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19-07-2014, 07:36
The Ministry of Islamic Affairs is investigating 17 imams in Riyadh for allegedly ignoring a government order to highlight and condemn the recent Sharura terror attack in their Friday sermons.
Most imams across the country had highlighted the incident and the dangers of terrorism in their Friday sermons, as ordered by the ministry.
The ministry stated on Friday that it would penalize the imams if the allegations are proven true.
Tawfiq Al-Sudairi, the ministry’s undersecretary, confirmed that 17 imams at mosques in Riyadh are under investigation for allegedly failing to highlight the incident in their sermons.
A Saudi newspaper, meanwhile, reported that 100 imams across the country allegedly ignored the ministry’s order to condemn the Sharura attacks.
Al-Sheikh Salman Al-Hadi, an imam in Jeddah, told Arab News that religious leaders play an important role in creating awareness of terrorist activities in the country.x
He said people should be particularly aware of those who “deceive the young and convince them to fight against their country and society.”x
The incident in the Kingdom’s southern governorate of Sharura took place two weeks ago when Al-Qaeda militants attacked the Wadia Saudi border post along the Yemeni border.x
The terrorists killed the Saudi commander. Saudi security officers killed three of the assailants, and shot and captured two others.x
This attack was preceded by an assault on the Yemeni side of the border post with the terrorists detonating a car bomb killing one Yemeni soldier and wounding another.x
The suspected Al-Qaeda assailants were seeking to infiltrate Saudi Arabia from Yemen, possibly with the intention of carrying out further terrorist attacks.x
Saudi security forces seized machine guns and rocket-propelled grenades from the vehicles used by the assailants.
http://www.arabnews.com/news/604281

19-07-2014, 07:40


'Let us strangle the last king with the guts of the last priest," the French 18th century philosopher Denis Diderot said. The same phrase is now widely repeated across Arabia – or Saudi Arabia, as it is currently named under the dynastic autocracy. It is only a matter of time before the revolutions that have swept the Arab world in the past year reach the Saudi kingdom.

Most of the factors that led to the Arab uprisings are present in Arabia. The Saudi regime holds tens of thousands of political prisoners, most without charge – just one example of the oppression people suffer. The scale of corruption is staggering. In the most recent budget alone, $100bn is unaccounted for. In this country with its huge oil revenue, unemployment rates are soaring (currently more than 30%), the average salary is less than $1,300 (£820) a month, with a huge discrepancy between classes, and 22% of the population live in poverty. As a result of corruption, the oil wealth has had little impact on the quality of life of the average citizen, as is the case in neighbouring Gulf countries.

What is worse is that the royal family continues to treat the country and its people as its private property. Instead of attempting to provide the citizens with the strong identity people long for, they have reinforced the subjugation to the royal family of Al-Saud

Down with saudi regime
http://forums.marokko.nl/showthread.php?t=4276768&

19-07-2014, 07:45
Zie vanaf deze pag. hoe corrupte saudi regime moslimgeleerden misbruikt.
http://forums.marokko.nl/showthread.php?t=3782432&page=21