Pages

Wednesday, May 15, 2013

Saudi religious police boss condemns Twitter users

oped: Well the time has come to educate the losers at the 'Saudi Virtue Police'..they are nothing more than women abusers..who get off physically abusing women and children...if they could read and had the ability to understand the actual writings of the 'Fraud' Muhammad they would surely change their ways...however Muhammad and his followers of this 7th Century Theocracy will never give up their Love of brutality and perversion...it is up to the citizens of 'Saudi Arabia' to take control and remove these perverts from society at large !

For those who are intelligent and want to know the truth about Islam...let me educate you...read and learn:

UpDate The Life and Times of Muhammad..Prophet,Man,King or Myth? 

http://sharlaslabyrinth.blogspot.com/2012/09/the-life-and-times-of-muhammad_5191.html 

Apps, including Twitter, on a smartphone 

via: BBC

Saudi Arabia has the highest take-up of Twitter in the world 

The head of Saudi Arabia's religious police has warned citizens against using Twitter, which is rising in popularity among Saudis.
Sheikh Abdul Latif Abdul Aziz al-Sheikh said anyone using social media sites - and especially Twitter - "has lost this world and his afterlife".
Twitter was the platform for those who did not have any platform, he said.
His remarks reflect Riyadh's concern that Saudis use Twitter to discuss sensitive political and other issues.
The conservative kingdom is believed to have seen the world's fastest increase in the uptake of Twitter, says the BBC's Sebastian Usher.

'Losing battle'
The sheikh's comments echo those of the imam of the Grand Mosque in Mecca in April who used his sermon - seen by millions on TV - to warn that Twitter was a threat to national unity, our correspondent says.
Earlier, Saudi Arabia's grand mufti, the kingdom's most senior Muslim cleric, had dismissed Twitter users as "fools".
These rhetorical attacks are part of a concerted offensive by the Saudi establishment on the social network site, our correspondent says.
Many Saudis have seized on Twitter as the most immediate and effective way to open little windows into a traditionally opaque society.
Recent protests in the Eastern Province have been tweeted and images of human rights activists on trial have been uploaded directly from courtrooms, challenging many taboos.
In response, the authorities have mooted moves that could inhibit Twitter users by linking their online accounts to their Saudi ID numbers.
A number of web activists have been detained, including at least one for the alleged apostasy, a charge that could carry the death penalty.

However, some elements of the Saudi elite have also warned against moving too hard on social network users.
Billionaire businessman Prince Alwaleed Bin Talal, who presents himself as a reformist, has described attempts to restrict social media as a losing battle.

No comments:

Post a Comment