Monday 26 December 2016

Monster Who Sent His Daughter to Die in Damascus now also Dead.

'Narrated AbudDarda: The Prophet said: "The intercession of a martyr will be accepted for seventy members of his family."' So it says, in one of Islam's most trusted compilations of ahadith, Sunan Abu Dawud, in book eight, number 2516. This is why we see Muslim families waving their scions off to die needlessly in suicide bombings, they believe that not only is the immolated offspring going to go to Allah's heavenly brothel but they will too.

If this seems immoral, like everything in Islam does, then consider the proud father in Damascus, Abu Nimr al-Suri, who sent his daughters, aged seven & nine, out into the streets with bombs strapped to them. The seven-year-old is now dead, having detonated in a police station. And now, so is Abu Nimr al-Suri. Let's hope his pimping out his little girl for jihad paid off. This report from MailOnline today (hat-tip to Blazing Cat Fur):

No 72 virgins in heaven for you pal: Jihadi dad who turned his young daughter into a suicide bomber and blew her up in a Damascus police station is dead

  • WARNING: GRAPHIC CONTENT
  • Footage showed jihadi fanatic lecturing his two young daughters in Damascus
  • The younger girl, who was seven, was killed in explosion at a police station
  • The blast in Damascus, the Syrian capital, wounded three police officers
  • The father has been identified as Abu Nimr, who has died in fighting in Syria
  • Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said he was shot in Teshreen, Damascus

A jihadi father who used his seven-year-old daughter as a suicide bomber in Syria has now met his own death.

Abu Nimr al-Suri was shown on a video kissing his daughter goodbye before sending her into a Syrian police station, where she was blown up by a remote detonator.

Russia Today's Middle East correspondent Lizzie Phelan has tweeted a photograph of Abu Nimr in his traditional death shroud.

She said he had also been involved in the murder of Syrian TV actor Mohamad Rafea, 30, who was kidnapped and killed in 2012.

Many Islamist extremist fighters believe the Koran promises 'martyrs' 72 virgins in heaven if they die during a jihad, or holy war. Islamic scholars say this is a misreading of one of the shuras [sic] in the Koran.

Earlier this month a appalling [sic] video emerged showing the ranting extremist holding the girls in his arms as he brainwashes them.

Footage showed him lecturing her and her nine-year-old daughter about how to carry out suicide bomb attacks before they are embraced by a woman in a burka, believed to be their mother.

A short time later the seven-year-old walked into a police station in Syria's capital, Damascus, before being killed in an explosion.

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said yesterday gunmen opened fire on Abu Nimr, whose real name was Abdul Rahman Shaddad, in the Teshreen neighbourhood on the outskirts of capital Damascus.

As music played in the background, Abu Nimr, sitting in front of a black and white jihadist flag, drums into the girls the importance of completing their mission.

Both girls then said 'Allahu Akbar' before separate footage showed them dressed in coats and woolly hats as they embraced their mother and left the room.

A short time later, on December 16, the seven-year-old girl calmly walked into a Damascus police station before being killed in a bomb blast that also injured three officers.

In one video, the mother repeatedly hugs the seven-year-old, named as Islam, and the older girl, named as Fatima. A man behind the camera asks the woman why she is sending her daughters to jihad when they are so young.

She replied: 'No-one is young when it comes to jihad as every Muslim is supposed to participate in jihad.'

He then prays for Allah to accept the sacrifice the woman is making

In the second video Abu Nimr asks one of the girls what she is 'going to do today' before she replies that she is going to carry out a suicide bombing in Damascus.

In an apparent reference to the recent bus evacuation of rebel fighters and residents from Aleppo, Abu Nimr asks one of the children: 'Shouldn’t you leave fighting to the men? Or did all of them flee in the green buses?'

He later added: 'You are not going to be afraid because you are going to the Heavens, right?'.

The girl on the left replied simply: 'Yes'.

Both children then said Allah Akbar on their father’s request before he started saying prayers.

The explosion in the bustling Midan neighbourhood of the Syrian capital wounded three police officers, said the Al-Watan daily, which is close to the government.

A police source told Al-Watan the little girl had appeared lost and asked to use the toilet when the explosives went off.

Although rebel groups have fired rockets and mortar rounds into the capital, explosions inside the city itself are rare.

Observatory head Rami Abdel Rahman told AFP 'one woman' was killed in the blast, but it remained unclear whether she was a suicide bomber or a bystander.

In early 2012, a suicide bomber killed 26 people when he blew himself up in Midan. More than 310,000 people have died since Syria's conflict broke out in 2011.

The attack happened in the Syrian capital, President Bashar al-Assad's stronghold of Damascus.

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