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Hundreds of Muslim leaders in India demanded on Tuesday that the government protect their community from persecution, saying Muslims were being unfairly targeted in a police crackdown after bombings across the country.

"Today, with the injustice and harassment, Islam and Muslims in this country are under threat," said Maulana Syed Ahmed Bukhari, influential leader of the Jama Masjid mosque, the largest in north India.

"We have been quiet for a long time, but we cannot take this anymore. We too have rights."

Bukhari said neither the ruling Congress nor the opposition Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) were a suitable option for the Muslims, who make up 13 percent of India's population.

"They think we only have these two options," he said, addressing a crowd of Muslim leaders and others on the lawns of the Jama Masjid, a 17th century mosque built by Mughal kings.

"But water will find its way, it will find its own level."

Bombings have killed hundreds of people in recent months, and Muslim leaders accuse the police of indiscriminate arrests of young Muslim men who have been paraded before the media.

Muslims are key voter bases for the Congress and for regional parties.

"Just as the Congress and the BJP use terrorism to secure their voter base, the Muslim leaders are also using it to secure their position," said Ajai Sahni, executive director of the Institute for Conflict Management.

 
Home arrow News Headlines arrow Australia Snoops Email for Terrorism
Australia Snoops Email for Terrorism PDF Print E-mail
Tuesday, 15 April 2008

Emails snooped for Terrorism
 
The new laws would allow employers to spy on workers' emails and internet communications without their consent.

The Australian government is drafting new anti-terror laws that would allow employers to spy on workers' emails and internet communications without their consent, drawing flaks from civil liberties groups.

"It's a national security move, not a move about an unseemly interest in people's private emails," Deputy Prime Minister Julia Gillard said on Monday, April 14, reported Agence France-Presse (AFP).

She said the new legislation aims to prevent a cyber attack on critical national infrastructure such as stock exchange, electricity grid or transport system.

"I promise we are not interested in the email you send out about who did what at the Christmas party," said Gillard.

"What this is about is looking at our critical infrastructure. If our banking system collapsed, if our electronic system collapsed, obviously that would have huge implications for society.

"We want to make sure they are safe from terrorist attack."

The government's current Telecommunications Act allows only security agencies to monitor employees' communications without consent. The Act will expire in June 2009.

"Part of doing that is making sure we've got the right powers to ensure that we can tell if there's something unusual going on in the system," said Gillard.

Eavesdropping

The planned anti-terror laws drew diatribe from civil liberties group.

"These types of powers, which are currently only enjoyed by a select few agencies including the Australian Federal Police and organizations such as state crime and conduct commissions, shouldn't be extended to companies which are providing critical infrastructure services," Dale Clapperton, chair of the independent Internet rights watchdog Electronic Frontiers Australia, told ABC radio.

"Our concern is, that if given these powers, they're more likely to be used for eavesdropping and corporate witch hunts rather than protecting Australia from some kind of cyber attack."

The Australian Council of Civil Liberties also blasted the government's move.

"We have passed so many laws in the name of fighting terrorism that we're at serious risk of losing the balance between giving the intelligence services sufficient powers to fight terrorism while at the same time keeping longstanding and cherished civil liberties," said chairman Terry O'Gorman.

Under former premier John Howard, Australian enacted a series of anti-terror laws condemned by rights groups as draconian.

Most Australian Muslims blame the Howard government for fostering an image of the Muslim minority as the enemy within through his hard-line policies and unbalanced remarks.

Muslims, who have been in Australia for more than 200 years, make up 1.5 percent of the 20 million population.

IslamOnline.net & News Agencies 
 

Last Updated ( Wednesday, 18 June 2008 )
 

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