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Thursday, December 13, 2018

ISLAMIC JIHAD: THE STRASBOURG, FRANCE CHRISTMAS MARKET MASSACRE (& THE COWARDICE OF THE MEDIA)~PRESS BENDS TO COMPLAINTS FROM MUSLIM COUNCIL

 MUSLIMS COMPLAIN ABOUT GRAPHIC NEWS HEADLINES, SO THEY ARE CHANGED TO ASSUAGE THEM
 https://www.toulouse7.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/12/Strasbourg-Cherif-Chekatt-ennemi-public-num%C3%A9ro-1.jpeg
 http://congresoestudiantesacodres.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/08/au-bureau-strasbourg-inspirant-le-bureau-strasbourg-unique-christmas-markets-might-be-the-best-image-of-au-bureau-strasbourg.jpg
ISLAMIC JIHAD: THE STRASBOURG, FRANCE CHRISTMAS MARKET MASSACRE 
(& THE COWARDICE OF THE MEDIA)

Published on Dec 12, 2018
 Muhammad said, "I have been made victorious with terror." Nearly 1400 years later, jihadis continue to strike terror into the hearts of infidels. On December 11, 2018, a young Muslim named Chérif Chekatt opened fire at a Christmas market in Strasbourg, France, killing and wounding many. Meanwhile, Western media sites such as the BBC and Sky News take orders from the Muslim Council of Britain on how to word their headlines. David Wood discusses the issue.


 Chérif Chekatt: Everything you need to know about Strasbourg terror suspect
 
Published on Dec 12, 2018
Chérif Chekatt: Everything you need to know about Strasbourg terror suspect: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2018/.... Thanks for watching, subscribe for more videos: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC9Sa...  
The gunman suspected of killing three people and injuring 13 near Strasbourg’s Christmas Market served several terms in prison for armed robbery and is believed to have been radicalised in prison.  29-year-old Chérif Chekatt has been on France’s “S” file terrorist watch list since 2015, and his profile matches that of self-styled “jihadists” who have carried out other attacks in France.   Born in Strasbourg, he is a French citizen and has some 27 convictions in France, Germany and Switzerland to his name, according to Strasbourg's public prosecutor Rémy Heitz. In 2016, he was released from prison in Germany and, before the attack on Tuesday night, was wanted in connection with an attempted murder and an armed robbery, according to a source close to the investigation.  On Tuesday morning, police raided Mr Chekatt's home and found grenades, a .22 firearm and two hunting knives, but failed to capture him. Five associates were, however, detained. Strasbourg shooting map  “He fell into crime when he was still in his teens,” the source said.  In 2011 he was jailed for six months for assaulting a teenager with a broken bottle, and completed his last prison sentence in France in at the end of 2015, around the same time as the November 13 Paris attacks that left 130 dead.  He went on to serve a further jail term in Germany for robbing a dental practice and a pharmacy, and was deported to France last year after completing his sentence.   The suspected motive for the shootings on Tuesday night is terrorism. “Terrorism has again struck our soil,” said Mr Heitz at a press conference on Wednesday, noting that witnesses heard the gunman shout "Allahu Akbar" during the attack.   Laurent Nunez, the junior interior minister, said: “The individual appears to have been radicalised in his religious practices during his prison terms.” Specialised anti-terrorist prosecutors are in charge of the investigation.  In prison, the suspect became known for violence and  repeated attempts to convert fellow-inmates to a radical form of Islam.   Before the Strasbourg attack, he was considered to be an extremely high-risk suspect, intelligence sources said.  France’s DGSI, the domestic intelligence service, placed him under "active" surveillance following his release from a French prison in 2015, Mr Nunez said.  As a child in Strasbourg, he grew up alongside six brothers and sisters. Although he worked for local authorities after leaving school, he had not been employed since 2011.  Investigators are trying to establish whether Mr Chekatt travelled to Syria or Iraq to join an Islamist group, or whether he was radicalised entirely in France, according to sources close to the case.
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 France Islamic Terrorist Had 27 Previous Convictions
BY DANIEL GREENFIELD
republished below in full unedited for informational, educational and research purposes:
 
These "lone wolf" Muslim terrorists invariably have a track record.
Before they actually carry out an attack, they've usually spent years enriching the European countries they settled in with a long record of petty crime, violent attacks and drug dealing.
Cherif Chekkat, who opened fire at the Strasbourg Christmas market, has the expected record.
Chekkat was born in Strasbourg in February 1989, into a family with Moroccan roots, and appears to have fallen first into petty crime then gangster circles. The final stage, his apparent move into Islamic extremism, was reportedly sparked – or at least strengthened – during a spell in prison between 2013 and 2015.
This is typical enough. As I noted in a previous article on the gang rape in Freiburg, these guys usually have a track record.
29.
That’s how many crimes one single Syrian migrant had allegedly committed since entering Germany four years ago. He had already been wanted for drug trafficking and had been investigated for a rape last year. And then he struck again, this time in a case that has once again torn apart a sleepy college town.
Majid and another of the suspects had already been suspected of the rape of another 20-year-old woman in her home. And Majid had also been suspected of committing yet another sexual assault. He was also due to be arrested shortly for drug trafficking, but before the police could take him in, he struck again and destroyed a young woman’s life.
This is what's Europe's criminals and terrorists look like.