By Soeren Kern • May 22, 2014
The American Embassy in Prague is financing a new project aimed at promoting Islam in public elementary and secondary schools across the Czech Republic.
The new law removes the requirement that there must be a special reason to sue for defamation or insult. Swedish thought police will be able to prosecute anyone who expresses an opinion about Muslim immigration and much else if that opinion is deemed to be defamation or slander. The Swedish government is also spending 60 million krona ($9 million) to boost voter turnout in Muslim neighborhoods.
"The influx of immigrants is reaching biblical proportions. Italy is fighting a losing battle." — Admiral Giuseppe De Giorgi, Head of the Italian Navy
Before
and After: Left, German rapper Denis Cuspert in 2005, then known as
"Deso Dogg". Right, Cuspert as jihadist in Syria, in 2013, operating
under the alias "Abu Talha Al-Almani" [Abu Talha the German]. (Image
sources: Wikimedia Commons, ISIS)
In Austria, police
say they believe that two teenage girls who vanished from their homes in
the capital of Vienna on April 10 may be in Turkey, and that whoever
helped them get there is using them as pin-up girls to boost recruitment
efforts for the "holy war" in Syria.
Friends
of Samra Kesinovic, 16, and Sabina Selimovic, 15, said the girls had
become radicalized after attending a local mosque run by a Salafist
preacher, Ebu Tejma, and learning about the duty of every Muslim to
participate in jihad. The girls were expelled from school after
inscribing "I Love Al-Qaeda" on tables and walls.
But
the girls' parents—originally Bosnian refugees who settled in Austria
after the ethnic conflicts of the 1990s—say that messages and
photographs posted on social media networks which claim that the girls
are on the front line and fighting with their new husbands are fake.
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