PAKISTAN. 135 de morți, majoritatea copii, în asaltul islamist asupra unei ȘCOLI. Toți teroriștii au fost UCIȘI
http://www.evz.ro/talibanii-au-luat-...-pakistan.html
PAKISTAN. 135 de morți, majoritatea copii, în asaltul islamist asupra unei ȘCOLI. Toți teroriștii au fost UCIȘI
http://www.evz.ro/talibanii-au-luat-...-pakistan.html
beleafer
Portretul unui terorist devenit notoriu:
Pious teenager who turned into a zealot and heartless murderer The Times
http://www.thetimes.co.uk/tto/multim...e1_862825a.jpg
In the early 1990s, after they had emigrated from Kuwait and left a region scarred with conflict, the Emwazi family must have thought they had found a peaceful haven for their fledgeling family. Instead, their six-year-old son, Mohammed, was planted straight into an area of London that has become a hotbed for terrorism.
From the council estates of Queen’s Park to the more affluent St John’s Wood, the inner suburbs of west London have long been a breeding ground for young men intent on jihad, initially in Somalia and later in Syria.
Mohammed Emwazi now outranks his friends as the most notorious.
He grew up in a rented mansion block at a canal-side location with his father, Jasem, and his mother, Ghaneya, although the family later moved to a cramped, two storey terraced house in Queens Park.
His father initially picked up work as a delivery driver, although he now runs a taxi business. His mother stayed at home to look after the expanding family — the couple had another son, Omar, and two daughters, Asra and Hana. Emwazi is thought to have two other younger siblings who were also born in Kuwait.
A neighbour, who did not wish to be named, said that he used to hear loud arguments within the home. He said: “Our walls are thin and I used to hear screaming. It was some kind of argument in Arabic. I couldn’t tell who was screaming and shouting.”
Friends said that Emwazi’s family was far from radical. “His mum is absolutely devastated, she’s been crying ever since he went to Syria, which was a while ago.”
The friend lost contact about six years ago and said that Emwazi “got much more religious and just wasn’t really seen any more”. He added: “Growing up, he was always religious, not extreme, but he was aware of his religion and practised it quite well.”
He described him as a “regular London teenager, not violent at all” but added that “radicalising him mustn’t have been too hard, all they would need to do is just feed him the same crap they feed most of their recruits. All it takes is someone willing to listen.”
At primary school Emwazi, nicknamed Mo, enjoyed football and was a fan of S Club Seven. He wrote in a yearbook that he was a Manchester United fan and said: “What I want to be when I grow up is a footballer.” His favourite book was How to Kill a Monster, his favourite food “chips” and his favourite animal a monkey.
Emwazi left Quintin Kynaston academy in St John’s Wood in about 2006, before completing a degree in computing at the University of Westminster.
Among the Facebook friends of his younger brother, Omar, 22, who is not accused of any wrongdoing, was a young man with links to a clique of young west London extremists, some of whom are facing terrorism charges.
One of his friends had posted an image showing Abdel-Majed Abdel Bary, a former rapper who had been mistakenly outed as being the man behind the “Jihadi John” mask. Another of Omar’s friends has links to Khaled Fikry, a controversial preacher who has spoken at the University of Greenwich, where Michael Adebolajo, one of the killers of Fusilier Lee Rigby, studied, and at the University of Westminster, attended by Emwazi.
It is unclear where he was first radicalised but he appears to have been on the authorities’ radar shortly after his graduation, and after a failed attempt to travel to Somalia. In 2010 he filed a complaint with the Independent Police Complaints Commission, alleging that he had been harassed and intimidated by the security services for a year.
He is also known to have met Bilal Berjawi, a radical who would later die in a drone attack in Somalia. They attended the same mosque as other young would-be jihadis.
Neighbours described him as polite but he had at least one brush with the law in 2011, when he was cleared of possessing stolen bicycles in a trial at Snaresbrook crown court in June 2011.
That was small fry compared with his membership of a jihadist cell based in west London, which helped to recruit fighters for al-Shabaab. The group emerged from Somali-dominated London street gangs in 2006 and raised money through drug dealing to send money to al-Shabaab.
Security agencies viewed the group as loose-knit, with a fluid membership that stretched across the capital.
Emwazi was identified in court documents as associating with at least a dozen men in west London who belonged to “a network of United Kingdom and east African-based Islamist extremists which is involved in the provision of funds and equipment to Somalia for terrorism-related purposes and the facilitation of individuals’ travel from the United Kingdom to Somalia to undertake terrorism-related activity”.
The first members of the cell went to Somalia in 2006. They were sent back and, according to an MI5 assessment quoted in the courts, “tasked to return to carry out facilitation activities and to recruit individuals to work on behalf of al-Qaeda and/or al-Shabaab”.
With Emwazi and many others being stopped from reaching Somalia, the network increasingly shifted its attention to trying to reach Syria. With greater ease of travel to that country, via cheap flights to Turkey, Emwazi joined many other young Londoners swelling the ranks of Islamic State’s foreign fighter brigades.
http://www.thetimes.co.uk/tto/news/u...cle4366957.ece
Last edited by miril; 27th February 2015 at 06:08.
"The minority is sometimes right, the majority always wrong." - A Progres...sive Thinker
"If you support a team that fails to win the league for years, it does feel like a kind of cult'." - Salman Rushdie
Isis butcher had been MI5 terror suspect for six years The Times
http://www.thetimes.co.uk/tto/multim...4-_862804c.jpg
British security services were under pressure last night to explain how they failed to stop the brutal Islamic State killer who was unmasked yesterday as a football-loving London university graduate.
Mohammed Emwazi was known to MI5 for at least six years since he was deported from Tanzania amid suspicions that he was travelling to Somalia to join the terrorist group al-Shabaab. The intelligence agency repeatedly tried and failed to recruit him as an informer from 2009.
The man now known as “Jihadi John” was on a terrorist watchlist and a no-fly list but was not subjected to the more stringent restrictions of a control order or a terrorism prevention investigation measure.
Emwazi, 26, who was born in Kuwait, was able to evade surveillance, slip out of the country using false papers and re-emerge in Syria in graphic propaganda videos as the world’s most-wanted terrorist.
Emwazi was a “person of interest” for MI5 as a member of a London jihadist cell set up in 2007 to recruit for al-Shabaab, an al-Qaeda affiliate.
Michael Adebolajo, one of the killers of Fusilier Lee Rigby, was part of the same network and had also been a target of MI5 surveillance. The Commons intelligence and security committee conducted an inquiry into the agencies’ handling of Adebolajo and is likely to do the same in this case.
In 2009, Emwazi was stopped inTanzania while trying to reach Somalia. He was regularly monitored and questioned after his return to Britain and complained to the prisoners’ rights group Cage, which provoked outrage yesterday by describing him as “a beautiful young man”. Asim Qureshi, one of the group’s leaders, said that Emwazi was “extremely kind, extremely gentle, extremely soft spoken, the most humble young person that I knew”.
British officials have known who killed hostages including the Britons Alan Henning and David Haines since September last year, but did not divulge it because of the sensitivity of their investigation and the slim chance of saving the lives of other captives.
Scotland Yard reacted to the publication of his name in the United States with thinly disguised anger and said that it had asked the media “not to speculate about the details of our investigation on the basis that life is at risk”. There are increased fears now for the life of the remaining British hostage in Islamic State hands in Syria, the photographer John Cantlie.
The Tory MP Sir Gerald Howarth said that the security agencies should explain how Emwazi was “able to slip through the net”. He said: “If they are thought to be that valuable that we try to recruit them, if they are that important they need to be watched as well. There must be a system whereby they can be intercepted before they leave the country.”
Andy Hayman, a former police anti-terrorism chief, said that the intelligence agencies had to approach people who were involved in terrorism to glean information that could prevent attacks. “The idea of trying to recruit a terrorist rather than put him under a control order can be hard to understand. However, in the complex world of investigating extremist groups that is an acceptable tactic which can and has saved lives,” he said.
Emwazi was six when his family moved from Kuwait to London in 1994. He was educated at St Mary Magdalene Church of England primary school and Quintin Kynaston secondary school, going on to study computer science at Westminster University. While at primary school he was a fan of the pop group S Club 7, Manchester United, the computer game Duke Nukem: Time To Kill and the book How to Kill a Monster.
“What I want to be when I grow up is a footballer,” he wrote in his school yearbook.
He was drawn into a group of extremists who were bent on supporting al-Shabaab. High Court papers revealed MI5 assessments that the men conducted covert meetings under the guise of playing football and were skilled in counter-surveillance.
http://www.thetimes.co.uk/tto/news/u...cle4366971.ece
"The minority is sometimes right, the majority always wrong." - A Progres...sive Thinker
"If you support a team that fails to win the league for years, it does feel like a kind of cult'." - Salman Rushdie
Sportul darama barierele rasismului !!!
Cel care cade dar se ridica este mai puternic decat cel care nu a cazut niciodata.
Zilele trecute am fost la Bruxelles. Sediul CE , PE , sediile evreiesti si sectiile de politie sunt pazite cu arme de asalt de soldati echipati pentru front. In capitala europei.
Pacat si atat de trist. Ca imagine. Oricum , orice terorist poate obtine impact mediatic maxim detonand o bomba in zona comerciala, deci absurde aceste masuri de protectie.
19 morti la Tunis in urma unui atac terorist la museul Bardo. 17 erau turisti polonezi, nemti; spanioli.
Sportul darama barierele rasismului !!!
Cel care cade dar se ridica este mai puternic decat cel care nu a cazut niciodata.
http://ziarero.antena3.ro/article/view/id/148222
L-au ratat de putin ... sau Putin
Sportul darama barierele rasismului !!!
Cel care cade dar se ridica este mai puternic decat cel care nu a cazut niciodata.
Mihai Viteazul likes this!
Mihai mai mult s-a batut cu transilvaneni si moldoveni decat cu turci.
De Viteazul vorbesc, nu de Dascalescu
Sportul darama barierele rasismului !!!
Cel care cade dar se ridica este mai puternic decat cel care nu a cazut niciodata.
pai de aia ii place. daca se omorau singuri si pe vremea lui era trai nu gluma.
sunt curios cine au fost atentatorii. daca revendica cineva
Atentatul din Ankara: Autoritatile turce i-au identificat pe autorii atacului. Niste porci islamisti
Unul dintre teroristi se numea Yunus Emre Alagoz, membru al unei celule a retelei teroriste Stat Islamic activa in orasul Adiyaman. Alagoz era fratele lui Seyh Abdurrahman Alagoz, autorul unui atac sinucigas comis in orasul Suruc pe 20 iulie si soldat cu 33 de morti.
Al doilea terorist sinucigas a fost Omer Deniz Dundar. Tatal acestuia a declarat ca islamistul a mers in Siria in anul 2013, revenind in Turcia dupa un an.
"Am depus o plangere impotriva fiului meu. Le-am cerut autoritatilor sa il tina in detentie, dar a fost eliberat dupa audieri. Dupa opt luni, a plecat in Siria", a declarat tatal islamistului.
mirile, nasol bre in Suedia, nu mai plec acolo
Teacher, student killed in stabbing as masked man attacks Swedish school; 2 others wounded
https://ca.news.yahoo.com/swedish-po...092635595.html
beleafer
Era deghizat in Dark Vador
Sportul darama barierele rasismului !!!
Cel care cade dar se ridica este mai puternic decat cel care nu a cazut niciodata.
S-ar putea sa fie un bolnav psihic ca si norvegianul ala, sau ca americanii de la Sandy hook si mai recent Oregon
Sau canadianul convertit la islam de fix acum un an, din Ottawa.
beleafer
Si eu cred ca sunt bolnavi toti astia dar in vremea asta avem psihoza de a asimila orice eveniment dramatic cu terorism islamist. Le facem o publicitate nesperata
Sportul darama barierele rasismului !!!
Cel care cade dar se ridica este mai puternic decat cel care nu a cazut niciodata.
avem un porc musulman, ceva capetenie isis, belit!
sa fie mozolit bine de tot cu untura de porc si apoi aruncat intr-un wc turcesc.
Marele porc, liderul Al-Qaida din Siria a fost UCIS
intre timp, porcii de la isis sunt din ce in ce mai slabi...
Atentat revendicat de Statul Islamic in Bangladesh, soldat cu un mort si 80 de raniti
pfff, se pisa iliescu tovaraseste pe ei! pana si el are cel putin 4 bucati victime fragezite bine inainte de executare.
US 'reasonably certain' it has killed 'Jihadi John'
Pentagon briefing summary
Colonel Steve Warren said the Pentagon is “reasonably certain” that the US killed Mohammed Emwazi, a British member of Isis called “jihadi John”, in a drone strike in Raqqa, Syria.
http://www.theguardian.com/world/liv...es-jihadi-john
http://edition.cnn.com/2015/11/13/mi...get/index.html
http://edition.cnn.com/2015/11/13/mi...ohn/index.html
http://edition.cnn.com/2015/11/13/mi...get/index.html
"The minority is sometimes right, the majority always wrong." - A Progres...sive Thinker
"If you support a team that fails to win the league for years, it does feel like a kind of cult'." - Salman Rushdie
Atentat la Paris. Iarasi. Je suis charlie.
[I]În timp ce Luceafãrul brânzei își revarsã lumina hepaticã la televizor, Steaua se stinge ca o lumânare, în cel mai tragic priveghi public pe care l-a cunoscut sportul românesc[/I]