Copenhagen Blasphemy Shooting

pmaitra

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Shooting at blasphemy debate in Copenhagen featuring controversial cartoonist Lars Vilks

Three police officers were wounded at a shooting in a Copenhagen café hosting a freedom of speech debate. The French ambassador and Swedish artist Lars Vilks, known for drawing controversial cartoons of the prophet Muhammad, were reportedly at the event.

The two assailants are still at large, according to Danish media. TV 2 reports that the two spoke Danish and were dressed in dark clothes. They reportedly fled the crime scene in a dark Volkswagen Polo.

The French ambassador François Zimeray had just finished speaking at the event as the shots were fired. Later he confirmed in a tweet he was unharmed.

The meeting, "Art, Blasphemy and Freedom of Expression" was being held in the Krudttonden cultural center in northern Copenhagen. Some 30 bullet holes were found at the site.

A TV 2 correspondent on the scene has also said that there are unconfirmed reports of a civilian casualty.

One of the organizers of the event Helle Merete Brix told AP that artist Vilks was not injured during the shooting. In Brix's opinion, this was an "obvious assassination attempt" on the cartoonist.

In 2007, the controversial artist drew a cartoon depicting the prophet Muhammad as a dog. Subsequently, Vilks has lived under heavy security and now travels with police protection when in Denmark.
See more at: http://rt.com/news/232399-copenhagen-attack-vilks-blasphemy/
 

sorcerer

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Okay...
The apologists will say just because they are wearing black t-shirt doesnt mean they are ISIS.
But
Deep inside everyone knows what it is.
 

Razor

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I'm waiting for the Free-Will Baptists to start beheading people.
Then maybe you should ask yourself why you, as a tax-payer, are funding Islam to Czech schoolchildren.
Note that the czech republic is a country with almost NO muslims.
Why do amerikis want to inject islamic thoughts into a country that is lucky enough to not have islam.

(Hint: I am guessing this is just like the funding of xtianity in Asian countries (india, china, japan etc) i.e. to create viable minority groups (and their leaders) which can be used later when needed: NGOs, human rights groups, religious freedom, civil war etc)

US government promoting Islam in the Czech Republic

Is this Constitutional? No one particularly cares — to care about such questions would be "Islamophobic." But imagine the outcry if American taxpayers were funding grants from US Embassies to promote Christianity. That would make the front page of the New York Times and be the top story on all the nightly news shows.

"US Government Promoting Islam in Czech Republic," by Soeren Kern at the Gatestone Institute, April 14:

The Czech government has approved a new project aimed at promoting Islam in public elementary and secondary schools across the country.

The project—Muslims in the Eyes of Czech Schoolchildren—is being spearheaded by a Muslim advocacy group and is being financed by American taxpayers through a grant from the US Embassy in Prague. (The US State Department is also promoting Islam in other European countries.)

The group says the Czech Ministry of Education has authorized it to organize lectures and seminars aimed at "teaching Czech schoolchildren about Islamic beliefs and practices" and at "fighting stereotypes and prejudices about Muslims."

But critics—there are many—say the project's underlying objective is to convert non-Muslim children to Islam by bringing proselytizing messages into public schools under the guise of promoting multiculturalism and fighting "Islamophobia."

The group's website says the first phase of the project involves "analyzing the accuracy of the information about Islam in Czech textbooks on history, geography and social sciences, and mapping the level of teaching about Islam in Czech grammar schools and other secondary schools."

The second phase of the project involves the implementation of a three-level program that will "acquaint both pupils and teachers with Islam and Muslims" and help them to develop better "critical reception skills" when analyzing supposedly Islamophobic information.

According to the group's website:

"The first level acquaints the reader with the history of Islam, the basic religious concepts of tradition and contemporary issues such as family [Sharia] law, the veiling of women and Islamophobia."

"The second level offers a deeper look at the issues and puts more emphasis on the involvement of the pupils."¦ Pupils will be divided into three groups within which they will study any of the following topics: the veiling of women, media coverage of Islam and Muslims in the Czech Republic. Each group will be led by an experienced tutor, who will acquaint students with the problems by means of prepared materials and subsequent debate."

"The third level provides schools with artistically oriented projects or discussions with Muslims and professionals dealing with Islam. Artistic activities would involve making a film or taking photographs focused on a day in the life of a Muslim or art workshops and competitions focused on the possibility of integrating Muslims into Czech society."

The group also organizes thematic lectures, workshops and debates for schools or groups of students, many of which are held at the Municipal Library in Prague—and which are more openly geared toward converting Czech youth to Islam.

One such lecture entitled "Paths of Young Czech Women to Islam" answers questions such as: What makes a young Czech woman want to become a Muslim? It is the main motive always falling in love with a Muslim man or are there other reasons? How does one convert to Islam? How can new Muslims cope with non-Muslim relatives?

Another lecture entitled "Koran, Sunna and the Internet: Where to Do Muslims Get Their Information?" answers questions such as: Where can one get information about the Muslim faith? Is the Koran the only source of information about Islam or are there other sources? Where can one find information that is not mentioned directly in the Koran? The lecture is supplemented by providing students with hands-on opportunities to work with various Islamic texts, including the Koran and the Hadiths [sayings of the Prophet Mohammed].

Students wanting to participate in the lectures but lacking previous knowledge of Islam are advised to attend a 15-minute introductory course that "represents the characteristics of Islam and advocates it in the context of Christianity and Judaism." The lectures are "suitable for children from about the age of 15, although it is possible to customize the program for younger pupils."

A statement on the group's website justifies the project this way:

"The Muslim community in the Czech Republic is small, but it raises strong emotions. Issues relating to Muslims or Islam appear almost daily in television news, newspapers and Internet debates. But the topic is discussed only marginally in regular school lessons. This condition leads to acceptance and subsequent consolidation of prejudices and stereotypes that are supported by latent Islamophobia. We would like this project to contribute to improving the situation. We provide information about Islam that is factually accurate. Students will also have the opportunity to meet with Muslims and get to know them before forming an opinion of them."

One of the co-founders of the project, a Czech-Palestinian named Sadi Shanaah, was quoted by the Prague Post as saying, "School lessons do not pay sufficient attention to Islam. Pupils want to learn more about it."

But the group recently ran an advertisement promising to pay 250 Czech korunas ($13 dollars) to any student aged 15 to 18 years who would agree to attend a two-hour presentation about Islam.

The ad—which indicates that the American embassy in Prague was financing the April 2 event—states: "Event will take place at a school in New Butovice (7 minutes' walk from the metro station). You get a brief introduction to Islam through which you can learn more about the veiling of Muslim women, media coverage and Muslims in the Czech Republic. Then you will have the opportunity to meet with Amirah, a Malaysian Muslim who is studying medicine in Prague, and to ask her everything you want about Islam or Muslim life in the Czech Republic."

The Czech Republic is home to a small but rapidly growing Muslim population. Although reliable figures do not exist, it is estimated that the number of Muslims in the country now exceeds 10,000 (some say the figure is closer to 5,000, while others say it exceeds 15,000), up from 3,699 in the 2001 census, and 495 in the 1991 census.

Using 10,000 as the baseline figure, the Muslim population currently comprises around 0.1% of the total Czech population of 10.4 million. This percentage is far lower than most European countries, but the rate of increase is nearly 2,000% since 1991, and 170% since 2001.

Most Muslims in the Czech Republic are immigrants from Afghanistan, Bosnia, Chechnya, Egypt, Iraq, Iran, Libya, Syria and Turkey. But a study produced for the Czech Interior Ministry in 2007 (it estimated there were a total of 11,235 Muslims in the country in 2005) found that there were also a large number of Czech converts to Islam.

It is estimated that at least 2,000 Czechs have converted to Islam since the end of Communist rule in 1989. Many are women who have married Muslims, but just as many are young males who are "looking to Islam in their search for spirituality," according to Radio Free Europe.

The Interior Ministry report says the majority of Muslims in the Czech Republic are well educated and economically successful. "Muslims who belong to the core of the community are often university-educated people. Among them are doctors, architects, teachers, economists, businessmen and others," the report says.
S: http://www.jihadwatch.org/2014/04/us-government-promoting-islam-in-the-czech-republic
 
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SajeevJino

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Three hurt in shooting attack at Copenhagen synagogue




One person was shot in the head and two police were wounded when shots were fired at a synagogue in central Copenhagen a little after midnight Saturday, Danish police said, adding that it was too early to say whether the incident was connected to an earlier one at an arts cafe.

One policeman was shot in the arm and the other in the leg, local media reported. Police initially declined to describe the precise condition of the person shot in the head or the police officers.

A massive manhunt was underway, Danish media reported, after the gunman fled the scene on foot. According to reports, police were searching the city's botanical garden, in the heart of Copenhagen.

Three hurt in shooting attack at Copenhagen synagogue - Israel News, Ynetnews
 

SajeevJino

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.


RIP the slain Civilian, Speedy recovery the wounded Police man and the civilians
 

wrigsted

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2 civilians killed, 5 wounded police and the perpetrator dead, shot by the police.
It's rare that you see other weapons here in Copenhagen than a police officer with a service pistol. Yesterday, each group with more than a few cops, at least one of them was armed than one machine gun, and they all had a quiet hope of meeting the "perker" who had shot at their colleagues. Some of them did, and now the lice is dead.
 

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