CARI Infonet

 Forgot password?
 Register

ADVERTISEMENT

View: 2684|Reply: 7

Bunuhlah mereka, agama keamanan?

[Copy link]
Post time 21-7-2016 12:57 AM | Show all posts |Read mode
https://www.facebook.com/Tito.Ma ... os/341305636200486/


Reply

Use magic Report


ADVERTISEMENT


 Author| Post time 21-7-2016 06:03 AM | Show all posts
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B7X5agrqqlU

[youtube]B7X5agrqqlU[/youtube]
Reply

Use magic Report

 Author| Post time 26-7-2016 08:42 PM | Show all posts
Quran (2:191-193) - "And kill them wherever you find them, and turn them out from where they have turned you out. And Al-Fitnah [disbelief or unrest] is worse than killing...
but if they desist, then lo! Allah is forgiving and merciful. And fight them until there is no more Fitnah [disbelief and worshipping of others along with Allah] and worship is for Allah alone. But if they cease, let there be no transgression except against Az-Zalimun
Reply

Use magic Report

 Author| Post time 26-7-2016 08:45 PM | Show all posts
org islam dilarang lukis gambar nabi muhammad, sejak bila kapir dilarang?


Reply

Use magic Report

Post time 12-12-2016 06:25 PM | Show all posts
Suicide bomb in Maidugari, Nigeria, carried out by two girls aged SEVEN, at least 17 dead
A TERROR attack in Maidugari, Nigeria, was carried out by two young girls who blew themselves up with suicide bombs.
By ALIX CULBERTSON
PUBLISHED: 10:47, Sun, Dec 11, 2016 | UPDATED: 22:47, Sun, Dec 11, 2016


A terrorist bomb blast in Maiduguri, Nigeria has been carried out by two girls, aged seven
Witnesses said they believed at least 17 people had died in the double suicide blast in Maidugari, the capital of the northeastern state of Borno.

The two blasts occured in quick succession at about 8.48am in a crowded area near the city's main market.

The area is often targeted by Islamist militants loyal to Boko Haram, the terror group which has pledged its allegiance to Islamic State (ISIS).

One witness said: “They got out of a rickshaw and walked right in front of me without showing the slightest sign of emotion.

“I tried to speak with one of them, in Hausa and in English, but she didn’t answer. I thought they were looking for their mother.

“She headed toward the poultry sellers, and then detonated her explosives belt.”


Military in NigeriaGETTY
Police at the scene of the attack

Boko Haram Islamists have been waging an insurgency for seven years in the region to try to establish an Islamic state.

The jihadists have frequently targeted crowded areas - such as markets, places of worship and refugee camps - in suicide bomb attacks across northeast Nigeria and in neighbouring Cameroon and Niger.

They have killed some 15,000 people and forced more than two million people to flee their homes.


A map showing Maiduguri in Nigeria where the suicide bombing took placeGETTY
The terror attack comes a day after dozens of people died in Nigeria's southeastern city of Uyo when a church collapsed on worshippers celebrating a pastor being ordained.

Earlier this morning at least 22 people were killed after a church was blown up in Cairo, Egypt.


Emergency services at the scene of the suicide attack
Late last night a car bomb and a suicide bomber killed 38 people - mainly police - in Istanbul outside the Turkish capital's famous Vodafone Arena football stadium.

Turkey is blaming Kurdish terrorist group PKK.

The British Foreign Office advises travellers to avoid going to Nigeria's northeast and says all but essential travel should be avoided to much of the rest of the country.

http://www.express.co.uk/news/wo ... mbing-market-deaths
Reply

Use magic Report

Post time 12-12-2016 06:26 PM | Show all posts
'The dead were everywhere' - 23 Coptic Christians killed in bomb attack on chapel complex
Magdy Samaan, cairo  James Rothwell
11 DECEMBER 2016 • 12:10PM
Men, women and children filed in to Cairo's Coptic Christian chapel on Sunday morning, taking a moment of respite from the bustle of the Egyptian capital's busy streets.

Situated in a complex at St Mark's Cathedral, the congregation was worshipping near the seat of the Coptic pope and the heart of their religion.

Minutes later, a blast ripped through the congregation, on the side of the church usually used by women, killing 23 and wounding scores of others in an attack that was chilling even by the bloody standards of Egypt's recent history.  
Al-Bortosia chapel became the scene of a nightmare: windows smashed, the floor littered with body parts and pews smeared with blood.

It was unclear how the bomb came to be inside the church, with some eyewitnesses saying it was thrown through a window, while others claimed it was planted next to the altar.


Egyptian security forces examine the scene inside St. Mark Cathedral in central Cairo, following a bombing, Sunday, Dec. 11,  CREDIT:  OMAR EL-HADY

What was certain by lunchtime was that Egypt's Coptic Christians had suffered their deadliest attack in recent memory, with Islamic extremists among the chief suspects.

"Dead bodies were scattered everywhere, I saw people with their heads cut off," Qelleny Farag, a member of the congregation, told the Telegraph as he searched for his wife.

Mr Farag, 80, managed to escape the chapel unharmed but was unable to find his wife, whose fate remains unknown .

As the bomb exploded on the left-hand side of the church, where female worshipers sit according to tradition, it is feared the majority of the dead are women and children.

Personal effects were left scattered among the shattered glass on the floor, including a broken pair of ladies' spectacles, a child's boot and a pink ribbon.

"As soon as the priest called us to prepare for prayer, the explosion happened," said Emad Shoukry, who was also inside the church when the bomb went off.


A worker cleans the scene inside St. Mark Cathedral in central Cairo, following a bombing, "The explosion shook the place... the dust covered the hall and I was looking for the door, although I couldn't see anything.

"I managed to leave in the middle of screams and there were a lot of people thrown on the ground."

One witness said he had noticed a woman acting strangely before the service began, and claimed that she planted the bomb by the altar.

Others furiously accused Egypt's security services of incompetence as they failed to spot the attacker.

"There were no security, the security guards were having breakfast," Samia Naem said. Justin Welby, the Archbishop of Canterbury, reacted with horror to the "terrible attack."

"Let us pray in lament, protest and in hope for them, martyrs for Christ," he wrote on the social network Twitter.

Magdy Zidan, a worker in a juice shop near the cathedral complex, said he entered the church about 15 minutes after the blast.

"I went inside the church after things calmed down and I helped in evacuating 10-12 bodies to the nearby churches," he said.


Security officials and people inspect the damage  CREDIT: KHALED ELFIQI
"I found everything destroyed. There were a lot of casualties. Most of the people inside the church were killed or injured."

"The police came late, about 45 after the bombing. Before the ambulance came, after about 30 minutes, we had evacuated bodies and injured people to nearby hospitals by private cars."

Within a few hours, a small group of protesters had gathered outside the partially destroyed chapel, where they sobbed and angrily accused Egypt's interior ministry of security failures.

By lunchtime, their numbers has swelled to the hundreds, and soldiers armed with teargas were sent to control the crowds.

"As long as Egyptian blood is cheap, down with any president," the protesters chanted, referring to Egyptian leader Abdel Fattah al-Sisi.

Mr al-Sisi, who is fighting an Islamist insurgency in the north of Egypt, declared three days of national mourning and strongly condemned the attack as an act of terrorism.


A picture shows the damage at the scene of the bomb explosion CREDIT:  KHALED DESOUKI
There was no immediate claim of responsibility for the bombing, but it was celebrated on social media by supporters of the Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant (Isil).

"God bless the person who did this blessed act," wrote one jihadist on the online messaging network Telegram, while another said: "God is great, God is great, God is great."

The attack comes after six officers were killed in a bombing in Cairo last Friday, which was claimed by a mysterious group linked to the Muslim Brotherhood.

It is understood the extremist group was formed after the Muslim Brotherhood's leader, Mohamed Morsi, was ousted in 2013. Christians in Egypt have previously been targeted by Islamic extremists, such as in 2011 when a New Year's Day bombing in Alexandria left 21 dead.

"This is a serious development," Mina Thabet, a researcher at  the Egyptian Commission for Rights and Freedoms, said.

"This is the first time a bomb was smuggled inside a church [in Egypt] and targeted directly the worshipers.

The Al-Bortosia bombing was condemned by senior leaders of Egypt's Christian and Muslim communities.

"The vile terrorist explosion...was a great crime against all Egyptians," said Sheikh Ahmed al-Tayeb, the head of Egypt's top Sunni Muslim authority, Al-Azhar.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2016/12/11/least-26-dead-bomb-explodes-inside-coptic-christian-church-cairo/

Reply

Use magic Report

Follow Us
Post time 12-12-2016 06:40 PM | Show all posts
CCTV footage captures the shocking moment Istanbul is rocked by a double bomb blast outside a football stadium
  • Istanbul hit in twin blasts with car bomb targeting police outside Vodafone Arena after Besiktas match
  • Seconds later a second blast, thought to be work of suicide bomber, went off in nearby Macka Park
  • Suspected attacks thought to be by Kurdistan Workers party and 19 people have been detained
By Alex Matthews For Mailonline
PUBLISHED: 10:45 GMT, 11 December 2016 | UPDATED: 19:35 GMT, 11 December 2016


CCTV footage has captured the shocking moment an explosion devastated streets outside a football stadium in Istanbul.
A car bomb targeting a police riot van was detonated outside the Vodafone Arena after Besiktas' 2-1 win over rivals Bursaspor, at around 10.30pm yesterday.

Just seconds later a second explosion, thought to be the work of a suicide bomber, went off at nearby Macka Park. The two attacks, left 38 people dead and 166 injured.

A short clip of the first blast, posted on Twitter by journalist Mutlu Civiroglu, shows a burst of blinding light flash on camera before vehicles are grounded to a halt in the Turkish city.

The sheer scale of damage done by the bomb follows seconds later, as thick grey clouds of debris cascade over cars and buses.

It is believed that 30 of the 38 people killed were police officers while 19 of those injured are currently fighting for their lives in intensive care.

The attacks are suspected to have been orchestrated by the outlawed Kurdistan Workers party and 13 people were detained over night.

The Istanbul Chief Public Prosecutor's office also said that three people have been detained for social media posts.

The prosecutor's office said it was investigating any 'news, comment or shares on press and social media platforms that attempted to praise terrorism or terrorist organizations, serve terrorist organizations' propaganda, legitimize terrorism or target those who combat terrorism.'

Witnesses said gunfire could be heard after the explosions, in what appeared to have been an armed attack on police.  

'It was like hell. The flames went all the way up to the sky. I was drinking tea at the cafe next to the mosque,' said Omer Yilmaz, who works as a cleaner at the nearby Dolmabahce mosque.


A burst of blinding light flashes onto the screen during the clip as the bomb grinds traffic to a halt on a busy road


After the flash, a cloud of debris covers vehicles as the full devastation of the car bomb begins to be revealed


Twin blasts rocked Istanbul this evening, with a car bomb detonating at a football stadium as a suicide attacker struck at a nearby park
'People ducked under the tables, women began crying. Football fans drinking tea at the cafe sought shelter, it was horrible,' he added.

In another video, young men are seen playing music together in a park when an explosion illuminates the city's skyline in the distance.

As the group stare in disbelief, the chilling thunder of the blast takes seven seconds to reach them across the Bosphores waterway.

Terrified, the teens are knocked into each other by the impact of the blast as they try to stagger away.


Pictured: As the friends play music together a blast illuminates the sky above the Turkish city


Pictured: The boys  stare in disbelief as the blast devastates the city, leaving many dead and even more injured

The footage was captured by Instagram user SiyahSozluk, who posted the clip with the caption: 'Detonation moment. We hope they don't have a big life loss. The past. #istanbul'

Following the attack, armed police sealed off streets around the newly-built Vodafone Arena, as smoke rose from the stadium.

A police water cannon doused the wreckage of a burned out car and there were two separate fires on the road outside the building.

The window glass of nearby buildings was shattered by the blasts and lay scattered the pavement.


Police officers receive treatment from paramedics just outside Besiktas' Vodafone Arena after the first blast yesterday



The car exploded the end of a match between two of Turkey's top teams, Besiktas and Bursaspor


Police officers hug each other after an explosion around Vodafone Arena Stadium in Istanbul

Police secure the area after an explosion around Vodafone Arena Stadium in Istanbul

Police officers hug each other after the explosion, left, while police secure the area after the explosion, right

Police open fire after explosion outside stadium in Istanbul

Bursaspor said none of the wounded were fans and issued a statement saying 'we wish a speedy recovery to our wounded citizens.'

The Besiktas 'strongly condemned' the attack and said an employee of one of its stores was among the fatalities, as well as member of its congress, who was also responsible for security at the stadium.

'We have once again witnessed tonight in Istanbul the ugly face of terror which tramples on every value and decency,' Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said in a statement.

Turkey's radio and television board issued a temporary coverage ban citing national security concerns in the aftermath of the blasts.

It said 'to avoid broadcasts that can result in public fear, panic or chaos, or that will serve the aims of terrorist organisations.'



Police arrive at the site of the explosion in central Istanbul, with smouldering wreckage left in the middle of a road



The attackers appeared to target police, with 30 of the 38 killed believed to be police officers


'We have once again witnessed tonight in Istanbul the ugly face of terror which tramples on every value and decency,' Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said in a statement



Police officers survey the devastation left in the wake of the horrifc attack outside Istanbul'a Vodafone Arena



Police officers stand inside a damaged bus after the explosion that rocked the streets of central Istanbul

Images broadcast on television showed more than a dozen ambulances on a street hugging the stadium and a police helicopter flying overhead with its search lights on.

'I heard two explosions, two sounds and now sirens of ambulances rushing to the scene,' an AFP correspondent in the city said.

'It is thought to be a car bomb at a point where our special forces police were located, right after the match at the exit where Bursaspor fans exited, after the fans had left.' Mr Soylu was quoted as saying by Turkey's state-run Anadolu Agency.   

Turkey is a partner in the U.S. led coalition against Islamic State and is armed forces are active in neighboring Syria and Iraq. It is also facing a renewed conflict with an outlawed Kurdish movement in the southeast. There was no immediate claim of responsibility for the attack.  


Nobody has yet claimed responsibility for the attack, but it is thought to have been orchestrated by the Kurdistan Workers party



Paramedics and emergency services workers help load victims of the horrifying attacks into ambulances



Crime scene investigators work next to a damaged water cannon at the scene of one of the explosions while the bodies of those killed are covered by black sheets



An injured man, who has been stripped of his clothes, is carefully stretchered into an ambulance after the blast



Pictured: The newly-built Vodafone Arena, home to the Besiktas football team, targeted by terrorists in last night's explosion

Chaos in heart of Istanbul as emergency services rush to Taksim Sq

The nation has experienced a bloody year of militant attacks in its two biggest cities that have left dozens dead and put the country on high alert.
Kurdish militants have twice struck in Ankara, while suspected Islamic State group suicide bombers have hit Istanbul on three occasions.

In June, 47 people were killed in a triple suicide bombing and gun attack at Istanbul's Ataturk airport, with authorities pointing the finger at IS.

Another 57 people, 34 of them children, were killed in August in a suicide attack by an IS-linked bomber at a Kurdish wedding in the southeastern city of Gaziantep.

The country is also still reeling from a failed July 15 coup blamed on the US-based Islamic preacher Fethullah Gulen that has been followed by a relentless purge of his alleged supporters from state institutions.


Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-4021792/Shocking-moment-Istanbul-rocked-double-bombing-captured-background-guitar-playing-teenager-s-Instagram-video.html#ixzz4ScPSN9wL
Follow us: @MailOnline on Twitter | DailyMail on Facebook
Reply

Use magic Report

Post time 29-12-2016 04:27 AM | Show all posts
Jihadi dad who turned his young daughter into a suicide bomber and blew her up in a Damascus police station is dead
WARNING: GRAPHIC CONTENT
  • Footage showed jihadi fanatic lecturing his two young daughters in Damascus
  • The younger girl, who was seven, was killed in explosion at a police station
  • The blast in Damascus, the Syrian capital, wounded three police officers
  • The father has been identified as Abu Nimr, who has died in fighting in Syria
  • Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said he was shot in Teshreen, Damascus

By Chris Summers For Mailonline
PUBLISHED: 12:02 GMT, 26 December 2016 | UPDATED: 21:48 GMT, 26 December 2016

A jihadi father who used his seven-year-old daughter as a suicide bomber in Syria has now met his own death.

Abu Nimr al-Suri was shown on a video kissing his daughter goodbye before sending her into a Syrian police station, where she was blown up by a remote detonator.

Russia Today's Middle East correspondent Lizzie Phelan has tweeted a photograph of Abu Nimr in his traditional death shroud.

She said he had also been involved in the murder of Syrian TV actor Mohamad Rafea, 30, who was kidnapped and killed in 2012.

Many Islamist extremist fighters believe the Koran promises 'martyrs' 72 virgins in heaven if they die during a jihad, or holy war. Islamic scholars say this is a misreading of one of the shuras in the Koran.


Abu Nimr was shown in the traditional Muslim death shroud (right) but it is unclear exactly how he was killed

Earlier this month a appalling video emerged showing the ranting extremist holding the girls in his arms as he brainwashes them.

Footage showed him lecturing her and her nine-year-old daughter about how to carry out suicide bomb attacks before they are embraced by a woman in a burka, believed to be their mother.

A short time later the seven-year-old walked into a police station in Syria's capital, Damascus, before being killed in an explosion.

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said yesterday gunmen opened fire on Abu Nimr, whose real name was Abdul Rahman Shaddad, in the Teshreen neighbourhood on the outskirts of capital Damascus.  

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hUB3s7XPTnQ
[youtube]hUB3s7XPTnQ[/youtube]


Footage captured the moment jihadi father Abu Nimr kissed his daughters goodbye shortly before one of them walked into a Syrian police station and was blown up by a remote detonator


Both girls said 'Allahu Akbar' before separate footage showed them dressed in coats and woolly hats as they embraced their mother and left the room


Footage showed Abu Nimr lecturing the two children, seven and nine, about how to carry out suicide bomb attacks before they are embraced by their mother

In one video, the mother repeatedly hugs the seven-year-old, named as Islam, and the older girl, named as Fatima.

A man behind the camera asks the woman why she is sending her daughters to jihad when they are so young.




A short time later, the seven-year-old reportedly walked into a police station in Syria's capital, Damascus, and was killed in an explosion at a police head quarters


There were Syrian media reports that Abu Nimr was a member of Jabhat Fateh al-Sham, formerly known as the al-Nusra Front, which had links with al-Qaeda

She replied: 'No-one is young when it comes to jihad as every Muslim is supposed to participate in jihad.'

He then prays for Allah to accept the sacrifice the woman is making

In the second video Abu Nimr asks one of the girls what she is 'going to do today' before she replies that she is going to carry out a suicide bombing in Damascus.

In an apparent reference to the recent bus evacuation of rebel fighters and residents from Aleppo, Abu Nimr asks one of the children: 'Shouldn’t you leave fighting to the men? Or did all of them flee in the green buses?'

He later added: 'You are not going to be afraid because you are going to the Heavens, right?'.

The girl on the left replied simply: 'Yes'.

Both children then said Allah Akbar on their father’s request before he started saying prayers.


Abu Nimr teaching his two children to become suicide bombers before kissing them goodbye


The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights confirmed there had been a blast in Midan but said it could not specify the cause

The explosion in the bustling Midan neighbourhood of the Syrian capital wounded three police officers, said the Al-Watan daily, which is close to the government.

A police source told Al-Watan the little girl had appeared lost and asked to use the toilet when the explosives went off.

Although rebel groups have fired rockets and mortar rounds into the capital, explosions inside the city itself are rare.


A police source told Al-Watan the little girl had appeared lost and asked to use the bathroom before the explosives went off


A news report from the scene showed the girl's remains, which had been blurred out by the television network

Observatory head Rami Abdel Rahman told AFP 'one woman' was killed in the blast, but it remained unclear whether she was a suicide bomber or a bystander.

In early 2012, a suicide bomber killed 26 people when he blew himself up in Midan. More than 310,000 people have died since Syria's conflict broke out in 2011.

The attack happened in the Syrian capital, President Bashar al-Assad's stronghold of Damascus.


Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-4066182/No-72-virgins-heaven-pal-Jihadi-dad-turned-young-daughter-suicide-bomber-blew-Damascus-police-station-dead.html#ixzz4UAKtS7sZ
Follow us: @MailOnline on Twitter | DailyMail on Facebook

Reply

Use magic Report


ADVERTISEMENT


You have to log in before you can reply Login | Register

Points Rules

 

ADVERTISEMENT



 

ADVERTISEMENT


 


ADVERTISEMENT
Follow Us

ADVERTISEMENT


Mobile|Archiver|Mobile*default|About Us|CARI Infonet

20-4-2024 04:01 AM GMT+8 , Processed in 0.059489 second(s), 34 queries .

Powered by Discuz! X3.4

Copyright © 2001-2021, Tencent Cloud.

Quick Reply To Top Return to the list