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Showing posts with label Charlie Hebdo. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Charlie Hebdo. Show all posts

Sunday, October 11, 2020

Islam - Current Day - Father Tortures Daughter; Islamic Scholar Shot in Karachi; Islamic Extremism in France


Saudi Arabia: Father prosecuted for beating daughter, filming torture,
posting on social media

Burmese father says he did so to bring back his sister who fled home

Published:  October 11, 2020 08:27
Samir Salama, Associate Editor, Gulf News
  
Abu Dhabi: A man arrested for shackling his daughter, beating her, filming the offence, and posting a video clip of it on social media was moved to Mecca Prosecution, local media reported. The dad, in his 40s, allegedly confessed that he assaulted his 11-year-old daughter after tying her with ropes and tortured her with a whip severely.

The Burmese man reportedly said his act was blamed on his sister, who ran away from the house after she cut his daughter's hair without his permission. He added he forced her mother to film the clip to be sent to his sister to return home. It was not immediately known what he planned to do to his sister.

This video may be disturbing to some readers

This video should be disturbing to all readers. If it isn't, you are part of the problem.



Since this story came from Saudi Arabia, we assume that the father was Muslim. That, however, may not be the case as he is from Myanmar. He might be a Buddhist, or a Muslim. At any rate, he is a lunatic who needs to be locked up and kept away from his family.



Pakistan: Renowned Islamic scholar shot dead in Karachi

Was gunned down along with his driver in the Shah Faisal Colony area

Published:  October 11, 2020 15:23
Azeem Samar, Correspondent
  
Maulana Dr Adil Khan, a religious scholar and head of Karachi's Jamia Farooqia seminary, was shot dead
along with his driver in a suspected targeted attack in the city on Saturday, officials said.

Karachi: The targeted killing of noted religious scholar and administrator of Jamia Farooqia, Karachi, Maulana Dr Adil Khan, along with his driver has sent shockwaves across the city as the authorities concerned have become wary about law and order situation.

Sixty-year-old Dr Adil Khan was the son of renowned religious scholar Maulana Saleemullah Khan who assumed responsibilities as the administrator of Jamia Farooqia after the death of his father.

Dr Adil Khan was assassinated by unidentified motorcycle riders who opened fire on him when he stopped in Shah Faisal Colony area of the city to do some shopping. He was present in his vehicle with his drive as the gunmen approached them, opened fire and killed them both.

An initial investigation report submitted by the Inspector General of Sindh Police Mushtaq Ahmed Mahar to Sindh Chief Minister Syed Murad Ali Shah said that the incident had occurred near Shama Shopping Centre as two gunmen fired total five bullets.

The late Islamic scholar was also the member of the executive council of Wifaq-ul-Madaris Al-Arabia Pakistan i.e. the largest federation of religious seminaries in Pakistan with affiliation of around 23,000 madaris from across Pakistan.

He had obtained his master’s degree in Arabic in 1976 from the University of Karachi and PhD in in Islamic Culture in 1992. He remained associated with the International Islamic University Malaysia as a professor from 2010 to 2018. The late Islamic scholar also received five-star ranking award in Malaysia. He was preparing for his post-doctoral research at the time of his death.

He also published four different periodicals in Arabic, English, Urdu, and Sindhi languages from Jamia Farooqia. Late Dr Adil Khan was well versed in Urdu, English, and Arabic languages. He was an expert in Quraanic and Hadith studies, Islamic history, Islamic economic system, Islamic history, and jurisprudence. He had the plan to upgrade Jamia Farooqia as a university.

Sabotage activities

Following the incident, the Sindh Home Department imposed an immediate ban on pillion riding on motorcycles in Karachi for one month to maintain law and order situation in the city as the criminals mostly used two-wheelers in such sabotage activities.

In his statement, Sindh CM said that certain miscreants wanted to tarnish the situation of peace in Karachi.

He asked the Sindh Police to use modern policing technology to trace the killers to arrest them at the earliest and hand them down stern punishment. Sindh Governor Imran Ismail also condemned the killing of Dr Adil Khan and asked police to take steps on urgent basis for arresting the killers.

Renowned Islamic scholar Mufti Taqi Usmani said that the killing had been perpetrated under a conspiracy to cause widespread lawlessness in the country.

Peace is anathema to many in the Religion of Peace.

He lauded the services of Dr Adil Khan for the national unity and harmony in the country.




As terrorism trial unfolds in Paris, France confronts its problem with Islamist extremism

Muslim hardliners trying to capitalize on alienation many young Muslims feel

Don Murray · CBC News · Posted: Oct 11, 2020 4:00 AM ET

French President Emmanuel Macron delivers a speech to present his strategy to fight Islamist separatism on Oct. 2, 2020, in Les Mureaux, outside Paris. (Ludovic Marin/The Associated Press)

"This is our separatism."

Separatism — a word that has weight in many countries, notably Canada. Here the speaker was French, in fact it was French President Emmanuel Macron.

The separatism he was talking about, in a major and long-delayed speech on Oct. 2, was Islamist separatism in France, an effort by Muslim hardliners in the country to capitalize on the alienation many young Muslims feel to create a regiment of fighters for jihad, or holy war against France, the West and Jews.  

The result has been a series of fatal attacks in the last decade in France, as well as the presence of French Muslims fighting in extreme groups in the Middle East.

Macron's timing was no accident. 

Police officers stand by a knife, seen on the ground, in Paris on Sept. 25, 2020. French terrorism authorities investigated a knife attack that wounded at least two people near the former offices of the satirical newspaper Charlie Hebdo, authorities said. (Soufian Fezzani Via AP)

His speech took place during the first major terrorism trial in Paris after the attacks against the satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo and a Jewish grocery store in January 2015, the co-ordinated killings in cafés and the Bataclan theatre in November 2015, and finally the truck assault in Nice on Bastille Day, July 14, in 2016.

The combined death toll was more than 230.

Most of the attackers were French-born, but all saw themselves as Islamist jihad fighters. 

So important is the trial, expected to last for several more weeks, that judicial authorities have allowed video cameras to record it.

So important did Macron consider the speech that he made it in the midst of the COVID-19 crisis, which consumes the attention of the country.

A glass box is seen in a courtroom where the trial over the deadly attacks on satirical newspaper Charlie Hebdo and a kosher supermarket in 2015 is taking place in Paris. (Michel Euler/The Associated Press)

The French president's diagnosis was brutal. 

"We ourselves have constructed our own separatism," he said, by creating ghettos in the suburbs of major cities, particularly Paris. 

In these ghettos live most of France's Muslims. Their number is estimated at approximately 5,750,000 or around 8.5 per cent of the French population.

That number from Pew Research in 2017 is approximate because French law stipulates that the census cannot ask about the religion of any resident of the country.  

'A concentration of misery and difficulties'

For many Muslims in France, the future looks like a locked door. 

Or, as Macron put it, "we built a concentration of misery and difficulties, we concentrated populations according to origin and social milieu. We created neighbourhoods where the promise of the republic was never kept and where these most radical forms [of Islamism] became sources of hope."

It also created fertile ground for imams trained in the Middle East and North Africa to radicalize young men. 

Issa, who requested confidentiality because of a fear of reprisals, is a young man I talked to from a poor Paris suburb, populated largely by families of North African and African origin. 

"Liberty, equality, fraternity — those words have no value here," he said. "They only have value in the centre of Paris. Liberty — you go out and the police stop you five or six times a day. Equality — when you try to find work, you don't have the same chance as someone in a rich district of Paris. Fraternity — everyone fears the other, the foreigner — the Black or the North African."

A man wearing a protective face mask as a precaution against the coronavirus looks at a painting by French street artist Christian Guemy, a.k.a. C215, in tribute to the members of the satirical newspaper Charlie Hebdo attacked in January 2015. (Michel Euler/The Associated Press)

Other factors also contribute to a sense of alienation. 

In the Seine Saint-Denis suburb just north of the central district of Paris, which has a population largely of North African origin, the unemployment rate in late 2019 was 27 per cent. The national rate was less than nine per cent.

"Getting a job, no, just getting in the door, is much harder if your name is Mohammed," one young man with a university degree once told me. 

Several studies in the last three years, notably by the sociologist Marie-Anne Valfort, back him up, concluding it's at least 50 per cent harder for young Muslims to get job interviews than for non-Muslims.

'All the time, every day'

Muslims are often the target of open racism from police. The most recent charge came from a police whistleblower, Brig. Amar Benmohammed. In July 2020, he detailed hundreds of incidents of racist language over two years in the police cells at Paris's main court house.

"Racist language, it's all the time, every day," a police officer talking about fellow officers told the French national radio, France Info, this summer. 

"They call them bastards, rats, members of dirty races," said another police officer, of North African origin working in the Paris region. The racist comments, the officers believe, reflect a poisonous mindset widespread in the police.

"French Muslims are fed up with the hateful invective and racist comments emanating from individuals and groups around the country," said Mohammed Moussaoui, president of the Union of French Mosques. 

That is the unsettling background to the trial in Paris. 

Thousands of people gather at Republique Square in Paris on Jan. 11, 2015, eight days after the attack against Charlie Hebdo. (Peter Dejong/The Associated Press)

Ten of the 11 defendants accused of helping the three killers prepare the attacks had been in prison — for drug dealing, assault, even kidnapping and murder. It was in prison that several met the killers — the Kouachi brothers and Amedy Coulibaly — or their friends.

The three killers had been mentored by hardline Islamists at a mosque in northern Paris. Two had been arrested and imprisoned for terrorist offences, including trying to join the jihad in Iraq. There, among fellow Muslims, they preached the virtues of religious war, according to police.

In French prisons, Muslims form an outsize minority. Using the imperfect measure of requests for Ramadan meals, the French Ministry of Justice in 2017 calculated Muslims represent 26 per cent of the country's prison population. 

Once back in the ghetto suburbs, the perpetrators of the Charlie Hebdo killings were able to outwit the French security services with ease. 

Obtained arms without police knowing

One police investigator, chief inspector Nicolas Guidoux, said at the trial that one of the attack leaders, Chérif Kouachi, "had simply played with the security and intelligence services."

The proof was that the attackers were able to obtain arms, detonators, bullet-proof vests, a large car and several safe houses — all without the police knowing.

One of the accused, Willy Prevost, isn't Muslim but had run up a huge drug debt with one of the killers. He was told to obtain Tasers and bullet-proof vests.

"You don't go to the police in the suburbs. If you do, thugs come after your family," he said. 

Three of the key accused aren't even in court. They escaped to Syria around the time of the attacks. Two are believed dead, but the wife of one of the killers has reportedly been seen alive there. The French anti-terrorist police have taken the sighting seriously enough to open a criminal inquiry.

In the face of this, Macron's suggested remedy seems thin.  

He said France will stop allowing foreign imams to come to indoctrinate French Muslims and a new law will outlaw home schooling. All children will have to go to state schools and learn about the ideals and principles of the French republic. (At the moment, authorities believe a worrying minority of Muslim children go to secret Islamist schools.)

It almost certainly won't be enough. The French interior minister said as the trial opened that the police had, on average, broken up one terrorist plot every month for the past three years.

One they didn't break up took place outside the former offices of Charlie Hebdo two weeks after the trial opened. A man wielding a large knife wounded two people seriously.

France's problems with Islamist extremism are far from over.

Is Macron hoping to secularize the Muslim population of France? Is he trying to do what Residential Schools were supposed to do for Canadian aboriginals? 




Monday, June 11, 2018

Outcry in France as Muslim Rapper Who Sang About 'Crucifying Secularists' to Play at Bataclan

Islamization Backlash at the Bataclan

Islamic jihad would certainly have something to celebrate in Paris if this jihad supporter claims the stage at Bataclan so soon after his compatriots massacred 90 Parisians



A planned performance by a controversial Muslim rapper at the Bataclan, where 90 people were killed during the November 2015 Paris attacks, has prompted a wave of criticism and has been described as a ‘dishonor for France.’

Medine, who is of Algerian descent, is due to play two gigs at the venue in October. The musician has denied that he is an Islamist but caused outcry in the aftermath of the Charlie Hebdo attack because of his song ‘Don’t Laik,’ which includes the lyrics: “Let's crucify the secularists like at Calvary... put fatwas on the heads of these idiots.”

He also released an album called ‘Jihad’ in 2005, but insisted that it is about an internal identity struggle.

Isn't that what radicalization is, an eternal identity struggle? First you struggle with who you are, then you struggle with the truth, then you give in to the insanity of radical Islam.

The decision to allow the singer to play the venue has drawn severe criticism from several high-profile French politicians. Laurent Wauquiez, the leader of the Republicans, France’s largest opposition party, tweeted that it was “sacrilege for the victims” and a “dishonor for France.”

Not to mention, remarkably stupid!

Wauquiez added that he was shocked that “someone who sings about 'crucifying secularists' and calls himself 'Islamo-scum’” should play the famous venue “less than three years after Islamist barbarism cost the lives of 90 of our compatriots.”

Former presidential candidate Marine Le Pen said: “No French person can accept that this guy is going to spew out his filth at the Bataclan. We have had enough of complacency and worse, of this incitement to Islamist fundamentalism.”

Le Pen’s National Rally party started an online petition, calling for the gigs to be cancelled and more than 16,000 people had already added their names on Monday afternoon.

Members of parliament belonging to President Emmanuel Macron's LaREM party have also criticized the move, with Aurore Berge saying that having Medine headline a concert at the Bataclan was an "insult" to the victims of the atrocity.

The rapper said that ‘Dont Laik,’ a play on the French word for secular, was an attempt to mock people with staunch secular views in the same way that Charlie Hebdo cartoons mocked religious fundamentalists, according to Le Monde. He later distanced himself from the song saying that it “went too far.”


Sunday, February 25, 2018

2 Attacks Thwarted & 3 Mosques Closed in Terrorism Crackdown in France in 2018

 The New Normal - France - Terrorist threats

© Philippe Huguen / AFP

The French interior minister has revealed that authorities have thwarted two planned terrorist attacks since the start of the year. Several mosques have been also shut down over preaching radical ideas, according to the official.

The foiled assaults were aimed at the military and sports facilities, Gerard Collomb said in an interview with Europe 1 radio on Sunday.

The suspect plotting to attack sports facilities was a convert who wanted to make his way to Syria, Le Parisien and AFP reported citing inside sources. In the second case, the 33-year-old suspect from Nimes was planning to attack soldiers taking part in Operation Sentinelle, a military operation launched in January 2015 to guard sensitive targets from terrorist attacks. According to the General Directorate for Internal Security (DGSI), the man pledged allegiance to Islamic State in a video, while explosive materials were also found in his home.

Collomb added that although the suspects behind both plots are now in custody, the terrorist threat still exists and will continue for several more years.

For almost two years, France had been under a state of emergency following the November 2015 Paris attacks which killed 130 people. The state of emergency was lifted by President Emmanuel Macron in November of last year, only to be replaced by a controversial new counter-terrorism law giving security services more power to search and detain suspects at their homes, as well as shut down places of worship.

Gerard Collomb said that three mosques had been closed on Sunday in Aix-en-Provence, Sartrouville and Marseille, for preaching radical ideas.

241 people have been killed in terrorist attacks in France since the shooting at the offices of satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo in January 2015. Last year, three people were killed in two attacks claimed by IS in France, one on the Champs-Elysees in Paris and another at the Saint-Charles station in Marseille. According to figures provided by the interior ministry in January, 20 attacks were also thwarted that year.


Monday, July 10, 2017

Muslim Radio Station Suspended for Broadcasting 25 Hours of ‘Al-Qaeda Speeches’

A British radio station has been suspended after it broadcast more than 25 hours of lectures by a suspected Al-Qaeda recruiter during Ramadan that called for “holy war” and “encouraged violence.”

The Office of Communications (Ofcom) has temporarily revoked the license of Sheffield-based Iman FM for playing lectures by radical Muslim cleric Anwar al-Awlaki, a hate preacher who was killed by a US drone strike in 2011.

Anwar al-Awlaki, a U.S.-born cleric linked to al Qaeda's Yemen-based wing, gives a religious lecture in an unknown location in this still image taken from video released by Intelwire.com on September 30, 2011. © Intelwire.com  Google will not censor ‘pied piper of Jihad’ who inspired 7/7 London bombings

Ofcom said it received a complaint from a listener in June. When contacted by the watchdog, the radio station said it decided to broadcast a series of pre-recorded lectures during Ramadan as the regular presenter was not available.

In one, Awlaki said, “prepare whatever strength you have for holy war in the cause of Allah. This is a form of worship,” according to the Daily Mail.

Imam FM told Ofcom it searched the internet for lectures “on the life of the Prophet Muhammed” and “lectures on Seerah,” adding that the lectures it broadcast were “freely available.”

Under broadcasting rules, hate speech must not be included in TV or radio shows except where justified by context.

Iman FM’s chief executive, Mohammad Mughal, has been given 21 days to provide an explanation for the broadcast before the station is shut down, according to the Daily Mail.

“This is very, very sad because none of us had any idea this lecture was preaching hatred. We are not just a Muslim radio station - we regularly feature Christian presenters,” he told the newspaper.

Ofcom dismissed Imam FM’s claims that it was unaware of Awlaki’s background and hadn’t checked the material before broadcast as “not credible.”

Iman FM broadcast a show on June 23 condemning the lectures and apologizing to its listeners.

The radio station said in a post on its Facebook page: “This is to inform you that Imam FM has temporarily stopped broadcasting, this has resulted due to the regulator suspending its licence for the next 21 days, on the basis that unwittingly some controversial lectures were broadcast.

“Please note that we are trying our level best to remedy this situation and look forward to broadcasting as soon as possible. We thank you for your continued support in the meantime.”

Awlaki, a US-born radical of Yemeni descent, who has been called “the Bin Laden of the internet” was linked to a series of attacks and terrorist plots around the world.

His lectures are believed to have inspired attacks such as the assault on the offices of Charlie Hebdo magazine in Paris in 2015 and the Fort Hood mass shooting in Texas in 2009.

His sermons were attended by at least two people who would later carry out the 9/11 attacks in New York.

Both the UN and the United States labeled Awlaki a “specially designated global terrorist.”

In 2002, Awlaki moved temporarily to the UK before going back to Yemen, where he was killed in a US drone strike in 2011.


Saturday, September 3, 2016

Je ne Sui pas Charlie Hebdo

Satire is one thing; making fun of tragedy and suffering is not satire it's just sick.
Charlie Hebdo is more famous for being massacred than for anything it has ever published.
If this is what they have to do to sell magazines then they should close up shop and find something honest and useful to do. If you have a subscription to this piece of trash, please consider cancelling it.

Italy furious after Charlie Hebdo caricature depicts quake victims as pasta & lasagna

© Stefano Rellandini
© Stefano Rellandini / Reuters

Italian politicians and the public are fuming over a “disgusting” satirical cartoon published by controversial French weekly Charlie Hebdo, which made fun of the victims of an earthquake that left nearly 300 people dead and obliterated entire towns.

Charlie Hebdo, which made headlines in 2015 after a terrorist attack that followed the publication of a series of controversial Mohammad cartoons, has just released another controversial satire.

The cartoon titled “Earthquake Italian Style” compared the quake victims with typical dishes of the country. The caricature showed a man covered in blood standing with a sign over his head reading “penne in tomato sauce.” The poor fellow is depicted next to a badly injured woman survivor who is labeled “penne au gratin.” The icing on the satirical image shows people squashed in the rubble with feet sticking out between the floors of a collapsed building with the sign reading “Lasagna”.

“These designs are disgusting,” said the Italian Minister of Justice Andrea Orlando, Le Figaro quoted. The minister added that by publishing the caricature the weekly “created a scandal” to “attract media attention.”

“All this is disgusting,” President Senate Pietro Grasso concurred, calling the respect for the freedom of satire an “irony”.

The most outrage came from the mayor of a quake-devastated town of Amatrice, who declared “the town is gone” after the disaster.

 “How the **** do you draw a cartoon about the dead!” Sergio Pirozzi said in response to the cartoon. “I’m sure this unpleasant and embarrassing satire does not reflect French sentiment.”

He added that misfortunes and the dead do not deserve a satire, saying “we will show how the Italian people are a great people.”

Following a similar reaction on social media, the French embassy in Rome said Friday that the Charlie Hebdo cartoon “does not absolutely represent the position of France.”

Calling the suffering of Italian people from earthquake an “immense tragedy,” the embassy issued “sincere condolences,” adding that the Frenchmen “are close to Italy in this difficult trial.”

An earthquake, measuring 6.2, hit central Italy on August 24 near the border of Umbria, Lazio, Abruzzo and Marche regions. It caused widespread destruction with severe damage being witnessed in the towns of Amatrice, Accumoli and Pescara del Tronto. The quake has taken lives of at least 294 people.

Tuesday, December 29, 2015

Nemtsov Murder Mastermind Named

The site of the murder of politician Boris Nemtsov, who was killed on Bolshoi Moskvoretsky Bridge in downtown Moscow
© Vladimir Astapkovich / Sputnik
Russia’s Investigative Committee has pressed final charges against the suspected murderers of prominent opposition figure Boris Nemtsov, including the hit’s suspected organizer Ruslan Mukhutdinov, currently at large and on the international wanted list.

The committee also said in the Tuesday statement that it plans to start a separate criminal probe against Mukhutdinov and a number of yet unidentified persons who could also have been involved in Nemtsov’s assassination.

Also on Tuesday, investigators pressed final charges of a contract murder by an organized group and illegal purchase, possession and carrying of firearms against the four detained suspects. They said that the suspects’ complicity in the killing had been confirmed by over 70 forensic experiments, testimonies of witnesses, CCTV records and many documents seized at the suspects’ places of residence.

The law enforcers added that the lawyers representing the prosecution and the defense would receive all case materials in January.

Earlier, Russian mass media revealed Mukhutdinov as the primary suspect in Nemtsov’s killing on these grounds he had been put on the Russian federal and international wanted lists. One of the suspected killers, Zaur Dadaev, reportedly told investigators that the murder was revenge for Nemtsov’s “negative comments on Muslims and Islam,” in particular, the public condemnation of Islamists who killed the journalists from the Charlie Hebdo magazine in France. However, a short time later Dadaev retracted his testimony. The other suspects denied any involvement in the case.

In comments on the Investigative Committee’s statement, the lawyer representing Nemtsov’s family said he disagreed with the main conclusion.

“Mukhutdinov is just one of the organizers and he is one on the lowest rank. He only used to work as a driver for [one of the suspects] Ruslan Geremeyev,” he told RIA Novosti.

A defense lawyer representing Zaur Dadaev told Kommersant radio that the charges against Mukhutdinov were “unfounded” and added that he and his client intended to demand a trial by jury. Russia allows jury trials in cases where the maximum punishment is 10 years or more. The final verdict is still made by the judge, but it cannot be harsher than the one passed by the jury.

Boris Nemtsov was a regional governor and a deputy PM under President Boris Yeltsin. In recent years he had turned into an opposition politician occupying a seat in the legislature of central Russia’s Yaroslavl Region.

In February this year Nemtsov was shot dead while crossing the Bolshoi Moskvoretsky Bridge, near the Moscow Kremlin. The assassination prompted a thousands-strong march in the Russian capital, with demands to find and punish the killers.

President Putin personally promised in a public address that everything would be done to punish those responsible for the organization and execution of the murder.