Interesting to see the CCTV footage of the alleged gunmen after the event, calmly strolling down a Lahore side street, not a cop in sight, after 30 minutes, getting on the pillions of waiting motorbikes, or walking out of view
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/south_asia/7924550.stm
Quote:
Attack on a bus carrying a cricket team in Pakistan.
1. Reportedly, certain security services are trying to break up Pakistan, just as they broke up Yugoslavia.
Reportedly, it was Henry Kissinger who "gave the green light to India’s plan to break up East Pakistan and create Bangladesh." (Written by http://www.daily.pk )
Unfortunately, a lot of the top people in Pakistan seem to be working for foreign security services, and that makes Pakistan look doomed.
2. Omar Sheik is reported to have murdered US journalist Daniel Pearl
In his 2006 memoir In the Line of Fire, President Musharraf wrote that Omar Saeed Sheik "is a British national born to Pakistani parents in London" in December 1973.
Omar Sheikh was reportedly a contemporary of England cricket captain Nasser Hussain at the private Forest School, in Snaresbrook, in the UK. (BBC Profile: Omar Saeed Sheikh)
Omar Sheik attended the London School of Economics (which reportedly has links to MI6).
"It is believed in some quarters that while Omar Sheikh was at the LSE he was recruited by the British intelligence agency MI-6," Musharraf wrote. "It is said that MI-6 persuaded him to take an active part in demonstrations against Serbian aggression in Bosnia and even sent him to Kosovo to join the jihad" (Pervez Musharraf Nailed Top Pakistani Terrorist and Kidnapper As ... )
3. On 3 February 2009, in the Pakistani city of Lahore, gunmen killed at least five Pakistan policemen and wounded up to six Sri Lankan cricket players. Cricketers wounded in Lahore attack / Sri Lankan cricketers injured in deadly gun attack in Pakistan .
The attackers, reportedly armed with Kalashnikovs, rocket launchers and hand grenades, targeted the Sri Lankan team's bus.
Habibur Rehman, Lahore's chief of police, said there were about 12 attackers, who "appeared to be well-trained." They appeared to have had formal combat training.
Video seen on news channels showed the cricket team's white van with its front window shattered. Pakistan TV showed footage of gunmen with rifles and backpacks running through the streets and firing on unidentified vehicles.
1. Someone appears to want to get Pakistan and India into a war.
Why?
1. To weaken and divide Pakistan, and possibly India.
(The Iran-Iraq war was designed to weaken Iran and Iraq)
2. To make money for the military-industrial complex.
3. To frustrate China, which is a friend of Pakistan.
4. To make it easier for the powers-that-be to control strategically important parts of Asia.
5. To reinforce the idea that Moslems are a bunch of terrorists.
2. "Cricket matches between Pakistan and India, dubbed cricket diplomacy, are credited with healing the rift between the two neighbors and paving the way for peace talks in 2004." (Attack on cricket team shakes Pakistan)
So, the bad guys do not want cricket matches.
Pakistan's spooky Interior Ministry chief Rehman Malik, allegedly a friend of Mossad, said: "If foreigners are attacked, we will not have foreign investment." (Attack on cricket team shakes Pakistan)
3. In Pakistan, Lt. General (retd.) Hamid Gul, a former head of Pakistan's ISI security service, told one TV channel that India's RAW security service got Sri lanka's Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam to carry out the attack on the Sri Lankan cricket bus in Pakistan. (In Pakistan, India is emerging as prime suspect)
India's RAW is reported to be close to Mossad. (RAW & Mossad: The Secret Link)
Chris Broad, the former England batsman turned match referee who escaped unhurt from the commando-style ambush on the Sri Lankan cricket squad, voiced his anger today at the failures of the Pakistan security forces.
Broad, who arrived back at Manchester Airport today, castigated Pakistan for not providing the "presidential-style security" that had been promised. He accused the security services of fleeing from the attack and leaving the match-officials van as "sitting ducks"
He also refuted reports that he had been a hero and had helped to save the life of the Pakistani umpire Ahsan Raza, who remains in a critical condition in a Lahore hospital. "I wasn't a hero, I was lying on the van floor," he said.
Although still unaware of reports that Pakistan had been forewarned of a potential terrorist attack, Broad's anger was palpable.
"After the incident there was not a sign of a policemen anywhere," he said. "They had clearly gone, left the scene and left us to be sitting ducks. I am extremely angry that we were promised high-level security and in our hour of need that security vanished and we were left open to anything that the terrorists wanted.
Always happens in these state-contrived assassination attempts - the security is pulled - in order to let the killing occur. Some officer in a commanding position within the Lahore police much have given the order for proper security measures to be withdrawn
Psy-op against the population..........
Quote:
On a bright morning in March 2004 I heard a cheer so loud it drowned out all conversation in the stands of Karachi's National Stadium. I looked immediately to the field, thinking the cricketers must have walked on to warm up before the game commenced. No one but cricketers could draw that kind of cheer from such a heterogeneous Pakistani crowd. But the field was empty, and for explanation I had to turn towards the entry to the stands, where a large group of spectators had just walked in, carrying with them the largest Indian flag I had ever seen. The cheers for those Indian spectators and their flags went on all through the day, and when the nailbiting game ended in an Indian victory, every Pakistani still left smiling. "Cricket won today," someone told me. "The nation won today," someone else said.
When anyone claims cricket is "just a game", I always point back to that bright Karachi day and try to explain the euphoria that raced through those stands, the sense of history pausing in its tired, war-mongering steps and considering another route. Observers, both national and international, correctly analysed that the cheers for the Indians revealed the deep desire of "the average Pakistani" (a term synonymous with "cricket fan") for the governments of both nations to put aside their jingoism and bellicose posturing
See the comments under the Independent article headed '9/11'.
Always nice to see that so many people have got the point
Disappointing that there is not yet established a common resistance point or co-ordination which is all-encompassing _________________ http://www.exopolitics-leeds.co.uk/introduction
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