Wednesday, January 7, 2015

Hebdo Jihadists Were French Citizens, Known to Police

Hebdo Jihadists Were French Citizens, Known to Police

http://www.frontpagemag.com/2015/dgreenfield/2-of-hebdo-jihadists-were-french-citizens/

cherif-kouachi
Not surprising. They may have identified themselves as Al Qaeda Yemen, but witnesses said they spoke perfect French and two of the gunmen have been identified as French citizens.
Like the latest round of Islamic attackers targeting the NYPD, we are entering the next stage of the Jihad. Forget Al Qaeda Yemen. Try Al Qaeda France and Al Qaeda America.
French police have identified three men as suspects in Wednesday’s massacre of a dozen people at the offices of a satirical weekly newspaper, a brazen attack that set off a massive manhunt amid widespread condemnation of the killings.
According to police and other officials, two of the suspects are French brothers aged 34 and 32 years old from the Paris region, and the third is an 18-year-old from the northeastern city of Reims. There were conflicting reports on whether the teenager was also a French national.
In a late-night telephone interview with CNN, Paris Deputy Mayor Patrick Klugman said the three gunmen have been identified and “may have been arrested.” One “may have been prosecuted in the past,” he said, but he did not know the charge.
The Associated Press, citing police officials, named the suspects as Frenchmen Said Kouachi and Cherif Kouachi. The news agency identified the 18-year-old as Hamyd Mourad. It quoted one official as saying the suspects were linked to a Yemeni terrorist network.
This is what happens when you keep enriching your cultural diversity until your diversity enriches your culture with lead. These are predictably leftovers from France’s Algerian cancer.
Brothers Cherif and Said Kouachi were born in Paris, raised in the French city of Rennes, and later moved back to Paris, where Cherif worked as pizza delivery man, reports Liberation. The Kouachi brothers were orphaned by their Algerian-immigrant parents as children.
The Associated Press reported in 2008 that Cherif Kouachi had been sentenced to three years in prison in Paris for helping to funnel prospective jihadi fighters from France to Iraq. He served 18 months, with the remainder of his sentence was suspended. In that case, Cherif was named as a member of the 19th arrondissement network, named for the mainly North African neighborhood where they were based.
So the attackers were on the radar. They had known ties to Jihadists. This whole thing is a replay of other recent attacks in Europe.
At the very least, anyone with ties to Islamic terrorism should be denaturalized and deported.

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