MWL Commends Resolutions of Riyadh’s Islamic-Arab Summit

Logo of the Muslim World League (Photo: MWL website)
Logo of the Muslim World League (Photo: MWL website)
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MWL Commends Resolutions of Riyadh’s Islamic-Arab Summit

Logo of the Muslim World League (Photo: MWL website)
Logo of the Muslim World League (Photo: MWL website)

The Muslim World League (MWL) on Sunday welcomed the resolutions of the Joint Arab Islamic Extraordinary Summit, held a day earlier in Riyadh.

The League also declared complete support for the Palestinian people's right to freedom and to an independent sovereign state on all their national territory.

In a statement, MWL’s Secretary General Sheikh Mohammad al-Issa said the league agrees with the summit's statements on the right of the Palestinian people to freedom and an independent state.

He called for convening an international peace conference as soon as possible, through which a credible peace process could be launched based on international law, international resolutions, and the principle of land for peace within a defined timeframe and with international guarantees.

“The process should have a specific timeline and international guarantees to lead to an end to the occupation,” the Secretary General said.

Al-Issa also affirmed the validity of the statements made, which rejected the characterization of Israel’s retaliatory war as self-defense.

He emphasized the condemnation of the killing and targeting of civilians, grounding this stance in humanitarian values and alignment with international and humanitarian law.

The Secretary General then stressed the urgency for the international community to take immediate and decisive action to halt the killing and targeting of Palestinian civilians.

He underscored the fundamental principle that there should be no disparity in valuing human life regardless of nationality, race or religion.

Al-Issa then praised the summit's resolutions asking to break the siege on Gaza and allow the entry of aid convoys, denouncing the double standards in applying international law and warning that this duplicity both undermines the credibility of multilateral action and exposes the selectivity in upholding humanitarian values.

He thanked the Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques, King Salman bin Abdulaziz Al Saud and Crown Prince and Prime Minister Mohammed bin Salman bin Abdulaziz Al Saud for hosting the summit which reflects the Kingdom’s unwavering commitment to supporting Palestinian rights and alleviating their suffering.

Saudi Arabia and other Muslim countries called on Saturday for an immediate end to military operations in Gaza, rejecting Israel's justification of its actions against Palestinians as self-defense.

The extraordinary joint Islamic-Arab summit in Riyadh urged the International Criminal Court to investigate “war crimes and crimes against humanity that Israel is committing” in the Palestinian territories, according to a final communique.



Kuwait Court Drops Case Against Notorious Pentagon Hacker

Palace of Justice in Kuwait
Palace of Justice in Kuwait
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Kuwait Court Drops Case Against Notorious Pentagon Hacker

Palace of Justice in Kuwait
Palace of Justice in Kuwait

The Kuwaiti Court of Cassation upheld on Sunday the dismissal of criminal charges against a notorious Kuwaiti hacker who had infiltrated hundreds of websites around the world, including the US Department of Defense’s (Pentagon) website.
The Court of Cassation, the highest judicial authority, affirmed a previous ruling by the Court of Appeals that the 28-year-old defendant could not be prosecuted for the allegations in this case, which occurred 10 years ago.
The accused faced criminal charges related to his hacking of the US Department of Defense website, accessing sensitive weapon sites, and infiltrating 200 American websites, with the information being published in 2011.
On October 9, 2023, the Criminal Court dropped the criminal case against the hacker accused of breaking into global websites, including the Pentagon’s website.
The court’s decision to drop the charges against the hacker was based on the principle that the accused could not be tried for accusations committed over 10 years ago, as the acts were carried out from 2010 to 2012.
The charge of endangering Kuwait’s potential to sever relations by hacking the US Department of Defense website was also dismissed.
The prosecution had accused the defendant of hacking more than 200 sites, some of which contained confidential information belonging to the US.
The hacker was also accused of deceitfully appropriating money through fraud by marketing his website post-hack to attract victims to subscribe and browse the website.