1. #16
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    25-03-2017


  2. #17
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    25-03-2017

    Citaat Geplaatst door SlashHamer Bekijk reactie
    Je staat er alleen voor wanhopige tering rat
    Ik sta er alleen voor? De mujahideen spreekt voorzich:



    Lang leven de democratie en vrijheid.

  3. #18
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    03-07-2017

    Citaat Geplaatst door Cataleya_ Bekijk reactie
    en wat heeft algerije te maken met jouw kufr uitspraken?
    Ik ben niet met alle punten mee eens met merri maar dat zij voorstander van democratie zijn toont aan dat deze mensen geen soennieten zijn. Het is een koranische (Koranist) uiting door op te staan en te vechten voor vrijheid en democratie. Een ware soenniet zal nooit voorstander van democratie zijn never nooit. Want volgens de hadith boeken is democratie ongeloof , en tegen de religie. Veel soennieten zeggen ook dat je niet mag opstaan tegen je leider en dus zullen zionisten die volk door blijven besturen.
    The Qur'an, the whole Qur'an, and nothing but the Qur'an.

  4. #19
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    24-05-2017

    Citaat Geplaatst door Esmaeel Bekijk reactie
    Ik ben niet met alle punten mee eens met merri maar dat zij voorstander van democratie zijn toont aan dat deze mensen geen soennieten zijn. Het is een koranische (Koranist) uiting door op te staan en te vechten voor vrijheid en democratie. Een ware soenniet zal nooit voorstander van democratie zijn never nooit. Want volgens de hadith boeken is democratie ongeloof , en tegen de religie. Veel soennieten zeggen ook dat je niet mag opstaan tegen je leider en dus zullen zionisten die volk door blijven besturen.
    Wat voor een leeghoofdig argument is dit. Het toont enkel aan hoe onwetend de mensen zijn van vandaag. Inclusief jij

  5. #20
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    03-07-2017

    Ya Allah , winst voor de islam , presidenten verkiezingen 4 juli 2019 in Algerije. De Koranische islam (Democratie) wordt geïmplementeerd in Algerije.

    Algeria sets presidential election for July 4
    Announcement comes a day after Abdelkader Bensalah replaced Abdelaziz Bouteflika who quit in face of mass rallies.



    Algeria's newly appointed president has set July 4 as the date for the country's postponed presidential election, according to state media.

    The announcement on Wednesday came a day after Abdelkader Bensalah was appointed as interim president for 90 days, replacing long-time leader Abdelaziz Bouteflika who stepped down last week in the face of mass protests against him.

    Bensalah, who will not be able to run in the election, signed a decree on the vote shortly after taking the post on Tuesday, Algeria's official news agency APS reported.

    In a televised address to the nation on Tuesday, the 77-year-old pledged to deliver a free and transparent election within his tenure and said he hoped the vote would return a president committed to building a new Algeria.

    Bensalah also announced plans to urgently create a "sovereign" body, with the help of the political class and civil society, to help lay down the required conditions for an "honest" process.

    His appointment, however, failed to quell protesters, with thousands on Wednesday taking to the streets of the capital, Algiers, to call for a complete political overhaul.

    Demonstrators have repeatedly demanded the departure of a coterie of individuals closely-linked to Bouteflika's administration, including the so-called "three Bs"; Bensalah, Prime Minister Noureddine Bedoui and Head of the Constitutional Council Tayeb Belaiz.

    Army vows to oversee transition period
    Algeria's political turmoil began in late February when the 82-year-old Bouteflika announced his bid to seek a fifth term in office in an election planned for April 18.

    The move triggered mass rallies against the ailing leader, which eventually forced him to backtrack and postpone the poll. But Bouteflika, who has been confined to a wheelchair since a 2013 stroke, said he would remain in office to oversee a transition that would include drafting a new constitution.

    The pledges failed to appease protesters, who continued rallying en masse demanding a total political overhaul.

    On April 2, after weeks of mass nationwide protests and increasing pressure from the powerful armed forces, Bouteflika announced his resignation. In accordance with Algeria's constitution, Bensalah, the chairman of the upper house of parliament, took over as caretaker president.

    Earlier on Wednesday, Algeria's army chief of staff said the military would watch over Algeria's preparations for presidential elections, but suggested the military does not want to intervene.

    Speaking at a regional military headquarters in Oran, Lieutenant General Gaid Salah also said it was "unreasonable" to organise the transition period without "institutions", warning that such a scenario "could compromise all that has been achieved to this day since independence" from France in 1962.

    Salah also said he expects those who profited under the former president to be prosecuted.

    "The judiciary has recovered its prerogative and can work freely," he said.

    https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2019/...172027171.html
    The Qur'an, the whole Qur'an, and nothing but the Qur'an.

  6. #21
    MVC Lid

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    03-07-2017

    The Qur'an, the whole Qur'an, and nothing but the Qur'an.

  7. #22
    MVC Lid

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    03-07-2017

    The Qur'an, the whole Qur'an, and nothing but the Qur'an.

  8. #23
    MVC Lid

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    899
    03-07-2017

    The Qur'an, the whole Qur'an, and nothing but the Qur'an.

  9. #24
    MVC Lid

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    899
    03-07-2017

    The Qur'an, the whole Qur'an, and nothing but the Qur'an.

  10. #25
    MVC Lid

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    899
    03-07-2017

    The Qur'an, the whole Qur'an, and nothing but the Qur'an.

  11. #26
    MVC Lid

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    03-07-2017

    The Qur'an, the whole Qur'an, and nothing but the Qur'an.

  12. #27
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    03-07-2017

    Citaat Geplaatst door Cataleya_ Bekijk reactie
    eeey donder op man heb jij nou net gezegd dat algerijnen geen soenieten zijn spreek voor jezelf malloot, jij bent echt gestoord zeg, verkondig jouw propaganda in iran ofzo
    Algerijnen zijn ware koranische moslims. Ze komen op voor hun vrijheid , voor democratie. Niet zoals de soennieten en sjiieten die graag van achter gepakt willen worden door seculiere dictators en onder andere liever een dictatuur willen zoals isis waar je in zijn geheel niet kan stemmen voor een leider of bestuurder. Veel sjiieten en soennieten leven in een waan en denken dat democratie haram is volgens de islam. Zo achterlijk zijn die grotbewoners eenmaal.

    De Koran zelf is voorstander van democratie en vrijheid. Daarom heb ik veel respect voor de Algerijnen.
    The Qur'an, the whole Qur'an, and nothing but the Qur'an.

  13. #28
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    03-07-2017

    Masalllaahhh! Ga zo door Algerijnse broeders en zusters:


    'The B's must go': Algerians keep up pressure on old guard
    Demonstrators gather for ninth successive Friday in cities across Algeria to call for root-and-branch political reform.



    Hundreds of thousands of demonstrators have taken to the streets for a ninth successive Friday in Algeria to demand a complete political overhaul in the wake of former president Abdelaziz Bouteflika's resignation.

    The protesters gathered in multiple cities throughout the country, including the capital Algiers, to call for root-and-branch reforms and the departure of the military's powerful chief of staff, General Ahmed Gaid Salah.

    Bouteflika's April 2 exit has failed to placate many Algerians, who instead want to remove the entire clique historically aligned to the ailing ex-leader and a political elite that has dominated the country since its independence from France in 1962 and is widely perceived as corrupt.

    Algeria's parliament has tried to no avail to appease the demonstrators by naming an interim president, Bouteflika loyalist Abdelkader Bensalah, and announcing an election to be held on July 4.

    'The B's must go'
    Earlier this week, Bensalah himself appointed a new head of Algeria's Constitutional Council after the former chief, Tayeb Belaiz, quit under pressure from protesters.

    Belaiz was one of three figures in the interim government whose removal had been demanded by pro-democracy protesters. They are seen as part of the discredited group that surrounded Bouteflika, who stepped down after six weeks of nationwide demonstrations calling for an end to his two-decade rule.

    "They must go. The B's must go," one banner at a protest in Algiers on Friday read, Reuters News Agency reported.

    The "B's" refer to Bensalah, interim Prime Minister Noureddine Bedoui and Moad Bouchareb, head of the ruling National Liberation Front party.

    Protesters, whose numbers swelled following Friday prayers, meanwhile shouted slogans including "Down with the System!" or "You ate the country, you bunch of thieves", The Associated Press news agency reported.

    On Tuesday, Salah said the military was considering all options to resolve the ongoing political crisis and warned: "time is running out".

    He did not specify what measures the army could take, but said military leaders "have no ambition but to protect our nation".

    'Arbitrary detentions'
    The army has largely patiently monitored the mostly peaceful protests that at times swelled to hundreds of thousands of people.

    But on Friday, international NGO Human Rights Watch warned police have been "forcibly dispersing peaceful demonstrations and arbitrarily detaining protesters" in Algiers as part of a "government crackdown" on the pro-democracy movement.

    "Algerians have continued to assert their right to peaceful assembly in recent weeks despite growing police efforts to crack down on them," said Sarah Leah Whitson, HRW's Middle East and North Africa director.

    "Protesters report being arrested, strip-searched, handled roughly, and detained for hours," Whitson added.

    Algeria's Ennahar television channel reported on Friday that an 18-year-old injured during a protest last week in the capital had died as a result of head wounds.

    It said police were investigating the death, adding that he could have been beaten or fallen from a truck.

    Mustapha Bouchachi, a veteran lawyer and human rights activist, meanwhile told The Associated Press news agency that protesters' efforts and "the peaceful mobilisation should continue until the departure of all the system's faces."

    "The movement should remain united to achieve the dream of a democratic Algeria with equal rights for all," Bouchachi said.

    Algeria's upheaval began in late February when Bouteflika, 82, announced his intention to seek a fifth term in office despite being rarely seen in public since a stroke in 2013 rendered him nearly incapacitated.

    Youcef Bouandel, a professor of political science at Qatar University, told Al Jazeera demonstrators were unified by their ambition to "get rid of the system", but cautioned there was little agreement on who should head any new government in a post-Bouteflika era.

    "Protesters all over the country are saying the same thing, but I don't think they are united in terms of who is going to lead them," Bouandel said.

    https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2019/...135822859.html
    The Qur'an, the whole Qur'an, and nothing but the Qur'an.