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Samurai_Jerk wrote:Coligny wrote:Whut did Abe said ?
And since when Haruna Yukawa has been undeaded ?
Do isis gave him the H1Z1 virus to contaminamate the Tokyo ?
Still pending: where are my pants...
That lazy сука didn't even bother to provide us a link.
Cyka UchuuJin wrote:Samurai_Jerk wrote: to provide us a link.
Sorry SJ, I thought everyone had already seen it, I haven't been able to pass a television anywhere without it being shown on endless loop.
Samurai_Jerk wrote:In recent days these shit bags have executed two men for being gay by throwing them off a roof, 13 teenagers for watching Jordan play Iraq in soccer on TV, 15 men and boys for raising pigeons, one of their own executioners for smoking, and the list goes on. They're also having problems governing their "state" due to lack of money and infrastructure. It's getting to the point where their supporter are having second thoughts. Let's hope the whole thing collapses on itself. Of course there's not much chance something better would follow.
Coligny wrote:Samurai_Jerk wrote:In recent days these shit bags have executed two men for being gay by throwing them off a roof, 13 teenagers for watching Jordan play Iraq in soccer on TV, 15 men and boys for raising pigeons, one of their own executioners for smoking, and the list goes on. They're also having problems governing their "state" due to lack of money and infrastructure. It's getting to the point where their supporter are having second thoughts. Let's hope the whole thing collapses on itself. Of course there's not much chance something better would follow.
As well as 12 journalists and few djouzes in Paris... Quite a busy month...
Mr Abe said the threat was unacceptable and vowed to save the hostages.
He added that their lives were his "top priority" and that Japan would not give in to terrorism.
chokonen888 wrote:Mr Abe said the threat was unacceptable and vowed to save the hostages.
He added that their lives were his "top priority" and that Japan would not give in to terrorism.
Did he just set himself up for failure or is he actually going to do something?
chokonen888 wrote:Any kind of public response to this type of shit gives ISIS an air of legitimacy. Not gracing them with an official response (though a military one would be nice) is ideal.
BTW, where are the Japanese nationalist extemists? Are the Japanese aloha snackbar jokes limited to 2ch?
If I were half the troll I could be, I'd be putting up posters that said something along the lines of "Don't jump in front of trains! Become a "神風" suicide bomber and take out some crazed Muslim extremists with you!"
At least "Haruna" might end up in a rap song?
Yokohammer wrote:This is kinda interesting ... leaders and the press (and people in general) around the world are starting to call these murderous fuckwits "Daesh" rather than "ISIS". It not only takes Islam out of their name (and they hate that), but it has also become somewhat derogatory in Arabic.
Australia's Tony Abbott made a statement supporting Japan in the current crisis and used that term. It was the first time I had seen it, so I looked it up. Some oldish info here:
US general rebrands Isis 'Daesh' after requests from regional partners
Cyka UchuuJin wrote: ... that we're now calling these things 'rebrandings' says a lot about the state of our world...
Cyka UchuuJin wrote:Yokohammer wrote:This is kinda interesting ... leaders and the press (and people in general) around the world are starting to call these murderous fuckwits "Daesh" rather than "ISIS". It not only takes Islam out of their name (and they hate that), but it has also become somewhat derogatory in Arabic.
Australia's Tony Abbott made a statement supporting Japan in the current crisis and used that term. It was the first time I had seen it, so I looked it up. Some oldish info here:
US general rebrands Isis 'Daesh' after requests from regional partners
that we're now calling these things 'rebrandings' says a lot about the state of our world...
ISIS will reportedly release a statement "soon" about the two Japanese men it's threatening to execute Friday.
Japanese broadcaster NHK said it has been in contact online with a spokesman for the militant group who made the assertion.
When asked whether ISIS has been in negotiations with the Japanese government, the spokesman said he wouldn't comment, NHK reported.
Alaaeddin Al Zaim, who had worked with Goto in Syria previously, says he warned him not to enter the ISIS stronghold of Raqqa. "I tell him it's not safe for you," Al Zaim told CNN.
But Goto chose to go anyway, saying, "I am not American, I am not British. I'm Japanese. I can go," Al Zaim recalled.
chokonen888 wrote:Apparently the Japanese media never got that "daesh" memo...イスラム国 の方indeed
Alaaeddin Al Zaim, who had worked with Goto in Syria previously, says he warned him not to enter the ISIS stronghold of Raqqa. "I tell him it's not safe for you," Al Zaim told CNN.
But Goto chose to go anyway, saying, "I am not American, I am not British. I'm Japanese. I can go," Al Zaim recalled.
reminds me of the Japanese that visited my friends father in Sydney during ANZAC day....totally confused by the hostility towards them.
Samurai_Jerk wrote:chokonen888 wrote:Apparently the Japanese media never got that "daesh" memo...イスラム国 の方indeed
Alaaeddin Al Zaim, who had worked with Goto in Syria previously, says he warned him not to enter the ISIS stronghold of Raqqa. "I tell him it's not safe for you," Al Zaim told CNN.
But Goto chose to go anyway, saying, "I am not American, I am not British. I'm Japanese. I can go," Al Zaim recalled.
reminds me of the Japanese that visited my friends father in Sydney during ANZAC day....totally confused by the hostility towards them.
After a few drinks Australians are hostile to just about anyone so it wouldn't have mattered when they went.
The Daily Beast has learned that the current crisis might have been averted last year if the Japanese government had not interfered in negotiations to save the first hostage captured by the terrorist group. Indeed, even now Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s administration seems more interested in saving face than saving lives.
ISIS, which has already executed thousands of Iraqis and Syrians, as well as international aid workers and reporters, captured Haruna Yukawa, the founder of a private security company, in northern Syria in August 2014. The next month, the group asked Japanese journalist Kosuke Tsuneoka to mediate the trial it was planning to stage against Yukawa, 42, whom it suspected of being a spy. Tsuneoka, who was held hostage in 2010 in Afghanistan and is one of the few Japanese journalists with a pipeline to ISIS, told The Daily Beast last year that the group invited him and Japanese Muslim scholar Hassan Ko Nakata to follow the trial as an Arabic translator.
But Tsuneoka said he and Nakata were not allowed to travel to Syria to try to negotiate Yukawa’s release after the police raided their homes on October 6, a day before their planned departure, and seized their passports. Tsuneoka was detained for questioning for 24 hours but was not arrested.
Police sources said the raid stemmed from an ongoing police investigation into Tsuneoka’s involvement with a student who may have been attempting to join ISIS. Tsuneoka and the student are under suspicion of violating the rarely enforced Article 93 of Japan’s criminal code, which prohibits “preparing or plotting to wage war privately upon a foreign state”; if arrested, tried, and convicted, the two could face up to five years in prison. Tsuneoka has denied the allegations, though he acknowledges buying an airplane ticket for the student, who had no credit card.
The day after the raid, Foreign Minister Fumio Kishida told reporters that Japan would take measures to “curb extremists.” Japanese nationals would be barred from traveling to Syria, Iraq, or other countries in pursuit of terrorist acts and from offering financial resources to terrorists and extremist groups, in line with domestic law.
In late October, after negotiations for Yukawa’s release had collapsed due to Tsuneoka’s detention, the freelance journalist Kenji Goto arrived in Syria, seeking to establish contact with ISIS and free Yukawa, a friend he had met the previous spring. On October 25, he vanished. His family received an email in November demanding a $10 million ransom for his return. The Japanese government knew he had been kidnapped but did not make the news public...
http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2 ... -deal.html
But Tsuneoka said he and Nakata were not allowed to travel to Syria to try to negotiate Yukawa’s release after the police raided their homes on October 6, a day before their planned departure, and seized their passports.
Tsuneoka was detained for questioning for 24 hours but was not arrested.
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