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Benghazi: The Coverup

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There are two articles in the two links shown below.  Both published in Canada Free Press.  If you care to know what happened and what is happening, open and read them.

 

Benghazi explained: Interview with an “Intelligence Insider” (Part I)
Administration is engaged in a massive cover-up

http://www.canadafreepress.com...

Benghazi: Behind the scenes (Part II)
- Doug Hagmann November 29, 2012

http://www.canadafreepress.com...

Note:  Hagman's "contact" is a White House and intel insider.

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More from "the religion of peace" and the obumbler's muslim brotherhood buddies!:

 

Egypt's Muslim Brotherhood accused of  paying gangs to rape women

Egypt’s embattled Muslim Brotherhood regime is paying gangs of thugs to rape  women and beat men who gather in Tahrir Square to protest the power grab of  President Mohamed Morsi, say activists.

In a bitter replay of the Arab Spring protests that brought down President  Hosni Mubarak nearly two years ago, protesters have flooded the Cairo square to  denounce Morsi, who has stripped the judiciary of power and is rushing through  an Islamist constitution. And while Mubarak is now in prison for using violence  to quell protests targeting him, Morsi’s regime is now accused of doing the  same.

“This is still happening now,” Magda Adly, director of the Nadeem Center for  Human Rights, told The Times of London. “I believe thugs are being paid money to  do this ... the Muslim Brotherhood have the same political approaches as  Mubarak.”

Hundreds of thousands of Egyptians have gathered in the square to protest the  new constitution and to call for Morsi’s ouster. Morsi briefly fled the  Itihadiya presidential palace in Cairo Wednesday, after the complex was  surrounded by tens of thousands of protesters chanting slogans reminiscent of  those used during the  revolution that ousted Mubarak. The protesters  scrawled anti-Morsi graffiti and waved giant banners carrying images of  revolutionaries killed in earlier protests.

A protester the newspaper identified as Yasmine said she was attacked while  videotaping demonstrations. She said about 50 men surrounded her and began  tearing off her clothes, grabbing her breasts and sexually assaulting her. She  said she suffered internal injuries and was unable to walk for a week.

The Daily Mail  reported that most attacks take place at night when men form a human chain  around women, then move in for the assault. Two men told the paper they were  paid to attack women.

“We're told to go out and sexually harass girls so they leave the  demonstration," one said.

The current crisis pits his Muslim Brotherhood and their ultraconservative  Islamist allies against a coalition of youth groups, liberal parties and large  sectors of the public. It began on Nov. 22, when Morsi decreed himself and his  party above the judiciary and escalated after the Muslim Brotherhood pushed  through a draft constitution without the participation of liberals and  Christians.

The constitution faces a Dec. 15 referendum, but opponents and the nation’s  judges have signaled they won’t take part in what they consider a sham  process.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Click for more from The Times of  London.

 

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More gifts from the "religion of peace":

 

Al-Masry Al-Youm Reports
On Brotherhood Torture Chambers

 

 

By:Mohamad Jarehi.  Translated from Al-Masry Al-Youm (Egypt)

Al-Masry Al-Youm spent three hours in total in the torture chambers  established by the Muslim Brotherhood at the gates of the Ittihadiya Palace in  the suburb of Heliopolis. The central torture chamber, which is located in front  of the gate facing the Omar Ibn Abdel Aziz Mosque on al-Merghany Street, is  secured with a cordon and iron barriers, where the Central Security Forces (CSF)  prevent the access of any persons without the authorization of the  Brotherhood.

Read more: http://www.al-monitor.com/pulse/politics/2012/12/muslim-brotherhood-egypt-torture-chambers.html#ixzz2EUz0uEHV

 

We entered the chamber with a great difficulty, after a fellow journalist from  the Misr 25 TV channel facilitated. The channel is owned by the Brotherhood.  There are brigades and police officers in military uniforms, as well as others  in civilian clothes from al-Nozha police station, who oversee the beatings,  whippings and torture. Fifteen others from the group, distinguished by their  strong bodies, are supervised by three bearded and well-dressed men who decide  who will be in the chamber and who may leave, even if the person is a member of  the Brotherhood.

The torture process starts once a demonstrator who opposes President Mohammed Morsi is arrested in the  clashes or is suspected after the clashes end, and the CSF separate Morsi’s  supporters from his opponents. Then, the group members trade off punching,  kicking and beating him with a stick on the face and all over his body. They  tear off his clothes and take him to the nearest secondary torture chamber, from  which CSF personnel, members of the Interior Ministry and the State Security Investigations Services (SSIS) are  absent.

Read more: http://www.al-monitor.com/pulse/politics/2012/12/muslim-brotherhood-egypt-torture-chambers.html#ixzz2EUyjeAIC

 

It is hard to determine how many locations there are, given that the torture  chambers are established as near as possible to where a person is arrested.  Before the interrogation process starts, they search him, seize his funds,  cellphones or ID, all the while punching and slapping his face in order to get  him to confess to being a thug and working for money.

They ask him why he took to the street, whether he got paid to take part in  the protest and whether he supports Mohamed ElBaradei, founder of the  Constitution Party, or Hamdeen Sabahi, founder of the Egyptian Popular Current  or the dissolved Egyptian Nationalist movement. As long as this person denies  the allegations, they beat him and insult his parents. After that, a person will  videotape the interrogation and contact the Misr 25 TV channel to tell them  about the interrogation and arrest.

After a while, the detainee is transported from the secondary torture  chamber to the central one. On his way, the beatings and insults continue. Every  time the prisoner encounters a member of the Brotherhood, that person gets in  his share of the insults and beatings. They also may collectively insult him  before he enters the central room, while a Brotherhood lawyer hands over his  national ID card, his funds and his belongings to the SSIS chief. Some members  of the group claim to have seized weapons from the detainee and handed them over  to the officers at al-Nozha police station. However, we were unable to verify  that.

A young detainee shouted in the faces of the men in the chamber: “I am a  bearded sheikh, and Sheikh Safwat Hijazi will avenge me. I am a friend of all  sheikhs. God is all I need and he is the best guardian; I am a Muslim just like  you.” Another bleeding man said, “I am educated; I am not a thug, leave me  alone.” A third person, born in the region of Sayyida Zaynab, was accused of  following Fathi Srour, former speaker of the People's Assembly, and got a  significant share of the beatings.

The health conditions of some of the prisoners was very bad and they were  unable to answer questions. Some of them were bleeding all over their bodies,  severely exhausted and not receiving any medical aid. However, some got a bottle  of water to drink or something to use to stop their bleeding.

Once 10 people had been arrested, police officers and state security chiefs  in the chamber demanded that the three Muslim Brotherhood leaders in the room  secure passage for the prisoners to the nearby al-Nozha police station and  prevented the Brotherhood members from attacking them again.

Read more: http://www.al-monitor.com/pulse/politics/2012/12/muslim-brotherhood-egypt-torture-chambers.html#ixzz2EUyeLXht

 

This all really happened.

Once the arrested group left, another arrived. Outside the central  torture chamber, three people were detained and brought into the security room  within the palace at the main gate on Al-Ahram Street.

The Brotherhood youth don't have control over this location. Their role ends  once they hand over the arrestees to the guards. We successfully took a picture  of one of the detained men, but the other two were already in the palace. The  Brotherhood youth accused one of them of possessing a weapon and shooting a  member of the group. Some detainees remained in the secondary torture chambers  and were not handed over to the state security officers.

We left the place and found blood flowing on the sidewalk of the palace.  Someone had tried to cover the blood with soil to remove it. However, no one  will be able to clean the image of this blood from the memory of Egyptians for  hundreds of years.

 

Read more: http://www.al-monitor.com/pulse/politics/2012/12/muslim-brotherhood-egypt-torture-chambers.html#ixzz2EUyUdKtc

 

 

 

 

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