Exposing the role that Islamic jihad theology and ideology play in the modern global conflicts
Germany: Two Muslim “asylum seekers” charged with crimes against humanity
“Germany has charged two alleged former Syrian secret service officers with crimes against humanity, federal prosecutors have announced, a key step in a patchwork of international efforts to seek justice for atrocities committed during the country’s long civil war.”
It should also be a “key step” toward abandoning open-door immigration policies in favor of responsible vetting.
One can only imagine the range of crimes committed by Anwar Raslan and Eyad al-Gharib, as well as by other jihadists who have made their way into Western countries such as Germany, taking advantage of their open-borders policies.
Raslan and Gharib left Syria in 2013 and entered Germany as asylum seekers in July 2014 and August 2018 respectively.Anwar Raslan came on to the radar of German investigators after a number of his alleged victims spotted him in Berlin and reported the sighting to authorities.
Imagine having them as your neighbors.
Documented crimes include the use of chemical weapons and torture, mass execution, Islamic State’s abduction and sexual enslavement of Yazidi women, and the targeted bombing of hospitals and other civilian installations.
Globalist politicians who ascribe to open-door policies have bodyguards for their own protection and the best health and care package for life, courtesy of the taxpayers for whom they they care so little.
The case of these two “alleged former Syrian secret service officers” charged with “crimes against humanity” is a glaring example of how the worst abusers and jihadists have infiltrated the refugee stream and continue to do so. Globalists will never learn, as the West continues its decline.
“Germany charges two Syrians with crimes against humanity,” by Philip Oltermann and Emma Graham-Harrison, Guardian, October 29, 2019:
Germany has charged two alleged former Syrian secret service officers with crimes against humanity, federal prosecutors have announced, a key step in a patchwork of international efforts to seek justice for atrocities committed during the country’s long civil war.Anwar Raslan and Eyad al-Gharib were arrested in February, in a coordinated operation by German and French police.Raslan allegedly led an investigative unit with its own prison, known as Branch 251, near the Syrian capital, Damascus. Prosecutors claimed at least 4,000 people were tortured by his subordinates during interrogation there between April 2011 and 2012, with guards using bars, cables and whips to beat prisoners during interviews.Some prisoners were subjected to electric shocks, while others were “hung from the ceiling by their wrists, with only their toes touching the ground”, according to a statement by the German prosecutor.Many died as a result, and Raslan has been has been charged with 59 counts of murder, as well as rape and aggravated sexual assault.“As head of the investigation unit, the accused Anwar R determined and oversaw the prison’s operational procedures, including the systematic and brutal use of torture,” prosecutors said in a statement. “He was aware of the fact that prisoners were dying as a result of the massive application of violent force.”Gharib allegedly reported to Raslan, arresting protesters and delivering them to the Branch 251 jail. He is charged with a role in the abduction and torture of at least 30 people in the autumn of 2011.Raslan and Gharib left Syria in 2013 and entered Germany as asylum seekers in July 2014 and August 2018 respectively.Anwar Raslan came on to the radar of German investigators after a number of his alleged victims spotted him in Berlin and reported the sighting to authorities.After years of civilian deaths and suffering at the hands of multiple parties during the Syrian conflict, the first slow efforts to bring perpetrators to justice and dispel a sense of impunity are moving through national courts in several countries…..
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