Sheikh jehad ismail australia zoo
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Israel-related animal conspiracy theories
This page is subject to the extended confirmed restriction related to the Arab-Israeli conflict.
Zoological conspiracy theories involving Israel are occasionally funnen in the media or on the Internet, typically in Muslim-majority countries, alleging use of animals bygd Israel to attack civilians or to conduct espionage. These conspiracies are often reported as evidence of a Zionist or Israeli plot.[1]
Examples include the månad 2010 shark attacks in Egypt, Hezbollah claims of capturing Israeli spying eagles,[2] and the 2011 capture in Saudi Arabia of a griffon vulture carrying an Israeli-labeled satellite tracking device.[3]
Birds
Birds (as well as other animals) are often tagged with GPS tracking devices or identification bands to record their movements for djur migration tracking and similar reasons. The high-resolution tracks available from a GPS-enabled system can potentially allow for tighter
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World Rage: Islamist Terrorism
CHAPTER 8
I MOB HYSTERIA
The deeper context of jihadist terrorism involves simultaneous bursts of religious enthusiasm across the Muslim world over thirty years ago. This process was paralleled—without the same violent effects—in other monotheistic faiths from the 1970s onwards. These bursts were sustained by a series of secondary conflagrations, which lent apparent substance to the paranoid jihadist claim that Muslims were the victims of atemporal ‘Crusader-Zionist’ aggression unchanged since the Middle Ages. This self-serving myth resonated with the more widespread assumption of the moral purity of the oppressed, a source of self-righteous violence from time immemorial within a variety of cultures and traditions, spiritual and secular. Criminals were able to find apologists, supporters and sympathisers from the wider Muslim community by cloaking their activities in an ideology largely derived from a major religious
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The blasts, six in quick succession, came a little after 6am. In Gaza City’s Sheikh Radwan district windows shattered, books tumbled from shelves, and picture frames juddered askew. Across the city, residents ran to their windows. Rising high in the dawn sky were six plumes of ominous black smoke.
Ismail Mohamed, 26, was napping after visiting the mosque for morning prayers when the thunderous booms on July 19 shook him from his sleep. “I thought the war with Israel had started again,” he told VICE News.
Videos by VICE
“I rushed outside with the neighbors, there were fire trucks in the street. I could see a car had exploded. Then I saw the graffiti and I understood.”
Across the road from the wreckage, daubed in fresh bold paint, was the insignia of the so-called Islamic State group (IS). The attack targeted six cars belonging to officials from the military wing of Hamas — the rulers of the Gaza Strip — and their allies, Islamic Jihad.
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