World News Thread & Breaking News!!

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bladerunner

Banned Idiot
Or possibly more like gangsta's...owning money to the mob is quite a risk for not only you but your family members as well.

Maybe they were just innocent people that stumbled onto something. .....you know the usual "Wrong place Wrong time " thing
 

Equation

Lieutenant General
Maybe they were just innocent people that stumbled onto something. .....you know the usual "Wrong place Wrong time " thing

True that's a possibility, but why kill them when you can bribe them. Wouldn't killing them in country known to have gun control would get the authority to be more suspicious and sending in more specialize investigators on the case?
 

bladerunner

Banned Idiot
True that's a possibility, but why kill them when you can bribe them. Wouldn't killing them in country known to have gun control would get the authority to be more suspicious and sending in more specialize investigators on the case?

Maybe its a big drug buy or something.They would'nt want witnesses.

Then theres this speculative talk about a stand in at Bo's wifes trial thats been doing the rounds. Mrs Gu has paid well for a stand in, meanwhile shes in France crossing over to Switzerland to get all the gazillions she had stacked in the Swisss Banks. Maybe the people in the car saw her?.;);)
 

Finn McCool

Captain
Registered Member
That murder BD Popeye posted the link to turned out to be an Iraqi family. Perhaps some score settling from the old country...
 

SampanViking

The Capitalist
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There have been a load of suggestions and most of them sound utterly disingenuous.
The man was an scientist or engineer involved in Satellites and possibly missiles. The fact that this has been glossed over and virtually ignored is possibly the most telling part of the story so far.

A family machine gunned in their own car while in a remote spot on holiday has all the hallmarks of a professional hit, as indeed was the killing of the passing cyclist. It also looks like a State rather than a gang action, give the delays in giving details and the ridiculous stories being circulated, I think we can guess which country should be top of the suspect list.

I am curious to learn which community the victims came from.
 

delft

Brigadier
The man came as a child to the UK and was according to British media a very capable engineer in a company that designs and builds satellites. His parents died, his father last year and the suggestion is today that there was trouble with his elder brother about the inheritance. But would any disagreement be so large that it makes sense to someone to hire assassins? I think the police are talking to give the impression that they are active while they are really scratching their heads and looking for the killer(s), any other clues and for any kind of motive that might be less outrageous. The outrageous explanation might be the true one but it is much to early to think so.
 

Franklin

Captain
Egyptians angry at film scale U.S. embassy walls

People shout slogans and light flares in front of the U.S. embassy during a protest against what they said was a film being produced in the United States that was insulting to the Prophet Mohammad, in Cairo September 11, 2012. Egyptian protesters scaled the walls of the U.S. embassy in Cairo on Tuesday and some pulled down the American flag during the protest, witnesses said. REUTERS-Amr Abdallah Dalsh
People attend a rally in front of the U.S. embassy to protest against a recently produced movie insulting Prophet Mohammad, in Cairo September 11, 2012. REUTERS-Amr Abdallah Dalsh
People shout slogans in front of the U.S. embassy during a protest against what they said was a film being produced in the United States that was insulting to the Prophet Mohammad, in Cairo September 11, 2012. Egyptian protesters scaled the walls of the U.S. embassy in Cairo on Tuesday and some pulled down the American flag during the protest, witnesses said. REUTERS-Amr Abdallah Dalsh

(Reuters) - Egyptian protesters scaled the walls of the U.S. embassy on Tuesday, tore down the American flag and burned it during a protest over what they said was a film being produced in the United States that insulted Prophet Mohammad.

In place of the U.S. flag, the protesters tried to raise a black flag with the words "There is no God but God, and Mohammad is his messenger", a Reuters witness said.

Once the U.S. flag was hauled down, some protesters tore it up and showed off pieces to television cameras. Others burned the remains outside the fortress-like embassy building in central Cairo. But some protesters objected to the flag burning.

Many Muslims consider any depiction of the Prophet to be offensive.

"This movie must be banned immediately and an apology should be made," said 19-year-old Ismail Mahmoud, a member of the so-called "ultras" soccer supporters who played a big role in the uprising that brought down Hosni Mubarak last year.

He called on President Mohamed Mursi, Egypt's first civilian president and an Islamist, to take action, without giving details of the film that angered him or other protesters.

About 20 people stood on top of the embassy wall, while about 2,000 protesters gathered outside. The demonstrators were mainly supporters of Islamist groups or "ultras" youths.

Rafik Farouk, 38, an Egyptian Christian, also took part. "I am here because I am Egyptian and reject anything that insults Islam or anything that sparks division in Egypt," he said.

Washington has a big mission in Egypt, partly because of a huge aid programme that followed Egypt's signing of a peace treaty with Israel in 1979. The United States gives $1.3 billion to Egypt's military each year and offers the nation other aid.

U.S. State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland in Washington said the wall was breached and the flag removed.

"We are obviously working with Egyptian security to try to restore order at the embassy and to work with them to try to get the situation under control," she said.

Following the protest, Egypt's Foreign Ministry said it was committed to giving all embassies the necessary protection.

The U.S. embassy had put out a statement earlier on Tuesday condemning "misguided individuals" who hurt the religious feelings of Muslims or followers of other religions.

"We firmly reject the actions by those who abuse the universal right of free speech to hurt the religious beliefs of others," the U.S. embassy said in its statement.

MUSLIM ANGER

Although it was not clear which film prompted the protests, Egypt's prestigious Al-Azhar mosque and seat of Sunni learning condemned on Tuesday a symbolic "trial" of the Prophet organised by a U.S. group including Terry Jones, a Christian pastor who triggered riots in Afghanistan in 2010 by threatening to burn the Koran.

According to the website
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, Jones and others were due to take part in an event on Tuesday - the anniversary of the September 11 attacks by al Qaeda on U.S. cities - called "International Judge Mohammad Day" in Florida. It was due to be carried live on the Internet.

Some activists had mentioned Jones in calls for a protest.

Egypt's Coptic Orthodox church also condemned in a statement some Copts living abroad who it said financed "the production of a film insulting Prophet Mohammad", a state website reported. About a 10th of Egypt's 83 million people are Christians.

Protests have become a common feature in Egypt since the uprising that ousted long-time U.S.-ally Mubarak. When U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton visited in July, after Mursi was sworn in, her motorcade was pelted with tomatoes.

Some demonstrators shouted slogans against her and some slogans were against Islamists, reflecting perceptions of some opponents of Islamists who have swept Egypt's presidency and a parliamentary vote that Washington helped Islamists to power.

In Mubarak's era, protests were usually swiftly halted by an often brutally efficient police force.

One slogan scrawled on the walls of the embassy, which is near Tahrir Square where Egyptians revolted against Mubarak, said: "If your freedom of speech has no limits, may you accept our freedom of action."

In another incident prompted by similar religious sentiments last month, a lone man attacked the German embassy with homemade nail bombs and a hammer, cracking glass at the entrance, after he read a report about a protest in Germany where demonstrators paraded caricatures of the Prophet outside a mosque.

No one was injured and there was no serious damage to the embassy during the incident.

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