Post by The PeelerOn Sat, 03 Nov 2018 05:05:28 -0700, serbian bitch Razovic, the resident
psychopath of sci and scj and Usenet's famous sexual cripple, making an ass
of herself as "jew pedophile Ron Jacobson (jew pedophile Baruch 'Barry'
EVERY normal, straight and intelligent person ALWAYS will keep laughing at
you, dreckserb Razovic!
Indeed.
Against us, the mangina has no chance.
Now here is Judith Bergman writing about terror investigations.
UK: Terror Investigations an "Inconvenience"?
by Judith Bergman
November 2, 2018 at 5:00 am
https://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/13190/britain-terror-investigations
If you do not even dare to link terrorism to its source, then surely neither
can you prepare for it.
No one seems to be holding roundtable talks with non-Muslim communities
across the UK to address their legitimate fears and concerns about
religiously-motivated terrorism on their lives.
Perhaps the main reason that terror victims had nowhere to turn is that even
after years of living with Islamic terrorism, British authorities and public
services still appear to be more concerned with dealing with perceived
"Islamophobia" than with the real, devastating consequences of terrorism.
Pictured: A police officer stands guard near the Manchester Arena on May 23,
2017, following a suicide bombing by Salman Abedi, who murdered 22
concert-goers. (Photo by Dave Thompson/Getty Images)
Britain's Independent Reviewer of Terrorism Legislation, Max Hill, recently
recommended:
"...the Police should consider and reflect upon the community impact of a
large-scale [terror] investigation, centering as it did on particular areas
of Manchester with a large Muslim population... Good community policing, as
well as good counter-terrorism policing, demands that real efforts are made
to work within and with local communities, where many blameless residents
will have been inconvenienced if not traumatised by the regular appearance
of Police search and arrest teams on their street or in their home. I would
like to see the outcome of Police reflections on this aspect..." [Emphasis
added]
Hill's recommendation was published in his recent report on how the UK
handles its counter-terrorism efforts. In the report, Hill examines police
investigations of the major 2017 terrorist attacks; his recommendation was
connected to the investigation into the terrorist attack in Manchester in
May 2017, in which Salman Abedi murdered 22 people and injured 139, half of
them children, at an Ariana Grande pop concert at the Manchester Arena.
The police, in other words, should consider making it a priority to work in
a way so that their investigations of the murder and maiming of all these
people will not "inconvenience" the community in which the suicide bomber
lived.
Hill based his recommendation on talks he had previously had with various
Muslim organizations across the UK about the impact of counter-terror
legislation on their lives and the aftermath of the terrorist attacks in
London and Manchester in 2017.
The talks with the Muslim organizations were recorded in the report,
"Community Roundtables: A report on the aftermath of the terrorist attacks
in London and Manchester" published by Forward Thinking's "Building Bridges"
Program. This program, which "empowers grassroots communities," facilitates
dialogue between UK Muslim communities and grassroots organizations, British
authorities (local government, parliamentarians, policymakers), and the
national media.
The "Community Roundtables" report described a meeting with representatives
of the Libyan-Muslim community in Manchester -- from which Abedi emerged:
"Throughout the meeting, almost all participants articulated a profound
sense of anger and frustration at the consequences of extensive police raids
within the community and a perceived lack of support to deal with these
consequences, including the fear of being ostracised and targeted by wider
society... Individuals -- particularly children and teenagers -- who have
been directly affected were said to have been left traumatised and
humiliated, creating a sense of alienation that it was warned could have
profoundly damaging consequences for the UK unless urgently addressed...
Specific concerns were raised about the potential for a rise in Islamophobic
attacks in the current context and it was hoped that the authorities would
take such a threat seriously and offer increased support to communities."
No one, however, seems to be holding roundtable talks with non-Muslim
communities across the UK to address their legitimate fears and concerns
about religiously-motivated terrorism on their lives.
According to the National Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children
(NSPCC) a leading UK children's charity, more than 300 counselling sessions
were held by the organization with children after the terrorist attack at
the Manchester Arena -- apparently four times as many sessions as usual. In
addition, the organization received hundreds of calls from children after
the Manchester attack. An 11-year-old who called the helpline said: "I
constantly feel anxious... I am really worried that they will get someone in
my family. I haven't been sleeping because it is all I can think about."
Another caller, a 14-year-old girl, said: "I'm always on the edge when I
leave the house and am always looking over my shoulder."
The number of children and young people seeking help from mental health
services also rose after the Manchester attack, according to the Royal
College of Psychiatrists (RCP). Hospitals across the Manchester region saw
an estimated 10% increase in children seeking psychological help, which
received hundreds more patients from June to July compared with previous
months.
"Dr Louise Theodosiou, a consultant child and adolescent psychiatrist at
Royal Manchester children's hospital and a member of the RCP, described the
increase as significant and said the terror attack had a 'profound impact on
the way the children view their city.'
"Just a small fraction of those treated had been at the concert; the
majority of patients had felt increased anxiety after watching the events on
the news. Anxiety and insomnia were the most common complaints, with
children worrying about going out or being on public transport after the
attacks."
A similar trend had been seen in London after the terrorist attacks there.
In March, an independent review, the purpose of which was to examine the
quality of the emergency response to the Manchester bombing, found that many
respondents did not know where to turn for support after the attack. Some
suffered post-traumatic stress disorder, flashbacks, trauma and anxiety
causing them to lose jobs and drop out of the educational system.
It is mystifying that the victims of terror had nowhere to turn: it has been
more than a decade since the first mass terrorist attack in the UK, in 2005
on London's transit system, where 56 people were killed and 700 wounded.
Since then, Britain has only seen the terror threat continue.
Perhaps the main reason that terror victims had nowhere to turn is that even
after years of living with Islamic terrorism, British authorities and public
services still appear to be more concerned with dealing with perceived
"Islamophobia" than with the real, devastating consequences of terrorism.
If you do not even dare to link terrorism to its source, then surely neither
can you prepare for it. You cannot even speak about the gravely detrimental
effects that Islamic terrorism has on the well-being of children and others
in general society, because Islamic terrorism is (officially) not even
supposed to exist.
It is only in such a society -- where everything has been turned on its
head, where the authorities cannot tell who are the victims and who are the
people who may feel as if they are victims if someone asks them some
questions -- that a terrorist investigation can be considered "an
inconvenience."
As the saying goes about children in a playground: "It all started when he
hit me back."
Judith Bergman, a columnist, lawyer and political analyst, is a
Distinguished Senior Fellow at Gatestone Institute.
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