Ibtisam

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Everything posted by Ibtisam

  1. ^^Was it not you, who wanted to stay at a HOTEL when you went on holiday and take up an offer that was made to you lool So much for old fashion :rolleyes: It is a holiday, She should not even see somali people if she can help it! let alone stay with them
  2. ^^^where else is she suppose to stay?? on the streets? find a somali to crash with?? :rolleyes: It is a holiday! Val Is the place that bad, you are on the net after travelling for 24hrs to get there, I was thinking of going there sometime so looking forward to your honest report!
  3. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9lhjIYzfti8
  4. CC Why would she want to look like maryan mursal?? Jacayl What on earth are you laughin about??? Strawberry Xu, There is a really nice pedicures and facials place in Dalton Kingsland high street, 2mins from the shopping center, it was (I have not been there for nearly a year now) really cheap, and they have everything, full body if wish as well....hmmm you reminded me I need a day there. Otherwise in Marble Arch opposite Selfridges there is a new Chinese place that has just open in the last couple of months, I went with a friend the other day and I was impressed. I remember my dissertation day (exactly one year today) I feel for you so good luck dear. As for what types: I have no idea, I just tell them do what you have to do, but make sure you tell them nothing that I have to keep doing for the rest of my life because this is a one off! Tell her nothing too harsh because you have sensitive skin (even if you don't) the harsher it is the more chemicals it has! The best way to recover is sleep! And rest and more sleep…… I never got that as I had to go back to work the next day and I regretted it for months Do enjoy!
  5. lool @And return determine^^Go ahead just curse her why don't you!! Munira002 careful sis, what goes around, comes right back around sometimes, yaani kuu caawrriyin so have some mercy will ya
  6. Biixi I had lots of time to waste at university, when I finished I never went back and did not re new my gym membership, now I just been too busy to go and find classes. I will get round to it one day.
  7. ^^Speak somali^ ^what the hell is that?? :rolleyes:
  8. ^^^You mean faarrah ila so galaya, afkaku is no where near you :rolleyes: . ^And it is untrue that females can do "anything" males can do. :rolleyes:
  9. ^^^Jaca don't hide behind me... so cheeky :rolleyes:
  10. No it just means I do not have to deal with bullshit excuses such as “you are a women you cannot do that or this”,,,, in Fact read my signature So shaaqa kaalee doono, or rather find a real yoyo, Perhaps one who is on the same page, you know Somaliniom & all lol
  11. ^^Right, the unseen enemy is going to send me to the factory :rolleyes: Don't concern you little self "me" niimaan baan laasoo kooray, so many that I can switch up the roles and act & think like a man if need be
  12. ^^I told you Xanthus is just "username", what they hell you doing giving it a full time job! :rolleyes: adiga aabaan okay aahan nooh.
  13. ^^^London is starting to sound more and more like a good place to be
  14. He says: The judge in the criminal court, who asked not to be identified because of the sensitivity of the issue, said cases of rape are on the rise in Qatar, especially among Qatari nationals. Then he says " Cases of rape, including incest, are becoming more frequent. I believe this is due to the fact that the traditional society is suffering from a cultural shock, mainly due to the growing presence of immigrants. Values and habits are rapidly changing and violence in increasing." Right! Blame it on the immigrants :rolleyes: Akhaas
  15. Elysian don't worry about it, there are more than enough lazy somalis in London , but thanks for the thought. Anyway, Can you list the organisations who agreed to support us, when you get the chance. so far we have: - MPACUK - Working People - Socilist party - The police
  16. ^^^No dear, run him into the Ocean, keep closing all the doors. I know you are trying to show some mercy, but really does he deserve it??... I guess everyone needs mercy to a certain extent, some more than others 2. I appreciate that you have given me the permission to have an opinion of my own. Your kindness has not gone unnoticed. Now we know how you get your orders, Me, Red please be kind to him and give him permission to understand one or two things, he cannot comprehend until you grant permission!
  17. Red They are both Mujrimiin, who are bound to hellfire. :eek: :eek: :mad: Red you should know better than that, you or anyone else is in no position to determine who is going to hellfire and who is going to heaven, that is misuse of the deen, and shows that you did not understand the deen Even if they die in this current stage, you do not know where they are going, what if they live for another 30years, make tobaah and Allah forgives them? Then what, I understand you hate them, they are criminals, but you should not fall into danbi just because of your emotions. p.s. Take that as a sisterly advise
  18. ^^that is not martial arts, she is just trying to get fit! Biixi I enjoy kick boxing, I've kind of stopped now since i finished uni, but if you are thinking of taking something up, then kick boxing is well good
  19. Interesting article Pakistan and Turkey are the ones to watch this summer, the outcome could change the out look. Pakistan is reverberating with the call of jihad. Taliban-style militias are spreading rapidly out from provinces in the far north-west. The danger to the country and to the rest of the world is escalating. "You must understand," says Maulana Sami ul-Haq, "that Pakistan and Islam are synonymous." The principal of Darul Uloom Haqqania, a seminary in Pakistan's North-West Frontier Province (NWFP), is a tall and jovial man. He grabs my hand as he takes me round the seminary. Maulana ul-Haq laughs when I ask his views on jihad. "It is the duty of all Muslims to support those groups fighting against oppression," he says. The Haqqania is one of the largest madrasas in Pakistan. It produces about 3,000 graduates, most from exceptionally poor backgrounds, every year. The walls of the student dormitory are decorated with tanks and Kalashnikovs. A group of students, all with black beards, white turbans and grey dresses, surrounds me. They are curious and extremely polite. We chat under the watchful eye of two officers from Pakistan's intelligence services. What would they do after they graduate, I ask. "Serve Islam," they reply in unison. "We will dedicate our lives to jihad." Pakistan is reverberating with the call of jihad. For more than two months, the capital, Islamabad, has been held hostage by a group of burqa-clad women, armed with sticks and shouting: "Al-jihad, al-jihad." These female students belong to two madrasas attached to the Lal Masjid, a large mosque near one of the city's main supermarkets. I found the atmosphere around the masjid tense, with heavily armed police surrounding the building. Though the students were allowed to go in and out freely, no one else could enter the mosque. The women are demanding the imposition of sharia law and the instant abolition of all "dens of vice". Away from the masjid, Islamabad looked like a city under siege. A new generation of militants is emerging in Pakistan. Although they are generally referred to as "Taliban", they are a recent phenomenon. The original Taliban, who ruled Afghanistan briefly during the 1990s, were Afghan fighters, a product of the Soviet invasion of their country. They were created and moulded by the Pakistani army, with the active support of the United States and Saudi money, and the deliberate use of madrasas to prop up religious leaders. Many Taliban leaders were educated at Haqqania by Maulana Sami ul-Haq. The new generation of militants are all Pakistani; they emerged after the US invasion of Afghanistan and represent a revolt against the government's support for the US. Mostly unemployed, not all of them are madrasa-educated. They are led by young mullahs who, unlike the original Taliban, are technology- and media-savvy, and are also influenced by various indigenous tribal nationalisms, honouring the tribal codes that govern social life in Pakistan's rural areas. "They are Taliban in the sense that they share the same ideology as the Taliban in Afghanistan, " says Rahimullah Yusufzai, Peshawar-based columnist on the News. "But they are totally Pakistani, with a better understanding of how the world works." Their jihad is aimed not just at "infidels occupying Afghanistan" , but also the "infidels" who are ruling and running Pakistan and maintaining the secular values of Pakistani society. "They aim at nothing less than to cleanse Pakistan and turn it into a pure Islamic state," says Rashed Rahman, executive editor of the Lahore-based Post newspaper. The Pakistani Taliban now dominate the northern province of Waziristan, adjacent to Afghan istan. "They are de facto rulers of the province," says Yusufzai. Waziristan is a tribal area that has historically been ruled by the tribes themselves. Pakistan has followed the policy of British Raj in the region. The British allowed tribal leaders, known as maliks, semi-autonomous powers in exchange for loyalty to the crown. Pakistan gives them the same power but demands loyalty to the federal government. They have been sidelined by the Taliban, however. Pro-government maliks who resisted the onslaught of the Taliban have been brutally killed and had their bodies hung from poles as a lesson to others. The Taliban have declared Waziristan an "Islamic emirate" and are trying to establish a parallel administration, complete with sharia courts and tax system. Taliban-type militias have also taken control of parts of the adjacent NWFP. In Peshawar, one of the most open and accessible areas of the province, one can feel the tension on the streets. There are hardly any women out in public. The city, which has suffered numerous suicide attacks, is crowded with intelligence officers. Within an hour of my arrival in Peshawar, I was approached by a secret service official who warned that I was being watched. It is practically impossible for outsiders to enter other NWFP towns such as Tank, Darra Adam Khel and Dera Ismail Khan. In Dera Ismail Khan, outsiders - that is, Pakistanis from other parts of the country - need police escorts to travel around. You are allowed in only if you can prove you have business or relatives there. Girls' schools have been closed, video and music shops bombed, and barbers forbidden from shaving beards. The religious parties have passed a public morality law that gives them powers to prosecute anyone who does not follow their strict moral code. Legislation to ban dance and music is being planned. Even administration of polio vaccination campaigns has been halted amid claims that it is a US plot to sterilise future generations. Why is the ostensibly secular government of President Pervez Musharraf not taking any action against the Taliban militants and the parties that support them? Part of the answer lies in the militants and religious parties having served the military regime well. After coming to power in 1999, Musharraf used them to neutralise the mainstream political parties - Benazir Bhutto's People's Party and the Muslim League, led by Nawaz Sharif. "The military and mullahs have been traditional allies," says the Islamabad-based security analyst Dr Ayesha Siddiqa. "The alliance of religious parties that rules NWFP came into power through his support." Musharraf also used the religious militants to destabilise Indian-held Kashmir by proxy. He encouraged extremists preaching jihad to infiltrate India for acts of sabotage. The same is true of the Taliban. The Afghan Taliban have been a useful ally against unfriendly governments in Kabul. Even though Musharraf has been forced to go against them under pressure from the Americans, his strategy has been to try to contain them, rather than defeat them. He tried to regulate the madrasas in NWFP and elsewhere in Pakistan that provide recruits for the Taliban, seized their funds and banned them from admitting foreign students. But that's about as far as he wanted to go. Constant US pressure has forced him to send in the army, with grave consequences. Every time the Pakistani army enters Waziristan, it takes heavy casualties. Since 2003, when Pakistani troops first entered the tribal regions, more than 700 soldiers have been killed. Not surprisingly, Musharraf signed a hasty peace agreement on 5 September 2006 allowing the Afghan Taliban to get on with their business. "The military regards the Taliban as an asset," says Siddiqa. "So why destroy an asset? Particularly when the asset could be useful in the future." That future may not be too far off. Pakistan's foreign policy towards Afghanistan is based on the assumption that the Nato forces there will withdraw sooner rather than later, leaving Hamid Karzai's regime to fend for itself. The Karzai government is strongly anti-Pakistani. But the Pakistani army needs friendly rulers in Kabul who would be willing to run the oil and gas pipelines that will serve the newly established port at Gwadar through Afghanistan' s provinces (see page 32). So Pakistan needs the Afghan Taliban to exist as a force strong enough to establish the next government in Afghanistan. Moreover, a pro-Islamabad Taliban-type government in Afghanistan would help establish peace in the northern tribal regions of Pakistan. Although Karzai himself is a Pashtun, most of the people in power in Kabul are Tajiks, a minority tribe. A sizeable majority of Afghans belong to the Pashtun ethnic group, which ruled Afghanistan for centuries. The position of Pakistan's military is that this imbalance "against the political history and tribal culture of Afghan istan", as one army officer told me, is not going to last. Most of the Pakistani Taliban - that is, the vast majority of people in Waziristan - are also Pashtun. And they will not rest until their brothers across the border hold the reins of power. As such, peace in this part of Pakistan depends on who rules Afghanistan. Musharraf's strategy is to contain the Taliban of Afghan and Pakistani varieties alike, while weeding out al-Qaeda jihadis, or "foreign elements", as they are known in Pakistani military circles. The foreigners are a legacy of the Soviet-Afghan war. When the war ended, many of the central Asians who came to fight the Soviets were not welcomed back in their countries. For want of an alternative, they settled in Pakistan. Most of these foreign jihadis are Uzbek. Musharraf has simply bribed the local tribes to attack and eradicate the Uzbek jihadis. The battle between Pashtun tribesmen and al-Qaeda in Wana, southern Waziristan, in which more than 200 al-Qaeda fighters and some 50 tribal fighters were killed a fortnight ago was a product of this policy. Musharraf's problem is that the Taliban cannot be contained. The Pakistani Taliban have now acquired enough confidence to break out of Wazi ristan and NWFP into other parts of the country. "What's happening at the Lal Masjid in Islamabad is a trial run for the rest of the country," says Rahman. "If the Taliban succeed in Islamabad, they will turn Pakistan into Talibistan." Lawyers in uproar While Musharraf continues to placate the Taliban, the rest of Pakistan is standing up against Talibanisation. Huge demonstrations have been held in Lahore, Karachi and other cities throughout Pakistan. To begin with, the protests were held to support Chief Justice Iftikhar Moham med Chaudhry, who was sacked by Musharraf in March. Chaudhry, who has become a national hero, tried to prevent the army from selling the national steel mill for a song. The affair was the latest in a long list of scandals involving the military. The openly unconstitutional act caused uproar, leading to countrywide protests by lawyers. But the lawyers have now acquired a broader agenda. They have become a national resistance movement, supported by all sections of society, against military rule and the Taliban. Musharraf's response to the demonstrations and the Taliban challenge is to try to entrench himself even more deeply. While the country buckles under the pressure of suicide bombings, kidnappings and acts of sabotage, his main concern is his own survival. Constitutionally, he must hold elections some time this year - something he has promised to do, but the whole exercise will be designed to ensure that he continues as president for another five years. His plan to get "re-elected" has two strands. The simple option is to get the current hand-picked parliament to endorse him for a second term and try to manipulate this vote, which the present sham constitution dictates, to ensure a healthy two-thirds majority. The heads of intelligence, the security services and the police have already been primed to ensure "positive results". Bhutto to the rescue? The other option is a bit messy. It involves making a deal with the former prime minister Benazir Bhutto, head of the Pakistan People's Party. Bhutto, who has been ousted from power by the military twice, is desperate to get back into power. She has a great deal in common with the general. She runs the People's Party as her personal property, and her social and economic policies - rooted as they are in feudalism and opportunism - are not far removed from those of the army. Her foreign policy would be the same as that of Musharraf; indeed, she is even more pro-American than the general. So Bhutto and Musharraf, who have been negotiating with each other for almost three years, are an ideal couple. "The problem," says Rahman, "is that Musharraf does not want to give up his military uniform. It is the source of his strength. And the idea of Musharraf remaining military chief is anathema to Bhutto." But the state of the nation, on the verge of political and religious collapse, may force Musharraf's hand. A deal between the general and the self-proclaimed "Daughter of the East" in which Musharraf retains most of his power as civilian president and Bhutto serves as prime minister may be acceptable to both. Rumours abound in Islamabad that a deal is imminent. Bhutto's return from the cold would do little to stop Pakistan's slide into anarchy, however. The Taliban sense victory and will not be easily satisfied with anything less than a Pakistan under sharia law, or wide-ranging bloodshed. As Asma Jahangir, chairwoman of Pakistan's Human Rights Commission, makes clear, the country cannot survive its "deep-seated rot" unless the "unrepresentative organs of the state - the military, the mullahs and the all-consuming intelligence agencies - are brought under control". It is hard to disagree with her assessment. But it is even harder to see how these "unrepresen tative organs" can be stopped from dragging Pakistan further towards the abyss - with dire consequences for the rest of the world. Source
  20. ^^Lool What are you Private Eye Zenobia, i kind of got worried there, my heart almost jumped out, then i re read what your wrote, and i laughed. indeed Xanthus is strange, just how strange is the million dollar question.
  21. ^^is that it :rolleyes: warryaad baal look at this! I knew that much already dear :rolleyes: i thought you was gone tell me something else. You are brave baan kuu iidii, there are people on this site that are just plain strange! lol
  22. ^^Dee wiixx kaaka qoosoliya like that lool
  23. ^^^Oh go on do tell me beiils lol, Zenobia i hope you do have something on it by the sound of your laugh, lool.
  24. ^^why on earth for?? unless... you had a similar event while you were here and therefore know something I don't! in which case haas qaarxiinin