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English Wikipedia references for Dailystar.com.lb 141-160 of 322
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Iran/Archive 4
Talk:Iran/Archive_4
PJAK
The Party of Free Life of Kurdistan or Free Life Party of Kurdistan or Party for a Free Life in Kurdistan (Kurdish)Partiya Jiyana Azad a Kurdistanê ) or PJAK, also sometimes mistakenly written as PEJAK, is a militant Kurdish nationalist group with bases in the mountainous regions of northern Iraq
PJAK
Arabic hip hop
Arabic hip hop is hip hop music and culture originating in the Arabic-speaking world. It is performed in Arabic, and local Arabic dialects, English, French, Berber languages (Tamazight) and Hebrew. Like most artists of the genre, the artists from the Arab World are highly influenced by American hip hop.Also considered part of Arabic hip hop are the rappers of Arab origin in the Arab diaspora including in Europe, North America, Australia.
Arabic_hip_hop
Franck Ribéry
Talk:Franck_Ribéry
Syrian occupation of Lebanon
The Syrian occupation of Lebanon (also called the Syrian military presence in Lebanon) was effective in Lebanon for the period 1976-2005.
Syrian_occupation_of_Lebanon
Iraq War
Iraq_War
Sami Abdul Aziz Salim Allaithy
Sami Abdul Aziz Salim Allaithy (born October 28 1956) is a citizen of Egypt, held in extrajudicial detention in the United States Guantanamo Bay detention camps, in Cuba. Internee Security Number is 287.Joint Task Force Guantanamo counter-terrorism analysts report he was born on October 28 1956 in Shubrakass Egypt.
Sami_Abdul_Aziz_Salim_Allaithy
Muhammad Hamid Al Qarani
Muhammad Hamid Al Qarani is a citizen of Chad, held in extrajudicial detention in the United States Guantanamo Bay detention camps, in Cuba. Internee Security Number is 269.Medina, Saudi Arabia.On June 15, 2005Human Rights lawyer Clive Stafford Smith identified Al Qarani as one of a dozen teenage boys held in the adult portion of the prison.
Muhammad_Hamid_Al_Qarani
2006 Iranian sumptuary law controversy
May 19, 2006, the National Post of Canada published pieces by Amir Taheri and Chris Wattie falsely claiming that the Iranian parliament had passed a sumptuary law mandating a national dress code for all Iranians, Muslim and non-Muslim alike.Both National Post articles went on to say that non-Muslim religious minorities in Iran would be required to wear "special insignia"Jews, red for Christians and blue for Zoroastrian.
2006_Iranian_sumptuary_law_controversy
Assem Hammoud
Assem Hammoud (), aka Amir Andalousi, a Beirut native, is an alleged Al Qaeda operative living in Lebanon who was charged with plotting a mission to blow up the PATH train tunnels beneath the Hudson River between New Jersey and lower Manhattan, New York City, United States with a team of suicide bombers with backpack explosives.
Assem_Hammoud
Hudson River bomb plot
July 7, 2006, the FBI announced that they had foiled a plot that was in its "talking phase" by foreign militants to detonate explosives in tunnels connecting New Jersey with Manhattan and drown the New York financial district with a torrent of water. This was unfeasible because the tunnel is embedded in bedrock, and the target is above sea level. The report, however, made international news. The government initially protested about how the story was leaked to the New York Daily News.
Hudson_River_bomb_plot
International reactions to the 2006 Lebanon War
International_reactions_to_the_2006_Lebanon_War
2006 Israel-Lebanon conflict/Archive 1
Talk:2006_Israel-Lebanon_conflict/Archive_1
Hussein el-Husseini
Sayyed Hussein el-Husseini () is a Lebanese statesman and former speaker of the Lebanese parliament, who brought the end of the Lebanese Civil War in 1990, followed by the disarmament of sectarian militias. As co-founder of the Amal Movement, el-Husseini, along with Musa al-Sadr, is regarded as one of the founders of the Lebanese resistance.
Hussein_el-Husseini
Military operations of the 2006 Lebanon War
Military_operations_of_the_2006_Lebanon_War
Military operations of the 2006 Lebanon War
Talk:Military_operations_of_the_2006_Lebanon_War
2006 Israel-Lebanon conflict/Archive 4
Talk:2006_Israel-Lebanon_conflict/Archive_4
Terrorism in Syria
Terrorism in Syria comes primarily from Kurdish separatists, Lebanese nationalists as well as Sunni Islamists. The United States government accuses the government of Syria of sponsoring what some consider terrorism, specifically through its past and current support for such organizations as Hezbollah, HAMAS, Palestinian Islamic Jihad, the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine General Command, the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, the Democratic Front for the Liberation of Palestine, the Abu Musa Organization, and the Popular Struggle Front.
Terrorism_in_Syria
States Parties to the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court
The States Parties to the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court are those countries that have ratified or acceded to the Rome Statute, the treaty that established the International Criminal Court. As of April 2009, 108 states are members of the Court.
States_Parties_to_the_Rome_Statute_of_the_International_Criminal_Court
Battle of Bint Jbeil
The Battle of Bint Jbeil was one of the main battles of the Litani offensive in the 2006 Lebanon War. It consisted of a series of military actions and clashes in the southern Lebanese town of Bint Jbeil, regarded as the "Hezbollah stronghold" in the south. The town is three kilometers from the Israeli border.
Battle_of_Bint_Jbeil