• Berlin attack suspect Anis Amri killed in Milan after shootout
    23 replies, posted
[url]http://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-38415287[/url] [quote]The Berlin market attack suspect Anis Amri has been shot dead by police in Milan, Italy's interior minister says. The man, who opened fire on police who asked him for ID during a routine patrol in the Sesto San Giovanni area in the early hours of Friday morning, was "without a shadow of a doubt" Anis Amri, Marco Minetti said. One police officer was injured in the shootout.[/quote]
[QUOTE=Niklas;51572371]One police officer was injured in the shootout.[/QUOTE] And not killed? I like good news.
Good riddance
Well, he deserves it, but it's not much consolation I'm afraid. It won't bring them back.
Sesto San Giovanni many times is more dangerous than any terrorist, and I can say it myself. So is a good news: Milan 1, terrorist 0
One thing makes me wonder though. [QUOTE]According to the Italian news agency Ansa, Anis Amri had travelled by train from France to Turin, and then taken another train to Milan. Amri, a Tunisian national aged 24, had served a prison sentence in Italy after being convicted of vandalism, threats and theft in 2011. He was known to Italian authorities for his violent behaviour while imprisoned. After his release he was asked to leave the country. He arrived in Germany where he applied for asylum in April of this year.[/QUOTE] Germany granted asylum to a convict who had been noted for violent behavior. That's exactly the issue people have with the refugee crisis. This could have been avoided.
[QUOTE=SirJon;51572423]One thing makes me wonder though. Germany granted asylum to a convict who had been noted for violent behavior. That's exactly the issue people have with the refugee crisis. This could have been avoided.[/QUOTE] Surely it could have been avoided. We need a united police force for the most, and not divided countries with the removal of Schengen.
[QUOTE=SirJon;51572423]One thing makes me wonder though. Germany granted asylum to a convict who had been noted for violent behavior. That's exactly the issue people have with the refugee crisis. This could have been avoided.[/QUOTE] I though he wasn't granted asylym and was being deported
Now the question is how did the most wanted man in Europe get all the way to Italy without being picked up.
[QUOTE=Trebgarta;51572586]He wasnt wanted. He served time and was released.[/QUOTE] He was wanted for driving a fuckin semi into a crowd of people...
[QUOTE=Boilrig;51572584]Now the question is how did the most wanted man in Europe get all the way to Italy without being picked up.[/QUOTE] Because German authorities arrested the wrong person, so he had time to get away until they found his document in the truck.
[QUOTE=Boilrig;51572584]Now the question is how did the most wanted man in Europe get all the way to Italy without being picked up.[/QUOTE] You could get all the way from Estonia to Portugal without seeing a single border control worker a few years ago (did a road trip with friends). Got checked two times when we came back though, but that was just "luck". I doubt the situation has changed drastically with the migrant crisis.
[QUOTE=Trebgarta;51572579]Germany didnt grant asylum. They were legally obligated to process his application and refuse it properly, during which time he stayed in Germany ofc.[/QUOTE] Well that's even worse if you think about it
[QUOTE=Trebgarta;51572965]Not really. He is an asshole for taking advantage of the system, but that doesnt mean the system is bad. There is not much of an alternative, apart from wishing more speed on bureaucracy, which is extremely hard. Wish Germany had 50 million clerks and 70 million cops and 99o trillion dollar budget for all this but sadly no. At least it isnt a travesty like American immigration courts. Look at that if you wanna see something EVEN worse.[/QUOTE] I want to read this story. Can you give some examples?
In the source is a video of him making his pledge to ISIS [url]http://www.reuters.com/article/us-germany-truck-idUSKBN14C0JP[/url]
[QUOTE=MarcusSmith;51572438]Surely it could have been avoided. We need a united police force for the most, and not divided countries with the removal of Schengen.[/QUOTE] If it wasn't for the Schengen he would have been stopped multiple times before he ever reached Italy.
[QUOTE=Trebgarta;51574654]If it wasnt for the union of Germany as well. He would be stopped at the border of Berlin. Maybe we should rebuild the Berlin Wall.[/QUOTE] [thumb]https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/2/21/Mitteleuropa_zur_Zeit_der_Staufer.svg/800px-Mitteleuropa_zur_Zeit_der_Staufer.svg.png[/thumb] bring this back but without the globalists of the HRE fucking up national sovereignty
[QUOTE=Trebgarta;51572965]Not really. He is an asshole for taking advantage of the system, but that doesnt mean the system is bad. There is not much of an alternative, apart from wishing more speed on bureaucracy, which is extremely hard. Wish Germany had 50 million clerks and 70 million cops and 99o trillion dollar budget for all this but sadly no. At least it isnt a travesty like American immigration courts. Look at that if you wanna see something EVEN worse.[/QUOTE] What you said is exactly why the system is clearly bad though
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