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Guardian Unlimited -
1 days ago
divimg alt=""
src="http://hits.guardian.co.uk/b/ss/guardiangu-feeds/1/H.15.1/40940?ns=guardianpageName=Art+and+design%3A+The+room+I+cannot+leavech=Art+and+designc3=The+Guardianc4=Turner+prize%2CArt+and+design%2CArt+%28visual+arts+only%29%2CCulture+sectionc5=Art%2CNot+commercially+usefulc6=Adrian+Searlec7=2008_12_01c8=1126619c9=articlec10=GUc11=Art+and+designc12=Turner+prizec13=c14=h2=GU%2FArt+and+design%2FTurner+prize"
width="1" height="1" //divpI am an A-level art student, which means I have a sketchbook, which I am
expected to fill with ideas, notes and drawings - drawings of other artists' work as well as my
own. But I often find myself writing mini-reviews of everything I stick in it, whether it's a scrap
torn from a magazine or a photocopy from a book. Recently, I've started to realise that writing
about art is just as much fun as actually creating it; the two things definitely inform each other.
/ppI am lucky enough to be part of what I think of as the Tate Modern Generation - teenagers who
have, for a good eight years, been able to see modern and new art at a cost of nothing. I don't
live in London, but I love the Turbine Hall commissions, the large permanent collection, the cool,
minimalist interior. Not everyone feels the same way, of course - plenty of my friends don't - but
I'm pretty sure it's inspiring a future generation of artists and designers. My favourite painting
there is Meryon by Franz Kline: what looks like a few spontaneous brushstrokes is actually the
result of rigorous reworking; it's hard to comprehend how you can make something so beautiful using
only two colours. /ppA couple of weeks ago, I went to see the Turner prize exhibition at Tate
Britain with the Guardian's art critic, Adrian Searle. Predictably, Charles Thomson of the
Stuckists had already written it off, saying: "The work is not of sufficient quality in terms of
accomplishment, innovation or originality of thought to warrant exhibition in a national museum."
Adrian proved a much better guide./ppFirst, we looked at Goshka Macuga's work, which confronts you
as soon as you step inside. Her sculptural pieces look like bike racks and handrails, and wouldn't
be out of place at a German airport. Adrian told me they were, in fact, commissioned for this
year's Berlin Biennial, and made from designs by Lilly Reich, the German modernist and lover of
architect Mies van der Rohe. Collages of work by Paul Nash and Eileen Agar adorn the walls, walls
that have been gently licked by elegant strokes of grey; this suits the sharp lines and precise
shapes of the sculptures. /ppIn the next room, Cathy Wilkes had installed I Give You All My Money,
a scene featuring toilets, mannequins wearing horseshoes, and half-eaten bowls of porridge sat on
supermarket conveyor belts. It's not exactly Sainsbury's on a Sunday morning. Adrian and I agreed
this was a very difficult piece. All the ephemera around it made it even more puzzling: the
abandoned pram, the glass bowls with baby spoons suggesting motherhood; the batteries inserted into
jars of Bonne Maman jam, perhaps pointing to an idea of the strength of the family unit. There was
something mundane about it all: you go to the shop, you buy the food, you feed it to your child,
you leave the washing up. /ppRuna Islam's work here is all film-based. I don't really know much
about video art, but Adrian told me about some of the techniques artists use - the importance of
the speed and direction in which a camera moves; the way background colour can influence the way
you perceive a video, in the same way as a painting or photograph. In Islam's wonderful film, Be
the First to See What You See As You See It, a woman wanders around a gallery pushing tea sets
slowly to the floor; the green walls recall a Good Housekeeping magazine from decades ago. (It
might just be the fact that they both use tea cups and small containers in their work, but for me
there were echoes of Wilkes' installation here.) Islam made me want to go away and experiment, to
buy a vintage Super 8 camera and a whirring projector./ppMark Leckey, the only man on this year's
list, has produced a lot of work, and a lot of ideas. There is a small model of his studio, a short
film featuring Jeff Koons's 1986 sculpture Rabbit, and a series of slides showing a circular mirror
and some kind of stuffed animal. A strobe light flickered underneath the carousel slide projector
to simulate the effect of a film; Adrian pointed out the tiny light mounted on the plinth./ppWho
would I like to win tonight? Macuga: her work was the most varied, and I liked the way it
interacted with the gallery environment. Looking at the Turner exhibition with Adrian is something
I will remember for the rest of my life. What did I learn? That you can home in on the minutest of
details - a rosebud, a panning shot - and then build towards an overall understanding of a work;
that amazing art doesn't need to be a painting or a sculpture - it can be an installation or a
video. I also know that art has become a perpetual passion - a book I can't put down and a room I
can't leave./pp· See the other shortlisted young critics at a
href="http://guardian.co.uk/youngcritics"guardian.co.uk/youngcritics/a/pdiv style="float: left;
margin-right: 10px; margin-bottom: 10px;"ullia
href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/artanddesign/turnerprize"Turner prize/a/lilia
href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/artanddesign/art"Art/a/li/ul/diva
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Guardian Unlimited -
1 days ago
divimg alt=""
src="http://hits.guardian.co.uk/b/ss/guardiangu-feeds/1/H.15.1/37965?ns=guardianpageName=World+news%3A+Nigerian+city+counts+its+dead+after+days+of+Christian-Muslim+riotsch=World+newsc3=The+Guardianc4=Nigeria+%28News%29%2CChristianity+%28News%29%2CIslam+%28News%29%2CReligion+%28News%29%2CWorld+newsc5=Not+commercially+usefulc6=Xan+Ricec7=2008_12_01c8=1126663c9=articlec10=GUc11=World+newsc12=Nigeriac13=c14=h2=GU%2FWorld+news%2FNigeria"
width="1" height="1" //divpOfficials were counting the dead in a central Nigerian city yesterday
after two days of violent clashes between Christian and Muslim gangs. /ppNearly 400 bodies are
reported to have been received at the main mosque in Jos, while there are also expected to be a
significant number of Christian casualties. Thousands of people fled their homes in the city after
rival mobs burned houses, shops, and several churches and mosques in the worst sectarian violence
in the country since 2004. /ppWitnesses said sporadic gunfire could still be heard yesterday
morning, as the army patrolled the city following a 24-hour curfew, during which soldiers had
orders to shoot on sight. /pp"The situation ... is gradually returning to normal," Brigadier Emeka
Onwuamaegbu told Agence France-Presse. "There've not been any cases this morning of any destruction
or violence."/ppA police spokesman said there were "many dead" but there has been no official
confirmation of the number killed. /ppThe violence was triggered by elections in Plateau state,
where Jos is the capital. It sits at the fertile crossroads between Nigeria's Christian south and
Muslim north, and has a history of religious strife. /ppThe mainly Christian-backed People's
Democratic party, which currently holds federal power, was reported to have won the poll - the
first in Jos in more than a decade - on Thursday. But supporters of the All Nigeria People's party,
which has strong Muslim support, suspected vote-rigging after the official results were not posted
at the ballot counting centres./ppClashes between gangs of Hausa Muslims and mostly Christian
Beroms began on Thursday night and continued into Saturday afternoon. Security forces were deployed
from neighbouring states to try to quell the violence. /ppPatrolling on foot and in armoured
personnel carriers, the soldiers detained more than 500 people. The road from the north was blocked
and flights to the city cancelled. Local religious and ethnic leaders made appeals for calm on the
radio./ppMurtala Sani Hashim, who was responsible for registering bodies brought to the main mosque
in Jos, said yesterday that the tally of the dead was 367. The Jos University Teaching Hospital had
received 25 bodies, and 154 injured people. "Gunshot wounds, machete injuries - those are the two
main types," said Dr Aboi Madaki, the hospital's director of clinical services./ppDan Tom, a
Nigerian Red Cross official, said some bodies had not yet been cleared off the streets. "Over
10,000 people have been displaced from their homes and are now seeking refuge in churches, mosques,
and army and police barracks," he said. /ppCommunal violence in Nigeria, which has a roughly equal
population of Christians and Muslims, is often inflamed by the country's rough politics. Local
elections are always tense because state authorities control huge budgets. /ppBut competition for
resources at an individual level is often the main cause of clashes. In Nigeria's "middle belt",
tensions have been simmering for years between mainly Christians and animist minority groups,
regarded as indigenous to the area, and Hausa settlers and migrants from the Muslim north. In 2001,
1,000 people died in sectarian fighting in Jos./pdiv style="float: left; margin-right: 10px;
margin-bottom: 10px;"ullia href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/nigeria"Nigeria/a/lilia
href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/christianity"Christianity/a/lilia
href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/islam"Islam/a/lilia
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Open"Source::critere -
1 days ago
L'imam soudanais Sadiq al-Mahdi prône un islam plus tolérant envers les femmes.
© Le Temps SA, 2008
|
Dailymotion - Videos -
1 days and 9 hours ago
رامي
عياش و
مريام
ÙØ§Ø±Ø³
العراب
انا و
الشوق dahmene el harrachi
guerouabi hadj mohamed el anka omar charif Cheikha Rimitti Dauphin Cheb Enrico Macias syrie turk
salam salhi clip george wassouf abdelhalim hafez haifa wahbe nancy ajram ihab tawfik om kalthoum
oum bouchnak mbc art rotana lbc fairouz walid assala latifa charki Adrar Chlef Laghouat
Oum-El-Bouaghi Batna Bejaia Biskra Bechar Blida Bouira Tamanrasset Tebessa Tlemcen Tiaret said
saadi Djelfa Jijel Setif Saida Skikda Sidi-Bel-Abbes Annaba Guelma Constantine Medea Mostaganem
M'Sila Mascara Ouargla Oran El-Bayadh Illizi Bordj-Bou-Arreridj Boumerdes El-Taref Tindouf
Tissemsilt El-Oued Khenchela Souk-Ahras Tipaza Mila Ain-Defla Naâma Ain-Temouchent Ghardaia
Sahara Desert voyage mer plage bledard drague beauté algerien algerienne marocain
marocaine tunisien tunisienne maghrebin maghrebine kabyle kabylie chaoui allaoui saharoui rai
raï rap rnb staifi été zidane kenza farah harraga melissa karim benzema samir
nasri sofia boutella rimk rim'k 113 andalouse kiffan kiffen club projet moderne pays capritour
air algerie algerie islam bateau marseille depart L'Ariana Béja Ben Arous Bizerte
Gabès Gafsa Jendouba Kairouan Kasserine Kébili Le Kef Mahdia La Manouba
Médenine Monastir Nabeul Sfax Sidi Bouzid Siliana Sousse Tataouine Tozeur Tunis Zaghouan
mezoued carthage monastir hammamet djerba Agadir Casablanca Tanger Essaouira Mohammedia Fedala
Ouarzazate Taroudant Oujda Tetouan Rabat Marrakech Fes Meknes Fes musulman musulmane represente
fierté football musique arabe cheb hasni bouteflika ben ali roi mohammed VI Reda Taliani
Cheb Mami Cheb Khaled Cheikha Rimitti Cheb Bilal Cheb Abdou Houari Dauphin Cheb Nasro Idir Massa
Bouchafa ali Lounès rachid taha takfarinas warda el djazairia chaabi reggada jallal el
hamdaoui wahrane el bahia wharane oranais
Auteur : MONALIZA007
Tags : rami ayach meryam faris ayash tv femme homme arabic musique music orient super star fame egypt liban algerie maroc tunisie israel sexy hot kabylie usa iran turquie france lol paris irak clip rai
Envoyé : 30 novembre 2008
Note :5.0
Votes :1

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Guardian Unlimited -
2 days ago
divimg alt=""
src="http://hits.guardian.co.uk/b/ss/guardiangu-feeds/1/H.15.1/25095?ns=guardianpageName=World+news%3A+Mumbai%3A+Behind+the+attacks+lies+a+story+of+youth+twisted+by+hatech=World+newsc3=The+Observerc4=Mumbai+terror+attacks+%28News%29%2CIndia+%28News%29%2CTerrorism+-+international%2CWorld+news%2CObserverc5=Unclassified%2CNot+commercially+usefulc6=Jason+Burkec7=2008_11_30c8=1126474c9=articlec10=GUc11=World+newsc12=Mumbai+terror+attacksc13=c14=h2=GU%2FWorld+news%2FMumbai+terror+attacks"
width="1" height="1" //divpThe pitted roads around Multan, the city of saints, stretch flat across
the fields. They lead past rundown factories, workshops, shabby roadside teashops and mile after
mile of flat fields broken only by the mud and brick houses of the villages of Pakistan's rural
poor. One road leads south-east to the nearby city of Bahawalpur, the biggest recruiting base of
the militant groups currently being blamed by India for the Mumbai attack; another leads north-west
to Faridkot, the home village of Mohammad Ajmal Mohammad Amin Kasab, a 21-year-old Pakistan
national named yesterday in the Indian media as the only gunman involved in last week's atrocity
now alive and in custody./ppAlready a picture claimed by the Indian media to be Kasab, showing a
young man dressed in combat trousers, carrying a backpack and an AK47, on his way to to Mumbai's
main station to carry out his deadly work, has become an iconic image of the assault on the
city./ppTwo other militants have been named. Like Kasab, according to the Indian media reports,
they are said to be from the Multan region, southern Punjab. They, too, are said to be members of
the Pakistan-based militant group Lashkar-e-Taiba (Army of the Pure) and to have followed a
five-month training period to prepare them for the attack. The charge of the group's involvement,
denied by its spokesmen, has explosive political consequences for the volatile region and must be
treated with caution. In the long-running contest between India and its neighbour, propaganda and
misinformation is far from rare. But if the details now emerging are confirmed, the link to
Pakistan may spark war./ppFor though it is widely acknowledged that Pakistan's civilian government
has limited control over local militant groups, it is clear that Pakistan's military and security
establishment does./ppLashkar-e-Taiba was originally founded with the support of the Pakistani
military intelligence service, the ISI, to fight as 'deniable' proxies in the contested territory
of Kashmir, part of a decades-old strategy by the militarily weaker Pakistan to 'bleed' its bigger
rival. The ISI also has connections with Jaish-e-Mohammed, the second group that New Delhi security
officials has accused of involvement in the Mumbai attacks./ppFor the moment little is known about
the three men named yesterday or their accomplices. But their place of origin comes as no surprise
to experts. Both Lashkar-e-Taiba and Jaish-e-Mohammed draw the majority of their recruits from the
southern Punjab. Last week The Observer travelled to the twin towns of Multan and Bahawalpur, the
centres of the region, to investigate the reality of the groups' power on the ground, their
relations with the Pakistani intelligence services and the factors which drive young men, possibly
including the Mumbai gunmen, to join them./ppTrace a line from where US special forces battle
Taliban fighters in the corner of empty desert where the Afghan, Pakistani and Iranian frontiers
meet, follow it through the badlands of the Pakistani North West Frontier and on through the
bomb-blasted cities of northern Pakistan and down through Delhi, attacked in September, to
shell-shocked Mumbai, and one thing becomes clear: this zone has displaced the Middle East as the
new central front in the struggle against Islamic militancy. The southern Punjab falls on the
line's centre point. There may be doubt over the identity of the attackers, but there is none that
Multan and Bahawalpur and villages such as Faridkot are in the Indians' sights./ppFor most
militants in the region the story - and that of Azam Amir Kasab is unlikely to be very different -
starts at school. The southern Punjab has one of the highest concentrations of religious schools or
madrassas in south Asia. Most teach the ultra-conservative Deobandi strand of Islam that is also
followed by the Afghan Taliban and, crucially in this desperately poor land, offers free classes,
board and lodging to students./ppIn Bahawalpur the Jaish-e-Mohammed group, believed responsible for
a string of brutal attacks across south Asia, including the murder of Jewish American journalist
Daniel Pearl, has been linked to two such madrassas. One is the headquarters of the group - a
semi-fortified and forbidding complex in the centre of the town. The other is the Dar-ul-Uloom
Medina, where the brother-in-law of Rashid Rauf, the Bahawalpur-based suspected British militant
thought to have been killed in an American missile attack eight days ago, is a teacher. Surrounded
by some of the 700 students, he told The Observer that 'jihad' was the duty of all his young
charges./ppThe pupils at the more radical Bahawalpur and Multan schools grow up soaked in extremist
ideology. The most senior cleric in Bahawalpur, Maulana Riaz Chugti, said his students could only
go 'for training or to fight' after their studies or when the schools were shut for the holy month
of Ramadan./pp'To fight in Afghanistan or Kashmir and to struggle against the forces who are
against Islam is our religious duty,' Chugti, who oversees the education of 40,000 students, told
The Observer./ppIn Bahawalpur both the effects and the limits of the recent reversal of policy by
the ISI, the powerful Pakistani military intelligence service, are evident. A crackdown on the
militant groups was launched after they were blamed for a bloody attack on the Indian parliament in
2001 which almost brought India and Pakistan to open war. The groups, previously seen as a
strategic asset, were suddenly seen as, at least for the moment, a liability. When their operatives
were linked to plots to assassinate the then President, and evidence of collusion with al-Qaeda
itself became clear, the pressure mounted on the ISI to rein in their former
proteacute;geacute;s./pp'The militants have had to lower their profile,' said one local security
official. 'They are no longer recruiting or preaching or raising funds openly. Things are much more
difficult for them. If they recruit at all they do it individual by individual, not en masse like
before. There is no production line.'/ppBut the groups - along with break-away outfits with their
roots in sectarian Shia-Sunni violence in the region - still have a significant presence in the
region, particularly in remote villages such as that of Azam Amir Kasab. 'They may be semi-retired,
but in my village there are 300 men who have fought in Afghanistan and have training and can be
activated with one phone call,' one local former militant said. That fighters for one operation
should come from the same place was not surprising. 'When I went to Afghanistan I went with five
guys who I knew from school,' he said./ppThe young men of the southern Punjab have been found
across a broad swath of south Asia and even further afield. In Kabul in August, The Observer
interviewed Abit, a 23-year-old from Bahawalpur who had surrendered to Afghan police seconds before
he was supposed to blow himself up in a huge truck bomb. Other militants from the town have been
found as far away as Bangladesh. Lashkar-e-Taiba members have even been located in Iraq./ppThe
groups are also of great interest to British intelligence services, who fear their key role as
intermediaries between young volunteers from the UK's Muslim community - such as Rauf - and
al-Qaeda leaders based in the volatile tribal zones along Pakistan's western frontier. The groups,
the sources say, have a UK support network to supply funding./ppThe groups' relationship with the
intelligence services is complex. Front organisations for the groups have even put up candidates in
recent elections and travel without fear throughout Pakistan. Earlier this year The Observer
interviewed a representative of one group alleged to be linked to Lashkar-e-Taiba in the foyer of a
luxury Lahore hotel./ppLocal politicians said groups in the region were still powerful enough to
intimidate the local government and security forces and even to collect tax or mediate in legal
disputes in some areas. Roshan Gilani, a Shia community leader in Bahawalpur, said music shops had
received Taliban-style threats, telling them to close or risk violence. Prominent Shias have been
told they are on a hit list./ppUntil the Mumbai attacks, the recent series of bombings in India had
been attributed by most analysts to a home-grown militant outfit: the Indian Mujahideen. With many
highly educated and middle-class recruits among its ranks, and led by a 36-year-old computer
engineer, the group's members have a very different profile from the Pakistani groups' recruits.
But though their paths may be very different, the militants' eventual destination - fanaticism,
violence and hate - are the same./ppIntelligence agencies have done much research since 9/11 into
how individuals become terrorist killers. Dehumanising the enemy is seen as key. Civilians are no
longer seen as innocent but as complicit in a war waged by their governments against Islam. Group
dynamics also play a huge role, particularly when teams of militants are isolated from normal
society for long periods of time. Training camps - such as those in which Azam Amir Kasab is said
to have spent months - are the perfect way of reinforcing solidarity and the new 'world view' which
will allow them to execute murderous operations, such as killing diners in a hotel restaurant in
cold blood./ppIndian authorities believe local members of the Indian Mujahideen may have acted as
scouts to prepare the ground and gather intelligence before the attack. Security services now
recognise that militant groups looking to prepare attacks seek out resources and often enter into
temporary coalitions with other outfits when necessary. Though criminal links to Islamic militants
are rare, they are not unknown, and there are some suggestions that local underworld networks may
have been exploited to get the attackers to the targets by sea./ph2India's terror
groups/h2pstrongLashkar-e-Taiba (Army of the Pure)/strong/ppBattling to end Indian rule in Kashmir,
this Pakistan-based group is routinely blamed by Indian security forces for attacks. The surviving
gunman arrested in Mumbai is said to be a member./ppstrongMaoists, also known as
Naxalites/strong/ppPrime Minister Manmohan Singh has said the Maoists are the most serious threat
to national security. Their battles with police cause a steady death toll./ppstrongLiberation
Tigers of Tamil Eelam/strong/ppThe violence caused by this Sri Lankabased separatist group spilled
into India in 1991 when a suicide bomber killed Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi./ppstrongSikh
separatists /strong/ppPresident Indira Gandhi's Sikh bodyguards shot her in 1984 in revenge for the
hundreds killed when the military, aiming to suppress separatist militants, stormed a temple in
Amritsar. Riots followed./ppstrongStudents Islamic Movement of India/strong/ppAn Islamist
fundamentalist organisation. Indian police suspect involvement in the attack on Jaipur this
summer./ppstrongUnited Liberation Front of Asom/strong/ppFormed in 1979 to establish a 'socialist
Assam' through armed struggle. One of many such groups in north-east India./pdiv style="float:
left; margin-right: 10px; margin-bottom: 10px;"ullia
href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/mumbai-terror-attacks"Mumbai terror attacks/a/lilia
href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/india"India/a/lilia
href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/terrorism"Global terrorism/a/li/ul/diva
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Martin Varsavsky | Spanish -
2 days and 3 hours ago
Un día después de que terroristas que dicen actuar en nombre de Islam masacren a
turistas y ciudadanos en Bombay se arma otra batalla. Esta vez en Nigeria y es entre cristianos y
musulmanes. Reportan 300 muertos más una gran destrucción de iglesias y mezquitas.
Es increible cómo se puede matar invocando el nombre de Dios. La religión y los
nacionalismos son dos de las principales razones que se usan para asesinar o violentar los
derechos de los demás. En el caso de Jos parece que ya hace años que se masacran,
entre cristianos y musulmanes la última vez fueron más de 1000 víctimas. Se
que hay nacionalismo positivo y religión positiva. Pero estos dos sentimientos que mucho
comparten al diferenciar los seres humanos entre los miembros de un grupo y los
“otros” (religiosos y paganos, ciudadanos y extranjeros) muchas veces se proyectan no
en lo constructivo sino en la aniquilación del considerado diferente. A mi la gente que
hace de la religión o la nacionalidad el tema principal de su vida me preocupa porque
estos individuos muchas veces se dedican a quitarle la libertad, los derechos y a veces la vida a
los demás.
Compártelo

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Dailymotion - Videos -
2 days and 4 hours ago
On m'a toujours accusé de faire des faux montages sur le maroc,et pour repondre ces cons
j'ai mis cette video sans aucun montage Au Maroc les femmes ne sont pas les seules victimes de la
violence conjugale. Il y a aussi des hommes qui sont battus par leurs femmes. Le fait est
là et bien réel. Combien sont-ils à être violentés par le sexe
féminin? Difficile de se prononcer à ce sujet. L’absence de statistiques et
d’études ne permet pas de mesurer l’ampleur du phénomène.
D’autant plus que les centres pour les hommes violentés sont inexistants au Maroc.
Néanmoins, cette violence reste minoritaire. Mais, il faut avouer que les hommes
maltraités sont moins rares qu'on ne pourrait le croire car le sujet reste tabou et les
victimes préfèrent se taire. «Contrairement aux femmes, les hommes
n’osent pas en parler. Ils pensent que c’est une atteinte à leur image. La
société marocaine est machiste. Dans notre société, on voit mal un
homme frappé par sa femme, muni d’un certificat médical et déposait
plainte», affirme Me Abderrahim Bouhmidi, avocat du barreau de Rabat avant d’ajouter
: «Je me souviens d’un cas qui remonte à une vingtaine d’années.
Un homme se faisait constamment frapper par sa femme jusqu’au jour où il n’a
plus supporté cette situation et l’a frappée à son tour. Celle-ci a
alors porté plainte. Une fois au tribunal, en pleine audience, le juge lui a
demandé s’il était véritablement un homme car il se laissait battre
par sa femme. Cette réflexion du juge reflète en fait celle de la
société marocaine».
http://www.portaildumaroc.com/news+article.storyid+6692.htm
Auteur : forza-algeria
Tags : algerie maroc bouteflika zidane mohamed islam hassna cheb rai khaled hasni mami bilele reda taliani houari sarkozy oran marseille madrid alicance barcelone casablanca rimk amel bent kenza farah zianie
Envoyé : 29 novembre 2008
Note :0.0
Votes :0

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Auteur : koster78
Tags : djins football match joueur islam ballon sorcelerie
Envoyé : 29 novembre 2008
Note :0.0
Votes :0

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ØÙŠØ¯Ø± Saul Alinsky, Rezko, Michelle Obama,
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Barack Obama wins 44th president of United States Of America. High quality. Michelle Obama uses a
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michelle Added: November 29, 2008

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