On Twitter, a “French” Hanbalite explains authentic Islam …

Did you know that?

Multicultural France, recreated from scratch by our progressive elites, is now home to Hanbalites.

What is a Hanbalite, you may ask?

A Hanbalite is a Muslim who follows the school of Ibn Hanbal, a ninth-century Muslim fanatic, in matters of law.

(And his heirs, such as Ibn Tamiyya, who recommended cutting the throats of Christian monks, among other things, or Ibn Abdel Wahabb, who inspired ” modern” Saudi Arabia).

The Wikipedia article written by a Muslim is scandalous from the perspective of veneration for this criminal:

https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ahmad_Ibn_Hanbal

While the Islamo-left advocate openness towards these fanatics in our country:

Translation: 1 year “Separatism” is:
The instrumentalisation of the labour inspectorate in aligning institutions according to their perceived or actual origin or creed.

The fanatics in question, firmly rooted in the French social fabric, spread their Muslim ideology.

Like this “French” Hanbalite in his Twitter feed.

Here are some examples.

This Hanbalite, a great supporter of Sharia, regrets that a Tunisian apostate (“Murtad”) cannot suffer the full rigours of Sharia:

Translation: We have a murtad complaining about being convicted of blasphemy in Tunisia when he knows he would have been executed under Sharia law, so put it in perspective, little khabith, and there are many wrongdoers down there who criticise the laws in other countries on the grounds that theirs are objectively better….

For this Hanbalite is against any ” innovation “, a systematic attitude of Muslims, which largely explains the social, cultural, scientific, spiritual backwardness of Muslims in one word:

Translation: Orthodox Sunnism = heritage of the 4 schools.
This heritage is present in the :
1) Faith
2) Jurisprudence
3) Spirituality
These 4 schools are
1) Hanafism
2) Malikism
3) Shafiism
4) Hanbalism
This heritage is our protection against innovations.

And so the fixed idea of the Hanbalites, which is actually that of all Muslims, is to return to the time of Muhammad, including the barbaric punishments:

Translation: If the duration of one’s life is the most important thing for a human being, then prison is far crueler than the corporal punishment mandated in Islam. Between losing years of life in prison and being flogged or amputated in public, the answer to this question is quickly given.

It is not all bad that this Muslim fanatic claims, one of his recent tweets in particular gives us hope:

Translation: One will have to admit that France is a country to leave according to its possibilities in the medium to long term. Year after year, the situation of Muslims and their institutions worsens, and when a country falls into economic crisis and is left to decline, it is always the minorities who suffer.

This is wise and corresponds to pure Mohammedan teachings.

If a Muslim cannot assert himself in a country, he must leave it (“Hijra”).

So, the Hanbalites and your hundreds of thousands of similar ones, unsuitable and maladjusted for our France: GET OUT!

It will be better to make this hijra yourself because it is a recommendation from your Allah and because, as you say, your “Allah knows best” (sic).

https://resistancerepublicaine.com/2021/10/31/sur-twitter-un-hanbalite-francais-explique-lislam-authentique/

Germany: Due to massive side effects, the University Hospital of Münster has now stopped the booster vaccinations for its employees

Another scandal is brewing concerning the supposedly “safe” and “effective” Corona vaccines: As the Saxon Vaccination Commission (Stiko) has now announced or revised, the Covid-19 vaccine from Moderna is now only recommended for people over 30. So far, we know the numbers game from vaccines like AstraZeneca and Co., where age recommendations, especially for older people, were repeatedly revised upwards or downwards seemingly at will.

The fatal thing is that the vaccine, which apparently leads to massive complications and side effects in younger people, may already be vaccinated to 12-year-old children.

The Stiko says: “The background to this is the latest studies from October, which indicate a somewhat greater increase in heart muscle and pericardial inflammation in adolescents and young adults.” These side effects have allegedly not yet been proven in people over 30 years of age.”This is purely a precautionary measure. We are reacting to the latest scientific findings and a resulting recommendation of the vaccination commission,” says Saxon Health Minister Petra Köpping ( Social Democratic Party of Germany), who continues to propagate the Corona vaccination despite these questionable findings. After all, “it protects against severe courses of corona” (in the past, it was said to protect against infection in general), so what does a damaged heart as a side effect of the vaccination matter?Due to massive side effects, the University Hospital Münster has now stopped the booster vaccinations for its employees. The official reason for this is “an unusually high number of vaccination reactions”. It had to be feared that more staff would be absent because of the vaccination reactions than the duty rosters could cope with.

https://unser-mitteleuropa.com/wegen-massiver-nebenwirkungen-moderna-impfstoff-nun-ploetzlich-nur-mehr-fuer-ue30-jaehrige-empfohlen/

An Italian football coach in Saudi Arabia looks back: I wasn’t allowed to kiss my wife, I wasn’t allowed to wear shorts in public, I wasn’t allowed to drink alcoholic beverages, training had to be interrupted because of the muezzin’s call, and women had to be crowded together in a corner in the stadium.

No, not much can upset him any more. Paolo Tramezzani (51) has already seen too much in his life for that. But not as a footballer. He quickly became a star, played more than 100 Serie A matches, including 34 for Inter Milan. The worst thing that happened to him was that in two years at Tottenham Hotspurs he didn’t make it and only made six matches.

As a coach, however, the Italian ranges from one extreme to the other. The highlight: his last job in Saudi Arabia. Al-Faisaly is the name of the club. Harma is a city. In the middle of the desert. Two hours by car from Riyadh. “It wasn’t easy,” Tramezzani recalls.” For me. Even more so for my family.” Women are still second-class people in Saudi Arabia. Tramezzani mentions examples: “Harma is a city from another era. Which is why it was better that my wife and daughter lived in the modern metropolis of Riyadh.Being separated was not easy per se. And it wasn’t much better when we were together. When I picked Lisa up at the airport, I wasn’t allowed to kiss her because it was against the customs. We had to enter the restaurants through separate entrances. And there was no alcohol. How often we looked at each other and thought: How nice it would be to have a glass of wine now … Sure, there is the black market. But that is high risk.

Lisa also had to endure a lot in the stadium. “I guess women have been tolerated for a few years now. But they are all crammed into one corner. Literally ghettoised. And they are not allowed to leave this sector either.”

But it wasn’t always easy for him either. “It starts with having to wear long trousers and long-sleeved shirts even when it’s over forty degrees. That was infernal!” And then the rules of prayer! “When the muezzin in the mosque called for prayer at half past four or a quarter to six, everything stood still. Even in the middle of the training. All in all, Muslims pray seven times a day.”

As a coach in Saudi Arabia, you have to be extremely flexible. Nevertheless, it was a wonderful experience that Paolo wouldn’t miss a bit. “Such an experience makes you richer, bigger, you feel better. Without having lived there, you can’t know how completely different the reality is there.

https://www.blick.ch/sport/fussball/superleague/sion-coach-tramezzani-ueber-seine-flucht-aus-saudi-arabien-ich-haette-jedem-anderen-klub-ausser-sion-abgesagt-id16949708.html

Germany: Perpetrators of violence in nightlife often have a migration background

Among the perpetrators of violence in Düsseldorf’s nightlife are mainly aggressive, alcoholic men with a migration background. This was confirmed by North Rhine-Westphalia’s Interior Minister Herbert Reul ( Christian Democratic Union, CDU) speaking to the Interior Committee of the state parliament on Thursday. “Among the revellers there are regularly larger groups with a high potential for aggression. Often male, often with a migration background.”

Often the perpetrators are already known to the police because of previous violent offences.”These are people who can cause trouble. A mistaken statement, a misunderstanding can sometimes lead to a blackout.” Often groups with excessive drinking incite each other.

“These are spirals of escalation that can only be de-escalated by a massive police presence.” The Minister of the Interior listed various measures that would now be taken to bring the situation in Düsseldorf’s Old Town under control. Among other things, he counted more comprehensive illumination of the banks of the Rhine and improved prevention work. However, Reul said, “There is no one solution to this problem.” Previously, Düsseldorf’s mayor Stephan Keller ( Christian Democratic Union, CDU) had brought up the idea of a no-weapons zone in Düsseldorf’s old town.

Düsseldorf has recently been the scene of repeated acts of violence at night. A week ago, a 19-year-old died in an altercation in the Old Town. Last weekend, a 17-year-old barely survived a knife attack.

https://jungefreiheit.de/politik/deutschland/2021/innenminister-reul-gewalttaeter-im-nachtleben-haben-oft-migrationshintergrund/

France: Can this Journalist Become President and Save France?

September 16. Éric Zemmour’s new bookFrance Has Not Yet Said Her Last Word, immediately book becomes a bestseller. Two of his previous books, The French Suicide and A Five-Year Term for Nothing: Chronicles of the War of Civilizations, sold more than 500,000 copies, a high number for non-fiction in France. He is an exception. All authors who write of immigration and Islam without political correctness have been ostracized by the media for years. Not Zemmour. Each time he was fired by radio and television stations, another one hired him. As the last politically incorrect talk show host, his audience consists of people weary of political correctness. He has been dragged into court countless times and ordered to pay high fines, presumably to force him to be quiet. He has paid the fines but would not be quiet.

His earlier books, extremely pessimistic about the future of France, concluded that the country was dying, and unnervingly fast. The cause of death would be the population change resulting from uncontrolled immigration and the ensuing Islamization of the country. Islam, at war with Western civilization for thirteen centuries, he wrote, is incompatible with it. The Muslim population living in France, he went on, does not assimilate, but instead creates extremist enclaves in French territory from which non-Muslims are driven out; and now France finds itself colonized by Islam. French political leaders, he added, practice willful blindness, refusing to see what happens, and slip into submission. The situation, he concluded, is irreversible.

His new book breaks with his former pessimism and shows a willingness to fight. His publisher would not publish the book, so Zemmour published it himself. The book’s release was accompanied by a poster campaign from a group, “Friends of Éric Zemmour,” created a few weeks earlier. The posters show his face along with the words, “Zemmour President“. Zemmour is not even officially a candidate for president of the French Republic – yet. Nonetheless, he acts as if he were on the campaign trail. He has been holding public meetings in large cities and attracting thousands of supporters who seem happy to pay 20 euros ($23) to attend.

On September 13, his television program on CNews was canceled after an institution responsible for regulating audiovisual media in France, the CSA (Superior Audiovisual Council), said that it was “impossible for a presumed presidential candidate to have a television show”. Immediately, Zemmour was invited on virtually every radio and television station. In early September, polls credited him with 5%-7% of the 2022 election vote. Recent polls show that, in the first round, he could get 16%-18% of the vote, thereby placing him, in the second round, head-to-head with France’s current president, Emmanuel Macron. Never in the history of the Fifth Republic has a presumed presidential candidate had such a dramatic rise to power.

The leaders of The Republicans, France’s leading moderate right-wing political party, can see that many of their voters are considering voting for Zemmour, so they still have not chosen a presidential candidate. When they saw that Zemmour had every chance of receiving more votes than anyone else in the party, without even participating in the primary election, they announced that votes for Zemmour would not be counted. The president of the National Rally Party, Marine Le Pen, also can see that many of her voters are turning toward Zemmour. President Macron, for his part, until recently probably assumed that in the second round he would be facing Marine Le Pen, and could again use the fear of “fascism” and the “defense of the republic” by reminding the public that she is the daughter of an unreconstructed anti-Semite, Jean-Marie Le Pen, and therefore get easily re-elected.

Macron now seems visibly anxious and has begun to attack Zemmour’s positions by saying that France must be “open to diversity” and that “the identity of France was never built on shrinking the country “. His advisers know it is not possible to accuse Zemmour of anti-Semitism: he is a Jew. French Jews supporting Macron now describe Zemmour as a far-right Jew betraying the values of Judaism. Zemmour has said that the Vichy regime saved French Jews during World War II by preventing them from being sent to the death camps, so some have accused him of defending the Vichy regime and its collaboration with the Nazis. Supporters of Macron and others say that Zemmour is a “racist” and a “fascist“. Articles steeped in hatred are published daily in the mainstream media, and journalists who interview him on radio and television always say, before asking him questions , that he is a dangerous man. Some commentators have described him as an “infectious agent” and as a “virus more harmful than the Wuhan coronavirus”.

The defamation poured out against him has even appeared in the international press. An article on October 24 in the Wall Street Journal states that Zemmour “has drawn inspiration from former President Donald Trump, is harnessing his celebrity to explore a run for president”. It adds that Zemmour “defended the leaders of Vichy France, the regime that collaborated with Nazi Germany during World War II”, and that

“Mr. Zemmour said that they protected French Jews while handing over foreign-born Jews to the Germans in a necessary compromise to occupation… Mr. Zemmour wrote that families of the children killed in 2012 at a Jewish school near Toulouse were behaving like foreigners for burying their children in Israel”.

The newspaper added that Zemmour “has embraced a view held by white nationalists called the ‘Great Replacement,’ which contends that global elites are conspiring to bring non-European immigrants”.

Never has a presumptive French presidential candidate been attacked so unanimously, so viciously and with so much savagery. To find similar attacks, it would be necessary to go back to the 1930s, and at the time the attacks came only from an anti-Semitic far-right press.

Zemmour responds to all criticisms and defamatory remarks. He tells the leaders of The Republicans that his proposals are exactly those included in their party’s program from 1990, when, as the Rally for the Republic (RPR), it proposed to close the borders, suspend immigration, provide social benefits only for the French, and to fight the increasing Islamization of the country. He adds that The Republicans betrayed their own party by renouncing its old program.

Zemmour tells Marine Le Pen that she cannot win and she knows it, and Macron that “opening up to diversity” leads to the dissolution of France. He notes that he does not want to shrink the country, but to save it from destruction and that he will not refuse to see what Islam is or can do. He frequently quotes the Algerian author Boualem Sansal, who writes that Islamic neighborhoods in France are “budding Islamic republics”. Zemmour tells those who say he is a far-right Jew that he is just a conservative attached to the French republic and all the values ​​that made France great. He states that he is a French Jew, proud of his name, and that those who murdered Jews in France in recent years were not Jews. He says he rejects the charge of being an apologist for the anti-Semitic Vichy regime, and points out that what he says about French Jews during WWII was laid out in a bookVichy and The Holocaust: An Inquiry on a French Paradox, by Rabbi Alain Michel, who works for the Yad Vashem Holocaust Museum in Israel. Zemmour stresses that he does not defend the Vichy regime at all, does not say that the Vichy regime “protected” French Jews, but only cites historical facts — and asks those who criticize him on this point if they think Rabbi Alain Michel is an anti-Semite.

Zemmour reminds those who call him a racist and a fascist that Islam is not a race, and that fascists are the enemies of democracies, while he is trying to save democracy. He adds that those who call him a “virus” remind him of those who called Jews “vermin” in the 1930s; that anti-Semites already decades ago called Jews “vermin,” and that calling Jews “vermin” led to horrific consequences.

Zemmour says that he thinks that Donald Trump did great things for the United States — he is one of the rare French journalists not to spit on Trump — and that he, Zemmour, would have preferred not to think about running for president, but saw no one else likely to defeat Macron, and therefore has no choice.

When asked about the Jews murdered by an Islamic terrorist at a Jewish school in Toulouse, Zemmour says that he does not blame their families for having them buried in Israel, that he does not think their families behaved like “foreigners.” He simply notes a fact: that they think that above all they are Jews, which is the right of every Jew. He says that the concept of a “great replacement” of Western Christendom by Islam is not a conspiracy theory but a reality: that demographic data show that in many places throughout history, there is documentation of people who have replaced other people after they have imported a civilization that does not have the same values as theirs. He adds that this is not an idea shared only by white nationalists, but by all those who read history and live in areas that are changing rapidly.

So far, only one French politician has agreed to debate with Zemmour: Jean-Luc Mélenchon, the leader of La France Insoumise (“France Unsubmitted”), a far-left party that includes former members of the French Communist Party. The other political leaders treat Zemmour with contempt. If he becomes a presidential candidate, and if he continues to attract a large number of voters, they will not be able to avoid debating him. They know him well, for thirty years, as a journalist and political commentator. He also knows them well — and is a formidable debater.

Zemmour’s presumed candidacy, his success, and the fury it provokes among politicians and journalists seem symptoms of the state of the country today. France is in an extremely serious situation. There are now more than 700 “no-go zones” (Zones Urbaines Sensibles), ruled by ethnic gangs and radical imams. The police can only intervene in these zones through commando operations. A new kind of disturbance, defined by sociologists as “gratuitous violence” — violence practiced for the pleasure of injuring and killing — has been spreading. Hundreds of assaults take place every day; police reports show that the majority of them are committed by “suburban youths” and that their victims are Caucasians. In many high schools and colleges, teachers have long since given up even mentioning the Holocaust. Since the beheading of high-school teacher Samuel Paty, who was advocating free speech, they have also given up talking about secularism. When, on October 17, 2021, a year after Paty was murdered, the French government organized a commemoration in all French schools, many violent incidents, unfortunately initiated by Muslim students, took place. A recent survey showed that 14% of young people in France aged 18-30 approved of the motives of Paty’s murderer. A poll conducted in November 2020 showed that 57% of Muslims in France aged 18-25 consider Sharia law to be superior to the laws of the republic (in 2016, the figure was 47%).

Entire French towns are now predominantly Muslim: Roubaix, Trappes, Sevran, Aubervilliers. The department of Seine-Saint-Denis will very soon be predominantly Muslim. Marseille, the second-largest city in France, is 40% Muslim and will likely be a majority Muslim city in less than a decade. The population of Lyon, the third-largest city in France, is one-third Muslim.

Each year, 400,000 immigrants legally arrive in France, mostly from the Muslim world. Also each year, tens of thousands of illegal immigrants, also mostly from the Muslim world, are added to that number. Hardly any of them are deported. The French population is aging; the newcomers are young, and their birthrate is far higher than that of non-Muslims. A population change is taking place. The September issue of the French monthly magazine Causeur published a detailed investigation of the subject, titled “Smile, You Are Replaced!” It disclosed that while native French women have a fertility rate of 1.9 children, women coming from Algeria have a fertility rate of 3.6 children; from Tunisia, 3.5 children, and from Morocco, 3.4 children. If the change continues at the present rate, France could be a predominantly Muslim country around 2050.

President Macron has not done anything to stop or lessen the flow of Muslim immigration into France or to act against the change in population. He has often said that he wants to fight Islamism — and always adding that Islamism is an ideology unrelated to Islam. He only once said that “Islam is a religion that is in crisis today, all over the world”, without giving a clear explanation of what he meant. Most French Muslim organizations immediately reacted by saying that he had insulted Islam. Demonstrations were launched in several Muslim countries: Turkey, Lebanon, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Indonesia. French Foreign Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian flew to Cairo to apologize to Sheikh Ahmed al-Tayeb, the Grand Imam of the al-Azhar Mosque, and emphatically to underscore France’s deep respect for Islam.

Macron said in November 2020 that a law to fight “Islamic separatism” would quickly be passed. A law was indeed passed in August 2021, but it does not include the words Islam or Islamism. It is called a “law confirming respect for the principles of the Republic”. It speaks of a “separatist dynamic which aims at division” and says that public services should respect secularism, that civil servants should be protected from threats, and that Islamic organizations should disclose their sources of funding. It prohibits polygamy and home schooling.

However, the public services were already supposed to respect secularism; civil servants were already supposed to be protected by the French state, and Islamic organizations were already supposed to reveal their sources of funding. Polygamy was already banned in France, but it exists nevertheless; several thousand French Muslims today are polygamousHome schooling is practiced by many non-Muslims. The law offers no way to counter the Islamization of France and radical Islam. Two or three radical mosques were closed for a few months, but each year, dozens more mosques open up. Imams calling for jihad continue to preach. Most are French citizens and cannot be expelled. Islamic bookstores continue to sell anti-Semitic books banned in other bookshops. The expression “Islamic separatism” is now used by all political leaders — including Marine Le Pen — and by all French journalists when they speak of “no-go zones.”

“The Islamists do not want to separate,” Middle East scholar Bernard Rougier states in his book The Conquered Territories of Islamism, “they want to submit and conquer”. Zemmour is the only journalist not excluded from the mainstream media for speaking like Rougier, and the only presumptive presidential candidate who reminds everyone that all the Jews murdered in France over more than a decade have been killed by Islamic anti-Semites. Zemmour is also the only presidential candidate who has dared to say that the Palestinian people were invented — a statement long ago affirmed by former Palestinian Authority President Yasser Arafat — and that Israel is a nation state that, like all states, has the right to defend itself and fight for its survival.

Polls show that the French population is extremely pessimistic about the future of France, and extremely dissatisfied with the current political parties. When French regional elections were held in June, they saw an unprecedented abstention ratefor France of 66.7%.

When Zemmour’s supporters are questioned at a public meeting, they unanimously say that he is the only one telling the truth: that a “great replacement” is clearly taking place and could cause France as they know it — proud of its secularism, Judeo-Christian values and individual liberty — to “die”. They almost all add that they think the France of the Enlightenment actually could “die” and that the 2022 presidential election is probably the last chance to save the republic.

The Muslim electorate, increasing in importance in France, is — no surprise there — hostile to him. Zemmour says Muslims need to accept criticism of Islam. However, Muslims do not, and Islamic intolerance of free speech is rapidly gaining ground in France. When a teenage girl named Mila made negative comments about Islam on social media, she received so many death threats that she had to go into hiding and still fears for her life.

In spite of articles saying that “Zemmour causes discomfort among French Jews,” a large number of them seem set on voting for him: they apparently view the possibility of continuing to live in an increasingly Islamized France as compromised. They have already fled from the Islamized neighborhoods and cities en masse. Nevertheless, the main French Jewish institutions seem to be blind to the danger to French Jews represented by Islamic anti-Semitism. They continue unconditionally to support Macron. “No Jewish vote should go to potential candidate Éric Zemmour”, said the president of the Representative Council of the Jewish Institutions of France (CRIF), Francis Kalifat. “The ideas of Zemmour can only inspire disgust,” he added. He had never used such harsh words for French politicians who supported Palestinian terrorist organizations. Ten years ago, the then-president of CRIF, Richard Prasquier, also warmly received the Palestinians’ current leader, Mahmoud Abbas, not exactly known to be pro-Jewish, in Paris.

If Zemmour decides to become a presidential candidate, he will need to do so soon, and undoubtedly knows that being elected will be difficult. He has no support from any political party or any political leader. Attacks against him by the mainstream media will not just continue but intensify.

The French, Zemmour often says, do not want France to “die”. The coming weeks will show if he is right.

https://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/17905/eric-zemmour-save-france

French epidemiologist admits a ‘decline in the effectiveness of vaccines’

The incidence rate has just exceeded an alert threshold in France. An increase in the spread of the novel Coronavirus is expected by Arnaud Fontanet, member of the Scientific Council and researcher at the Pasteur Institute.

In an interview with French weekly JDD, he explained this by “the weather” and the decline in vaccine effectiveness over time. In fact, a Swedish study showed that it had declined to zero.

On 23 October 75,7 percent of French people had received at least one injection of vaccine (more than 51 million) and 73,9 percent had had two shots (more than 49,8 million), according to the Ministry of Solidarity and Health. But in an interview given on October 23 to the Journal du Dimanche (JDD), Arnaud Fontanet, professor at the Pasteur Institute and member of the Scientific Council, admitted that he expected a “continuation of the rise in contamination”.

“With nearly 5000 cases per day, France is in an intermediate situation: it is a moderate epidemic recovery. The R [number of people infected by a positive case, editor’s note] has just crossed the threshold of 1. But, be careful, the trend will be clearer in two or three weeks because the change in our testing practices blurs the picture. We have to wait a bit to be able to identify a trend.”

According to him, two factors are involved: “the weather and the decline in the effectiveness of vaccines against infection.”

https://freewestmedia.com/2021/10/31/french-epidemiologist-admits-a-decline-in-the-effectiveness-of-vaccines/

Syrians provoke Turks by posting videos on social media, now they are facing deportation

Videos of Syrians blatantly eating bananas caused a clash in Turkey. Even the Turkish migration authorities were called into action and immediately ordered the deportation of seven Syrians. The fuss was triggered by a simple street survey.

Source: Tiktok Türkiye/Youtube

For years, Turkey has taken in countless civil war refugees from neighbouring Syria. 3.5 million now live in the country. But the mood is changing, especially in the face of a severe economic crisis and the ongoing Corona pandemic. Now all Turks are fighting for economic survival. More and more are turning against the refugees from Syria. Recently, there was a scandal.

Turkey wants to expel seven Syrian citizens after they shared videos of themselves eating bananas on social media. The furore was preceded by a street survey on October 17, 2021, in which a Turk complained about the economic situation, saying Syrians in Turkey could afford more than locals. “I can’t eat bananas, they buy bananas by the kilo,” he said in the Youtube video. A short time later, videos appeared on social media showing young Syrians demonstratively eating bananas and captioning the recording with the quotations from the street survey.

Many Turks felt provoked by this, calling the clips a “mockery of the economic hardship of Turkish citizens”. Some extremist have even propagated that now is the time to “shoot and kill Syrians”.

Some comments were also directed against Erdogan’s government and its asylum policy. But the migration authority has now also reacted. It considers the videos provocative because Turks are mocked in them. The authority announced that the background of the videos would be fully clarified and action would be taken against all persons who had shared them.

https://exxpress.at/bananen-aktion-migranten-provozieren-tuerken/

FC Union Berlin faces penalties following anti-Semitic abuse during win over Haifa

Following an investigation into allegations that FC Union Berlin fans shouted anti-Semitic insults at fans of Maccabi Haifa during a Conference League soccer match in Berlin, the UEFA, the governing soccer authority in Europe, announced disciplinary measures on Friday.

Union Berlin’s 3-0 defeat of Maccabi Haifa was the scene of ugly anti-Semitic behavior, with Maccabi fans targeted with abuse by some of Union’s supporters.

The youth division (“Junges Forum”) of the German-Israeli Society (“Deutsch-Israelische Gesellschaft” or JuFo DIG) had reported that Union Berlin fans threw beer on Maccabi Haifa fans and called them “f***** Jews.”

Policer also restrained another Union Berlin fan who was attempting to burn one of their Israeli flags.

After the incidents occurred, the UEFA said in a statement that an “ethics and disciplinary Inspector has been appointed to conduct a disciplinary investigation regarding potential discriminatory incidents.”

According to the European Jewish Congress, police were also investigating the fans for incitement, including the Union supporter who tried to burn the Israeli flag and another who repeatedly yelled “Sieg Heil.”

The UEFA said it will implement two disciplinary actions.

A “partial stadium closure” of FC Union Berlin stadium will occur in “sectors 13 and 14 where the home supporters are seated” during the team’s next home competition match as a penalty “for the racist behaviour of its supporters.”

Also, Union Berlin has been ordered to “implement the following directive in the next UEFA competition match in which it will play as host club: to display a banner with the wording “#NoToRacism”, with the UEFA logo on it, in the relevant closed sectors.”

Union Berlin plays at Berlin’s Olympic Stadium, the venue which was originally constructed for the 1936 Olympics hosted by the Nazis.

The Fare network, a European group dedicated to countering discrimination in EU soccer, tweeted: “In Berlin where Union played Maccabi Haifa… eye witnesses were shocked by the levels of anti-Semitism.”

They also posted a photo of fans making Nazi salutes and what appears to be one of the same fans giving the photographer the middle finger, stating: “This man made nazi salutes towards the Maccabi fans and abused those who called him out.”

However, JuFO DIG pointed out that some Union fans interjected in an attempt to stop the anti-Semitic behavior.

“There were also Union fans who spoke out against this behavior. To be on the safe side, we switched to the Maccabi block,” the group said.

https://www.israelnationalnews.com/News/News.aspx/315974