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| We no Longer Care | |
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| Tweet Topic Started: May 30 2010, 10:27 AM (69 Views) | |
| General Pershing | May 30 2010, 10:27 AM Post #1 |
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Patriot
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Not only do we have street jihad in Britain This is a murder (the Parking Murder) that currently upsets every citizen in Sweden. Inger, 78 years of age, and her husband Sven wanted to access a parking spot outside a shopping mall in Landskrona. But a Mazda 323 was standing in their way. Sven tapped his horn and tried to talk to the driver of the Mazda. But instead of moving, the driver started beating Sven. When Sven’s wife tried to come to her husband’s rescue, she was hit to the ground. With the injuries, she died two days later at a hospital. Police arrested Ahmad Akileh, originally palestinian and 23 years old. Ahmad’s family, that kept him hidden after the murder, are seeking help and protection since they claim they fear for the lifes. Ahmad Akileh pushed away the 71-year-old a few times. He claims he pushed the man with open hands. But Ahmad admits that he probably hit the older man’s face. And that some of the “pushes” might have been hard. After a while, the man fell with his back on the hood of the car. Ahmad Akileh claims he took a hasty step back. Doing so, he felt that he bumped into something. He made a circular movement with his upper body and saw that Inger, the 78-year-old woman, was laying on the ground, bleeding. Ahmad Akileh claims he never saw her before that. Sven, the 71-year-old man, of course, gives another version of the events. According him, he was beaten in the face with a fist. When he fell over the hood, Ahmad Akileh continued hitting him several times in the back with his fist. At the same time, Sven noticed that his wife came up from behind and tried to stop the beating. Ahmad Akileh turned in the direction of Inger and struck her in the face. A third version is given by an eye-witness. The eye-witness says the blow was directed against Inger’s shoulder or chest. On a direct question from Ahmad Akileh’s lawyer the eye-witness says the blow hit the woman, but he couldn’t be quite sure. Inger took a step back, before she fell. And how about evidence? The coroner states that the dead woman had bruising, particularly around the eye. One or more injuries could have been caused by violence from another person, but also says that other causes are also possible. Let us not speculate about this, but a bruising around the eye? Caused by something else? A young man beating older people to death, and then claim they did it because they were afraid? I don’t get it. If you are 23 years old, there is no excuse for beating up somebody at age 71 or 78. You just walk away. Why didn’t Ahmad Akileh have that common sense? Because this was never about a parking spot in the first place? Which so happened to be a parking lot for handicapped. Which, in my eyes, makes it murder. The Swedish justice system and Swedish media, however, have a different opinion. Britta Svensson, a journalist at one of the largest news papers in Sweden, Expressen, wrote a long article about the case. She seemed upset because the image of Ahmad Akileh does not match her image of a killer. And because he is not allowed to speak to his wife, that shows up in the court room with a baby of one moth of age. The wife burst into tears and police force her to leave. Britta Svensson writes: “The 23-year-old turns and his eyes are black with despair. His young wife tries to break through, but the police stops her. The man who has just been arrested on suspicion of aggravated manslaughter can not hold her baby.” Svensson is, in other words, trying to paint the picture of a perpetrator being a victim. This is not uncommon in Swedish press. But I doubt that the public today, in general, see perpetrators as victims. Isn’t it true that everybody make choices, and all choices have consequences? But that some people think they will get away with anything? Britta Svensson didnt write a word about despair in the eyes of a husband that just lost a wife. Not a word about the despair of friends or relatives that can no longer hold or see a woman who was brutally beaten to death. And not a word about why this happened. Not a word about the fact that Ahmad Akileh is from another culture, and that maybe, just maybe, this has something to do with the brutal assault. Isn’t that what we expect of a journalist? Or is it possible that we no longer care? |
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| Deleted User | May 30 2010, 11:19 AM Post #2 |
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Deleted User
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f**king little c**t needs a kicking from someone bigger, stronger and fitter than him. what a coward. |
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1:19 AM Jul 11
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1:19 AM Jul 11