Post by Teddy Bear on Jan 8, 2012 21:36:33 GMT
(Hat Tip - Pounce-UK)
The BBC ran an article a few days ago about a terrorist who was denied parole in his original 45 year sentence after so far serving only 25 years. he had plotted to blow up an Israeli EL AL flight and kill 375 passengers by planting explosives on his unwitting Irish pregnant girlfriend.
According to the BBC - In 2009, the board had concluded that Hindawi should be freed, saying he had shown remorse and was "very unlikely" to re-offend.
But then-Justice Secretary Jack Straw, and his successor Ken Clarke, sought to block Hindawi's release arguing he had not rejected terrorism.
So apparently the parole board originally decided that since he was only likely to be attacking Israel in future he was a safe bet to release. Was the 'remorse' he expressed the fact that Israeli security agents discovered the explosives on his girlfriend before they went off?
At the end of the article it gives some background to this terrorist as follows: He was from a wealthy Palestinian family whose village was burned in the Israeli-Arab war of 1967, when he was 12.
After his family became refugees in Jordan, he joined the Palestine Liberation Organisation (PLO), became a writer and travelled to London.
This can only be an attempt by the BBC to somehow justify his actions, at least in their view, as it's pure invented fantasy.
Daniel Pipes, a mid-East expert wrote about this man back in 1989, and his past, as well as who he was working for, gives a completely different picture.
It also goes on to tell us that he was to receive $250,000 for the successful completion of his mission, blowing up this plane. Hardly a Palestinian fighting for freedom, as the BBC would have their public believe. It's worth reading the whole exposee on this man and the Syrian connection
Just as well the Syrians didn't want him to blow up a British plane as the BBC would have had to modify their narrative.
Any doubt that the BBC aren't assisting terrorism and terrorists in the world? I wonder when the British public are going to wake up to just what forces they are forced to sponsor and support - even through ignorance.
The BBC ran an article a few days ago about a terrorist who was denied parole in his original 45 year sentence after so far serving only 25 years. he had plotted to blow up an Israeli EL AL flight and kill 375 passengers by planting explosives on his unwitting Irish pregnant girlfriend.
According to the BBC - In 2009, the board had concluded that Hindawi should be freed, saying he had shown remorse and was "very unlikely" to re-offend.
But then-Justice Secretary Jack Straw, and his successor Ken Clarke, sought to block Hindawi's release arguing he had not rejected terrorism.
So apparently the parole board originally decided that since he was only likely to be attacking Israel in future he was a safe bet to release. Was the 'remorse' he expressed the fact that Israeli security agents discovered the explosives on his girlfriend before they went off?
At the end of the article it gives some background to this terrorist as follows: He was from a wealthy Palestinian family whose village was burned in the Israeli-Arab war of 1967, when he was 12.
After his family became refugees in Jordan, he joined the Palestine Liberation Organisation (PLO), became a writer and travelled to London.
This can only be an attempt by the BBC to somehow justify his actions, at least in their view, as it's pure invented fantasy.
Daniel Pipes, a mid-East expert wrote about this man back in 1989, and his past, as well as who he was working for, gives a completely different picture.
Nizar Nawwaf al-Mansur al-Hindawi (his first name is also spelled Nezar) is a Jordanian of Palestinian origins. Born in 1954 in Baqura, a village near the east side of the Jordan River, he worked as a journalist in Amman. Although he is from a prominent establishment family (two uncles had held cabinet posts), Nizar's extreme anti-Hashemite views and his founding membership in a shadowy organization, the Jordanian Revolutionary Movement for National Salvation, got him in trouble at home.
Seeking refuge, he arrived in London in 1979. At first, he hoped to write for the Arabic press. This did not work out, in part because of a drinking problem. Failing to land a steady position, Hindawi took on odd jobs. For example, he worked in 1982 for two months as a messenger at a London-based Arabic newspaper, Al-'Arab. But he was fired for erratic behavior (locking up the teleprinter room and taking the key home in a fit of temper). Hindawi had other troubles too. He married a Polish woman and the couple had a daughter; but his wife left him and returned to Poland with the child.
Despondent, Hindawi hired himself out in the early 1980s to the Syrian government to make quick money. According to the British authorities, the Syrian ambassador to the Court of St. James's, Loutuf Allah Haydar, was personally engaged in recruiting Hindawi. The relationship began innocently enough, with Hindawi writing puff pieces on Syria. Then, one thing led to another and in late 1985 or so - about the time the Jordanian government refused to renew his passport - he went to Syria for two months' military training.
It also goes on to tell us that he was to receive $250,000 for the successful completion of his mission, blowing up this plane. Hardly a Palestinian fighting for freedom, as the BBC would have their public believe. It's worth reading the whole exposee on this man and the Syrian connection
Just as well the Syrians didn't want him to blow up a British plane as the BBC would have had to modify their narrative.
Any doubt that the BBC aren't assisting terrorism and terrorists in the world? I wonder when the British public are going to wake up to just what forces they are forced to sponsor and support - even through ignorance.