In this mailing:
- Judith Bergman: Why is Nobody
Talking about the Union for the Mediterranean?
- Tom Quiggin: Toronto Shooting:
Politically Correct Cover-Up?
by Judith Bergman • August 14,
2018 at 5:00 am
- The EU countries
involved in the Union for the Mediterranean (UfM) appear
unbothered by promoting "integration" -- or even
claiming "a common heritage" -- with countries such
as Mauritania, where, according to recent reports, up to 20%
of the population (Haratines and other Afro-Mauritanian
groups) is enslaved, and anti-slavery activists are regularly
tortured and detained.
- There is not the
slightest allusion in the UfM yearly report, or in the 2017
Roadmap for Action, to the fact that in most Muslim countries,
sharia law influences the legal code -- especially regarding
marriage, divorce, inheritance and child custody -- and that
gender inequality may therefore be institutionalized and not
something likely to change, regardless of the number of UfM
projects.
- Given these large
sums of money involved, it is remarkable that the UfM and its
activities enjoy little to no scrutiny in the European press.
A map of
the Union for the Mediterranean members. Blue are EU member states,
brown are other members, Libya (red) is an official observer, and
Syria (green) is a suspended member. (Image source:
Treehill/Wikimedia Commons)
In July, the Union for the Mediterranean (UfM) celebrated
its 10-year anniversary. Most Europeans, however, are unlikely to
have heard about the Union, let alone the anniversary. The media
rarely reports on the UfM and its activities.
The participating countries in the UfM are the 28
European Union (EU) member states and the Southern Mediterranean
countries, which include Albania, Algeria, Bosnia and Herzegovina,
Egypt, Israel, Jordan, Lebanon, Mauritania, Monaco, Montenegro,
Morocco, "Palestine", Syria (temporarily suspended),
Tunisia and Turkey. Libya has observer status in the UfM. The UfM
is chaired by a "co-presidency" shared between the
European Union and Jordan. The UfM Secretariat maintains the daily
operations of the UfM and is run by a Secretary General, presently
Nasser Kamel (Egypt).
by Tom Quiggin • August 14, 2018
at 4:00 am
- The Hussain
"family statement" was not written by the murderer's
parents at all, but rather by Mohammed Hashim, a professional
activist connected with the National Council of Canadian
Muslims. Its American parent organization, as stated in its
own documents, is CAIR, designated as a terrorist entity by
the United Arab Emirates.
- Contrary to what
Hashim purportedly wrote in the statement, there is no
evidence that Hussain was diagnosed with or treated for a
mental illness, even after one of his high-school teachers
reported to the police 10 years ago that Hussain had said
"I want to kill someone... I just feel it would be really
cool to kill somebody."
- Given the global
climate, to which Canada most certainly has not been immune --
as well as Hussain's dubious connections -- the attempt by the
government and the media to dismiss potential links to
terrorist groups or inspiration from jihadist ideologies, is
both premature and politically transparent.
Pictured:
Toronto Police officers ride on horseback as they patrol Danforth
Ave. in Toronto on July 24, 2018, the day after Faisal Hussain
murdered 18-year-old Reese Fallon and 10-year-old Julianna Kozis,
and wounded several others in a shooting attack in the area. (Photo
by Cole Burston/Getty Images)
On July 22, two youngsters -- 18-year-old Reese
Fallon and 10-year-old Julianna Kozis -- were killed, and another
13 people, ranging in age from 17 to 59, were wounded in a brutal
shooting attack at a number of restaurants on Danforth Avenue, in
Toronto's popular Greektown neighborhood. The perpetrator, who was
later identified as Faisal Hussain, killed himself after exchanging
gunfire with police.
Hussain's firing stance and ability to reload his
40-caliber Smith and Wesson handgun while on the move suggested
that he had experience with firearms.
The following morning, the Toronto Police Service
issued a statement that indicated they had already identified the
shooter, yet did not release his name until later that afternoon.
Meanwhile, a statement allegedly from the Hussain family made the
rounds in a number of news outlets.
The statement read, in part:
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