Friday, November 8, 2013

Kenyan Crap

SeeKenya Hoax was a Fake Siege

Another f***ing completely staged and scripted hoax presented as a real event by jewsmedia?

All over an insurance scam

Thus much of what I will only link below I did read, but why bother to take the time to transmit blatant falsehoods and cover story crapola in the name of analysis? What is important to realize is the amount of coverage and print is related to whether it is an agenda-pushing psyop or not. One day wonders come and go, but the agenda-pushing plot lines always remain.


It's called drill rehearsal, and meticulous plans are carried out by intelligence agencies. They are called covert operations. And why they are bringing up some dead ghost in Somalia is beyond me.


I fail to see how that will help, unless you want "evidence" planted or destroyed (as they telegraph the same type of attack coming to America!).


Al-CIA (pronounced Sha)-Bob and their statements on the internets! 


Someone had to make it look real for the cameras, and I see Samantha Lewthwaite, the MI-6 agent or asset/fall guy patsy?, garnered a mention there.


Not interested in details anymore.


Don't feel I'm missing much at all.


Not for me.

Kenya intelligence reports show persistent threats

And one managed to "slip" through.

Targets of US raids planned terrorism in Kenya

It's called public relations and damage control as your attention is diverted. Lewthwaite also makes another appearance with the titbit being her marriage to one of the 7/7 patsies.

Man reportedly radicalized before mall attack in Kenya

He was a nice, quiet boy from Norway?

Video shows troops looting Kenya mall

Because there actually were no terrorists in the building. As for believing propaganda pre$$ video of such things, those days are long gone.

Norway tried to stop Kenya suspect

No hard enough.

4 Somalis charged with aiding Westgate Mall attack

And why the charade of a production for world consumption? 


That event and its ramifications will be covered in a future post.

The things I do consider important in Kenya:

"Kenyan bus accident kills at least 41" by Nicholas Kulish |  New York Times, August 30, 2013

NAIROBI, Kenya — Kenya’s dangerous roads again claimed the lives of dozens of people in a gruesome bus accident west of Nairobi on Thursday morning.

A passenger bus crashed through a barrier at a sharp curve, flipped over, and had its roof shorn off, the Kenya Red Cross said in a statement. According to the Red Cross, 41 people were killed immediately and another 39 people with severe injuries were taken to a hospital in the town of Narok....

Rural roads in Kenya usually lack lighting. Accidents are frequent and often deadly, with drivers speeding and executing dangerous passing maneuvers on narrow two-lane stretches. At least 35 people were killed when a bus crashed in February.

“We are losing too many Kenyans through road accidents, and the onus is us as car owners, as commuters, as traffic police, and as leaders,” President Uhuru Kenyatta wrote on Twitter on Thursday. He promised to hold vehicle owners accountable for accidents. “We are going to take action now, not just against the drivers but even the car owners themselves,” he said.

The World Health Organization has said that estimates of the number of people killed in traffic crashes in Kenya annually range wildly, between 3,000 and 13,000 annually. One-third of all fatalities are passengers, many of them killed “in unsafe forms of public transportation,” WHO said.

Francis Kimemia, secretary to the Cabinet of Kenya, offered condolences on Twitter. If passengers aren’t happy with something, report it, he said, adding “It’s your life.”

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"Riots erupt in Kenya after cleric fatally shot; At least 4 dead and 7 wounded" by Josh Kron |  New York Times, October 05, 2013

NAIROBI — Deadly riots broke out in the coastal city of Mombasa on Friday morning after a popular but controversial Muslim cleric was fatally shot in what his followers said they believed was an attack by state security services.

Trying to appease the West, were they?

Four people were confirmed dead and seven injured in the unrest, according to the Kenya Red Cross, and a church was set ablaze. The violence unleashed bubbling religious tensions in the wake of the terrorist attack last month on a shopping mall in Nairobi, the Kenyan capital, that left more than 60 people dead and investigators grasping for answers.

The cleric, Sheik Ibrahim Ismail, was killed Thursday night along with three others when their car was sprayed with bullets as they drove along Mombasa’s palm-fringed coastal highway. Ismail’s predecessor, Sheik Aboud Rogo Mohammed, a radical cleric, was killed last year in similar circumstances. Rogo had been linked to Al Shabab, the Somali Islamist militant group behind the Nairobi mall attack.

By late Friday morning, after prayer services, Muslim youths were pouring out of the mosque where Ismail had preached, throwing together makeshift furniture barricades in the streets, according to witnesses reached by telephone. Security personnel in helmets and protective vests tried to contain the rioting.

But demonstrators smashed windows, left tires burning in the street, and hurled stones at police officers in running street battles, television footage showed. Black smoke rose from the white Salvation Army church. Footage showed several officers huddled behind an auto rickshaw, seeking cover from rioters, some with red-and-white scarves wrapped around their faces.

The situation in the country since the mall attack remains tense. Witnesses have said that one or more of the attackers may have escaped, and fears of a follow-up assault are running high. Muslims, both Somalis from the country’s large diaspora and native Kenyans, have been bracing for reprisal attacks.

On Friday, the police said no one had been arrested in the killings of the sheik and the others in the car. “Right now, the area is calm,” said a Kenyan police spokeswoman in Nairobi, Zipporah Mboroki. “We are investigating the cause of the shooting.”

The Kenyan authorities this week urged calm in the wake of the Nairobi attack, and called particularly for Kenyan Muslims and non-Muslims to stay united. Muslims were among the dead in the attack on the mall, as well as among the rescuers hailed here as heroes. But the attackers allowed some Muslims to leave unharmed, in what may have been in part an attempt to sow dissent.

Followers of Ismail said they believed that the killings were political, and that his death was the beginning of the feared retribution against Muslims after the mall siege.

“The police are killing people while saying it is a war against terrorism; this is a war against Islam,” said another radical cleric, Abubaker Shariff Ahmed, according to Agence France-Presse. He called Ismail’s killing an “outright execution.”

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"CRACKDOWN ON IVORY TRADE -- Wildlife officers counted elephant tusks after impounding an illegal shipment at a terminal in the port city of Mombasa, Kenya, on Tuesday. More than 1,600 pieces of ivory were found inside bags of sesame seeds in freight sent from Uganda. Officials said the ivory did not come from recent kills (Boston Globe October 9 2013)."

"Teen’s gang rape galvanizes Kenya; Police did little after girl found in pit latrine" by Josphat Kasire and Jason Straziuso |  Associated Press, November 08, 2013

TINGOLO, Kenya — A wave of outrage has swelled in Kenya after reports that a 16-year-old girl was gang-raped and thrown into a pit latrine in this western Kenyan town, with the alleged attackers told to cut grass at a police post as punishment and then let go.

Nearly 1.4 million people have signed an online petition put up by the activist group Avaaz calling for prosecution of the young men and an investigation of the police who freed the suspects.

Political leaders are also speaking up. Supreme Court Chief Justice Willy Mutunga last weekend said he had forwarded the matter to the National Council for Administration of Justice for ‘‘immediate action.’’ Foreign Minister Amina Mohamed said that ‘‘as a woman and a mother I am outraged and angered by this inhumane, traumatizing, and inexcusable violation.’’

The teen is currently confined to a wheelchair because of the physical trauma from the attack. She has undergone two surgeries — one for spinal injuries, said Lydia Muthiani, the deputy executive director of the Coalition on Violence Against Women, which has advocated for the victim.

‘‘She is doing very well. They are hopeful she will walk again,’’ said Muthiani, who noted that the victim is still dealing with the psychological trauma of the rape and from time to time will shut down emotionally.

The attack happened in June but did not get wider attention until Nairobi’s Daily Nation newspaper wrote about it last month.

Her mother spoke through tears at her home in Busia County. She told the Associated Press the police at first said only that her daughter should be taken to a pharmacy and be prescribed pain killers.

Even if her physical and psychological traumas continue to heal, her life will forever be upended. Cultural traditions in this area mandate that a rape victim move to another town where people may not know she has been raped.

Muthiani labeled rape an ‘‘invisible crime’’ in Kenya because it is underreported and rarely acted on judicially.

‘‘We wouldn’t know how big a problem rape is in essence just because we do not have all the numbers of reported cases, but from the number of cases that we do receive, it is a very, very high number,’’ said Muthiani, who said studies have shown that one in six Kenyan women will experience some sort of sexual assault in her lifetime.

Muthiani said that one aid group that studied sexual violence during Kenya’s 2007-08 election violence found that at least 3,000 women were raped. She said there have been only 11 convictions related to those cases.

‘‘When you have a statistic that low, what are you inspiring the public to do? The institutions that are supposed to protect and serve us, for instance police and prosecutors, have to start doing a better job,’’ she said.

Kenya’s inspector general of police, David Kimaiyo, has expressed support for the victim and said the investigation into the attack is complete, with the file forwarded to prosecutors.

The victim’s grandmother said the attackers must be found.

‘‘I want those policemen that released the boys that they had in custody to arrest the parents of the boys who raped my granddaughter so that they can say where the boys are hiding,’’ the grandmother said.

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