Friday, October 06, 2006

Today at IRIB: Zionist crimes, blood of martyrs, "tubby kids"



"We will not cave in - Haniya":
Palestinian Prime Minister said Friday that the Palestinian popular government enjoys legitimicy and will not back down from its platform.

Ismail Haniya who was speaking to a very large gathering of people in Gaza made it clear that America soon after the victory of Hamas in January elections made every attempt to overthrow the Palestinian ruling government.

"But it failed since the government is backed by blood of the Palestinian martyrs as well as its Islamic rightful stand," Haniya continued.

Revealing a media plot to introduce the Palestinian cabinet as 'Hamas cabinet', Haniya said that their owners have pretensions to present the incumbent cabinet as partisan through such a psychological warfare.

"I and other members of the governemnt take honor in being a meber of Hamas Islamic Resistance," he affirmed, adding the governemnt represents people and took office in compliance with democratic rules.

Haniya vowed that efforst to punish Palestinian people for their voting to Hamas will end up in failure, arguing that in every point of the world where anti-occupation flag waves the strategic depth of the Palestinian ruling government emerges.

Haniya speech was backed by the immense audience's enthusiastic slogans in support of the governement.
"UN urges probe into Zionists crimes":
The Geneva-based UN Human Rights Council special representative on the 'right to food' said on Thursday that the International Criminal Court (ICC) should investigate whether the Zionist regime is guilty of war crimes for a bombing campaign in Lebanon that blocked access to food and water.
"Mere work fails to halt kid obesity":
The belief that obesity can be thwarted by getting tubby kids to exercise more is misplaced, says a study among nursery-school children.

In an unusual experiment, British researchers tested the Exercise Theory among 545 preschoolers among 36 nurseries in the Scottish city of Glasgow, where fatty diets and a couch potato lifestyle are entrenched.

With the consent of the children's parents and help of nursery-school staff, the researchers had half of the children do three 30-minute sessions of physical activity each week, while the other half followed their normal kindergarten routine.

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