sábado, 14 de noviembre de 2015

Paris Attacks: The price of "multiculturalism"


Paris attack TIMELINE: Suicide bombers, blasts, shootouts
State of emergency has been declared in France following a series of attacks in Paris, reportedly by people inspired by ISIS. Over 150 people have been killed and many more injured in 7 attacks.




The attack took place in Paris with the maximum loss is the Bataclan concert hall attack was recorded by journalist Daniel Psenny where injured and was published by the French newspaper Le Monde.





Islamic State releases video threatening more attacks on France


Islamic State has claimed responsibility for the attacks in Paris. The terrorist group released a video threatening more assaults if the country continues to bomb its positions.
The video emerges just hours after gunmen and bombers killed more than 120 people in the French capital.


A bearded militant in the video says that while the allied forces continue bombing IS positions, they will never be safe.
The video is undated and was released on Saturday via Islamic State’s foreign media arm, the Al-Hayat Media Center.
Islamic State terrorists are also urging Muslims who can’t travel to Syria to conduct deadly attacks in France.
The militants are calling on the Muslim population in the country to fight the "infidels” adding there are arms and “poison”available, and targets terrorists should hit. 

French President Francois Hollande has said the attacks in Paris that left 127 people killed were "an act of war" organized from abroad by Islamic State with internal help.
Hollande added he would address parliament on Monday in an extraordinary meeting, and the country would observe three days of official mourning.

'Terrorists chose Paris as iconic target like twin towers' – ex-CIA officer


The series of apparent Islamic State attacks in Paris can be compared to the 2001 destruction of the WTC towers in the US, says Jack Rice, a former CIA officer. The French capital is an iconic European city, and terrorists target icons.

France has suffered one of the worst tragedies in its modern history with more than 150 people reported killed in seven separate gun and bomb attacks throughout the capital. The terrorist group Islamic State (IS, formerly ISIS/ISIL) claimed responsibility for the attacks.
“Part of the strength that a terrorist group has is to take down an icon,” Rice told RT. “If we go back to 9/11 in the United States, they took down the World Trade Center and parts of New York. And we've seen efforts around the world to do similar things.


“That's what terrorism is about. You are not going to be able to destroy the Western Hemisphere. You are not going to be able to take down parts of Western Europe. What you can do is establish that what you are doing is dramatic and that people have to notice you,” he added.


France should not respond in a draconian manner to the terrorist threat as the US did after 9/11, the former US intelligence officer said.
“There needs to be a calculated reasonable response. What there can't be is a draconian effort to reach out to the world and shake it to the core, because what you potentially do is create more danger, more justification in those who support ISIS. We don't want that,” Rice said.
“What we want is to go after the culprits who actually did this and make our people safe rather than to make them appear safe. That happened after 9/11 in the Unite States, and, frankly, it was a disaster in many ways. I think the French have learned from that,” he added.



The Paris attacks are reminiscent to the terrorist gun spree in Mumbai in 2008, when separate groups of gunmen went on a shooting spree at different locations across the city. This tactic is a brutally efficient form of terrorism, Rice said.
“What you have is a city where people don't know where to go, where is that safe place to be. Where is it that I can go, where my loved ones can go. And what you have is almost a paralysis,” he said. “You bring everybody from the intelligence community, from the army, from the police, and try to deal with the situation and lock the country down. And people are trying to get out of the way and don't know where to go.”
IS, if it's proven to be behind the attacks, is clearly trying to enlarge its footprint, demonstrating that it can stage terrorist acts globally, Rice said.
“They have been showing the strength that they possess, with the recent potential downing of an aircraft in Egypt. Looking at their potential to reach out into Europe, into North Africa, into the Horn of Africa, beyond the Middle East really shows their capability,” he said.
“What ISIS is trying to establish is that they can operate anywhere and that everybody is potentially vulnerable. Their ability to reach out and do this all the way down to the common man and woman on the street is something that creates the havoc,” Rice added.

Paris attacks: 120+ killed and many injured in a series of terrorist acts


State of emergency has been declared in France following a series of attacks in Paris, reportedly by people inspired by ISIS. Over 150 people have been killed and many more injured in 7 attacks.
  • 14 November 2015
    14:25 GMT
    Just before the peace Syria talks in Vienna started, US Secretary of State John Kerry and Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov discussed the terrorist attacks in Paris, calling them “unacceptable acts” of “modern fascism” and promising “no tolerance” to the perpetrators.



  • 14:13 GMT
    Another passport, belonging to an Egyptian citizen, has been found next to the body of another suspected terrorist near the Stade de France, BFM TV reported.
  • 14:03 GMT
    Police have established the identity of one of the terrorists behind the attacks on the Bataclan concert hall in Paris. His fingerprints have been used to identify him. The attacker was a French citizen, BFM TV reported.
    The authorities haven’t disclosed the man’s name yet.
    It comes about an hour after a Syrian passport was found near the body of one of the suicide bombers who blew himself up near the Stade de France, sources close the investigation in Paris told Reuters.
  • 13:34 GMT
  • French Interior Minister Bernard Cazeneuve has authorized local authorities to impose curfews if needed, according to his televised address.
  • 13:30 GMT
    Bloodstains and personal belongings can be seen outside the Bataclan cafe and theater in Paris. The area still remains cordoned off.



  • 13:27 GMT
    There were American citizens among those injured in the attacks in Paris, the US State Department reported, according to Reuters.
  • 13:18 GMT
    The Netherlands will reinforce security measures at its borders and airports following the terrorist attacks in Paris, Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte said on Saturday, Reuters reports.
    "Our values and our rule of law are stronger than their fanaticism. ISIS (Islamic State) is our enemy. We are at war with ISIS. We are not at war with a country, a belief or with Islam," Rutte said.
  • 13:04 GMT
  • Speaking to RT outside the French embassy in Moscow, Konstantin Kosachev, chairman of the Russian Council Federation Committee on International Affairs, has expressed his deepest condolences to the French people, saying the tragedy extends beyond France and is a “global” one.



  • 12:57 GMT
    Saudi Arabia’s Council of Senior Scholars has issued a statement condemning the terrorist attack, saying that it goes contrary to Islamic values.
    "Terrorists are not sanctioned by Islam and these acts are contrary to values of mercy it brought to the world," the statement obtained by the Saudi Press Agency goes, according to Reuters.
    Islamic nations would have to make a “concerted effort" and assume a "unified moral stance" to eliminate terrorism, Saudi Arabia's highest religious body said.
  • 12:50 GMT
  • A connection between a man arrested in Germany last week in possession of automatic weapons and explosives, and the attacks in Paris, has been "established," according to the president of Bavaria, Horst Seehofer, as cited by Le Monde.
  • 12:44 GMT
    • France is stepping up security at its offices abroad, including embassies and consulates, Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius said on Saturday, according to Reuters.
      "I have taken measures needed internationally to increase protection at all our sites, and by that I mean our embassies, consulates, cultural centers and schools," Fabius said, after talks on Syria in Vienna had ended.
    • 12:39 GMT
    • Queue to the French embassy in Moscow - hundreds of meters to nearest metro station.
      • 12:36 GMT
        A Syrian passport has been found next to one of the suicide bombers at the Stad de France football stadium in Saint-Denis, Reuters reports, citing sources close to the investigation.
      • 11:59 GMT
      • Following the attack on Paris on Friday evening, EU foreign policy chief Federica Mogherini called on the international community to join together to defeat terrorism whilst speaking to press in front of Vienna's Hotel Imperial, Saturday, before the next round of talks on the Syrian conflict. 



  • 11:56 GMT
    Italian Interior Minister Angelino Alfano says border control have been tightened since the terror attacks in Paris.
  • 11:33 GMT
    Syrian President Bashar Assad has said Western support for insurgents in Syria fuelled the “expansion of terror” abroad, state media reported.
  • 11:16 GMT
    RT’s Peter Oliver, who flew in from Berlin to Paris this morning, said there was “no more security than I would have expected.”
    However, getting into the center of Paris proved harder.
    “I was asked to show documents on most occasions,” he said.
    Oliver describes the mood of the people in the French capital as “defiant” and “somber,” saying he saw people in the streets shouting, “Freedom! We will always be free!”
  • 11:02 GMT
  • The Islamic State terrorist group has claimed responsibility for the attacks that killed at least 127 people in Paris. In an official statement the group said its fighters, armed with suicide bomb belts and machine guns, carried out the terror strikes at various locations they had pinpointed in the heart of the French capital.
  • 10:49 GMT
  • Transport Minister Maxim Sokolov has said Russia will implement transport safety measures across the country following the terrorist attacks in Paris, RIA Novosti reported. The head of Russian aviation agency Rosaviatsia, Aleksandr Neradko, says authorities are considering restrictions on flights from Moscow to Paris.
  • RAW: Calais ‘Jungle’ refugee camp on fire as Paris rocked by fatal attacks




Calais Locals Are Ready To Take Up Arms Against The Illegal Immigrants Invading






The last time France was safe



(Source: rt.com,patreon.com) votar

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