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Is Munich Shooter A Complete Cover Up? Yes acording to shoebat.com he is Pro Turkey Syrian Islamist

July 23, 2016 By administrator

ali sonboly

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by Walid Shoebat on July 23, 2016

The Munich Massacre Is A Complete Coverup. The Munich Shooter’s Facebook Including His Family Background Shows He Is Not Iranian But A Syrian Islamist Pro Turkey

Ali David Soboly is no Iranian but pro Turkey’s Islamists from Syria. That plus he had a record with the Interpol and was being watched.

First of all. There is only one way to spell Sonboly in the Arabic (سنبلي), but in the English it can be spelled multiple ways (like Sunbulli, Sonboly), yet it is always the same spelling in Arabic: سنبلي

Unless one knows Arabic, they do not know where to look. Examining clan Sonboly and even Sonboly’s own Facebook where the Turkish flag is a main symbol.

Okay, perhaps he had a fetish for the red color and the crescent moon? But his clan also are of Turkish origin living in Syria and Turkey and this same Turkish flag as well as the Syrian flag is the pride of this clan as can be seen from Facebook.

The case for this clan’s love of Turkey’s Erdogan is ironclad. Plus he lived in the Turkish neighborhood.

Why then advertise him as an Iranian which would make him a Shiite Muslim? Is it possible that Germany wants to avoid the repercussion when Germans know that Turks or Syrian refugees who are entering Germany by the droves are the culprit?

The clan is from Homs Syria where some are scattered in Yemen, Saudi Arabia, the U.S. and Canada. A quick peruse of this clan can show their love for Turkey (here, here this one lives in Chicago, sunni with a Hijab from Homs, Syria, see also here, and here, and here, and here these are anti-Assad pro-Turkey’s brand of Islam.

And the Arabic version of Sonboly yields the same results. One clan member, Ziyad Sonboly likes sniping and he is clearly Syrian with a Syrian flag.

If Ali Sonboly was Iranian, what then is he doing with the flag of Turkey hovering behind him on his Facebook?

There is also a photo of him being arrested and what few know is the Sonboly was being watched by Interpol. They show you his face as a kid when he is a mature individual as the video also shows.

Notice: facebook has been disabled

Source: http://shoebat.com/2016/07/23/the-munich-massacre-is-a-complete-coverup-the-munich-shooters-facebook-including-his-family-background-shows-he-is-not-iranian-but-a-syrian-islamist-pro-turkey/

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Cover Up, islamist, munich, Pro Turkey, Shooter, Syrian

Once elected, Islamists do not surrender power, lesson West must accept US Tactician

July 19, 2016 By administrator

Erdogan islamistThe wide-ranging purge launched by President Recep Tayyip Erdogan after last week’s failed military coup is part of his masterplan to turn Turkey into a radical Islamist state, retired US Army Colonel and historian Douglas Macgregor told Sputnik.

WASHINGTON (Sputnik) – Since the failed coup, Erodgan has ordered the arrest of at least 70 generals and admirals, fired 21,000 school teachers across Turkey from their jobs and told CNN he wants Parliament to discuss reintroducing the death penalty, which was abolished in 2004.

“Turkey is now moving as I forecast in chapter 3 of my book ‘Margin of Victory’ down the Islamist Path,” Macgregor, a leading US military tactician and combat hero of the 1991 Gulf War, said on Tuesday.

Macgregor interpreted these events as signs that Erdogan was showing his true colors as a radical Islamist after 13 years of slowly but steadily increasing his personal power.

“Once elected, Islamists do not surrender power: That is the lesson everyone in the West must finally accept. The coup was the last opportunity to arrest this tragic development.”

Erdogan would still try and present himself to the United States and the European Union (EU) as a moderate democrat but the reality of his political actions would tell a very different story, Macgregor warned.

“In the short-run, Erdogan will attempt to the extent he can to cultivate a ‘moderate’ image but his violent suppression of internal dissent and political opposition will make it very difficult for all but the most gullible to believe in his alleged democratic credentials.”

Macgregor argued that Erdogan had played a far larger role in helping to create and sustain the Daesh, than Western governments and media had realized. He predicted that even though Daesh was being destroyed, Erdogan would seek to replace it with a similar movement.

“Daesh, in large part a creation of Erdogan, Qatar and the Saudis, is now a dying Frankenstein’s monster. As it diminishes, another will arise that is likely more closely aligned with and obedient to Erdogan’s wishes.”

However, as these developments unfolded, Erdogan would no longer be able to present himself to the West as a democrat and moderate, Macgregor predicted.

“In the long-run, the proverbial hand writing is on the wall. Ultimately, Erdogan will be unable to conceal his true identity as Sunni Islam’s leader Jihadist Champion against the West, Russia, Iran and Israel.”

On Tuesday, US Department of State spokesperson Mark Toner rejected media allegations that the US government had any involvement in Friday’s military coup in Turkey that resulted in 300 deaths and more than 1,400 wounded.

 

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Erdogan, islamist, Turkey

Denmark: Out! Copenhagen Evicts Notorious Islamist Organization

May 13, 2016 By administrator

1039555246Copenhagen Municipality informed the Islamic organization Hizb ut-Tahrir that it is no longer welcome to use state-funded rooms and locations for its meetings and dealings, thus marking the end of Denmark’s long-drawn-out legal battle with the notorious Islamists.

The decision to bar Hizb ut-Tahrir from undermining democracy in state-owned premises came just days after the Danish government tightened the screws in its public information law in a bid to cripple extremist associations and groups promoting violent radicalism.

The doors to taxpayer-funded facilities have finally been shut for the notorious Islamist organization after years of failed attempts by the state of Denmark in an uphill battle against the Islamists’ tirades against Jews, homosexuals and Western democracy.

“I am a very happy man. Now we can finally ban extremists and subversive organizations from using the municipal offices,” Copenhagen Deputy Mayor for Culture and Leisure Carl Christian Ebbesen of the Danish People’s Party told the news outlet Altinget.

The eviction of Hizb ut-Tahrir is one of the practical consequences of the new government agreement among the Social Democrats, the Socialist People’s Party, the Liberal Alliance, the Conservatives and the Danish People’s Party to crack down on extremist religious preachers. Under the agreement, municipalities must stop providing support or leasing premises to associations that undermine democracy and fundamental human rights and freedoms.

“The government will no longer be a fool with its own money,” Culture Minister Bertel Haarder of the Liberal Party said, ensuring that the new law may also be used against the notorious Grimhøj Mosque in Aarhus, which last year made international headlines by declaring its support for Daesh and encouraging its flock to stone adulteresses to death.

Hizb ut-Tahrir, which numbers around one million members around the world and was started in 1953, aims at replacing democratic society with a caliphate and establishing the radical Islamic sharia law; it has already been banned in a number of countries, including Germany, Russia, Turkey and all but three Arab nations.

Hizb ut-Tahrir first came to Denmark in 1990 under the name of Khalifa or Khilafah, which is still the name of their magazine. According to various estimates, the notorious organization has several hundred active members and sympathizers. However, Denmark has been struggling with the association since 2002, when the first proposal to forcibly dissolve Hizb ut-Tahrir was submitted.

In August 2006, Hizb ut-Tahrir’s spokesperson in Denmark was found guilty of threats against the then Danish Prime Minister Anders Fogh Rasmussen. In 2007, a kindergarten in Copenhagen was reported being run in line with the ideology of Hizb ut-Tahrir.

Source: sputniknews.com

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Evicts, islamist, Notorious, organization, Out! Copenhagen

Erdogan’s Ottoman Ambitions Lead to Ties With Islamists – French Lawmaker

April 15, 2016 By administrator

1037999695Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s Ottoman ambitions to spread his influence across parts of Europe and Syria have forced Ankara into dangerous alliances with Islamists, a member of the French legislative defense commission told Sputnik Friday.

MOSCOW (Sputnik), Svetlana Alexandrova – On Thursday, Russian President Vladimir Putin said during the Direct Line Q&A session that the Turkish government is fighting extremists in the country less than it is cooperating with such groups.

“Mr. Erdogan is playing a very dangerous game trying to recreate the Ottoman Empire across parts of Europe and Syria for this purpose Mr. Erdogan is trying to secure a wide range of partners among Islamists and build connections with the Wahhabi regime of Saudi Arabia,” Nicolas Dhuicq said.

The lawmaker noted that Saudi Arabia’s King Salman visits Ankara these days as a personal guest of the Turkish President “who is an Islamist himself.”

According to Dhuicq, Erdogan’s plan includes attempts “to inhabit the border and some Syrian villages of the north of the country with Turkic-speaking people, trading oil with Iraqi Kurds and using its military might on [the Kurdistan Workers’ Party] PKK’s rebels and the Syrian Kurds.”

© SPUTNIK/

Sputnik Turkey ‘Blocked for Providing Alternative, Objective Information’

Tensions between Ankara and Turkey’s Kurdish population escalated in July 2015 as fighting between the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK), a pro-independence organization considered to be a terrorist group by Ankara, and the Turkish army resumed.

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan alleges over 5,000 Kurdish insurgents have been killed in the campaign since mid-December, a figure that pro-Kurdish officials contend includes hundreds of civilians.

The Ottoman Empire preceded modern Turkey. It encompassed most of present-day Turkey, Syria, Iraq and Lebanon, among other territories, including in Europe.

Source: sputniknews.com

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: ambitions, Erdogan, islamist, ottoman, Saudi Arabia

Islamists hold protest in front of Israeli embassy in Baku. Members of Islamic Party of Azerbaijan detained

July 10, 2015 By administrator

israel-ambbassyActivists of the Islamic Party of Azerbaijan held a protest in front of the Israeli embassy dedicated to the actions of solidarity with the Palestinians, “Remember Quds!” (Jerusalem). About 50 people took part in the protest, according to Haqqin.az.

According to the report, Quds Day is traditionally observed by the Islamists all over the world on the last Friday of the month of Ramadan to demand Jerusalem’s liberation of occupation. This is the initiative of the Iranian Islamic Revolution leader, Imam Khomeini.

Turan agency reports that reinforced police squads stopped the Islamists’ protest detaining over 20 believers, including deputy chairmen of the Islamic Party of Azerbaijan, Elchin Manafov, Akif Heydarli and Vuqar Ibayev.
“The journalists were also treated in an extremely undiplomatic way and driven away from the venue by the police,” Turan writes.

Source: Panorama.am

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Azerbaijan, islamist, Israeli embassy, Protest

Reuters Exclusive: Turkish intelligence helped ship arms to Syrian Islamist rebel areas

May 21, 2015 By administrator

ADANA, Turkey | By Humeyra Pamuk and Nick Tattersall
A locally made shell is launched by rebel fighters towards forces loyal to Syria's President Bashar al-Assad at the frontline in al-Breij district of Aleppo December 10, 2014.  REUTERS/Sultan Kitaz

A locally made shell is launched by rebel fighters towards forces loyal to Syria’s President Bashar al-Assad at the frontline in al-Breij district of Aleppo December 10, 2014. REUTERS/Sultan Kitaz

Turkey’s state intelligence agency helped deliver arms to parts of Syria under Islamist rebel control during late 2013 and early 2014, according to a prosecutor and court testimony from gendarmerie officers seen by Reuters.

The witness testimony contradicts Turkey’s denials that it sent arms to Syrian rebels and, by extension, contributed to the rise of Islamic State, now a major concern for the NATO member.

Syria and some of Turkey’s Western allies say Turkey, in its haste to see President Bashar al-Assad toppled, let fighters and arms over the border, some of whom went on to join the Islamic State militant group which has carved a self-declared caliphate out of parts of Syria and Iraq.

Ankara has denied arming Syria’s rebels or assisting hardline Islamists. Diplomats and Turkish officials say it has in recent months imposed tighter controls on its borders.

Testimony from gendarmerie officers in court documents reviewed by Reuters allege that rocket parts, ammunition and semi-finished mortar shells were carried in trucks accompanied by state intelligence agency (MIT) officials more than a year ago to parts of Syria under Islamist control.

Four trucks were searched in the southern province of Adana in raids by police and gendarmerie, one in November 2013 and the three others in January 2014, on the orders of prosecutors acting on tip-offs that they were carrying weapons, according to testimony from the prosecutors, who now themselves face trial.

While the first truck was seized, the three others were allowed to continue their journey after MIT officials accompanying the cargo threatened police and physically resisted the search, according to the testimony and prosecutor’s report.

President Tayyip Erdogan has said the three trucks stopped on Jan. 19 belonged to MIT and were carrying aid.

“Our investigation has shown that some state officials have helped these people deliver the shipments,” prosecutor Ozcan Sisman, who ordered the search of the first truck on Nov. 7 2013 after a tip-off that it was carrying weapons illegally, told Reuters in a interview on May 4 in Adana.

Both Sisman and Takci have since been detained on the orders of state prosecutors and face provisional charges, pending a full indictment, of carrying out an illegal search.

The request for Sisman’s arrest, issued by the Supreme Board of Judges and Prosecutors (HSYK) and also seen by Reuters, accuses him of revealing state secrets and tarnishing the government by portraying it as aiding terrorist groups.

Sisman and Takci deny the charges.

“It is not possible to explain this process, which has become a total massacre of the law,” Alp Deger Tanriverdi, a lawyer representing both Takci and Sisman, told Reuters.

“Something that is a crime cannot possibly be a state secret.”

More than 30 gendarmerie officers involved in the Jan. 1 attempted search and the events of Jan. 19 also face charges such as military espionage and attempting to overthrow the government, according to an April 2015 Istanbul court document.

An official in Erdogan’s office said Erdogan had made his position clear on the issue. Several government officials contacted by Reuters declined to comment further. MIT officials could not immediately be reached.

“I want to reiterate our official line here, which has been stated over and over again ever since this crisis started by our prime minister, president and foreign minister, that Turkey has never sent weapons to any group in Syria,” Erdogan’s spokesman Ibrahim Kalin said on Wednesday at an event in Washington.

Erdogan has said prosecutors had no authority to search MIT vehicles and were part of what he calls a “parallel state” run by his political enemies and bent on discrediting the government.

“Who were those who tried to stop MIT trucks in Adana while we were trying to send humanitarian aid to Turkmens?,” Erdogan said in a television interview last August.

“Parallel judiciary and parallel security … The prosecutor hops onto the truck and carries out a search. You can’t search an MIT truck, you have no authority.”

‘TARNISHING THE GOVERNMENT’

One of the truck drivers, Murat Kislakci, was quoted as saying the cargo he carried on Jan. 19 was loaded from a foreign plane at Ankara airport and that he had carried similar shipments before. Reuters was unable to contact Kislakci.

Witness testimony seen by Reuters from a gendarme involved in a Jan. 1, 2014 attempt to search another truck said MIT officials had talked about weapons shipments to Syrian rebels from depots on the border. Reuters was unable to confirm this.

At the time of the searches, the Syrian side of the border in Hatay province, which neighbors Adana, was controlled by hardline Islamist rebel group Ahrar al-Sham.

The Salafist group included commanders such as Abu Khaled al-Soury, also known as Abu Omair al-Shamy, who fought alongside al Qaeda founder Osama bin Laden and was close to its current chief Ayman al-Zawahiri. Al-Soury was killed in by a suicide attack in Syrian city of Aleppo in February 2014.

A court ruling calling for the arrest of three people in connection with the truck stopped in November 2013 said it was loaded with metal pipes manufactured in the Turkish city of Konya which were identified as semi-finished parts of mortars.

The document also cites truck driver Lutfi Karakaya as saying he had twice carried the same shipment and delivered it to a field around 200 meters beyond a military outpost in Reyhanli, a stone’s throw from Syria.

The court order for Karakaya’s arrest, seen by Reuters, cited a police investigation which said that the weapons parts seized that day were destined for “a camp used by the al Qaeda terrorist organization on the Syrian border”.

Reuters was unable to interview Karakaya or to independently confirm the final intended destination of the cargo.

Sisman said it was a tip-off from the police that prompted him to order the thwarted search on Jan. 1, 2014.

“I did not want to prevent its passage if it belonged to MIT and carried aid but we had a tip off saying this truck was carrying weapons. We were obliged to investigate,” he said.

(Additional reporting by Ercan Gurses in Ankara; Editing by Nick Tattersall and Anna Willard)

Filed Under: News Tagged With: arm, intelligence, islamist, Syrian, Turkish

Today marks first anniversary of Turkish Jihadist invasion of Kessab

March 21, 2015 By administrator

f550d5a69136a6_550d5a69136e1.thumbToday marks the first anniversary of the Islamist attacks in Syria’s Armenian-populated town of Kessab.

The event captured the international media’s attention shortly after the town was controlled by rebel groups.

One year after the heated developments, the Kessab-Armenians are back home, but many say the town has lost its previous image.

Tireless efforts will be needed to restore the town looted and partially destroyed by insurgents, but the local Armenians say they aren’t willing to leave their homes.

Today too, repeated shootings are heard in Kessab, driving he panic-stricken population – especially women and children – to the port city of Latakia. The one-time prosperous town is now under target, with people in fear of even working in their own gardens.

Situated at a distance of 8km from the Mediterranean, Kessab has a population of an estimated 5,000, of whom 80% are Armenians.

The Turkish border town of Yayladagi (from where the shootings began) is just 3km far from there.
Kessab-Armenians claim Turkey’s direct involvement in the attacks.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: anniversary, islamist, Kessab, Turkish

Pamuk: ‘Authoritarian and Islamist government’ replaced soldiers in Turkey

February 14, 2015 By administrator

ISTANBUL – Agence France-Presse

Turkish Nobel laureate author Orhan Pamuk poses during an interview at his house in Istanbul. AFP photo

Turkish Nobel laureate author Orhan Pamuk poses during an interview at his house in Istanbul. AFP photo

When the book begins in the 1970s, Istanbul’s population was just two million, but now it is up to 16 million, he noted.

Pamuk may be reluctant to be seen as a political figure, but he remains unequivocally critical of Erdoğan who has boasted of transforming the country into a “new Turkey” with ambitious building projects.

He said that the ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP) was “destroying the balance of powers, which is in fact the key to any democracy.”

“In that sense, Turkey is only an electoral democracy, but a democracy where the respect of human rights, free speech are violated every day.”

Pamuk leaves Turkey every year to teach for a semester at New York at Columbia University and said he could sense the change when he returned last.

“When I came back, I felt a climate of fear, people whispering.”

Commenting on Turkey’s recent history, from coup-happy generals to Erdoğan, he said: “Authoritarian soldiers were (pushed) out, (an) authoritarian and Islamist government took their place.”

Erdoğan and the AKP have dominated Turkey’s highly diverse society for over a decade but have been facing unprecedented challenges after 2013 mass protests followed by stunning corruption allegations against the elite.

“In a sense, the mystery of political Islam vanished because of the convincing power of corruption allegations,” said Pamuk.

He is far more reticent when asked to comment on the mass killings of Armenians by Ottoman forces during World War I, a tragedy which Pamuk had in 2005 labelled a “genocide.”

Those comments brought him death threats as well as legal proceedings that were eventually abandoned.

“In a sense, the mystery of political Islam vanished because of the convincing power of corruption allegations,” said Pamuk.

He is far more reticent when asked to comment on the mass killings of Armenians by Ottoman forces during World War I, a tragedy which Pamuk had in 2005 labelled a “genocide.”

Those comments brought him death threats as well as legal proceedings that were eventually abandoned.

“I had a lot of trouble eight to 10 years ago because I talked freely about this subject.”

Time to Unite time to #deturkification of Washington

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Authoritarian, government, islamist, Pamuk, Turkey

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