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Pan-Islamic merged mega thread

The ISIS atrocities continue, targeting certain groups in order to perpetuate ignorance:

Christian Science Monitor

ISIS reportedly kills 13 boys for watching soccer: Is ISIS adopting Taliban tactics?

Reports of torture and public executions being employed by ISIS have been circulating, but these harsh sharia tactics aren't new to those who lived in Afghanistan under the Taliban.

Unconfirmed reports say that ISIS had executed 13 young boys from Mosul, Iraq, over the weekend, by firing squad because they watched a soccer match on TV, according to Raqqa Is Being Slaughtered Silently, an activist group that claims to expose ISIS atrocities.
The website is filled with descriptions of the harsh life under Islamic State rule.

The report of boys killed for watching soccer comes on the heels of images the Islamic State released last week that depicted ISIS security personnel throwing two individuals to their deaths from a tower because they were "convicted" of being homosexual, according to a report from the International Business Times

(...SNIPPED)

Agence-France-Presse via Yahoo News

ISIS executing 'educated women' in new wave of horror, UN says
By AFP | Yahoo Canada News – 3 hours ago

Geneva (AFP) - The UN on Tuesday decried numerous executions of civilians in Iraq by the Islamic State group, warning that educated women appeared to be especially at risk.

The jihadist group is showing a "monstrous disregard for human life" in the areas it controls in Iraq, the UN human rights office said.

The group, which controls large swathes of territory in Iraq and in neighbouring war-ravaged Syria, last week published pictures of the "crucifixions" of two men accused of being bandits, and of a woman being stoned to death, allegedly for adultery.

Numerous other women have also reportedly been executed recently in ISIS-controlled areas, including Mosul, spokeswoman Ravina Shamdasani told reporters.

She said "educated, professional women, particularly women who have run as candidates in elections for public office, seem to be particularly at risk."

(...SNIPPED)
 
The religious civil war spreads to Yemen, which is also acting as a front in the proxy war between Iran and Saudi Arabia:

http://www.dallasnews.com/news/local-news/20150121-embattled-yemen-primed-for-breakup.ece

Embattled Yemen primed for breakup
FROM WIRE REPORTS

Published: 21 January 2015 11:01 PM
Updated: 22 January 2015 09:07 AM

WASHINGTON — Only months ago, U.S. officials were still referring to Yemen’s negotiated transition from autocratic government to an elected president as a model for post-revolutionary Arab states.

Now, after days of gunbattles in the Yemeni capital that left President Abed Rabbo Mansour Hadi, a key U.S. ally, confined to his residence, the country appears to be at risk of fragmenting in ways that could provide greater opportunities for al-Qaeda, whose Yemeni branch claimed responsibility for directing the Paris terrorist attack this month.

Although the Houthi rebels who now effectively control the capital are at war with al-Qaeda, they are also allied with Iran and with Yemen’s former president, Abdullah Saleh. The Houthis’ rise to a dominant position may set off local conflicts that would give more breathing room to al-Qaeda’s local branch, which has repeatedly tried to strike at the United States.

“The Yemeni state has always been weak, but now there’s a real danger of economic meltdown and of the kind of fragmentation that could ultimately make Yemen almost ungovernable,” said April Alley, an analyst with the International Crisis Group, a nonprofit organization that works to resolve conflicts.

The Houthi takeover, which began in September and was reinforced in recent days, has deepened sectarian and regional divisions in a poor country that has long been a sanctuary for jihadi followers. And though the latest round of fighting appeared to end Wednesday when Hadi conceded to the Houthis’ political demands, the underlying crisis will continue to fester, analysts say.

The deal announced Wednesday addressed a number of the Houthis’ grievances, including a lack of representation in government bodies and complaints about provisions in a draft constitution. In return, the Houthis agreed to withdraw fighters from the presidential palace and other parts of Sanaa and to release an aide to Hadi who was kidnapped by Houthi gunmen Saturday.

But there was little doubt that the Houthis, who have threatened repeatedly to use force to win political concessions, remain in control.

The Houthis’ public humiliation of Hadi — a southerner — prompted southern rebels to close the country’s chief port in Aden and shut the border between the north and south this week, raising the specter of actual secession. Armed tribesmen have cut off oil exports in three southern provinces. And Saudi Arabia, which sees the Houthis as a proxy of its regional rival, Iran, has shut off almost all aid to the Yemeni government, leaving it virtually penniless and unable to pay salaries.

The Saudis, who have long been Yemen’s economic lifeline, pumping in more than $4 billion since 2012, say they would rather allow the Houthis to take the blame for the approaching economic collapse than provide aid to an Iranian client, according to a Yemeni official who spoke on condition of anonymity.

In another ominous sign, the Houthis appear to be gearing up for a major battle with their Sunni rivals in Marib province, to the east of the capital, where much of Yemen’s oil infrastructure is. That could prove devastating to Yemen’s government and economy, which is dependent on oil.

It could also exacerbate sectarian tensions in a country that was almost entirely free of them until recently. The Houthis belong to the Zaydi branch of Shiite Islam, and Saudi Arabia — whose leaders see all Shiites as heretics — has been providing aid to Sunni tribes in Marib, diplomats say, fueling another proxy war between Saudi Arabia and Iran.

In Washington, military and intelligence officials expressed grave concern Wednesday about the violence in Sanaa and the impact any further deterioration could have on one of the Obama administration’s staunchest counterterrorism partners. Michael Vickers, the Pentagon’s top intelligence policy official, said analysts were still trying to determine the Houthis’ ultimate goal.

The Houthis’ leader, a charismatic guerrilla fighter in his early 30s named Abdel-Malik al-Houthi, inherited his mantle from his father and his older brother Hussein, who founded the movement in the 1990s and was killed in the first of a series of wars against the Yemeni state that ended in 2010.

Houthi’s speeches focus on fighting corruption and fulfilling the agreements reached in a series of “national dialogue” sessions that ended last year. Those demands have helped bolster public support for the Houthis — which remains strong — in a country where corruption has gutted the state and appears to have worsened since Hadi became president following the uprising of 2011.

The Houthis modeled themselves on Hezbollah, the Lebanese Shiite militia, and though their ideology and leadership are distinct and unmistakably Yemeni, they are allied with Iran, which has provided them with weapons, training and money, especially since 2011.

The Houthis’ ongoing and bloody battle with al-Qaeda has led some in the West to see them as potential partners, despite the trademark Houthi slogan, “God is great, Death to America, Death to Israel.”

Under Yemen’s former president, Saleh, “the formula was to milk the USA for support in the fight against al-Qaeda, which was a recipe for more drones and more radicalization,” said Bernard Haykel, a professor at Princeton who has written extensively on Yemen. “The Houthis actually want to fight al-Qaeda, which could be more effective.”

But the Houthis are also allied with Saleh, who remains a powerful figure in Yemen and is bent on revenge on those who engineered his ouster during the turmoil of 2011. If the Houthis succeed in consolidating power, many in Yemen expect a bloody power struggle between them and Saleh’s loyalists in the military and the tribes.

Capitalizing on the chaos, Saleh made a rare public statement Wednesday, calling on Hadi to call early presidential and parliamentary elections and urging the cancellation of U.N. Security Council sanctions imposed on him and two Houthi leaders last year after the Houthi seizure of power.

The conflict between the Houthis and their mostly Sunni rivals has led some Yemenis to give up on the state.

In Taiz, Yemen’s third-largest city, the local governor has taken over the military and intelligence quarters and is effectively governing a city-state.

In southern Yemen, which was a separate country from 1970 until 1990 and fought a brief civil war against the north in 1994, many have similarly seized on the Houthi ascendancy as an opportunity to break away. Those aspirations have fueled fears of a wider breakdown that could benefit al-Qaeda, which ejected government officials across a wide swath of the south in mid-2011 and declared an Islamic emirate that lasted about a year.

The New York Times,

The Associated Press
 
Throwing people off towers because they may be homosexual.

This from the guys who perfected Man Love Thursdays and say it's alright for a boy to screw his buddy or fuck goats, mules and sheep, so long as they stop when they reach twelve.

By which time, those boys are now wearing makeup and dresses and dancing for the old bastards who are going to take them at the end of the night and trade them around as their own introduction to Man Love Thursdays to complete their hypocritical, self righteous ethos and initiate another group to complete their circle of depravity.
 
As the security situation deteriorates in Yemen, which has a 3-sided civil war between the Shia Houthi faction,  the Sunnis of the "Al Qaeda in Yemen" group and Yemeni government forces, the US mulls evacuating its nationals.

Military.com

2 US Navy Ships Move to Red Sea for Possible Yemen Evacuation

Stars and Stripes | Jan 22, 2015 | by Steven Beardsley
The Navy has positioned a pair of amphibious ships in the Red Sea for a possible evacuation of U.S. Embassy personnel from the Yemen capital of Sanaa.

The USS Iwo Jima, an amphibious assault ship, and the USS Fort McHenry, a dock landing ship, were moved in recent hours from the Gulf of Aden to the Red Sea, nearer to Yemen’s capital, U.S. 5th Fleet spokesman Cmdr. Kevin Stephens said. Both ships are part of the Iwo Jima Amphibious Ready Group, and each has Marines embarked from the 24th Marine Expeditionary Unit.
“They are ready to support operations to protect Americans in Yemen if that becomes necessary,” Stephens said.

(...SNIPPED)
 
NBC interview with a former captive of ISIS/ISIL.

http://www.nbcnews.com/meet-the-press/inside-isis-one-mans-story-being-captured-islamic-state-n293056
 
All the negotiations for the release of this Japanese reporter held hostage by ISIS came to no avail:

Reuters

Islamic State says it has beheaded second Japanese hostage Goto
Reuters

By Sylvia Westall and William Mallard

BEIRUT/TOKYO (Reuters) - Islamic State militants said on Saturday they had beheaded a second Japanese hostage, journalist Kenji Goto, after the failure of international efforts to secure his release through a prisoner swap.

The hardline Islamist group, which controls large parts of Syria and Iraq, released a video which seemed to show the beheaded body of Goto and threatened further attacks on Japanese targets. Japanese Defense Minister Gen Nakatani said the video appeared to be genuine.
Islamic State had said Goto, 47, was held along with a Jordanian pilot. Efforts to win their release had focused on the possible release of an Iraqi would-be suicide bomber jailed in Jordan 10 years ago. The video did not mention the pilo

(...SNIPPED)
 
I listened with interest to an interview on The Current on CBC radio yesterday on both of the hostages the barbarians have and this fugly bitch the barbarians want to trade for.  It was the general thought that the reason Jordan have not been able to get proof of life for the pilot as he is already gone.  There was an "interview" with him in the barbarian's magazine where at the end he was asked if he knew what would happen to him after this, to which he replied "I will be killed".

The guest on the radio was saying that many of the barbarian big wigs came from the Baath party and former Iraqi intelligence orgs.  They were Russian trained and are very savvy at making the most of their propaganda efforts.  Their present game with Jordan is having King Abdullah and his government twist in the wind while they attempt to make the best of an impossible situation.

Jordan have warned that if their pilot is killed they will stretch the necks of all the barbarian prisoners they have in custody.  I fervently hope the kid is OK,  but if not, I hope retribution is swift, final and public.
 
jollyjacktar said:
The guest on the radio was saying that many of the barbarian big wigs came from the Baath party and former Iraqi intelligence orgs.  They were Russian trained and are very savvy at making the most of their propaganda efforts. 

I have a very hard time believing this. The Baath party was most definitely socialist and atheist, and from one of Iraq's minority group on top of that. I don't believe that the underlings in ISIS/L would ever be convinced that they had now suddenly embraced faith and become "crazy for Allah". My feeling is that anyone from the old Baath party getting into the hands of ISIS/L is soon parted with his/her head. 
 
That was what the man was saying.  That ISIS is not your run of the mill terrorist organization, that they are savvy in many ways and have talent who have come from many countries and are knowledgeable in their particular fields.  The political and strategic campaign they are waging is measured and planned for maximum effect against their opponents.  And can be observed at (military response aside) how countries such as Jordan have been forced to treat with them as a state entity which is playing right into their hands.

Here is the link to that episode.  http://www.cbc.ca/player/Radio/ID/ID/2651038739/

 
Oldgateboatdriver:
I have a very hard time believing this. The Baath party was most definitely socialist and atheist, and from one of Iraq's minority group on top of that. I don't believe that the underlings in ISIS/L would ever be convinced that they had now suddenly embraced faith and become "crazy for Allah".

So I guess you don't believe the guys in jails who are murders, rapists et al suddenly find religion. :)

ISIS is just like a lot of organizations who use "religion" as a cover/excuse for personal depravities.

I always thought the IRA did this: robbing banks, settling personal vendettas, murder, rape etc. daftandbarmy would know.
 
The barbarians have apparently burned the Jordanian pilot alive.  I don't suppose there's much they won't stoop to.  I wonder what will it take for the rest of the Muslim world to turn on them and put them down for the count.

Updated
Muath al-Kasaesbeh, ISIS hostage, purportedly burned alive

Jordanian pilot had been in captivity since December

Thomson Reuters Posted: Feb 03, 2015 12:09 PM ET| Last Updated: Feb 03, 2015 1:26 PM ET

A video released by the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria (ISIS) today purports to show captive Jordanian pilot Muath al-Kasaesbeh being burned alive.

Reuters could not immediately confirm the video, which shows a man resembling the pilot standing in a black cage before he was set ablaze.

Kasaesbeh has been in ISIS captivity since his plane crashed over Syria in December.

The head of the Jordanian armed forces told the pilot's family that Kasaesbeh had been killed, a member of the family told Reuters.


The plane piloted by Kasaesbeh crashed over Syria while on a bombing mission against the insurgents.

In the video, the burned man wore orange clothes similar to those worn by other foreign ISIS captives who have been killed since a U.S.-led coalition started bombing the militants in July.

Prime Minister Stephen Harper tweeted that Canada’s thoughts and prayers are with the people of Jordan, and that he was "appalled" by Kasaesbeh's apparent death.

ISIS has released videos showing the beheadings of several Western hostages and has said it has killed two Japanese captives.

The ultra-radical militants have come under increased military pressure from airstrikes, and by Kurdish and Iraqi troops pushing to reverse ISIS's territorial gains in Iraq and Syria.

With files from CBC News
© Thomson Reuters, 2015
Reuters
 
jollyjacktar said:
The barbarians have apparently burned the Jordanian pilot alive.  I don't suppose there's much they won't stoop to.  I wonder what will it take for the rest of the Muslim world to turn on them and put them down for the count.

What a horrible way to die!

Reuters

Islamic State video purports to show Jordanian pilot burnt alive
Reuters

– 54 minutes ago

CAIRO/AMMAN (Reuters) - Islamic State militants released a video on Tuesday purporting to show a captive Jordanian pilot being burnt alive, and Jordanian state television said he was murdered a month ago.
Reuters could not immediately confirm the video, which showed a man resembling the captive pilot standing in a black cage before being set ablaze.
The pilot, Mouath al-Kasaesbeh, was captured by Islamic State insurgents after his plane crashed over Syria while on a bombing mission against the group in December. Jordanian state TV said Kasaesbeh had been killed on Jan. 3.
There was no further comment from the Jordanian government. The head of the Jordanian armed forces broke the news of the pilot's killing to his family, a member of the family told Reuters.

(...SNIPPED)
 
S.M.A. said:
What a horrible way to die!

Reuters

Yes, the written description was bad enough to read that I would not want to watch the video.  I have refused to watch any of their snuff films, unless, of course, they're the one's snuffing it.  I can watch Predator porn all day long...
 
And some bravely fight back:

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2936629/Father-shoots-dead-seven-ISIS-militants-revenge-son-executed-spying-Iraqi-government.html

Iraqi father shoots dead seven ISIS militants in revenge for son's public online execution - before being gunned down himself

Iraqi man opened fire on ISIS militants in revenge attack in Tikrit
Basil Ramadan killed seven before he himself was shot dead
Ahmed Basil Ramadan, 18, was one of eight men executed last month
Islamic State released photographs and a video of the execution
The victims are clearly identified and appear to have been interviewed
The eight men are accused of spying on ISIS for the Iraqi government

By Tom Wyke for MailOnline and Sara Malm for MailOnline

Published: 17:06 GMT, 2 February 2015 | Updated: 23:20 GMT, 2 February 2015

An Iraqi man has shot and killed seven ISIS militants in an act of revenge for his son who was executed by the terrorist group, local media reports.

Basil Ramadan, said to be in his 60s, used an AK-47 to gun down a group of militants at a checkpoint in Tikrit, a city northwest of Baghdad currently under ISIS control, before he was shot.

Mr Ramadan's son, Ahmed Basil, 18, was one of eight men executed by ISIS in January, accused of infiltrating the organisation and spying for the Iraqi government.

ISIS released photos from a video of the execution of Ahmed Basil Ramadan and seven others, all said to be police officers, accused of informing on Islamic State for the Iraqi government.

Entitled 'the Day of Judgement', the photos from the video show eight Iraqi men dressed in orange Guantanamo Bay style jumpsuits.

Standing behind them are Islamic State's notorious security forces, known for carrying out mass public executions in broad daylight.

Several of the victims, including Mr Ramadan's son, are named in the captions and appear to have been interviewed for the video as they are seen wearing microphones.

In the video, Ahmad Basil Ramadan is accused of giving information on the location of Islamic State soldier houses.

The leader of the group is named as Captain Hossam Salah Bnosh. According to Islamic State media, Bnosh and seven other police officers converted to Sunni Islam and joined Islamic State.

However once they had infiltrated the Islamic State security forces, they began to secretly spy for the Iraqi government.

The group are accused of providing intelligence information to the Iraqi government, identifying targets for coalition airstrikes against Islamic State.

Another prisoner wearing a microphone is named as Marwan Habib Said, who reportedly joined Islamic State security forces but was caught giving target information to the Iraqi government.

The photos show how the eight prisoners were blindfolded and frogmarched along the edge of the river, most likely the Euphrates.

Their hands are handcuffed behind their backs and each Islamic State fighter appears to be holding their victim's neck as they march to their deaths.

They appear to have been taken to a quiet area away from the city, possibly under a motorway bridge, near the river. Forced to kneel down and unable to see, the prisoners wait as each Islamic State fighter draws their pistol and takes aim.

Each prisoner is executed with a single bullet to the head. Afterwards, the security forces pose for a photo. The squadron are shown pointing their pistols at the video camera.
 
Some good news:

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2936231/The-Kill-List-Half-ISIS-commanders-believed-dead-executioner-chief-Jihadi-John-free-commit-barbaric-slaughter.html

The Kill List: Half of ISIS top commanders believed to be dead... but executioner-in-chief Jihadi John is still free to commit barbaric slaughter

Allied airstrikes decimate ISIS' leadership, leaving terror group in chaos
Terror chief Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi left isolated and in hiding amid chaos
Nine out the 18 members of Baghdadi's ruling council have been killed
These include number two Abu Muslim al-Turkmani, who had previously served as a lieutenant colonel in Saddam Hussein's Iraqi army
But prominent killers such as Jihadi John are still free to commit atrocities

By John Hall for MailOnline

Published: 12:44 GMT, 2 February 2015 | Updated: 14:50 GMT, 2 February 2015

The Islamic State's leadership in Syria and Iraq has been decimated by months of sustained air strikes, leaving the terror group in chaos and isolating leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, it is claimed.

Allied airstrikes, including those carried out by British warplanes, have killed more than 6,000 fighters since September, including more than half the militants serving on ISIS' ruling council.

Among the dead jihadis is Abu Muslim al-Turkmani, a former Iraqi army lieutenant colonel considered Baghdadi's number two and ISIS' most senior militant in Iraq.

His death and that of as many as nine others on ISIS' 18-man leadership council have forced Baghdadi to promote local warlords to the status of regional commanders, as his inner circle of trusted advisers and battle-hardened loyalists becomes increasingly small.

Baghdadi has not been seen in public since July and there have been numerous unconfirmed reports that he suffered serious injury or possibly even death as a result of targeted airstrikes.

The likelihood, however, is that Baghdadi has been forced deep into hiding to avoid being targeted by jets that have destroyed more than 1,000 vehicles used by terrorists over the past five months.

Other senior figures within the terror group have not been afforded that luxury and still need to travel across the vast swathes of Syria and Iraq that remain under ISIS' control.

This forces them to make a decision whether to move as part of a large military convoy and risk being spotted by warplanes overhead, or whether to use cars that reduce the likelihood of aerial detection but leave them at risk of kidnap or killing at the hands if ISIS' rivals on the ground.
Despite the serious damage done to ISIS' leadership by the airstrikes, scores of prominent militants remain alive, including the terror group's British executioner in chief, Jihadi John

Among the ISIS leadership figures killed in airstrikes in recent months is Abu Musa al-Alwani, according to the Sun. Another former member of Saddam Hussein's army, Abu Musa - real name Waleed Jassem al-Alwani - had been a prominent member of ISIS' military council before his death.

Also killed by coalition airstrikes last year was Abu Abdulrahman al-Bilawi - who had been the head of Baghdadi's four man military council, having previously served on the terror leader's religious and strategic advisory body, known as the Shura Council.

Another militant reportedly killed by the first wave of coalition airstrikes in September was Abu Hajar Al-Sufi, also known as Abu Hajar al-Assafi, who had been one of Baghdadi's most trusted advisers on the Shura Council.

His death came two months before that of Abu Jurnas. real name Rathwan Talib Hussein Ismail al-Hamdani, whose official title was believed to have been Governor of 'Border Provinces'.

Abu Jurnas' role was to ensure ISIS' barbaric interpretation of Sharia law was enforced along the Syria-Iraq crossing, and to ensure that the nations' respective armies are unable to reestablish the border that was effectively wiped out by the terror group's lightning advance last summer.

Baghdadi is likely to have replaced Abu Jurnas with another of his trusted lieutenants, but in less strategically important regions he is understood to have been forced to appoint local warlords to the role of senior commander as his inner circle of loyalists dwindles.

While many of these local tribal leaders are in favour of a Sunni Muslim caliphate and their opposition to the Syrian and Iraqi regimes confirmed, their allegiances remain largely tribal and they are not seen as entrenched supporters of the Baghdadi-led group.

Long-standing tensions between the tribes has also surfaced as they battle for regional prominence and advantage, causing chaos with ISIS ranks.

Despite the serious damage done to ISIS' leadership by the airstrikes, scores of prominent militants remain alive, including the terror group's British executioner in chief, Jihadi John.

Although he is unlikely to hold a senior position within the group's leadership, his death would be highly symbolic in the battle to defeat ISIS due to his in the deaths of British, American and Japanese aid workers and journalists.

Over the weekend ISIS' British executioner in chief, Jihadi John, savagely murdered Japanese journalist Kenji Goto in a shocking filmed beheading after days of intensive negotiations through intermediaries to save him.

Other well-known militants still alive and operational include Abu Wahib, the terror group's 28-year-old leader in Iraq's Anbar province, whose distinctive thick black beard has ensured he has been used prominently in ISIS propaganda.

Another is Abu Omar al-Shishani, another 28-year-old, who is understood to be responsible for ISIS' military operations within Syria.

Before joining ISIS Georgian-born Shishani led the terror group Jaish al-Muhajireen wal Ansar in operations against the Syrian regime, but declared his allegiance to Baghdadi last year.

He had previously been a member of the Georgian army, but left ahead of his promotion to officer.
 
I hope the Jordanians take that female(?) bomber they're holding, chain her limbs to four camels, and give them all a swat in the arse.  I further hope they put it on Al Jazeeras Saturday night This Week in Fanaticism.
 
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