puls
23.10.04, 00:17
Zakorzenil sie w ich chorej psychice i znalazl akceptacje w
swiecie .
Protestow tysiecy ludzi nie widze w Europie nawet po zamordowaniu
12 Nepalczykow na raz !!
Zaakceptowali i uznali to za jeszcze jeden arabski ,
islamski "folklor" .
A tymczasem liczba ofiar bandytow arabskich rosnie ... brak reakcji
moze spowodowac przeniesienie tego islamskiego bestialstwa--"folkloru'
w inne czesci swiata ..
The first American victim to be slaughtered by al Qaeda was the Wall Street
journalist Daniel Pearl, who was murdered in February 2002 in Karachi,
Pakistan.
From April 2004, 22 have suffered his horrendous fate. They are listed from
last to first hereunder with the dates of their murder by beheading:
Kenneth Bigley, a British civilian working in Baghdad, October 7.
Yilmaz Dabka, a Turk, October 2.
Iyad Anwar Wali, Italian-Turk, October 2.
Jack Hensley, American, September 21.
Akar Besir, Turk, September 21.
Eugene Armstrong, American, September 20.
Durmus Kumdereli, Turk, September 13.
Nasser Juma, Egyptian, September 5.
12 unnamed Nepalese hostages, August 31.
Enzo Baldoni, Italian, August 26.
Mohammed Mutawali, Egyptian, August 10.
Osman Alisan, Turk, August 5.
Murat Yuce, Turk, August 2.
Sajjad Naeem, Pakistani, July 28.
Raja Azad Khan, Pakistani, July 28.
Ivailo Kepov, Bulgarian, whose body was found July 22.
Georgi Lazov, Bulgarian, July 13.
Keith Matthew Maupin, American, his June 28 murder never confirmed by US
authorities.
Kim Sun-il, South Korean, June 22.
Hussen Ali Alilyan, Lebanese, June 12.
Nicolas Berg, American, May 11.
Fabrizio Quattrocchi, Italian, April 14.
Foreign nationals beheaded in Saudi Arabia
On May 29, Al Qaeda attacked foreign oil offices and installations in Khobar
City and took hostages. An official news blackout was imposed and the number
and names of the hostages taken and murdered was never released. DEBKAfile’s
sources estimate that 9 foreign employees were murdered by beheading after
being identified as non-Muslims and separated from Muslim hostages. This
group is believed to include one American, as well as Italian and Indian
nationals.
Paul Johnson, American electronics engineer, June 2004 in Riyadh.