[Biggest 
Islamic 
web site in the 
U.S.]
P.O. Box 356, Kingsville, MD 21087.
Phone: 410-435-5000.
Disclaimer: Views expressed are not necessarily 
shared by editorial committee.
Responses (positive or negative) up to 250 words are welcome.
Names will be withheld on request.
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Would your masjid be willing to receive a speaker 
from 
Jamaat al-Muslimeen 
to 
discuss the case of 
IMAM JAMIL al-AMIN? 
Write to: ksidd37398@aol.com 
or call: 410-435-5000
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"SHOCK and AWE" in the MID WEST: Over three days, 
May 3-6, 88 tornadoes have 
wreaked havoc in  the U.S. states of Missouri, 
Tennessee, southern Illinois, 
Kansas and Arkansas. Forty people were killed and 
entire towns wiped out. The 
mayor of Pierce actually compared his town to 
Baghdad. 
Another official in 
Tennessee used the words "shock and awe" for the 
barrelling funnel clouds 
which sounded like freight trains as they tore 
through town after town. Our 
sympathies are with the survivors, many of whom 
asked like Iraqis after B-52 
attacks" "Why us?"
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SADDAM ALIVE? A taped message given to an 
Australian journalist seems to be 
in President Saddam Hussain's voice and refers to 
current state of affairs. 
If Saddam is alive, the 
American 
occupation is in 
trouble. There are reports 
that a billion dollars were taken from the Iraq 
reserve bank. He could use 
this money to re-organize the resistance.
On the other hand, the tape may be a fake 
meant to draw out Saddam 
loyalists to kill them. The billion dollars could 
be taken by "coalition 
forces" and the blame put on Saddam.
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[Received from Sis. Hamdiyeh in South Carolina.]
How do Somalis See Fall of Baghdad?
(Islamweb)
MOGADISHU - Somalis see fall of Baghdad as an act 
of US colonialism, say 
Americans cannot be trusted as they serve 
Israeli 
interest.
A decade after a US military foray in Somalia 
ended in bloody embarrassment, 
residents of the lawless Horn of Africa country 
saw Wednesday's fall of 
Baghdad as an act of American colonialism.
"It is bad that Iraq is now an American colony," 
said Ali Yahya Ahmed, a 
tailor at Mogadishu's Bakara market.
Ahmed said that it was very deplorable that the 
Iraqi heroes were overrun by 
invading, well-armed American forces.
A bitter Sheikh Mohamud, a prominent religious 
leader, urged the Iraqis to 
continue fighting Americans until they leave 
their country, saying that 
"Iraqis are Arabs, Muslims and have nothing in 
common with Americans."
Asha Mohamud, a shop owner in north Mogadishu's 
Sinai market, said "Saddam 
Hussein may 
have been bad to his people, but the Americans 
would not be better than him."
"Maybe they don't watch Arabic TVs to see how 
many civilians are being killed 
daily," a crowd shouted at the two supporters of 
the war, with some saying 
the two "deserved to be killed for supporting the 
war in Iraq."
Qur'anic 
school teacher Ahmed Haji Abdullahi said 
Sunni Muslims in Iraq would 
be rounded up and detained.
Other parts of Somalia also did not welcome news 
of the capture of Baghdad.
Most people interviewed in the breakaway 
northwest republic of Somaliland 
capital, Hargeisa, said that although they hated 
Saddam Hussein, they would 
never change their minds to accept "imperial 
takeover of Iraq by the 
Americans."
"If America stands for peace and security in the 
Arab world, they should 
first support UN Security Council Resolution 242, 
which calls for an end to 
Israeli occupation of 
Palestine," 
said Ahmed 
Idris, a driver who worked for 
many years in Saudi Arabia. 
"America is giving more attention to Iraqi oil 
than its people," he charged.
Farmer Ahmed Yakub Ibrahim branded the war 
"illegal" because it was not 
supported by the United Nations.
"America is winning a war which is not endorsed 
by most people in the world," 
said the farmer.
"After the war is over, the Iraqis should 
reconcile and forget the past bad 
history and give the Americans a chance if they 
are serious to help the 
Iraqis," he said.
"Maybe they can build Iraq to get the trust of 
the Islamic world, but you 
can't trust America as they serve the interest of 
Israel," he added.
Tuesday : 06/05/2003
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[Courtesy: 
Sudan 
Society]
Sudan says inclusion on 
U.S. terror list 
"unfair" 
KHARTOUM, Sudan, May 01, 2003 (AP) -- The 
government of Sudan on Thursday 
said its continued inclusion on a U.S. list of 
sponsors of terrorism was 
"unjust." 
The United States on Wednesday named seven 
countries - Cuba, Iran, Iraq, 
Libya, North Korea, 
Syria 
and Sudan - as sponsors 
of terrorism. The same 
countries were listed last year. 
"This is an unfair and unjust decision. It is not 
based on any justification 
or on a logical basis," said Foreign Minister 
Mustafa Osman Ismail. "It is 
connected to American internal politics." 
Ismail told reporters that his government had 
expected to be removed from the 
list in light of peace negotiations with the 
rebel Sudan People's Liberation 
Army. 
Last week, U.S. President George W. Bush said the 
Sudanese government was 
negotiating in good faith with the rebels, but 
said it should still try 
harder. 
His comments ensured that Sudan will not face 
penalties under the U.S. 
Congress' Sudan Peace Act, which authorizes 
Washington to take steps against 
the Khartoum government if it fails to make a 
genuine effort to reach peace 
with the SPLA. 
Government and rebel leaders are hoping to reach 
a peace deal this summer 
after long-running negotiations to end a civil 
war that began in 1983. 
But Ismail said the terror list was an American 
affair that did not worry 
Sudan. 
"We do not, however, expect any confrontation 
between the United States and 
Sudan anew before the signing of this peace 
deal," Ismail said. 
The seven countries listed as sponsors of terror 
are banned from receiving 
U.S. weapons and U.S. economic aid, and 
effectively prevented from receiving 
World Bank loans.
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2003-05-09 Fri 19:32ct