'We Muslims are the new Jews' says MP
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'We Muslims are the new Jews' says MP
'Escape is impossible'
It is a destitute, oppressive place, where 70,000 Palestinian refugees
are squeezed into one square kilometre and violence is the norm.
Ghaith Abdul-Ahad visits Ain al-Hilweh, Lebanon's biggest refugee
camp, and talks to the new generation of jihadis whose experience
reflects the Islamisation of Arab youth throughout the Middle East
In pictures: Ghaith Abdul-Ahad on life in the camp
Tuesday June 12, 2007
The Guardian
A PLO gunman patrols the streets of Ain al-Hilweh
A PLO gunman patrols the streets of Ain al-Hilweh. Photograph: Ghaith
Abdul-Ahad
It is a Monday in early June and four bearded jihadi fighters hide in
a bicycle repair shop less than 50 meters from a Lebanese army
position at the entrance of Ain al-Hilweh refugee camp, the biggest
camp in Lebanon. Around them is a familiar battle scene; the smell of
burned concrete mixed with gunpowder, a cloud of smoke rising,
hundreds of bullet-holes peppering the buildings. The street is empty
apart from an occasional lone fighter who sprints across the road from
one position to the other.
Article continues
The clashes between the jihadi Palestinian group of Jund al-Sham and
the Lebanese army had stopped a few hours ago, leaving at least one
militant dead and three injured. The army lost two men.
Residents are already on the move, fearing a repetition of the two
weeks-old battles raging in another Palestinian camp between another
jihadi group - Fatah al-Islam - and the Lebanese army. There, at the
smaller Nahr al-Bared camp in Tripoli, to the north of Lebanon, at
least 70 people had been killed.
One of the fighters, who is in his early 20s, wearing a black T-shirt
carrying the words "Allahu Akbar" and nestling an M16 rifle between
his legs, says: "They are cowards those soldiers. This is a
Palestinian camp, this is not Israel."
The Islamist group of Jund al-Sham is believed to have no more than 50
fighters. Like other jihadi groups in the camp, some of the fighters
are veterans of the war in Iraq. They are flourishing in the
Palestinian refugee camps of Lebanon, which have been in place since
1948 when Palestinians fled or were expelled to make way for the
creation of the state of Israel. There are 12 such established camps
in Lebanon, the most well-known of which, Sabra and Shatila, were made
notorious in 1982 when the South Lebanon Army massacred up to 3,500
people, many of them civilians, under the watch of the Israeli army.
In many respects, Ain al-Hilweh and other camps are the microcosm of a
failed Arab state and its anger and politics: packed, crowded,
frustrated, hot-housed and surrounded by guards. They reflect the
politicisation, the Islamisation and the radicalisation of Arab youth
all over the Middle East. Their inhabitants are oppressed and kept
poor by badly managed and corrupt regimes; they are hemmed in by visa
restrictions and borders that are almost impossible to cross.
For years now the secular factions, which were in the ascendant in the
1970s, have been challenged by the rising star of jihadis and
fundamentalists. In the middle lies the besieged nation, filled with
anger, mostly at Israel, where many of their families lived until
1948. These are the realities of not only Ain al-Hilweh but of all the
Middle East.
Ain al-Hilweh is the biggest of the Palestinian refugee camps in
Lebanon, situated in the south of the country on the edge of the
ancient city of Sidon, less than an hour's drive from the northern
borders of Israel. The name means the "Sweet Water Spring".
Almost 50 years ago, the recently formed UNRWA - the UN relief agency
for Palestinian refugees - leased the land around the Sweet Water
Spring from the Lebanese government, to provide a temporary shelter
for the tens of thousands of Palestinian refugees who were then
flooding into south Lebanon.
Six decades and four generations later, the camp looks like every
other destitute Arab town; a busy market, houses built from concrete
cinder blocks packed close to each other, children and chickens
running in the dirty roads between piles of garbage, open sewers,
record shops blaring Arab pop music all day, and young men in tight
jeans standing at corners staring at other young men in jeans, looking
for a fight to break the deadly boring cycle of the day.
Just like the imagined city of the movie Escape from New York, Ain al-
Hilweh resembles a huge maximum-security prison. Walls are topped with
barbed wire, army-fortified posts and armoured vehicles. As many as
70,000 Palestinian refugees are squeezed into a square kilometre.
The unemployed, the revolutionaries and the fundamentalists roam the
streets like gangs. Violence is the norm, and escape is impossible.
Lebanese conscript soldiers, wearing tin helmets and US flak jackets
from the Vietnam era, and armed with M16 rifles, stand guard at the
checkpoints leading into the camp. Positioned behind them are
fortifications made from tyres and barrels filled with sand. They
inspect the ID cards of everyone going in or out of the camp. Drivers
are asked to open their car boots and journalists, NGO workers, and
foreigners have to get permission from the Lebanese military
intelligence just to get inside the camp.
"Sometimes we call it Gaza II," I was told a few weeks ago by a very
thin young Palestinian student as we negotiated our way through the
checkpoint.
But when I visit the camp again two days after the recent clashes, the
main checkpoint is almost deserted. Shaken soldiers inspect my ID card
quickly and wave me through. The ground is covered with empty bullet
casings, a reminder of the heavy fighting.
A few metres on from the Lebanese army, there is another checkpoint.
This one is manned by soldiers of the armed struggle: two old men,
carrying Kalashnikovs, dressed in combat fatigues, red berets and
trainers. They are veterans from the PLO's heyday of the 1970s.
Now you are in "Palestinian territory".
The graffiti and posters start from there, pictures of Yasser Arafat,
the (secular, PLO) Palestinian leader next to those of Sheikh Ahmed
Yassin - the spiritual leader of Hamas, who was assassinated by the
Israelis.
The camp's main streets, which are usually crowded with people and
motorbikes, are empty. Gunmen with different shapes of beards and of
the different factions stand at street corners, under insignias of
their militias. The street looks like a bazaar of old and new
revolutionary brands: PFLP, DFLP, Fatah, Hamas and so on.
Each neighbourhood carries the name of its inhabitants' original
village or town in Palestine and shares a certain political loyalty to
one of the factions. Most of the camp's residents today have never
visited their families' homes, which are mostly in Galilee in what is
now northern Israel.
Hind is a young Palestinian woman and a leftwing activist. She doesn't
wear a hijab, and always dresses in baggy trousers and a red, green
and black scarf. She lives outside the camp, in the city of Sidon, but
she was born in Ain al-Hilweh and knows every tiny alleyway. She can
jump between a very thick Palestinian accent and Lebanese. She spends
her time in the camp, organising activities and exhibitions. I asked
her one day what is it like to be called "a Palestinian", though her
father was born in a refugee camp in another country, and so was she.
She told me how, after the Israeli withdrawal from the south of
Lebanon, she went with some friends to the border. "We stood on the
edge of the fence, Palestine was there in front of us," she says. "The
air that came from Palestine was different, it was sweet, it came from
our lands."
A few metres down the main road there is the military HQ of the
Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP), the Marxist
militant group that was responsible for spectacular attacks in the
1970s, such as the Leila Khaled hijacking of an El Al plane.
The HQ is a small room with two camp beds. The commander, a thin man
in his late 40s, sits on one of the beds, his red beret resting on the
top of his skull, and wisps of hair falling on to his forehead. He
drinks bitter coffee and fiddles with his phone. Around him, four
other veterans of the faction's decades of wars gather around a small
table. They are all dressed in combat gear; everyone is on high alert
because of the clashes.
"The camp is made of different factions and everyone belongs to a
faction," the commander tells me. "I can't walk with you to the end of
the street because PFLP turf stops a couple of blocks from here. Each
faction has its territory."
"It's so easy to form a faction and a militia here," he says. "We are
poor, our parties are not paying us, we can't leave here and we can't
travel, so if someone pays a young kid $500 a month, of course he will
join any movement. Most of those jihadis were once fighters with us
and other Palestinian factions."
He thinks for a moment. "If you come to me and give me a $100,000, I
will split from the PFLP and form the PFLP: Believers' Army. It's so
easy."
The contrast between the ailing, ill-equipped and ill-fed fighters of
the old "secular" factions and muscular, bearded and well-equipped
jihadis is huge.
I go to see a member of this new generation of radicals, a fighter and
commander of Usbat al-Ansar, a group of jihadist Palestinians in the
camp, called Abu Omar. We first met more than a year ago when I was
told by his friends that he was "very funny and very sweet ... he
makes jokes all the time". The Lebanese government is said to have
sentenced him to death three times.
I walk towards the area where the clashes between the Lebanese army
and the Islamists took place, a sort of a no-man's land between the
edge of the camp and the Lebanese army checkpoints. "Tameer" is the
Islamists' turf, where most of the men on the streets have long beards
and some wear shalwar kameez and black prayer-caps, the signature
dress for the Salafi-jihadi Islamists in the region.
The area has also become a safe haven not only for jihadis fresh from
Iraq but also for wanted criminals such as arms dealers.
"Long live the leader Zarqawi," is written on a wall, referring to the
al-Qaida commander in Iraq who was killed last year. A photomontaged
poster hangs from a light pole, showing a young man holding a rifle in
front of a burning US Humvee. It says: "The Martyr, the Lion, the
hero, martyred in Iraq in 2005 fighting the crusaders."
I come across two fighters, who are relaxing by the shade of a
building and keeping an eye on the frontline. I ask them if they know
where Abu Omar is.
"Who wants to see him?" one asks me, still busy eating his ice cream.
I explain that I already know Abu Omar.
They ask me to follow, and we walk through a maze of alleyways into a
yard where Abu Omar is sitting, surrounded by his men.
Abu Omar looks like an Arab version of the Scandinavian god Thor. He
is tall with huge muscled arms, a thin waist, a thick ginger beard and
kinky long hair. Strapped to him are a small machine gun, two pistols
and eight magazines. A veteran of the jihad in Iraq, he greets me
using Iraqi words.
He once told me that his two new black (Glock) pistols - the kind that
the US army is supplying to the Iraqi police - were his "spoils of the
war".
He was born in the Ain al-Hilweh camp. His father was born in the
camp, too; his grandfather came to Lebanon as a refugee from Galilee
when he was a small boy after the 1948 war.
When he was six years old, he got his first classes in military
training in a PLO Cubs training camp. "I was 12 when the Israelis
invaded Lebanon in 1982," he says. "I didn't do much fighting then but
it really helped to shape the fighter in me. We used to carry
ammunition to the fighters."
Three years later, he became a fully fledged fighter when Shia
factions supported by the Syrians started a two-year battle against
Palestinian camps in the mid-1980s, in the midst of the Lebanese civil
war.
In the early 1990s he joined the radical Islamist Usbat al-Ansar. But
the war in Iraq was a turning point. Instead of fighting against other
factions in the camp, they found a better enemy - and like many all
over the Middle East, their long-awaited jihad dreams could be
fulfilled in Iraq.
Now Usbat al-Ansar is considered one of the strongest factions in the
camp; it is flooded with money from the jihadi networks in the Middle
East, and has a rank and file made of enthusiastic, indoctrinated
young jihadis. The story of their rise and the demise of secular
movements mirrors the story of the Middle East.
"I have been fighting since the age of six and I tell you the apostate
secular PLO fighters are more courageous than the Americans," says Abu
Omar. "At least they don't hide behind armoured Humvees." He says he
went to Iraq not as a suicide bomber but to provide training to the
Iraqis and to other young Arabs, mostly from Saudi Arabia and the Gulf
states. "Saddam destroyed the Iraqi army: he created a bunch of
overweight, corrupt officers who didn't know how to fight."
He says he participated in many attacks against the US and Iraqi army.
For a while his group had a base in the northern Iraqi town of Tal
Afar until a US-led attack forced them out of the city and he went
back to Ramadi. He did two trips of six months each to Iraq.
"People say if I am Palestinian why not go and fight for the
liberation of my country instead of fighting in Iraq?" he says. "I
tell them it's the same people, we have the Jews here in Palestine and
the Americans are there in Iraq. Both are occupations."
He shaved off his long beard and the Iraqis who he met at the border
supplied him with a fake ID card. (His Iraqi ID card looks as real as
my genuine Iraqi ID card.) He was given a Shia name.
He clearly understands why the jihadists are so successful in the
camp. "If the economic and security situation was stable, the jihadi
movements almost don't exist," he says. "It's only when there is a
security vacuum that jihad flourishes. Just like in Iraq."
The ice-cream fighters are standing in silent respect behind Abu Omar,
part bodyguards, part disciples. One of them, a tall and muscled man
with a pistol strapped to his waist, claims that he started the fight
with the Lebanese army the day before.
"They [Lebanese soldiers] taunted us, they told us 'We will kill you
like we are killing Fatah al-Islam [in Nahr Al-Bared camp]'," he says.
"So I went home with my friend and we got our weapons and started
shooting at them." Soon other jihadis joined the fight and a full-
scale battle raged for hours. "Abu Omar had taught us how to fight,"
the young fighter told me.
I first meet Saleh in a sit-in at a PFLP rally at the entrance to the
camp, a protest demanding the release of leaders in Gaza who had been
jailed by the Israeli army a few weeks earlier.
Plastic chairs are organised in a big circle, a man is reading
speeches over a microphone, coffee is served in plastic cups, the
walls are decorated with pictures of leaders and logos, and a
Kalashnikov rifle with a red piece of cloth wrapped around the top is
laid next to the jailed leader's picture like a bundle of flowers.
A banner hanging on the wall reads: " We will fight for Palestine
generation after generation."
Saleh is sitting with his friends under a poster of another dead
leader. He is 20 years old, but he looks 16. His hair is dyed orange-
blond on top. A small wooden map of Palestine hangs around his neck.
"This is from inside," he says, referring to the parts of Palestine
that became Israel in 1948 - a mythical place for those in exile so
long. "From Jaffa." He holds tightly to the little piece of wood as if
it is a piece of Christ's cross.
Like most of the young men here he is unemployed and had dropped out
from school when he was 12. He joined the Marxist Palestinian group
the PFLP; his father, uncle and mother were all communist.
"I wake up in the morning and then stand around with my friends," he
says, in the filthy PFLP office with its threadbare sofas. "It's so
boring here. Even the people I meet I have met every day of my life.
We have talked about everything."
"Do you go out of the camp?" I ask him.
"No."
"Why not? The sea is very beautiful near here."
"I don't like to feel like a fish out the water. I don't like going
out - every time we are stopped by that checkpoint the Lebanese
soldiers they look at you as if you are a piece of filth."
In theory Palestinians can leave the camp freely but in practice they
are subjected to draconian controls, especially after events in Nahr
al-Bared. At the hint of any problem involving Palestinians in
Lebanon, the army seals off the camp.
For the past six decades, Palestinians in Lebanon have been at the
very margins of society and have difficult relations with the Lebanese
people, accused by some as being the cause of the civil war and fought
against by every faction at one point or another. They are subjected
to discriminatory laws: their movements are constrained, they are
banned from owning or inheriting property and they are prevented from
working in 72 specified jobs. This means that most of the young
Palestinians here are unemployed, and those lucky enough to work can
only get jobs as barbers, taxi drivers and construction workers. They
live a besieged life.
The atmosphere of lawlessness inside the camp, meanwhile, makes it the
preferred refuge for jihadis and other militiamen, many of whom are
wanted by the Lebanese authorities, which have no power inside the
camp. (They signed security arrangements with the Palestinian factions
at the Cairo agreement in 1969.)
I walk to Saleh's house. The walls are bare concrete blocks, and his
mother, a former leftwing revolutionary, is sitting in the courtyard
peeling potatoes. A hijab is tightly wrapped round her head.
Saleh's room tells the story of all the revolutions and defeats in the
Middle East. It is tiny - three by two metres.
There is a small bronze bust of Lenin, a red flag, a picture of Che
Guevara and two portraits of Hassan Nasrallah, the head of the Shia
Islamic group Hizbullah.
It might be surprising that a secular leftist could be so enamoured of
a religious party such as Hizbullah, but this is common throughout
Lebanon and the Middle East. "He is our hero now," he says, pointing
at the cleric with his black turban and bushy beard.
Saleh's journey is explained to me a few days later when I meet
another Palestinian in Beirut, a fighter in his 50s and a hard-core
Marxist, his face is lined with wrinkles. "I have never lost my
political compass," he says. "Wherever the Americans and the Israelis
are, I am on the other side. So if Hizbullah and the Iranians and the
Islamists are against the Americans now, so I am an Islamist."
Is this another reason why the Islamists are doing so well? I ask Abu
Obaida, another leader of jihadists Usbat al-Ansar. "All the other
movements have proved their failure," he says. "The secularists,
nationalists and the communists they have all failed, the hypocrisy of
their rhetoric has been exposed."
In the office of a secular faction, a senior official tried to explain
it better.
"We have young men who have nothing, no hope of a nation, no hope for
the right of refugees to return, nothing but the two streets of the
camp. With this situation I wouldn't be surprised if half the camp
becomes jihadis. Ain al-Hilweh, this is your perfect Failed State."
It is a destitute, oppressive place, where 70,000 Palestinian refugees
are squeezed into one square kilometre and violence is the norm.
Ghaith Abdul-Ahad visits Ain al-Hilweh, Lebanon's biggest refugee
camp, and talks to the new generation of jihadis whose experience
reflects the Islamisation of Arab youth throughout the Middle East
In pictures: Ghaith Abdul-Ahad on life in the camp
Tuesday June 12, 2007
The Guardian
A PLO gunman patrols the streets of Ain al-Hilweh
A PLO gunman patrols the streets of Ain al-Hilweh. Photograph: Ghaith
Abdul-Ahad
It is a Monday in early June and four bearded jihadi fighters hide in
a bicycle repair shop less than 50 meters from a Lebanese army
position at the entrance of Ain al-Hilweh refugee camp, the biggest
camp in Lebanon. Around them is a familiar battle scene; the smell of
burned concrete mixed with gunpowder, a cloud of smoke rising,
hundreds of bullet-holes peppering the buildings. The street is empty
apart from an occasional lone fighter who sprints across the road from
one position to the other.
Article continues
The clashes between the jihadi Palestinian group of Jund al-Sham and
the Lebanese army had stopped a few hours ago, leaving at least one
militant dead and three injured. The army lost two men.
Residents are already on the move, fearing a repetition of the two
weeks-old battles raging in another Palestinian camp between another
jihadi group - Fatah al-Islam - and the Lebanese army. There, at the
smaller Nahr al-Bared camp in Tripoli, to the north of Lebanon, at
least 70 people had been killed.
One of the fighters, who is in his early 20s, wearing a black T-shirt
carrying the words "Allahu Akbar" and nestling an M16 rifle between
his legs, says: "They are cowards those soldiers. This is a
Palestinian camp, this is not Israel."
The Islamist group of Jund al-Sham is believed to have no more than 50
fighters. Like other jihadi groups in the camp, some of the fighters
are veterans of the war in Iraq. They are flourishing in the
Palestinian refugee camps of Lebanon, which have been in place since
1948 when Palestinians fled or were expelled to make way for the
creation of the state of Israel. There are 12 such established camps
in Lebanon, the most well-known of which, Sabra and Shatila, were made
notorious in 1982 when the South Lebanon Army massacred up to 3,500
people, many of them civilians, under the watch of the Israeli army.
In many respects, Ain al-Hilweh and other camps are the microcosm of a
failed Arab state and its anger and politics: packed, crowded,
frustrated, hot-housed and surrounded by guards. They reflect the
politicisation, the Islamisation and the radicalisation of Arab youth
all over the Middle East. Their inhabitants are oppressed and kept
poor by badly managed and corrupt regimes; they are hemmed in by visa
restrictions and borders that are almost impossible to cross.
For years now the secular factions, which were in the ascendant in the
1970s, have been challenged by the rising star of jihadis and
fundamentalists. In the middle lies the besieged nation, filled with
anger, mostly at Israel, where many of their families lived until
1948. These are the realities of not only Ain al-Hilweh but of all the
Middle East.
Ain al-Hilweh is the biggest of the Palestinian refugee camps in
Lebanon, situated in the south of the country on the edge of the
ancient city of Sidon, less than an hour's drive from the northern
borders of Israel. The name means the "Sweet Water Spring".
Almost 50 years ago, the recently formed UNRWA - the UN relief agency
for Palestinian refugees - leased the land around the Sweet Water
Spring from the Lebanese government, to provide a temporary shelter
for the tens of thousands of Palestinian refugees who were then
flooding into south Lebanon.
Six decades and four generations later, the camp looks like every
other destitute Arab town; a busy market, houses built from concrete
cinder blocks packed close to each other, children and chickens
running in the dirty roads between piles of garbage, open sewers,
record shops blaring Arab pop music all day, and young men in tight
jeans standing at corners staring at other young men in jeans, looking
for a fight to break the deadly boring cycle of the day.
Just like the imagined city of the movie Escape from New York, Ain al-
Hilweh resembles a huge maximum-security prison. Walls are topped with
barbed wire, army-fortified posts and armoured vehicles. As many as
70,000 Palestinian refugees are squeezed into a square kilometre.
The unemployed, the revolutionaries and the fundamentalists roam the
streets like gangs. Violence is the norm, and escape is impossible.
Lebanese conscript soldiers, wearing tin helmets and US flak jackets
from the Vietnam era, and armed with M16 rifles, stand guard at the
checkpoints leading into the camp. Positioned behind them are
fortifications made from tyres and barrels filled with sand. They
inspect the ID cards of everyone going in or out of the camp. Drivers
are asked to open their car boots and journalists, NGO workers, and
foreigners have to get permission from the Lebanese military
intelligence just to get inside the camp.
"Sometimes we call it Gaza II," I was told a few weeks ago by a very
thin young Palestinian student as we negotiated our way through the
checkpoint.
But when I visit the camp again two days after the recent clashes, the
main checkpoint is almost deserted. Shaken soldiers inspect my ID card
quickly and wave me through. The ground is covered with empty bullet
casings, a reminder of the heavy fighting.
A few metres on from the Lebanese army, there is another checkpoint.
This one is manned by soldiers of the armed struggle: two old men,
carrying Kalashnikovs, dressed in combat fatigues, red berets and
trainers. They are veterans from the PLO's heyday of the 1970s.
Now you are in "Palestinian territory".
The graffiti and posters start from there, pictures of Yasser Arafat,
the (secular, PLO) Palestinian leader next to those of Sheikh Ahmed
Yassin - the spiritual leader of Hamas, who was assassinated by the
Israelis.
The camp's main streets, which are usually crowded with people and
motorbikes, are empty. Gunmen with different shapes of beards and of
the different factions stand at street corners, under insignias of
their militias. The street looks like a bazaar of old and new
revolutionary brands: PFLP, DFLP, Fatah, Hamas and so on.
Each neighbourhood carries the name of its inhabitants' original
village or town in Palestine and shares a certain political loyalty to
one of the factions. Most of the camp's residents today have never
visited their families' homes, which are mostly in Galilee in what is
now northern Israel.
Hind is a young Palestinian woman and a leftwing activist. She doesn't
wear a hijab, and always dresses in baggy trousers and a red, green
and black scarf. She lives outside the camp, in the city of Sidon, but
she was born in Ain al-Hilweh and knows every tiny alleyway. She can
jump between a very thick Palestinian accent and Lebanese. She spends
her time in the camp, organising activities and exhibitions. I asked
her one day what is it like to be called "a Palestinian", though her
father was born in a refugee camp in another country, and so was she.
She told me how, after the Israeli withdrawal from the south of
Lebanon, she went with some friends to the border. "We stood on the
edge of the fence, Palestine was there in front of us," she says. "The
air that came from Palestine was different, it was sweet, it came from
our lands."
A few metres down the main road there is the military HQ of the
Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP), the Marxist
militant group that was responsible for spectacular attacks in the
1970s, such as the Leila Khaled hijacking of an El Al plane.
The HQ is a small room with two camp beds. The commander, a thin man
in his late 40s, sits on one of the beds, his red beret resting on the
top of his skull, and wisps of hair falling on to his forehead. He
drinks bitter coffee and fiddles with his phone. Around him, four
other veterans of the faction's decades of wars gather around a small
table. They are all dressed in combat gear; everyone is on high alert
because of the clashes.
"The camp is made of different factions and everyone belongs to a
faction," the commander tells me. "I can't walk with you to the end of
the street because PFLP turf stops a couple of blocks from here. Each
faction has its territory."
"It's so easy to form a faction and a militia here," he says. "We are
poor, our parties are not paying us, we can't leave here and we can't
travel, so if someone pays a young kid $500 a month, of course he will
join any movement. Most of those jihadis were once fighters with us
and other Palestinian factions."
He thinks for a moment. "If you come to me and give me a $100,000, I
will split from the PFLP and form the PFLP: Believers' Army. It's so
easy."
The contrast between the ailing, ill-equipped and ill-fed fighters of
the old "secular" factions and muscular, bearded and well-equipped
jihadis is huge.
I go to see a member of this new generation of radicals, a fighter and
commander of Usbat al-Ansar, a group of jihadist Palestinians in the
camp, called Abu Omar. We first met more than a year ago when I was
told by his friends that he was "very funny and very sweet ... he
makes jokes all the time". The Lebanese government is said to have
sentenced him to death three times.
I walk towards the area where the clashes between the Lebanese army
and the Islamists took place, a sort of a no-man's land between the
edge of the camp and the Lebanese army checkpoints. "Tameer" is the
Islamists' turf, where most of the men on the streets have long beards
and some wear shalwar kameez and black prayer-caps, the signature
dress for the Salafi-jihadi Islamists in the region.
The area has also become a safe haven not only for jihadis fresh from
Iraq but also for wanted criminals such as arms dealers.
"Long live the leader Zarqawi," is written on a wall, referring to the
al-Qaida commander in Iraq who was killed last year. A photomontaged
poster hangs from a light pole, showing a young man holding a rifle in
front of a burning US Humvee. It says: "The Martyr, the Lion, the
hero, martyred in Iraq in 2005 fighting the crusaders."
I come across two fighters, who are relaxing by the shade of a
building and keeping an eye on the frontline. I ask them if they know
where Abu Omar is.
"Who wants to see him?" one asks me, still busy eating his ice cream.
I explain that I already know Abu Omar.
They ask me to follow, and we walk through a maze of alleyways into a
yard where Abu Omar is sitting, surrounded by his men.
Abu Omar looks like an Arab version of the Scandinavian god Thor. He
is tall with huge muscled arms, a thin waist, a thick ginger beard and
kinky long hair. Strapped to him are a small machine gun, two pistols
and eight magazines. A veteran of the jihad in Iraq, he greets me
using Iraqi words.
He once told me that his two new black (Glock) pistols - the kind that
the US army is supplying to the Iraqi police - were his "spoils of the
war".
He was born in the Ain al-Hilweh camp. His father was born in the
camp, too; his grandfather came to Lebanon as a refugee from Galilee
when he was a small boy after the 1948 war.
When he was six years old, he got his first classes in military
training in a PLO Cubs training camp. "I was 12 when the Israelis
invaded Lebanon in 1982," he says. "I didn't do much fighting then but
it really helped to shape the fighter in me. We used to carry
ammunition to the fighters."
Three years later, he became a fully fledged fighter when Shia
factions supported by the Syrians started a two-year battle against
Palestinian camps in the mid-1980s, in the midst of the Lebanese civil
war.
In the early 1990s he joined the radical Islamist Usbat al-Ansar. But
the war in Iraq was a turning point. Instead of fighting against other
factions in the camp, they found a better enemy - and like many all
over the Middle East, their long-awaited jihad dreams could be
fulfilled in Iraq.
Now Usbat al-Ansar is considered one of the strongest factions in the
camp; it is flooded with money from the jihadi networks in the Middle
East, and has a rank and file made of enthusiastic, indoctrinated
young jihadis. The story of their rise and the demise of secular
movements mirrors the story of the Middle East.
"I have been fighting since the age of six and I tell you the apostate
secular PLO fighters are more courageous than the Americans," says Abu
Omar. "At least they don't hide behind armoured Humvees." He says he
went to Iraq not as a suicide bomber but to provide training to the
Iraqis and to other young Arabs, mostly from Saudi Arabia and the Gulf
states. "Saddam destroyed the Iraqi army: he created a bunch of
overweight, corrupt officers who didn't know how to fight."
He says he participated in many attacks against the US and Iraqi army.
For a while his group had a base in the northern Iraqi town of Tal
Afar until a US-led attack forced them out of the city and he went
back to Ramadi. He did two trips of six months each to Iraq.
"People say if I am Palestinian why not go and fight for the
liberation of my country instead of fighting in Iraq?" he says. "I
tell them it's the same people, we have the Jews here in Palestine and
the Americans are there in Iraq. Both are occupations."
He shaved off his long beard and the Iraqis who he met at the border
supplied him with a fake ID card. (His Iraqi ID card looks as real as
my genuine Iraqi ID card.) He was given a Shia name.
He clearly understands why the jihadists are so successful in the
camp. "If the economic and security situation was stable, the jihadi
movements almost don't exist," he says. "It's only when there is a
security vacuum that jihad flourishes. Just like in Iraq."
The ice-cream fighters are standing in silent respect behind Abu Omar,
part bodyguards, part disciples. One of them, a tall and muscled man
with a pistol strapped to his waist, claims that he started the fight
with the Lebanese army the day before.
"They [Lebanese soldiers] taunted us, they told us 'We will kill you
like we are killing Fatah al-Islam [in Nahr Al-Bared camp]'," he says.
"So I went home with my friend and we got our weapons and started
shooting at them." Soon other jihadis joined the fight and a full-
scale battle raged for hours. "Abu Omar had taught us how to fight,"
the young fighter told me.
I first meet Saleh in a sit-in at a PFLP rally at the entrance to the
camp, a protest demanding the release of leaders in Gaza who had been
jailed by the Israeli army a few weeks earlier.
Plastic chairs are organised in a big circle, a man is reading
speeches over a microphone, coffee is served in plastic cups, the
walls are decorated with pictures of leaders and logos, and a
Kalashnikov rifle with a red piece of cloth wrapped around the top is
laid next to the jailed leader's picture like a bundle of flowers.
A banner hanging on the wall reads: " We will fight for Palestine
generation after generation."
Saleh is sitting with his friends under a poster of another dead
leader. He is 20 years old, but he looks 16. His hair is dyed orange-
blond on top. A small wooden map of Palestine hangs around his neck.
"This is from inside," he says, referring to the parts of Palestine
that became Israel in 1948 - a mythical place for those in exile so
long. "From Jaffa." He holds tightly to the little piece of wood as if
it is a piece of Christ's cross.
Like most of the young men here he is unemployed and had dropped out
from school when he was 12. He joined the Marxist Palestinian group
the PFLP; his father, uncle and mother were all communist.
"I wake up in the morning and then stand around with my friends," he
says, in the filthy PFLP office with its threadbare sofas. "It's so
boring here. Even the people I meet I have met every day of my life.
We have talked about everything."
"Do you go out of the camp?" I ask him.
"No."
"Why not? The sea is very beautiful near here."
"I don't like to feel like a fish out the water. I don't like going
out - every time we are stopped by that checkpoint the Lebanese
soldiers they look at you as if you are a piece of filth."
In theory Palestinians can leave the camp freely but in practice they
are subjected to draconian controls, especially after events in Nahr
al-Bared. At the hint of any problem involving Palestinians in
Lebanon, the army seals off the camp.
For the past six decades, Palestinians in Lebanon have been at the
very margins of society and have difficult relations with the Lebanese
people, accused by some as being the cause of the civil war and fought
against by every faction at one point or another. They are subjected
to discriminatory laws: their movements are constrained, they are
banned from owning or inheriting property and they are prevented from
working in 72 specified jobs. This means that most of the young
Palestinians here are unemployed, and those lucky enough to work can
only get jobs as barbers, taxi drivers and construction workers. They
live a besieged life.
The atmosphere of lawlessness inside the camp, meanwhile, makes it the
preferred refuge for jihadis and other militiamen, many of whom are
wanted by the Lebanese authorities, which have no power inside the
camp. (They signed security arrangements with the Palestinian factions
at the Cairo agreement in 1969.)
I walk to Saleh's house. The walls are bare concrete blocks, and his
mother, a former leftwing revolutionary, is sitting in the courtyard
peeling potatoes. A hijab is tightly wrapped round her head.
Saleh's room tells the story of all the revolutions and defeats in the
Middle East. It is tiny - three by two metres.
There is a small bronze bust of Lenin, a red flag, a picture of Che
Guevara and two portraits of Hassan Nasrallah, the head of the Shia
Islamic group Hizbullah.
It might be surprising that a secular leftist could be so enamoured of
a religious party such as Hizbullah, but this is common throughout
Lebanon and the Middle East. "He is our hero now," he says, pointing
at the cleric with his black turban and bushy beard.
Saleh's journey is explained to me a few days later when I meet
another Palestinian in Beirut, a fighter in his 50s and a hard-core
Marxist, his face is lined with wrinkles. "I have never lost my
political compass," he says. "Wherever the Americans and the Israelis
are, I am on the other side. So if Hizbullah and the Iranians and the
Islamists are against the Americans now, so I am an Islamist."
Is this another reason why the Islamists are doing so well? I ask Abu
Obaida, another leader of jihadists Usbat al-Ansar. "All the other
movements have proved their failure," he says. "The secularists,
nationalists and the communists they have all failed, the hypocrisy of
their rhetoric has been exposed."
In the office of a secular faction, a senior official tried to explain
it better.
"We have young men who have nothing, no hope of a nation, no hope for
the right of refugees to return, nothing but the two streets of the
camp. With this situation I wouldn't be surprised if half the camp
becomes jihadis. Ain al-Hilweh, this is your perfect Failed State."
-
- Trustworthy Freedom Fighter
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University tenure denied...
Cant even get tenure in the land of the free and the home of the
brave.
If everyone is like Finklestein in the USA which they are even mild
criticisms of israel get you in this position.
What hope does Ahmejinhadad have with his views?
None whatsoever.
University denies tenure to outspoken Holocaust academic
· Political scientist loses bid after four to three vote
· Rancour lives on in Jewish and academic worlds
Read the letter to Mr Finkelstein here (pdf)
Ed Pilkington in New York
Tuesday June 12, 2007
The Guardian
One of the most rancorous disputes in American academia has ended with
a prominent political scientist with controversial views on Israel and
anti-semitism being denied tenure at one of the country's top 10
private universities.
Norman Finkelstein, author of The Holocaust Industry, now has less
than a year remaining on his contract with the political sciences
department of DePaul University in Chicago. He lost his bid for a
lifelong post after a four to three vote of the promotions and tenure
board.
Article continues
The decision came at the end of several months of wrangling, both
within the Catholic university and within the wider academic and
Jewish communities in the US. Mr Finkelstein has argued in his books
that claims of anti-semitism are used to dampen down criticism of
Israeli policy towards the Palestinians and that the Holocaust is
exploited by some Jewish institutions for their own gain.
His position as a Jewish intellectual critical of Israel and of some
elites within the Jewish community has prompted passionate debate on
both sides.
Intellectuals such as the prolific writer Noam Chomsky and the Oxford
historian Avi Shlaim have spoken out in Mr Finkelstein's favour, but
others have decried him in equal measure as giving succour to anti-
semitism. His most bitter opponent is Alan Dershowitz, a Harvard law
professor, who campaigned heavily to prevent tenure being granted.
Soon after Mr Finkelstein applied for it, Mr Dershowitz sent DePaul
faculty members a dossier of what he categorised as the "most
egregious academic sins, outright lies, misquotations, and
distortions" of the political scientist.
The dispute has roots that go deeper still, with Mr Finkelstein
devoting much of his most recent book, Beyond Chutzpah: On the Misuse
of Anti-Semitism and the Abuse of History to an attack on Mr
Dershowitz's own work, the Case for Israel. Mr Dershowitz threatened
to sue.
Mr Finkelstein, the son of Holocaust survivors, has responded to the
decision to, in effect, sack him from his job at DePaul by condemning
the vote as an act of political aggression. "I met the standards of
tenure DePaul required, but it wasn't enough to overcome the political
opposition to my speaking out on the Israel-Palestine conflict."
He told the Chicago Sun-Times: "They can deny me tenure, deny me the
right to teach. But they will never stop me from saying what I
believe."
On his website, he has posted letters of support from students and
alumni of DePaul. Mr Finkelstein's own department of political science
lobbied in favour of tenure, but he was opposed by the Dean of the
College of Liberal Arts and Sciences.
DePaul is the largest Catholic university in the US. It employs more
than 800 full-time faculty members.
The president of the university, the Rev Dennis Holtschneider, who
made the final decision, put out a statement explaining why he
endorsed the rejection of tenure - a decision that normally remains
private under academic protocol. He said: "Some will consider this
decision in the context of academic freedom. In fact, academic freedom
is alive and well at DePaul."
The president also made clear reference to the Finkelstein-Dershowitz
fisticuffs, saying there had been considerable outside debate. "This
attention was unwelcome and inappropriate and had no impact on either
the process or the outcome of this case."
Mr Chomsky said before the announcement that the dispute was
"outrageous. [Finkelstein] is an outstanding scholar. It's amazing
that he hasn't had full professorship a long time ago."
brave.
If everyone is like Finklestein in the USA which they are even mild
criticisms of israel get you in this position.
What hope does Ahmejinhadad have with his views?
None whatsoever.
University denies tenure to outspoken Holocaust academic
· Political scientist loses bid after four to three vote
· Rancour lives on in Jewish and academic worlds
Read the letter to Mr Finkelstein here (pdf)
Ed Pilkington in New York
Tuesday June 12, 2007
The Guardian
One of the most rancorous disputes in American academia has ended with
a prominent political scientist with controversial views on Israel and
anti-semitism being denied tenure at one of the country's top 10
private universities.
Norman Finkelstein, author of The Holocaust Industry, now has less
than a year remaining on his contract with the political sciences
department of DePaul University in Chicago. He lost his bid for a
lifelong post after a four to three vote of the promotions and tenure
board.
Article continues
The decision came at the end of several months of wrangling, both
within the Catholic university and within the wider academic and
Jewish communities in the US. Mr Finkelstein has argued in his books
that claims of anti-semitism are used to dampen down criticism of
Israeli policy towards the Palestinians and that the Holocaust is
exploited by some Jewish institutions for their own gain.
His position as a Jewish intellectual critical of Israel and of some
elites within the Jewish community has prompted passionate debate on
both sides.
Intellectuals such as the prolific writer Noam Chomsky and the Oxford
historian Avi Shlaim have spoken out in Mr Finkelstein's favour, but
others have decried him in equal measure as giving succour to anti-
semitism. His most bitter opponent is Alan Dershowitz, a Harvard law
professor, who campaigned heavily to prevent tenure being granted.
Soon after Mr Finkelstein applied for it, Mr Dershowitz sent DePaul
faculty members a dossier of what he categorised as the "most
egregious academic sins, outright lies, misquotations, and
distortions" of the political scientist.
The dispute has roots that go deeper still, with Mr Finkelstein
devoting much of his most recent book, Beyond Chutzpah: On the Misuse
of Anti-Semitism and the Abuse of History to an attack on Mr
Dershowitz's own work, the Case for Israel. Mr Dershowitz threatened
to sue.
Mr Finkelstein, the son of Holocaust survivors, has responded to the
decision to, in effect, sack him from his job at DePaul by condemning
the vote as an act of political aggression. "I met the standards of
tenure DePaul required, but it wasn't enough to overcome the political
opposition to my speaking out on the Israel-Palestine conflict."
He told the Chicago Sun-Times: "They can deny me tenure, deny me the
right to teach. But they will never stop me from saying what I
believe."
On his website, he has posted letters of support from students and
alumni of DePaul. Mr Finkelstein's own department of political science
lobbied in favour of tenure, but he was opposed by the Dean of the
College of Liberal Arts and Sciences.
DePaul is the largest Catholic university in the US. It employs more
than 800 full-time faculty members.
The president of the university, the Rev Dennis Holtschneider, who
made the final decision, put out a statement explaining why he
endorsed the rejection of tenure - a decision that normally remains
private under academic protocol. He said: "Some will consider this
decision in the context of academic freedom. In fact, academic freedom
is alive and well at DePaul."
The president also made clear reference to the Finkelstein-Dershowitz
fisticuffs, saying there had been considerable outside debate. "This
attention was unwelcome and inappropriate and had no impact on either
the process or the outcome of this case."
Mr Chomsky said before the announcement that the dispute was
"outrageous. [Finkelstein] is an outstanding scholar. It's amazing
that he hasn't had full professorship a long time ago."
-
- On Gardening Leave
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- TonyGosling
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'We Muslims are the new Jews' says MP
'We Muslims are the new Jews' says MP who has been victim of a hit-and-run and a firebomb attack
By Steve Doughty
Last updated at 12:22 AM on 04th July 2008
Muslim leader and Dewsbury MP Shahid Malik feels Muslims are an easy target for Islamophobia
Muslims have become the target of prejudice in the way Jews were once persecuted, a minister declared yesterday.
Shahid Malik, an international development minister, said he did not intend any comparison with the Nazi Holocaust.
But he added: 'In the way that it was and still is in some parts, almost legitimate to target Jews, many Muslims would say we feel the exact same way - that somehow there is a message out there that it is OK to target people as long as they are Muslims.'
The complaint by the Dewsbury MP will carry added weight because Mr Malik is regarded as one of the most measured of Muslim leaders, regularly attacking Islamist extremism and suggesting that those who want to live under sharia law could emigrate to do it.
But he added that many feel it legitimate to pick on Muslims 'and you don't have to worry about the facts... people will turn a blind eye.'
The Burnley-born MP, interviewed for Channel 4's Dispatches programme by Mail writer Peter Oborne, told how his car has been firebombed in a petrol station and he receives regular hate mail.
He said: 'I have been the victim of Islamophobia and hatred on many occasions. My family car from years ago was firebombed. Somebody did a hit-and-run while I was walking in a petrol station some years ago.
'They saw me, they went for me, they caught my leg. I, fortunately, was not seriously injured but the CCTV wasn't working and so we were not able to apprehend individuals.'
Exaggerated stories about high-handed behaviour by Muslims are having a damaging effect and hampering the fight against extremism, added 40-year-old Mr Malik.
He cited a newspaper account which said a hospital had been told to turn beds with Muslim patients towards Mecca five times a day and dying Muslims might be asked if they wished to face Mecca.
'That makes Muslims feel like aliens in their own country and, at a time when we want to engage with Muslims, actually the opposite happens,' he added.........
http://www.mailonsunday.co.uk/news/arti ... l?ITO=1490
By Steve Doughty
Last updated at 12:22 AM on 04th July 2008
Muslim leader and Dewsbury MP Shahid Malik feels Muslims are an easy target for Islamophobia
Muslims have become the target of prejudice in the way Jews were once persecuted, a minister declared yesterday.
Shahid Malik, an international development minister, said he did not intend any comparison with the Nazi Holocaust.
But he added: 'In the way that it was and still is in some parts, almost legitimate to target Jews, many Muslims would say we feel the exact same way - that somehow there is a message out there that it is OK to target people as long as they are Muslims.'
The complaint by the Dewsbury MP will carry added weight because Mr Malik is regarded as one of the most measured of Muslim leaders, regularly attacking Islamist extremism and suggesting that those who want to live under sharia law could emigrate to do it.
But he added that many feel it legitimate to pick on Muslims 'and you don't have to worry about the facts... people will turn a blind eye.'
The Burnley-born MP, interviewed for Channel 4's Dispatches programme by Mail writer Peter Oborne, told how his car has been firebombed in a petrol station and he receives regular hate mail.
He said: 'I have been the victim of Islamophobia and hatred on many occasions. My family car from years ago was firebombed. Somebody did a hit-and-run while I was walking in a petrol station some years ago.
'They saw me, they went for me, they caught my leg. I, fortunately, was not seriously injured but the CCTV wasn't working and so we were not able to apprehend individuals.'
Exaggerated stories about high-handed behaviour by Muslims are having a damaging effect and hampering the fight against extremism, added 40-year-old Mr Malik.
He cited a newspaper account which said a hospital had been told to turn beds with Muslim patients towards Mecca five times a day and dying Muslims might be asked if they wished to face Mecca.
'That makes Muslims feel like aliens in their own country and, at a time when we want to engage with Muslims, actually the opposite happens,' he added.........
http://www.mailonsunday.co.uk/news/arti ... l?ITO=1490
Last edited by TonyGosling on Sun Jul 06, 2008 9:51 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Messianic Jews say they are persecuted in Israel.....
Maybe Messianic Jews are the "new Jews" too.
http://whtt.org/index.php?news=2&id=2390
The "Christian holy books" means Bibles I suspect.TEL AVIV, Israel -- Safety pins and screws are still lodged in 15-year-old Ami Ortiz's body three months after he opened a booby-trapped gift basket sent to his family. The explosion severed two toes, damaged his hearing and harmed a promising basketball career.
Police say they are still searching for the assailants. But to the Ortiz family the motive of the attackers is clear: The Ortizes are Jews who believe that Jesus was the Messiah.
Israel's tiny community of Messianic Jews, a mixed group of 10,000 people who include the California-based Jews for Jesus, complains of threats, harassment and police indifference.
The March 20 bombing was the worst incident so far. In October, a mysterious fire damaged a Jerusalem church used by Messianic Jews, and last month ultra-Orthodox Jews torched a stack of Christian holy books distributed by missionaries.
Maybe Messianic Jews are the "new Jews" too.
http://whtt.org/index.php?news=2&id=2390
- TonyGosling
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This is a sea change - make no mistake that the UK is getting the measure of the NWO. Possibly hence this weird stuff at the JIC
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Channel 4 Interview with Dr Abdul Wahid & Shahid Malik
[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ggz4jvUsvN8[/youtube]
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ggz4jvUsvN8
[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ggz4jvUsvN8[/youtube]
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ggz4jvUsvN8
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This tide of anti-Muslim hatred is a threat to us allThe attempt to drive Islamists and young Asian activists out of the political mainstream is a dangerous folly
http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree ... eat-to-all
Seumas Milne - The Guardian, Thursday 25 February 2010
If young British Muslims had any doubts that they are singled out for special treatment in the land of their birth, the punishments being meted out to those who took part in last year's London demonstrations against Israel's war on Gaza will have dispelled them. The protests near the Israeli embassy at the height of the onslaught were angry: bottles and stones were thrown, a Starbucks was trashed and the police employed unusually violent tactics, even by the standards of other recent confrontations, such as the G20 protests.
But a year later, it turns out that it's the sentences that are truly exceptional. Of 119 people arrested, 78 have been charged, all but two of them young Muslims (most between the ages of 16 and 19), according to Manchester University's Joanna Gilmore, even though such figures in no way reflect the mix of those who took part. In the past few weeks, 15 have been convicted, mostly of violent disorder, and jailed for between eight months and two-and-a-half years – having switched to guilty pleas to avoid heavier terms. Another nine are up to be sentenced tomorrow.
The severity of the charges and sentencing goes far beyond the official response to any other recent anti-war demonstration, or even the violent stop the City protests a decade ago. So do the arrests, many of them carried out months after the event in dawn raids by dozens of police officers, who smashed down doors and handcuffed family members as if they were suspected terrorists. Naturally, none of the more than 30 complaints about police violence were upheld, even where video evidence was available.
Nothing quite like this has happened, in fact, since 2001, when young Asian Muslims rioted against extreme rightwing racist groups in Bradford and other northern English towns and were subjected to heavily disproportionate prison terms. In the Gaza protest cases, the judge has explicitly relied on the Bradford precedent and repeatedly stated that the sentences he is handing down are intended as a deterrent.
For many in the Muslim community, the point will be clear: not only that these are political sentences, but that different rules apply to Muslims, who take part in democratic protest at their peril. It's a dangerous message, especially given the threat from a tiny minority that is drawn towards indiscriminate violence in response to Britain's wars in Afghanistan and Iraq and rejects any truck with mainstream politics..........
http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree ... eat-to-all
Seumas Milne - The Guardian, Thursday 25 February 2010
If young British Muslims had any doubts that they are singled out for special treatment in the land of their birth, the punishments being meted out to those who took part in last year's London demonstrations against Israel's war on Gaza will have dispelled them. The protests near the Israeli embassy at the height of the onslaught were angry: bottles and stones were thrown, a Starbucks was trashed and the police employed unusually violent tactics, even by the standards of other recent confrontations, such as the G20 protests.
But a year later, it turns out that it's the sentences that are truly exceptional. Of 119 people arrested, 78 have been charged, all but two of them young Muslims (most between the ages of 16 and 19), according to Manchester University's Joanna Gilmore, even though such figures in no way reflect the mix of those who took part. In the past few weeks, 15 have been convicted, mostly of violent disorder, and jailed for between eight months and two-and-a-half years – having switched to guilty pleas to avoid heavier terms. Another nine are up to be sentenced tomorrow.
The severity of the charges and sentencing goes far beyond the official response to any other recent anti-war demonstration, or even the violent stop the City protests a decade ago. So do the arrests, many of them carried out months after the event in dawn raids by dozens of police officers, who smashed down doors and handcuffed family members as if they were suspected terrorists. Naturally, none of the more than 30 complaints about police violence were upheld, even where video evidence was available.
Nothing quite like this has happened, in fact, since 2001, when young Asian Muslims rioted against extreme rightwing racist groups in Bradford and other northern English towns and were subjected to heavily disproportionate prison terms. In the Gaza protest cases, the judge has explicitly relied on the Bradford precedent and repeatedly stated that the sentences he is handing down are intended as a deterrent.
For many in the Muslim community, the point will be clear: not only that these are political sentences, but that different rules apply to Muslims, who take part in democratic protest at their peril. It's a dangerous message, especially given the threat from a tiny minority that is drawn towards indiscriminate violence in response to Britain's wars in Afghanistan and Iraq and rejects any truck with mainstream politics..........
www.lawyerscommitteefor9-11inquiry.org
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www.mp911truth.org
www.ae911truth.org
www.rl911truth.org
www.stj911.org
www.v911t.org
www.thisweek.org.uk
www.abolishwar.org.uk
www.elementary.org.uk
www.radio4all.net/index.php/contributor/2149
http://utangente.free.fr/2003/media2003.pdf
"The maintenance of secrets acts like a psychic poison which alienates the possessor from the community" Carl Jung
https://37.220.108.147/members/www.bild ... rg/phpBB2/
www.rethink911.org
www.patriotsquestion911.com
www.actorsandartistsfor911truth.org
www.mediafor911truth.org
www.pilotsfor911truth.org
www.mp911truth.org
www.ae911truth.org
www.rl911truth.org
www.stj911.org
www.v911t.org
www.thisweek.org.uk
www.abolishwar.org.uk
www.elementary.org.uk
www.radio4all.net/index.php/contributor/2149
http://utangente.free.fr/2003/media2003.pdf
"The maintenance of secrets acts like a psychic poison which alienates the possessor from the community" Carl Jung
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- TonyGosling
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Imagine if there had been 'terror raids' on Jewish homes near the Olympics site and those people had been fitted up. I think you know where I'm coming from.
If you haven't read this already please do - links freemasonry, Theosophy & Nazis to help understand much better the forces behind todays Gestapo tactics in London.
Unholy Alliance: A History of Nazi Involvement with the Occult
http://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/0826414095/
"With humor, courage, an eye for irony and through humble scholarship, Levenda draws the relationship between Nazis, the Vatican, the CIA, anti-Communist organizations...a whole slough of occult societies and our own local yokels. Beginning like a good exciting spy novel in the clutches of a dangerous Nazi hideaway in Chile called Colonia Dignidad, Levenda...weaves this dangerous locale into his vast documentation and original research from many archives in a sophisticated and thrilling revelation of cults and their victims....Too complicated for Geraldo and too shocking for Oprah and too damaging to large corporate entities like ITT (which financed Allende s overthrow)....I recommend a serious reading of Peter Levenda s Unholy Alliance." Bob Rudner, Chicago Greens/Green Party USA
Product Description
This comprehensive popular history of the occult background and roots of the Nazi movement shows how the ideas of a vast international network of late 19th- and early 20th century occult groups influenced Nazi ideology, from Madame Blavatsky and Aleister Crowley to the Thule Gesellschaft, the Order of the Golden Dawn, the Order of the Eastern Temple, and the pseudoscientific expeditions to Iceland and Tibet of the Ancestral Heritage Research and Teaching Society. Nazi appropriation of the occult was a weird farrago of astrology, Freemasonry, racism rooted in occultism and popular European folklore (the Cathars, the Holy Grail, the Knights Templar, the Arthurian legends). It also traces the Nazi movements as they continued their activities after the war (the Nazi ratlines to South America, the Colony of Righteousness in Chile) or "morphed" into neo-Nazi, skinhead and satanic groups such as the Christian Identity and White Aryan Resistance movements.
If you haven't read this already please do - links freemasonry, Theosophy & Nazis to help understand much better the forces behind todays Gestapo tactics in London.
Unholy Alliance: A History of Nazi Involvement with the Occult
http://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/0826414095/
"With humor, courage, an eye for irony and through humble scholarship, Levenda draws the relationship between Nazis, the Vatican, the CIA, anti-Communist organizations...a whole slough of occult societies and our own local yokels. Beginning like a good exciting spy novel in the clutches of a dangerous Nazi hideaway in Chile called Colonia Dignidad, Levenda...weaves this dangerous locale into his vast documentation and original research from many archives in a sophisticated and thrilling revelation of cults and their victims....Too complicated for Geraldo and too shocking for Oprah and too damaging to large corporate entities like ITT (which financed Allende s overthrow)....I recommend a serious reading of Peter Levenda s Unholy Alliance." Bob Rudner, Chicago Greens/Green Party USA
Product Description
This comprehensive popular history of the occult background and roots of the Nazi movement shows how the ideas of a vast international network of late 19th- and early 20th century occult groups influenced Nazi ideology, from Madame Blavatsky and Aleister Crowley to the Thule Gesellschaft, the Order of the Golden Dawn, the Order of the Eastern Temple, and the pseudoscientific expeditions to Iceland and Tibet of the Ancestral Heritage Research and Teaching Society. Nazi appropriation of the occult was a weird farrago of astrology, Freemasonry, racism rooted in occultism and popular European folklore (the Cathars, the Holy Grail, the Knights Templar, the Arthurian legends). It also traces the Nazi movements as they continued their activities after the war (the Nazi ratlines to South America, the Colony of Righteousness in Chile) or "morphed" into neo-Nazi, skinhead and satanic groups such as the Christian Identity and White Aryan Resistance movements.
www.lawyerscommitteefor9-11inquiry.org
www.rethink911.org
www.patriotsquestion911.com
www.actorsandartistsfor911truth.org
www.mediafor911truth.org
www.pilotsfor911truth.org
www.mp911truth.org
www.ae911truth.org
www.rl911truth.org
www.stj911.org
www.v911t.org
www.thisweek.org.uk
www.abolishwar.org.uk
www.elementary.org.uk
www.radio4all.net/index.php/contributor/2149
http://utangente.free.fr/2003/media2003.pdf
"The maintenance of secrets acts like a psychic poison which alienates the possessor from the community" Carl Jung
https://37.220.108.147/members/www.bild ... rg/phpBB2/
www.rethink911.org
www.patriotsquestion911.com
www.actorsandartistsfor911truth.org
www.mediafor911truth.org
www.pilotsfor911truth.org
www.mp911truth.org
www.ae911truth.org
www.rl911truth.org
www.stj911.org
www.v911t.org
www.thisweek.org.uk
www.abolishwar.org.uk
www.elementary.org.uk
www.radio4all.net/index.php/contributor/2149
http://utangente.free.fr/2003/media2003.pdf
"The maintenance of secrets acts like a psychic poison which alienates the possessor from the community" Carl Jung
https://37.220.108.147/members/www.bild ... rg/phpBB2/
- Whitehall_Bin_Men
- Trustworthy Freedom Fighter
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We picked up on this theme last night as Gerald Celente reflected on the question of how a great country like Germany was brought to its knees by 'a two bit freak' called Adolf Hitler
http://bcfm.org.uk/2012/08/31/17/friday ... e-86/21045
The Tax Justice Network Roadshow comes to Bristol. British forces already for action in Syria? US Soldiers form anarchist Maryland Militia with $90k worth of assault rifles. Richard Cottrell on his new book 'Gladio, NATO's Dagger at the Heart of Europe, The Pentagon-Nazi-Mafia Terror Axis'. Journalism is dead as the mainstream press parrot the government line without criticism. Old Labour Oxford Economist Martin Summers returns after his August break.
http://bcfm.org.uk/2012/08/31/17/friday ... e-86/21045
The Tax Justice Network Roadshow comes to Bristol. British forces already for action in Syria? US Soldiers form anarchist Maryland Militia with $90k worth of assault rifles. Richard Cottrell on his new book 'Gladio, NATO's Dagger at the Heart of Europe, The Pentagon-Nazi-Mafia Terror Axis'. Journalism is dead as the mainstream press parrot the government line without criticism. Old Labour Oxford Economist Martin Summers returns after his August break.
--
'Suppression of truth, human spirit and the holy chord of justice never works long-term. Something the suppressors never get.' David Southwell
http://aangirfan.blogspot.com
http://aanirfan.blogspot.com
Martin Van Creveld: Let me quote General Moshe Dayan: "Israel must be like a mad dog, too dangerous to bother."
Martin Van Creveld: I'll quote Henry Kissinger: "In campaigns like this the antiterror forces lose, because they don't win, and the rebels win by not losing."
'Suppression of truth, human spirit and the holy chord of justice never works long-term. Something the suppressors never get.' David Southwell
http://aangirfan.blogspot.com
http://aanirfan.blogspot.com
Martin Van Creveld: Let me quote General Moshe Dayan: "Israel must be like a mad dog, too dangerous to bother."
Martin Van Creveld: I'll quote Henry Kissinger: "In campaigns like this the antiterror forces lose, because they don't win, and the rebels win by not losing."
- TonyGosling
- Editor
- Posts: 18479
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Focus on Islamist terror plots overlooks threat from far right – report
Most extensive survey yet of ‘lone actors’ in Europe warns that rightwing extremists are more lethal and much harder to detect
http://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2016 ... ?CMP=fb_gu
Anders Breivik, who carried out the single most deadly attack analysed by the survey – in all 77 people were killed and 242 injured.
Ben Quinn and Shiv Malik
Monday 29 February 2016 00.01 GMT
The threat from far-right terrorists is being neglected by governments and law enforcement, according to the most extensive survey yet of “lone actors” in Europe.
While Islamist plotters are given full attention, the authors of the 98-page report warn that in comparison, individuals and small groups of rightwing extremists in the mould of Norway’s Anders Breivik are in fact more lethal, almost as numerous, and much harder to detect by security services.
Britain leads any other European country for the sheer number of attacks or plots over the past 15 years that have been planned by individuals or self-starting cells, according to the analysis conducted jointly by four research institutes.
It also finds that almost half of rightwing attacks in Britain over recent years were partly motivated by the murder of Lee Rigby – a wave of violence that ranges from arson attacks through to bombings of Islamic centres.
Analysing 31 European countries, researchers found there had been 124 individuals involved in 98 attacks or plots over a 15-year period.
After the UK’s 38 planned attacks, France came second with 11. Germany and Sweden both had five. The report’s authors concluded that while such attacks have been rare in Europe – 10 countries had no documented attacks in 15 years – there has been an increase in the frequency of attacks after 2011.
High profile perpetrators in the UK include Lee Rigby’s killers: Michael Adebolajo and Michael Adebowale. Others include Pavlo Lapshyn, a white supremacist terrorist who stabbed a Muslim grandfather to death and bombed mosques in an effort to trigger a racial war.
Lapshyn’s bombing campaign started after the murder of Rigby, with his final explosive detonating weeks later on the day of the soldier’s funeral – although police have said they do not believe he was motivated by the murder in London.
The joint report by experts from Royal United Services Institute, Chatham House, the Institute for Strategic Dialogue and the University of Leiden in the Netherlands deemed such attacks “lone” even if they involved up to three people, as long as the individual or group was acting without either an order to act from outside or “direct support in the planning, preparation and execution of the attack”.
Out of the 124 perpetrators in the database, 38% were religiously inspired and 33% were branded right-wing extremists. The authors of the report said they were surprised by the finding, given the focus on Islamic extremism.
“Given the intense public focus on religiously inspired terrorism, the finding that rightwing extremists account for a similar proportion of perpetrators within the database is particularly significant.”
Melanie Smith, one of the co-authors of the report, said that the researchers were surprised at the high proportion of far-right, lone-actor terrorists recorded across Europe. This perception might also explain the allocation of resources by authorities.
“When we looked into where resources were going, it became clear that actually the vast majority were going to looking for religiously inspired terrorists … which kind of made sense to us because that’s what we were expecting too, but that’s not the case,” she added.
By European standards, she said the relatively high number of far-right attacks in the UK could be due to the ease of collecting data, but also due to inspiration by some organisations.
Analysts also identified distinctive differences in the profile of far-right perpetrators and their religiously motivated counterparts, who include self-styled jihadis.
Rightwing perpetrators – those who were motivated by an “emphasis on immigration policy, a wish to inspire patriotism and to defend their country from what they term ‘Islamisation’” – tended to be older: the majority of them were about 40 years old. They were also more likely to be socially isolated.
Plotters and attackers from the religiously-inspired cohort were far younger – most often less than twenty-five years old – as well as being less socially isolated. They tended to have the lowest indication of mental health issues.
From the 72 successfully launched attacks within the database, religiously inspired attacks caused only 8% of deaths. By contrast, rightwing terror attacks accounted for fewer executed attacks in total but just under half of deaths.
“The most frequent targets were civilians, in particular ethnic and religious minorities, asylum seekers and immigrants. A large majority of religious targets were Muslim,” the report found.
The single most deadly attack in the set was carried out by rightwing anti-Islamist fanatic Anders Breivik. On 22 July 2011, Breivik detonated explosive devices targeting government buildings in Oslo’s city centre, then made his way to a summer camp on the island of Utøya, where leftwing youth were having their annual retreat. Dressed as a policeman, Breivik then set about gunning down as many teenagers as possible. In all 77 people were killed and 242 injured.
Yet despite the horror of that day researchers found that just over three-quarters of attacks failed to cause any fatalities, and 58% caused no injuries.
“While lone-actor terrorist attacks can be devastating, a high proportion of plots fail to materialise in this manner,” the authors said.
The challenge to the security services in Britain and elsewhere was also underlined by a lack of discerning or “typical” traits of lone-actor terrorists, who often evaded the “tripwires” of intelligence services and police monitoring of established terror networks. The one outstanding common feature was that 96% of the perpetrators were male.
The challenges of identifying them were apparently deepened by the fact that two-thirds of lone actors had never been active within an extremist group. At the same time, the researchers stated that far-right groups such as Pegida, which has recently launched a British wing, might provide “moral oxygen” for some violent plotters.
Adding that their research suggested a need for increased coordination among EU member states, in particular when it comes to far-right movements operating across national boundaries, the report highlighted that no far-right organisations were currently listed as terror groups.
Information sharing between states must be improved to avoid the “internationalising” of certain movements who are able to move from one state where they are banned to another where they are not.
“A concrete example of existing imbalance is the group Combat 18 and its associated Blood and Honour organisation, to which numerous lone actors across different countries in the dataset have exhibited a link,” it states, citing a movement which originated in the UK.
In terms of how plotters were detected, it found that of the religiously-inspired perpetrators that exhibited “leakage” of their intentions, 45% “leaked” to friends or family, in contrast with only 18% of leakage by rightwing perpetrators. Rightwing lone-actor terrorists were more likely to post telling indicators online, where 41% of their leakage occurred.
A key recommendation was aimed at social media companies such as Facebook and Twitter, who currently offer users the opportunity to report content posted by individuals or a page on their site.
Calling for mechanisms to be developed to give users the option of lodging reports that would identify potential lone actors, it added: “This option could perhaps read: ‘[this post] suggests this person is going to commit a violent attack.’”
Most extensive survey yet of ‘lone actors’ in Europe warns that rightwing extremists are more lethal and much harder to detect
http://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2016 ... ?CMP=fb_gu
Anders Breivik, who carried out the single most deadly attack analysed by the survey – in all 77 people were killed and 242 injured.
Ben Quinn and Shiv Malik
Monday 29 February 2016 00.01 GMT
The threat from far-right terrorists is being neglected by governments and law enforcement, according to the most extensive survey yet of “lone actors” in Europe.
While Islamist plotters are given full attention, the authors of the 98-page report warn that in comparison, individuals and small groups of rightwing extremists in the mould of Norway’s Anders Breivik are in fact more lethal, almost as numerous, and much harder to detect by security services.
Britain leads any other European country for the sheer number of attacks or plots over the past 15 years that have been planned by individuals or self-starting cells, according to the analysis conducted jointly by four research institutes.
It also finds that almost half of rightwing attacks in Britain over recent years were partly motivated by the murder of Lee Rigby – a wave of violence that ranges from arson attacks through to bombings of Islamic centres.
Analysing 31 European countries, researchers found there had been 124 individuals involved in 98 attacks or plots over a 15-year period.
After the UK’s 38 planned attacks, France came second with 11. Germany and Sweden both had five. The report’s authors concluded that while such attacks have been rare in Europe – 10 countries had no documented attacks in 15 years – there has been an increase in the frequency of attacks after 2011.
High profile perpetrators in the UK include Lee Rigby’s killers: Michael Adebolajo and Michael Adebowale. Others include Pavlo Lapshyn, a white supremacist terrorist who stabbed a Muslim grandfather to death and bombed mosques in an effort to trigger a racial war.
Lapshyn’s bombing campaign started after the murder of Rigby, with his final explosive detonating weeks later on the day of the soldier’s funeral – although police have said they do not believe he was motivated by the murder in London.
The joint report by experts from Royal United Services Institute, Chatham House, the Institute for Strategic Dialogue and the University of Leiden in the Netherlands deemed such attacks “lone” even if they involved up to three people, as long as the individual or group was acting without either an order to act from outside or “direct support in the planning, preparation and execution of the attack”.
Out of the 124 perpetrators in the database, 38% were religiously inspired and 33% were branded right-wing extremists. The authors of the report said they were surprised by the finding, given the focus on Islamic extremism.
“Given the intense public focus on religiously inspired terrorism, the finding that rightwing extremists account for a similar proportion of perpetrators within the database is particularly significant.”
Melanie Smith, one of the co-authors of the report, said that the researchers were surprised at the high proportion of far-right, lone-actor terrorists recorded across Europe. This perception might also explain the allocation of resources by authorities.
“When we looked into where resources were going, it became clear that actually the vast majority were going to looking for religiously inspired terrorists … which kind of made sense to us because that’s what we were expecting too, but that’s not the case,” she added.
By European standards, she said the relatively high number of far-right attacks in the UK could be due to the ease of collecting data, but also due to inspiration by some organisations.
Analysts also identified distinctive differences in the profile of far-right perpetrators and their religiously motivated counterparts, who include self-styled jihadis.
Rightwing perpetrators – those who were motivated by an “emphasis on immigration policy, a wish to inspire patriotism and to defend their country from what they term ‘Islamisation’” – tended to be older: the majority of them were about 40 years old. They were also more likely to be socially isolated.
Plotters and attackers from the religiously-inspired cohort were far younger – most often less than twenty-five years old – as well as being less socially isolated. They tended to have the lowest indication of mental health issues.
From the 72 successfully launched attacks within the database, religiously inspired attacks caused only 8% of deaths. By contrast, rightwing terror attacks accounted for fewer executed attacks in total but just under half of deaths.
“The most frequent targets were civilians, in particular ethnic and religious minorities, asylum seekers and immigrants. A large majority of religious targets were Muslim,” the report found.
The single most deadly attack in the set was carried out by rightwing anti-Islamist fanatic Anders Breivik. On 22 July 2011, Breivik detonated explosive devices targeting government buildings in Oslo’s city centre, then made his way to a summer camp on the island of Utøya, where leftwing youth were having their annual retreat. Dressed as a policeman, Breivik then set about gunning down as many teenagers as possible. In all 77 people were killed and 242 injured.
Yet despite the horror of that day researchers found that just over three-quarters of attacks failed to cause any fatalities, and 58% caused no injuries.
“While lone-actor terrorist attacks can be devastating, a high proportion of plots fail to materialise in this manner,” the authors said.
The challenge to the security services in Britain and elsewhere was also underlined by a lack of discerning or “typical” traits of lone-actor terrorists, who often evaded the “tripwires” of intelligence services and police monitoring of established terror networks. The one outstanding common feature was that 96% of the perpetrators were male.
The challenges of identifying them were apparently deepened by the fact that two-thirds of lone actors had never been active within an extremist group. At the same time, the researchers stated that far-right groups such as Pegida, which has recently launched a British wing, might provide “moral oxygen” for some violent plotters.
Adding that their research suggested a need for increased coordination among EU member states, in particular when it comes to far-right movements operating across national boundaries, the report highlighted that no far-right organisations were currently listed as terror groups.
Information sharing between states must be improved to avoid the “internationalising” of certain movements who are able to move from one state where they are banned to another where they are not.
“A concrete example of existing imbalance is the group Combat 18 and its associated Blood and Honour organisation, to which numerous lone actors across different countries in the dataset have exhibited a link,” it states, citing a movement which originated in the UK.
In terms of how plotters were detected, it found that of the religiously-inspired perpetrators that exhibited “leakage” of their intentions, 45% “leaked” to friends or family, in contrast with only 18% of leakage by rightwing perpetrators. Rightwing lone-actor terrorists were more likely to post telling indicators online, where 41% of their leakage occurred.
A key recommendation was aimed at social media companies such as Facebook and Twitter, who currently offer users the opportunity to report content posted by individuals or a page on their site.
Calling for mechanisms to be developed to give users the option of lodging reports that would identify potential lone actors, it added: “This option could perhaps read: ‘[this post] suggests this person is going to commit a violent attack.’”
www.lawyerscommitteefor9-11inquiry.org
www.rethink911.org
www.patriotsquestion911.com
www.actorsandartistsfor911truth.org
www.mediafor911truth.org
www.pilotsfor911truth.org
www.mp911truth.org
www.ae911truth.org
www.rl911truth.org
www.stj911.org
www.v911t.org
www.thisweek.org.uk
www.abolishwar.org.uk
www.elementary.org.uk
www.radio4all.net/index.php/contributor/2149
http://utangente.free.fr/2003/media2003.pdf
"The maintenance of secrets acts like a psychic poison which alienates the possessor from the community" Carl Jung
https://37.220.108.147/members/www.bild ... rg/phpBB2/
www.rethink911.org
www.patriotsquestion911.com
www.actorsandartistsfor911truth.org
www.mediafor911truth.org
www.pilotsfor911truth.org
www.mp911truth.org
www.ae911truth.org
www.rl911truth.org
www.stj911.org
www.v911t.org
www.thisweek.org.uk
www.abolishwar.org.uk
www.elementary.org.uk
www.radio4all.net/index.php/contributor/2149
http://utangente.free.fr/2003/media2003.pdf
"The maintenance of secrets acts like a psychic poison which alienates the possessor from the community" Carl Jung
https://37.220.108.147/members/www.bild ... rg/phpBB2/
-
- Trustworthy Freedom Fighter
- Posts: 8
- Joined: Fri Sep 07, 2012 1:42 am
- Location: Sheffield
Last October this same Royal United Services Institute (RUSI) invited Andriy Parubiy, co-founder of the Social-National Party of Ukraine, to appear as a guest speaker in London.
More about Paribuy's visit along with analysis of RUSI can be found here:
https://wallofcontroversy.wordpress.com ... surprised/
More about Paribuy's visit along with analysis of RUSI can be found here:
https://wallofcontroversy.wordpress.com ... surprised/
- Whitehall_Bin_Men
- Trustworthy Freedom Fighter
- Posts: 3234
- Joined: Sat Jan 13, 2007 6:03 pm
- Location: Westminster, LONDON, SW1A 2HB.
- Contact:
Macron Demands State Control Over Mosques' Financing Amid Fight Against Islamism
18:29 12.04.2018
https://sputniknews.com/europe/20180412 ... -islamism/
PARIS (Sputnik) - French President Emmanuel Macron said Thursday that the government would take all necessary measures to fight radical Islamism, of which include imposing control over the foreign financing of mosques.
"I met the Saudi Crown Prince [Mohammed bin Salman], and we addressed this issue. I want it so that foreign financing [of mosques] is organized under the control of the state and is transparent. I don’t want any mosques to open with backdoor financing," Macron told TF1 broadcaster.
The French president vowed to take all the necessary steps to fight Islamic fundamentalism.
"We will take all the necessary measures to fight radical Islamism … Firstly, we gave ourselves the means to close the [salafist] mosques, and we will continue doing this. Secondly, we will pursue the deportation [policy]. Thirdly, we have to clarify the rules for [mosque] financing and operation," Macron said.
On Tuesday, Macron held talks with Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman during the latter’s visit to France. The two leaders discussed the ongoing crises in the Middle East and fight against terrorism.
France Subjected to Massive Islamization by Muslim Brotherhood – Activist
In October, Macron signed new counterterrorism legislation to replace the already two-year state of emergency that was initially introduced in the aftermath of the 2015 terror attacks in Paris.
In February, French Interior Minister Gerard Collomb said that three mosques were closed in the French cities of Aix-en-Provence, Sartrouville and Marseille due to their "apologetic attitude toward terrorism."
18:29 12.04.2018
https://sputniknews.com/europe/20180412 ... -islamism/
PARIS (Sputnik) - French President Emmanuel Macron said Thursday that the government would take all necessary measures to fight radical Islamism, of which include imposing control over the foreign financing of mosques.
"I met the Saudi Crown Prince [Mohammed bin Salman], and we addressed this issue. I want it so that foreign financing [of mosques] is organized under the control of the state and is transparent. I don’t want any mosques to open with backdoor financing," Macron told TF1 broadcaster.
The French president vowed to take all the necessary steps to fight Islamic fundamentalism.
"We will take all the necessary measures to fight radical Islamism … Firstly, we gave ourselves the means to close the [salafist] mosques, and we will continue doing this. Secondly, we will pursue the deportation [policy]. Thirdly, we have to clarify the rules for [mosque] financing and operation," Macron said.
On Tuesday, Macron held talks with Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman during the latter’s visit to France. The two leaders discussed the ongoing crises in the Middle East and fight against terrorism.
France Subjected to Massive Islamization by Muslim Brotherhood – Activist
In October, Macron signed new counterterrorism legislation to replace the already two-year state of emergency that was initially introduced in the aftermath of the 2015 terror attacks in Paris.
In February, French Interior Minister Gerard Collomb said that three mosques were closed in the French cities of Aix-en-Provence, Sartrouville and Marseille due to their "apologetic attitude toward terrorism."
--
'Suppression of truth, human spirit and the holy chord of justice never works long-term. Something the suppressors never get.' David Southwell
http://aangirfan.blogspot.com
http://aanirfan.blogspot.com
Martin Van Creveld: Let me quote General Moshe Dayan: "Israel must be like a mad dog, too dangerous to bother."
Martin Van Creveld: I'll quote Henry Kissinger: "In campaigns like this the antiterror forces lose, because they don't win, and the rebels win by not losing."
'Suppression of truth, human spirit and the holy chord of justice never works long-term. Something the suppressors never get.' David Southwell
http://aangirfan.blogspot.com
http://aanirfan.blogspot.com
Martin Van Creveld: Let me quote General Moshe Dayan: "Israel must be like a mad dog, too dangerous to bother."
Martin Van Creveld: I'll quote Henry Kissinger: "In campaigns like this the antiterror forces lose, because they don't win, and the rebels win by not losing."
- Whitehall_Bin_Men
- Trustworthy Freedom Fighter
- Posts: 3234
- Joined: Sat Jan 13, 2007 6:03 pm
- Location: Westminster, LONDON, SW1A 2HB.
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Who Will Stand Up For The Persecuted - Muslims Are Being Oppressed in paper headline: By Powerful States Across The World
https://inews.co.uk/opinion/muslims-are ... nd-1351236
Muslims are under siege in China and India - it is time for the UK to make a stand against Islamophobia
Islam is coming under siege in attacks led by the world's two most populous nations and inflamed by the leader of America
By Ian Birrell
Sunday, 29th December 2019, 6:58 pm
A Uighur family pray at the grave of a loved one on the morning of the Corban Festival on September 12, 2016 (Photo by Kevin Frayer/Getty Images)
A Uighur family pray at the grave of a loved one on the morning of the Corban Festival on September 12, 2016 (Photo by Kevin Frayer/Getty Images)
Boris Johnson focused on persecution in his first Christmas message as prime minister, pointing out that for many people around the world celebrations had to be held in secret while Britons tucked in to their turkey.
“We stand with Christians everywhere, in solidarity, and will defend your right to practise your faith,” he said.
Prince Charles put out a similar message, saying the Easter Sunday attacks in Sri Lanka were “the single worst day of violence targeting Christians in the modern era” before urging a strengthening of resolve “to prevent Christianity disappearing from the lands of the Bible”.
i's opinion newsletter:
talking points from today
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Sign up
These seasonal pleas for tolerance made sense given recent events that have scarred the world, especially in the Middle East.
Britain remains ostensibly a Christian country, after all, despite the rapid growth of atheism and arrival of other faiths, so it is natural for our leaders to speak out on such concerns, especially at this time of year.
Yet their words coincide with Islam, another of the world’s great religions, coming under siege in attacks led by the planet’s two most populous nations and inflamed by the leader of the world’s most powerful country. But where are the prominent voices speaking up for these victims of bigotry, hate and intolerance?
Chinese policemen push Uighur women who are protesting at a street on July 7, 2009 in Urumqi, the capital of Xinjiang. (Photo by Guang Niu/Getty Images)
Chinese policemen push Uighur women who are protesting at a street on July 7, 2009 in Urumqi, the capital of Xinjiang. (Photo by Guang Niu/Getty Images)
The full extent of China’s horrific repression of Muslims in the east of the country has become clear over the course of this year.
Now we know about its grim use of technology to control citizens in Xinjiang region, bringing George Orwell’s terrifying vision of totalitarianism into grotesque reality.
We have seen glimpses of the razed mosques and huge camps holding up to three million Uighurs, Kazakhs and other minorities as part of Beijing’s drive to crush traditional cultures. Leaked documents have even revealed how President Xi Jinping personally demanded a crackdown with “absolutely no mercy” after anti-government protests and terror attacks.
Last month I met Sayragul Sauytbay at her new home in Sweden. This Kazakh woman, who ran five schools before the clampdown, is one of the few people that has seen inside the indoctrination centres and escaped to tell her story. She told me about the slow strangling of her community as their land was stolen, languages silenced and passports seized.
Her native region was flooded with security forces, checkpoints and facial recognition cameras. Then came the round-ups and “re-education”. Inside the camp she claimed to have seen mass rape, routine use of torture, forced injection of drugs and Muslims made to eat pork.
Then there is India, where the Hindu nationalist government of Narendra Modi has cracked down harshly on its Muslim minority since winning a second term in office.
First he revoked the autonomy of the country’s only majority-Muslim state, placing Kashmir under siege by sending in huge numbers of troops, restricting movement, intimidating journalists and cutting off the internet.
Then his parliament passed a discriminatory citizenship law, sparking wider protests over attempts to shift this fine democracy away from its foundations of diversity and secularism. Detention camps are being built for those deemed stateless.
Meanwhile refugee camps in next-door Bangladesh are overflowing with Muslims driven from their homes in Myanmar by systematic ethnic cleansing.
Troops used murder, rape and burning of villages to force out about 750,000 Rohingya people in a campaign described by the United Nations as having “genocidal intent”.
Rohingya Muslim refugees who were stranded after leaving Myanmar walk towards the Balukhali refugee camp after crossing the border in Bangladesh's Ukhia district on November 2, 2017. (DIBYANGSHU SARKAR/AFP via Getty Images)
Even in the Middle East, where there is justified concern over the future existence of Christian communities in some parts, it is still Muslims who make up most of the victims of religious fanatics with their medieval intolerance.
In the West there is surging populism that feeds off bigotry inflamed by nationalists and restricts space for refugees, especially Muslims, who are fleeing savagery.
This is most obvious in Hungary, where Viktor Orban poses as a champion of traditional Christian identity to promote his brand of intolerance – and most depressing in the United States, under a president who was elected with a promise of “complete shutdown of Muslims entering the US”.
It can be detected in Britain too, where the former Tory chairwoman Sayeeda Warsi has rightly condemned the “dinner-table” acceptability of prejudice against Muslims.
Our new prime minister is a man who promoted Islamophobic tropes in his journalism.
It is bad enough there is at best muted condemnation of anti-Muslim abuse by the emerging powerhouses of China and India from Western leaders who should defend liberal values.
Instead they show higher regard for business deals than for human lives and their own supposed democratic ideals, falling again for a flawed belief that it is better to appease autocracy than to challenge aggression. It would be good to believe post-Brexit Britain might be inspired to assert progressive values on the global stage.
Far more likely we will see our weakened nation cowed by its desperate need for new trading alliances.
Most shocking, however, is the shameful failure of Muslim nations to defend fellow followers of their faith. Turkey stands almost alone in having spoken out on Beijing’s brutality towards Uighurs.
The ghastly feudal despots in the Gulf have backed China, while democratic leaders have either stayed silent or – in the cases of Indonesia and Pakistan – pathetically claimed when pressed to know little about the issue.
At least Rodrigo Duterte, the thuggish Philippine President, was honest when saying he could not fight China since “it would be a war which I can never win”.
As the next decade arrives, it is a time to think about the future.
So do we really want a world in which strong nations bully the weak, bystanders stand silent over abuse and followers of a great religion are tormented across the planet?
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https://inews.co.uk/opinion/muslims-are ... nd-1351236
Muslims are under siege in China and India - it is time for the UK to make a stand against Islamophobia
Islam is coming under siege in attacks led by the world's two most populous nations and inflamed by the leader of America
By Ian Birrell
Sunday, 29th December 2019, 6:58 pm
A Uighur family pray at the grave of a loved one on the morning of the Corban Festival on September 12, 2016 (Photo by Kevin Frayer/Getty Images)
A Uighur family pray at the grave of a loved one on the morning of the Corban Festival on September 12, 2016 (Photo by Kevin Frayer/Getty Images)
Boris Johnson focused on persecution in his first Christmas message as prime minister, pointing out that for many people around the world celebrations had to be held in secret while Britons tucked in to their turkey.
“We stand with Christians everywhere, in solidarity, and will defend your right to practise your faith,” he said.
Prince Charles put out a similar message, saying the Easter Sunday attacks in Sri Lanka were “the single worst day of violence targeting Christians in the modern era” before urging a strengthening of resolve “to prevent Christianity disappearing from the lands of the Bible”.
i's opinion newsletter:
talking points from today
Enter your email
Sign up
These seasonal pleas for tolerance made sense given recent events that have scarred the world, especially in the Middle East.
Britain remains ostensibly a Christian country, after all, despite the rapid growth of atheism and arrival of other faiths, so it is natural for our leaders to speak out on such concerns, especially at this time of year.
Yet their words coincide with Islam, another of the world’s great religions, coming under siege in attacks led by the planet’s two most populous nations and inflamed by the leader of the world’s most powerful country. But where are the prominent voices speaking up for these victims of bigotry, hate and intolerance?
Chinese policemen push Uighur women who are protesting at a street on July 7, 2009 in Urumqi, the capital of Xinjiang. (Photo by Guang Niu/Getty Images)
Chinese policemen push Uighur women who are protesting at a street on July 7, 2009 in Urumqi, the capital of Xinjiang. (Photo by Guang Niu/Getty Images)
The full extent of China’s horrific repression of Muslims in the east of the country has become clear over the course of this year.
Now we know about its grim use of technology to control citizens in Xinjiang region, bringing George Orwell’s terrifying vision of totalitarianism into grotesque reality.
We have seen glimpses of the razed mosques and huge camps holding up to three million Uighurs, Kazakhs and other minorities as part of Beijing’s drive to crush traditional cultures. Leaked documents have even revealed how President Xi Jinping personally demanded a crackdown with “absolutely no mercy” after anti-government protests and terror attacks.
Last month I met Sayragul Sauytbay at her new home in Sweden. This Kazakh woman, who ran five schools before the clampdown, is one of the few people that has seen inside the indoctrination centres and escaped to tell her story. She told me about the slow strangling of her community as their land was stolen, languages silenced and passports seized.
Her native region was flooded with security forces, checkpoints and facial recognition cameras. Then came the round-ups and “re-education”. Inside the camp she claimed to have seen mass rape, routine use of torture, forced injection of drugs and Muslims made to eat pork.
Then there is India, where the Hindu nationalist government of Narendra Modi has cracked down harshly on its Muslim minority since winning a second term in office.
First he revoked the autonomy of the country’s only majority-Muslim state, placing Kashmir under siege by sending in huge numbers of troops, restricting movement, intimidating journalists and cutting off the internet.
Then his parliament passed a discriminatory citizenship law, sparking wider protests over attempts to shift this fine democracy away from its foundations of diversity and secularism. Detention camps are being built for those deemed stateless.
Meanwhile refugee camps in next-door Bangladesh are overflowing with Muslims driven from their homes in Myanmar by systematic ethnic cleansing.
Troops used murder, rape and burning of villages to force out about 750,000 Rohingya people in a campaign described by the United Nations as having “genocidal intent”.
Rohingya Muslim refugees who were stranded after leaving Myanmar walk towards the Balukhali refugee camp after crossing the border in Bangladesh's Ukhia district on November 2, 2017. (DIBYANGSHU SARKAR/AFP via Getty Images)
Even in the Middle East, where there is justified concern over the future existence of Christian communities in some parts, it is still Muslims who make up most of the victims of religious fanatics with their medieval intolerance.
In the West there is surging populism that feeds off bigotry inflamed by nationalists and restricts space for refugees, especially Muslims, who are fleeing savagery.
This is most obvious in Hungary, where Viktor Orban poses as a champion of traditional Christian identity to promote his brand of intolerance – and most depressing in the United States, under a president who was elected with a promise of “complete shutdown of Muslims entering the US”.
It can be detected in Britain too, where the former Tory chairwoman Sayeeda Warsi has rightly condemned the “dinner-table” acceptability of prejudice against Muslims.
Our new prime minister is a man who promoted Islamophobic tropes in his journalism.
It is bad enough there is at best muted condemnation of anti-Muslim abuse by the emerging powerhouses of China and India from Western leaders who should defend liberal values.
Instead they show higher regard for business deals than for human lives and their own supposed democratic ideals, falling again for a flawed belief that it is better to appease autocracy than to challenge aggression. It would be good to believe post-Brexit Britain might be inspired to assert progressive values on the global stage.
Far more likely we will see our weakened nation cowed by its desperate need for new trading alliances.
Most shocking, however, is the shameful failure of Muslim nations to defend fellow followers of their faith. Turkey stands almost alone in having spoken out on Beijing’s brutality towards Uighurs.
The ghastly feudal despots in the Gulf have backed China, while democratic leaders have either stayed silent or – in the cases of Indonesia and Pakistan – pathetically claimed when pressed to know little about the issue.
At least Rodrigo Duterte, the thuggish Philippine President, was honest when saying he could not fight China since “it would be a war which I can never win”.
As the next decade arrives, it is a time to think about the future.
So do we really want a world in which strong nations bully the weak, bystanders stand silent over abuse and followers of a great religion are tormented across the planet?
Opinion-Society
Promoted Stories
Nigel Farage says Boris Johnson is taking UK 'to the right place' for Brexit
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Cancer Prevention Diet: 25 Foods to Prevent Cancer
OrganixMag.com
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When Andrew Neil called out Boris Johnson, he was making a big mistake
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Boris Johnson and Jeremy Corbyn and a tale of two contrasting Christmases
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--
'Suppression of truth, human spirit and the holy chord of justice never works long-term. Something the suppressors never get.' David Southwell
http://aangirfan.blogspot.com
http://aanirfan.blogspot.com
Martin Van Creveld: Let me quote General Moshe Dayan: "Israel must be like a mad dog, too dangerous to bother."
Martin Van Creveld: I'll quote Henry Kissinger: "In campaigns like this the antiterror forces lose, because they don't win, and the rebels win by not losing."
'Suppression of truth, human spirit and the holy chord of justice never works long-term. Something the suppressors never get.' David Southwell
http://aangirfan.blogspot.com
http://aanirfan.blogspot.com
Martin Van Creveld: Let me quote General Moshe Dayan: "Israel must be like a mad dog, too dangerous to bother."
Martin Van Creveld: I'll quote Henry Kissinger: "In campaigns like this the antiterror forces lose, because they don't win, and the rebels win by not losing."
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As France Shifts Right, a Hard-Line Minister Proves Indispensable to Macron
https://www.nytimes.com/2020/12/12/worl ... manin.html
Interior Minister Gérald Darmanin has become a useful tool for the French president as he responds to growing calls for law and order following a spate of terror attacks.
Interior Minister Gérald Darmanin last month on a French news broadcast. He was named to his post in July after the dismissal of Christophe Castaner.
Interior Minister Gérald Darmanin last month on a French news broadcast. He was named to his post in July after the dismissal of Christophe Castaner.Credit...Thomas Coex/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images
Adam Nossiter
By Adam Nossiter
Dec. 12, 2020
Lire en français
PARIS — He has declared war on the Islamist “enemy within” and halal food shelves in supermarkets. He launched what he described as a “massive” operation against 76 of France’s mosques, and sought to criminalize the filming of police officers. And he announced that he “can’t breathe” when he hears the term “police violence” — mocking a cry against police brutality that originated in the United States and resonated around the world.
Interior Minister Gérald Darmanin of France is at the center of a triple-headed political crisis that is rocking the late stages of the presidency of Emmanuel Macron — over Islam, police brutality and freedom of the press.
And there is no sign that Mr. Darmanin is buckling.
This week, the youthful, 38-year-old Mr. Darmanin appeared on the cover of the magazine Paris Match, a sure sign that he has transcended the Paris political bubble and entered into the public consciousness. “Baptism by Fire” is the headline in the widely read weekly magazine, which combines news with extensive coverage of celebrities, next to a posed picture of the minister looking thoughtful.
Vilified on the left and mistrusted by former colleagues on the right, Mr. Darmanin, who is the minister in charge of the French police, has become indispensable to Mr. Macron at a time when a majority of French are demanding law, order and toughness in the face of what the president calls “Islamism” after a spate of terrorist attacks.
“For Emmanuel Macron, he’s his guarantee to the right,” said Boris Vallaud, a prominent socialist in the French Parliament, referring to Mr. Darmanin. “There’s a demand for order right now. On the whole field of public liberties, of religion, he’s letting his minister push forward — until the day when he pulls in the leash.”
So far, the leash has not been seriously pulled.
In the pugnacious and ambitious Mr. Darmanin, Mr. Macron has found an ideal confluence of the man and the political moment, acting in response to France’s sharp shift to the right. Freelance jihadists have murdered French citizens; Mr. Darmanin is there to search and question Muslims suspected of extremism. The police are accused of brutality and racism in a series of violent incidents; Mr. Darmanin is there to defend them, and insist they only need better equipment and working conditions.
ImageRiot police last weekend at demonstrations in Paris against a proposed law that would limit how images of police officers are recorded and published.
Riot police last weekend at demonstrations in Paris against a proposed law that would limit how images of police officers are recorded and published.Credit...Veronique De Viguerie/Getty Images
“We owe them an apology for the way we put them out in the streets to do a job that’s very difficult,” Darmanin said at a parliamentary hearing last week. He decried the “unspeakable” video of the police beating of a Black music producer in Paris this month that went viral on social media and brought new calls to address racism and police brutality, but he also insisted it was merely the work of “individuals.”
The police mostly suffer from a lack of training, he said. Mr. Darmanin’s predecessor at the Interior Ministry, Christophe Castaner, was dismissed over the summer after hinting at that there is racism in the police, infuriating the unions. Mr. Darmanin runs no such risk. Now he must answer to union fury at Mr. Macron for daring to make similar suggestions in an interview with Brut, an online news site last week.
The minister’s parliamentary performance was soothing to the all-powerful police unions, reassuring to Mr. Macron’s crucial constituents on the right, and offered a nod to those disturbed by the violence. That can only aid the onward march of a political chameleon who many believe has the presidential Élysée Palace as his ultimate goal.
In some ways, Mr. Darmanin’s performance imitated Mr. Macron’s own varying colorations, always balancing between left and right.
So eager was Mr. Macron to retain Mr. Darmanin — he was previously the public accounts minister before his appointment to the interior post in July — that the president has brushed off a 2009 rape accusation against the minister that is still under investigation.
Mr. Macron told an interviewer this summer that “it was not up to him to judge” whether the reopening of the investigation was warranted. He added, about his exchanges with Mr. Darmanin, that “there is also a relation of confidence, man-to-man.”
Image
A protest against the appointment of Mr. Darmanin and the justice minister, Eric Dupond-Moretti, in July. Mr. Darmanin remains under investigation in a rape accusation.Credit...Francois Mori/Associated Press
Those words, and Mr. Darmanin’s appointment, infuriated French feminists, and there were several days of demonstrations that petered out amid general indifference. Court documents and testimony in the case suggest that Mr. Darmanin, before he became minister, used his position of authority to obtain sexual relations with a woman seeking his official help. Mr. Darmanin has acknowledged relations with the woman but said they were consensual.
The affair has been largely passed over — the minister’s lawyers recently obtained a postponement of an appearance before investigators. Mr. Darmanin has also moved on to a task his predecessor failed at, placating the police in the country with the highest security agent-to-citizen ratio in Europe. Mr. Macron would know well what he owes the French national police: ever-tougher police tactics put down the Yellow Vest popular uprising against his political reforms that threatened his presidency in 2018.
“Darmanin is someone who adapts very impressively to his circumstances,” said Pierre Mathiot, the director of the Political Studies Institute at Lille, where Mr. Darmanin was a student, and who has known him for several decades.
“So he’s understood that he’s got to be the minister of the police. And not of the people who have relations with them,” Mr. Mathiot said. “He’s using this crisis to get more for the police than Castaner got.” He added that Mr. Darmanin would use the proposed restrictions on citizens filming officers to get more funding for the police.
Critics have struggled to situate Mr. Darmanin politically, which speaks to his great usefulness for Mr. Macron, who has staked out a middle ground in French politics himself. Is he from the right? From the center? Even a little bit on the left, because of his modest family background?
“It’s hard to say whether he’s authoritarian or not,” Mr. Mathiot said. “I don’t think he’s that different from Macron.”
Mr. Darmanin is definitely not of the economic and educational elite who fill the ranks of the president’s aides. His father ran a bar in the industrial north and his mother was a cleaner at the French central bank. Mr. Darmanin’s Muslim grandfather fought for the French in the Algerian independence war, and his own middle name is Moussa.
Image
Mr. Darmanin, second from left, and President Emmanuel Macron, right, in October in Conflans Saint-Honorine, where a teacher who had shown who had shown caricatures of the Prophet Muhammad to his class was decapitated.Credit...Pool photo by Abdulmonam Eassa
Mr. Darmanin’s aides did not make him available for an interview, and a half-dozen of his former parliamentary colleagues in the center-right party he belonged to previously did not respond to interview requests, though several have been quoted expressing bitterness at him for abandoning them to join Mr. Macron.
“He’s coming out of a very working-class background,” one of Mr. Darmanin’s top aides said in an interview, “and his idea is, you’ve got to speak to the people more. He’s the incarnation of the working-class right.” The aide asked not to be quoted by name under prevailing ground rules in French ministries.
Up until the moment when Mr. Macron first recruited him in 2017, his political credentials were impeccably on the French right. He was campaign manager for former President Nicolas Sarkozy in his failed bid to regain his position in the 2017 election; mayor of Tourcoing, a grimy industrial town in the north, and the parliamentary representative for France’s main center-right party from his home base in the north.
Image
Mr. Darmanin, center, was greeted by members of the government last month after the National Assembly approved a bill to restrict sharing images of police officers and strengthen government surveillance tools.Credit...Mohammed Badra/EPA, via Shutterstock
He succeeded a politician, Christian Vanneste, who gave him his political start as an intern, and who was subsequently forced out of the party — Mr. Vanneste said he resigned — for his blatant homophobia. Mr. Darmanin, seizing the opportunity, ran against him and won. Mr. Vanneste has never forgiven him.
“He’s a careerist, and an absolutely miserable one,” Mr. Vanneste said. “He betrayed me, that’s all. You don’t bite the hand that feeds you.”
Others have a somewhat more nuanced view.
“What he tries to do is seize the opportunities of the moment — to gain position,” said a centrist deputy in the French Parliament, Charles de Courson. “And Macron is trying to use him, in order to crush the right.”
https://www.nytimes.com/2020/12/12/worl ... manin.html
Interior Minister Gérald Darmanin has become a useful tool for the French president as he responds to growing calls for law and order following a spate of terror attacks.
Interior Minister Gérald Darmanin last month on a French news broadcast. He was named to his post in July after the dismissal of Christophe Castaner.
Interior Minister Gérald Darmanin last month on a French news broadcast. He was named to his post in July after the dismissal of Christophe Castaner.Credit...Thomas Coex/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images
Adam Nossiter
By Adam Nossiter
Dec. 12, 2020
Lire en français
PARIS — He has declared war on the Islamist “enemy within” and halal food shelves in supermarkets. He launched what he described as a “massive” operation against 76 of France’s mosques, and sought to criminalize the filming of police officers. And he announced that he “can’t breathe” when he hears the term “police violence” — mocking a cry against police brutality that originated in the United States and resonated around the world.
Interior Minister Gérald Darmanin of France is at the center of a triple-headed political crisis that is rocking the late stages of the presidency of Emmanuel Macron — over Islam, police brutality and freedom of the press.
And there is no sign that Mr. Darmanin is buckling.
This week, the youthful, 38-year-old Mr. Darmanin appeared on the cover of the magazine Paris Match, a sure sign that he has transcended the Paris political bubble and entered into the public consciousness. “Baptism by Fire” is the headline in the widely read weekly magazine, which combines news with extensive coverage of celebrities, next to a posed picture of the minister looking thoughtful.
Vilified on the left and mistrusted by former colleagues on the right, Mr. Darmanin, who is the minister in charge of the French police, has become indispensable to Mr. Macron at a time when a majority of French are demanding law, order and toughness in the face of what the president calls “Islamism” after a spate of terrorist attacks.
“For Emmanuel Macron, he’s his guarantee to the right,” said Boris Vallaud, a prominent socialist in the French Parliament, referring to Mr. Darmanin. “There’s a demand for order right now. On the whole field of public liberties, of religion, he’s letting his minister push forward — until the day when he pulls in the leash.”
So far, the leash has not been seriously pulled.
In the pugnacious and ambitious Mr. Darmanin, Mr. Macron has found an ideal confluence of the man and the political moment, acting in response to France’s sharp shift to the right. Freelance jihadists have murdered French citizens; Mr. Darmanin is there to search and question Muslims suspected of extremism. The police are accused of brutality and racism in a series of violent incidents; Mr. Darmanin is there to defend them, and insist they only need better equipment and working conditions.
ImageRiot police last weekend at demonstrations in Paris against a proposed law that would limit how images of police officers are recorded and published.
Riot police last weekend at demonstrations in Paris against a proposed law that would limit how images of police officers are recorded and published.Credit...Veronique De Viguerie/Getty Images
“We owe them an apology for the way we put them out in the streets to do a job that’s very difficult,” Darmanin said at a parliamentary hearing last week. He decried the “unspeakable” video of the police beating of a Black music producer in Paris this month that went viral on social media and brought new calls to address racism and police brutality, but he also insisted it was merely the work of “individuals.”
The police mostly suffer from a lack of training, he said. Mr. Darmanin’s predecessor at the Interior Ministry, Christophe Castaner, was dismissed over the summer after hinting at that there is racism in the police, infuriating the unions. Mr. Darmanin runs no such risk. Now he must answer to union fury at Mr. Macron for daring to make similar suggestions in an interview with Brut, an online news site last week.
The minister’s parliamentary performance was soothing to the all-powerful police unions, reassuring to Mr. Macron’s crucial constituents on the right, and offered a nod to those disturbed by the violence. That can only aid the onward march of a political chameleon who many believe has the presidential Élysée Palace as his ultimate goal.
In some ways, Mr. Darmanin’s performance imitated Mr. Macron’s own varying colorations, always balancing between left and right.
So eager was Mr. Macron to retain Mr. Darmanin — he was previously the public accounts minister before his appointment to the interior post in July — that the president has brushed off a 2009 rape accusation against the minister that is still under investigation.
Mr. Macron told an interviewer this summer that “it was not up to him to judge” whether the reopening of the investigation was warranted. He added, about his exchanges with Mr. Darmanin, that “there is also a relation of confidence, man-to-man.”
Image
A protest against the appointment of Mr. Darmanin and the justice minister, Eric Dupond-Moretti, in July. Mr. Darmanin remains under investigation in a rape accusation.Credit...Francois Mori/Associated Press
Those words, and Mr. Darmanin’s appointment, infuriated French feminists, and there were several days of demonstrations that petered out amid general indifference. Court documents and testimony in the case suggest that Mr. Darmanin, before he became minister, used his position of authority to obtain sexual relations with a woman seeking his official help. Mr. Darmanin has acknowledged relations with the woman but said they were consensual.
The affair has been largely passed over — the minister’s lawyers recently obtained a postponement of an appearance before investigators. Mr. Darmanin has also moved on to a task his predecessor failed at, placating the police in the country with the highest security agent-to-citizen ratio in Europe. Mr. Macron would know well what he owes the French national police: ever-tougher police tactics put down the Yellow Vest popular uprising against his political reforms that threatened his presidency in 2018.
“Darmanin is someone who adapts very impressively to his circumstances,” said Pierre Mathiot, the director of the Political Studies Institute at Lille, where Mr. Darmanin was a student, and who has known him for several decades.
“So he’s understood that he’s got to be the minister of the police. And not of the people who have relations with them,” Mr. Mathiot said. “He’s using this crisis to get more for the police than Castaner got.” He added that Mr. Darmanin would use the proposed restrictions on citizens filming officers to get more funding for the police.
Critics have struggled to situate Mr. Darmanin politically, which speaks to his great usefulness for Mr. Macron, who has staked out a middle ground in French politics himself. Is he from the right? From the center? Even a little bit on the left, because of his modest family background?
“It’s hard to say whether he’s authoritarian or not,” Mr. Mathiot said. “I don’t think he’s that different from Macron.”
Mr. Darmanin is definitely not of the economic and educational elite who fill the ranks of the president’s aides. His father ran a bar in the industrial north and his mother was a cleaner at the French central bank. Mr. Darmanin’s Muslim grandfather fought for the French in the Algerian independence war, and his own middle name is Moussa.
Image
Mr. Darmanin, second from left, and President Emmanuel Macron, right, in October in Conflans Saint-Honorine, where a teacher who had shown who had shown caricatures of the Prophet Muhammad to his class was decapitated.Credit...Pool photo by Abdulmonam Eassa
Mr. Darmanin’s aides did not make him available for an interview, and a half-dozen of his former parliamentary colleagues in the center-right party he belonged to previously did not respond to interview requests, though several have been quoted expressing bitterness at him for abandoning them to join Mr. Macron.
“He’s coming out of a very working-class background,” one of Mr. Darmanin’s top aides said in an interview, “and his idea is, you’ve got to speak to the people more. He’s the incarnation of the working-class right.” The aide asked not to be quoted by name under prevailing ground rules in French ministries.
Up until the moment when Mr. Macron first recruited him in 2017, his political credentials were impeccably on the French right. He was campaign manager for former President Nicolas Sarkozy in his failed bid to regain his position in the 2017 election; mayor of Tourcoing, a grimy industrial town in the north, and the parliamentary representative for France’s main center-right party from his home base in the north.
Image
Mr. Darmanin, center, was greeted by members of the government last month after the National Assembly approved a bill to restrict sharing images of police officers and strengthen government surveillance tools.Credit...Mohammed Badra/EPA, via Shutterstock
He succeeded a politician, Christian Vanneste, who gave him his political start as an intern, and who was subsequently forced out of the party — Mr. Vanneste said he resigned — for his blatant homophobia. Mr. Darmanin, seizing the opportunity, ran against him and won. Mr. Vanneste has never forgiven him.
“He’s a careerist, and an absolutely miserable one,” Mr. Vanneste said. “He betrayed me, that’s all. You don’t bite the hand that feeds you.”
Others have a somewhat more nuanced view.
“What he tries to do is seize the opportunities of the moment — to gain position,” said a centrist deputy in the French Parliament, Charles de Courson. “And Macron is trying to use him, in order to crush the right.”
--
'Suppression of truth, human spirit and the holy chord of justice never works long-term. Something the suppressors never get.' David Southwell
http://aangirfan.blogspot.com
http://aanirfan.blogspot.com
Martin Van Creveld: Let me quote General Moshe Dayan: "Israel must be like a mad dog, too dangerous to bother."
Martin Van Creveld: I'll quote Henry Kissinger: "In campaigns like this the antiterror forces lose, because they don't win, and the rebels win by not losing."
'Suppression of truth, human spirit and the holy chord of justice never works long-term. Something the suppressors never get.' David Southwell
http://aangirfan.blogspot.com
http://aanirfan.blogspot.com
Martin Van Creveld: Let me quote General Moshe Dayan: "Israel must be like a mad dog, too dangerous to bother."
Martin Van Creveld: I'll quote Henry Kissinger: "In campaigns like this the antiterror forces lose, because they don't win, and the rebels win by not losing."
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- Trustworthy Freedom Fighter
- Posts: 793
- Joined: Sun Oct 23, 2005 12:13 am
- Location: UK
- Contact:
We Muslims are the new Jews
FALSE FLAGS OVER EUROPE
A Modern History of State-Fabricated Terror
Dr Nicholas Kollerstrom
Published by Lightning Source UK
Reviewed by Dr.James Thring
http://globalvision2000.com/forum/showt ... hp?tid=656
This diligently researched, colourfully illustrated set of accounts would be highly rated and in huge demand if it were a novel. And it would be even more popular as its revelations about terror attacks contradict official stories. But it is not a novel and it is not yet acclaimed because it reveals the terror attacks were not by Muslims but by much more insidious and powerful conspirators in Israel’s Mossad, the CIA and MI6.
15 terror attacks in Europe were under ‘false flags’, from the bomb at Israel’s London Embassy in 1994, to the Westminster Bridge attack in 2017. The ‘false flag’ tag derives from Lord Cecil’s tactic to sabotage the Spanish Armada by sailing into Cadiz flying ‘friendly’ Dutch flags which blew up amongst the preparatory Spanish fleet, delaying its launch. Guy Fawkes’ plot is cited as a false flag attempt to blame Catholics for blowing up Parliament after Catholicism was out-lawed by Henry VIII turning England Protestant so he could behead his Catholic wife.
Muslims are blamed for ‘terrorism’ under false flags, to stir up Islamophobia. This helps Israel attack Palestinians and their Muslim supporters with alacrity. By stealth, the Muslim world has been cast as an ‘enemy of the West’ as incited in Samuel Huntington’s ‘The Clash of Civilizations’. This has emboldened Israeli lobbyists in the three main Parties in the UK and USA, to frog-march our forces to fight their wars and decimate Muslim nations such as Iraq, Afghanistan, Libya and Syria at our expense and to our detriment. Those countries harboured Palestinian refugees and tried to counter Zionist massacres. Israel plotted to infiltrate Muslim nations with agents provocateurs to sow dissent and bring down governments. The ‘Arab Spring’ was an arm of this strategy, aided by George Soros’s ‘Foundation for Democracy’. Even if you prefer the ‘Muslims-did-it’ theory, these revelations give pause for doubt.
The relevance to Nationalism is that we, and most nations, are being incredibly deceived: Deceived by the media that Muslims are ‘the enemy,’ to be regarded with suspicion, ostracized, denied positions and jobs; deceived that Zionism is ‘friendly’ not to be criticized; and deceived into assuming that terrorism is Islamic when, generally, it is bred in Israel. Israel founded
itself terrorizing Palestinians from their ancient homeland. Three of its Prime Ministers led Zionist terror gangs, like Hagana and Irgun. They terrorized the British Army out of Palestine, murdering thousands and blowing up our HQ in Jerusalem in 1946. They dressed as Palestinians to dupe us to punish them. Our withdrawal left Zionists to escalate their Genocide of the Palestinians and devastate neighbouring nations. Jez Turner courageously Memorialized British casualties at the Cenotaph in 2017 but was also terrorized by Zionist extremists shouting “kill him, kill him” and even getting him unjustly imprisoned for ‘racial hatred’. It is Zionist attacks on innocent people which create hatred, not the exposing of their crimes.
Deception of our governments to limit all our freedoms is a weapon of Zionist repression; denying free speech, justice and the sanctity of peace treaties. The outrageous deception that ‘Muslims’ orchestrated the ‘9-11’ attacks in 2001 (see Kollerstrom’s ‘Who Did ‘9-11’?’), exemplifies how such propaganda twists minds of leaders like Bush and Blair, fooled by hoax threats, like Saddam’s absent WMD, thus inflicting wars on Iraq and Afghanistan. Those wars were unlawful, based on fake data from Mossad, as indicated by its ex-officer, Victor Ostrovsky in ‘The Other Side of Deception’, by ex-CIA intern Susan Lindauer in her testimony ‘Extreme Prejudice’ and by Italian President Francesco Cossiga. They benefitted only Israel.
Immigration of large numbers of any foreigners in a short period generates friction. The influx of Muslims since 1991 largely stems from joining those US-Israeli wars driving out terrified families. Any religion that instils new customs is fearsome. But Islam’s codes of behaviour are similar to ours; outlawing usury, extortion, dishonesty, lewdness, homosexuality, same-sex marriage and major crimes such as murder and unprovoked war. Instead, we are gradually succumbing to Old Testament, Talmudic codes espoused by High Priests of Judaism, such as deception, sexual deviance, miscegenation, murder and war. That self-serving code is little known, consequently rarely condemned and thus more easily imposed on an unsuspecting public. The power of their lobby is exposed by persistent cries of ‘anti-Semitism’ (a misnomer for ‘anti-Zionism’) desecrating the Labour Party for criticising Israeli atrocities. Other Parties are similarly subverted, as is the media and thus the public mind generally,
by the Anti-Defamation League, funded by billions of Jewish dollars, as Whitney Webb‘s research on the Epstein files reveals in ‘Mega Group: Maxwell & Mossad’ mintpressnews.com.
Israelis have been guilty of false flag attacks, blaming Muslims, since the fake state was conceived and violently planted in the God-forsaken country of Palestine. In the ‘Six-Day War’ in 1973, Israelis even bombed the unarmed US ship, The Liberty, blaming Egypt, inciting the US to devastate another State friendly to Palestine. Nuclear-armed bombers took off for Cairo but were luckily re-called after Russia revealed the truth to Washington. Here we summarize more of Kollerstrom’s crucial discoveries.
Israel staged the bombing of its London Embassy in 1994. Nobody was in at the time; CCTV lapsed; MI6 was warned; evidence was spirited away; the trial was in camera and crucial documents still withheld under Public Interest Immunity claims. Is this to protect our ‘public interest’ or Israel’s? Two Palestinians were sentenced to 9 years on fake charges and had nothing to gain from the attack. Instead it helped Israel denigrate Palestinians and ‘justify’ more horrific attacks on them.
The Madrid train disaster in 2004 involved 10 bombs on four trains. Police ‘found’ an unexploded bomb full of nuts and bolts inferring all the bombs were similar. But none of the 191 killed, nor the 1,800 injured, had nuts or bolts injuries. Here are six of 12 hints that events were staged: The extra bomb was in a van with a Koran and Muslim passports, detonators and a video in Arabic. Would the bombers be so foolish as to leave their details? By coincidence, NATO held an anti-terror exercise the day before, but reports of it were ‘classified’. No CCTV showed the ‘bombers’ at any station. The explosive was military-grade. 24 of the 29 alleged perpetrators were police informers, as El Mundo reported six weeks later. Two of the suicides’ bodies were later found in a swimming pool with explosive belts. Too many questions to assert guilt.
The London Tube and bus bombs in 2005 had similar oddities; a ‘terror drill’ to test the emergency services was being run simultaneously in the same locations (see panel); a Koran was found with an extra bomb containing shrapnel, whereas victims had no shrapnel injuries; crucial CCTV was missing. It did show the alleged bombers at Luton station but Kollerstrom discovered the train they needed to be at Kings Cross before the bombing, was cancelled. A carriage floor was blown up from below. One ‘suicide bomber’ was shown to the Inquest at four locations. Two were later shot by police at Canary Wharf. Israeli Foreign Minister, Netanyahu, in London for a Tel Aviv Economic Summit that day, was warned of attacks and stayed in his hotel. Surveillance on the Underground is by Israeli companies Verint Systems and ICTS. Former Mossad agent, Juval Aviv, let slip in an interview; “It’s easy to put a bomb as we did…[then correcting himself] - as happened - in London.” (p.79). He is the central character in Spielberg’s ‘Vengeance: The True Story of an Israeli Counter-Terrorist Team’. Several other pointers are drawn to Israel’s foreknowledge of the events and to its abilities to undertake them and predict a suitable reaction.
Breivik’s attacks in Norway in 2011 also had Israeli links. Anders Breivik was a Zionist. His stated motive was; ‘too many Muslims were flooding into Norway’. He also condemned Marxism and multiculturalism. In this we would concur. His manifesto said: “So let us fight with Israel, our Zionist brothers, against all Marxists/multi-culturalists.” But Zionism is only anti-multi-culturalism for Israel, other nations must endure it. His victims were Labour Youth chanting “Boycott and Sanction Israeli goods”. Norway’s Foreign Minister concurred. Norway brokered the Oslo Accord between Israel and Palestine in 1993 for a Palestinian State and an end to Occupation. Netanyahu reneged on this plan in his 1996 policy; ‘A Clean Break’ [from Oslo]. So Breivik may have had a little help using military-grade explosive to blow up Norwegian government offices, and in rushing to Utoya Island to kill young activists, as suggested by Richard Cottrell in ‘Gladio; NATO’s Dagger at the Heart of Europe’. CCTV images were again scarce until two months later, after many were erased.
The murder of Drummer Lee Rigby was blamed on a Muslim with a machete. But Kollerstrom went to great trouble to check photos questioning: Why no blood from the severed head? And; Why the killers stayed on the scene until Police arrived? Whatever conclusion one draws there are enough unanswered questions to doubt the official story.
The Paris Charlie Hebdo plot on 7th Jan. 2015 was after France’s Parliament voted to recognise Palestine, requiring Israel to withdraw to the 1967 borders. “Did Netanyahu decide to teach France an anti-Islam lesson?” Kollerstrom asks, and then queries some reports. The Hebdo office was empty. The magazine was in debt by Euro 200,000, tellingly bailed out by Edward de Rothschild. But an estranged member of that family asserted to columnist Lasha Darkmoon that the bombers were not Muslims but Mossad agents, Avigdor and Maloch. One, though disguised, left an Arab identity card in the getaway car, abandoned outside a patisserie frequented by Zionists. The Police Chief reporting the incident was found dead the next day. Jean-Marie le Pen concluded it was the work of Western intelligence. His house was later set on fire. Israeli IBA TV happened to be on the roof covering the incident. The pro-Zionist CH magazine was vulgarly anti-Islam and anti-Christian. The Jewish Shomrim police in fake Met Police cars, as exposed by Jez Turner, patrolled London on the following days, no doubt hunting ‘anti-Semites’.
The Bataclan Theatre had just been sold by Zionists before it was bombed on Nov.13th. After the Hebdo event an Anti-Terror Bill authorized almost unlimited surveillance on-line, plus a form of martial law with thousands of troops on French streets. Terrorists would be even less likely to evade all this than before without State complicity. Judge Trevedic predicted two months before the first attack; “The attacks in France will be on a scale comparable to ‘9-11’” (Paris Match, Oct. 2015). As on ‘7-7’ Police ran “an exercise for multi-site attacks on that very morning” according to consultant Pierre Carli (see panel). Yet they took two hours to arrive at the scene. President Hollande immediately claimed “We know who these criminals are [and] where from” before any investigation. He declared a new ‘State of Emergency’. But the Arab passport Police found in pristine condition after the bombing, turned out to be a Syrian soldier’s who died months earlier. A story of French Intelligence Chief Yves Bonnet making secret pacts with Palestinians to allow them access on condition they did no harm, is being wheeled out now probably to counter Kollerstrom’s claims (Sunday Times, 11 Aug. 2019).
The Brussels Airport bomb on 22nd March 2016 is analysed in forensic detail questioning stories about Kalashnikovs evading airport security, conflicting official and eyewitness accounts, one by an Israeli who also happened to be at two other terror attacks. The Belgian government had just agreed to recognise Palestinian statehood and support the Boycott Campaign. Israeli Minister Ofir Akunis instantly warned the EU that such anti-Israel policies bred ‘Islamic’ attacks. Security by ICTS, owned by Israelis Ezra Harel and Menachem Atzmon, was oddly deficient on the day. Israeli newspaper Haaretz reported (23 March)
“Security services knew…attacks were planned for the airport.”
Again, there had been a terror-drill in Antwerp the day before. Kollerstrom finds that ISIS websites are linked to our DWP. He links the date, 22nd March, a full-moon lunar eclipse, to the Jewish Holy Day of Purim when Esther countered King Xerxes’ plan to eradicate Jews from Persia in c.400BC, by murdering his guards. Linking such seemingly unconnected events is what our Intelligence Services are paid for, not conspiring in fake terror for a foreign agenda killing and injuring us.
The attack in Nice also has odd elements. The lorry was being filmed before it hit anyone, by Richard Gutjahr who also happened to film the Munich disaster. His wife Einat Wilf was an Israeli foreign policy adviser. Kollerstrom shows photos of bodies in impossible positions which are likely to be dummies. Astoundingly, the Interior Ministry told the Nice authorities to destroy all CCTV footage. Finally, many of those reported dead, including the driver, allegedly shot by Police, were still alive: Their identities were stolen. The event was clearly staged.
The Westminster Bridge attack is dissected in minute detail exposing lack of evidence, inconsistencies, changed stories, a Masonic helicopter, fake bodies, a planted manifesto, no CCTV, extra-judicial killing of the suspect and many other anomalies, making fascinating reading but for which space does not permit a summary.
Conclusion: The facts behind these events echo the ‘9-11’ story: The fictional terrorists make no demands, nor do they benefit from the attacks; evidence is found but none suggesting they are suicidal; they attack the public who are no threat to them; they are instantly accused as Muslim extremists before any inquiry, and; Israel is implicated in nearly every case and is the sole beneficiary. If that foreign power is manipulating our home security to stir up Islamophobia and goad us to another war, for example against Iran, it must be interdicted before there is more bloodshed and devastation, leading to poverty and more migration. It also damages the UK’s reputation for justice, human rights, democratic freedoms of speech and association and independence from dictatorial powers-that-should-not-be. This book is valuable testimony for challenging those threats.
[html][/html]
A Modern History of State-Fabricated Terror
Dr Nicholas Kollerstrom
Published by Lightning Source UK
Reviewed by Dr.James Thring
http://globalvision2000.com/forum/showt ... hp?tid=656
This diligently researched, colourfully illustrated set of accounts would be highly rated and in huge demand if it were a novel. And it would be even more popular as its revelations about terror attacks contradict official stories. But it is not a novel and it is not yet acclaimed because it reveals the terror attacks were not by Muslims but by much more insidious and powerful conspirators in Israel’s Mossad, the CIA and MI6.
15 terror attacks in Europe were under ‘false flags’, from the bomb at Israel’s London Embassy in 1994, to the Westminster Bridge attack in 2017. The ‘false flag’ tag derives from Lord Cecil’s tactic to sabotage the Spanish Armada by sailing into Cadiz flying ‘friendly’ Dutch flags which blew up amongst the preparatory Spanish fleet, delaying its launch. Guy Fawkes’ plot is cited as a false flag attempt to blame Catholics for blowing up Parliament after Catholicism was out-lawed by Henry VIII turning England Protestant so he could behead his Catholic wife.
Muslims are blamed for ‘terrorism’ under false flags, to stir up Islamophobia. This helps Israel attack Palestinians and their Muslim supporters with alacrity. By stealth, the Muslim world has been cast as an ‘enemy of the West’ as incited in Samuel Huntington’s ‘The Clash of Civilizations’. This has emboldened Israeli lobbyists in the three main Parties in the UK and USA, to frog-march our forces to fight their wars and decimate Muslim nations such as Iraq, Afghanistan, Libya and Syria at our expense and to our detriment. Those countries harboured Palestinian refugees and tried to counter Zionist massacres. Israel plotted to infiltrate Muslim nations with agents provocateurs to sow dissent and bring down governments. The ‘Arab Spring’ was an arm of this strategy, aided by George Soros’s ‘Foundation for Democracy’. Even if you prefer the ‘Muslims-did-it’ theory, these revelations give pause for doubt.
The relevance to Nationalism is that we, and most nations, are being incredibly deceived: Deceived by the media that Muslims are ‘the enemy,’ to be regarded with suspicion, ostracized, denied positions and jobs; deceived that Zionism is ‘friendly’ not to be criticized; and deceived into assuming that terrorism is Islamic when, generally, it is bred in Israel. Israel founded
itself terrorizing Palestinians from their ancient homeland. Three of its Prime Ministers led Zionist terror gangs, like Hagana and Irgun. They terrorized the British Army out of Palestine, murdering thousands and blowing up our HQ in Jerusalem in 1946. They dressed as Palestinians to dupe us to punish them. Our withdrawal left Zionists to escalate their Genocide of the Palestinians and devastate neighbouring nations. Jez Turner courageously Memorialized British casualties at the Cenotaph in 2017 but was also terrorized by Zionist extremists shouting “kill him, kill him” and even getting him unjustly imprisoned for ‘racial hatred’. It is Zionist attacks on innocent people which create hatred, not the exposing of their crimes.
Deception of our governments to limit all our freedoms is a weapon of Zionist repression; denying free speech, justice and the sanctity of peace treaties. The outrageous deception that ‘Muslims’ orchestrated the ‘9-11’ attacks in 2001 (see Kollerstrom’s ‘Who Did ‘9-11’?’), exemplifies how such propaganda twists minds of leaders like Bush and Blair, fooled by hoax threats, like Saddam’s absent WMD, thus inflicting wars on Iraq and Afghanistan. Those wars were unlawful, based on fake data from Mossad, as indicated by its ex-officer, Victor Ostrovsky in ‘The Other Side of Deception’, by ex-CIA intern Susan Lindauer in her testimony ‘Extreme Prejudice’ and by Italian President Francesco Cossiga. They benefitted only Israel.
Immigration of large numbers of any foreigners in a short period generates friction. The influx of Muslims since 1991 largely stems from joining those US-Israeli wars driving out terrified families. Any religion that instils new customs is fearsome. But Islam’s codes of behaviour are similar to ours; outlawing usury, extortion, dishonesty, lewdness, homosexuality, same-sex marriage and major crimes such as murder and unprovoked war. Instead, we are gradually succumbing to Old Testament, Talmudic codes espoused by High Priests of Judaism, such as deception, sexual deviance, miscegenation, murder and war. That self-serving code is little known, consequently rarely condemned and thus more easily imposed on an unsuspecting public. The power of their lobby is exposed by persistent cries of ‘anti-Semitism’ (a misnomer for ‘anti-Zionism’) desecrating the Labour Party for criticising Israeli atrocities. Other Parties are similarly subverted, as is the media and thus the public mind generally,
by the Anti-Defamation League, funded by billions of Jewish dollars, as Whitney Webb‘s research on the Epstein files reveals in ‘Mega Group: Maxwell & Mossad’ mintpressnews.com.
Israelis have been guilty of false flag attacks, blaming Muslims, since the fake state was conceived and violently planted in the God-forsaken country of Palestine. In the ‘Six-Day War’ in 1973, Israelis even bombed the unarmed US ship, The Liberty, blaming Egypt, inciting the US to devastate another State friendly to Palestine. Nuclear-armed bombers took off for Cairo but were luckily re-called after Russia revealed the truth to Washington. Here we summarize more of Kollerstrom’s crucial discoveries.
Israel staged the bombing of its London Embassy in 1994. Nobody was in at the time; CCTV lapsed; MI6 was warned; evidence was spirited away; the trial was in camera and crucial documents still withheld under Public Interest Immunity claims. Is this to protect our ‘public interest’ or Israel’s? Two Palestinians were sentenced to 9 years on fake charges and had nothing to gain from the attack. Instead it helped Israel denigrate Palestinians and ‘justify’ more horrific attacks on them.
The Madrid train disaster in 2004 involved 10 bombs on four trains. Police ‘found’ an unexploded bomb full of nuts and bolts inferring all the bombs were similar. But none of the 191 killed, nor the 1,800 injured, had nuts or bolts injuries. Here are six of 12 hints that events were staged: The extra bomb was in a van with a Koran and Muslim passports, detonators and a video in Arabic. Would the bombers be so foolish as to leave their details? By coincidence, NATO held an anti-terror exercise the day before, but reports of it were ‘classified’. No CCTV showed the ‘bombers’ at any station. The explosive was military-grade. 24 of the 29 alleged perpetrators were police informers, as El Mundo reported six weeks later. Two of the suicides’ bodies were later found in a swimming pool with explosive belts. Too many questions to assert guilt.
The London Tube and bus bombs in 2005 had similar oddities; a ‘terror drill’ to test the emergency services was being run simultaneously in the same locations (see panel); a Koran was found with an extra bomb containing shrapnel, whereas victims had no shrapnel injuries; crucial CCTV was missing. It did show the alleged bombers at Luton station but Kollerstrom discovered the train they needed to be at Kings Cross before the bombing, was cancelled. A carriage floor was blown up from below. One ‘suicide bomber’ was shown to the Inquest at four locations. Two were later shot by police at Canary Wharf. Israeli Foreign Minister, Netanyahu, in London for a Tel Aviv Economic Summit that day, was warned of attacks and stayed in his hotel. Surveillance on the Underground is by Israeli companies Verint Systems and ICTS. Former Mossad agent, Juval Aviv, let slip in an interview; “It’s easy to put a bomb as we did…[then correcting himself] - as happened - in London.” (p.79). He is the central character in Spielberg’s ‘Vengeance: The True Story of an Israeli Counter-Terrorist Team’. Several other pointers are drawn to Israel’s foreknowledge of the events and to its abilities to undertake them and predict a suitable reaction.
Breivik’s attacks in Norway in 2011 also had Israeli links. Anders Breivik was a Zionist. His stated motive was; ‘too many Muslims were flooding into Norway’. He also condemned Marxism and multiculturalism. In this we would concur. His manifesto said: “So let us fight with Israel, our Zionist brothers, against all Marxists/multi-culturalists.” But Zionism is only anti-multi-culturalism for Israel, other nations must endure it. His victims were Labour Youth chanting “Boycott and Sanction Israeli goods”. Norway’s Foreign Minister concurred. Norway brokered the Oslo Accord between Israel and Palestine in 1993 for a Palestinian State and an end to Occupation. Netanyahu reneged on this plan in his 1996 policy; ‘A Clean Break’ [from Oslo]. So Breivik may have had a little help using military-grade explosive to blow up Norwegian government offices, and in rushing to Utoya Island to kill young activists, as suggested by Richard Cottrell in ‘Gladio; NATO’s Dagger at the Heart of Europe’. CCTV images were again scarce until two months later, after many were erased.
The murder of Drummer Lee Rigby was blamed on a Muslim with a machete. But Kollerstrom went to great trouble to check photos questioning: Why no blood from the severed head? And; Why the killers stayed on the scene until Police arrived? Whatever conclusion one draws there are enough unanswered questions to doubt the official story.
The Paris Charlie Hebdo plot on 7th Jan. 2015 was after France’s Parliament voted to recognise Palestine, requiring Israel to withdraw to the 1967 borders. “Did Netanyahu decide to teach France an anti-Islam lesson?” Kollerstrom asks, and then queries some reports. The Hebdo office was empty. The magazine was in debt by Euro 200,000, tellingly bailed out by Edward de Rothschild. But an estranged member of that family asserted to columnist Lasha Darkmoon that the bombers were not Muslims but Mossad agents, Avigdor and Maloch. One, though disguised, left an Arab identity card in the getaway car, abandoned outside a patisserie frequented by Zionists. The Police Chief reporting the incident was found dead the next day. Jean-Marie le Pen concluded it was the work of Western intelligence. His house was later set on fire. Israeli IBA TV happened to be on the roof covering the incident. The pro-Zionist CH magazine was vulgarly anti-Islam and anti-Christian. The Jewish Shomrim police in fake Met Police cars, as exposed by Jez Turner, patrolled London on the following days, no doubt hunting ‘anti-Semites’.
The Bataclan Theatre had just been sold by Zionists before it was bombed on Nov.13th. After the Hebdo event an Anti-Terror Bill authorized almost unlimited surveillance on-line, plus a form of martial law with thousands of troops on French streets. Terrorists would be even less likely to evade all this than before without State complicity. Judge Trevedic predicted two months before the first attack; “The attacks in France will be on a scale comparable to ‘9-11’” (Paris Match, Oct. 2015). As on ‘7-7’ Police ran “an exercise for multi-site attacks on that very morning” according to consultant Pierre Carli (see panel). Yet they took two hours to arrive at the scene. President Hollande immediately claimed “We know who these criminals are [and] where from” before any investigation. He declared a new ‘State of Emergency’. But the Arab passport Police found in pristine condition after the bombing, turned out to be a Syrian soldier’s who died months earlier. A story of French Intelligence Chief Yves Bonnet making secret pacts with Palestinians to allow them access on condition they did no harm, is being wheeled out now probably to counter Kollerstrom’s claims (Sunday Times, 11 Aug. 2019).
The Brussels Airport bomb on 22nd March 2016 is analysed in forensic detail questioning stories about Kalashnikovs evading airport security, conflicting official and eyewitness accounts, one by an Israeli who also happened to be at two other terror attacks. The Belgian government had just agreed to recognise Palestinian statehood and support the Boycott Campaign. Israeli Minister Ofir Akunis instantly warned the EU that such anti-Israel policies bred ‘Islamic’ attacks. Security by ICTS, owned by Israelis Ezra Harel and Menachem Atzmon, was oddly deficient on the day. Israeli newspaper Haaretz reported (23 March)
“Security services knew…attacks were planned for the airport.”
Again, there had been a terror-drill in Antwerp the day before. Kollerstrom finds that ISIS websites are linked to our DWP. He links the date, 22nd March, a full-moon lunar eclipse, to the Jewish Holy Day of Purim when Esther countered King Xerxes’ plan to eradicate Jews from Persia in c.400BC, by murdering his guards. Linking such seemingly unconnected events is what our Intelligence Services are paid for, not conspiring in fake terror for a foreign agenda killing and injuring us.
The attack in Nice also has odd elements. The lorry was being filmed before it hit anyone, by Richard Gutjahr who also happened to film the Munich disaster. His wife Einat Wilf was an Israeli foreign policy adviser. Kollerstrom shows photos of bodies in impossible positions which are likely to be dummies. Astoundingly, the Interior Ministry told the Nice authorities to destroy all CCTV footage. Finally, many of those reported dead, including the driver, allegedly shot by Police, were still alive: Their identities were stolen. The event was clearly staged.
The Westminster Bridge attack is dissected in minute detail exposing lack of evidence, inconsistencies, changed stories, a Masonic helicopter, fake bodies, a planted manifesto, no CCTV, extra-judicial killing of the suspect and many other anomalies, making fascinating reading but for which space does not permit a summary.
Conclusion: The facts behind these events echo the ‘9-11’ story: The fictional terrorists make no demands, nor do they benefit from the attacks; evidence is found but none suggesting they are suicidal; they attack the public who are no threat to them; they are instantly accused as Muslim extremists before any inquiry, and; Israel is implicated in nearly every case and is the sole beneficiary. If that foreign power is manipulating our home security to stir up Islamophobia and goad us to another war, for example against Iran, it must be interdicted before there is more bloodshed and devastation, leading to poverty and more migration. It also damages the UK’s reputation for justice, human rights, democratic freedoms of speech and association and independence from dictatorial powers-that-should-not-be. This book is valuable testimony for challenging those threats.
[html][/html]