He he he ...

> Swedia dan negara2 Scandinavia sebelumnya termasuk sbg negara paling
> aman sedunia.

Lu ngomong gitu emangnya lu sudah pernah ke Swedia atau negara-negara 
Skandinavia lainnya?



--- In [email protected], itemabu2 <itemabu2@...> wrote:
>
> Swedia dan negara2 Scandinavia sebelumnya termasuk sbg negara paling
> aman sedunia. Sekarang, negara2 itu dipenuhi sampah2 masyarakat,
> kriminal dan bajingan berbentuk orang Islam, orang2 Islam jadi tukang
> merkosa, tukang tipu, rampok dll.
> 
> Kejadian orang2 Islam bikin rusuh udah terjadi di Swedia, mirip dgn
> apa yg tjd di Perancis yg udah merupakan "ritual" tahunan. Dan gua
> rasa, kerusuhan di Swedia ini jg akan jadi "ritual" tahunan, jg di
> negara2 Eropa lainnya.
> 
> Dari buahnya, kita tahu asalnya spt apa. Dr kelakuan orang2 Islam ini,
> kita tahu spt apa ajaran Islam.
> 
> 
> http://frontpagemag.com/2013/bruce-bawer/gangs-of-youths-overrun-stockholm/
> 
> Gangs of `Youths' Overrun Stockholm
> May 22, 2013 By Bruce Bawer Comments (18)
> 
> Husby is a neighborhood in western Stockholm which in 2007 had just
> over 11,000 inhabitants, fully 81.9% of whom were immigrants or the
> children of immigrants. The other interesting fact in the brief
> Wikipedia entry on Husby is that the area contains "many
> runestones…remnants from when Vikings used to live here."
> 
> There are, alas, few other signs of the area's Viking heritage.
> 
> The story begins on May 14, when Stockholm police were forced to shoot
> a man who was wielding a machete at them. He died. The cops were
> immediately accused of police brutality. A "community group" called
> Megafonen urged locals to demonstrate "for social justice and again st
> police violence."
> 
> Last Sunday evening, apparently acting upon this suggestion, Husby
> erupted in the kind of wide-scale "youth" violence that has plagued
> suburbs in France and elsewhere for years. A school, a garage, and
> almost 100 cars were set on fire. And a gang attacked a cop.
> 
> On Monday evening, in further accordance with the Gallic precedent,
> things got even worse. Chaos reigned. Different reports provided
> different details, some of them sketchy. There were explosions. As of
> 9:36 PM Monday, Stockholm time, it was being reported that police
> officers were "running for their lives from youth gangs." Twenty or so
> masked "youths" threw rocks at police officers and firefighters.  A
> reporter for the newspaper Expressen narrowly missed being hit by a
> metal pipe. One report mentioned "youths" stealing fire hoses. When
> "youths" set fire to a parking garage, police had to evacuate fifty
> people from a nearby apartment house. Four or five "youths" beat up a
> cop on a bridge before he managed to flee. As he ran off, a girl could
> be heard laughing and shouting "Allah akbar!"
> 
> In Husby, at least three police cars were reported to have been
> vandalized. Meanwhile reports began to come in of cars on fire in
> other parts of western Stockholm. "The situation is escalating
> constantly,"  a police spokesperson said on Monday evening. Late that
> night, The Local reported that over 100 cars had been set on fire in
> Husby and that a local shopping center had been vandalized, causing
> injury to three police officers.
> 
> Although Megafonen had itself urged its readers to demonstrate against
> police violence, it "explained" the rioting, in one statement, as an
> expression of frustration over high unemployment. "There is a great
> deal of hopelessness and powerlessness among the young people here,"
> read a comment by the organization, which added that it was important
> to "understand" the root causes of the rioting "and to find out what
> we can do" to make things better. In what seemed to be a
> contradiction, Megafonen spokesperson Rami Al-Kamisi called the
> rioting a "reaction to police brutality against citizens, our
> neighbors," and said: "We understand that people react like this."
> 
> In Norway, Ragnhild Bjørnebekk, who works at the Oslo Police College
> as a "violence researcher" (in the otherwise stagnant European
> economy, there's a growth field if I ever heard of one) said that the
> rioting in Husby is only the latest of several "youth disturbances" in
> Europe sparked by "suspicions of police violence." (Yes, you know
> those trigger-happy Scandinavian police.) Mentioning riots that had
> taken place in recent years in Greece, Gothenberg, Malmö, Copenhagen,
> and various French cities, Bjørnebekk attributed them all to anger
> over police conduct. ("Allah akbar," of course, is Arabic for "Down
> with police brutality.") Still, Bjørnebekk found it important to
> mention that this kind of rioting is a relatively new phenomenon in
> northern Europe. "Setting fire to cars and trash containers during
> riots is typical of countries like France and Greece, but unusual in
> the Nordic countries," Bjørnebekk said. (As if differences between
> Scandinavian and Mediterranean cultures had the slightest thing to do
> with any of this!)
> 
> To be sure, Bjørnebekk was right in suggesting that nightly
> car-burnings and the like are still not a fixed part of the cultural
> landscape in the Nordic countries as they are on the outskirts of
> Paris, Marseilles, and so on. Yes, there are stabbings, rapes,
> gay-bashings, Jew-bashings, acts of vandalism, and other gang activity
> aplenty; non-Muslims who live in certain parts of Stockholm, Malmö,
> Copenhagen, and (increasingly) Oslo are systematically tormented in
> schools and on the streets by "youths" who seem to grow bolder and
> more aggressive by the year. And yes, there have been "youth" riots in
> Scandinavia: on a couple of nights in January 2009, a violent mob of
> "youths" descended on downtown Oslo and smashed in the front windows
> of businesses in an area of several square blocks, effectively
> paralyzing the very heart of the city. The rioting, which was
> supposedly a response to Israeli actions in Gaza (and which has pretty
> much been dropped down the memory hole), stretched police resources to
> the limit. But no, I guess it's fair to say, as Bjørnebekk does, that
> so far regular car-burnings haven't been a major element of the Nordic
> mix.
> 
> As is usual, of course, in such cases, Swedish media reports on Monday
> night were almost uniformly careful to avoid using any word other than
> "youths" (or some equally innocuous term) to characterize the
> perpetrators of the violence. Although here and there between the
> lines it was clear enough what was going on, there was nothing you
> could really put your finger on until Dagbladet – the Norwegian one,
> note, not the Swedish one – dared to mention that girl shouting "Allah
> akbar!" By Tuesday morning, the Swedish media, while providing
> reasonably extensive coverage of the night's events, seemed to be
> making an effort to suggest that it hadn't really been all that bad
> and to emphasize that,  in any event, things had now quieted down. I
> did a pretty thorough online search of the major Swedish media, but
> couldn't find any report on the rioting that included the word Islam
> or Muslim or any reference to the girl who shouted "Allah akbar!"
> 
> The emphasis was, shall we say, on other matters. One article in
> Expressen, for example, focused on the fact that a policeman had
> actually – gasp – dared to draw his weapon during the hubbub. (The
> paper actually had a video of this horrible act.) The cop put his gun
> back after being informed that the rioter he was aiming at was only
> thirteen years old. (Police later told VG that several of the
> participants in the evening's festivities were as young as twelve.) On
> Tuesday morning, Megafon held a "well-attended" press conference the
> obvious intention of which was to turn the criminals into victims and
> the police into villains. The organization accused the police of
> deploying "excessive force" against the rioters; one speaker added the
> charge that cops, during the rampage, had used offensive language to
> describe immigrant-group members. Another speaker asked: "Who should
> you call when it's the police who attack? I have no idea." The meme
> that it had all been the fault of police overreach quickly established
> itself, with Norway's Aftenposten stressing laments by Stockholm
> "youth" that the police are never punished for their abuse of power,
> while the "youth" are always blamed.
> 
> Meanwhile, a police officer who has worked for many years in western
> Stockholm (and who apparently preferred not to be identified) told
> Aftonbladet that the rioting, though horrible, amounted to "a typical
> day on the job." He added: "People generally have no idea how serious
> it is, but there have been so many incidents in the past year that I'm
> sure it'll end up with a police officer being killed."
> 
> The latest reports, at this writing, confirm that all this is plainly
> only the beginnning. The early hours of Wednesday morning saw a new
> round of stories in the Scandinavian papers announcing that Stockholm
> was being beset by riots for the third night in a row. Among much
> else, stones had been thrown at a police station and a school had been
> set on fire. The rioting, moreover, had spread even further, to
> several other parts of the city that had been previously unaffected.
> Brief video here. Stay tuned. There will certainly be more
> developments on this front in the days to come.
>



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