Monday, November 4, 2013

Tunisia .... the once secular country is likely to become another province of Saudi Arabia, just like parts of Syria already have


If you think that's an outrageous statement .... all I can say for now is "Wait and see."   

The Tunisian govt of the past, before the "Arab spring" days, should have halted the tonnes of wahhibi and salafi literature sent to the schools and mosques, which were being built  with Saudi Arabian and Qatari money.  If that govt. had refrained from taking that "aid" from their stinking rich cousins, the present situation of an increasing number of brainwashed extremists, would have never come about and Tunisia would remain as secular as it used to be.  

Watch a few minutes of the vid below to gauge how the new salafi imams are inciting the heretobefore "moderate Muslims" to come back to the "fold" of depravity.  These fucks were taught their special brand of madness in Saudi Arabia's madrasas.  What an appropriate name "MADrasa" right?!

From TunisiaLive:
Amid continued violence and political instability,  President Moncef Marzouki further extended the state of emergency declared after the 2011 revolution, which provides the government a range of special powers.

Marzouki made the decision Saturday to extend the state of emergency through June 2014. This marks the 34th consecutive month the status will be in effect since former president Zine el-Abidine Ben Ali fled the country on January 15, 2011.
The measure comes after a string of incidents this year in which armed gunmen have killed national guard officers, police officers, and soldiers. ........



From Reuters:
....When protesters stormed the U.S. embassy   in Tunis last year, they hoisted a black jihadist flag that exposed the militant Islamist undercurrent in one of the Muslim world's most secular societies.
An attack on a tourist resort last week by a suicide bomber, and recent gun battles with Tunisian police, revealed how deeply that fervor, fostered worldwide by al Qaeda, has taken root in the country where the Arab Spring began.
Militants, few in number, have little chance of forging the Islamic state they want in Tunisia or igniting wider war. But with the country still stumbling toward democracy and Libya's chaos on its doorstep, violent Islamists have room to flourish.
No one else died when a man blew himself up on the beach at Sousse on Wednesday after failing to get in to a resort hotel. Another would-be suicide bomber was arrested. Last month, nine policemen died in a clash with Islamists.
Both incidents shocked a small country little used to violence, dependent on tourism and in the process of forming a national unity government to organize elections after two years of rule by moderate Islamists allied to the Muslim Brotherhood.
"When we have seen this in the past, in Syria or elsewhere, it is usually a very ominous sign of things to come," Thomas Joscelyn of the Foundation for Defense of Democracies in Washington said of the suicide bomber. "It represents a marked escalation in the tactics the jihadists are willing to use."...........

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