Monday, April 2, 2012

Terrorism and conspiracy - what is behind French events?


fot. tomskydive /sxc.hu

French terrorist is dead. He died in an attempt to escape from his flat, which was being sorrounded by the police yesterday. Is looks that instead of the terrorist from Norway he didn't like the perspective of spending many years in prison, so Mohamed Merah decided to risk and jump from the window. 

Let's have a look on what events followed the actions of "Tolouse killer". Firstly, when his identity remained unknown some speculations showed up that this can have something in common with the actions taken in Norway by Anders Breivik a year ago. He claimed that even if he was alone, there were more people like him in Europe and soon we will hear about them. There were no information about it in media but we can expect that intelligence services of several European states didn't left the case alone. 

Soon we learned that the French terrorist is Momamed Merah, a 23-year-old French citizen of Algerian descent. During police negotiations he said that he regrets that he didn't kill more people and that his major motive was to avenge Palestinian children and to response on French presence in Afganistan. Police didn't confirm his alleged membership in Al-Quaeda, but there are suspicions that the killer had been contacting with the organisation while visiting Afganistan and Pakistan. 

Nicolas Sarkozy/fot. EPP
Now, let's see the background. Soon (April, 22) we are having elections in France. President in office, Nicolas Sarkozy is being followed in polls by the socialist candidate, Francoise Holland. Both candidates are fighting for the support and the elections just after the attacks will only make the atmosphere warmer, like it hapenned in Spain in 2004. According to Richard Cottrell from IntelHub after the attacks Sarkozy can count on stronger French Jews community support as well as on those French citizens who are against Muslim immigration.

We didn't have to wait long for French president to answer. On the press conference on Thursday, 22 he announced that the people who regulary visit websites where the authors "justify terrorism" or "call for hatred and violence" will be prosecuted. When we consider the fact, that it is Sarkozy, who was one of major European politicians calling for Internet control we can expect that these are not only declarations.

Is it another false flag operation similar to operation "Gladio"?


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