Germany: Again the mother of a baby killed by a Muslim

In the case of the murdered woman (†27) from the banks of the river Wupper, the homicide squad continues to investigate at full steam. Thursday morning, the crime scene in Wuppertal was investigated from the air with a drone.

The victim’s former spouse (43 years old) is considered a prime suspect and has been in custody since Tuesday on suspicion of manslaughter. According to the public prosecutor’s office, he “has not yet admitted to the case”. In March, the victim separated from her partner, to whom she was married under Moroccan law. After the violent death of the mother, her child (6 months old) immediately came into the care of the Youth Welfare Office. According to the current state of investigations, an consensual meeting between the ex-partners took place on Easter Sunday between 7 and 8 pm in the area of Völklinger Street and Hünefeld Street. What then happened on the banks of the Wupper has not yet been conclusively determined. Presumably there was an argument between the two, which then ended fatally. During the autopsy the cause of death was found to be “external violence”. For reasons of investigation tactics, the public prosecutor’s office has not yet provided more detailed information. The homicide squad is also continuing to search for eyewitnesses who may be able to provide important clues to the investigators. Witnesses are asked to contact the police by calling 0202 /284 1122.

https://www.bild.de/regional/duesseldorf/duesseldorf-aktuell/getoetete-frau-27-am-wupperufer-sucht-hier-die-polizei-nach-der-tatwaffe-70074240.bild.html

Christians yet again denied food aid, coronavirus relief distribution for Muslims only

International Christian Concern (ICC) reports Pakistani Christians were denied food aid amid the COVID-19 crisis in the fourth incident ICC has documented since Pakistan was placed on lockdown by authorities seeking to combat the pandemic.

According to a video post on Facebook, Christians were denied food aid on April 2 in a village situated on the Raiwind road, near Lahore. A local pastor confirmed the incident to ICC.

In the Facebook video, a young Christian man claims that a local mosque committee distributed food on April 2, however, village Christians were told to leave the mosque compound because the food aid was meant for only Muslims.

“If this is the situation, then what are the arrangements for Christians?” the Christian asked in the Facebook video. “Who is going to feed them? Are we not citizens of the same country?”

“Denying food aid and discriminating among citizens is a crime,” Aftab Hayat, a Pakistani NGO leader, told ICC. “Christians often face discrimination and are victims of religious hatred. However, the situation for Christians in the midst of the COVID-19 crisis is alarming and becoming worse. Therefore, the authorities must take note of the developing situation.”

Jihad Watch previously reported on two other such incidents, one on April 1st and one on April 7th, as well as on April 11th an incident in which Christians were forced to make the Islamic profession of faith to get food aid.

http://www.israelnationalnews.com/News/News.aspx/278740

What happened in Wuhan? The single most important question


by Giulio Meotti

Two years ago, US embassy officials visited a Chinese research facility in Wuhan several times and sent two dispatches to Washington about safety risk in that laboratory that was conducting risky studies of coronaviruses from bats. The Washington Postreveals that what American officials learned during their visits worried them to the point that they sent two classified cables to Washington. The first cable warned that the lab’s work on bat coronaviruses and their potential human transmission represent the risk of a new Sars-like pandemic. There is no evidence that the virus that now plagues the world was created ad hoc, but that’s not to say it didn’t come from the lab that spent years testing coronaviruses, said Berkeley’s Xiao Qiang.

The Wall Street Journal also reveals that “ aTG13″ is the name and serial number of a bat of the Rhinolophus affinis species, or rather a sample of its feces collected in a cave in Yunnan, China. The sample was collected by scientists from the Wuhan Institute of Virology. The sample contains the virus that causes Covid-19. Bats are sold in markets and restaurants throughout China and Southeast Asia, but there is no evidence of their sale in the Wuhan market. 

So, we don’t know how the virus passed from bats to humans, but now we know that Chinese researchers had a sample of the virus in Wuhan and that American diplomats after visiting the laboratory were alarmed that it could get out. Ah, we also know that the Chinese regime has done everything to keep this story hidden and that it seems to have gotten the West to submit to the point of not wanting to talk about it.

Forget knowing the truth about the origin of the pandemic. China has just imposed restrictions on publishing research on the origins of the coronavirus. Under the new policy, all academic papers on Covid-19 will be subject to additional checks before publication. Studies of the origin of the virus will receive a more thorough examination and must be approved by central government officials, according to the messages now removed from the web.

It is a perfect Chinese decision, as there is not a single international observer in Wuhan and the Chinese Communist Party must now close the mouth of its scientists, as it has already done to its doctors.

What happened in Wuhan?

Scary testimonies about the cremations came out. Radio Free Asiarevealed them. Mourning relatives said they discovered anomalous objects in the boxes that could not have been linked to their relatives. A Wuhan Jiang’an district resident, “Liu”, said she found an unfamiliar belt clip in the urn allegedly containing her mother’s ashes. A resident of the Hongshan district said he found the remains of a denture in his father’s urn, althoughhis father didn’t have dentures.

They burned so many bodies that the cremation facilities cracked. A source close to the funeral industry nicknamed “Ma” said some incinerators stopped working after being operated day and night and that they were cremating several bodies together to meet the demand.

The Daily Telegraph also spoke to a cremation worker. At the peak, there were 5,000 bodies awaiting urgent cremation in one of the 8 crematoria in Wuhan, compared to two dozen a day before the virus.

What happened in Wuhan? This is the single most important question. And very few dare to ask it. Why? 

http://www.israelnationalnews.com/Articles/Article.aspx/25545

Greece to Expand Turkish Border Fence, Claims Turks Shot at Greek Police

The Greek government will expand the border fence along the Evros river in preparation for a fresh migrant wave and claimed that Turkish officials fired at Greek police earlier this month.

The plan to extend the border fence comes as part of new legislation aimed at tackling the spread of the Wuhan coronavirus and outlined that Greek authorities will build the border fence extension “regardless of the expenditure budget”.

Armoured military vehicles will also be deployed along the northern border with Turkey “for the purpose of covering extraordinary and urgent needs to serve the public interest and protection of national and EU borders”, newspaper Proto Thema reports.

The Greek government has also claimed this week that Turkey may be sending migrants back to the Greek border area after previously closing the border late last month over coronavirus infection fears.

“We have noticed some suspicious movements… As a result, we have ordered a heightened alert for the next few days during the Easter holiday,” a Greek government source had said, with Greek Orthodox Easter celebrated later in the calendar than in Western churches.

Greek government spokesman Stelios Petsas confirmed the claims, saying that the Greeks had seen “signs of activity”.

Greek Defence Minister Nikos Panagiotopoulos went on to add: “We will strengthen our forces along the borders. In Evros, the existing fence is strengthened and created in places where it did not exist. At sea, where the effort is more difficult than on land, we are there with the Coast Guard.”

During the weeks following President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan opening the Turkish border to migrants, Greek authorities reported multiple acts of aggression from Turkish forces and authorities stationed along the border.

This week it was revealed that earlier this month Turkish special forces had shot towards Greek police, both in the air and in their direction.

The incidents occurred on the evening of April 7th near the village of Sofiko and saw at least three Turkish soldiers fire their weapons on three separate occasions. The Greeks did not return fire.

https://www.breitbart.com/europe/2020/04/16/greece-expand-turkish-border-fence-turks-shot-greek-police/

“Refugee children” wearing A.C.A.B. shirts are joyfully greeted by Europe’s left-wing politicians

Photo: Screenshot

At last they are here! On Wednesday, the Luxembourg socialist Asselborn was finally able to welcome 12 unaccompanied “refugees” – flown from Greek islands via airlift. The welcome photos show that the “young children” are not quite as young as promised. On the other hand, the “little children” come to us with clear messages: One of them wears a T-shirt with the imprint “A.C.A.B” – “All cops are bastards – All cops are pigs”.

journalistenwatch.com/2020/04/16/arme-fluechtlingsknaben-ausstaffiert/

A German crackdown on a shutdown dissenter has a distinctly fascist feel

By Andrea Widburg

The Soviet Union, a socialist dictatorship, famously locked up dissidents in psychiatric institutions. Once there, they were subject to cruel tortures in the name of “restoring” their mental health. Word is now leaking out that the Germany government imprisoned a German lawyer in a mental institution for opposing Germany’s oppressive reaction to the Wuhan virus.

Germany has imposed extremely stringent shutdown measures in response to the Wuhan virus (although it is not enforcing them against Muslims). The country has had a national curfew in place since March 22. Under the curfew, people may not travel in groups of more than two people, unless they share a household, and they may leave home only for certain limited activities (e.g., work, sports, or buying groceries).

On April 3, Beate Bahner, a lawyer in Baden-Württemberg, German, issued a press release challenging Germany’s shutdown. In it, according to a translation at the UK Column, Bahner contended that the government’s mandates were “flagrantly unconstitutional, infringing to an unprecedented extent many of the fundamental rights of German citizens.” She argued, instead, that the policy should isolate those vulnerable to the Wuhan virus, rather than quarantining the entire population.

In addition, Bahner published a 19-page legal analysis entitled “Why the shutdown is unconstitutional and the greatest legal scandal in the post-1940s history of Germany.” In the conclusion to that analysis, Bahner made the following statement (again, the translation is from the UK Column):

Fellow citizens,

I hereby invite all 83 million of you across the nation to gather and demonstrate peacefully at 3 pm on Easter Saturday:

Coronoia 2020 — [Tyranny] never again. We rise up today!

In accordance with §14.1 of the Assembly Act, please give the competent authority prior notification of your intent to demonstrate.

Because Bahner rhetorically asked 83 million people to assemble on Easter Sunday, Heidelberg’s police announced that they would prosecute her for inciting people to violate a law (that is, the new law against public assembly). The police further informed Bahner that she was required to appear at the police station on the Wednesday following Easter for an interview.

On the Monday after Easter, though, Bahner’s sister got a long voicemail message from Bahner describing how the police, when she’d called them for help, instead handcuffed her and took her to a psychiatric institution. Once there, they subjected her to the same treatment that a terrorist would receive. Someone uploaded the message onto the internet:

Again, I am indebted to the UK Column for the translation of Bahner’s recording. Bahner describes how, when a car was following her, she called the police for help. The police arrived but, instead of helping her, they handcuffed her and delivered her to a psychiatric clinic. Once at the clinic, she was thrown to the floor, banging her head. Bahner ended up spending the night on the floor in a locked room. “There was no toilet, no sink, though they did allow me water, and there was a bell I could ring, though they ignored it after the third time I pressed it.”

Bahner did eventually get upgraded to a room with a bed and access to a telephone, which was how she was able to leave the message describing what had happened to her. Once her message was uploaded to the internet, a local journalist confirmed that she was indeed being held in a psychiatric institution. When questioned, the police justified her treatment on the ground that Bahner seemed “confused.”

It’s entirely possible that Bahner is a confused woman who was a genuine risk to herself and needed psychiatric help. But of course, it’s just as possible in today’s environment that Bahner is a victim of a government reveling in the power it’s achieved thanks to the Wuhan virus.

In towns and states all over America, we’ve seen governments — especially (although not always) those in Democrat hands — throwing the Bill of Rights out the window. They justify what they’re doing by saying that they’re “protecting” people from the virus. Lord Acton, of course, was correct when he famously said, “power corrupts and absolute power corrupts absolutely.”

The problem is that people who are fearful will too easily hand over power to someone who claims he can protect them. Interestingly, Democrats seem more afraid of the virus than conservatives. They are more amenable to lockdown orders and they are more certain that anybody violating, or even talking about violating, the orders will instantly be stricken with the virus or will infect someone else. They’re also certain that the hydroxychloroquine treatment will be unavailing. With that level of fear, it’s small wonder that they cling to government as their rock and salvation from a fearsome invisible enemy.

*****

This photograph seems apropos. Taken in Amsterdam, in 1975, it shows protestors agitating for the release of Vladimir Bukovsky, a Soviet dissident who spent twelve years in psychiatric prisons/hospitals, labor camps, and actual prisons. One of his primary targets was the way in which the Soviet government abused psychiatry to control political dissent:

https://www.americanthinker.com/blog/2020/04/a_german_crackdown_on_shutdown_dissenter_has_a_distinctly_fascist_feel.html

Corona measures cause German asylum numbers to drop sharply

The border controls introduced due to the Corona crisis have led to a sharp decline in asylum numbers.

As can be seen from a response from the Federal Government to an inquiry by AfD MP Stephan Brandner, since the start of the measures at German borders, the Federal Police have only registered single-digit applications for asylum.

“The number of people who have submitted an application for asylum at land, air and sea borders since March 16, 2020,” according to the Federal Government in the 12th calendar week was twelve entries on land and others 20 by air. There were only four overland and three the following week. According to the statistics, no asylum seekers have come by plane so far.

The AfD sees this as proof that border controls regulate the number of migrants. “Apparently border controls do mean something. Although the federal government had assumed significantly higher figures at the beginning of April, it is now becoming clear that if you want to protect German borders, you can do that, ” Brandner told Berlin weekly Junge Freiheit.

Since extensive travel restrictions and curfews were also imposed in Italy, Austria, Belgium and France, hardly any migrants from outside the EU reach the German borders.

According to the Federal Ministry of the Interior, the controls introduced at the German borders due to the Corona crisis are to be extended for just under three weeks, the Bild newspaper reported.

freewestmedia.com/2020/04/16/corona-measures-cause-german-asylum-numbers-to-drop-sharply/

Germany: Still Too Much Free Speech, Says the European Commission Against Racism and Intolerance

The European Commission against Racism and Intolerance (ECRI) recently published its sixth monitoring report on Germany. Even though Germany has some of the most repressive hate speech laws in Europe, ECRI decided that, according to it, Germany is still not doing enough.

Never heard of ECRI? Here are a few words by way of introduction:

ECRI, which describes itself as “independent” is the human rights monitoring body of the Council of Europe — not to be confused with the European Union. The Council of Europe is composed of 47 member states, including all of the 27 European Union member states. Its decision and policy making body is the Committee of Ministers, made up of the foreign ministers of each of the member states. Its most famous body is the European Court of Human Rights. The Council of Europe, unlike the EU, cannot make binding rules on its member states. Last year it celebrated its 70th anniversary. The Council of Europe calls itself the “continent’s leading human rights organization… All 830 million people living in this common legal space have an ultimate right of appeal to the European Court of Human Rights”.

ECRI was founded in 1994 by the heads of state of the 47 members of the Council of Europe. According to its 1997 Annual Report:

“The mandate of ECRI, as determined by the Heads of State and Government, is: to review member States’ legislation, policies and other measures to combat racism, xenophobia, antisemitism and intolerance, and their effectiveness; to propose further action at local, national and European level; to formulate general policy recommendations to member States…” (page 3)

“ECRI is composed of members designated by their governments (one for each member State of the Council of Europe) on the basis of their in-depth knowledge in the field of combating intolerance. They should have high moral authority and recognised expertise in dealing with racism, xenophobia, antisemitism and intolerance. ECRI’s members are nominated in their personal capacity and act as independent members.” (page 7)

Since 1994, ECRI has been monitoring Council of Europe member states to ensure that their policies and legislation adhere to the stated goals of the heads of state of the Council of Europe.

At the 1997 Strasbourg Summit, the member states of the Council of Europe,

“… reiterated their aim of achieving a greater unity between the member States in order to build a freer, more tolerant and just European society, and called for an intensification of the fight against racism, xenophobia, antisemitism and intolerance”.

Nearly three decades later, Europe has a large web of hate speech laws and policies, thanks in part to the efforts of ECRI — an unelected body — and the Council of Europe.

According to ECRI’s website:

“In the framework of its country monitoring work, ECRI examines the situation concerning manifestations of racism and intolerance in each of the Council of Europe member states. ECRI’s findings, along with recommendations as to how each country might deal with the problems identified, are published in country reports. These reports are drawn up after a contact visit to the country in question and a confidential dialogue with the national authorities. The country monitoring deals with all member States on an equal footing and takes place in five-year cycles, covering nine/ten countries per year”.

Work on the sixth round of the ECRI reports started at the end of 2018.[1] The sixth round country reports focus on three topics common to all member States: (1) Effective equality and access to rights, (2) Hate speech and hate-motivated violence, and (3) Integration and inclusion.

ECRI’s sixth report on Germany was published on March 17, 2020. In it, ECRI does not disguise what can hardly be described as anything other than a political agenda.

ECRI notes as a “welcome positive development” and a sign of “progress” that, among other things:

“Germany warmly welcomed an extraordinarily large number of asylum seekers in 2015. The Chancellor and ministers publicly spoke out against hate speech and called on social networks to enforce their guidelines on removing hate speech”.

Nevertheless, according to ECRI, “Despite the progress achieved, several issues give rise to concern”.

The article focuses on ECRI’s “concerns” regarding Germany’s measures against “hate speech”:

Although Germany’s hate-speech regulations are among the most repressive in the European Union, “ECRI regrets to note that German public discourse has become increasingly xenophobic in recent years, and that hate speech has become more common”.

“Against this background, ECRI highlights very positively that many Germans warmly welcomed, on the initiative of the Federal Chancellor, the extraordinarily large number of about 890 000 asylum seekers who arrived during the autumn of 2015. This ‘welcome-culture’ mobilised hundreds of thousands of individuals who contributed to accommodating and assisting the new arrivals, many of whom were refugees from Syria”.

ECRI laments that:

“Other parts of the population, however, showed concern about the wave of migration. Hostile and xenophobic attitudes increased and the public debate worsened. The political party ‘Alternative for Germany’ (AfD)…took a strong position against migration… Issues such as the investigation of large numbers of complaints of sexual assault and theft after the New Year’s celebrations of 2015/2016 in Cologne and the suspicion that many asylum seekers were among the suspects, sparked a huge public debate, affected the general sense of security and contributed to increasing islamophobic and xenophobic sentiments and hate speech. Repeated public and media attention to other offenses allegedly committed by asylum seekers, the attack by an Islamist terrorist on the Berlin Christmas market on 19 December 2016 and other similar attacks in neighbouring countries further amplified fears, xenophobia and racism. The AfD gained 12.6% of the vote in the 2017 federal elections and, for example, 15.1% in the elections in Baden-Württemberg, 20.8% in Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania and 24.3% in Saxony-Anhalt”.

ECRI suggests that:

“… action is required in several areas to effectively prevent and combat hate speech. These encompass awareness-raising, prevention and counter speech, support to victims, self-regulation, the use of regulatory powers and, as a last resort, criminal investigation and punishment”.

ECRI considers that “there is a lack of a sufficiently robust and dense network of counselling services for victims [of hate speech]. Equality bodies should be given a clear mandate, the necessary competences and resources to assist victims of hate speech”.

ECRI notes with satisfaction, however, that:

In March 2017, the German Press Council changed… its Press Codex and published guidelines for its interpretation following a public debate on the media coverage of events that involved criminal offenses possibly committed by foreigners and in particular the assaults on women on New Year’s Eve 2015/2016. Guideline 12.1 of the Press Codex now states that the affiliation of suspects to ethnic, religious or other minorities should normally not be mentioned, unless there is a well-founded public interest”.

ECRI also “recalls that such information should only be disclosed by the police if it is strictly necessary and serves a legitimate purpose”.

ECRI then goes on to commend Germany for introducing the controversial 2017 censorship law, known as NetzDG, which requires Facebook to remove content within 24 hours or face fines of up to 50 million euros. ECRI legitimizes the law, saying that:

“the restrictions imposed by the NEA [Network Enforcement Act] can be considered as necessary in a democratic society… in particular to protect the reputation and the rights of privacy and honour of the persons exposed to hate speech… and to prevent disorder and crime”.

ECRI, nonetheless, evidently does not think that the censorship law goes far enough.

“ECRI also regrets that there is no mechanism in place that would ensure that social networks systematically transfer criminally relevant content and the related evidence to the police and prosecution. Thus, the general preventive effect of the prosecution and sentencing of hate speech cases cannot fully develop and further contribute to the elimination of online hate speech… ECRI recommends that the German authorities standardise access to, and rules for, reporting hate speech on social media, ensure that evidence of online hate speech is preserved and transmitted to the law enforcement authorities and develop ways for the police and prosecution to close new channels for the dissemination of hate speech online”.

Germany has in fact already followed at least some of ECRI’s recommendations:

In October, the government announced that it was working on introducing legislation that among other things, obliges online service providers such as Facebook, YouTube and Twitter not only to delete hate speech within a certain time frame, but to report hate speech to German authorities, and also to forward the IP address of the social media user suspected of hate speech. The German government approved the bill in February and it is now awaiting the approval of the Bundestag, Germany’s lower house of parliament, and the Bundesrat, the upper house of parliament.

ECRI also pushes its agenda on the media, stating:

“ECRI is pleased to note that the new National Action Plan on Integration will have a chapter on media. ECRI encourages all stakeholders involved in its revision to develop measures that help curb the spread of hate speech and avoid messages that unintentionally trigger racism and xenophobia”.

Finally, ECRI “strongly welcomes the German government’s implementation of its recommendation [in ECRI’s fifth report on Germany] to introduce into the law an obligation to discontinue the public financing of political parties and other organisations that promote racism” and recommends that such a procedure against the Alternative für Deutschland (AfD) party be examined.

Since 1994, ECRI has been dispensing its highly politicized recommendations to European governments in confidential government consultations removed from public scrutiny. Only the final reports are published.

As this kind of arguably undemocratic governance, where an unelected body of “experts” tells national governments how to govern on fundamental issues such as freedom of speech, has been ongoing for several decades now, one can only assume that either Europeans approve of these measures or are entirely ignorant of them.

[1] The country reports of the first round were completed at the end of 1998, those of the second round at the end of 2002, those of the third round at the end of 2007, those of the fourth round in the beginning of 2014, and those of the fifth round at the end of 2019. Work on the sixth round reports started at the end of 2018.

https://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/15806/germany-ecri-free-speech

Coronavirus Is Taking a Heavy Toll at Nursing Homes Across America

According to a study by the New York Times, at least 3,800 seniors living in nursing homes and long-term care facilities have died of the coronavirus and another 21,000 have been infected. There were 43 deaths at a Seattle nursing home, Life Care Center, in the last month, and yesterday, the 45th resident died of the virus at the Canterbury Rehabilitation & Healthcare Center in suburban Richmond, Virginia.

What those two facilities have in common is that they are publicly funded. In fact, most of those 3,800 deaths chronicled by the New York Times were in homes where Medicaid was paying most residents’ bills.

Post-Gazette:

“A publicly funded nursing home is a virus’s dream,” said Dr. Jim Wright, Canterbury’s medical director. “It is the best place for a virus to be. People are close together. Their immune systems are compromised. It is just a tinderbox for that match.”

Studies have shown nursing homes heavily dependent on Medicaid for revenue have fewer nurses and other staff per patient than average and lower quality of care overall. And some of the biggest outbreaks so far have been at homes tied closely to the government payment program, including ones in Wayne, W.Va., and the Crown Heights section of New York City’s Brooklyn borough.

We’ve heard nightmare stories of conditions at some public nursing homes. Canterbury may one of the worst.

Even in normal times, Canterbury merited just one out of five stars in Medicare’s rating system, with inspection records showing the facility had such poor staffing levels that it impacted patient care.

One nurse told an inspector last year “residents would stay in bed because it is almost impossible for two people to assist 62 or 63 residents.” Previous inspections also found infection-control problems and failure to report an attempted rape of a patient.

One patient had a sore on her leg that went unnoticed for so long that by the time they began to treat it, her leg had to be amputated. That kind of care is not uncommon and is one of the big reasons the virus has taken such a heavy toll on nursing homes.

Governors are trying. They’ve even called out the National Guard to help.

Since then, several governors have used their emergency power to do the same for their homes. The National Guard was called in to evacuate a home in Tennessee, take over another one in Massachusetts and run tests at a third in Wisconsin. And special “strike teams” have been tapped to run tests and ferry supplies to homes in Ohio, Indiana and Maryland.

“Where is the state in some of this? Why wasn’t more done on a state level as well to come in and take over the situation?” Ms. Thompson asked, noting that at one point the victims from Canterbury accounted for about a third of the state’s dead. “There’s lots of blame to go around.”

The media is too busy trashing Trump to pay much attention to states run by Democratic governors.

It won’t matter to the anti-Trump hysterics, but the insidious nature of this bug means that it can infect hundreds of people before anyone knows it’s there. That’s what’s happened in nursing homes across the country and thousands are dying because of it.

https://pjmedia.com/trending/virus-is-taking-a-heavy-toll-at-nursing-homes-across-america/