Society's ChildS

Books

Prison authorities fail to remove Islamist, homophobic, anti-Semitic books distributed in UK prisons

Banned books in prison
© Amr Dalsh / Reuters
Five "extremist Islamist books" promoting anti-semitism, homophobia, and hatred towards non-Muslims were distributed by imams at prisons in England and Wales for months, even after jail authorities were alerted.

Among the titles is a book urging Muslims to fight and subjugate unbelievers. Another blames Jews for "materialism, animal sexuality, the destruction of the family, and the dissolution of society," according to The Times.

One of the books focuses on "the sexual deviation known as homosexuality," saying: "The spread of this depraved practice in a society disrupts its natural life pattern and makes those who practice it slaves to their lusts, depriving them of decent taste, decent morals and a decent manner of living."

Another of the books is widely accepted as the foundational text for the modern jihadist movement.

Copies of some of the publications were found in chaplaincy rooms at nine of 11 prisons inspected during a review, led by former Home Office official and prison governor Ian Acheson, of radicalization behind bars, according to the newspaper.

Pocket Knife

Breaking news: Church siege as 'knifemen take priest, nuns and worshippers hostage' in Rouen, France (UPDATES)

The situation is reported to have broken out at the Church of the Gambetta in Saint-Etienne-du-Rouvray
The situation is reported to have broken out at the Church of the Gambetta in Saint-Etienne-du-Rouvray
Police are at the scene at the Saint-Etienne-du-Rouvray commune in the Haute-Normandie region of northern France

A hostage situation has broken out at a church in France as two knifemen are reportedly holding a priest, two nuns and several worshippers.

Police are at the scene at the Saint-Etienne-du-Rouvray commune in the Haute-Normandie region of northern France.

The hostage takers are reported to have stormed the Church of the Gambetta at around 9.45am local time (8.45am UK time).

A large area has been evacuated and cordoned off around the scene.

One nearby resident said he was walking to church as the horror broke out and he was told to go home and stay indoors by armed officers.

French police
© frederic veille

Comment: Update 1

The two men with knives were shot and killed by police snipers after they ran out of the church. They had killed the 84-year-old priest by slitting his throat. Another hostage was seriously wounded. One other person believed to be connected with the attacks has been arrested. While police had earlier said they could not confirm the motive or identities of the attackers, since then Daesh's propaganda outlet has claimed responsibility for the attack and eyewitnesses claim the men shouted "Daesh". This report was later discredited (Daesh doesn't call itself Daesh). Now they're saying they yelled, "Allahu Akbar!" as they left the church, at which point they were shot by snipers.

One of the attackers had tried to go to Syria last year but had been seized in Turkey and deported. Arrested in May 2015, he spent almost a year in prison, after which he lived with his parents and was forced to wear an electronic bracelet.

The church where the attacks took place was on "hit list" found on an alleged ISIS terrorist who was arrested last year (Sid Ahmed Ghlam, arrested in 2015 after shooting himself in the leg, charged with murdering a mother of one, and suspected to have been in contact with a French speaker in Syria who directed him to carry out attacks on churches).

Update 2

The attackers reportedly filmed themselves murdering Jacques Hamel, then performed a "sermon" at the altar, according to a nun who was held hostage and witnessed the killing. The attacker mentioned in the update above was a 19-year-old, Adel K, who killed Hamel while his accomplice filmed it. Both he and his accomplice were on France's terrorist watchlist. The third man arrested, 17-year-old HB, is believed to be a relative of Adel.

Update 3

The killer has been identified as Adel Keramiche, known to French police and intelligence, and who had travelled to Syria numerous times. The other attacker's identity remains unknown. An anonymous source told Le Figaro that Keramiche had told them, "I'll commit an attack on a church." One of the two was found to be carrying "an explosive belt made of aluminum foil and three knives", the other "a weapon made of aluminum and a backpack containing a fake explosive device".
Kermiche tried to reach Syria twice in 2015, first attempting to pass under the radar of authorities in March of last year, according to Molin. However, he was arrested in Germany after trying to use his brother's ID. Kermiche was subsequently put under surveillance in France.

He left home nearly two months later and an international warrant was issued for his arrest. In May of 2015, Keramiche was arrested near Geneva after Turkish authorities expelled him for attempting to reach Syria. He was then transferred to Switzerland.
On May 22, 2015, Keramiche was handed over to French authorities and put on trial, which resulted in him being put under provisional surveillance and house arrest. He also had to report to a local police station once a week.

In March of 2016, the house arrest order was dropped, but Kermiche has been required to wear an electronic tag ever since.
Update 4

A video has emerged of the two attackers. They make clear their allegiance to Daesh and their plan to carry out an attack. (See here, which includes extra details about the attackers.) Now it comes out that, despite knowing that Kermiche was a terrorist (he was awaiting trial at the time of the attack), French police had been tipped off about the attack days before it occurred. The tip was about the second attacker, now identified as Abdel Malik Nabil Petijean, who had been on a terrorist watchlist since June. Like Kermiche, he had tried to travel to Syria (he was spotted taking a flight on June 10, but returned the next day for unknown reasons).
Before the attack, police had been searching for Petitjean for several days, and allegedly had information that he was preparing an attack, French media reported, citing sources close to investigation.

Petitjean's photo was distributed to the police four days prior to Tuesday's hostage-taking and killing, and the caption to the picture read that he "could be ready to participate in an attack on national territory."
Due to the contained nature of the attack, and the survival of key witnesses, there's no indication of outside support (like the muscular white guys observed shooting people during the Paris attacks). Of course, that doesn't mean that certain authorities knew about it and "let it happen on purpose". However, even if there are some in the French security establishment who profit by attacks like these (and either set them up or allow them to happen), it's also possible that this one was a result of a failure on the part of police who really did want to stop such an attack from occurring.

Kermiche was reportedly a friend of Maxime Hauchard, a French jihadi who has appeared in ISIS videos in Syria. (More details and pictures at Daily Mail.)


Radar

Be very afraid: Ex-navy chief warns terrorists could use drones to drop explosives on UK targets

Drone
© Francois Lenoir / Reuters
Terrorists could use drones loaded with explosives to carry out attacks, a former Royal Navy admiral has warned.

Ex-Navy chief Admiral Lord West of Spithead has called for tighter controls on drones, including a registration list and licenses. At present, there is no registration scheme for drones in the UK.

West's warning came as the Foreign Office issued a statement on Thursday claiming it has evidence that Islamic State (IS, formerly ISIS/ISIL) is already using drones for propaganda and surveillance purposes.

Comment: America's drone wars, what do they really do?


Attention

Massive anti-US rally staged at NATO Incirlik air base in Turkey

Incirlik Air Base
© AFP
A crowd has been protesting near the Incirlik military base in Adana, Turkey. The base houses US and NATO forces.

Regional television has been broadcasting the rally.

Over five thousand joined anti-American demonstrations yelling "death to US" and demanding an immediate closure of the Incirlik Air Base for over five hours on Thursday before Turkish police came in and broke up the protesters before they could arrive at major NATO military facility, home to nearly 90 US tactical nuclear weapons.

Protesters have been shouting anti-American and anti-Israel slogans, according to an RT stringer.

Comment: US warnings:


Heart - Black

Samia Shahid's death: Pakistan police probe 'honor killing'

Samia Shahid, 28, from Bradford, died while visiting relatives in Pandori in Northern Punjab
© Family photoSamia Shahid, 28, from Bradford, died while visiting relatives in Pandori in Northern Punjab.
Police in Pakistan have launched a murder investigation into the death of a woman whose husband says she was the victim of a so-called honor killing.

Samia Shahid, 28, from Bradford, died last week in Northern Punjab.

Police are treating her death as suspicious after receiving information from her husband.

No arrests have been made but officers are investigating her father and want to speak to her first husband Choudhry Shakeel, who has gone on the run.

Comment: Brother confesses to honor killing of social media star, has 'no regrets'


Handcuffs

Protesters gather outside DNC - 7 arrested after jumping security fence

philly police
© WeAreChange / YouTube
At least seven protesters outside the Democratic National Convention were arrested after jumping a security fence and are now facing federal charges.

Seven DNC protesters face federal charges, according to David Spunt of KYW-TV, who spoke with Philadelphia Police Commissioner Richard Ross.


A witness conveyed to Jamie Stover of WFMZ how several protesters broke through the security perimeter.


The protest, which was marked by flag burning, swung from peaceful demonstration to moments of high intensity, and back again.


With a helicopter overhead and still around a hundred protesters reported past midnight by Buzzfeed, things seemed to be dying down. There was even a group hug, Michaelle Bond of the Philadelphia Inquirer reported.


USA

DNC circus: Anti-war protestors disrupt Panetta speech; convention organizers dim lights to drown them out

protests leon panetta speech DNC
© Lucy Nicholson / Reuters Attendees protest drone warfare as former Congressman and Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta speaks at the Democratic National Convention in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S. July 27, 2016.
Supporters of Bernie Sanders interrupted a speech being made by former defense secretary Leon Panetta at the Democratic National Convention (DNC), with delegates loudly chanting "No more war!" and "No more drones!"

The roaring disruption came from the Oregon and Washington delegates, who shouted "No more war!" as Panetta spoke at the podium. Both states were won by Sanders at the Democratic presidential primary.

Comment: Humiliation games and cognitive dissonance at the Democratic National Convention


Sherlock

Sun investigation reveals ISIS member tried to recruit undercover reporter to carry out terrorist attack in London

isis bomb supplies
© SWNSIS jihadi recruited an undercover Sun reporter to carry out a lone wolf terrorist atrocity
AN ISIS jihadi recruited an undercover Sun reporter to carry out a lone wolf terrorist atrocity โ€” targeting Big Ben, London Bridge or a major shopping centre.

Abu Muslim Khurasani ordered our man to get the materials for a car bomb, saying: "Park somewhere busy with many people."

He spent two months coaching our man on the orders of ISIS's top recruiter โ€” using the encrypted Telegram messaging app to communicate. He sent a bomb-making guide and ordered our reporter to get the readily-available materials to make an explosive device and hide it in a car.

A hit-list of targets included Big Ben and London Bridge โ€” before Khurasani settled on a major shopping centre for a Nice-style atrocity. He said: "Learn from Nice. Get a car you can park somewhere busy with many people โ€” and a gun you can use at the same time.

"While sitting in car, use them all (referring to bullets) and quickly press the button. Both things must be in a hurry. No time gap."

Khurasani, who claimed to have active jihadi operations in the UK and the US, ordered our man to launch his lone-wolf attack last Monday. On Sunday evening, believing our man was poised for his suicidal mission, Khurasani sent a final message.

Camera

Corporate appropriation: Getty resells thousands of donated images, now facing billion-dollar lawsuit

Carol Highsmith
© image via Wikimedia CommonsCarol Highsmith self-portrait in a broken mirror that she photographed during the Willard Hotel restoration, Washington, DC (c. 1980โ€“90)
In December, documentary photographer Carol Highsmith received a letter from Getty Images accusing her of copyright infringement for featuring one of her own photographs on her own website. It demanded payment of $120. This was how Highsmith came to learn that stock photo agencies Getty and Alamy had been sending similar threat letters and charging fees to users of her images, which she had donated to the Library of Congress for use by the general public at no charge.

Now, Highsmith has filed a $1 billion copyright infringement suit against both Alamy and Getty for "gross misuse" of 18,755 of her photographs. "The defendants [Getty Images] have apparently misappropriated Ms. Highsmith's generous gift to the American people," the complaint reads. "[They] are not only unlawfully charging licensing fees ... but are falsely and fraudulently holding themselves out as the exclusive copyright owner." According to the lawsuit, Getty and Alamy, on their websites, have been selling licenses for thousands of Highsmith's photographs, many without her name attached to them and stamped with "false watermarks."

Since 1988, Highsmith has been donating tens of thousands of photographs of people and places in the United States to the Library of Congress, making them free for public use. The institution calls the donation "one of the greatest acts of generosity in the history of the Library." The Carol M. Highsmith Collection is featured in the library's Prints & Photographs Division, alongside the likes of Dorothea Lange's Dust Bowl and Depression photographs.

In fact, it was partly Lange's work with the Farm Security Administration that inspired the now-70-year-old Highsmith to begin her own project of documenting all 50 states through her nonprofit This is America! Foundation. Chances are, you've seen the results before. The United States Postal Service featured Highsmith's photographs of the Jefferson Memorial and the Lincoln Memorial on stamps, and her work has appeared in Smithsonian Magazine, Time, the New York Times, and the Washington Post Magazine.

Airplane

JetBlue airline to launch first US flight to Cuba on August 31

Jet Blue airlines
© Flickr/ wilco737
The first US flight to Cuba operated by JetBlue Airlines will take off on August 31, the airline announced in a statement on Thursday.

"JetBlue today announced it will launch flights to Cuba on August 31, 2016," the statement said.

The first flights will all leave from Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood International Airport in the US state of Florida and head to the Cuban city of Santa Clara, the airline noted. A one-way ticket will cost 99 dollars.

Comment: JetBlue is in the news today for another reason too: No shock there: Kilos of cocaine found on to JetBlue planes during check in Florida