Bogus Colleges, Bogus Universities Aid Islamic Invasion
by sheikyermami on December 28, 2009
Vlad Tepes:
Terror plot raises questions over student visas
The latest airline bomb plot by a terrorist with British connections raises serious questions about the UK’s controversial student visa system.
From The Telegraph U.K.
Umar Farouk Abdul Mutallab, who comes from a wealthy family in Nigeria, was already showing signs of extremist views when he was granted a visa to study mechanical engineering at University College London in 2005.
After completing his studies in 2008 he traveled to the Middle East before applying to return to the UK in May for another six month course.
However, his request was refused by officials from the UK Borders Agency as he was attempting to enroll on a course being offered by an institution on the Government’s list of bogus colleges.
Despite the fact his entry was barred, questions still remain over the system which has seen more than one and a half million visas granted to overseas students during the last eight years.
Earlier this year a report by the Home Affairs Select Committee criticised the Government for failing to deal adequately with the explosion in bogus colleges springing up across the UK.
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Nooooo!!!!! According to Jason Burke of ‘The Age’ today, it is only a local issue, not a global thing.
….”The tension between these two is the unresolved flaw at the heart of the international militant project.”
Even though he outlines the internationalisation of jihadi events he still insists it is only a local phenomenom. Talk about fuzzy logic.
…”He has apparently claimed he was trained and commissioned by an al-Qaeda master bomb-maker in Yemen. Whatever the eventual conclusion about his alleged international mission – a Nigerian living in London, trained in Yemen to blow up US planes – his case should not distract us from the fact that modern Islamic militancy is primarily a local phenomenon, not a global one.”
It’s only be because locals weren’t let into the nightclub or… “In Morocco, alongside the Jewish targets, a restaurant patronised by the local elite was hit. In Madrid, immigrants struck a short distance from where many of them lived or socialised. There was little international about the targets or the perpetrators of the 7/7 London bombings.”
His last two paragraphs are a gem.
…”Al-Qaeda’s project is often wrongly portrayed as having roots in the protection of local specificity against a rampant globalisation. In fact, al-Qaeda’s ideology is as disrespectful of local difference as any other global ideology.
Where the al-Qaeda project does coincide with local concerns, the combination is potent. Yet such situations are rare. The problem with ”joining the dots” between the countries any individual militant may have visited is that it falsifies the picture by over-emphasising the international dimension. Ultimately, all politics is local. And, whatever the story of Abdulmutallab, we should not let it blind us to the fact that Islamic militancy is no exception.”
http://www.theage.com.au/opinion/politics/a-world-stage-but-islamic-militancy-strikes-close-to-home-20091228-lh8m.html