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Across Mideast, Arabs Hail Shoe-Hurling Journalist

by: Qassim Abdul-Zahra and Omar Sinan  |  The Associated Press

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A journalist, Muntadar al Zeidi, is being held by police after throwing his shoes at George Bush in Baghdad. (Photo: Sky News)

    Baghdad - Thousands of Iraqis took to the streets Monday to demand the release of a reporter who threw his shoes at President George W. Bush, as Arabs across many parts of the Middle East hailed the journalist as a hero and praised his insult as a proper send-off to the unpopular U.S. president.

    The protests came as suicide bombers and gunmen targeted Iraqi police, U.S.-allied Sunni guards and civilians in a series of attacks Monday that killed at least 17 people and wounded more than a dozen others, officials said.

    Journalist Muntadhar al-Zeidi, who was kidnapped by militants last year, was being held by Iraqi security Monday and interrogated about whether anybody paid him to throw his shoes at Bush during a press conference the previous day in Baghdad, said an Iraqi official.

Also see below:     
Iraq TV Demands Release of Bush Shoe Attacker    β€’

    He was also being tested for alcohol and drugs, and his shoes were being held as evidence, said the official, speaking on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to talk to the media.

    Showing the sole of your shoe to someone in the Arab world is a sign of extreme disrespect, and throwing your shoes is even worse.

    Newspapers across the Arab world on Monday printed front-page photos of Bush ducking the flying shoes, and satellite TV stations repeatedly aired the incident, which provided fodder for jokes and was hailed by the president's many critics in the region.

    "Iraq considers Sunday as the international day for shoes," said a joking text message circulating around the Saudi capital Riyadh.

    Palestinian journalists in the West Bank town of Ramallah joked about who would be brave enough to toss their shoes at Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, another U.S. official widely disliked in the region.

    Many users of the popular Internet networking site Facebook posted the video of the incident to their profile pages, showing al-Zeidi leap from his chair as Bush and Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki were about to shake hands Sunday and hurl his shoes at the president, who was about 20 feet away. Bush ducked the airborne footwear and was not injured in the incident.

    "This is a farewell kiss, you dog," al-Zeidi yelled in Arabic as he threw his shoes. "This is from the widows, the orphans and those who were killed in Iraq."

    Al-Zeidi was immediately wrestled to the ground by Iraqi security guards. The incident raised fears of a security lapse in the heavily guarded Green Zone where the press conference took place. Reporters were repeatedly searched and asked to show identification before entering and while inside the compound, which houses al-Maliki's office and the U.S. Embassy.

    Al-Zeidi's tirade was echoed by Arabs across the Middle East who are fed up with U.S. policy in the region and still angry over Bush's decision to invade Iraq in 2003 to topple Saddam Hussein.

    The response to the incident by Arabs in the street was ecstatic.

    "Al-Zeidi is the man," said 42-year-old Jordanian businessman Samer Tabalat. "He did what Arab leaders failed to do."

    Hoping to capitalize on this sentiment, al-Zeidi's TV station, Al-Baghdadia, repeatedly aired pleas to release the reporter Monday, while showing footage of explosions and playing background music that denounced the U.S. in Iraq.

    "We have all been mobilized to work on releasing him, and all the organizations around the world are with us," said Abdel-Hameed al-Sayeh, the manager of Al-Baghdadia in Cairo, where the station is based.

    Al-Jazeera television interviewed Saddam's former chief lawyer Khalil al-Dulaimi, who offered to defend al-Zeidi, calling him a "hero."

    In Baghdad's Shiite slum of Sadr City, thousands of supporters of radical Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr burned American flags to protest against Bush and called for the release of al-Zeidi.

    "Bush, Bush, listen well: Two shoes on your head," the protesters chanted in unison.

    In Najaf, a Shiite holy city, some protesters threw their shoes at an American patrol as it passed by. Witnesses said the American troops did not respond and continued on their patrol.

    Al-Zeidi, who is in his late 20s, was kidnapped by Shiite militias on Nov. 16, 2007, and released three days later. His station said no ransom was paid and refused to discuss the case.

    Violence in Iraq has declined significantly over the past year, but daily attacks continue. A truck bomb killed at least nine police officers Monday and wounded 13 others, including two civilians, in Khan Dhari, west of Baghdad, said Dr. Omar al-Rawi at the Fallujah hospital, where the dead and wounded were taken.

    Hours earlier, a female suicide bomber knocked on the front door of the home of the leader of a local chapter of the Sunni volunteer militia north of Baghdad and blew herself up, killing him, said an Iraqi police official, speaking on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to talk to the press.

    Also Monday, gunmen killed seven people from a single family, members of the minority Yazidi sect, when they stormed into their home in northern Iraq, police said.

    The U.S. military said in a statement Monday that a 25-year-old male detainee died of an apparent heart attack while in custody Sunday at a U.S. detention facility at Camp Cropper near the Baghdad airport.

    The military did not release the name or nationality of the detainee, nor did it say why he was being held. An autopsy will be conducted before the body is released to family for burial, the military said.

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    Abdul-Zahra reported from Baghdad and Sinan from Cairo, Egypt. Associated Press writers Muhieddin Rashad in Baghdad, Mohammed Daraghmeh and Diaa Hadid in Ramallah, West Bank, Jamal Halaby in Amman, Jordan, and Donna Abu-Nasr in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, contributed to this report.

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Iraq TV Demands Release of Bush Shoe Attacker

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by: Agence France-Presse

    Baghdad - An Iraqi television station on Monday demanded the immediate release of one of its journalists who caused a furore when he hurled shoes at visiting US President George W. Bush.

    Muntazer al-Zaidi jumped up as Bush was holding a press conference with Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki on Sunday, shouted "It is the farewell kiss, you dog" and threw two shoes at the US leader.

    Bush ducked and the first shoe hit the American and Iraqi flags behind the two leaders, while the second was off target.

    Zaidi, a reporter with the Al-Baghdadia channel which broadcasts from Cairo, was immediately wrestled to the ground by security guards and frogmarched from the room.

    "Al-Baghdadia television demands that the Iraqi authorities immediately release their stringer Muntadhar al-Zaidi, in line with the democracy and freedom of expression that the American authorities promised the Iraqi people," it said in a statement.

    In Cairo, Muzhir al-Khafaji, programming director for the television channel, described Zaidi as a "proud Arab and an open-minded man."

    "We fear for his safety," he added.

  

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Comments

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If it 'didn't bother' Bush,

If it 'didn't bother' Bush, then why doesn't he allow this 'Free Iraqi' man to be released without charge...?

Hail to the daring

Hail to the daring show-thrower! Let's get everyone throwing shoes at the hapless, demented, villainous Bush. Let it become a practice all over the world, whenever he appears in public.

The few articles in the msm

The few articles in the msm that deign to mention Iraq are mandated to pretend that everything is rosy due to the escalation, but usually list a bunch of recent attacks anyway. The fact is, we'll be there until the job is done--turning over of Iraqi oil resources to American-based petroleum companies. It's a lucky thing it was shoes and not bullets.

Well, I don't believe in

Well, I don't believe in violence nor hatred, however it seems quite fitting that this man should throw his shoes at Bush. I'm glad he had the courage to show us his mind-set. Perhaps, instead of throwing our shoes at Bush, we could hold them up and wave them. It would still send a message. One writer calls Bush hapless and villainous. Yes, I do agree, God help me.

Sadly(?), many Americans

Sadly(?), many Americans also hail the Shoe thrower. God bless the man, I wish him only the best.

YES!!! Journalist Muntadhar

YES!!! Journalist Muntadhar al-Zeidi SPEAKS for 10 of millions ... including Me! He spoke Truth to Power ... and it has been heard around the world. YA KALB -YOU DOG!! YA KALB -YOU DOG!! YA KALB -YOU DOG!! YA KALB -YOU DOG!! Thank You!!!!!!!!

What was the psychotic

What was the psychotic monkey doing there in the first place? Giving a fond"farewell" to the people he murdered? Shoes were far to good to be throwing at this louse.

Whenever a figurative shoe

Whenever a figurative shoe drops (eg another economic catastrophe bombshell, bailout, bombed village), we go to the streets and use street theatre to 'throw' the shoe(s) back at the establishment.

Someone had to do it. Thank

Someone had to do it. Thank you Muntadhar al-Zeidi

Such a tragedy that

Such a tragedy that Muntadhar al-Zeidi had a glass arm.

If I had been there and had

If I had been there and had there been one available I would have preferred to throw a toilet seat... but I like the idea of everyone at protests holding a shoe up in the air... and everyone should be throwing shoes at anyone in the Bush Administration! Maybe a good lump on the head will wake them up to the crimes they have committed against humanity.

""I don't think you can take

""I don't think you can take one guy throwing shoes and say this represents a broad movement in Iraq," Bush told reporters" How about tens of thousands of people marching and dancing in the street to celebrate the shoe throwing incident? Does that represent a broad movement in Iraq? How about the outpouring of joy that someone had the guts to do what they all wanted to do. The MSM does its thing reporting this story invariably finding someone in Iraq who disapproved of the incident, trying to make it look as if there was serious disagreement in Iraq. They would have better luck convincing people that there was no overwhelming support for Mr. al Zeidi if they could find marches against his action to offset the marches in his support instead of one government official's comment.

Bush is a tyrant but sadly

Bush is a tyrant but sadly he is just one of many in America. Too many of our politicians are doing to America what they just got done doing to Iraq. Forget shoes lets throw them all out of this country and see if anyone will take these worthless tyrants.