Friday 15 September 2017

Guess the Religion: Home-Made Bomb Detonates on London Tube.

"O you who believe! Fight those of the unbelievers who are near to you & let them find in you hardness; & know that Allah is with those who guard (against evil)." So Allah the spittle-saturated pagan rock idol tells his frothing followers, in verse 9:123 of the most disgusting tome of trash ever drooled onto paper, the Koran.

There it is, the reason Muslims wage jihad upon us in our own country. Forget foreign policy or 'racism', the mere fact that we do not believe in their ugly pernicious deity is sufficient for them to want to murder us en masse.

This is how we know the low-life scumbag who left a bomb in a Lidl bag on a tube train in West London this morning was a Muslim, following the commandments of Allah & trying to kill unbelievers, though the powers that be won't say it. They have declared this to be an act of terrorism, as opposed to, for instance, homeopathy.

President Trump has suggested that the perpetrator was already known to Scotland Yard. Good old Donald. And it is not beyond the bounds of possibility that he is right, as the concept of the 'known wolf' has become a familiar one.

It has previously been speculated upon, on this site, that the cynical autocrats who run this country decided that the Manchester Arena bombing should be allowed to happen. Certainly the elites who decreed that Muslims should swarm here in the first place care nothing for the safety of native people. This report from BBC News:

Parsons Green: Underground blast a terror incident, say police

An "improvised explosive device" was detonated on a Tube train in south-west London during Friday's morning rush hour, Scotland Yard has confirmed.

The blast, at Parsons Green station on a District Line train from Wimbledon, is being treated as terrorism.

Twenty-two people have been treated in hospitals, mostly for burns, though at least eight have now been discharged.

A hunt for the person who placed the device is under way and the area around the station has been evacuated.

Specialist officers there are securing the remains of the improvised device and ensuring it is stable.

Prime Minister Theresa May condemned the "cowardly" attack, which she said had "intended to cause significant harm".

She said the UK's terror threat level would remain at severe - the second highest - but would be under review.

Speaking in Downing Street after chairing a meeting of the Cobra emergency committee, she said there would be an increased armed police presence on the transport network in London.

Hundreds of detectives and the MI5 are investigating the attack, which took place at 08:20 BST on an eastbound train.

Assistant Commissioner Mark Rowley earlier refused to reveal whether anyone had yet been arrested.

Pictures taken of the train show a white bucket on fire inside a supermarket bag, with wires trailing on to the carriage floor.

The IED, which failed to kill anyone. Click to enlarge.

The BBC understands the device had a timer.

Our security correspondent Frank Gardner said the bomb appeared not to have gone off.

Had it worked as intended, it would have killed everyone around it and maimed everyone in the train carriage for life, he said.

St Thomas' Hospital in London said it had treated eight patients, but they had now been discharged.

Chelsea and Westminster Hospital received 14 people, with a "small number" of them being taken to its specialist burns unit.

US President Donald Trump tweeted that "sick and demented" people behind the attack had been in the sights of the Metropolitan Police, prompting Mrs May to say it was not helpful to "speculate" on an ongoing investigation.

Mr Rowley asked the public to remain "vigilant", but said they should "not be alarmed".

He said anyone who took pictures or videos at the scene could upload them to ukpoliceimageappeal.co.uk.

Mayor of London Sadiq Khan earlier appealed for calm, saying the city "will never be intimidated or defeated by terrorism".

May
Rowley
Trump
Khan

Witnesses speak of 'panic'

Witnesses to the incident have described seeing at least one passenger with facial injuries, while others spoke of "panic" as alarmed passengers left the train at the station, which is above ground.

Passenger Peter Crowley was sitting in the carriage, travelling from Wimbledon, when the explosion happened.

He said his head was burned by a "really hot intense fireball above my head" and added: "There were people a lot worse than me."

Passenger Chris Wildish told BBC Radio 5 live he saw a bucket in a supermarket bag with "low-level flames coming out of it" by the door of the rear carriage.

Read about the issues covered here, go to Amazon in the UK, USA & Canada.

No comments:

Post a Comment