BN : Five dead in Quebec City mosque shooting: mosque president

Discussion in 'BS Forum' started by mute, Jan 29, 2017.

  1. mute

    mute Well-Known Member

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    QUEBEC CITY, Jan 29 (Reuters) - Five people were killed after gunmen opened fire in a Quebec City mosque during evening prayers, the mosque's president told reporters on Sunday.

    Earlier, a witness told Reuters that up to three gunmen fired on about 40 people inside the Quebec City Islamic Cultural Center. Police put up a security perimeter around the mosque.
    Quebec police confirmed the shooting at a Quebec mosque in a tweet, and police on the scene said there had been fatalities.

    "There are many victims ... there are deaths," a Quebec police spokesman told reporters.
    A police tweet said there were deaths and injuries and that suspects had been arrested.
    "Why is this happening here? This is barbaric," said the mosque's president, Mohamed Yangui.
    Yangui, who was not inside the mosque when the shooting occurred, said he got frantic calls from people at evening prayers. He did not know how many were injured, saying they had been taken to different hospitals across Quebec City.

    In June 2016, a pig's head was left on the doorstep of the cultural center.
    Like France, Quebec has struggled at times to reconcile its secular identity with a rising Muslim population, many of them North African emigrants.

    The face-covering, or niqab, became a big issue in the 2015 national Canadian election, especially in Quebec, where the vast majority of the population supported a ban on it at citizenship ceremonies.

    Incidents of Islamophobia have increased in Quebec in recent years. In 2013, police investigated after a mosque in the Saguenay region of Quebec was splattered with what was believed to be pig blood.
    In the neighboring province of Ontario, a mosque was set on fire in 2015, a day after an attack by gunmen and suicide bombers in Paris.
    (Reporting by Kevin Dougherty in Quebec City; Editing by Peter Cooney)
    https://a.msn.com/r/2/AAmof9J?m=en-us
     
  2. KWJetsFan

    KWJetsFan Well-Known Member

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    Thanks Obama.
     
  3. abyzmul

    abyzmul R.J. MacReady, 2018 Funniest Member Award Winner

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    Mute is so concerned about people in Mexico that he ignores the hundreds of deaths reported monthly there and starts a thread about 5 people dying in Canada.

    Lmfao.
     
  4. abyzmul

    abyzmul R.J. MacReady, 2018 Funniest Member Award Winner

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    http://www.insightcrime.org/news-an...nce-through-organized-crime-related-homicides

    Written by Tristan Clavel
    Thursday, 27 October 2016
    Mexico Infographics Homicides

    [​IMG]
    Bullet casings at a crime scene in Mexico.

    A study linking a percentage of Mexico's homicides to organized crime offers a different view of the rising violence depicted through government homicide figures, which do not discriminate between all killings and those related to criminal groups.

    From January to September 2016, organized crime was responsible for 8,815 homicides, which amounts to 58 percent of all homicides during that period and a 47 percent increase in comparison to the same period the previous year, according to the study by Semáforo Delictivo andLantia Consultores. The data was obtained through the monitoring of media reports, according to Animal Politico, and by comparing the killing count with official homicide statistics.

    According to Mexico's National System for Public Security (Sistema Nacional de Seguridad Pública- SNSP), the total number of homicides during the first three quarters of 2016 reached 15,201, a more than 20 percent increase in comparison to the 12,660 homicides registered over the same period in 2015 (pdf). In September, 1,974 homicides were registered, ranking it as the most violent month since President Enrique Peña Nieto took office in 2012.

    Using the official data, the most violent states in 2016 were Colima, Guerrero, Sinaloa, Baja California and Morelos. But after applying their methodology, Semáforo Delictivo produced a different ranking -- states with the highest number of organized crime-related homicides -- in which the rundown changes to Guerrero first, followed by the states of Mexico, Michoacán, Chihuahua and Sinaloa.

    The combination of both the official data and Semáforo Delictivo's also provides the percentage of a state's registered homicides committed by organized crime. And in those terms, Baja California Sur, Quintana Roo, Tamaulipas, Aguascalientes and Michoacán are the worst offenders. According to the study, at least 90 percent of all murders in those states during the first nine months of 2016 were perpetrated by organized crime.

    Due to discrepancies between the sources, Baja California Sur holds a percentage superior to 100 percent, an impossible figure which stems from the fact that Lantia Consultores detected media coverage of a total of 131 organized-crime related killings, while the government only registered an overall total of 123 homicides. (See InSight Crime's graphics below)

    [​IMG]



    [​IMG]

    InSight Crime Analysis
    The methodology used by Semáforo Delictivo and Lantia Consultores is by no means foolproof -- especially when attempting to designate responsibility for homicides using press coverage. But if considered with a sufficient margin of error, the data is of value as it offers an alternative picture than that offered by government homicide records, which themselves may be contested on methodological basis and whose accuracy has been questioned.

    SEE ALSO: Coverage of Homicides

    The numbers confirm a trend of increasing violence this year on which InSight Crime haspreviously reported, and some of the percentages of organized crime's share of murders are hair-raising.

    The figures reflect the criminal dynamics playing out across the country. It is of little surprise that Michoacán appears twice among the leading states, and that neighboring Guerrero suffers the most from homicides related to organized crime. The former has been a hotbed for both criminal groups and vigilantes alike, and its criminal landscape saw considerable turmoil this year. As for Guerrero, it has become the epicenter ofMexico's growing poppy cultivation and is territory contested by some say as many as 50 different criminal groups. Outbursts of violencehave repeatedly placed the state and its capital Acapulco in the headlines as the most violent part of the country in recent years.

    SEE ALSO: Mexico's Security Dilemma: Michoacán's Militias

    Similarly, the states of Chihuahua and Sinaloa have been battle grounds for competing drug trafficking organizations, while Tamaulipas hashistorically been one of the most crime-ridden and corrupt states in Mexico. Sinaloa has been particularly destabilized in recent weeks by what appears to be a weakening of the Sinaloa Cartel as the extradition of its leader El ChapoGúzman to the United States becomes more likely. This has prompted rival groups to go on the offensive.

    The seeming vulnerability of the Sinaloa Cartelhas also created an incentive for attacks outside of its home territory, with the capital of Baja California Sur suffering from an increase in killings as rival groups may be uniting to confront the weakened cartel.

    These shifting dynamics within the criminal landscape do not bode well for this year's homicide figures, whether general or specifically related to organized crime. It is very likely that the trend of increasing violence shown so far this year will remain steady.
     
    #4 abyzmul, Jan 30, 2017
    Last edited: Jan 30, 2017
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  5. Walt White

    Walt White Well-Known Member

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    It's mind boggling what's happened there. Instead of answers we get entertainment about that slaughterhouse. Movie, shows, and even popular music
    The money coming out of there is drenched in blood
     
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  6. Cman68

    Cman68 The Dark Admin, 2018 BEST Darksider Poster

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    Kill the demand, there wouldn't be much of a supply. Americans are funding the cartels with their drug habits. A wall won't do shit as just like every other wall ever built in history, there will be a way to bypass it at some point. Especially if there is a pot of gold on the other side. (no pun intended)

    I guess Twitler will have to build a northern wall as well and make Canada pay for it. Good luck with that.
     
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  7. King Koopa

    King Koopa Well-Known Member

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    Or just stop the failure which is the war on drugs and decriminalize everything.....

    There will always be a demand for drugs...but cutting out the massive profits is the best solution

    Change from prison to treatment and there are already laws on the books for other crimes drug users typically commit

    No one has the balls to ever suggest this and there are other "conflicts of interest" which keep this dumb cycle going
     
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