Tuesday, August 25, 2020

Islam - Current Day - Men Kill 20 y/o Sister for Not Obeying Them; Rapist Marries 10 y/o Victim, Then Divorces Her; Canadian Terrorist Learns Nothing

Men kill 20 y/o sister over ‘suspicions’ of visiting neighbour

Complainant mother says victim was attacked with sticks
Our Correspondent
The Express Tribune

FAISALABAD: A 20-year-old girl was allegedly beaten to death by her brothers with sticks for going to the neighbours’ house on Wednesday.



The accused escaped after the incident. Police registered a case and launched raids to nab the accused.

The police said 20-year-old daughter of Muhammad Boota, a resident of Kamalpur area of Nishatabad, was repeatedly barred by her brothers identified as Muhammad Ikram and Muhammad Saddam, from going to their neighbours’ house.

On Tuesday, the victim left for her neighbours’ place and when she came back home she was asked by her brothers about her reason for leaving the house and where she had gone. The victim did not answer them.

The two brothers started beating beat her with sticks, injuring her fatally.

Rescue 1122 personnel rushed her to Allied Hospital where she succumbed to her injuries.

Nishatabad police reached the hospital, took the body into custody and handed it over to heirs after postmortem.

Following the statement of Suraya Bibi, mother of the slain victim, the police registered a case against Ikram and Saddam and started raids to arrest them.

Several incidents of murder over petty domestic issues have been reported in the past.

On August 18, a man killed his younger sister with an axe for not serving him a cup of tea in breakfast in a village near Arifwala. Police registered a case against the accused.

The incident happened in the jurisdiction of Sadar police station.




10-y/o Indian girl married off to rapist, given triple talaq
IANS Aug 23, 2020 

Muzaffarnagar: In a shocking incident, a ten-year-old girl was allegedly married to her rapist and then given Triple Talaq by him, police said on Sunday.

Triple talaq, also known as talaq-e-biddat, instant divorce and talaq-e-mughallazah (irrevocable divorce), was a form of Islamic divorce which has been used by Muslims in India, especially adherents of Hanafi Sunni Islamic schools of jurisprudence. It allowed any Muslim man to legally divorce his wife by uttering the word talaq (the Arabic word for "divorce") three times in oral, written or, more recently, electronic form. 

On 30 July 2019, the Parliament of India declared the practice of Triple Talaq illegal and unconstitutional, and made it a punishable act from 1 August 2019 which is deemed to be in effect from 19 September 2019. - Wikipedia

The incident came to light when a team from the child care helpline visited the girl for counselling at a village in Budhana police station area earlier this month.

According to the helpline in-charge, Punam Sharma, the victim alleged that she was 'married' to her sister's brother-in-law on February 16 after a rape.

The child care helpline later informed the police.

The accused, a resident of Shamli district, left the girl at her parents' house on August 4 after which the family approached the helpline.

Budhana SHO KP Singh said they have started an investigation into the allegations and called the accused for questioning.

Meanwhile, sources said that the minor's family had married the girl on the insistence of her sister.




Ontario man convicted of terror offences re-arrested,
could pose public safety risk: RCMP

Kevin Omar Mohamed, 27, found in 2016 with knife and notes on carrying out attack, detained on peace bond

CBC News · Posted: Aug 24, 2020 

This undated Twitter profile picture was linked by counter-terrorism researchers to Kevin Omar Mohamed. (Twitter)

An Ontario man convicted of supporting an al-Qaeda-affiliated terror group has been rearrested after national security officials learned of information suggesting he "may pose a risk to public safety," the RCMP says.

Kevin Omar Mohamed, 27, was first arrested in 2016 on the University of Waterloo campus after being found with a hunting knife, work gloves, a large quantity of money and handwritten notes taken down from al-Qaeda publications on how to plan and carry out an attack. 

He was sentenced to four and a half years behind bars — after pleading guilty to supporting Jabhat al-Nusra — and released in 2019 after receiving two and a half years of credit for time served.

But in the months since, the RCMP's Integrated National Security Enforcement Team (INSET) says Mohamed was twice rearrested — once on July 8 for allegedly breaching his probation order by having a device capable of accessing the internet, and again on Sunday on a peace bond meant to "mitigate the risk of him committing a terrorist-related offence."

In the days leading up to his August arrest, the RCMP say they turned up information suggesting Mohammed might pose a public safety risk. They say police searched two residences on Sunday that Mohamed was associated with.

"The RCMP and our law enforcement and intelligence partners continue to monitor and assess the threat that individuals that possess ideologically motivated extremist views pose to public safety, particularly those on court imposed conditions as a result of their previous convictions for terrorism related offences," the service said in a news release Monday.

A decision by the Parole Board of Canada last year noted Mohamed had not participated in "any interventions geared toward deradicalization," noting there was "no evidence" that he was committed to changing his "extremist ideological beliefs." 

The board noted it was "very concerned" Mohamed could continue to present a "significant risk to the community."

The decision indicated Mohamed travelled to Turkey in 2014 where he met with members of the Syria-based Jabhat al-Nusra, also known as the al-Nusra Front, and was smuggled to Syria in the trunk of a car, only returning home after his brother flew to Turkey to meet him. The group was considered a terrorist organization by Canada and other countries. It has morphed and renamed itself several times since. 

Back in Canada, police said Mohamed promoted violence and tweeted out support for terrorist activities online under the pseudonym "Abu Jayyid," leaving his Whitby, Ont., home in February 2016 after an argument with his mother and ending up on the street.

Police tracked him for nearly a week until he suddenly went offline upon withdrawing $3,500 from his bank account.

He was arrested in March 2016 after being found sleeping in empty rooms on his university campus, and convicted in 2017. Following his release, he was to be subject to three years of probation.

Speaking to CBC News last year, Mohamed's lawyer Paul Slansky said his client's motivation had been "to help Syrians with the humanitarian crisis. However, he recognized that he went about it the wrong way," Slansky said.

No kidding!


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