• Germany: Knife-Wielding Isis Supporters Attack Kurdish Kobani Protests in Hamburg,roughly 500 kurds
    18 replies, posted
[IMG]http://d.ibtimes.co.uk/en/full/1403287/kurd-germany.jpg[/IMG] [video=youtube;pviV4-F825w]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pviV4-F825w[/video] [QUOTE]Anti-Isis (Islamic State) protests organised by Kurdish nationals in a number of German cities have erupted into violent clashes, with radical Muslims armed with knives and brass-knuckles.The demonstrations in the city of Hamburg and the town of Celle deteriorated into violence, forcing German police to request reinforcements to restore order. The clashes occurred on Tuesday after 80 Kurdish protesters occupied Hamburg's main train station for an hour before leaving voluntarily, according to local police. Approximately 500 Kurdish demonstrators marched through Hamburg, causing damage to a number of cars and Turkish snack bars. Fourteen Kurdish protesters were arrested. A few hundred Kurdish protesters then gathered at a mosque near the train station before they were attacked by a group of 40 armed supporters of IS. Four people were taken to hospital with stab wounds following the incident. Police used water cannons, batons and pepper spray to bring the unrest under control while both sides threw stones and bottles in an attempt to break police lines and attack the other. The clashes in Celle occurred a day earlier, with 100 Kurds and 100 Muslims brawling until police calmed the situation. Protests against the Islamic State have been organised in cities and towns across Germany such as Hannover, Oldenburg, Wolfsburg, Bremen, Gottingen and Kiel. Kurdish refugees are protesting against the Islamic State's offensive on Kurdish communities in northern Iraq and northern Syria, particularly the city of Kobani, where over 150,000 Syrian-Kurds have fled into Turkey. In the city, American airstrikes have pushed IS militants back from some districts that they had captured after a three-week fight for the city. Since the Islamic State (also known as Isis) raised their black flag on the eastern side of the town, raids on the Sunni Islamists have multiplied.[/QUOTE] [url]http://www.ibtimes.co.uk/germany-knife-wielding-isis-supporters-attack-kurdish-kobani-protests-hamburg-1469077[/url] What the fuck man, of all places, this happened in Germany, and in Hamburg!
Anybody who gets caught supporting IS deserves to be thrown behind bars at once if identified. We don't need any repeats of mass stabbings like in China in other places either.
Imagine actually being an ISIS supporter in the western world.
[QUOTE=Mr_Razzums;46183971]Imagine actually being an ISIS supporter in the western world.[/QUOTE] I can't, I'm not retarded.
If they love ISIS so much they should get shipped right back.
[QUOTE=bravehat;46183995]I can't, I'm an educated free thinking individual.[/QUOTE] Would be better but you got the jest of it.
[QUOTE=Mr_Razzums;46183971]Imagine actually being an ISIS supporter in the western world.[/QUOTE] There are so many motivational factors that might drive people to become terrorists or supporters of terrorism though. Economic, societal, religious (though this is an obvious link) and cultural facets can be visualised here to name a few. Disillusionment with the prevailing establishment is another important cause, and several Westerners who fight for IS are more than likely mercenaries. It isn't really all that simple to imagine that it shouldn't be easy for support to grow for such organizations, especially among the have-nots and those without a purpose who may see it as a means of striking back against the state which has left them by the wayside.
You gotta be a major hypocrite to live in a western society, enjoying its benefits of protest/speech, and then turn around and support ISIS. Unless the article is off and they were just anti-Kurd.
(I think) I heard they are thinking of deporting them. I don't think anyone would give a shit if they did, that scum doesn't deserve to live here. By the way, Germany banned all kinds of ISIS activities, so supporting them is an even worse idea here.
[QUOTE=Tudd;46184041]You gotta be a major hypocrite to live in a western society, enjoying its benefits of protest/speech, and then turn around and support ISIS. Unless the article is off and they were just anti-Kurd.[/QUOTE] Don't think it is, multiple sources have mentioned that a pro-ISIS faction was involved in the clashes.
This is fucking scary, to think those rats have supporters living in a [I]western [/I]world and are attacking people on the streets. How do these things even happen
[QUOTE=Firewarrior;46184050](I think) I heard they are thinking of deporting them. I don't think anyone would give a shit if they did, that scum doesn't deserve to live here. By the way, Germany banned all kinds of ISIS activities, so supporting them is an even worse idea here.[/QUOTE] for once germany banning everything is a good thing
[QUOTE=MendozaMan;46184097]This is fucking scary, to think those rats have supporters living in a [I]western [/I]world and are attacking people on the streets. [B]How do these things even happen[/B][/QUOTE] Unchecked immigration and a failure to assimilate/integrate?
[QUOTE=Canuhearme?;46184278]Unchecked immigration and a failure to assimilate/integrate?[/QUOTE] I thought criticizing immigration in Europe made you a horrible fascist?
Deport the fuckers they don't deserve to live in the West if they're going to openly support ISIS.
[QUOTE=Taepodong-2;46184961]Deport the fuckers they don't deserve to live in the West if they're going to openly support ISIS.[/QUOTE] There are some limits (like actual threats and such), but free speech should be free.
[QUOTE=Zonesylvania;46184058]Don't think it is, multiple sources have mentioned that a pro-ISIS faction was involved in the clashes.[/QUOTE] At the risk of sounding like I'm defending this, what's their evidence to support that? People are pretty on edge right now so I'd expect a lot to jump the gun and blame ISIS on a lot of things without them actually being involved. Anti-Kurds and radical Islamists have both been a thing for a lot longer than ISIS has.
[QUOTE=asteroidrules;46185231]At the risk of sounding like I'm defending this, what's their evidence to support that? People are pretty on edge right now so I'd expect a lot to jump the gun and blame ISIS on a lot of things without them actually being involved.[/QUOTE] I might have jumped the gun somewhat here as well, I should have put it down as probably involved. The sources are kind of thin on more pertinent information as well so we may need to wait on further investigation.
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