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Tuesday, November 20, 2012

Islamic calendar 2013

 

January 2013

1 Tu:ath-thalatha': 18. Safar 1434
2 We:al-'arb`a': 19. Safar 1434
3 Th:al-khamis: 20. Safar 1434
4 Fr:al-jum`a: 21. Safar 1434
5 Sa:as-sabt: 22. Safar 1434
6 Su:al-'ahad: 23. Safar 1434
7 Mo:al-'ithnayn: 24. Safar 1434
8 Tu:ath-thalatha': 25. Safar 1434
9 We:al-'arb`a': 26. Safar 1434
10 Th:al-khamis: 27. Safar 1434
11 Fr:al-jum`a: 28. Safar 1434
12 Sa:as-sabt: 29. Safar 1434
13 Su:al-'ahad: 1. Rabi al-Awwal 1434
14 Mo:al-'ithnayn: 2. Rabi al-Awwal 1434
15 Tu:ath-thalatha': 3. Rabi al-Awwal 1434
16 We:al-'arb`a': 4. Rabi al-Awwal 1434
17 Th:al-khamis: 5. Rabi al-Awwal 1434
18 Fr:al-jum`a: 6. Rabi al-Awwal 1434
19 Sa:as-sabt: 7. Rabi al-Awwal 1434
20 Su:al-'ahad: 8. Rabi al-Awwal 1434
21 Mo:al-'ithnayn: 9. Rabi al-Awwal 1434
22 Tu:ath-thalatha': 10. Rabi al-Awwal 1434
23 We:al-'arb`a': 11. Rabi al-Awwal 1434
24 Th:al-khamis: 12. Rabi al-Awwal 1434
25 Fr:al-jum`a: 13. Rabi al-Awwal 1434
26 Sa:as-sabt: 14. Rabi al-Awwal 1434
27 Su:al-'ahad: 15. Rabi al-Awwal 1434
28 Mo:al-'ithnayn: 16. Rabi al-Awwal 1434
29 Tu:ath-thalatha': 17. Rabi al-Awwal 1434
30 We:al-'arb`a': 18. Rabi al-Awwal 1434
31 Th:al-khamis: 19. Rabi al-Awwal 1434

 

February 2013

1 Fr:al-jum`a: 20. Rabi al-Awwal 1434
2 Sa:as-sabt: 21. Rabi al-Awwal 1434
3 Su:al-'ahad: 22. Rabi al-Awwal 1434
4 Mo:al-'ithnayn: 23. Rabi al-Awwal 1434
5 Tu:ath-thalatha': 24. Rabi al-Awwal 1434
6 We:al-'arb`a': 25. Rabi al-Awwal 1434
7 Th:al-khamis: 26. Rabi al-Awwal 1434
8 Fr:al-jum`a: 27. Rabi al-Awwal 1434
9 Sa:as-sabt: 28. Rabi al-Awwal 1434
10 Su:al-'ahad: 29. Rabi al-Awwal 1434
11 Mo:al-'ithnayn: 30. Rabi al-Awwal 1434
12 Tu:ath-thalatha': 1. Rabi al-Akhir 1434
13 We:al-'arb`a': 2. Rabi al-Akhir 1434
14 Th:al-khamis: 3. Rabi al-Akhir 1434
15 Fr:al-jum`a: 4. Rabi al-Akhir 1434
16 Sa:as-sabt: 5. Rabi al-Akhir 1434
17 Su:al-'ahad: 6. Rabi al-Akhir 1434
18 Mo:al-'ithnayn: 7. Rabi al-Akhir 1434
19 Tu:ath-thalatha': 8. Rabi al-Akhir 1434
20 We:al-'arb`a': 9. Rabi al-Akhir 1434
21 Th:al-khamis: 10. Rabi al-Akhir 1434
22 Fr:al-jum`a: 11. Rabi al-Akhir 1434
23 Sa:as-sabt: 12. Rabi al-Akhir 1434
24 Su:al-'ahad: 13. Rabi al-Akhir 1434
25 Mo:al-'ithnayn: 14. Rabi al-Akhir 1434
26 Tu:ath-thalatha': 15. Rabi al-Akhir 1434
27 We:al-'arb`a': 16. Rabi al-Akhir 1434
28 Th:al-khamis: 17. Rabi al-Akhir 1434

 

March 2013

1 Fr:al-jum`a: 18. Rabi al-Akhir 1434
2 Sa:as-sabt: 19. Rabi al-Akhir 1434
3 Su:al-'ahad: 20. Rabi al-Akhir 1434
4 Mo:al-'ithnayn: 21. Rabi al-Akhir 1434
5 Tu:ath-thalatha': 22. Rabi al-Akhir 1434
6 We:al-'arb`a': 23. Rabi al-Akhir 1434
7 Th:al-khamis: 24. Rabi al-Akhir 1434
8 Fr:al-jum`a: 25. Rabi al-Akhir 1434
9 Sa:as-sabt: 26. Rabi al-Akhir 1434
10 Su:al-'ahad: 27. Rabi al-Akhir 1434
11 Mo:al-'ithnayn: 28. Rabi al-Akhir 1434
12 Tu:ath-thalatha': 29. Rabi al-Akhir 1434
13 We:al-'arb`a': 1. Djumada l-Ula 1434
14 Th:al-khamis: 2. Djumada l-Ula 1434
15 Fr:al-jum`a: 3. Djumada l-Ula 1434
16 Sa:as-sabt: 4. Djumada l-Ula 1434
17 Su:al-'ahad: 5. Djumada l-Ula 1434
18 Mo:al-'ithnayn: 6. Djumada l-Ula 1434
19 Tu:ath-thalatha': 7. Djumada l-Ula 1434
20 We:al-'arb`a': 8. Djumada l-Ula 1434
21 Th:al-khamis: 9. Djumada l-Ula 1434
22 Fr:al-jum`a: 10. Djumada l-Ula 1434
23 Sa:as-sabt: 11. Djumada l-Ula 1434
24 Su:al-'ahad: 12. Djumada l-Ula 1434
25 Mo:al-'ithnayn: 13. Djumada l-Ula 1434
26 Tu:ath-thalatha': 14. Djumada l-Ula 1434
27 We:al-'arb`a': 15. Djumada l-Ula 1434
28 Th:al-khamis: 16. Djumada l-Ula 1434
29 Fr:al-jum`a: 17. Djumada l-Ula 1434
30 Sa:as-sabt: 18. Djumada l-Ula 1434
31 Su:al-'ahad: 19. Djumada l-Ula 1434

April 2013

1 Mo:al-'ithnayn: 20. Djumada l-Ula 1434
2 Tu:ath-thalatha': 21. Djumada l-Ula 1434
3 We:al-'arb`a': 22. Djumada l-Ula 1434
4 Th:al-khamis: 23. Djumada l-Ula 1434
5 Fr:al-jum`a: 24. Djumada l-Ula 1434
6 Sa:as-sabt: 25. Djumada l-Ula 1434
7 Su:al-'ahad: 26. Djumada l-Ula 1434
8 Mo:al-'ithnayn: 27. Djumada l-Ula 1434
9 Tu:ath-thalatha': 28. Djumada l-Ula 1434
10 We:al-'arb`a': 29. Djumada l-Ula 1434
11 Th:al-khamis: 30. Djumada l-Ula 1434
12 Fr:al-jum`a: 1. Djumada l-Akhira 1434
13 Sa:as-sabt: 2. Djumada l-Akhira 1434
14 Su:al-'ahad: 3. Djumada l-Akhira 1434
15 Mo:al-'ithnayn: 4. Djumada l-Akhira 1434
16 Tu:ath-thalatha': 5. Djumada l-Akhira 1434
17 We:al-'arb`a': 6. Djumada l-Akhira 1434
18 Th:al-khamis: 7. Djumada l-Akhira 1434
19 Fr:al-jum`a: 8. Djumada l-Akhira 1434
20 Sa:as-sabt: 9. Djumada l-Akhira 1434
21 Su:al-'ahad: 10. Djumada l-Akhira 1434
22 Mo:al-'ithnayn: 11. Djumada l-Akhira 1434
23 Tu:ath-thalatha': 12. Djumada l-Akhira 1434
24 We:al-'arb`a': 13. Djumada l-Akhira 1434
25 Th:al-khamis: 14. Djumada l-Akhira 1434
26 Fr:al-jum`a: 15. Djumada l-Akhira 1434
27 Sa:as-sabt: 16. Djumada l-Akhira 1434
28 Su:al-'ahad: 17. Djumada l-Akhira 1434
29 Mo:al-'ithnayn: 18. Djumada l-Akhira 1434
30 Tu:ath-thalatha': 19. Djumada l-Akhira 1434

 

May 2013

1 We:al-'arb`a': 20. Djumada l-Akhira 1434
2 Th:al-khamis: 21. Djumada l-Akhira 1434
3 Fr:al-jum`a: 22. Djumada l-Akhira 1434
4 Sa:as-sabt: 23. Djumada l-Akhira 1434
5 Su:al-'ahad: 24. Djumada l-Akhira 1434
6 Mo:al-'ithnayn: 25. Djumada l-Akhira 1434
7 Tu:ath-thalatha': 26. Djumada l-Akhira 1434
8 We:al-'arb`a': 27. Djumada l-Akhira 1434
9 Th:al-khamis: 28. Djumada l-Akhira 1434
10 Fr:al-jum`a: 29. Djumada l-Akhira 1434
11 Sa:as-sabt: 1. Radjab 1434
12 Su:al-'ahad: 2. Radjab 1434
13 Mo:al-'ithnayn: 3. Radjab 1434
14 Tu:ath-thalatha': 4. Radjab 1434
15 We:al-'arb`a': 5. Radjab 1434
16 Th:al-khamis: 6. Radjab 1434
17 Fr:al-jum`a: 7. Radjab 1434
18 Sa:as-sabt: 8. Radjab 1434
19 Su:al-'ahad: 9. Radjab 1434
20 Mo:al-'ithnayn: 10. Radjab 1434
21 Tu:ath-thalatha': 11. Radjab 1434
22 We:al-'arb`a': 12. Radjab 1434
23 Th:al-khamis: 13. Radjab 1434
24 Fr:al-jum`a: 14. Radjab 1434
25 Sa:as-sabt: 15. Radjab 1434
26 Su:al-'ahad: 16. Radjab 1434
27 Mo:al-'ithnayn: 17. Radjab 1434
28 Tu:ath-thalatha': 18. Radjab 1434
29 We:al-'arb`a': 19. Radjab 1434
30 Th:al-khamis: 20. Radjab 1434
31 Fr:al-jum`a: 21. Radjab 1434

 

June 2013

1 Sa:as-sabt: 22. Radjab 1434
2 Su:al-'ahad: 23. Radjab 1434
3 Mo:al-'ithnayn: 24. Radjab 1434
4 Tu:ath-thalatha': 25. Radjab 1434
5 We:al-'arb`a': 26. Radjab 1434
6 Th:al-khamis: 27. Radjab 1434
7 Fr:al-jum`a: 28. Radjab 1434
8 Sa:as-sabt: 29. Radjab 1434
9 Su:al-'ahad: 30. Radjab 1434
10 Mo:al-'ithnayn: 1. Shaban 1434
11 Tu:ath-thalatha': 2. Shaban 1434
12 We:al-'arb`a': 3. Shaban 1434
13 Th:al-khamis: 4. Shaban 1434
14 Fr:al-jum`a: 5. Shaban 1434
15 Sa:as-sabt: 6. Shaban 1434
16 Su:al-'ahad: 7. Shaban 1434
17 Mo:al-'ithnayn: 8. Shaban 1434
18 Tu:ath-thalatha': 9. Shaban 1434
19 We:al-'arb`a': 10. Shaban 1434
20 Th:al-khamis: 11. Shaban 1434
21 Fr:al-jum`a: 12. Shaban 1434
22 Sa:as-sabt: 13. Shaban 1434
23 Su:al-'ahad: 14. Shaban 1434
24 Mo:al-'ithnayn: 15. Shaban 1434
25 Tu:ath-thalatha': 16. Shaban 1434
26 We:al-'arb`a': 17. Shaban 1434
27 Th:al-khamis: 18. Shaban 1434
28 Fr:al-jum`a: 19. Shaban 1434
29 Sa:as-sabt: 20. Shaban 1434
30 Su:al-'ahad: 21. Shaban 1434

July 2013

1 Mo:al-'ithnayn: 22. Shaban 1434
2 Tu:ath-thalatha': 23. Shaban 1434
3 We:al-'arb`a': 24. Shaban 1434
4 Th:al-khamis: 25. Shaban 1434
5 Fr:al-jum`a: 26. Shaban 1434
6 Sa:as-sabt: 27. Shaban 1434
7 Su:al-'ahad: 28. Shaban 1434
8 Mo:al-'ithnayn: 29. Shaban 1434
9 Tu:ath-thalatha': 1. Ramadan 1434
10 We:al-'arb`a': 2. Ramadan 1434
11 Th:al-khamis: 3. Ramadan 1434
12 Fr:al-jum`a: 4. Ramadan 1434
13 Sa:as-sabt: 5. Ramadan 1434
14 Su:al-'ahad: 6. Ramadan 1434
15 Mo:al-'ithnayn: 7. Ramadan 1434
16 Tu:ath-thalatha': 8. Ramadan 1434
17 We:al-'arb`a': 9. Ramadan 1434
18 Th:al-khamis: 10. Ramadan 1434
19 Fr:al-jum`a: 11. Ramadan 1434
20 Sa:as-sabt: 12. Ramadan 1434
21 Su:al-'ahad: 13. Ramadan 1434
22 Mo:al-'ithnayn: 14. Ramadan 1434
23 Tu:ath-thalatha': 15. Ramadan 1434
24 We:al-'arb`a': 16. Ramadan 1434
25 Th:al-khamis: 17. Ramadan 1434
26 Fr:al-jum`a: 18. Ramadan 1434
27 Sa:as-sabt: 19. Ramadan 1434
28 Su:al-'ahad: 20. Ramadan 1434
29 Mo:al-'ithnayn: 21. Ramadan 1434
30 Tu:ath-thalatha': 22. Ramadan 1434
31 We:al-'arb`a': 23. Ramadan 1434

 

August 2013

1 Th:al-khamis: 24. Ramadan 1434
2 Fr:al-jum`a: 25. Ramadan 1434
3 Sa:as-sabt: 26. Ramadan 1434
4 Su:al-'ahad: 27. Ramadan 1434
5 Mo:al-'ithnayn: 28. Ramadan 1434
6 Tu:ath-thalatha': 29. Ramadan 1434
7 We:al-'arb`a': 30. Ramadan 1434
8 Th:al-khamis: 1. Shawwal 1434
9 Fr:al-jum`a: 2. Shawwal 1434
10 Sa:as-sabt: 3. Shawwal 1434
11 Su:al-'ahad: 4. Shawwal 1434
12 Mo:al-'ithnayn: 5. Shawwal 1434
13 Tu:ath-thalatha': 6. Shawwal 1434
14 We:al-'arb`a': 7. Shawwal 1434
15 Th:al-khamis: 8. Shawwal 1434
16 Fr:al-jum`a: 9. Shawwal 1434
17 Sa:as-sabt: 10. Shawwal 1434
18 Su:al-'ahad: 11. Shawwal 1434
19 Mo:al-'ithnayn: 12. Shawwal 1434
20 Tu:ath-thalatha': 13. Shawwal 1434
21 We:al-'arb`a': 14. Shawwal 1434
22 Th:al-khamis: 15. Shawwal 1434
23 Fr:al-jum`a: 16. Shawwal 1434
24 Sa:as-sabt: 17. Shawwal 1434
25 Su:al-'ahad: 18. Shawwal 1434
26 Mo:al-'ithnayn: 19. Shawwal 1434
27 Tu:ath-thalatha': 20. Shawwal 1434
28 We:al-'arb`a': 21. Shawwal 1434
29 Th:al-khamis: 22. Shawwal 1434
30 Fr:al-jum`a: 23. Shawwal 1434
31 Sa:as-sabt: 24. Shawwal 1434

 

September 2013

1 Su:al-'ahad: 25. Shawwal 1434
2 Mo:al-'ithnayn: 26. Shawwal 1434
3 Tu:ath-thalatha': 27. Shawwal 1434
4 We:al-'arb`a': 28. Shawwal 1434
5 Th:al-khamis: 29. Shawwal 1434
6 Fr:al-jum`a: 1. Dhu l-Kada 1434
7 Sa:as-sabt: 2. Dhu l-Kada 1434
8 Su:al-'ahad: 3. Dhu l-Kada 1434
9 Mo:al-'ithnayn: 4. Dhu l-Kada 1434
10 Tu:ath-thalatha': 5. Dhu l-Kada 1434
11 We:al-'arb`a': 6. Dhu l-Kada 1434
12 Th:al-khamis: 7. Dhu l-Kada 1434
13 Fr:al-jum`a: 8. Dhu l-Kada 1434
14 Sa:as-sabt: 9. Dhu l-Kada 1434
15 Su:al-'ahad: 10. Dhu l-Kada 1434
16 Mo:al-'ithnayn: 11. Dhu l-Kada 1434
17 Tu:ath-thalatha': 12. Dhu l-Kada 1434
18 We:al-'arb`a': 13. Dhu l-Kada 1434
19 Th:al-khamis: 14. Dhu l-Kada 1434
20 Fr:al-jum`a: 15. Dhu l-Kada 1434
21 Sa:as-sabt: 16. Dhu l-Kada 1434
22 Su:al-'ahad: 17. Dhu l-Kada 1434
23 Mo:al-'ithnayn: 18. Dhu l-Kada 1434
24 Tu:ath-thalatha': 19. Dhu l-Kada 1434
25 We:al-'arb`a': 20. Dhu l-Kada 1434
26 Th:al-khamis: 21. Dhu l-Kada 1434
27 Fr:al-jum`a: 22. Dhu l-Kada 1434
28 Sa:as-sabt: 23. Dhu l-Kada 1434
29 Su:al-'ahad: 24. Dhu l-Kada 1434
30 Mo:al-'ithnayn: 25. Dhu l-Kada 1434

 

October 2013

1 Tu:ath-thalatha': 26. Dhu l-Kada 1434
2 We:al-'arb`a': 27. Dhu l-Kada 1434
3 Th:al-khamis: 28. Dhu l-Kada 1434
4 Fr:al-jum`a: 29. Dhu l-Kada 1434
5 Sa:as-sabt: 30. Dhu l-Kada 1434
6 Su:al-'ahad: 1. Dhu l-Hidjdja 1434
7 Mo:al-'ithnayn: 2. Dhu l-Hidjdja 1434
8 Tu:ath-thalatha': 3. Dhu l-Hidjdja 1434
9 We:al-'arb`a': 4. Dhu l-Hidjdja 1434
10 Th:al-khamis: 5. Dhu l-Hidjdja 1434
11 Fr:al-jum`a: 6. Dhu l-Hidjdja 1434
12 Sa:as-sabt: 7. Dhu l-Hidjdja 1434
13 Su:al-'ahad: 8. Dhu l-Hidjdja 1434
14 Mo:al-'ithnayn: 9. Dhu l-Hidjdja 1434
15 Tu:ath-thalatha': 10. Dhu l-Hidjdja 1434
16 We:al-'arb`a': 11. Dhu l-Hidjdja 1434
17 Th:al-khamis: 12. Dhu l-Hidjdja 1434
18 Fr:al-jum`a: 13. Dhu l-Hidjdja 1434
19 Sa:as-sabt: 14. Dhu l-Hidjdja 1434
20 Su:al-'ahad: 15. Dhu l-Hidjdja 1434
21 Mo:al-'ithnayn: 16. Dhu l-Hidjdja 1434
22 Tu:ath-thalatha': 17. Dhu l-Hidjdja 1434
23 We:al-'arb`a': 18. Dhu l-Hidjdja 1434
24 Th:al-khamis: 19. Dhu l-Hidjdja 1434
25 Fr:al-jum`a: 20. Dhu l-Hidjdja 1434
26 Sa:as-sabt: 21. Dhu l-Hidjdja 1434
27 Su:al-'ahad: 22. Dhu l-Hidjdja 1434
28 Mo:al-'ithnayn: 23. Dhu l-Hidjdja 1434
29 Tu:ath-thalatha': 24. Dhu l-Hidjdja 1434
30 We:al-'arb`a': 25. Dhu l-Hidjdja 1434
31 Th:al-khamis: 26. Dhu l-Hidjdja 1434

 

November 2013

1 Fr:al-jum`a: 27. Dhu l-Hidjdja 1434
2 Sa:as-sabt: 28. Dhu l-Hidjdja 1434
3 Su:al-'ahad: 29. Dhu l-Hidjdja 1434
4 Mo:al-'ithnayn: 30. Dhu l-Hidjdja 1434
5 Tu:ath-thalatha': 1. Muharram 1435
6 We:al-'arb`a': 2. Muharram 1435
7 Th:al-khamis: 3. Muharram 1435
8 Fr:al-jum`a: 4. Muharram 1435
9 Sa:as-sabt: 5. Muharram 1435
10 Su:al-'ahad: 6. Muharram 1435
11 Mo:al-'ithnayn: 7. Muharram 1435
12 Tu:ath-thalatha': 8. Muharram 1435
13 We:al-'arb`a': 9. Muharram 1435
14 Th:al-khamis: 10. Muharram 1435
15 Fr:al-jum`a: 11. Muharram 1435
16 Sa:as-sabt: 12. Muharram 1435
17 Su:al-'ahad: 13. Muharram 1435
18 Mo:al-'ithnayn: 14. Muharram 1435
19 Tu:ath-thalatha': 15. Muharram 1435
20 We:al-'arb`a': 16. Muharram 1435
21 Th:al-khamis: 17. Muharram 1435
22 Fr:al-jum`a: 18. Muharram 1435
23 Sa:as-sabt: 19. Muharram 1435
24 Su:al-'ahad: 20. Muharram 1435
25 Mo:al-'ithnayn: 21. Muharram 1435
26 Tu:ath-thalatha': 22. Muharram 1435
27 We:al-'arb`a': 23. Muharram 1435
28 Th:al-khamis: 24. Muharram 1435
29 Fr:al-jum`a: 25. Muharram 1435
30 Sa:as-sabt: 26. Muharram 1435

 

December 2013

1 Su:al-'ahad: 27. Muharram 1435
2 Mo:al-'ithnayn: 28. Muharram 1435
3 Tu:ath-thalatha': 29. Muharram 1435
4 We:al-'arb`a': 30. Muharram 1435
5 Th:al-khamis: 1. Safar 1435
6 Fr:al-jum`a: 2. Safar 1435
7 Sa:as-sabt: 3. Safar 1435
8 Su:al-'ahad: 4. Safar 1435
9 Mo:al-'ithnayn: 5. Safar 1435
10 Tu:ath-thalatha': 6. Safar 1435
11 We:al-'arb`a': 7. Safar 1435
12 Th:al-khamis: 8. Safar 1435
13 Fr:al-jum`a: 9. Safar 1435
14 Sa:as-sabt: 10. Safar 1435
15 Su:al-'ahad: 11. Safar 1435
16 Mo:al-'ithnayn: 12. Safar 1435
17 Tu:ath-thalatha': 13. Safar 1435
18 We:al-'arb`a': 14. Safar 1435
19 Th:al-khamis: 15. Safar 1435
20 Fr:al-jum`a: 16. Safar 1435
21 Sa:as-sabt: 17. Safar 1435
22 Su:al-'ahad: 18. Safar 1435
23 Mo:al-'ithnayn: 19. Safar 1435
24 Tu:ath-thalatha': 20. Safar 1435
25 We:al-'arb`a': 21. Safar 1435
26 Th:al-khamis: 22. Safar 1435
27 Fr:al-jum`a: 23. Safar 1435
28 Sa:as-sabt: 24. Safar 1435
29 Su:al-'ahad: 25. Safar 1435
30 Mo:al-'ithnayn: 26. Safar 1435
31 Tu:ath-thalatha': 27. Safar 1435

2012 islamic calender Important Dates

Some dates may vary slightly as they are determined by the lunar calendar.
Date Day Festival
Feb 05, 2012SundayMilad Un Nabi (birthday Of The Prophet Muhammad)
Feb 09, 2012ThursdayMilad Un Nabi (shia)
   
Jun 16, 2012SaturdayLailat Al Miraj
   
Jul 04, 2012WednesdayLailat Al Bara'ah
Jul 20, 2012FridayRamadan (start)
   
Aug 14, 2012TuesdayLaylat Al Kadr
Aug 19, 2012SundayEid-al-fitr (end Of Ramadan)
   
Oct 25, 2012ThursdayWaqf Al Arafa - Hajj
Oct 26, 2012FridayEid-al-adha
   
Nov 15, 2012ThursdayHijra - Islamic New Year
Nov 24, 2012SaturdayDay Of Ashura
     
 

Israel waits on ground assault; death toll rises in Gaza

Israel waits on ground assault; death toll rises in Gaza
20 Nov 2012, 1142 hrs IST, AGENCIES
Israel temporarily put on hold a decision on a possible ground invasion of Gaza to give more time to Egypt's truce efforts, but seven days of incessant raids took the Palestinian death toll to 111 amid warnings by Hamas that it won't succumb to Israeli conditions. Israel's cabinet met late last night to discuss the latest ceasefire initiatives with Hamas, on the bloodiest day yet of the military offensive when over 30 Palestinians were killed in multiple strikes.

As UN chief Ban Ki-moon stepped into the Egypt-led efforts to strike a ceasefire, the Security Council wrangled over an Arab-proposed statement calling for Israel-Hamas hostilities to end, with Russia expressing frustration over the silence on the issue and blaming the US for blocking any action. Early this morning, at least four people were injured when F-16 fighter jets hit the Islamic National Bank in Gaza City, which is located in a residential area, Al Jazeera reported.

At a late night cabinet meeting, the Israeli government agreed to briefly hold off sending ground forces into Gaza to see how the ceasefire efforts in Cairo turn out, according to Jerusalem Post. This makes today's round of talks in Cairo very crucial to the situation and if a tangible solution is not arrived at by the end of the day, Israel would then decide on a ground assault.

While several Western nations have supported Israel's military offensive and its "right to defense", they have warned against launching a ground invasion of Gaza enclave. Khaled Meshaal, leader of Hamas, the controlling authority of Gaza, said Hamas was aware that Israel is "capable" of an invasion, but warned Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu that such a move would not "be a picnic, but a political disaster". Speaking at a press conference in Cairo yesterday, Meshaal said Hamas was willing for a truce but the Israeli aggression and the continued economic blockade of Gaza should end. "Whoever started the war must end it," he said, insisting that Hamas would not yield to Israeli conditions on a ceasefire.

UN Secretary-General Ban, who arrived in Cairo yesterday for talks, will travel to Jerusalem today to lend his weight to calls for a "de-escalation" of hostilities. On a diplomatic tour of Asia, US President Barack Obama called Netanyahu and Egyptian President Mohammad Mursi to discuss ways to halt the violence while Secretary of State Hillary Clinton spoke to foreign ministers of France, Qatar and Turkey.

In Gaza, meanwhile, Israeli raids continued for a seventh day today, and medics said the death toll had reached to 111 in the narrow coastal territory, according to Al Jazeera.

Israel President Shimon Peres meanwhile accused Iran of encouraging the Palestinians to continue rocket attacks on Israel rather than negotiating a ceasefire even as he praised Egyptian President Mohammad Mursi's role in the crisis. "They are out of their mind," he said of the Iranians.

Yesterday, Israeli attacks flattened Gaza's police headquarters and targeted a building housing media offices for a second time. The building houses Palestinian and international media outlets, including Britain's Sky News, Saudi-owned Al Arabiya and the official Hamas broadcaster, Al Aqsa TV. The Islamic Jihad group said one of its commanders was killed in the attack.

In a similar attack on Sunday eight journalists were injured including one who had a leg amputated. However, Israeli government spokesperson, Mark Regev said Israel was not targeting journalists but "Hamas communications equipment". "Hamas used communication facilities on buildings where journalists were," he said, describing Al Aqsa TV as a "Hamas command and control facility".

The US meanwhile dispatched three warships to the region to be on standby, if needed for the purpose of evacuation of Americans in the region.

Israeli airstrikes continue to pound Gaza


No sign of truce in Gaza conflict



Sunday, August 19, 2012

3-day Eid break for UAE? Saudi, Qatar, Oman get 10-days


UAE residents wait with baited breath to know which will be first day of Eid Al Fitr


All their bags are packed, and they are ready to go.

But the suspense surrounding the duration of the upcoming Eid break is stretching out tighter than a spine-chilling thriller, even as other GCC nations announce a 10-day break for the public sector.

Neighbouring Oman is the latest country to announce a five-day Eid-Al-Fitr break for the government and public sector, which will give employees nine-day break in Oman; while employees of private sector will get six days.

Khalid bin Hilal bin Saud Al Busaidi, Minister of the Diwan of the Royal Court and Chairman of the Board of Civil Service, Oman, stated government, public sector and state employees will get their break from August 18 to 22, with work resuming on August 25.
Meanwhile, Qatar’s public bodies and institutions will remain closed from Thursday (August 16) to August 27 stated the Amiri Court.
However, financial institutions, including the central bank and bourse, will remain closed for only three days to be determined later.

Similarly, Saudi Arabia is following a similar breakdown for its Eid holidays, with bourse closed until August 24.

So when is Eid really?

Kuwaiti meteorologist and historian Adel Al-Saadoun told KUNA he predicts Eid-Al-Fitr will fall on Sunday, with Ramadan lasting a full 30 days this time around.

Al-Saadoun remarked that calculations at Al-Fintas observatory suggest it would be impossible to see the new crescent in any part of the Muslim World on Friday.

It will be possible to discern the crescent on Saturday, but in Saudi Arabia and countries other than Kuwait, due to specifics of position and time of setting of the sun.

Well-known Kuwaiti astronomer Saleh Al-Ujairi later Sunday also made the same prediction and said Eid Al-Fitr will fall on Sunday.

Dubai resident Yash Mahindra said: “I am booked to fly to Istanbul for the Eid break. But if the holidays are going to extend, I would hope I can alter my flight bookings for no charge.

“However, according to my office calculation, Eid will fall on Sunday so we will surely have Monday off also, right?”

Said Shakir Hussain, a Sharjah resident: “I am already booked on an Air Arabia flight to Pakistan, with my leave starting this Thursday itself.

“My office has assured me, it will adjust the dates to insure my annual leave doesn’t include the Eid break. However, everyone’s mentioned Sunday and Monday as a private sector holiday, so my leave starts from Tuesday officially.”

Meenakshi Gajodhar, who is staying in Dubai for the break, stated: “I don’t care about the number of days, really. As a homemaker, it’s all the same to me.”

Eid Al Fitr celebrations in UAE begin Saudi Arabia also celebrates Eid today


 http://cdn-wac.emirates247.com/polopoly_fs/1.471936.1345355085!/image/3859061669.jpg
Hundreds of thousands of UAE residents began Eid Al Fitr celebrations today with prayers in mosques across the country.

UAE residents were outpouring in their gratitude and wishes for the leaders of the country, praying for and sending their best wishes to President His Highness Sheikh Khalifa bin Zayed Al Nahyan, and to Vice-President and Prime Minister of the UAE and Ruler of Dubai His Highness Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum.

The people also wished and thanked General Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed Al Nahyan, Crown Prince of Abu Dhabi and Deputy Supreme Commander of the UAE Armed Forces, Their Highnesses Supreme Council Members and Rulers of Emirates, Deputies Ruler and Crown Princes on the occasion of Eid.

A day of family gatherings and sharing of Eid feasts beckoned as the UAE wore a festive look.
Several family hotspots across the country were also reparing for a deluge of visitors later in the day.

Malls and other entertainment centres announced extended timings.
Paying homage to the region’s traditions and culture, the Dubai Mall will host hospitality tents providing coffee and dates to visitors in the Arabian Court and The Souk, while passers-by can indulge in customary henna painting in designated tents.
Combining traditional Eid customs with carnival-like festivities appealing to kids, The Dubai Mall’s celebrations will encompass parades and crowd favourites such as balloon benders, face painters, stilt walkers, and clowns.
Children can participate in the various workshops at the Star Atrium, or join in the challenge at the ‘Big Boys’ stations. The celebrations will be taken to the next level with the Hamleys Parade featuring Freej characters and roaming Build-A-Bear mascots located on the second floor.
Dubai Mall has extended the daily operating hours from 10am-1am.
Children’s City has prepared an intensive programme under the slogan ‘Angry Bird Carnival’ in Creek Park for three days.
Naila Mansouri, head of Children’s City, said the celebration programme will continue for three days from the second day of Eid (Monday) from 10am-7pm.
The city is well prepared to provide maximum entertainment and fun, including a new area for recreation in a family setting.
“The programme, which has taken into account all types of tastes and age groups, includes Bouncing Castle, Snakes and Ladders, Magic Show, Arts and Crafts, Traditional Greeting, Murshid and Angry Bird Characters, Photo Shooting, Carnival Booth Games, Angry Bird Face Painting, Electronic Games, Glittered Workshop and other items,” Mansouri said.

Earlier, Minister of Justice and Chairman of the Committee Dr Hadef Al Dhaheri said, ''The Committee established, after observation and verification of all recognised methods of sighting the Shawaal crescent and after contacts with neighbouring countries, that Saturday, 18th August 2012, will be the 30th day of Ramadan 1433H and Sunday, 19th August 2012, will be the first day of Eid Al Fitr,'' he added.
On this glorious occasion, the minister offered best congratulations to President His Highness Sheikh Khalifa bin Zayed Al Nahyan, Vice-President and Prime Minister of the UAE and Ruler of Dubai His Highness Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum, Their Highnesses Supreme Council Members and Rulers of Emirates, General Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed Al Nahyan, Crown Prince of Abu Dhabi and Deputy Supreme Commander of the UAE Armed Forces, and Crown Princes.
Al Dhaheri also congratulated the UAE people, expatriate residents and Muslims across the world on the happy occasion.

Tuesday, August 14, 2012

Volume 8, Book 74, Number 311:
Narrated Jabir:
Allah s Apostle said, "When you intend going to bed at night, put out
the lights, close the doors, tie the mouths of the water skins, and cover
your food and drinks." Hamrnam said, "I think he (the other narrator)
added, 'even with piece of wood across the utensil.'

Sunday, August 12, 2012

Dost kaise Ho ? public lecture by Nisar Nadiadwala at Peace Tv urdu


"WAQT KI AHMIYAT (وقت کی اہمیت )" -By NISAAR NADIADWALA [watch full Peace TV urdu talk].


The Muslim population has grown from 1.65 million to 2.87 million since 2001, say researchers. What does this mean for liberal Britain?

There is a remarkable statistic in today's main Daily Telegraph leader:
The Pew Forum on Religion and Public Life estimates that there are 2,869,000 Muslims in Britain, an increase of 74 per cent on its previous figure of 1,647,000, which was based on the 2001 census. No demographic statistics are reliable in an era of open borders, but such an expansion is unprecedented.
The figure of 2.87 million was first published by Pew in a little-noticed press release last September, announcing a report on Muslim Networks and Movements in Western Europe. The Pew Centre, based in Washington DC, is one of the most respected demographic research bodies in the world; its methodology is scrupulous and its approach non-partisan. The new total for British Muslims means that, so far as this country as concerned, Pew's major 2009 report Mapping the Global Muslim Population is already spectacularly out of date. Here's a map showing the updated distribution of the Muslim population in Europe:
Pew mapScreen shot 2010-12-28 at 11.18.03
The material about global Islam in the 2010 report is fascinating, but it's the revision of British figures that took me by surprise. Why was it not more widely reported in the autumn? And what are the implications for society? For an analysis that puts the statistics in context, let me recommend this article from the British Religion In Numbers website, which makes the point that the 2001 figure was probably an underestimate.
Pew’s UK figure for 2010 is 2,869,000, which is equivalent to 4.6% of the population. In absolute terms, the UK has the third largest Muslim community on the continent, after Germany (4,119,000) and France (3,574,000).
In percentage terms, the UK is in ninth position, after Belgium (6.0%), France, Austria and Switzerland (5.7%), The Netherlands (5.5%), Germany (5.0%), Sweden (4.9%) and Greece (4.7%). UK Muslims account for 16.8% of all Muslims in Western Europe.
There have been other indications of a dramatic increase in the numbers of British Muslims: the UK Labour Force Survey recorded a rise from 1,870,000 in 2004 to 2,422,000 in 2008. So Pew's findings aren't unsupported by independent data. Common sense suggests explanations for the increase: a high Muslim birth rate and large-scale immigration. But I'm not sure that common sense tells us what this demographic earthquake means in practice for British public life.

Modest Rise in Concern About Islamic Extremism

The public continues to express concern about the rise of Islamic extremism in the United States and abroad, but a survey taken shortly after the deadly Nov. 5 shootings at the Fort Hood Army base shows only a modest increase in these concerns since 2007.
No Spike in Concerns About 
Islamic Extremism
Just more than half (52%) of Americans say they are very concerned about the possible rise of Islamic extremism in the United States. That is up from 46% in April 2007. The percentage that says they are somewhat worried dropped slightly from 32% in 2007 to 27%. There has been no significant change in the small percentages who say they are not too worried or not worried at all about the possible rise of Islamic extremism in the United States.
Public concerns about the rise of Islamic extremism around the world largely mirror levels measured in April 2007, according to the latest survey by the Pew Research Center for the People & the Press and the Pew Forum on Religion & Public Life, conducted Nov. 12-15 among 1,003 Americans reached on landlines and cell phones. Today, 49% say they are very concerned about this, compared with 48% in April 2007. Nearly three-in-ten (29%) say they are somewhat concerned, compared with 33% in the 2007 survey.
In recent weeks, the public has paid close attention to the shootings at the Texas Army base that left 13 dead and a Muslim Army psychiatrist charged with the killings. According to the Pew Research Center's News Interest Index, the public followed the story more closely than any other news the week of the tragedy and continues to closely follow the investigation into the shooting in this week's News Interest Index.
The Fort Hood shootings came amid an increase in the past year in reports about alleged terror plots or actions undertaken by people within the U.S. said to oppose U.S. military operations in Iraq and Afghanistan. In September, for example, an Afghan-born Muslim man and Denver resident - who reportedly received training and weapons from al-Qaeda in Pakistan - was arrested as part of an alleged bombmaking scheme.
Concerns about Possible Rise of
Islamic Extremism in the U.S.
Still, the survey shows no sea change in the population as a whole and only modest political and demographic changes in concerns over increasing Islamic extremism in the United States. Currently, a majority of political independents (55%) say they are very concerned by the possible rise of Islamic extremism in the U.S., up from 43% in 2007. About two-thirds of Republicans (65%) express this view, not much different from the 59% who said this two years ago. There has been virtually no change in opinions among Democrats (44% very concerned today, 46% in 2007).
Young people continue to express far lower levels of concern about the rise of Islamic extremism in the U.S. than do older age groups. Slightly more than a third of those younger than 30 (36%) say they are very concerned about this, compared with 60% of those 65 and older and 65% of those ages 50 to 64.
More than half of those with no college experience (55%) say they are very concerned about the possible rise of Islamic extremism in the U.S., compared with 46% of college graduates.

About the Survey

Results for this report are based on telephone interviews conducted under the direction of Princeton Survey Research Associates International among a nationwide sample of 1,003 adults, 18 years of age or older, from Nov. 12-15 (700 respondents were interviewed on a landline telephone, and 303 were interviewed on a cell phone, including 92 who had no landline telephone). Both the landline and cell phone samples were provided by Survey Sampling International.
The combined landline and cell phone sample are weighted using an iterative technique that matches gender, age, education, race/ethnicity, region, and population density to parameters from the March 2008 Census Bureau's Current Population Survey. The sample is also weighted to match current patterns of telephone status and relative usage of landline and cell phones (for those with both), based on extrapolations from the 2008 National Health Interview Survey. The weighting procedure also accounts for the fact that respondents with both landline and cell phones have a greater probability of being included in the combined sample and adjusts for household size within the landline sample.
The error attributable to sampling that would be expected at the 95% level of confidence for the total sample is plus or minus 4 percentage points. In addition to sampling error, one should bear in mind that question wording and practical difficulties in conducting surveys can introduce error or bias into the findings of opinion polls.

About the Projects

This survey is a joint effort of the Pew Research Center for the People & the Press and the Pew Forum on Religion & Public Life. Both organizations are sponsored by the Pew Charitable Trusts and are projects of the Pew Research Center, a nonpartisan "fact tank" that provides information on the issues, attitudes and trends shaping America and the world.
The Pew Research Center for the People & the Press is an independent opinion research group that studies attitudes toward the press, politics and public policy issues. The Center's purpose is to serve as a forum for ideas on the media and public policy through public opinion research. In this role it serves as an important information resource for political leaders, journalists, scholars, and public interest organizations. All of the Center's current survey results are made available free of charge.
The Pew Forum on Religion & Public Life seeks to promote a deeper understanding of issues at the intersection of religion and public affairs. It studies public opinion, demographics and other important aspects of religion and public life in the U.S. and around the world. It also provides a neutral venue for discussions of timely issues through roundtables and briefings.
This report is a collaborative product based on the input and analysis of the following individuals:
Pew Forum on Religion & Public Life
Luis Lugo, Director
Alan Cooperman and Sandra Stencel, Associate Directors
John C. Green and Gregory Smith, Senior Researchers
Allison Pond and Neha Sahgal, Research Associates
Scott Clement, Research Analyst
Tracy Miller and Hilary Ramp, Editors
Pew Research Center for the People & the Press
Andrew Kohut, Director
Scott Keeter, Director of Survey Research
Carroll Doherty and Michael Dimock, Associate Directors
Michael Remez, Senior Writer
Robert Suls, Shawn Neidorf, Leah Melani Christian, Jocelyn Kiley and Alec Tyson, Research Associates
Jacob Poushter, Research Analyst

The Future of the Global Muslim Population Projections for 2010-2030

Expected Growth of India’s Muslim Population

md2-india
India is projected to have the third-largest Muslim population (in absolute numbers) in the world by 2030, following Pakistan and Indonesia. The Muslim population in India is projected to increase from 177.3 million in 2010 to 236.2 million in 2030. The Muslim share of India’s population is expected to increase from 14.6% in 2010 to 15.9% in 2030. More than one-in-ten of the world’s Muslims (10.8%) will live in India in 2030, about the same as in 2010.
India’s Muslim population is expected to grow at a slower rate in the next 20 years than it did in the previous two decades. The Muslim population in India increased by 76.4 million from 1990 to 2010; it is expected to grow by 58.9 million between 2010 and 2030.1
md2-india3
Fertility rates for all populations in India have been declining in recent years, in part because of increasing use of birth control. However, Muslims in India continue to have more children on average than non-Muslims, mainly because Muslims’ use of birth control still falls below the national average. In 2005-2006, for example, 45.7% of Muslim couples used some form of birth control, compared with 56.3% of couples in the general population, according to an analysis of the National Family Health Survey.
Muslims in India are poorer and less educated than other religious groups. These characteristics are often associated with higher fertility rates. For instance, according to the 2001 census, only 3.6% of Muslims in India age 20 and older are college or university graduates, compared with 6.7% of all Indians in this age group. The literacy rate among Muslim women (50.1%) is lower than the rate among other women in India, including Hindus (53.2%) and Christians (76.2%).
md2-india2
Muslim women also are less likely to work outside the home than non-Muslim women, and employment is associated with lower fertility.
Muslims have lived in India since the advent of Islam. The country’s first mosque is said to have been established around 630 A.D., even before the death of the Prophet Muhammad. 2 The number of Muslims in India declined in 1947 when India gained its independence and an estimated 7 million people migrated from India to Pakistan, but India’s Muslim population has been rising steadily since.
Muslims live throughout India. According to the 2001 census, a large concentration of Muslims lives in two of the largest and poorest states, Uttar Pradesh and Bihar; 35.6% of all the Muslims in India live in these two states. An additional 14.6% of the country’s Muslims live in West Bengal, which adjoins Bihar and borders Bangladesh. The remainder of the country’s Muslim population is scattered in more than 20 other states.
Although Muslims constitute a small minority in most Indian states, they make up roughly a third of the population in Assam (30.9%) and about a quarter of the population in both West Bengal and Kerala. Muslims constitute a majority of the population in the northernmost state of Jammu and Kashmir, where they make up 67.0% of the population.

s Croatia Demographic Jihad:9 statistics about the population growth of Muslims in the West which will make you nervous

Islam spreads in the West through migration of Muslims in the West,high fertility rate of Muslims in the West and the conversion of non-Muslims into Islam.This problem is getting worse by each year and the future might be dark for non-Muslims in Europe.It is estimated that across the European continent there are 54 million Muslims (link),but those numbers will double in 2015 (link),so if the non-Muslim population across the continent doesn’t begin the process of Rechristianization which will turn the tide of Muslim population growth,Europe in the next century will become a Muslim continent and will become the extension of the Muslim World which its center is the Middle East.Unfortunately,non-Muslim Europeans doesn’t seem to care about this,too many of them are brainwashed by the anti-Christian left-wing propaganda machine and Europe is dying.
Here are nine statistics about the Muslim population growth in the West which will make you nervous:
1.In Austria in 1971 there were only 22200 Muslims (0.3%),today it is estimated that there are between 400000 and 500000 Muslims living in the country (6%) (link),already some parts of Vienna have a Muslim majority (link)
2.In Belgium in 2008 Islam has become the largest minority religion in the country with 628751 members (link) and the city of Brussels which is the capital of Belgium and the EU has a Muslim population of 25.5% (link) and Brussels will have a Muslim majority in 2030 (link)
3.France prohibits performing census based on religion and race,but it is estimated that the number of Muslims in the country is about 5-10% of the population (link) and the Muslim population of Marseille has reached 30-40% (link) which means it will become a Muslim-majority city in just a few years
4.In Germany the number of Muslims is currently estimated at 4.3 million (5.4%) of the population (link) and it is the largest minority religion in the country and it is estimated that Germany will become a Muslim state in 2050 (link)
5.In 1980 Norway had only 1006 Muslims,but in 2010 Muslims number 98953 (link) and the growth of the Muslim population in Norway which is not a member of the EU has caused a rape epidemic in Oslo where the majority of Muslims live (link)
6.Besides the Chechnya and the regions around (Dagestan and Ingushetia) which have a Muslim majority (link),in Moscow the number of Muslims is estimated at 1.5 million,while the whole country has a population of 20 million Muslims (link)
7.Spain has a Muslim population just over one million,but it will increase in 2030 by 82% (link),in 1992 the Spanish town of Salt had only 5% of Muslims,but in 2010 the Muslim population is 50% and crime has skyrocketed from 156 in 1992 to 5000 in 2010 (link)
8.Sweden has currently 400000 Muslims,while in 1930 only 15 (link),Malmo which is located in Southern Sweden has 25% Muslim population (link),that caused a Jewish exodus from Malmo (link),while the growth of the Muslim population across the country caused a rape epidemic (link).Danish journalist Lars Hedegaard said that Sweden will have a Muslim majority by 2049 (link)
9.Currently in the USA there are 2.6 million Muslims,but their number will double in 2030 when it will be 6.2 million (link)
So will the growth of the Muslim population stop?Of course not because they are migrating in large number to the West and they have a higher fertility rate,but our leaders are doing nothing to stop them,besides that Cameron,Sarkozy and Merkel claim that Multiculturalism failed and that there needs to be a policy change,but there isn’t any political will to stop the Muslim conquest of the West without guns and bombs.The responsibility is of course on the Christian church which is doing next to nothing,instead of evangelizing the Muslim population and Rechristianizing the non-Muslim Europeans which are slowly dying,the Church doesn’t seem to care about this besides that churches across the West are being turned into mosques.
But when the Muslim population grows enough then the real consequences will be seen and it will be a disaster for the non-Muslim Europeans which allowed it to happen.

Islam is the fastest growing religion and the second largest religion in the world

This report includes all the countries of the world and shows how many Muslims are in each one.


Country Name Total Population Muslims Percentage Number of Muslims
Afghanistan 22,664,136 100% 22,664,136
Albania 3,249,136 75% 2,436,852
Algeria 29,183,032 99% 28,891,202
Angola 10,342,899 25% 2,585,725
Antigua and Barbuda 65,647 n/a  
Argentina 34,672,997 2 693,460
Aruba 67,794 5 3,390
Australia 18,260,863 2.09 382,000
Azerbaijan 7,676,953 93.4 7,170,274
Bahrain 590,042 100 590,042
Benin 5,709,529 15 856,429
Bangladesh 123,062,800 85 104,603,380
Bhutan 1,822,625 5 91,131
Bosnia and Herzegovina 2,656,240 40 1,062,496
Botswana 1,477,630 5 73,882
Brazil 162,661,214 0.6 1,000,000
Brunei 299,939 63 188,962
Bulgaria 8,612,757 14 1,205,786
Burkina Faso 10,623,323 50 5,311,662
Burma 45,975,625 10 4,597,563
Burundi 5,943,057 20 1,188,611
Cambodia 10,861,218 1 108,612
Cameroon 14,261,557 55 7,843,856
Canada 28,820,671 1.48 400,000
Central African Republic 3,274,426 55 1,800,934
Chad 6,976,845 85 5,930,318
China 1,210,004,956 11 133,100,545
Christmas Island 813 10 81
Cocos (Keeling) Island 609 57 347
Comoros 569,237 86 489,544
Congo 2,527,841 15 379,176
Cote d'Ivoire 14,762,445 60 8,857,467
Croatia 5,004,112 1.2 60,049
Cyprus 744,609 33 245,721
Djibouti 427,642 94 401,983
Egypt 63,575,107 94 59,760,601
Equatorial Guinea 431,282 25 107,821
Eritrea 3,427,883 80 2,742,306
Ethiopia 57,171,662 65 37,161,580
Fiji 782,381 11 86,062
France 58,317,450 7 4,082,222
Gabon 1,172,798 1 11,728
Gambia 1,204,984 90 1,084,486
Gaza Strip 923,940 98.7 911,929
Georgia 5,219,810 11 574,179
Germany 83,536,115 3.4 2,840,228
Ghana 17,698,271 30 5,309,481
Gibraltar 28,765 8 2,301
Greece 10,538,594 1.5 158,079
Guinea 7,411,981 95 7,041,382
Guinea-Bissau 1,151,330 70 805,931
Guyana 712,091 15 106,814
Hong Kong 6,305,413 1 63,054
India 952,107,694 14 133,295,077
Indonesia 206,611,600 95 196,281,020
Iran 66,094,264 99 65,433,321
Iraq 21,422,292 97 20,779,623
Israel 5,421,995 14 759,079
Italy 57,460,274 1 574,603
Japan 125,449,703 1 1,254,497
Jordan 4,212,152 95 4,001,544
Kazakstan 16,916,463 51.2 8,661,229
Kenya 28,176,686 29.5 8,312,122
Kuwait 1,950,047 89 1,735,542
Kyrgyzstan 4,529,648 76.1 3,447,062
Lebanon 3,776,317 70 2,643,422
Liberia 2,109,789 30 632,937
Libya 5,445,436 100 5,445,436
Lesotho 1,970,781 10 197,078
Macedonia 2,104,035 30 631,211
Madagascar 13,670,507 20 2,734,101
Malawi 9,452,844 35 3,308,495
Malaysia 19,962,893 52 10,380,704
Maldives 270,758 100 270,758
Mali 9,653,261 90 8,687,935
Malta 375,576 14 52,581
Mauritania 2,336,048 100 2,336,048
Mauritius 1,140,256 19.5 222,350
Mayotte 100,838 99 99,830
Mongolia 2,496,617 4 99,865
Morocco 29,779,156 98.7 29,392,027
Mozambique 17,877,927 29 5,184,599
Namibia 1,677,243 5 83,862
Nepal 22,094,033 4 883,761
Netherlands 15,568,034 3 467,041
Niger 9,113,001 91 8,292,831
Nigeria 103,912,489 75 77,934,367
Norway 4,438,547 1.5 66,578
Oman 2,186,548 100 2,186,548
Pakistan 129,275,660 97 125,397,390
Panama 2,655,094 4 106,204
Philippines 74,480,848 14 10,427,319
Qatar 547,761 100 547,761
Reunion 679,198 20 135,840
Romania 21,657,162 20 4,331,432
Russia 148,178,487 18 26,672,127
Rwanda 6,853,359 1 68,534
Saudi Arabia 19,409,058 100 19,409,058
Senegal 9,092,749 95 8,638,112
Serbia and Montenegro 10,614,558 19 2,016,766
Sierra Leone 4,793,121 65 3,115,529
Singapore 3,396,924 17 577,477
Slovenia 1,951,443 1 19,514
Somalia 9,639,151 100 9,639,151
South Africa 41,743,459 2 834,869
Sri Lanka 18,553,074 9 1,669,777
Sudan 31,547,543 85 26,815,412
Suriname 436,418 25 109,105
Swaziland 998,730 10 99,873
Sweden 9,800,000 3.6 320,000
Syria 15,608,648 90 14,047,783
Tajikistan 5,916,373 85 5,028,917
Tanzania 29,058,470 65 18,888,006
Thailand 58,851,357 14 8,239,190
Togo 4,570,530 55 2,513,792
Trinidad and Tobago 1,272,385 12 152,686
Tunisia 9,019,687 98 8,839,293
Turkey 62,484,478 99.8 62,359,509
Turkmenistan 4,149,283 87 3,609,876
Uganda 20,158,176 36 7,256,943
United Arab Emirates 3,057,337 96 2,935,044
United Kingdom 58,489,975 2.7 1,579,229
United States 266,476,278 3.75 9,992,860
Uzbekistan 23,418,381 88 20,608,175
West Bank 1,427,741 75 1,070,806
Western Sahara 222,631 100 222,631
Yemen 13,483,178 99 13,348,346
Zaire 46,498,539 10 4,649,854
Zambia 9,159,072 15 1,373,861
Zimbabwe 11,271,314 15 1,690,697

Muslims Population


Islam is the fastest growing religion and the second largest religion in the world

Muslims in Asia (1996) 1,022,692,000 (30%)
Muslims in Africa (1996) 426,282,000 (59%)
Total Number of Muslims on the Earth (1996) 1,482,596,925
Total Number of People on the Earth (1996) 5,771,939,007
Percentage of Muslims (1996) 26%
Islam annual growth rate (1994-1995) from U.N. 6.40%
Christianity growth rate (1994-1995) from U.N. 1.46%
Total Number of Muslims on the Earth (1998) 1,678,442,000
Expected Number of Muslims on the Earth (2000) 1,902,095,000
This table below shows the growth of Islam:

North America (1989-1998)                                                                    25%
Africa 2.15%
Asia 12.57%
Europe   142.35%
Latin America -4.73%
Australia 257.01%
Among every four humans in the world, one of them is Muslim. Muslims have increased by over 235 percent in the last fifty years up to nearly 1.6 billion. By comparison, Christians have increased by only 47 percent, Hinduism, 117 percent, and Buddhism by 63 percent. Islam is the second largest religious group in France, Great Britain and USA (Muslims in USA are 10 millions and Jews are 6 millions).
The number of the total population has been taken from The CIA World's Facts Book which can be found at: http://www.odci.gov/cia/publications/factbook
The CIA World's Facts Book was used it to verify the total number of population in every country. But since it lacks the percentage of Muslims in each country, we used another statistic located at: http://www.flash.net/~royal/country.html
In 1986, the Muslim Education Trust organization (MET) located in the United Kingdom and directed by Ghulam Sarwar, obtained the 1971 census and information given by Embassies of the respective countries in London. The 1971 census showed the Independent Muslim countries population was around 784.5 Million and the Muslim Minorities countries had around 308 Million Muslim.
As for the U.N., the Briticana Encyclopidia for 1994 and for 1995 was used to get the growth rates. Briticana took those statistics from the U.N.
The final numbers were obtained by plugging in the percentage of Muslims (taken from MET) and the number of people (taken from CIA) in each country using Microsoft Excel.