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Post by kartadolofonos on May 14, 2013 22:27:17 GMT -5
Albanian Muslims from Kosovo recruited for Syria. Many Kosovo citizens traveling to Damascus to fight alongside the Syrian rebels fighting against President Bashar al-Assad, writes Kosovo Albanian newspaper. According to a report of the Kosovo Security citizens assembled and recruited to fight in Syria, following a call made to a mosque in Pristina and Mitrovica. A mosque that was built in the village Makofc belonging to the municipality of Pristina frequented Salafist Muslims who might be next to be recruited for war in Syria, "the report says Security. The Arsim Krasniqi who is the head of the Movement Document, is the one who gave his property in order to make the mosque of Salafist Muslims, said he supports those who raise arms against the regime of President Assad. According to the report of the Security Kosovo Albanian Muslims go to Syria in small groups and there are two offices of which are sent, one is in Pristina and Mitrovica else writes the report. Two Orthodox bishops kidnapped by gunmen on Monday are still missing, A source at the Syriac Orthodox Archdiocese of Aleppo said the bishops had not been released and he was unaware of any contact with their abductors. At the Greek Orthodox Patriarchate in Damascus, a source also said there was no indication they had been freed. Bishop Paul( Yazigi),of Aleppo brother of the Greek Orthodox Patriarch of Antioch John X. Greek Orthodox archbishop Paul Yazigi and Syriac Orthodox archbishop Yohanna Ibrahim were seized near the northern commercial and industrial hub of Aleppo by Terrorist Muslim rebels !
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Post by Balkaneros on May 15, 2013 11:13:36 GMT -5
Sick people who dare to call themselves Europeans. Koha Ditore returned to that subject in its March 13, 2013, issue when 22-year-old Mohammed Koprona became the 10th Albanian martyr to die in Syria. The story’s headline was: “Syria’s land is soaking in Albanian blood.” According to unidentified “intelligence sources,” many martyrs in Syria are Albanians from Kosovo, Albania, Macedonia and Serbia (Preševo valley). But Koprona’s case was unique. During the “great exit,” he migrated with his family from Kosovo to Sweden, where he grew up in a liberal European atmosphere. He suddenly fell under radical Islam’s influence and was recruited to fight with Islamist groups in Syria, where dozens of Albanians are fighting. The intelligence sources mentioned some of the names of Albanians killed in Syria (such as Naaman Damoli from Kosovo and Moussa Ahmadi from Serbia). Others are known by their noms-de-guerre such as Abu Omar al-Albani, who was one of four Albanian martyrs. The intelligence sources also mentioned Mounir and Bahloul al-Arnaout, who were killed by the Syrian army in Qadam. The intelligence sources also revealed that the number of Albanians in Syria stands at about 140. They are fighting among the Islamist groups in northern Syria.
By publishing this information for the first time, Koha Ditore was sharply criticizing the Kosovar government led by Hashim Thaci for remaining silent as young Kosovars fight alongside Islamist groups in Syria and the effect that phenomenon has on Kosovo: These young people will return home with military experience inspired by the spirit of jihad.
On April 13, 2013, the newspaper Shekulli reported on the issue by relying on “Kosovar security sources.” The newspaper quoted its sources as saying that “many Kosovo citizens are traveling to Syria to join the Syrian rebels in fighting Assad’s regime.” The paper said that Kosovo security sources have put their finger on two Kosovo mosques (Makovitz mosque in the outskirts of Pristina and Mitrovica mosque) that are gathering Albanians to go fight with the Islamists in Syria.
(ohhh where's rex now) Because many local observers are accusing the new Islamist party LISBA of being involved in Syria, the paper spoke with LISBA’s leader Arsim Krasniqi, who had donated a plot of land to build the Makovitz mosque. Krasniqi denied that his party was recruiting fighters but admitted that “[fighters] are going [to Syria] on an individual basis, not as part of*group. … I support those who are participating in fighting Assad’s regime.” www.al-monitor.com/pulse/security/2013/04/albanian-kosovo-islamists-join-syria-war.htmlTypical shiptar move for thaci not to comment or saying anything. albs remain silent on this because deep down they support this move. all is explained here illyria.proboards.com/thread/36873/greater-albania
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Kanaris
Amicus
This just in>>>> Nobody gives a crap!
Posts: 9,589
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Post by Kanaris on May 15, 2013 22:10:25 GMT -5
LOL !Koprona or kopritis meaning 'douchebag'... how fitting.
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Post by icouldnothelpmyself on May 18, 2013 16:16:22 GMT -5
The Greeks and their Orthodox Albanian speaking pawns in Albania. So of course its no wonder that real Albanians will fight these fiends !
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Kanaris
Amicus
This just in>>>> Nobody gives a crap!
Posts: 9,589
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Post by Kanaris on May 18, 2013 22:46:40 GMT -5
So real Albanians consists of only Muslim Albanians...gotcha!!!
I tend to agree... with you,our pawns were/are Greek to begin with and the foundation on which Muslims stand on.
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Post by icouldnothelpmyself on May 19, 2013 6:52:24 GMT -5
Of course. But don't forget the Catholics. They too like being Albanian. Its just the Orthodox who have gone Greek. And that is fine. The less of them there are in Albania, the better for the Albanian people. They can stay and rot with the others in Greece who sold out long ago as Arvanites. Anyway Islam is a sociopolitical glue which no Greek, not even you, can disolve from the Albanian ethnicity(I really would like to see Greece appoint a Greek as head of the Albanian Islamic community). Because of your Pyrrhic victory in assimilating most of the Orthodox Albanian speakers(for the past twenty years) closer ties with Turkey can proceed. Thus its the last hurrah for Edi Rama and his Greek wannabees(both cronies and constituents). PS: Albanians don't ever regret your conversion to Islam. Reject Greco-Arvanite Orthodox propaganda. Reject these B.asterds. Say NO to Greek neo-colonialism !
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Post by Balkaneros on May 24, 2013 17:17:58 GMT -5
BANJA LUKA -- Some 300 persons from the Balkans, described as "mujahideen", are taking part in the fighting in Syria, the Srna news agency is reporting. The news agency of the Serb entity in Bosnia (RS) said that the men came from Bosnia, Albania, Macedonia, and also from Serbia's southwestern, predominantly Muslim region of Sandžak.The article cites "intelligence services" to claim that the number of Bosnians fighting in the ranks of Al-Nusra - which has been marked as a terrorist organization by the U.S. authorities - is far greater than the media have previously reported. When it comes to Bosnia-Herzegovina, about half of its mujahideens fighting in Syria come from Sarajevo and its surroundings. They gather in a house in the town's Butmir neighborhood, which Wahhabi Nusret Imamović bought from Montenegrin citizen Sead Redžematović, who has been deported back to Montenegro, the media in Banja Luka are reporting. As a member of the Salafi movement, Redžmatović became close with Imamović, and later built a big house close to Sarajevo's airport. Upon Imamović's insistence, the house was later turned into an Islamic center "for the Wahhabi brothers." Besides this, their presence was noted during large gatherings organized by the Bosnian Cultural Center in Sarajevo. A second group of Wahhabis has been gathering in the house owned by Bajra Ikanović in the Hadžići neighborhood, according to reports. Ikanović has been accused of terrorism and illegal possession of weapons. A third place is Semir Čelebić's house in Konjic, who, according to this, has been using an online moniker of "Semi(r) El Konjici." Once they cross into Syria, the mujahideen train to acquire various skills - and once they go back to Bosnia, i.e., the Balkans, " they are treated as war veterans, trained for various types of terrorism in case of conflicts." The source quoted by the news agency said that the United States has a "tolerant stance" toward the mujahedeen, "just as they did in 1992, when the mujahideen were arriving in Bosnia, and where this subject has not been talked about for years." However, "once the death notices started appearing, this had to be talked about publicly," the report said and added that while in 1992 Bosnia-Herzegovina was "importing" radical Islamists the country is today among the top "exporters", right behind Tunisia, Libya, and Afghanistan. The Bosnian media have been reporting during the past few days that two citizens of Serbia from Sandžak also died in Syria, as did a Montenegrin from the town of Rožaje, Adis Salihović. Eldar Kundaković from Novi Pazar was also killed in the fighting, according to this. Previously, the media in the Muslim-Croat entity, the Federation of Bosnia-Herzegovina, said that 52 Bosnian members of the Salafi movement had joined an Al-Qaeda associated terrorist group and were fighting in Syria. The Agency for Investigations and Protection (SIPA) said earlier they questioned eight persons believed to have been involved in organizing the departure of Bosnian citizens to join the war in the Middle Eastern country. Overall, security services say that some 1,000 mujahideens left Europe to fight in Syria, most of them from Germany, Belgium, Denmark, and Luxembourg. These countries are now "worried because the mujahideen are coming back trained for all types of terrorist activities." The case of Nihad Cosic, a German-born Bosnian Muslim, is given as an example. He was previously fighting on the Pakistani-Afghan border. According to the Srna report, "the German government views this as proof that serious terrorist attacks are being planned across the country." www.b92.net/eng/news/region-article.php?yyyy=2013&mm=05&dd=24&nav_id=86342Saudis buying Balkan arms for Syrian rebels
www.yourmiddleeast.com/news/saudis-buying-balkan-arms-for-syrian-rebels_13242
This is playing out like a typical dark comedy meanwhile in Lybia.... Five Serb “mercenaries” fly home Five Serbs, arrested on suspicion that they were mercenaries fighting for Qaddafi, were flown back to Serbia today after being released from 21 months’ imprisonment.It was not clear this evening why or how the freedom of these five men, described by Serbian diplomats as construction engineers, came to be negotiated. Serbian Deputy Prime Minister Aleksandar Vucic said in Belgrade that the release came about after months of negotiations. The deal seems to have been so delicate, that the families of the five were not made aware of the men’s release until they had actually stepped onto Serbian soil.Local media named them as Zoran Nikolic from Lazarevac, Milorad Djunic from Loznica, Milic Martinovic from Arandjelovac, Vojislav Niciforovic from Belgrade and Nedeljko Milanovic from Lazarevac. Vucic told a local broadcaster “We were all hoping the whole thing would be over sooner, but it was hard.” This April the Supreme Military Court opened and adjourned an appeal brought by 24 foreign engineers convicted as a result of similar allegations. The 19 Ukrainians, three Belorussians and two Russians all maintain that they are oil field engineers who had nothing to do with the fighting, www.libyaherald.com/2013/05/21/five-serb-mercenaries-fly-home/
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