Oslo, Norway, Jul 21, 2011. Once again Islamic fanatics have killed innocent people in the name of their false god prophet Mohammed.
This time they struck in Norway, a peaceful nation that is currently hosting over 150,000 Moslem immigrants, or roughly 3% of the their population. The number of Muslims in Norway has grown considerably, from when it was first counted at 1006 in official statistics in 1980.
Norway suffered two shocking attacks on Friday, when powerful explosions  shook the government center in the capital and, shortly after, a gunman  stalked youths on an island summer camp for children. 
According to media sources, Police were treating the assaults, which together  killed at least 90 people, as connected.
Conflicting reports centered on one group, Ansar al-Jihad al-Alami, or  the Helpers of the Global Jihad. According to Will McCants, a terrorism  analyst at C.N.A., a research institute, the group issued a statement  claiming responsibility, saying "the attack was a response to the  presence of Norwegian forces in Afghanistan and to unspecified insults  to the Prophet Muhammad." 
But Norwegian television reports later suggested that the group had  denied responsibility. In the immediate aftermath of recent terrorist  attacks, jihadi forums are often filled with claims and counterclaims  that are impossible to independently confirm.
While this attack may not be the work of Islamic terrorists, it certainly does mirror their tactics. And the fact that the initial reaction to any senseless slaughter of innocents is to suspect Moslems just tells us that it may be time for the Islamic World to consider precisely why people associate random acts of violence with Moslems.
The explosions, presumably from one or more bombs, turned the ordinarily  placid Scandinavian capital into a scene reminiscent of terror attacks  in Beirut or Baghdad, blowing out windows of several  government buildings, including one housing the office of the Norwegian  prime minister, who was unharmed. The state television broadcaster,  citing the police, said seven people were killed and at least 15 injured  in the explosions.
Even as police locked down a large area of the city, a man dressed as a  police officer entered the camp on the island of Utoya, about 25 miles  northwest of Oslo, a Norwegian security official said, and opened fire.
“The situation’s gone from bad to worse,” said Runar Kvernen, spokesman  for the National Police Directorate under the Ministry of Justice and  Police, adding that most of the children at the camp were 15 and 16  years old.
Panicked youths jumped in to the water to escape or went into  hiding on the island, which has no bridge to the mainland, a witness  said. Many could not flee in time.
  
Oslo police said that 9 or 10 people were killed at the camp, according  to The Associated Press. A witness on the island told the state  broadcaster that he saw between 20 and 25 bodies on the island, The A.P.  reported; the full extent of the carnage remained to be learned.
A suspect was eventually apprehended and was being questuioned by police  on Friday. The acting chief of police, Sveinung Sponheim, said the  suspect had been seen in Oslo before the explosions there, but they  stressed that the investigation was just beginning and that they could  not yet say whether the attacks were terrorism-related.
Norway is a member of the NATO alliance and has a small fighting  contingent in Afghanistan. It was named by  Ayman al-Zawahri, the leader of Al Qaeda, as a potential target for  attack.
In 2006, Norwegian newspapers reprinted Danish cartoons that  angered Muslims by lampooning Muhammad.
Norway has also historically  been a frequent participant in peacekeeping missions and a host for diplomatic talks, including the 1993 Oslo Accords.



 
Norwegians need to rise up. It's awful to have blown up that building, but to have attacked those children is the ultimate in terrorism. This will happen here if we do not get a handle on our border, where Hezbollah is now in league with the Drug Cartels. Let us say NO MAS! AND MEAN IT.
ReplyDeleteThe death toll has now risen to 87 dead.....
ReplyDeleteThe time has finally come when countries throughout the world have to accept the fact that muslims cannot and should not be allowed to live anywhere except in their own countries in the middle east. Sad for those who want to make a peaceful life for themselves, but that will never happen until they take a stand against those who are against peace.
ReplyDeleteThey cannot exist outside their own world and their world does not belong in any other countries in the world. Countries have opened their borders, welcomed Muslims and all they have received in return is death, terror and destruction...time to send them all back...It really doesn't matter whether they were born in this country, what they know and do is inbred in them....ship them all back to their place of origin