09-01-2022, 11:03 AM
In the particular article above, several questions arise that indicates how little the public know of what seems to be a recruiting
of persuaded followers and acquisition of information of those who wish to join a certain ideology. This may all seem obvious to
many, but the Begum-situation may be a glimpse into the dark world of 'false-flag' creation and how -what we perceive is the
manner we live our daily lives, isn't founded on the typical assumption that our security agencies are believed to function.
In hundreds of previous news-pieces, we were told that a 'terrorist'-group adhering to an extreme version of that religious belief
had been formed by Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, a Jordanian who later joined al-Qaeda and became a follower of Osama bin Laden.
Operating in Afghanistan, the public were then informed that ISIS was slowly expanding their control to other areas of the globe.
Deaths were many and often videoed to further the dread of these zealots. Bin Laden became the poster-figure to scare the west
and became the instigator of the Twin Towers attack. Al-Zarqawi died and then Bin Laden was killed and the horrible headlines
faded like Covid on a sunny day.
If we take the BBC's investigation at face-value, it means the Canadian intelligence services -a country that is still a member of
the Commonwealth of Nations, were involved in smuggling a British citizen into a known terrorist organisation for reasons still
to be explained.
So, even after all the UK's media banging-on about how a little girl from Bangladeshi parents had been groomed on-line by a
charming and impressive boy from overseas and then went with her friends to meet him in Turkey and be finally sneaked across
the border into Syria, we now discover all that was utter shite! The journey may have been true, but the background was based
on actions from a fellow-member of the Commonwealth.
Don't get me wrong, this has little to do with Canada as a nation, it shows how fake the established media-outlets are -including
the BBC who also previously wrote articles backing the original Begum-narrative, and also hints at the duplicitous workings of
security agencies from all countries interested in maintaining the terror threat.
Simple questions:
If a lickle girlie-girl from Bethnal Green, East London hadn't been targeted by whoever via the internet, would she have travelled
the hour-long trip to Gatwick Airport, flew the almost five-hours to Turkey and then delivered herself and her two friends into the
hands of total strangers?
What convincement and from who, would allay the media-generated fears of a female Muslim teenager enough that she would
embark on this journey, unless a confidence had been nurtured within the girls' secret-circle that the reported horrors wouldn't
effect Shamima and her cohorts?
Did you ever think of doing this at fifteen years of age, whilst being aware of the media's scary stories of beheadings, rape-rooms
and the accepted perception of women within extreme Islamic dogma?
Would such a (costly) undertaking be merely down to the excitement of living the life of a Jihad's wife and child-bearer? Begum
states: "...We were just doing everything he was telling us to do because he knew everything, we didn't know anything..." in regards
of the Canadian-agent, a victim's narrative. At no point does the girl state she was there to fight for a cause and in a letter supposedly
seen by the BBC from Begum's lawyer...
How did the Police know these seven girls were being groomed on-line for exploitive purposes? How was it that three of that particular
seven actually ceded to the convincing and then managed to travel out of the country after one of the group had fled and no alarm was
raised by Customs? Wouldn't it have been prudent to warn the UK Custom officialdom?
............................................................................................
This part of the whole situation is merely the tip of what is a regular scheme maintained by Government-funded agencies. The trafficking
narrative is a distraction from the simple tasks of moving people from A to B for reasons we're never supposed to know. Whether it is to
use for false-flag operations or some truncated manner of gathering intelligence on an enemy, it does give the public a glimpse into the
world of agencies that we're supposed to trust.
Anyway, Castro's illegitimate-son said he'll look into it.
of persuaded followers and acquisition of information of those who wish to join a certain ideology. This may all seem obvious to
many, but the Begum-situation may be a glimpse into the dark world of 'false-flag' creation and how -what we perceive is the
manner we live our daily lives, isn't founded on the typical assumption that our security agencies are believed to function.
In hundreds of previous news-pieces, we were told that a 'terrorist'-group adhering to an extreme version of that religious belief
had been formed by Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, a Jordanian who later joined al-Qaeda and became a follower of Osama bin Laden.
Operating in Afghanistan, the public were then informed that ISIS was slowly expanding their control to other areas of the globe.
Deaths were many and often videoed to further the dread of these zealots. Bin Laden became the poster-figure to scare the west
and became the instigator of the Twin Towers attack. Al-Zarqawi died and then Bin Laden was killed and the horrible headlines
faded like Covid on a sunny day.
If we take the BBC's investigation at face-value, it means the Canadian intelligence services -a country that is still a member of
the Commonwealth of Nations, were involved in smuggling a British citizen into a known terrorist organisation for reasons still
to be explained.
So, even after all the UK's media banging-on about how a little girl from Bangladeshi parents had been groomed on-line by a
charming and impressive boy from overseas and then went with her friends to meet him in Turkey and be finally sneaked across
the border into Syria, we now discover all that was utter shite! The journey may have been true, but the background was based
on actions from a fellow-member of the Commonwealth.
Don't get me wrong, this has little to do with Canada as a nation, it shows how fake the established media-outlets are -including
the BBC who also previously wrote articles backing the original Begum-narrative, and also hints at the duplicitous workings of
security agencies from all countries interested in maintaining the terror threat.
Simple questions:
If a lickle girlie-girl from Bethnal Green, East London hadn't been targeted by whoever via the internet, would she have travelled
the hour-long trip to Gatwick Airport, flew the almost five-hours to Turkey and then delivered herself and her two friends into the
hands of total strangers?
What convincement and from who, would allay the media-generated fears of a female Muslim teenager enough that she would
embark on this journey, unless a confidence had been nurtured within the girls' secret-circle that the reported horrors wouldn't
effect Shamima and her cohorts?
Did you ever think of doing this at fifteen years of age, whilst being aware of the media's scary stories of beheadings, rape-rooms
and the accepted perception of women within extreme Islamic dogma?
Would such a (costly) undertaking be merely down to the excitement of living the life of a Jihad's wife and child-bearer? Begum
states: "...We were just doing everything he was telling us to do because he knew everything, we didn't know anything..." in regards
of the Canadian-agent, a victim's narrative. At no point does the girl state she was there to fight for a cause and in a letter supposedly
seen by the BBC from Begum's lawyer...
Quote:"...lawyer Mr Akunjee claims the family was not told that Shamima had been interviewed by police whenArchived BBC Source:
another girl at the same school left for Syria the previous December. Had they known, he says, the family
would have been able to stop Shamima from following her.
The letter makes the point that police interviewed seven friends of this first Bethnal Green runaway schoolgirl,
whom the lawyer says had been "groomed for exploitation and trafficked internationally". But the police spoke
to these seven girls, including Shamima, Amira and Kadiza, without the knowledge or consent of their parents.
The lawyer says that by questioning the girls without their parents, they were effectively put on notice that "they
were being monitored and would have to leave for Syria immediately"..."
How did the Police know these seven girls were being groomed on-line for exploitive purposes? How was it that three of that particular
seven actually ceded to the convincing and then managed to travel out of the country after one of the group had fled and no alarm was
raised by Customs? Wouldn't it have been prudent to warn the UK Custom officialdom?
............................................................................................
This part of the whole situation is merely the tip of what is a regular scheme maintained by Government-funded agencies. The trafficking
narrative is a distraction from the simple tasks of moving people from A to B for reasons we're never supposed to know. Whether it is to
use for false-flag operations or some truncated manner of gathering intelligence on an enemy, it does give the public a glimpse into the
world of agencies that we're supposed to trust.
Anyway, Castro's illegitimate-son said he'll look into it.
Quote:Shamima Begum: Canada will investigate spy smuggling allegationsBBC:
'Canada says it will "follow up" claims that one of its spies smuggled three UK schoolgirls into Syria in 2015.
A BBC investigation revealed Shamima Begum, who fled the UK and joined the Islamic State group with two friends,
was smuggled by a Canadian agent.
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said he will "look at" the accusations to ensure rules were followed. But he defended the
intelligence services, who he said keep the country safe "in a very dangerous world". "The fight against terrorism requires
our intelligence services to continue to be flexible and to be creative in their approaches," Mr Trudeau told reporters at a
news conference on Wednesday.
"But every step of the way, they are bound by strict rules by principles and values that Canadians hold dear, including
around the Charter of Rights and Freedoms, and we expect that those rules be followed. "I know there are questions
about certain incidents or operations of the past and we will ensure to follow up on this," he pledged.
Ms Begum is now held in a detention camp in north-east Syria. Her citizenship was taken away in 2019 after she was
discovered at a refugee camp following the collapse of the so-called IS caliphate. Tasnime Akunjee, the lawyer for the
Begum family, is challenging the removal of Ms Begum's citizenship and said "one of the main arguments" will be that
the home secretary did not consider that she was a victim of trafficking.
Can you be stripped of your British citizenship?
He said it was "shocking" that a Canadian intelligence asset was a key part of the smuggling operation - "someone who
is supposed to be an ally, protecting our people, rather than trafficking British children into a war zone". Ms Begum was
15 when she and two other east London schoolgirls - Kadiza Sultana, 16, and 15-year-old Amira Abase - travelled to Syria
to join the IS group in 2015.
The girls met Mohammed Al Rasheed, who would facilitate their journey from Istanbul into IS-controlled Syria.
A senior intelligence officer, at an agency which is part of the global coalition against IS, has confirmed to the BBC that
Rasheed was providing information to Canadian intelligence while smuggling people to IS.
The BBC has obtained a dossier on Rasheed that contains information gathered by foreign law enforcement and intelligence,
as well as material recovered from his hard drives, which provide extraordinary detail about how he operated. He told authorities
that he had gathered information on the people he helped into Syria because he was passing it to the Canadian embassy in Jordan.
Rasheed, who was arrested in Turkey within days of smuggling Ms Begum to IS, told authorities he had shared a photo of the
passport the British schoolgirl was using. The Metropolitan Police were searching for her, although by the time Canada received
her passport details, Ms Begum was already in Syria.
A Canadian Security Intelligence Service spokesman told the BBC he could not "publicly comment on or confirm or deny the
specifics of CSIS investigations, operational interests, methodologies or activities". Defence Secretary Ben Wallace said he
could not "comment on intelligence matters", but added that "at the moment" he did not recognise "what's being reported".
Ms Sultana is believed to have been killed in a Russian airstrike on the then IS held city of Raqqa. The whereabouts of Ms
Abase are unknown...'
Edith Head Gives Good Wardrobe.