Todo sobre ISIS/Estado Islámico - Aquí

En memoria de todas las víctimas del odio y la violencia ideológica y dedicado a todos los que buscan la paz en medio del conflicto.

So live your life that the fear of death can never enter your heart. Trouble no one about their religion; respect others in their view, and demand that they respect yours. Love your life, perfect your life, beautify all things in your life. Seek to make your life long and its purpose in the service of your people. Prepare a noble death song for the day when you go over the great divide.

Always give a word or a sign of salute when meeting or passing a friend, even a stranger, when in a lonely place. Show respect to all people and grovel to none.

When you arise in the morning give thanks for the food and for the joy of living. If you see no reason for giving thanks, the fault lies only in yourself. Abuse no one and no thing, for abuse turns the wise ones to fools and robs the spirit of its vision.

When it comes your time to die, be not like those whose hearts are filled with the fear of death, so that when their time comes they weep and pray for a little more time to live their lives over again in a different way. Sing your death song and die like a hero going home.


Chief Tecumseh (Crouching Tiger) Shawnee Nation 1768-1813
 
Si, hombre

Día, tras día se divulga aquí toda la clase teorías conspiranoicas sobre yijad isis, atentados islamistas etc.

Siempre en la misma línea:
Las supuestas causas hay que buscar en los terceros.

S, que si
" hemos radicalizado al Islam"

Isis ha salido del laboratorio CIA + Mossad



los combatientes islámicos en SYRIA " toman piscotropocos o otras sustancias " ء-> véase sus posts

llama a una forera que expresa su preocupación " paranoias de Peggy"

no existen islamistas radicales, ni sus interpretaciones del Coran,

No, que no
 
que pena! que miedo!

asquerosos fanáticos locos.

y esto acaba de comenzar.

No perder el tiempo seguir buscando culpables. Culpables son ellos.

que descansen en paz!
 
¿Cuáles son las armas del Estado Islámico en Siria e Irak?
Publicado: 18 mar 2015 18:16 GMT

A la luz de la creciente expansión del grupo terrorista Estado Islámico en Afganistán surgen preguntas acerca de la estabilidad del país y de su capacidad de resistencia contra las armas que usa el EI. Les ofrecemos conocer qué tipos de armas han utilizado los yihadistas para fortificarse en el terreno de Siria e Irak.

http://actualidad.rt.com/actualidad/169488-armas-luchar-yihadistas-estado-islamico
 
http://www.theguardian.com/world/2015/mar/18/eight-people-killed-in-attack-on-tunisia-bardo-museum

Tunis museum attack: 20 people killed after hostage drama at tourist site
Tunisian PM says 17 of those killed in ‘cowardly attack’ were foreigners after two gunmen stormed Bardo museum and kept hostages for three hours

The aftermath of an attack near the Bardo national museum in Tunisia’s capital, Tunis
Chris Stephen in Tunis, Kareem Shaheen in Beirut and Mark Tran in London

Wednesday 18 March 2015 11.40 EDT Last modified on Wednesday 18 March 2015 15.21 EDT


At least 20 people have been killed in Tunisia after two gunmen stormed the Bardo national museum – one of the country’s leading tourist attractions in the capital, Tunis – sparking a three-hour hostage siege.

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Tunisia’s prime minister, Habib Essid, said on Wednesday afternoon that 17 of the dead were foreigners – from Germany, Italy, Spain and Poland – calling the attack a cowardly assault targeting the economy. He said two or three of the attackers remained at large.

Three hours after the attack started at about midday local time (11am GMT), an interior ministry spokesman said two gunmen had been killed, as well as one security officer, and that all hostages had been freed.

Poland’s foreign ministry said that three Poles were among the six wounded.

The Bardo, which includes one of the world’s largest and finest collections of Roman mosaics, is one of the country’s biggest tourist attractions.

A single muffled detonation signalled the end of the siege, with reports filtering through to crowds gathered outside the gates in the bright sunshine that the attackers were dead.

White ambulances with lights flashing drove in a slow convoy inside the gardens of the palace grounds. Minutes later police pushed open the big iron entrance gates and black armoured vehicles of the special forces, their task seemingly complete, came out, inching through the crowds pressing in outside.

The spectators burst into cheering and applause and a black-clad helmeted soldier peering from the turret of one vehicle punched the air with both fists in response.

cf2f6aaf-40f2-4e7d-b60d-d673ce0ef303-460x276.jpeg

Tunis museum attack – in pictures
View gallery
More than 100 European tourists freed at the end of the siege were driven out of the museum gates, their faces showing a mixture of anxiety and relief. The tourists - men and women, young and old - stared into space, some smiling at the crowds. One young woman inside the first bus grinned and waved her hand. Dozens of armed police and troops remained inside the museum complex sealed off from the city.

Relief that the siege was over was mixed with dismay among those watching. “This is a black day for Tunisia,” said Karim Ben Sa’a, a manager in the tourism industry. “We are very sad for these tourists. They visit our country and it is so, so, sad to see them die. Our hearts are black.”



An image grab taken from the Tunisia 1 TV channel shows people escaping from the museum during the attack. Photograph: -/AFP/Getty Images
Elsewhere in Tunis there was shock and dismay that terrorists had managed to launch an attack at the very heart of the capital, at a museum that shares the Bardo palace complex with the national parliament. Police set up checkpoints and a policeman with a machine gun was posted outside the office of the UK’s British Council.

During the hostage crisis, black-clad police snipers were on the rooftops and bastions of the ancient Bardo castle which forms part of the complex housing the museum.

A helicopter thundered low overhead making circles over the museum. Several hundred people gathered outside the wrought iron gates of the complex, as the air echoed to the sirens of police cars and ambulances.

The attack came a day after Tunisia announced a major seizure of weapons from jihadi groups, triggering speculation that the museum attack may have been launched by jihadi groups in revenge.

In a defiant tweet one MP, Sayida Ounissi, said: “We are not afraid”, adding that Tunisia’s parliament had been evacuated.

The Italian foreign ministry confirmed two Italians may have been wounded. It said 100 Italians were safe and under police protection after being rescued from the museum. The rescued victims were on a tour but the ministry could not confirm the name of the tour.

The attack came days after the death of Ahmed Al-Rouissi, a Tunisian also known as Abu Zakariya Al-Tunisi, who led a contingent of Islamic State (Isis) fighters in Libya. He was killed in clashes with Libyan troops near the town of Sirte, a stronghold of followers of Muammar Gaddafi, the late Libyan strongman.

Tunisian commentators speculated there may be a connection between his death and Wednesday’s deadly attack, which could badly damage tourism, on which the country relies heavily.

Pro-Isis Twitter accounts hailed the attack as “ghazwat Tunis” or the “raid of Tunis” (ghazwa is the description given to the early Islamic battles) and have cheered on the attackers. A purported Isis video from last December threatened attacks on Tunisia.

Last month, Tunisia arrested more than 30 suspected militants – some of whom returning from fighting in Syria – who were planning “spectacular” attacks, officials said at the time. Interior ministry officials said counter-terrorism forces had prevented attacks against “vital installations”, including the interior ministry and civilian buildings in Tunis.

The assault on the museum poses an early and severe challenge for the new secular-Islamist coalition cabinet, which took office last month. It already faces the problem of a proliferation of armed groups that emerged after the 2011 uprising that overthrew Zine El Abidine Ben Ali.

Beji Caid Essebsi, the Tunisian president, said measures were being taken to prevent further attacks.

“The authorities have taken all measures to ensure that such things don’t happen again,” Essebsi told Agence France-Presse as he visited victims of the attack in a Tunis hospital.

Philip Stack, of British risk-analyst Maplecroft, said; “This attack is certain to have an effect on the tourism industry which the authorities have worked hard to rebuild after the 2011 revolution. The principal targets of terrorism in Tunisia in the last couple of years have been the security forces. By targeting foreign tourists at a prestigious city centre site, the terrorists have changed their tactics and raised the stakes.”

The Bardo killings come amid mounting anxiety that jihadi violence is spilling over Tunisia’s border from neighbouring Libya. Troops are deployed on the Libyan border to interdict what the authorities believe are terrorist groups bringing in men and equipment.

Tunisia, alone among the former Arab spring states has seen the democratic revolution of 2011 bear fruit, celebrating trouble-free national elections held in December. But the country has also seen thousands of young men head to Syria and Libya to join IS units, triggering fears some will return to mount attacks back home.

Tunisia is a major source of fighters travelling to Syria, with the number of Tunisians fighting there estimated at about 3,000. A few hundred have returned to Tunisia and many have been tracked down and arrested.
 
España
Los dos españoles fallecidos en Túnez son un matrimonio de jubilados catalanes
abc.esABCESPANA / madrid
Día 18/03/2015 - 21.10h

Temas relacionados
Se trata de Antonio Cirera Pérez y Dolores Sánchez Rami




EFE
Un herido es evacuado del Museo del Bardo después del atentado
Según ha podido saber ABC, las dos víctimas españolas del atentado perpetrado este miércoles en Túnez son un matrimonio catalán de edad avanzada. Se trata de Antonio Cirera Pérez y Dolores Sánchez Rami, un matrimonio de jubilados de Barcelona que se Habían llegado a Túnez a bordo de un crucero para pasar las vacaciones.

El ministro de Exteriores, José Manuel García-Margallo, ha confirmado hace apenas una hora la muerte de dos turistas españoles en el atentado. El ministro de Asuntos Exteriores, por respeto a las familias, no ha facilitado ningún dato personal de las víctimas, aunque ha asegurado que una de ellas ya estaba identificada. Margallo ha manifestado, en nombre del ejecutivo nacional, el «dolor» y la «indignación» por la «sinrazón de la barbarie terrorista».

La última información, facilitada por el ministerio de Sanidad tunecino cerca de las siete y media de la tarde al cuerpo diplomático español, hablaba de una veintena de muertos en el ataque. Dos de los fallecidos, de origen español, formaban parte de un grupo de alrededor de noventa turistas españoles que se encuentran en el país del norte de África llegados a bordo de dos cruceros diferentes.

García-Margallo ha insistido en la «condena» a los sucesos, cuyas consecuencias totales todavía no han podido ser enumeradas, pues ha afirmado que «no se puede descartar» que existan más víctimas entre el grupo de españoles, tanto entre los fallecidos como entre los heridos.
 
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