2011年11月4日星期五

Norway killer praises Japan as model country: report

Kyodo said in the document, Breivik also commended Japan for not allowing many Rosetta Stone Language Muslims to immigrate, although the country has no ban on specific ethnic or religious groups.Immigration is a sensitive topic in Japan, where many people worry that letting in more foreigners would mean more crime and less social cohesion while experts say that the country's shrinking, aging population make opening up vital.Legislators in major political parties have called measures to open the door wider, but have taken little action for fear of alienating voters.Foreign residents account for only about 1.7 percent of Japan's population, with Chinese the largest group followed by ethnic Koreans, many of whom are descendants of people forced to come to Japan before its colonial rule over the Korean peninsula ended in 1945.Breivik also wrote that he would like to meet former Japanese Prime Minister Taro Aso, a right-leaning conservative who has been quoted by Kyodo and other media as praising Japan for having "one nation, one civilization, one language, one culture and one race" when he was a cabinet minister in 2005.The 32-year-old Breivik also praised South Korea for its similar low percentage of foreign residents, Kyodo said.Breivik has admitted planting a bomb on Friday outside Prime Minister Jens Stoltenberg's Oslo office that killed eight people, and then driving to the island of Utoeya and shooting dead Rosetta Stone language software 68 people at a youth camp of Norway's ruling Labour Party. Cooperation between NATO and Afghan troops has been soured by a steady stream of incidents over the past five years in which Afghan soldiers have opened fire on foreign troops, killing dozens in total.But Sandison speaks highly of the Afghan troops he works with, many of whom have spent years fighting the Taliban far from home in harsh desert conditions."They have got some very, very good troops ... Some of them have been fighting for a very, very long time," he said, adding that they shared some national traits with their mentors."They do exactly what we do. They sit around having tea." The letter had been written in Dari although Mullah Omar's first language, like the vast majority of the Taliban, is Pashto. Despite the letter however, the Afghan government had pulled out of the agreement at the last minute, she added later.Sultani said she didn't have to wear a burqa or even a veil during her meeting with Omar but said she had not been allowed to take photos or record the encounter. Women were required to cover from head to toe when the Taliban were in power."I can present Mullah Omar here to you if his safety and security can be assured," said Sultani as some journalists sniggered.But ever the jovial crowd, the Afghan journalists Rosetta Stone Spanish Latin in the room soon made clear what they thought of Sultani's story. Reporters jokingly embraced and congratulated each other that peace had finally come.

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