Thanks to r4wmaterial for translating and uploading.
"I feel like we have to work this ethnic society out, because it is coming whether we like it or not."
From anonymous:
This is a heartbreaking mini documentary about a Norwegian child named Elias who lives in a predominantly immigrant neighborhood in Oslo, Norway.
He goes to a school in that neighborhood and is constantly harassed by muslim children.
They beat him up, the tell him he will go to hell because he eats pork, they harass any children who arent muslims, he doesnt have any friends, and other things.
Also drawing from my own experiences as a ethnic Swede growing up in a multicultural neighborhood I can certainly say that the muslim kids there had a way of imposing their beliefs to the rest of the kids. They always talked about the quran, about their holidays like ramadan, they were served special foods, once a kid threw the quran on the floor and the others beat him up etc.
I would say that the mother of Elias is an idiot, but on the other hand she has just tried to embrace the multicultural society, not exactly understanding the implications it has had on her son.
Thanks to Geir Olsen for the upload and translation - and Deathdestroyer101 for the tip!
Marvelous Norwegian documentary on the Moslem Brotherhood now available with english subtitles!
"An islamic ideology that will use the baby carriage, democracy and freedom of religion as weapons, instead of the swords and suicide bombers?"
Walid al-Kubaisi travels from Yemen to Cairo Paris and Oslo conducting one revealing interview after the other. Highly recommended!
update: link repaired. Thanks to NKrekaruDarweshakani
Thanks a million to vladtepesblog for preserving this marvellous program on sevenload. Due to his foresight this and many other shows have a life of their own online, in spite of quick and often surprising "copyright infringement concerns" on youtube. Considering the fact that a "NBC" search results in no less than 74.000 hits on youtube, it can hardly be a coincidence that a little program like this one is being removed the day after it pops up.
"Priorities" i guess?
Mullah Krekar: NBC The Wanted TV Show - July 21, 2009
mullah-krekar-nbc-the-wanted-tv-showMullah Krekar who came to Norway as a refugee from northern Iraq in 1991. His real name is Najmuddin Faraj Ahmad. Mullah Krekar is the leader of Kurdish Ansar al-Islam.
In July, 2009, Mullah Krekar was one of the subjects of the NBC’s new show “The Wanted”, describing him as “responsible for killing hundreds of westerners”. The focus of NBC The Wanted tonight. NBC’s The Wanted on Mullah Krekar is getting average reviews.
The LA Times says tonight’s show as follows:
The Wanted: Counterterrorism experts hunt for Mullah Krekar, founder of an international terrorist organization said to be responsible for killing hundreds of Westerners in this new series.
The New York Times says The Wanted has a good story presented in a gimmick fashion.
“Beneath many scrims of reality-show gimmickry and stagy “Dateline”-style melodrama, the episode raises a perfectly legitimate “60 Minutes” kind of question: Why is it that Mullah Krekar, who is a wanted man in Iraq and was deemed a threat to national security by the Supreme Court of Norway, is still at liberty in Oslo, even though his refugee status was revoked and the Norwegian government says it wants him gone?
The Times says the show is short on journalism and strong on show business, theatrical appeal:
“Reporting on “The Wanted” keeps being pushed aside by the demands of show business….In the premiere episode there is no collusion with any government entity, just a few theatrical but uninformative interviews with Iraqi officials and Norwegian politicians.”
Bottom lines, says the New York Times, is the show lacks journalism:
“There is a good story buried somewhere in the Scandinavian gloom, but “The Wanted” leaves it almost untouched. Mr. Ciralsky complains that “Norway is letting justice get in the way of justice.” NBC News is letting reality-show aesthetics get in the way of journalism.”
Permalink:http://www.viddler.com/explore/yummi/videos/1/
Broadcast: 13/11/2007
Reporter: Mark Corcoran
LEAD STORY
SERIES 17
EPISODE 20
Synopsis
Alleged Iraqi terrorist Mullah Krekar faces almost certain execution if deported to Iraq from his safe haven in Oslo, but he’s beaten all attempts by Norway to imprison or deport him and also foiled a CIA kidnap attempt.
Mullah Krekar, created the radical islamic guerrilla force, Ansar al Islam, now known as Ansar Al Sunna. It’s affiliated to Al Qaeda.
Now confident of his position in Norway, Krekar makes extraordinary admissions. He admits training a unit of suicide bombers who have since slaughtered hundreds of men, women and children.
“There’s no different between suicide bombs and using Kalashnikov – what’s the difference when you send the fighters to death”, Krekar tells Foreign Correspondent’s Mark Corcoran.
He explains how, through the internet, he calls on supporters to kill Australian and American troops in Iraq:
“It is allowed for me in Islam to kill him, to kill his translator, to kill the people which give him food and water, give him medicine – all of them”.
Krekar claims to have relinquished control of Ansar al Islam in 2002, months before the suicide bombing in which the Australian cameraman Paul Moran and five Kurdish soldiers were killed.
Even so, he knows intimate details of the attack, including what the Saudi suicide bomber did in his last minutes alive.
Krekar is entirely unrepentant about the killing . Asked what he would say to the widow of Mr Moran and his family Krekar said, “ I say to all the western women don’t send your sons to kill us.”
Corcoran: “ He wasn’t killing anybody, he was a cameraman!’
Krekar: “Yes. He was also with our enemy. “
Krekar says Moran and correspondent Eric Campbell, who was injured in the attack, were in the “wrong work at the wrong time.”
After arriving in Norway as a refugee in 1991, Krekar began commuting back to Iraq to create the feared terrorist group Ansar al Islam. His goal was the establishment of a Taliban-style Islamic state in northern Iraq.
The Norwegian Government says Krekar has breached asylum conditions, is a threat to national security and want him out of the country. But after six years of court cases, Krekar isn’t going anywhere. Norwegian law prohibits deportation to countries that have the death penalty or engage in torture.
The United States Treasury department maintains that Krekar, despite his denials, stills commands fighters in Iraq. It describes him as an Al Qaeda facilitator who covertly funds Ansar operations through a European network.