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British actor arrested after escaping real life Mumbai false flag Mossad terror – India’s Internal Security Police are now holding and questioning an identified Israeli Mossad agent – India uncovers Hindu terror group that carried out bombings blamed on Islamists

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British actor arrested after escaping real life Mumbai horror

 

 


 

 

Statement issued by David Ben Gurion, the first Israeli Prime Minister, as printed in the Jewish Chronicle, 9 August 1967:

“The world Zionist movement should not be neglectful of the dangers of Pakistan to it. And Pakistan now should be its first target, for this ideological State is a threat to our existence. And Pakistan, the whole of it, hates the Jews and loves the Arabs.

This lover of the Arabs is more dangerous to us than the Arabs themselves. For that matter, it is most essential for the world Zionism that it should now take immediate steps against Pakistan.

Whereas the inhabitants of the Indian peninsula are Hindus whose hearts have been full of hatred towards Muslims, therefore, India is the most important base for us to work therefrom against Pakistan.

It is essential that we exploit this base and strike and crush Pakistanis, enemies of Jews and Zionism, by all disguised and secret plans.”

 

 


 

 

 

British actor who played one of the London suicide bombers(in reallity a false flag) in a TV documentary escaped death at the hands of real life terrorists in the Mumbai massacre before being detained as a suspect by police.

 

 

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India’s Internal Security Police are now holding 

and questioning an identified Israeli Mossad agent

 

Tarek Fatah: Look to Pakistan power struggle for roots of Mumbai murders

 

The terrorist mayhem in Mumbai had barely subsided when I received the first e-mail suggesting the attacks had been carried out by agents of Mossad — Israel’s foreign intelligence agency — masquerading as Islamic terrorists to give Muslims a bad name.

Alex James of Toronto forwarded a news item claiming, “India’s Internal Security Police are now holding and questioning an identified Israeli Mossad agent, who had been in communication with some of the alleged terrorists in India two weeks before the black-op attacks took place.”

As ridiculous as this may sound, chances are that countless Muslims are deluding themselves into believing that it is not their co-religionists who are responsible for the savagery let loose on India, but some hidden U.S.-Zionist conspiracy against Islam.

If at all there was an intelligence agency whose fingerprints can be spotted at the crime scene, it appears to be Islamist rogue elements from Pakistan’s Inter Services Intelligence (ISI), which is hell-bent on disrupting India’s (recently improving) relations with neighbouring Pakistan.

For two decades, the ISI has been the de-facto government in Pakistan, toppling regimes, aiding the Taliban, giving cover to al-Qaeda fugitives and running a business empire worth billions of dollars.
In July, the new democratically elected government in Islamabad, led by Prime Minister Yousaf Raza Gilani, attempted to bring the ISI under civilian control. Under threat of a military coup, it had to perform a humiliating about-face within 24 hours.

Then last Sunday, Pakistan’s Foreign Minister announced that the political wing of the ISI, which is responsible for rigging elections and blackmailing politicians, had been disbanded, saying, “The ISI is a precious national institution and wants to focus on counterterrorism activities.”

It seems the Foreign Minister had spoken too soon. Within hours of his announcement, the BBC reported that an unnamed senior security official had contradicted the statement.

While this tussle for control of the country’s intelligence network was going on behind the scenes, on Tuesday, the president of Pakistan, Asif Zardari, threw a bombshell that caught the Pakistan military establishment off-guard. Speaking to an Indian TV audience via a satellite link, President Zardari announced a strategic shift in Pakistan’s military doctrine. He told a cheering Indian audience that Pakistan had adopted a “no first-strike” nuclear policy.

This apparently did not go down well within Pakistan’s military establishment, which has ruled the country for decades using the Indian bogeyman to justify the maintenance of a huge military machine on a permanent war footing.
Immediately, military commentators denounced Zardari, with one saying he believed the President was “not fully informed or completely aware of” Pakistan’s policy on the issue.

To further alarm Pakistan’s own military-industrial complex, Zardari borrowed a quote from his late wife, Benazir Bhutto, who once said that there’s a “little bit of India in every Pakistani and a little bit of Pakistan” in every Indian.
“I do not know whether it is the Indian or the Pakistani in me that is talking to you today,” Zardari said, amid applause from his high-profile audience, which included diplomats, politicians and industrialists.

While most Pakistanis welcomed the new air of peace and friendship between Indian and Pakistan, the country’s religious right was upset.

Just a month ago, the founder of one of Pakistan’s most feared armed Islamist groups had accused Zardari of being too dovish toward India, and criticized him for referring to militants in Indian-held Kashmir as “terrorists.

Then, this week, the so-called Deccan Mujahideen struck against India with the clear aim of triggering a Hindu backlash against the country’s minority Muslims — with the obvious attendant danger to Pakistan-India relations.

Most security commentators agree that the Deccan Mujahideen is merely a tag of convenience, and that behind this well-planned terror attack lies Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT), a major militant group fighting in Indian Kashmir — the same group that has recently warned Zardari to desist from warming up to India.

Time will tell whether these Islamists succeed or whether the people of India — Hindus and Muslims alike — can see through this provocation and embrace the hand of friendship extended by President Zardari.

In the meantime, Muslims around the world will also have to decide whether to enter the 21st century and distance themselves from the doctrine of armed jihad, or embrace these murderous haters of joy and peace.
National Post
tarekfatah@rogers.com

Tarek Fatah is the author of Chasing a Mirage: The Tragic Illusion of an Islamic State (Wiley).

Photo: Indian commandos take positions outside “Nariman Bhavan”, where the armed militants are believed to be holed up in Mumbai November 27, 2008. The building has mainly Jewish residents.

 

 

http://network.nationalpost.com/np/blogs/fullcomment/archive/2008/11/27/tarek-fatah-look-to-pakistan-power-struggle-for-roots-of-mumbai-murders.aspx

 

 

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 Terror group that carried out bombings blamed on Islamists

 

 

India uncovers Hindu terror group that carried out bombings blamed on Islamists India uncovers Hindu

 

At least 10 people, including monk and army officer, held 

Mumbai massacre: ‘They shot the man standing next to me’

Mumbai under siege as death toll tops 100
Mumbai Massacre: ‘Put your hands up if you are British,’ gunmen tell terrified travellers
Mumbai massacre: Terrorists used al Qaida blueprint
India terror rampage: at least 80 dead in Mumbai
India is in something of a state of shock after learning from official sources that its first Hindu terror cell
may have carried out a series of deadly bombings that were initially blamed on militant Muslims. The
revelation is forcing the country to consider some difficult questions.
At least 10 people have been arrested in connection with several bomb blasts in the Muslim-dominated town of Malegaon in the western state of Maharashtra in September, which left six people dead. But reports suggest that police believe the cell may also have carried out a number of previous attacks, including last year’s notorious bombing of a cross-border train en route to Pakistan, which killed 68 people. Among the alleged members of the cell are a serving army officer and a Hindu monk.
Bomb attacks are not uncommon in India – there has been a flurry in recent months – but police usually blame them on Muslim extremists, often said to have links to militant groups based in either Pakistan or Bangladesh. As a result, the recent cracking of the alleged Hindu cell has forced India to face some difficult issues. A country that prides itself on purported religious and cultural toleration – an ambition that in reality often falls short – has been made to ask itself how this cell could operate for so long. India’s military, which prides itself on its professionalism, has been forced to order an embarrassing inquiry.

The near-daily drip of revelations from police has also caused red faces for India’s main political opposition, the Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), ahead of state polls and a general election scheduled for early next year. The BJP and its prime ministerial candidate, Lal Krishna Advani, have long accused the Congress Party-led government of being soft on terrorism that involved Muslims. However, the BJP has refused to call for a clampdown on Hindu groups, and last week Mr Advani even criticised the police over the way they questioned one of the alleged cell members, a woman called Sadhvi Pragya Singh Thakur.

The Prime Minister, Manmohan Singh, phoned his rival to ask him not to politicise the issue or the investigation. “There is a strong case so let the police do their job,” he told Mr Advani. While some commentators have expressed surprise about the discovery of the alleged cell, others have pointed out that there has been growing concern about the possible threat from Hindu extremists. In the summer, two members of a right-wing Hindu group were killed while putting together a bomb, and two other suspected members of the same group died in similar circumstances in 2006.

Meanwhile, senior right-wing leaders have made no secret of their wish that Hindus should form suicide squads to protect themselves against Muslim extremists. Bal Thackeray, leader of a group called the Shiv Sena, which has been responsible for communal and regional violence in Mumbai, wrote recently in the party’s magazine: “The threat of Islamic terror in India is rising. It is time to counter the same with Hindu terror. Hindu suicide squads should be readied to ensure the existence of Hindu society and to protect the nation.”

Observers say the fact that the police have arrested the alleged cell members amid considerable political pressure suggests the growing professionalism of its security forces. “It’s the first Hindu cell and it’s the first time Hindus have been shackled and taken to jail,” said Professor Dipankar Gupta, a sociologist at Delhi’s Jawarlahal Nehru University. “I’m quite pleased with the way the police have done their jobs.”

 

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Actor Joey Jeetun, 31, who played suicide bomber Shehzad Tanweer in a British television documentary 7/7: Attack on London, was in Cafe Leopold, the popular expat and tourist haunt near Mumbai’s landmark Taj Mahal Hotel when attackers stormed both venues and other key targets on Wednesday.

The attacks left up to 195 dead, among them foreign hostages.

“I was scared I was confused I was distraught … As an actor you can play a character but this wasn’t playing, it was real,” he told CNN.

In an interview with London newspaper The Times, he told how he survived the attack after terrorists assumed that he was dead because he was covered in other people’s blood.

“After about five minutes (the shooting) stopped and I opened my eyes. There were dead people next to me who had been shot in the head,” he said.

In the bloody and chaotic aftermath, police arrested Jeetun on suspicion of being one of the terrorists, he said.

“I was held in a police cell for 13 hours with a group of Arab looking men. They thought I was a suspect even though I said I was a British tourist,” he told London’s Daily Telegraph.

Jeetun was born and raised in London and his mother is from the tropical island of Mauritius, according to his website.

According to British media reports, Indian television news channel NDTV reported that “British citizens of Pakistani origin” were among the attackers who stormed two luxury Mumbai hotels and other key targets on Wednesday.

However these reports have since been denied.

 

 

http://news.theage.com.au/world/british-actor-arrested-after-escaping-real-life-mumbai-horror-20081130-6nol.html

 

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