Banner Advertiser

Sunday, September 14, 2014

[mukto-mona] This must be a joke?



Many of the villains still live in London and cheering the gruesome beheading. Brits should start charity right at home! -SD

http://www.bbc.com/news/uk-29197931


David Haines: PM says Britain will 'hunt down' IS killers

The UK will take "whatever steps are necessary" to keep safe after a video showing the killing of hostage David Haines was issued by Islamic State militants, the prime minister has said.

David Cameron said the UK would "hunt down" the killers of the aid worker, whom he called a "British hero".

He said the "menace" of IS had to be destroyed in a "calm, deliberate" way.

In the video, IS threatened to kill a second Briton, named as Alan Henning, 47, a volunteer on an aid convoy.

Alan Henning IS has now threatened to kill another hostage, Alan Henning

Mr Haines was seized in Syria in 2013. He was being held by Islamic State militants who had already killed two US captives, and a video of his death came shortly after his family appealed to his captors to make contact with them.

Born in Holderness, East Yorkshire, Mr Haines went to school in Perth and had been living in Croatia with his second wife, who is Croatian, and their four-year-old daughter. His parents live in Ayr.

The video of the 44-year-old's beheading was released on Saturday night.

A masked man who appears to have a British accent was pictured beside Mr Haines holding a knife.

Mr Henning, a married father-of-two from Salford, worked as a taxi driver.

line
'Incredibly kind man'
Alan Henning packing for a convoy
By Catrin Nye, BBC Asian Network

I met Alan Henning before he was kidnapped, when he was packing up for an aid convoy in Syria.

At this point, he had already travelled to Syria on one convoy.

He described the fact that he had been before, he had visited a refugee camp, and had had a really quite life-changing experience.

It had really touched him and he said ever since he had got back things hadn't quite been the same and he felt a real desire to go again and to help the Syrian people.

Those who knew and met Alan describe him as a funny and incredibly kind man.

Just an ordinary bloke - a father, a taxi driver and a keen fisherman who wanted to help the Syrians.

line

US Secretary of State John Kerry has completed a tour of the Middle East, aimed at enlisting allies against IS, which has also killed two American journalists.

Several Arab countries have offered to take part in air strikes against IS militants in Iraq, US officials say.

Step by step

Speaking at Downing Street after a meeting of the UK emergency committee Cobra, Mr Cameron said of IS, also known as Isil and Isis, "they are not Muslims, they are monsters".

"We will do everything in our power to hunt down these murderers and ensure they face justice, however long it takes."

Mr Cameron also said the country was "sickened" that a Briton could have carried out the "despicable" killing.

"We cannot just walk on by if we are to keep this country safe," he said.

"Step by step, we must drive back, dismantle and ultimately destroy Isil and what it stands for.

"We will not do so on our own, but with working with our allies, not just in the United States and in Europe, but also in the region."

He said the organisation posed a "massive threat" to the entire Middle East and said it would be defeated through a "comprehensive and sustained counter-terrorism strategy".

He added: "This is not about British combat troops on the ground. It is about working with others to extinguish this terrorist threat."

During his statement, Mr Cameron outlined steps that Britain would take against IS:

  • Work with the Iraqi government to ensure it represents all of its people, and support the Kurdish regional government which has already received British ammunition and training
  • Work at the United Nations to mobilise the broadest possible support to "bear down" on IS
  • Support the United States in its direct military action, which is currently air strikes
  • Continue to use the RAF to supply humanitarian aid to the millions who have fled IS
  • Maintain and continue to reinforce the UK's counter-terrorist effort

He also said IS extremists "have planned, and continue to plan, attacks across Europe and in our country", adding that it would take time to "eradicate a threat like this" and would require action at home and abroad.

"It falls to the government and to each and every one of us to drain this poison from our society and to take on this warped ideology that is radicalising some of our young people," he said.

He has previously not ruled out air strikes against IS but said any action must not be "Western intervention over the heads of neighbouring states".

BBC security correspondent Frank Gardner says several British prime ministers have pledged to bring the killers of a British hostage to justice whenever they are murdered in "cold blood" by jihadists, but the reality is that historically the trail tends to go cold very soon afterwards.

None of those who have taken British hostages in recent years have been brought to justice, our correspondent added.

David Haines was being held by Islamic State militants, as Caroline Hawley reports

IS is now in control of large parts of northern Iraq and Syria and Kurdish forces, known as the Peshmerga, have been involved in heavy fighting with the militants.

US air strikes have targeted IS militants in Iraq in recent weeks.

The UK has donated heavy machine guns and ammunition to authorities in Iraq to help fight IS militants.

Australia says it is sending 600 troops to the Middle East ahead of possible combat operations against IS in Iraq.

Prime Minister Tony Abbott said the deployment, initially to the United Arab Emirates, was in response to a specific US request.

US President Barack Obama was among the world leaders to react to the killing of Mr Haines.

He said: "Our hearts go out to the family of Mr Haines and to the people of the United Kingdom."

He said the US would work with the UK and a "broad coalition of nations" to "bring the perpetrators of this outrageous act to justice".

Militants from the extremist group have killed two US hostages in recent weeks, posting videos on the internet.

They had threatened to kill Mr Haines during a video posted online showing the killing of US journalist Steven Sotloff earlier this month. They also released a video of the killing of US journalist James Foley last month.



__._,_.___

Posted by: Shah DeEldar <shahdeeldar@gmail.com>


****************************************************
Mukto Mona plans for a Grand Darwin Day Celebration: 
Call For Articles:

http://mukto-mona.com/wordpress/?p=68

http://mukto-mona.com/banga_blog/?p=585

****************************************************

VISIT MUKTO-MONA WEB-SITE : http://www.mukto-mona.com/

****************************************************

"I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it".
               -Beatrice Hall [pseudonym: S.G. Tallentyre], 190





__,_._,___