I particularly like this detail:
This will take effect from 4pm this afternoon.
Why? Planning a last couple of shootings in the next hour-and-a-half, Gerry?
This will take effect from 4pm this afternoon.
Al-Qaeda terrorism is not on the same par as the IRA, Prime Minister Tony Blair has suggested.
He said IRA political demands or their previous atrocities could not be directly compared to fundamentalists who carried out the 9/11 US attacks.
It was invidious to make comparisons because "terrorism is wrong", he said.
"I don't think you can compare the political demands of republicanism with the political demands of this terrorist ideology we're facing now."
Ulster Unionist Party leader Sir Reg Empey said he had warned Mr Blair against "creating double standards between terrorists".
"There is no point in using the numbers killed to distinguish between terror groups as the prime minister seems to be implying," he said.
"However, if Mr Blair wants to use a crude stratification process in order to establish a hierarchy of terror, he will find that the number of those murdered and maimed in Northern Ireland is greater."
DUP MP Sammy Wilson said Mr Blair's comments were an "insult to every victim of terrorism".
"Whether a terrorist sets out to murder one person or 100 people, they are a terrorist and no difference should be drawn," he said.
We don't attack you to get you to give us something. We attack you to kill you.
Rape investigation starts after school trip claims that an injection can cure obesity.
As long as [the police] insist that they are absolutely the only people allowed to act against criminals and to defend the public, they take on the responsibility of doing the job perfectly — not just very well, but perfectly.
Al Qaeda are almost as crap at terrorism as the UVF the Loyalist terrorists who always seemed to go into a Catholic betting shop & open fire, only for the guns to jam.
a man was carrying a rucksack and the rucksack suddenly exploded. It was a minor explosion but enough to blow open the rucksack.
The man then made an exclamation as if something had gone wrong.
The law used to persecute gays, Article 219, was put in place by the French during colonial times, and it still exists in all of their former African colonies, though somehow not in Burkina. It's actively enforced in Senegal. Z gave me the example of two of his friends who were arrested on trumped up charges of public sex while they were sitting together in a park that had a reputation of being a cruising spot. The possible punishment is between 1 month and 2 years in prison, and they were both condemned to 2 years. They weren't even allowed to speak in their own defense at the tribunal. Z told me that nobody bothers to refute the judgements because the society's attitude is, "They're gays, they deserve it." Z's organization also helps its members who are AIDS patients find people who will agree to treat them, because they're often refused treatment at local hospitals or clinics. Even organizations like Amnesty International have offered nothing but sympathy for these injustices, claiming that if they help the gay community it would sully their relations with the government would harm their capacity for addressing other abuses.