Fury at Paris Match picture of Taleban in dead soldier’s uniform

Sunday, September 7th, 2008

* In France, as elsewhere, the left shills for the enemy:

 

A picture of a Taleban fighter in the uniform of a dead French soldier drew anger in France yesterday as the army came under new fire over its conduct in an ambush that killed ten paratroopers in Afghanistan last month.

 

A French soldier, wounded in clashes with Taliban forces near Kabul in Afghanistan

(Charles Platiau)

Twenty-three soldiers were injured in the Taleban attack that killed ten of their colleagues and has fuelled calls for French forces to leave Afghanistan

Paris Match magazine was condemned by politicians, the military and soldiers’ families for publishing a spread of Taleban posing with their French trophies from the battle, east of Kabul, on August 18. These included Famas assault rifles, helmets, body armour, walkie-talkies and a wristwatch that the Taleban asked the magazine to return to the family of the soldier who had owned it.

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France: Liberté, égalité, fraternité replaced by Muhammadanismé

Saturday, September 6th, 2008

KIDNAPPING TRIAL POSTPONED DUE TO RAMADAN

PARIS, SEPTEMBER 5 - The main unions of the French magistrates said they are “astonished” by the decision of the criminal court of Rennes to postpone “due to the Ramadan” a trial of abduction. The trial had to begin on September 16, exactly in the middle of the sacred month for the Muslims, but the defending counsel has asked and obtained a postponement, affirming that his client, of Islamic faith, was “too weak” due to the fast.

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Germany’s Intifada: Jihad against the Fatherland

Saturday, August 2nd, 2008

First it was France, now Germany

* The pattern is always the same: the police try to arrest a Muslim thug and are immediately surrounded by a mob of militant, fanatical Muslims, who are ready to attack and sometimes set police- cars. even ambulances, on fire. In France and Germany police have been beaten an shot up. 

German authorities are reporting that, within their cities, areas now exist where police fear to tread. In many German urban areas drug dealing, theft, brawls, and assaults on police officers are the order of the day. The problem is becoming so severe police scarcely dare enter some quarters except in strength, while in others they concentrate on their own safety first.      

 But this is old news to French law enforcement officials. The 2005 riots woke France up to the fact that an anti-civilization had arisen in the “banlieues” (housing projects), which surround major French cities. Populated mainly by immigrants from North and West Africa, many with a Muslim background, they are known as places of anger and aggression towards anyone who represents “official” France.

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