The terror question

Copied and pasted from Yahoo!News

[SIZE=6]Stop saying Islam is a religion of peace: Taslima Nasreen[/SIZE]
indianexpress.com 21 hours ago
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After reports suggested that all terrorists involved in the recent attack at Dhaka restaurant, in which 20 people were killed, were highly educated and belonged to rich families, Bangladeshi author Taslima Nasreen rubbished the arguments that poverty makes somebody a terrorist.

In a series of tweets, Taslima quoted Saleem Samad that Bangladesh has been a major contributor to global terror and said it’s time people should stop saying Islam is a religion of peace.

‘Bangladesh has been a major contributor to global terror. Bangladeshi men have joined terror outfits in 36 countries.’ – Saleem Samad

— taslima nasreen (@taslimanasreen) July 3, 2016

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All Dhaka terrorists were from rich families, studied in elite schools. Pl do not say poverty & illiteracy make people Islamic terrorists

— taslima nasreen (@taslimanasreen) July 3, 2016

— taslima nasreen (@taslimanasreen) July 3, 2016

You don’t need poverty,illiteracy, frustration,America’s foreign policy,Israel’s conspiracy to become an Islamic terrorist. You need Islam.

— taslima nasreen (@taslimanasreen) July 3, 2016

Taslima holds strong feminist and human rights views and has not been able to return to Bangladesh, her native country that she left in 1994. The author has received death threats from extremist groups linked to al-Qaeda.

Ngoja ukuturiwe na Mungich bin Soudani

As much political correctness is forced on us, this is true.

Sure the hypothesis that terrorists are people from poor economic and therefore education backgrounds has been rejected many times. One of the attackers of the Garrisa university was from a well to do family and was pursuing law at UoN. Mohammed Emwazi (Jihadi John) was also a rich kid from london.

I have been watching iSIS documentaries lately and i have a burning question…Who supplies these guys with weapons deep deep in the desert plus ammunition

Political correctness will be our bane

@gashwin just by posting this, you advance a thought so flawed, that I would put you to ‘sleep’ myself …

Then I say, your neck needs me

I read somewhere that, during its peak, ISIS had a multitude waiting to be used as suicide bombers. And so many guys wanted to join so much so that kids from rich backgrounds would pay up to be allowed to go first. Yani unahonga ili ufe kifala mbele ya maskini.

Cannot trace the source though.

Guns are easily available in that area thanks to the Russian and US invasions

And where do they get the money to purchase those guns? Plus ammo

selling oil in the black market

robbing banks, taxation, sale of oil in the black market and ransom money

But to whom/which countries?

ISIS is US

Mwisho wa Story

But if you insist to know, then,

ISIS is Israil

We have been saying this for so long but we’re branded haters of Islam. See?
ISIS are the perfect followers of Mohammed, al-Insan al-Kamil. The rest of the so called “peaceful” Muslims are kuffar,in fact that’s exactly what Mohammed would call them. Mohammed was a war monger and a murderer. His brutal escapades are well documented in the Hadith. Islam teaches that God’s justice must be carried out by the hands of Muslims, unlike Christians who say “vengeance belongs to God.” The Orlando gunman who killed gays did so to supposedly avenge God’s anger over homosexuality. Until the liberal media acknowledges that we’re at war with an ideology, these attacks will continue. You cannot win a war where it’s forbidden to name the enemy. Obama cannot utter the words ISIS, he says ISIL. He won’t even say Radical Islamic Terrorism. He believes Islam has nothing to do with Islamic terror!! What a crazy world where right is wrong and wrong is right.

For the Christian, this is not the time to despair. “When these things begin to happen, stand up and lift your heads, because your redemption draweth nigh.” Luke 21:28

Countries like North Korea have sanctions and they would gladly snap up the oil in exchange for weapons, It is also alleged that Turkey is buying the ISIS oil on the cheap chini ya maji

No wonder ISIS never claims responsibility when attacks target Turkey…

But let me also like this, if at all every muslim knows that if he/she dies will go somewhere nicer (i have no idea where they go after death), then why bother killing other muslims and in the end they shall meet at the same (nicer) place. Why blow up a market in Raqqa, or Baghdad where everyone is muslim. Doesn’t that equate to wastage of IED? Kuurisa tu kina Abdul maguruneti

Those that do that ain’t Muslims.

The religion is perfect, but bin’adam ni yule yule na udhaifu wake

I read somewhere that initially ISIS was supported by many countries e.g. the EU & US in the foundation stages before adopting radicalization and oppressive policies since they were at the time fighting corruption and vandalizing from the rich sultans that had allocated themselves resources and control . one of the factors that made those countries to abandon and disassociate themselves was because they were selling opium to support themselves financially. Opium is used to produce Heroin.

Thus opium could be their major source of income in Afghanistan.

heir [the international community’s] focus was only on terrorism and other sector development, but counter-narcotics was an isolated and marginalized agenda in their programs.” -Haroon Sherzad, Afghanistan’s acting minister of counter narcotics

The U.S. opioid problem has been named the worst drug crisis in America’s history. Overdoses from heroin, an opium derivative, and other opioids kill more than 27,000 people each year. The Center for Disease Control recently announced that the rates of heroin abuse quadrupled in the U.S. in the last decade. Where are these drugs coming from? How are the war on terror and the war on opium connected? The opium problem is not just America’s problem. The war continues in Afghanistan, and the two struggles are intimately connected.

Opium in Kabul

Since the U.S.-led invasion, Afghan opium production has increased 35-fold. Drug users in Afghanistan doubled from 1.6 million in 2012 to 3 million in 2015. Other estimates indicate that 11 percent of the population uses drugs. The increase in drug use coincides with the increase in poppy production.

In an economic crisis due to years of war, farmers have turned to a lucrative livelihood— cultivating opium. The Taliban buy opium crops from farmers and sell to drug dealers in Pakistan and Iran. Farmers who choose to grow opium make as much as four times their former income. Additionally, facing unemployment, many Afghans turned to drug use. This produces a vicious circle of dependence on the Taliban and on the drugs.

Money earned from the crop is used to buy weapons and support the Taliban’s terrorist acts. The United Nations estimates that the Taliban earns between $100 million to $700 million annually from opium sales — enough to support their entire operation in Afghanistan.

The opium and heroin problem persists for three reasons — easy access to drugs, lack of legal action against dealers, and unemployment. Throughout Kabul alone, heroin and other illicit drugs are easily accessible. Drug users comment that obtaining heroin is child’s play because it is so accessible.

Afghanistan’s national government must be held accountable for the lack of counter-narcotic policies. When former President Hamid Karzai took office in 2004, he failed to mention the opium problem in his inaugural address. Current President Ashraf Ghani did not discuss the opium problem in his inaugural address, either . So far, the Ghani administration has issued no firm policies regarding drug trafficking in Afghanistan. The Afghan government remains unstable and incapable of managing the drug crisis by itself. Government corruption remains widespread because the Taliban bribe officials. Administrative corruption also exists in the counter-narcotics court established by international forces. The international community could come together to promote sustainable development in Afghanistan by teaching them counter-narcotic techniques, but so far, has spent millions of dollars on a flawed poppy field eradication strategy.

Since the U.S. invasion in 2001, unemployment in Afghanistan has increased dramatically, from 25 percent in 2014 to 40 percent in 2015, due to increased security concerns of international and national companies. Companies and investors have pulled out of the country, creating even more economic instability.

Afghanistan’s poppies supply American habits

According to the United Nations, Afghanistan supplied the world with 90 percent of the heroin in 2015. Despite the $7 billion effort by the U.S. to stop poppy cultivation in Afghanistan, the problem persists. Illegal poppy field cultivation is at an all-time high. The international community has attempted to solve the problem through a focus on law enforcement and alternative livelihood projects for farmers in affected regions. Still, the rise in opium production in Afghanistan demonstrates the failure of the international community’s attempt to solve this crisis.

For the past ten years, the U.S. has seen a dramatic increase in patient admissions to opioid abuse programs. Approximately 900,000 pounds of heroin from Afghanistan end up in the U.S. every year. Afghanistan is the only country on earth that can supply enough opium to feed America’s opioid appetite.

Is the U.S. responsible? 2014 withdrawal of NATO troops

NATO has provided military support for the counter-narcotics efforts since 2005. In December 2014, NATO withdrew from Afghanistan after a 13-year operation. NATO left too soon, making international NGOs to solve the opium crisis vulnerable to the Taliban. To address its opium problem, Afghanistan build its educational and counter-narcotics programs. But the Afghan government doesn’t have the resources to work alone to defeat the multi-billion dollar opium industry.

Finding a solution

In addition to international support, the Afghan government must take a stronger stance on the opium drug trade. If Afghanistan truly wants to diminish Taliban control, the Ghani administration must initiate policies to eliminate opium production. The first step is to encourage and subsidize farmers to grow non-opium crops in the Taliban-controlled southern provinces of Afghanistan. The second is to develop an educational curriculum for the Afghan people on the harms of opioid addiction.

The effort to resolve the opium crisis needs to be addressed by NATO, the U.S., and Afghanistan.


http://www.huffingtonpost.com/jessica-saifee/the-war-on-opium-in-afgha_b_9828506.html