Showing posts with label Minneapolis. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Minneapolis. Show all posts

Monday, January 11, 2010

Somali Community Leader In Minneapolis Blames Mayor For Murder of 3 Somalis...Shot By 2 Somalis


Yeah, you read the title right. Last week in Minneapolis, three young Somali men were shot and killed outside of a Somali market and since then, two Somali suspects have been taken into custody. Nothing unusual here as violence rocks the Somali neighborhoods of Minneapolis on a regular basis. You will recall that the Somali community in Minneapolis has made plenty of national news due to the fact that a number of their young men left Minnesota to travel to Somalia to join al Shabaab (an al Qaeda group) to fight in the "civil" war there.

But with this recent violence, the unreal part of it was the response by the assclown Somali community leader, Omar Jamal, who decided to attack the Minneapolis mayor as the cause of the murders. From the article at WCCO.com:


Omar Jamal, an advocate for the Somali community in Minnesota, said this level of violence is the result of Mayor Rybak's failure of policy to engage the community.

He said the arrest of a second juvenile is certainly good news to the families of the victims of the shooting. However, Rybak "completely failed to engage the community and chose a policy of pitting a group against the other," Jamal said.The mayor's office responded by saying, "The Somali community, Mayor Rybak and the police are working together very closely at a critical time and we will not be distracted by the statement of a single individual."
Failure to engage the community? Oh, it is now a Mayor's job to come babysit every neighborhood of a city so they are taken care of? Or perhaps what Jamal is really saying is that his Somali community is special - that they need special things, special treatment, special rights and special status in the city.

It might be remembered that Jamal is the same dude that was very quick to disavow that the local Somali islamic mosque was in anyway involved in the recruitment efforts to send those young Somalis to al Qaeda in the "homeland."

But this speaks volumes of the situation across the country with muslim immigrants. The city of Minneapolis is waking up to the nightmare that the Somali immigrants have brought to their new home. There has been ZERO attempt at assimilation to America and as seen above, a demand for special treatment. The violence in Somalia that supposedly spurred their escape to Minnesota and other areas of America has come along with them. And when Somali community leaders are helpless to control the violence of their own ranks, they point the finger at local governmental officials.

This is exactly what I have warned about in the past. The muslim emigrate here and the idea is not to fit into American society and live a better life. The goal is to come here, bring the hate and violence with them and then utilize the democratic and legal system of America to carve a separate niche for themselves in society - and then begin the process of forcing Americans to conform to THEIR way of life, their "religion", their agenda.

It all starts....just like this.



Community Relieved About Arrests In Triple Murder


Police have arrested a second teen in the triple homicide at a South Minneapolis market, according to Mayor R.T. Rybak and Police Chief Tim Dolan.

The chief and mayor held a news conference on Sunday afternoon to discuss the triple homicide that happened at the Seward Market and announce the second arrest. They said the second teen arrested, a 17-year-old, turned himself in.

They are releasing few details about the two teens arrested and said they will not release any identifying information about them until charges have been filed.

The victims are Osman Jama Elmi, 28, of St. Paul, Mohamed Abdi Warfa, 30, of Savage and Anwar Salah Mohammed, 31, of Brooklyn Park. Elmi and Warfa were cousins. Mohammed was a customer in the store. All three men were shot multiple times.

Police said they believe that both of the people in custody are the only ones responsible for the murders and they anticipate charges will be filed soon. But to the families of the three victims, there is little that can bring comfort.

Fethi Mohammed, the brother of victim Anwar Mohammed, said he is thankful to the community and the police for the hard work leading to the arrests connected to the murders.

"It's a good start. We need more, the whole family needs to know how and what happened. Why? Was it a robbery? Whatever it is we want to know," explained Fethi Mohammed.

Mayor R.T. Rybak applauded the cooperation from the Somali community and Seward neighborhood.

"We greatly thank so many members of the community for courageously standing up and ensuring that we can bring about justice," he said at the news conference.

Omar Jamal, an advocate for the Somali community in Minnesota, said this level of violence is the result of Mayor Rybak's failure of policy to engage the community.

He said the arrest of a second juvenile is certainly good news to the families of the victims of the shooting. However, Rybak "completely failed to engage the community and chose a policy of pitting a group against the other," Jamal said.

The mayor's office responded by saying, "The Somali community, Mayor Rybak and the police are working together very closely at a critical time and we will not be distracted by the statement of a single individual."

Jamal said the poor policies led to an increase of Somali youth "utterly out of control."

Police said there is video of the crime that occurred last Wednesday in Minneapolis. It most likely won't be shown publicly as it is very graphic and will be held for prosecution and appeals, Dolan said.

"More importantly, though, I don't think it should be shown out of respect for the victims and their families and out of respect for public sensibilities," Dolan said.

Motives will not be discussed until charges have been filed, police said, adding that they do not believe it was part of a larger pattern of incidents.

Police would not say which of the juveniles in custody was the gunman.

Dolan and Rybak thanked the Somali community and residents of the Seward Neighborhood for their patience and support as the investigation continued.

More than a dozen investigators from the Minneapolis Police Department worked around the clock on the investigation.

Thursday, May 21, 2009

The Reason Somali Youths Are Leaving Minneapolis To Join Al Qaeda in Somalia


Okay, there's this article here from NPR that tries to shroud the fact that a large number of Somali immigrant youths have disappeared from Minneapolis, Minnesota and are now back in Somalia fighting on the side of al Qaeda in some sort of big mystery. The article keeps asking why these young people would leave? The FBI is trying to figure it out, the local adult Somali leaders and parents of these young Somali immirgrants are all scratching their heads and ignoring the reason: THEY ARE ISLAMIC TERRORISTS. Dress this pig up, put some lipstick on it, whatever you want to do but the fact of this big ass so-called "mystery" is as plain as the crescents on the Somali neighborhood buildings in Minneapolis - they are islamists, they have listened to the message of terror and they've left the U.S. for Somalia to kill people in the name of allah.
Here's some of the details from the story:


Twenty years ago, Somali refugees arrived in America and landed in what might seem like an unlikely place: Minneapolis. Today, the Twin Cities are home to the largest Somali community in America. And it is a community in turmoil.
That's because in the past year and a half, several dozen young men from Minneapolis have boarded planes to Africa and are thought to have joined up with a terrorist group in Somalia.

At one point in the late 1990s, Roosevelt had the largest concentration of Somali students in America. One of them was a skinny 15-year-old named Shirwa Ahmed. He left Minneapolis for Somalia in 2007. He blew himself up in a suicide bombing last year. His remains are in an unmarked grave on the outskirts of town.

They wish they had kept a better eye on their kids and, instead of trying to get them to forget about Somalia, warned them about how dangerous it is there. Most of all, they are anxious for the FBI to tell them who is taking their children.
What a crock. Look at that last sentence: "they are anxious for the FBI to tell them who is taking their children." Oh for pete's sakes...boo hoo fucking hoo. Someone stole my baby away! Yeah right. These Somalis have landed in Minnesota and other areas of the U.S. and from day one they have done NOTHING to assimilate to American society - NOT ONE THING. In fact, they have worked hard for every special exception to their own culture that they could con out of the local and state authorities. Take a look at the crime statistics in the Somali community in Minneapolis and you will see a crime rate 100 times that of any other part of the population. These are terrorists, these are radical islamists who simply have found an excuse to join the fight back in Somalia and the whole jist of this article is that the FBI is needed to be tied up in some sort of investigation - well, the imams at the Somali mosques in Minneapolis are preparing these young men for terror in Somalia so you don't need the FBI to go ask them.

Day in and day out these Somali leaders in America shrug their shoulders and try to put on this facade that they just don't know what's going on - well, the fact of the matter is these islamist leaders are lying. Lying.


FBI Looks For Clues To Missing Somali Youths

Twenty years ago, Somali refugees arrived in America and landed in what might seem like an unlikely place: Minneapolis. Today, the Twin Cities are home to the largest Somali community in America. And it is a community in turmoil.
That's because in the past year and a half, several dozen young men from Minneapolis have boarded planes to Africa and are thought to have joined up with a terrorist group in Somalia.
When Somalis first arrived in Minneapolis in the 1990s, they were fresh from refugee camps, trying to escape a civil war in their own country. The Lutheran Church sponsored the first 1,000 families and sent them to Minnesota.
Hussein Samatar was an early arrival and can't imagine why some of the community's young men have decided to return to Somalia.
"We left that country fleeing from it, so we can't even understand how a child, a 17-year-old can go back and be willing to fight again," he says.
For Samatar, this question is not academic. His own nephew left six months ago.
"We know that he is in Somalia," he says. "I am aware of one very short phone call. He called his mom and said 'I am fine, I am in Somalia, I am not going to tell you where I am at, but I am fine.' That is what we know."
FBI investigators have uncovered a bit more than that. They say there are recruiters for a Somali terrorist group called al-Shabab in the United States.
The Somali communities in Boston, Cleveland, San Diego and Seattle are also missing young Somalis. But nowhere have the numbers been as high as they have been in the Twin Cities — where up to 27 young men have vanished. And that, of course, raises the question: Why here?
The FBI has looked for some answers at a local school: Theodore Roosevelt High School. It's a two-story brick building in the suburbs of Minneapolis nestled in a neighborhood of bungalows on a narrow strip of road.
Inside, the hallways echo with foreign languages, some smatterings of Spanish and French and Somali.
At one point in the late 1990s, Roosevelt had the largest concentration of Somali students in America. One of them was a skinny 15-year-old named Shirwa Ahmed. He left Minneapolis for Somalia in 2007. He blew himself up in a suicide bombing last year. His remains are in an unmarked grave on the outskirts of town.
New Somalis are arriving in Minneapolis all the time, and many begin their high school careers in what is essentially a Somali phonics class. A lot of the new Somali students are illiterate. So they basically sound out Somali words on the board — as first-graders might do in this country. As a result, in many ways, they have become isolated even in their own high school.
Michael Leiter, the director of the National Counterterrorism Center in Washington, said in a recent speech that the Somali experience is unusual in this country.
"Our Muslim community in the United States tends to be much more integrated, much better off financially, much more engaged in the U.S. political system, much less isolated in pockets than, say, in countries like the United Kingdom," he says. "And that's the good news.'
The bad news is that the isolation of the Somali community has made its members vulnerable to radical ideas.
"We have seen a very, very small percentage who have come to identify with extremists in Somalia, be they al-Shabab or potentially elements of al-Qaida," he says.
And in Minneapolis, that small percentage was convinced to go to Somalia and join the fight there. Parents in the Somali community, for their part, are soul-searching. They wish they had kept a better eye on their kids and, instead of trying to get them to forget about Somalia, warned them about how dangerous it is there. Most of all, they are anxious for the FBI to tell them who is taking their children.