Author Topic: 187 Million Muslims - the next big threat?  (Read 910 times)

Offline Dinger

  • Silver Member
  • ****
  • Posts: 1705
187 Million Muslims - the next big threat?
« Reply #30 on: November 01, 2005, 06:49:15 AM »
I'm pretty sure the muslims killed Christ too.

Collective guilt calls for collective punishment, I keep telling you guys that.

Offline Habu

  • Silver Member
  • ****
  • Posts: 1905
187 Million Muslims - the next big threat?
« Reply #31 on: November 01, 2005, 07:08:00 AM »
Quote
Originally posted by Yeager
Habu, what would your guess be as to any official reaction to the killing of those girls?  Is there a reliable government capable of acting in any way to bring any sense of justice to the victims families or is it just business as usual in that part of the world?


I have not heard of that particular incident but when I was there the local army commander would have found out who did it and rounded them up pretty quickly. The government would have deployed some extra troops in the area as well as a show of force.

Things like that are not tollerated. The government knows that if they do nothing then the local people will take things into their own hands. I had great respect for the Indonesian military when I was there. They managed to keep things under control and were more or less not corrupt.

Offline Habu

  • Silver Member
  • ****
  • Posts: 1905
187 Million Muslims - the next big threat?
« Reply #32 on: November 01, 2005, 07:16:18 AM »
I thought that those killings were from a while ago but it seems they just happened. I found this in  The Jakarta Post which is a pretty good english language newspaper.  Looks like they are trying to find out who did it. When I was there things like that were solved quickly as the country had a system where you had to register with the local government when you moved into the area. So it was hard to be somewhere and not have the local officials know all about you. Also Indonesians (everywhere in the country) are very nosey and want to know all about their neighbors and they like to gossip alot.

I am sure someone will provide information eventually. They may be afraid of the killers and are waiting to see if the police catch them first.

 Scant progress in schoolgirl beheadings probe: Police

JAKARTA (Agencies): Police on Indonesia's Sulawesi island said Tuesday they had made scant progress in their investigation into the beheading murders of three Christian schoolgirls in the religiously-divided district of Poso.

Police and forensic experts have combed the scene of Saturday's killings but few clues have emerged, said Poso police chief Muhammad Soleh Hidayat.

"We haven't found any meaningful leads so far because we have had difficulty finding witnesses," Hidayat told AFP.

He said the only witness, a girl who survived the attack with injuries, was being treated in hospital in Palu, the capital of Central Sulawesi province, and was not well enough to be questioned.

"She's badly injured. Our first priority is to save her life. It would be inhuman to insist on questioning her," he said.

Machete-wielding attackers ambushed the high school students on their way home, killing three and wounding the fourth, police said. Two of the victims' heads were found near a police post while the third was discovered outside a Christian church.

Capt. Idham Mahdi, Poso's chief detective, told AP it was too early to say who was behind the killings - though suspicion has fallen on Islamic militants seeking to destabilize the region.

Four dozen detectives and forensic experts were trying to reenact the events leading up to the crime, he said.

Sniffer dogs led them to the rugged hills overlooking the cocoa plantation where the teenagers were murdered while walking to their Christian high school, just outside of Poso.

"We believe the perpetrators may have been watching the girls from the hill before they attacked them," said Mahdi, adding that authorities also found a backpack that allegedly belonged to the assailants. It contained only a key chain.

President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono condemned the killings and Pope Benedict XVI on Sunday deplored what he described as "barbaric murder."

About 400 police and 600 troops have been sent Poso amid fears that the killings would reignite widespread religious violence which killed more than 1,000 people between 2000 and 2001 in the area.

The government brokered a peace deal in December 2001 but intermittent violence has continued.

Police on Monday warned of further possible attacks to coincide with Idul Fitri, Indonesia's biggest holiday marking the end of the Muslim fasting month of Ramadhan, which falls on Thursday.

Offline DREDIOCK

  • Plutonium Member
  • *******
  • Posts: 17775
187 Million Muslims - the next big threat?
« Reply #33 on: November 01, 2005, 07:49:16 AM »
Quote
Originally posted by Curval
"To kill a Musilm is not murder...it is the path to heaven"....some loco monk on the Road to Messina in KINGDOM OF HEAVEN


Just watched that movie for the first time this past weekend on DVD.

Good Flick.

Loco monk? Perhaps not so at the time.
Same mindset they use on us today


"How much is Jeruselam worth?"

"Nothing........Everything"
Death is no easy answer
For those who wish to know
Ask those who have been before you
What fate the future holds
It ain't pretty