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ciekawy artykul

04.09.06, 05:15
www.israelshamir.net/Polish/Polish6.htm
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    • you-know-who Re: ciekawy artykul 04.09.06, 08:29
      owszem, da sie przeczytac. zauwazylem jednak straszne skoki myslowe po calej
      historii, dla wyluskania faktow potwierdzajacych tezy. no ale ogolnie cos w tym
      jest. polska powinna przejrzec na oczy i docenic niezaleznosc, i nie ku..c sie
      z amerykanska administracja, ktora zaraza caly swiat.
    • polani Re: ciekawy artykul 04.09.06, 13:30
      Kalifat Indonezja
      Zablo nie bedzie wodkii piwo wiecej u was w Kalifatu wroc do polski
      • you-know-who Re: ciekawy artykul 04.09.06, 16:48
        polani, r u using 1 of those automatic translation robots? there's no way to
        figure out what u wanted 2 say.
    • polani Re: ciekawy artykul 06.09.06, 06:21
      COPENHAGEN, Denmark - Danish authorities said they foiled a serious terror
      plot Tuesday with the arrest of nine men accused of preparing explosives for
      a planned attack in Denmark.

      Investigators were not sure how advanced the plans were but said they
      decided to launch a pre-emptive strike Tuesday after keeping the group under
      surveillance for some time.

      "The clues police found indicate that they were very likely planning an
      attack somewhere in Denmark," Justice Minister Lene Espersen told The
      Associated Press.

      "It was the most serious matter I have had in my time as justice minister,"
      she said. "Police went in and stopped the group as it was preparing an
      attack."

      The Scandinavian nation raised its terror preparedness level after recent
      attacks in London and Madrid and the global Muslim fury earlier this year
      over caricatures of the Prophet Muhammad first published in a Danish
      newspaper.

      Espersen said she did not know whether the case was related to the cartoon
      crisis. The caricatures were first published in the Jyllands-Posten
      newspaper on Sept. 30, then were reprinted in newspapers worldwide in
      January and February, sparking a wave of protests primarily in Islamic
      countries. Muslims consider any physical representation of Islam's prophet
      to be blasphemous.

      Officials said the suspects were Danish citizens between the ages of 18 and
      33. Lars Findsen, the head of the Danish Security Intelligence Service said
      eight of them had immigrant backgrounds, but did not specify from what
      countries.

      He did not reveal the planned target of the attack and said it was hard to
      evaluate how far the suspects had progressed in their preparations.

      "With the general terror situation, the Danish Security Intelligence Service
      didn't want to run any unnecessary risk," Findsen said.

      Findsen also said the sweep was not related to a terror investigation in
      Germany in which four Lebanese suspects are being held in connection with a
      failed train bombing attempt.

      German media claimed one of the suspects, Youssef Mohamad el Hajdib, who was
      arrested Aug. 19 in the northern German city of Kiel, was heading to
      Denmark. German and Danish media reported German police found a telephone
      number in his pocket for Abu Bashar, an imam living in Odense.

      Abu Bashar denied knowing el Hajdib but said it was a matter of time before
      terrorists would strike Denmark.

      "Osama Bin Laden said in a message three years ago that he will punish the
      countries that have (troops) in Iraq," he told AP. "Denmark is on the
      list. I am afraid of the message of Osama Bin Laden that he will do
      something against Denmark."

      Anti-terror squads carried out the sweep at 2 a.m. in Vollsmose, a mostly
      immigrant suburb of Odense, Denmark's third-largest city.

      Findsen said the suspects "had acquired material ... to build explosives in
      connection with the preparation of a terror act."

      Denmark has about 500 troops in southern Iraq under British command and 360
      more in Afghanistan as part of the NATO-led force.

      Abu Bashar said he knew the suspects arrested Tuesday as members of Odense's
      Muslim community and predicted they would be found innocent.

      "I believe that very, very soon they will be released," he said.

      Two weeks ago, four suspects in custody in Denmark since October were
      charged with supplying explosives to two men arrested in Bosnia for
      allegedly preparing a terror attack.

      Investigators said that group planned to blow up a target in a European
      country to force the withdrawal of foreign troops from Afghanistan and Iraq.

      Police did not say whether the new arrests were related to that case.

      Terrorists have not hit Denmark in more than two decades, but the July 2005
      bombings in London stirred fears that the Scandinavian country could be
      targeted for its participation in the U.S.-led coalition in Iraq.

      "We have seen the faces of terror in Madrid and London. We know that there
      are potential terror threats in the whole Western world," Denmark's Deputy
      Prime Minister Bendt Bendtsen told DR public television.

      In 1985, a bomb exploded outside the offices of North West Orient airlines
      in Copenhagen, killing one person and wounding 16. Three Palestinians living
      in Sweden were convicted of planting the bombs and sentenced to life in
      prison in 1989


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