A Palestinian woman who decided to become a suicide bomber for Hamas explains that she did so because she had no interest in living life on Earth and only wanted to “satisfy Allah”.
In the clip, a young woman called Saura says that she chose to become a “martyr….because I prefer the afterlife, near Allah”.
“I don’t like life on Earth, my only reward is Allah, because I know I’ll go to paradise,” she added.
She goes on to say that she is not interested in a “fun life on earth” and “only wants to satisfy Allah”.
Palestinian women, failed suicide bombers explain why they wanted to blow up Jews: "I don't want a fun life on Earth. I only want to satisfy Allah" "To be the parent of a martyr is the biggest reward. It is a big honor for the family." #Maga#Israelpic.twitter.com/Cr80tgyI2H
“If I give myself to God and Islam’s pride heaven will be my reward,” asserts Saura.
Another failed Hamas terrorist, Samina Ahmad Ahim, explains, “It is written in the Koran and the Hadith,” and that being the parent of a suicide bomber is “the biggest reward” and “a big honor for the family”.
Another Hamas member called Elham who helped plan a suicide bombing states, “We don’t only fight against occupation, our goal is to spread Islam to all, everywhere”.
Hamas has been responsible for around 26% of all Palestinian suicide attacks since 1989, atrocities that have claimed hundreds of lives.
In response to a jihadist terror attack in Vienna last week, the government of Austria will pass a law making it illegal to spread “political Islam” in the country.
The European nation’s capital was shook when a lone gunman killed four people and injured 23 others during a rampage that began in the city’s historic quarter. The culprit, 20-year-old Kujtim Fejzullai, was an ISIS sympathizer.
In response, Austrian Chancellor Sebastian Kurz announced new measures that would make preaching “political Islam” a criminal offense.
“We will create a criminal offence called ‘political Islam’ in order to be able to take action against those who are not terrorists themselves, but who create the breeding ground for them,” Kurz tweeted.
Im Kampf gegen den politischen Islam werden wir einen Straftatbestand „Politischer Islam“ schaffen, um gegen diejenigen vorgehen zu können, die selbst keine Terroristen sind, aber den Nährboden für solche schaffen.
Another measure set to be voted on by Parliament next month would see individuals convicted of terror offences kept behind bars for life.
As we previously highlighted, despite facing a worst threat than Austria, the French government hasn’t taken similar measures.
However, President Macron has faced global protests from the Muslim world simply for re-affirming the pre-eminence of free speech and suggesting tighter border controls.
The Danish newspaper that provoked violent worldwide protests after publishing cartoons of the Prophet Mohammad in 2005 has refused to do so again, with its editor-in-chief commenting, “Violence works.”
The decision follows the beheading of school teacher Samuel Paty in Paris for showing similar cartoons to pupils in his class and another attack yesterday in Nice during which three people were killed near a church, including a woman who was decapitated.
The culprit in Paris was a Chechen refugee who French authorities had given residency papers to back in March, while the jihadist in Nice was a boat migrant who arrived in Italy from Tunisia last month.
Now Jacob Nybroe, editor-in-chief of Jyllands-Posten, says his newspaper will not accept ads being run by Danish political party the New Right, which includes cartoons of Mohammad, due to the risk of a violent backlash.
The cartoons are being run in collaboration with Charlie Hebdo to “show support for the victims of Islamic violence,” but Nybroe says his newspaper can play no part in it.
“Security for us is unfortunately not a theoretical, moral, or political consideration,” Nybroe said.
“I wish it was different, that we could express ourselves freely, as we do in all other matters. But violence works,” he added.
“Only in one circumstance do we show caution – that is, in fact, a censorship inflicted on us by threats: we do not show drawings of the Prophet Muhammad,” Nybroe explained.
After Jyllands-Posten published 12 cartoons to spark a debate about criticism of Islam, the move prompted global violent riots as well as numerous threats against newspaper staff.
The backlash was described by former Danish Prime Minister Anders Fogh Rasmussen as “Denmark’s worst international crisis since World War II.”
Three other Danish newspapers said they would review the cartoons before deciding whether to publish them.