million Kazakhs have been "diverted from the traditional Islamic religion" and adopted other faiths. Aytaly said missionaries who convert young people and split up families should be banned.

"All things considered, Fokina's view that the KNB is behind the proposed changes is not without basis," Rotar reported.

On 21 February, Kazakh president Nursultan Nazarbayev signed a law "On combating extremism" and also a law introducing changes and additions to several legal documents relating to the battle against religious extremism (see F18News 25 February2005 www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=520).

Rotar wrote that: "These controversial laws had been considered in parliament for six months. During the drafting process, successive texts were criticized by a range of human rights organizations -- the OSCE, the Kazakhstan International Bureau for Human Rights, the Almaty Helsinki Committee and the International Centre for Non-commercial Law -- which regarded the draft law as potentially limiting the rights of Kazakh citizens."

"Protestant sources told Forum 18 that in late February, within days of the adoption of the extremism law, an official from the local administration came to the Baptist leader in Chimkent district of South Kazakhstan Region to ask whether any foreign missionaries were at work there. Similar visits to religious communities are believed to have been made in other parts of the country," Rotar said.

"In recent months representatives of the law-enforcement agencies -- above all the KNB secret police -- made no attempt to hide the fact that they initiated the law on extremism and the amendments to other laws. Last November, the chairman of the KNB, Nartay Dutbaev, admitted publicly that his agency was trying to change the laws on terrorism, national security, law enforcement, criminal investigations, and freedom of religion, believing that the existing laws contained "weaknesses" and arguing that it was necessary to augment the laws to strengthen state influence over believers," he wrote.

Rotar reports the first deputy chairman of the KNB secret police, Vladimir Bozhko, declared in January that efforts were needed to "defend society from the penetration of ideas that are alien to our mentality, alien to our traditional forms of religious expression". Bozhko emphasized that the KNB "definitely" intended to regulate missionary activity strictly.

In other words, says Rotar, the current draft law is simply a logical continuation of the National Security Service's policy to exert greater control over religious organizations.

"However," he writes, "some religious leaders seem unconcerned by the draft legal changes now in parliament."

"I am sure that the draft law does not in any way limit Muslims' rights," Ongar Omerbek, press secretary to the Muftiate of Kazakhstan, told Forum 18 on 8 April. The dean for the Almaty region in the Orthodox Astana and Almaty diocese, Fr Vasili Zaleznyak, turned out to be even more adamant. "We simply welcome the new draft law," he told Forum 18 the same day.

"The requirement to register a religious community does not present any problem to us. Now Protestants and religious missionaries will not be so free in their activities in Kazakhstan," Omerbek said.

Roman Dudnik, head of the Protestant Emmanuel community, is among those worried by the provisions in the draft law, arguing that the state has stepped up its policy against religious minorities, Rotar says.

"In many areas we have communities where there are fewer than the 10 members required for registration," Dudnik told Forum 18 from Almaty on 9 April. "Now it turns out that these believers will be legally persecuted. The discussion about missionary activity in the draft law is also very dangerous. It turns out that no believer can tell people his religious views without the permission of the authorities."

Wideranging concerns have been expressed by Aleksander Klyushev, head of the Association of Religious Organizations of Kazakhstan, which has called for more openness in discussing the proposed changes with legal experts and representatives of religious communities.

The deputy head of the ruling council of Jehovah's Witnesses in Kazakhstan, Anatoli Melnik, declined to comment to Forum 18 on 9 April on the new draft law, saying that he was not aware of its contents. Likewise the same day the head of the Ahmadiyya religious community in Kazakhstan Akhmed Muzafar also declined comment to Forum 18. At the same time, representatives of Ahmadiyya and the Jehovah's Witnesses said pressure from the authorities on their communities had increased in recent months, Rotar reported.

Rotar concluded: "The authorities have long sought to restrict religious rights by tightening the 1992 religion law. A harsh new law was adopted by parliament in 2002 (the eighth such attempt) and approved by President Nazarbayev. However, under pressure from international and local human rights organizations, the constitutional council ruled in April 2002 that the new law contradicted the constitution and it was withdrawn."


For more background, see Forum 18's Kazakhstan religious freedom survey at www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=249

A printer-friendly map of Kazakhstan is available at www.nationalgeographic.com/xpeditions/atlas/index.html?Parent=asia&Rootmap=kazakh

© Forum 18 News Service. All rights reserved. ISSN 1504-2855

You may reproduce or quote this article provided that credit is given to F18News www.forum18.org

Past and current Forum 18 information can be found at www.forum18.org

If you need to contact F18News, please email them at f18news@editor.forum18.org

Forum 18
Postboks 6663
Rodeløkka
N-0502 Oslo
NORWAY


** Michael Ireland is an international British freelance journalist. A former reporter with a London newspaper, Michael is the Chief Correspondent for ASSIST News Service of Garden Grove, CA. Michael immigrated to the United States in 1982 and became a US citizen in Sept., 1995. He is married with two children. Michael has also been a frequent contributor to UCB Europe, a British Christian radio station.


** You may republish this story with proper attribution.


4,074 posted on 04/13/2005 12:14:42 AM PDT by Cindy
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To: All

ON THE NET....

http://www.al-qal3ah.net/vb/
http://www.al-qal3ah.net/vb/showthread.php?p=565350#post565350
http://www.hdrmut.net//ufiles/66.gif
http://mastermind.jeeran.com/17-April-2003.bmp
http://www.aljazeera.net/mritems/images/2001/12/26/1_73356_1_6.jpg
http://www.aljazeera.net/mritems/images/2001/9/13/1_54460_1_11.jpg
http://islammemo.cc/news/newsimages/usa/World-Trade-Center-04.jpg
http://islammemo.cc/news/newsimages/usa/World-Trade-Center-02.jpg
http://www.al-qal3ah.net/vb/showthread.php?p=565344#post565344
http://bqaya.com/uploader/pic/00.gif
http://foma.3g2.org/upload/so/1154.zip
http://foma.3g2.org/upload/so/1155.zip
http://foma.3g2.org/upload/so/1156.zip
http://sigmarl.cside.com/upload/source/No_0234.zip
http://sigmarl.cside.com/upload/source/No_0235.zip
http://sigmarl.cside.com/upload/source/No_0236.zip
http://www.al-qal3ah.net/vb/showthread.php?p=565341#post565341
http://www.palestine-info.net/arabic/temp_photo/sh33.jpg

http://www.google.com/search?q=%22foma.3g2%22&hl=en&lr=&filter=0


http://www.internet-haganah.us/haganah/index.html
http://www.jihadwatch.org
http://www.memri.org/jihad.html
http://www.infovlad.net


4,075 posted on 04/13/2005 2:39:21 AM PDT by Cindy
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To: All; Calpernia; nw_arizona_granny

***Freeper Prayer Circle Needed***
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-religion/1382596/posts


Please join us in prayer


4,076 posted on 04/13/2005 5:29:20 AM PDT by Velveeta
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To: All

Bomb Suspect‘s Mother Waits for Word of Son
http://www.obviousnews.com/breakingnews/stories/obviousnews-556409.html


4,077 posted on 04/13/2005 6:20:28 AM PDT by Velveeta
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To: MamaDearest
We also have a large proportion of Americans with absolutely no health/medical insurance

Right. But if a person is sick they can go to any emergency room and they won't be turned away. Illegals can go too and not worry that they'll be reported.

Plans are already in place for early detection and mass innoculations. Our level of medical care and our biological terrorism planning does not exist in other parts of the world.

Again, I think the lesser developed countries would be hit much harder when the germs blow-back into their countries. I'd be very interested in contrary views.

4,078 posted on 04/13/2005 6:40:13 AM PDT by ladyjane
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To: All; nw_arizona_granny; Calpernia

Single-Engine Plane Explodes, Scatters In Sugarcane Fields
http://www.wftv.com/news/4374415/detail.html

SOUTH BAY, Fla. -- Palm Beach County Sheriff's Office says no rescue efforts are underway for Tuesday's single-engine plane explosion since there are no survivors.

The ***plane exploded into a ball of fire while in air*** scattering debris in sugarcane fields in western Palm Beach County.(snip)


4,079 posted on 04/13/2005 6:45:01 AM PDT by Velveeta
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To: All

Al-Jazeera says video shows kidnapped American

http://www.chron.com/cs/CDA/ssistory.mpl/world/3132743


4,080 posted on 04/13/2005 6:52:48 AM PDT by Velveeta
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