| Author |
Message |
   
Rekkadithe_gani_dokkadadhu
Junior Artist Username: Rekkadithe_gani_dokkadadhu
Post Number: 192 Registered: 01-2010 Posted From: 68.206.118.22
Rating: N/A Votes: 0 (Vote!) | | Posted on Wednesday, February 03, 2010 - 11:03 pm: |
    |
Cocanada:France ki unna guts INdia ki unte baavundu
aa guts tho Yes manollu rule edtharu:all muslms shud always wear burka.. Key Board adakapothe gani pani jaragadhu.... |
   
Cocanada
Moderator Username: Cocanada
Post Number: 16885 Registered: 01-2008
Rating: N/A Votes: 0 (Vote!) | | Posted on Wednesday, February 03, 2010 - 10:58 pm: |
    |
France ki unna guts INdia ki unte baavundu Naaku Namo Venkatesa 2nd half nachindi - Idly |
   
Kingaa_bongaa
Side Hero Username: Kingaa_bongaa
Post Number: 6875 Registered: 02-2008 Posted From: 69.174.58.20
Rating: N/A Votes: 0 (Vote!) | | Posted on Wednesday, February 03, 2010 - 10:56 pm: |
    |
Telugu_times:Nee post kindha, bomma soodu
muslim matrimonial site aaa? chass aa ammay enti burka thesesindhi. Manaki Manam Kingu, Choosevallaki Bongu.
|
   
Ishan
Side Hero Username: Ishan
Post Number: 2170 Registered: 01-2009 Posted From: 68.90.235.198
Rating: N/A Votes: 0 (Vote!) | | Posted on Wednesday, February 03, 2010 - 10:56 pm: |
    |
Excellent. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1yeGK88_5T4
|
   
Telugu_times
Moderator Username: Telugu_times
Post Number: 16045 Registered: 02-2008
Rating: N/A Votes: 0 (Vote!) | | Posted on Wednesday, February 03, 2010 - 10:55 pm: |
    |
Kingaa_bongaa:
Nee post kindha, bomma soodu
 |
   
Kingaa_bongaa
Side Hero Username: Kingaa_bongaa
Post Number: 6874 Registered: 02-2008 Posted From: 69.174.58.20
Rating: N/A Votes: 0 (Vote!) | | Posted on Wednesday, February 03, 2010 - 10:36 pm: |
    |
http://www.csmonitor.com/World/Global-News/2010/0203/French- citizenship-denied-to-man-with-veiled-wife French PM mogodu anukuntunnaaa. French Prime Minister Francois Fillon said the Moroccan man, who had married a French woman, failed to respect the âvalues of the [French] republicâ by forcing his wife to wear a burqa. President Nicolas Sarkozy's administration today took another shot at the burqa, scoring populist points ahead of Franceâs March elections, say analysts. âHe has no place in our country,â Prime Minister Francois Fillon told Europe 1 radio, in a decision that comes a week after a French parliamentary commission recommended a partial ban on any veils that cover the face. The ban still needs to be voted on, but it would apply in hospitals and on public transport. France already has bans for wearing headscarves in state schools. Fillon said the Moroccan man, who had married a French woman, failed to respect the âvalues of the [French] republic.â âThis case is about a religious radical: he imposes the burqa, he imposes the separation of men and women in his own home, and he refuses to shake the hands of women,â Fillon said. The recent acts reflect Sarkozyâs efforts to capitalize on anti-burqa sentiment ahead of Marchâs regional election, Arthur Goldhammer, chair the seminar for visiting scholars at Harvard Universityâs Center for European Studies, said in an interview Wednesday. âSarokozy is certainly agitating this issue with the upcoming regional election in mind,â says Goldhammer, who also maintains the blog French Politics and is on the editorial board of the journal French Politics, Culture, and Society. âHe has lost support in the polls from people who formerly voted for him and pledged their allegiance to him because of fairly strong statements he made on illegal immigration.â In a June 2009 address to both houses of parliament at Versailles, Sarkozy called the burqa âa sign of subservience, a sign of debasement.â In France, the argument against the burqa is presented not as an attack on Islam but a defense of women, Goldhammer says. Politicians label it a âwalking prison for women.â A complete ban could possibly be overturned by the European Court as a infringement on human rights. But with current support from 57 percent of French people for a ban on the burqa, Goldhammer says Sarkozy âlooses nothing by [the recent actions] and he potentially gains the votes of people who have been drifting away.â Some political observers say Sarkozyâs efforts are misplaced. Writing for Forbes, columnist Emre Deliveli says the burqa ban will backfire. âAccording to Interior Ministry figures and expert testimonies to the parliamentary commission, 1,900, or fewer than one in a thousand, Muslim women in France wear a burqa," Deliveli writes. âAs for curbing radical Islam, there is the risk that the law will lead to more proselytizing, not less, by stigmatizing Muslims. The converts among the burqa-wearers have already been boldly telling the French media how disappointed they are with the ban, and how they intend not to obey it.â
Manaki Manam Kingu, Choosevallaki Bongu.
|
|