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Mubarak Ali Gilani, the shadowy founder of Muslims of the Americas, is 
believed to be living in Pakistan. (Christian Action Network)Christian Action 
Network vows to bring Gilani, founder of Muslims of the Americas, into 
a U.S. court if the $30 million defamation suit proceeds. (Christian Action 
Network)Gilani, who is believed to be in his eighties, fires a weapon 
in a training video made by Muslims of the Americas. (Christian Action 
Network)Muslims of the Americas has rural bases in several states, including 
South Carolina and New York.The shadowy leader of an American Muslim organization 
accused of running terror training camps in the U.S. could find himself 
being questioned under oath if his outfit follows through on its $30 
million defamation suit against the Christian group that leveled the charges 
in a best-selling book.Muslims of the Americas, a group founded in the 
1980s by elusive Pakistani Sheikh Mubarak Ali Gilani, is suing the Christian 
Action Network for defamation and libel following CANs recent publication 
of the book Twilight in America: The Untold Story of Islamist Terrorist 
Training Camps Inside America. Co-authored by CAN founder Martin Mawyer 
and Patti Pierucci, the book accuses MOA of acting as a front 
for the radical Islamist group Jamaat al-Fuqra.In the suit, filed this year 
in federal court in Albany, N.Y., the Muslim group accuses Mawyer, Pierucci 
and CAN of "malicious, repetitious and continuous pronouncements and
the court fight.Lowering 
the age limit "may reduce delays for some young women but it 
does nothing to address the significant barriers that far too many women 
of all ages will still find if they arrive at the drugstore 
without identification," said Nancy Northup, president of the Center for 
Reproductive Rights.The FDA said the Plan B One-Step will be packaged with 
a product code that prompts the cashier to verify a customer's age. 
Anyone who can't provide such proof as a driver's license, birth certificate 
or passport wouldn't be allowed to complete the purchase."These are daunting 
and sometimes insurmountable hoops women are forced to jump through in time-sensitive 
circumstances, and we will continue our battle in court to remove these 
arbitrary restrictions on emergency contraception for all women," Northup 
said.Half the nation's pregnancies every year are unintended, and doctors' 
groups say more access to morning-after pills could cut those numbers. The 
pills contain higher doses of regular contraceptives, and if taken within 
72 hours of unprotected sex, can cut the chances of pregnancy by 
up to 89 percent.The FDA had been poised to lift all age 
limits and let Plan B sell over-the-counter in late 2011, when Health 
and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius, in an unprecedented move, 
overruled her own scientists. Sebelius said some girls as young as 11 
are physically capable of bearing children, but shouldn't be able to buy 
the 


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