Monday, August 31, 2020

Islam - Current Day - Riots in Sweden; 2 Swedish Boys Raped, Buried Alive; Peace in Islam?

6 days before riots broke out in Sweden, two teenage boys were raped, tortured and buried alive by criminals from a migrant background
OpIndia

The precise ages of the victims is not yet known although they are reported to be less than the age of 15, the legal age for consent in Sweden.


29 August, 2020
OpIndia Staff

Two teenage boys were allegedly raped, tortured and buried alive at a cemetery recently in Solna near Stockholm, Sweden. The incident is reported to have occurred around 11 pm on Saturday. According to the Police, the two boys were taken to the cemetery after declining an offer to boys. The criminals are reported to be of migrant backgrounds.

The incident occurred six days before riots broke out in the city of Malmo, Sweden after a copy of the Quran was set on fire by ‘Stram Kurs’, a far-right group in the country. The rioters burnt tyres and pelted stones at the police. Sentiments against the country’s ‘Refugees Welcome’ migration policy has been growing following a rise of crimes in the country. See story below.

In this instance, the boys were forced to strip by a 21-year old Iranian immigrant and an 18-year old born to a Tunisian father before the criminals proceeded to force them into a pit where they were buried alive partially. They are also accused to have raped them. The suspects have been charged with kidnapping, aggravated assault, robbery and rape.

Not sure where OpIndia got the info on the perpetrators being migrants or the son of a migrant, it is not in Aftonbladet, the Swedish paper that broke the story, and I don't see it on other European papers. Of course, that is to be expected as most mainstream media outlets protect Migrant, Muslim criminals at the expense of young Europeans.

The precise ages of the victims is not yet known although they are reported to be less than the age of 15, the legal age for consent in Sweden. Both the accused have denied the charges. The boys were spotted by a passer-by at 8.39 a.m. on Sunday, 10 hours after they were abducted by the accused.

Seven minutes later, the 18-year old accused was arrested, sixteen minutes later, the police got their hands on the 21-year old. One suspect is reported to have been wearing items of the victim at the time of arrest. A court ruled that the accused should remain in custody. The motive for the attack is not yet known.

Both men were previously known to Swedish authorities.

Last month, the 21-year-old was found guilty of arson after causing hundreds of thousands of pounds worth of damage at a property using a Molotov cocktail.

At least one of the men has also been investigated in relation to robberies as well as threats targeted at younger students.




Anti-Islam protest in Oslo ends with Koran-tearing
and scuffles between anti-protesters & police 
29 Aug, 2020 14:48

© Facebook / Lars Thorsen

A Norwegian anti-Islam group staged a protest on Saturday, culminating in an activist tearing pages from a Koran. The event was wrapped up after a scuffle with counter-protesters, who managed to bypass the police perimeter.

The rally outside the parliament building in Oslo was organized by a group called Stop Islamisation of Norway, or SIAN. Some of their past rallies have ended with clashes between group members and their political opponents. The police had a heavy presence at the scene in advance of Saturday’s event.

The protest escalated into violence when a female activist held up a copy of the Koran and tore pages from the Islamic holy book. Angry counter-protesters then launched an attack, and the police rushed to intervene. One person was reportedly injured, and several others were arrested.

Before the scuffle, the rally had been mostly peaceful for around two hours, with demonstrators chanting, singing, and listening to SIAN leader Lars Thorsen as he delivered a speech in which he denounced Islam’s Prophet Mohammed as a “false prophet”.

Lars Thorsen after similar speech in Bergen, NW

A security barrier had been erected beforehand to separate the rival sides and keep order. As the situation became more tense and volatile, law enforcement agents used pepper spray on several occasions and pushed back counter-protesters who tried to cross the line.

Shortly after the Koran-tearing incident, the protest ended. SIAN activists were escorted away by the police, while the counter-protesters were allowed to remain at the scene.

Earlier this week, a Koran-burning stunt by members of a local anti-Islam group triggered outrage among the Muslim community in Malmo, escalating into fully fledged rioting (2nd story on link).




And now for something completely different: peace breaks out
in an Islamic country

Sudan signs historic peace deal with 5 rebel groups to end fighting
By Clyde Hughes

Sudanese citizens celebrate in the streets of Khartoum, Sudan, on July 5, 2019, after the military council reached an agreement with opposition leaders to share power in the new government. Monday, the government agreed to a peace proposal with several rebel factions to end decades of fighting.
File Photo by Marwan Ali/EPA-EFE

Aug. 31 (UPI) -- The transitional government in Sudan agreed Monday to sign a historic peace agreement with five major rebel groups in a major step to end violent conflicts stemming from the leadership of former dictator Omar al-Bashir.

The power-sharing government signed the deal in Juba, which provides the rebels with political representation and economic and land rights.

Supporters hope the agreement will help heal Sudan after years of fighting under al-Bashir, who was removed from power more than a year ago. He is wanted for war crimes during the Darfur conflict in 2003 and is on trial for the 1989 coup that put him in power.

Hundreds of thousands died in fighting in Darfur in the early 2000s. The Christian-majority south eventually split from Muslim-majority Sudan in 2011 following a civil war.

Not all opposition groups, however, have reached an agreement with the government.

The Sudan People's Liberation Movement-North has balked at the prospect of involving Darfur warlord Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo in the new government and part of the Sudan Liberation Army, led by Abdel-Wahid Al-Nur, is also holding out.

High Representative of the European Union Josep Borrell said the bloc is supportive of the pact.

"This is the time for all Sudanese stakeholders to set aside their differences and to look for the greater good of the country and of all Sudanese," Borrell said in a statement. "The EU remains committed to supporting the historic Sudanese transition."

U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo visited Sudan last week to support the transitional government.

Thank Goodness, NATO is not involved or there would be another 20 years of war.





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