Who is Paus?
Witness Karawan Abdellah, a former Kurdish guerrilla, reads a document as he testifies during Saddam Hussein's trial on genocide charges in the fortified Green Zone in Baghdad, Monday Sept. 18, 2006. Saddam and six co-defendants are being tried on charges of committing atrocities against Kurds during the Operation Anfal crackdown in northern Iraq nearly two decades ago. The prosecution alleges some 180,000 people died in the campaign, many of them killed by poison gas. (AP Photo/Erik de Castro, Pool)
Saddam Hussein sits in the dock during his trial on genocide charges in the fortified Green Zone in Baghdad, Monday Sept. 18, 2006. Saddam and six co-defendants are being tried on charges of committing atrocities against Kurds during the Operation Anfal crackdown in northern Iraq nearly two decades ago. The prosecution alleges some 180,000 people died in the campaign, many of them killed by poison gas. (AP Photo/Erik de Castro, Pool)
Witness Karawan Abdellah, a former Kurdish guerrilla, testifies during Saddam Hussein's trial on genocide charges in the fortified Green Zone in Baghdad, Monday Sept. 18, 2006. Saddam and six co-defendants are being tried on charges of committing atrocities against Kurds during the Operation Anfal crackdown in northern Iraq nearly two decades ago. The prosecution alleges some 180,000 people died in the campaign, many of them killed by poison gas. (AP Photo/Erik de Castro, Pool)
Ali Hassan al-Majid -- a co-defendant of Saddam Hussein -- testifies during their trial on genocide charges. The trial has resumed with testimony from a witness burned by poison gas and the ousted Iraqi ruler citing US chemical attacks in Vietnam.(AFP/Pool/Erik De Castro)
British soldiers patrol in their armored vehicle in Basra, Iraq's second-largest city, 550 kilometers (340 miles) southeast of Baghdad, Monday Sept.18, 2006. Bombers and gunmen killed eight people in Iraq Monday as Iraqi security forces prepared to further tighten security ahead of the holy month of Ramadan, when violence traditionally spikes across Iraq. (AP Photo/Nabil Al Jurani)
Sydney newspapers with their front pages showing photographs of Australian troops in Iraq with a soldier pointing a pistol at the head of a man wearing Arab robes, Monday, Sept. 18, 2006. Australian defense launched an inquiry after the images, that were described by Australia's defense force chief, Air Chief Marshal Angus Houston, as culturally insensitive, were posted on a web site. (AP Photo/Mark Baker)
Iraqis families, who had occupied houses left by then Sadddam Hussein's republican guards after the fall of Baghdad, shout anti Iraq government slogans, during a demonstration, in Baghdad, Iraq, Monday Sept.18, 2006, against the government's order to evict those houses. (AP Photo/Khalid Mohammed)
An Australian soldier guards the area during a joint street patrol with Iraqi security forces in the Iraqi southern city of Samawa, June 2006. Australia's Prime Minister John Howard has defended the country's soldiers in Iraq, suggesting they were just "letting off steam" in a series of controversial videos posted on the Internet.(AFP/Pool/File/Mohammed Jalil)
http://i55.photobucket.com/albums/g1...tt/capt-53.jpgAustralia's Prime Minister John Howard gestures as he answers questions at a press conference in Sydney, July 2006. Howard has defended the country's soldiers in Iraq, suggesting they were just "letting off steam" in a series of controversial videos posted on the Internet.(AFP/File/Greg Wood)
GRAPHIC IMAGE
An Iraqi takes a picture with his cellular phone of a little girl killed when a suicide truck bomber firing a machine gun blew up his vehicle near a police centre, in Iraq's northern oil city of Kirkuk. Kirkuk buckled under a wave of bombings targeting the security forces that killed at least 27 people.(AFP/Marwan Ibrahim)
An man burns an effigy of Pope Benedict and a German flag during a demonstration in Basra city, south of Iraq September 18, 2006. (Atef Hassan/*******)
Pakistani religious student takes part in a march, holding a placard, right, reads, 'Muslim rulers hence take notice,' to condemn the anti-Islam remarks of Pope Benedict XVI which hurt the sentiments of Muslims, Monday, Sept 18, 2006 in Islamabad, Pakistan. Protests continued to demand that Pope apologize fully for his remarks on Islam and violence.(AP Photo/Anjum Naveed)
A girl attends a protest against remarks by Pope Benedict in Amman September 18, 2006. *******/Muhammad Hamed (JORDAN)
Activists and supporters of militant Indonesian Muslim group Front for Defenders of Islam (FPI) shout slogans against Pope Benedict XVI during a demonstration in front of the Holy See embassy in Jakarta. Pope Benedict XVI's personal apology for criticising Islam has failed to stem anger in some parts of the Muslim world despite calls for calm from Islamic and Western leaders.(AFP/Jewel Samad)
An Iraqi man burns a white effigy of Pope Benedict during a demonstration in Basra city south of Iraq September 18, 2006. Chanting slogans and burning a white effigy of Pope Benedict, some 150 demonstrators in the Iraqi Shi'ite city of Basra demanded a papal apology on Monday for comments that have offended many Muslims worldwide. *******/Atef Hassan (IRAQ)
Indian policeman throw stones during a protest against Pope Benedict in Srinagar September 18, 2006. Shops, businesses and most schools closed in Kashmir's main city on Monday in response to a strike call by separatists to protest over comments Pope Benedict made about Islam. *******/Danish Ismail (INDIAN-ADMINISTERED KASHMIR)
Kashmiri protesters throw stones during a protest against Pope Benedict in Srinagar September 18, 2006. Shops, businesses and most schools closed in Kashmir's main city on Monday in response to a strike call by separatists to protest over comments Pope Benedict made about Islam. *******/Danish Ismail (INDIAN-ADMINISTERED KASHMIR)
This undated photo provided Sunday, Sept. 17, 2006 by the family of Sister Leonella, shows Italian nun Sister Leonella in Rezzanello di Gazzola, near Piacenza, Italy. Gunmen killed Sister Leonella and her bodyguard Sunday at the entrance of the hospital where she worked in Mogadishu, Somalia, officials said _ an attack some feared could be linked to Muslim anger toward Pope Benedict XVI. (AP Photo/Courtesy of family, ho)
Catholic Christians pray for nun Sister Leonella at the Holy Family Basillica in Nairobi, Monday, Sept. 18, 2006. The elderly nun who was gunned down at the hospital where she worked in Somalia's capital Mogadishu was 'specifically targeted before being executed by gunmen lying in wait,' a hospital official said Monday. There was no claim of responsibility for Sunday's shooting, but many fear it could be linked to worldwide Muslim anger toward Pope Benedict XVI. In a speech last week, the pope quoted a Medieval text calling the Prophet Muhammad's teachings 'evil and inhuman. (AP Photo/Sayyid Azim)
Police gather around a car driven onto the Capitol plaza in Washington Monday, Sept. 18, 2006. A man crashed his vehicle into a security barricade at the Capitol, ran into the building and was arrested, forcing the complex to briefly be locked down, authorities said. (AP Photo/Dennis Cook)
Who is Paus?
A policeman searches a tourist with a metal detector at the entrance to Saint Peter's Basilica at the Vatican September 18, 2006. The Vatican has instructed its envoys in Muslim countries to explain Pope Benedict's words on Islam but Church experts said on Monday the furore has probably set back relations between the two faiths by decades. *******/Max Rossi (VATICAN)
Full of straws : Austrian Marco Hort takes in mouth 259 drinking straws during the World Records day at Vienna's Prater. (AFP/Vladimir Kmet)
Covered dead bodies are loaded on the back of a police vehicle at the blast site after a suicide attack in Kabul, Afghanistan on Monday, Sept. 18, 2006. A suicide car bomber killed three Afghan police and wounded five other people in Kabul on Monday, an official said. (AP Photo/Musadeq Sadeq)
A U.S. soldier keeps watch at a blast site in Kabul September 18, 2006. A car bomb exploded in the capital Kabul on Monday, killing two policemen, police said. *******/Ahmad Masood (AFGHANISTAN)
A U.S. soldier stands guard at the blast side after a suicide attack in Kabul, Afghanistan on Monday, Sept. 18, 2006. A suicide car bomber killed three Afghan police and wounded five other people in Kabul on Monday, an official said. (AP Photo/Musadeq Sadeq)
A Somali couple walk past a destroyed car after an explosion in Baidoa, Somalia, the only town controlled by the government, Monday, Sept. 18, 2006. Two explosions rocked the seat of Somalia's virtually powerless government Monday, killing the president's brother and three others, officials said. (AP Photo)
Cars burn after an explosion in Baidoa, Somalia, the only town controlled by the government, Monday, Sept. 18, 2006. Two explosions rocked the seat of Somalia's virtually powerless government Monday, killing the president's brother and three others, officials said. (AP Photo)
Cars burn after an explosion in Baidoa, Somalia, the only town controlled by the government, Monday, Sept. 18, 2006. Two explosions rocked the seat of Somalia's virtually powerless government Monday, killing the president's brother and three others, officials said. (AP Photo)
Simon's town Mosque Imam (R) sits, 12 September 2006, with Somalian refugees, from Masiphumelele northwest of Cape Town, where Somalian shops and properties were burnt and looted, outside the Simon's town Mosque in Cape Town, South Africa. Refugees who fled war-torn Somalia in search of safety and a better life in South Africa now fear becoming the next victims in a string of murders of their compatriots in the Cape peninsula.(AFP/File/Gianluigi Guercia)
In this image from NASA TV, International Space Station astronaut Jeff Williams, left, and European Space Agency astronaut Thomas Retter of Germany, work in the laboratory of the station, Monday, Sept. 18, 2006. (AP Photo/NASA TV)
So let's see here...the Pope quotes some guy in the Middle ages complaining about how violent Muslims are, and in protest the Muslims go all ape**** burning churches and rioting in defense of their supposed 'peaceful' religion?
How many days has this been going on now, anyways?
Yea you're right .
In Malay language which is also somewhat the same as Indonesian , Paus means Pope .
Another meaning for paus is also a whale . . weird eh .
I agree freaking hipocritical actions man. Thats life in our world.
A halo from the sun appears around one of the statues in Saint Peter's Square at the Vatican September 18, 2006. (Max Rossi/*******)
President Bush walks from the Oval Office on his way to Marine One on the South Lawn of the White House, September 18, 2006. (Jason Reed/*******)
U.S. army Maj. Gen. William B. Caldwell, gives a thumbs up, during a joint press conference with Iraqi government spokesman Ali al-Dabagh and Iraqi army Brigadier Qassim al-Mussawi, unseen, in Baghdad, Iraq, Monday Sept. 18, 2006. The Iraqi army's 4th division took over operational control of central Salahuddin province on Monday from the U.S.-led coalition, the government said. (AP Photo/Samir Mizban)
US Marines oversee the opening of a school in Karbala, Iraq. The country will need US and international forces on the ground until national security forces are prepared to fight and local governments have been elected around the country, Iraqi national security advisor Mowaffak Al-Rubaie said in an interview.(AFP/USMC-HO/File)
This undated picture provided by the Rehabilitation Institute of Chicago shows US Marine Claudia Mitchell showing her bionic arm. The prosthetic arm can be moved just by thinking about it and can feel heat and the pressure of a handshake.(AFP/HO/File)
They're going after the KKK now too ?