Disaster Ramadan Bomb-a-thon 2017 Megathread - Making bad decisions while hungry

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Jesus. The Phillipeans isn't really a third-world Carbombistan, and ISIS is actually gaining a foothold there.
If this shit can happen in a place like The Phillipeans, it's not going to stay there. Mark my words, this is a glimpse of Europe's future.

It helps if you have a bungling tinpot dictator as a leader who has alienated traditional allies of the Philippines who would usually be backing him up right now.
 
What's happening in Marawi will happen in a western European city/town within our lifetimes. Probably within a decade if things don't change from their current course. Charlie Hebdo and the Bataclan were preambles.

Guarantee it.

C7jAZfxWsAAIES4.jpg
 
Jesus. The Phillipeans isn't really a third-world Carbombistan,

Yeah it is. It consistently ranks poorly on the indices by which such things are measured, even compared to other SE Asian shitholes. It's also still as corrupt as fuck, and that kind of systemic corruption tends to give birth to opposition forces.

What's strange is that Filos actually seem to *want* to return to a Marcos style regime and are convinced that doing so will see them prosper.
 
Yeah it is. It consistently ranks poorly on the indices by which such things are measured, even compared to other SE Asian shitholes. It's also still as corrupt as fuck, and that kind of systemic corruption tends to give birth to opposition forces.

What's strange is that Filos actually seem to *want* to return to a Marcos style regime and are convinced that doing so will see them prosper.
Yeah, but that's "South East Asia" bad, not "Zimbabwe/Somalia/Libya" bad.
 
Poland is celebrating Ramadan by getting its shit together
Poland gathers data on foreigners, citing threat of terrorism
The conservative Polish government has defended the defense ministry’s collection of data on non-Poles living in the country, citing security reasons. The opposition accuses it of fomenting mistrust of foreigners.

The data-gathering effort was made public on Sunday, after a letter sent by a provincial head to the municipal authorities was leaked to the media. Krzysztof Kozłowski, the head of the West Pomeranian Voivodeship, citing an order from the defense ministry, ordered the municipalities to report on people “of foreign nationalities,” who live in the province as Polish citizens or legal residents.

The measure has drawn criticism from the opposition Civic Platform party, which says the government is trying to label all foreigners as potential threats.

“Almost half a million of people in Poland identify themselves as non-Poles,” Slawomir Nitras, the Civic Platform shadow foreign minister, told TVN24.

He added that the government “doesn’t look at whether anyone broke the law” among the foreigners targeted.

But the ruling Law and Justice (PiS) party defended the measure, with Deputy Defense Minister Michal Dworczyk on Monday calling it “a natural thing.”

“Considering the situation with [the] terrorist threat in the European Union today, the state should have information on foreign nationals on Poland’s territory,” he told TVN24, adding that the information the ministry wants collected is not secret.

“We cannot forget that the perpetrators behind terrorist attacks in the past few years were either people who arrived along the wave of illegal immigration, or those who belong to the first generation born in Europe,” Dworczyk said.

Poland’s conservative government has been resisting the EU’s open-door policy towards asylum-seekers from the Middle East and Africa, drawing condemnation from Brussels.
 
Update on Mindanao:

https://www.yahoo.com/news/philippi...er-fears-militant-infiltration-053913753.html

MARAWI, Philippines (Reuters) - The Philippine military said on Monday it was close to retaking a southern city held for a seventh day by Islamist militants, as helicopters unleashed more rockets on positions held by the rebels aligned with Islamic State.

The occupation of Marawi city by the Maute, a group hardly heard of a year ago, has become the biggest security challenge of Rodrigo Duterte's 11-month presidency, with gunmen resisting air and ground assaults and controlling central parts of a city of 200,000 people.


The military said the rebels may be getting help from "sympathetic elements" and fighters they had freed from jail during the rampage that started on Tuesday and caught the military by surprise.

"Our ground commanders have assured that the end is almost there," military spokesman Restituto Padilla told reporters. "We're trying to isolate all these pockets of resistance."

More than 100 people have been killed, most of them militants, according to the military, and most of the city's residents have fled.

The military said the Maute group was still present in nine of the city's 96 barangays, or communities.

The Maute's ability to fight off the military for so long will add to fears that Islamic State's radical ideology is spreading in the southern Philippines and it could become a haven for militants from Southeast Asia and beyond. Malaysians and Indonesians were among the rebels killed.

The government believes the Maute carried out their assault before the Muslim holy month of Ramadan to capture the attention of Islamic State and earn recognition as a regional affiliate.

BLACK-CLAD FIGHTERS

According to witnesses, men with black headbands typical of Islamic State have been seen on city streets in recent days. A photograph taken by a resident shows 10 men carrying assault rifles and dressed entirely in black.

A Reuters photographer saw an Islamic State flag in an oil drum in an abandoned street on Monday, where chickens roamed in front of damaged shops and homes.

Some troops tried to eliminate Maute snipers on Monday as others guarded deserted streets, taken back block by block.

Helicopters circled the lakeside city and smoke poured out of some buildings. Artillery explosions echoed.

Nearby Iligan City was in lockdown over fears that Maute fighters had sneaked out of Marawi by blending in with civilians.

"We don't want what's happening in Marawi to spill over in Iligan," said Colonel Alex Aduca, chief of the Fourth Mechanized Infantry Battalion.

Sixty-one militants, 20 members of the security forces and 19 civilians have been killed since Tuesday, when Maute rebels went on the rampage after a botched military operation to arrest Isnilon Hapilon, who the government believes is a point man for Islamic State in the Philippines.

Though most people have left, thousands are stranded, worried they could be intercepted by militants if they tried to flee.

CNN Philippines reported that 10 people taken hostage while fleeing Marawi had escaped their Maute captors during an air strike on Monday and were in safe hands. The report said they witnessed the beheading of another hostage a day earlier.

A video of several of the men was circulated online on Monday, showing them begging Duterte to stop military operations, otherwise they would be decapitated.

Reuters could not verify the authenticity of the video or the accounts given in the news report.

The military has warned that atrocities may have been committed by the Maute. The bodies of what appeared to be eight executed civilians were found in a ravine outside Marawi on Sunday, some with their hand bound.

Zia Alonto Adiong, a politician involved in evacuation efforts, said civilians stuck in Marawi wanted air strikes to stop.

"The anticipation of death is worse than death itself," he told news channel ANC. "We appeal to our military forces to do a different approach."

Army spokesman, Colonal Edgard Arevalo, said "surgical strikes" were taken on "known and verified enemy positions".

Duterte imposed martial law last week on Mindanao, an island of 22 million people where both Marawi and Iligan are located, to quell the unrest and try to tackle radicalism.

He made an unconventional offer on Saturday to Muslim separatists and communist rebels to become "soldiers of the Republic" and join his fight against extremists.

(Additional reporting by Erik de Castro in MARAWI and Neil Jerome Morales, Karen Lema and Manuel Mogato in MANILA; Writing by Martin Petty; Editing by Robert Birsel)
 
This just came in. The Islamic state performed a car bombing at an ice cream shop in Baghdad that has killed at least 11 people.
https://twitter.com/IraqiSecurity/status/869324197658578948

According to one of the replies on Twitter, those poor people were targeted by ISIS because they were Shia.

This picture of ice cream bowls scattered among debris is really poignant:

DBB1tAZXgAA9VoW.jpg


Those people were just enjoying ice cream on a hot summer night and not bothering anyone, and they were murdered for being the "wrong" kind of Muslim.

God, I wish we could just gather ISIS into an isolated area and then drop a nuke on them.
 
https://youtube.com/watch?v=KTiaefVU7OA
Why do I have a sinking feeling that there is going to be another riot in France...

Am I the only one who finds the irony in the kebabs making Sharia in a country that is mostly well known for its use of alcohol and promiscuity? The big two taboos in Kebabism.

Anyway, any thoughts which will be the next european country to suffer a bit of cultural enrichment this month?
 
ISIS really hates Baghdad.

That's because
  1. It's the capital of Iraq and has over 8 million inhabitants, meaning there's lots of easy targets
  2. It's home to millions of Shia Muslims (it's the world's second largest Shia city after Tehran). There's also a good number of Assyrian Christians.
 
ISIS really hates Baghdad. The Shuhada bridge was just bombed. At least 12 are believed to be dead.
I might as well make this a thing.


Is this the same bombing or another one?

http://www.abc.net.au/news/2017-05-...led-in-is-terrorist-attack-in-baghdad/8574680
 
Why are there always people from first world nations in every shithole where suicide bombers blow shit up?

Like, you're from Melbourne or Dublin or Stockholm, what the fuck are you doing in Iraq or Libya or Syria? Tourism? There to see the sights as a country is locked in civil war against a death cult?

Fucks wrong with you people.

Zynab was in Iraq with her parents and two siblings to visit her sick grandfather.

He'd want to be pretty damned sick to justify taking the kids out of school and hauling them into a conflict zone during fucking Ramadan.
 
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