Home-grown group hopes to repair regional issues.(Opinion)
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- Home-grown group hopes to repair regional issues.(Opinion)
- Farida Pardawala, a Bohra Muslim, donates blood for blast victims in…
- Nilofar Suhrawardy, Arab News —
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Home-grown group hopes to repair regional issues.(Opinion)
highbeam.com – Jul 17, 2006
find Crain’s Cleveland Business articles. Byline: JAY MILLER Last month the Voices & Choices campaign brought its volunteer leadership to Windows on.
Farida Pardawala, a Bohra Muslim, donates blood for blast victims in…
Calcutta Telegraph – Jul 17, 2006
Farooqui cited how the Jamat-e-Islami, Simi’s parent organisation, had severed all links with the students’ outfit and distanced itself from its actions. “While we do not know for sure who is responsible for the inhuman bombings in Mumbai, there is no scope or rationale for bailing out anybody on the ground of religion,” he said. While none among the Muslim leaders is prepared to go on record, almost all believe that the unconfirmed reports of “home-grown” terror links are cause for extreme concern. Since the Gujarat carnage, law board chief Maulana Rabey Nadvi has been sounding out Muslim organisations on the urgency to nip the problem before it escalates. The first alarm signals had come in September 2003 when a blast probe in Mumbai threw up the name of the Gujarat Revenge Force, an obscure outfit reportedly set up to avenge the post-Godhra violence. The moderate Muslim clergy’s call to reject the revenge motive is, however, yet to translate into an aggressive campaign. Part of the reason, the leaders say, is a lack of resources and an “institutionalised mechanism” to publicise their views.
Nilofar Suhrawardy, Arab News —
Arab News – Jul 17, 2006
The group, banned by both countries and accused by New Delhi of carrying out other attacks on India, has denied responsibility for the Bombay blasts. After visiting the injured in Bombay hospitals last week, the prime minister said the seven coordinated blasts were carried out with help from