Monday, May 2, 2011

What To Expect From A Glioblastoma

Doubts and criticism for the decision to throw the corpse into the sea



According 05/03/1911 U.S., so there will be no grave to go to worship. Muslim rejection.

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Washington. AFP, EFE, DPA


The U.S. authorities' decision to throw the corpse of Osama Bin Laden created a sea of \u200b\u200bspeculation. The official argument is that this prevents the tomb becomes in place of veneration of a terrorist leader. Washington assures that respected the Islamic rite, but several experts contradict this claim and raise doubts about the real reasons to remove the body.

The Pentagon said Monday it held a ceremony aboard the USS Carl-Vinson in the Arabian Sea, before the body was thrown overboard.

The remains were washed and placed in a white cloth, put in a bag of ballast. An officer read a religious text that an interpreter translated into Arabic, said the U.S. Defense

But a senior official of the highest authority in Sunni Islam, Al-Azhar institution in Cairo, said that "Islam does not accept the dumping at sea, only the funeral."
sea
The choice is limited to cases of force majeure, and for people killed on board a ship, whose decomposing body present risks, said Mahmoud Azab, chief of the great Imam Ahmad Al Tayeb for interreligious dialogue.

A U.S. official defended the operation. "We wanted to avoid that (a tomb) became a place of pilgrimage," he told AFP.

Official sources other means, the decision was taken because of need to find a country willing to bury the most wanted terrorist in the world like a complicated task. U.S. gave the body to Saudi Arabia, but the authorities in Riyadh (which had withdrawn citizenship years ago) refused to bury him.

"The way in which their body waste bin Laden is going to generate problems, forms, mostly because it will lead to more radical groups to doubt the operation," said Javier Martin, correspondent EFE Tehran and expert in the Islamic world, quoted by English newspaper El Pais.

In response to these questions, a senior U.S. official who requested anonymity said DNA tests confirmed "with certainty" that bin Laden was the man who was shot and killed in the assault on the residence where he was hiding in the outskirts of Islamabad.

Another senior source said that members of the command were able to identify "visually" to Bin Laden when they arrived. During the assault also heard from a woman, perhaps one of his wives, calling your name.

But suspicions arose because Pakistan TV showed a photo purportedly of Bin Laden's body, his face bloodied and disfigured, which proved to be a hoax.

The AFP submitted the photo to a computer program specialized allowed to prove he had been falsified by taking the beard and the lower face of an older photo of bin Laden.
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