Exposing the role that Islamic jihad theology and ideology play in the modern global conflicts
UK: “Terror arrests” in Dewsbury, a Muslim enclave that is home to “Army of Darkness” jihadis
Two men have been arrested by armed police on suspicion of a terror plot in Savile Town, a hardline Islamic enclave in Dewsbury, one of the UK’s most religiously segregated areas.
Despite fake news minimizing the existence of no-go zones and accusations of “Islamophobia” against truth tellers, Britons have every reason to fear for their safety, their country and future.
A 2016 report commissioned as part of the UK government’s “review into community cohesion and integration” discovered that in every Muslim enclave, people believed that the UK was an Islamic country.
The largest Muslim sect in the UK, the Deobandis, controls half of Britain’s mosques. An al-Qaeda associate of Osama bin Laden, Masood Azhar, “spoke to numerous future terrorists as he toured their mosques across the country.” This included Dewsbury.
The Deobandi sect has an even more “hardline offshoot, the ‘army of darkness’ Tablighi Jamaat movement.” This movement dominates “Muslim schools in the UK, control 600 of Britain’s nearly 1,500 mosques and produce 80 per cent of all domestically trained Islamic ‘scholars.’”
Yet the West still obsesses about fears of being labelled “Islamophobic,” a term pushed by Muslim Brotherhood groups for the sole purpose of advancing the supremacy of Islam. The West needs to be surveilling mosques.
“Terror Arrests in Dewsbury Muslim Enclave Home to ‘Army of Darkness’ Radical Group”, by Liam Deacon, Breitbart, April 3, 2018:
Two men have been arrested by armed police on suspicion of a terror plot in Savile Town, a hardline Islamic enclave in Dewsbury, one of the UK’s most religiously segregated areas.The men, aged 21 and 52, have been detained on suspicion of “being concerned in the commission, preparation or instigation of acts of terrorism” and detained for questioning, counter-terror police said.“The public may have heard loud bangs at the time police entered the properties,” the police statement added, explaining that the noises were linked to officers gaining entry.The arrests were described as “pre-planned and part of a proactive, intelligence-led investigation by Counter Terrorism Policing North East”.There has been a recent spate of anti-Muslim letters send out to Muslim areas of the UK including Dewsbury, and last month police announced a “full and thorough investigation” into the letters that seek “to cause fear and offence among our Muslim communities”.West Yorkshire Police Superintendent Marianne Huison said after Tuesday’s raid: “I understand our local communities will have concerns about this morning’s police activity but I want to offer my reassurance that we will continue to serve and protect the public of West Yorkshire.