Sabado, Agosto 20, 2011

Multitudes of Bangsamoro People joins the MNLF's 15th GSG - Grand Summit Gathering



Multitudes of Bangsamoro People composed of Muslim, Christians and Highlanders joins the 15th GSG - Grand Summit Gathering dubbed as "RAMADAN PEACE SUMMIT 2011" as its Founding Leader and Central Committee Chairman Professor Dr. Nur P., Misuari  arrives in the airport, many Highlanders organized by Mindanao Indigenous Peoples Conference for Peace and Development (MIPCPD) with gongs fetched the chairman and declares their support to the Moro National Liberation Front (MNLF).
As the chairman reported the status of the Peace Agreement, the Bangsamoro Muslims, Christians and Highlanders bid  Independence. 
The 15th GSG was organized by MNLF Davao City State Revolutionary Committee under its City State Chairman Rolando T. Olamit.

Sabado, Agosto 6, 2011

WRONG SIGNAL

The President’s meeting with the MILF rebel chief drew reactions, both positive and negative, from both sides of the political divide.
Even one of the President’s closest allies, Senator Francis Escudero, found reason to question the propriety of the President secretly meeting with Murad.
“I think the President may have been ill-advised to meet personally as he (Murad) is not even his counterpart. And it might not be a good tactic in the negotiations,” he said.
He said Deles should “protect the President from such things.”
“She should just do her job and give her President deniability with respect to this early stage of the negotiations,” Escudero said.
House Minority Leader  Edcel Lagman on Friday said that Mr. Aquino broke his own promise of full transparency and took unnecessary risks without any tangible gains in meeting with the MILF leader.
“The country is not the personal fiefdom of President Aquino.  Any presidential move which has a bearing on national interest and national security must be transparent and discussed with the Cabinet and the National Security Council. The President’s secret trip to Japan to meet MILF leaders violates his avowed policy on transparency,” said Lagman in a phone interview.
Lagman questioned the urgency or necessity of having the President himself meet with Murad.
Unnecessary risks
“Can’t the President send an emissary instead of he himself going?  There is more than meets the eye in the President’s excursion. He has much explaining to do.  Such as what has he achieved, what are the commitments?” said Lagman.
Lagman said the President also took unnecessary risks in his meeting the MILF leaders. “If something happened to him there, what would happen to our country? He is the President, that should be foremost in his mind,” he said.
But House Majority Leader Neptali Gonzales II said: “If it will lead to real and lasting peace, I fully support P-Noy.”
Senator Francis Pangilinan welcomed the move as “an out-of-the-box solution” that showed the President was willing to step out of his comfort zone to ensure that peace is achieved.
Senator Loren Legarda, chair of the Senate foreign relations committee, said “pass muna” to mean no comment for now.
Act of treason
A diplomat who asked not to be named said what the President did was “an act of treason.”
“A President is not supposed to go on secret missions. A head of state can never be the equal of a rebel leader, but he probably does not know that. He should be meeting with someone on his level,” the diplomat said.
She said the Department of Foreign Affairs was left completely out of the loop.
“I hear that the peace panel was the one that recommended it. What was their agenda? Did they just shake hands? A goodwill [meeting]?” she said. With reports from Gil C. Cabacungan Jr., Christian Esguerra and Jerome Aning and AP, AFP, Reuters
First posted 12:25 am | Saturday, August 6th, 2011 

MNLF Founding Leader & Central Committee Chairman Professor Dr. Nur P. Misuari call it a "WRONG SIGNAL". "Pinoy-Murad Japan talk was a wrong signal. We (MNLF-OIC-GPH) talks are almost at the finish line.

Lunes, Agosto 1, 2011

King, crown prince greet Muslims on Ramadan


Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques King Abdullah
By ARAB NEWS
JEDDAH: Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques King Abdullah and Crown Prince Sultan, deputy premier and minister of defense and aviation, greeted Muslims in the Kingdom and the rest of the world Sunday on the beginning of the blessed month of Ramadan.
In a joint address read out by Minister of Culture and Information Abdul Aziz Khoja, the king and the crown prince said: “We pray to Almighty Allah to make the advent of this month an opportunity for the Muslim Ummah to learn more, to strive to reject disunity and to achieve the ideals of brotherhood. That is when the strong stands by the weak, the wealthy supports the needy and the oppressed forgives the oppressor. Thus, they will build a tolerant society where people coexist peacefully preserving the rights and respecting the rights of others.”
The first of Ramadan is on Aug. 1 according to a statement issued by the Supreme Court on Saturday. The schools are on vacation and offices will have special working hours. The holy month also attracts millions of Umrah pilgrims from all parts of world.

Martes, Hulyo 26, 2011

15th GSG - RAMADAN PEACE SUMMIT 2011

The Final Schedule of the RAMADAN PEACE SUMMIT dubbed as the 15th GSG - Grand Summit Gathering 2011 will be on August 19, 2011 at 7AM - 1PM. Organizers  is still working on the venue..

15th GSG - Grand Summit Gathering in Davao City

MNLF Davao City Info: In behalf of the Founding Leader & Central Committee Chairman H.E. Professor Dr. Nur P. Misuari, all MNLF in Mindanao, Sulu, Palawan and other Islands are enjoined to attend the 15th GSG-Grand Summit Gathering; Theme: Ramadan Peace Summit this forthcoming August 12, 2011 in Davao City at 7:00 AM, venue shall be determine later. Please bring your own prayer carpet and wear clean socks because we will perform our Juma'ah Prayer on the said occassion.

Sabado, Hulyo 23, 2011

NORWAY TERROR

Norway killer is anti-multiculturism


This is an undated image obtained from the Twitter page of Anders Behring Breivik, 32, who was arrested in connection to the twin attacks on a youth camp and a government building in Oslo, Norway. (AP)
By AGENCIES
OSLO: The Norwegian charged with killing at least 92 people in a gun and bomb massacre had belonged to an anti-immigration party and wrote blogs attacking multiculturalism and Islam.
Police said Anders Behring Breivik, detained by police after 85 people were gunned down at a youth camp and another 7 killed in a bomb attack on Friday, was unknown to them and his Internet activity traced so far included no calls to violence.
In comments from 2009-2010 to other people's articles on website www.document.no, which calls itself critical of Islam, Breivik criticized European policies of trying to accommodate the cultures of different ethnic groups.
"When did multiculturalism cease to be an ideology designed to deconstruct European culture, traditions, identity and nation-states?" said one of his entries, posted on Feb. 2, 2010.
Another entry dated Feb. 16 last year said: "According to two studies, 13 percent of young British Muslims aged between 15 and 25 support Al-Qaeda ideology."
Breivik wrote he was a backer of the "Vienna School of Thought", which was against multiculturalism and the spread of Islam.
He also wrote he admired Geert Wilders, the populist anti-Islam Dutch politician, for following that school.
Wilders said in a statement on Saturday: "I despise everything he stands for and everything he did."
Nina Hjerpset-Ostlie, a contributing journalist to the website, said she had met Breivik at a meeting in late 2009. He seemed keen to develop the website as a way to counter what he saw as prevailing trends of multiculturalism.
Oslo deputy police chief Roger Andresen would not speculate on the motives for what was believed to be the deadliest attack by a lone gunman anywhere in modern times.
Breivik bought six tons of fertilizer before the massacre, the supplier said Saturday as police investigated witness accounts of a second shooter.
Norway's royal family and prime minister led the nation in mourning, visiting grieving relatives of the scores of youth gunned down at an island retreat, as the shell-shocked Nordic nation was gripped by reports that the gunman may not have acted alone.
The queen and the prime minister hugged when they arrived at the hotel where families are waiting to identify the bodies. Both king and queen shook hands with mourners, while the prime minister, his voice trembling, told reporters of the harrowing stories survivors had recounted to him.
A man who said he was carrying a knife was detained by police officers outside the hotel. He told reporters as he was led away that he was carrying the weapon because he didn't feel safe.