This morning's key headlines from
GenerationalDynamics.com:
- Shia families in Quetta Pakistan refuse to bury bombing victims
- Tension grows between Egypt's al-Nour party and Muslim Brotherhood
- Pollution spikes to 'dangerous' levels in eastern China
- Security experts recommend disabling Java on computers
Shia families in Quetta Pakistan refuse to bury bombing victims
Shia Muslims across Pakistan are conducting a remarkable demonstration
and are lashing out at the government and the army for taking no steps
to protect Shia Muslims for sectarian attacks by Sunni Muslim
terrorists who target Shias. In Quetta, Shias are refusing to bury
the coffins of the 100+ victims of Thursday's horrific suicide bombing
that we reported two days ago,
even though the bodies are decomposing. Instead, they're using the
coffins to blockade the roads in protest, and they claim that they
blockade won't end "until we get an assurance that the Pakistan army
will take over security and administrative control in Quetta,"
according to a protest organizer.
The year 2012 was the bloodiest year ever for Shia Muslims targeted by
Sunni Muslim terrorists, and with Thursday's horrific attack it seems
likely that 2013 will be even worse. Mainstream politicians do
nothing to protect Shias from these attacks, possibly because they're
afraid of the Sunni terrorists, or because they support the Sunni
terrorists, or because they simply don't care how may Shias are
slaughtered.
From the point of view of Generational Dynamics, Pakistan and India
are headed for a major war re-fighting the bloody 1947 war between
Hindus and Muslims that followed Partition, the partitioning of the
Indian subcontinent into Pakistan and India. For centuries, almost
since the time of Mohammed, Hindus and Shia Muslims have been allied
against Sunni Muslims in huge genocidal wars. Thus, the increasing
bloody terrorist attacks by Sunnis targeting Shias moves Pakistan
along the trend line towards that new war. Furthermore, the epicenter
of the 1947 was Kashmir, and as we've been reporting, there have been new flare-ups of violence between
Muslims and Hindus in Kashmir across the international Line of Control
(LoC).
The al-Qaeda linked terror group Lashkar-e-Jhangvi has claimed credit
for Thursday's bombing in Quetta. We've written about
Lashkar-e-Jhangvi several times in the past -- a terrorist group that
targets Shia and Sufi shrines in Pakistan and Afghanistan, and who has
been responsible for hundreds of deaths of worshipers. (See "7-Dec-11 World View -- Afghanistan shocked by coordinated suicide attacks targeting Shias") In
addition. Lashkar-e-Jhangvi is connected to Jundullah, a terrorist
group that has perpetrated major attacks on Shia mosques and
Revolutionary Guard stations in southeastern Iran. Express Tribune (Pakistan)
Tension grows between Egypt's al-Nour party and Muslim Brotherhood
In last year's parliamentary elections in Egypt, two Islamist parties,
the more moderate Muslim Brotherhood’s Freedom and Justice Party (FJP)
and the more religiously conservative Salafist al-Nour party together
came away with almost 75 per cent of the vote.
Although the two parties are collectively referred to as "Islamist,"
there are sharp differences between the two. The two parties
cooperated brilliantly during the elections to decisively defeat the
completely disorganized secular and liberal opposition, but now that
the FJP is firmly in control of the government, tensions are growing,
and the al-Nour party has announced that it plans to oppose the FJP in
future elections. However, the secular and liberal parties have also
learned some very hard lessons from the elections, and they're looking
for ways to leverage the favorable attitudes of Western nations
towards them into greater political power. However, the real battle
will be between the Brotherhood and the extreme Salafists, some of
whom consider the new constitution, written largely by the
Brotherhood, to be in violation of God's laws. Bloomberg and Hudson Institute
Pollution spikes to 'dangerous' levels in eastern China
Air pollution in Beijing, China, has spiked past hazardous levels, and
air smells like coal dust and car fumes, according to people
interviewed. Normal breathable air should contain no more than 100
micrograms per cubic meter of pollution particles. Official China
reports put the pollution levels to over 400. But a popular web app
provided by the U.S. Embassy in Beijing reports levels above 800.
Most of China's increasing energy needs are satisfied by burning coal,
with resulting pollution. Last year, the Chinese government demanded
that the U.S. Embassy stop publicizing air pollution readings, but
they've continued anyway.
All of eastern China is affected by the spike in pollution levels,
because the weather has turned cold, and so a lot more coal is being
burned. To make matters worse in Beijing, the streets are choked with
cars, and pollution emissions are poorly regulated. In 2008, when the
Olympics games were held in Beijing, China actually had to shut down
all traffic around Beijing, because some of the Olympics teams were
threatening not to compete because of the high pollution levels.
china.org.cn and BBC
Security experts recommend disabling Java on computers
Computer security experts are recommending that users disable Java on
their business and personal computers, because of a new surge of
hacker attacks that take advantage of a "zero-day vulnerability" in
Java software. Java (which is different from Javascript) is one of
the tools used by browsers to run complex visual applications, though
relatively few web sites actually use it. A "zero-day vulnerability"
is one that's been in the Java software for a long time, but was only
recently discovered by hackers, and is now being aggressively
exploited to hack people's computers. This warning applies to all
browsers that run on Windows systems, MAC systems and Linux systems.
The recommendation comes because of a surge of exploitations that were
discovered only four days ago, on Thursday. It's now expected that
the number of exploitations will grow dramatically, since over 400
million computers are subject to the vulnerability. Oracle, the
developer of Java, has not announced if or when a patch will be
available to repair the vulnerability. Information Week
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