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 zero_0592
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    Gabriel Diniz escreveu: Não é à toa que a muslinzada tá dominando geral com tanta facilidade lá, a resistência é zero, até mesmo entre as forças policiais e de contenção.

    Qual foi o evento na linha temporal interdimensional que transformou povos guerreiros, honrados, valentes e conquistadores nessa cambada de frouxos, covardes e medrosos?
    conforto e alta qualidade de vida

    antes da WWII a europa era bem merda, não à toa que geral vazou de lá pra tentar a vida na américa, até o bostil tinha melhores oportunidades

    depois da WWII a europa melhorou pra krl, resultado: consecutivas gerações de homo sapiens criados a leite com pera

    não quero nem ver os filhos e netos da nossa geração

     UltraRS
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    "Tempos difíceis criam homens fortes, homens fortes criam tempos bons, tempos bons criam homens fracos, homens fracos criam tempos difíceis"
    Hankey, zero_0592, popescu e 4 outros  isso

     Lakitus
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    Imagem

     Excel Rose
  •  27426 posts
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    não deixa essa imagem chegar a alguma autoridade europeia

    vão proibir fantasias de porco

     Hankey
  •  85643 posts
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    Até a Cosa Nostra declarou guerra contra os refugiados :lolsuper:
    Migrants versus the MAFIA: Cosa Nostra 'declares war' on refugees as mayor says Sicily capital feels more like Istanbul or Beirut than Europe

    Mafia bosses have 'declared war' against migrants on the holiday paradise of Sicily as one thousand new arrivals pour on to the island every week.

    The feared Cosa Nostra are desperate to maintain supremacy after African crime gangs arrived with the migrants - and they are engaged in a deadly turf war.

    An innocent Gambian man was shot through the head by an assassin in broad daylight sparking fears of a wider bloodbath.

    Mayor Leoluca Orlando told MailOnline: 'Palermo is no longer an Italian town. It is no longer European. You can walk in the city and feel like you’re in Istanbul or Beirut.'

    Immigration to Italy soared by 90 per cent in the first three months of the year. The migrant population in Ballaró, the part of Palermo where the shooting took place, has risen from approximately five to 25 per cent since the migrant crisis began.

    There is widespread concern in Italy that the number of new migrants exceeds the country’s capacity to cope - and the mafia is its biggest and most dangerous critic.

    The mayor of Palermo, Leoluca Orlando said: ‘In the past, when the Mafia was more powerful, it prevented any immigrants from entering the city. Until I was 30 years old, I never saw an African or Asian in Palermo.

    ‘The Mafia has not understood that the city has changed. We are now a city of immigrants, and the Mafia bosses no longer sit in the mayor’s chair.

    ‘Palermo is a Middle Eastern town in Europe. It is a mosaic city and we are happy about that.'

    The deadly Mafia-migrant war began after African criminal gangs apparently entered the country alongside law-abiding migrants, and started to operate ‘on the Mafia’s doorstep’.

    Mobsters claimed that police were targeting their activities while leaving African gangs alone.


    Then, two weeks ago, an innocent Gambian migrant was shot through the head in a 'hit' by a gangster dubbed 'an animal'. Astonishingly, he survived, but the attack was a brutal example of the violence gripping the island and raises fears it will spin out of control.

    Mayor Orlando said: ‘This Mafia shooting was a tremendous mistake because it turned the city against them. The Mafia needs silence and darkness. It needs people to keep their mouths shut.

    ‘When it does such a brutal act, shooting a young guy, the mayor switches on the lights and the whole city comes after them.’

    Palermo police commissioner Guido Longo added: ‘We are facing acts of unprecedented aggression and bullying [against migrants] with typically Mafioso attitudes. There is a will to impose their rule on the territory.’

    The shooting took place just after 6pm in broad daylight, near the Balleró street market in the centre of the city, where street vendors sell pigs’ heads and gut fish while Mafiosos collect protection money.

    This deprived district, characterised by its ancient, run-down buildings and cobbled streets, is a melting pot of immigrants from numerous countries and tough, working class Sicilians. It also attracts tourists, students, and yuppies.

    Victim Yusapha Susso, 21, had been playing football at a nearby park. According to his attorney, Mr Susso was walking with two friends along Via Maqueda, the main thoroughfare, when an Italian man riding an electric bicycle drove into them from behind ‘intentionally and provocatively’.

    An argument ensued. The Italian told them that he knew he was outnumbered, but ‘soon you will see’. He then allegedly contacted gangland friends and within minutes a group of up to 10 hoodlums arrived in cars, on motorcycles and by foot.

    CCTV footage showed a fight breaking out. Susso managed to beat back his assailants and went to the aid of his friends.

    That was when local mobster Emanuele Rubino, 28, retrieved a handgun from a nearby building, chased Susso into a side street and shot him in the head, it is alleged.

    The bullet passed through Susso’s skull and out the other side, grazing the brain but not damaging it. According to police, the gangster then ‘sauntered off’.

    'Rubino walked 100 metres with a pistol in his hand between many people, as if nobody could stop him,’ said Rudolfo Ruperti, head of Palermo police's Flying Squad. ‘He felt so powerful that he believed he would go unpunished. He has a violent, Mafioso nature.’

    Mr Susso lay in a coma for four days and is now undergoing rehabilitation. Speaking from his hospital bed, he told MailOnline: ‘This won’t change me. My feelings can never change. I want to stay in Italy. Physically I am feeling better, but I am very emotional.

    ‘It was a miracle. My parents are Christian and I’m a believer,’ he said. ‘I’m not feeling angry, I’m just feeling good to have my life. When I go out of the hospital it will be like the first day of my life.’

    Eyewitnesses reported seeing him sat in the road clutching his head. ‘When I went over there I didn’t think he was badly hurt because he was just acting as if he had a headache,’ said a shopkeeper. ‘Then he took his hand away and I saw the blood.’

    At the scene, locals pointed out the bloodstain that remains visible on the road.

    Rubino, who according to the mayor was 'a mafiosi', was apparently trying to establish himself as a local boss with the intention of either joining with a bigger Mafia family or setting up a new dynasty.

    He was demanding protection money from immigrant businesses, police sources said, and ‘terrorising’ the local community.

    Mr Ruperti, leading the investigation, said: 'At the moment Rubino is not a member of any official Mafia clan, but his bullying indicates a clear Mafioso attitude.


    'His method is typically Mafioso, as he wants to show with the gun that he commands the territory, and uses the gun for a minor scuffle.

    'This is his gravest crime, and he faces 16 years in prison. His criminal record includes armed bank robbery, drug dealing and sex trafficking.'

    Part of his strategy involved preying mercilessly on foreigners, targeting immigrant-owned businesses for protection money.

    Mr Susso’s lawyer Vincenzo Gervasi told MailOnline the attack was part of an effort by Rubino to advertise himself to the bigger Mafia players, for whom the influx of rival African gangs is a grave concern.

    He told police that he was ‘happy to go to prison for 12 years’ if it meant establishing a reputation as a force to be reckoned with in the Sicilian underworld.

    ‘He was a guy with a big personality, a Mafia personality. He wanted to take territory from other Mafia families of Palermo,’ said Gervasi. ‘He was trying to rule Ballaró. This was his plan to win power and have a role within the Mafia world.’

    Unnamed African and Pakistani shopkeepers said that when they heard that the gangster was behind bars they said, ‘finally we are free from him’.

    When Rubino was transported from the police station to prison, members of his family gathered and applauded – an established Mafia tradition in Sicily.

    Rubino, who faces up to 16 years' jail charged with attempted murder, has a criminal record including convictions for drug dealing, sex trafficking and armed robbery.

    His neighbour Giovanni Zinna, 46, a former social worker who has lived opposite the attacker for 15 years, said: ‘He and his friends have no knowledge of life outside Palermo, so they are obsessed with gaining power in the city.’

    ‘This is their culture. It is the beginning of a war between the Mafia and the migrants. It is going to get worse. I am scared. There will be more migrants, more friction, more attacks. This was the first shooting, but it won’t be the last.’

    Yesterday, the Italian prime minister, Matteo Renzi, wrote a letter to EU officials proposing that it funds ‘migration management’ measures in Africa, to stem the huge flow of the ‘economic migrants’ who are unlikely to be granted asylum.

    ‘One of our aims is to lower levels of migration and reduce tensions in Sicily and Italy as a whole,’ said Andrea Romano, an MP for Italy’s ruling Democratic Party.

    ‘What we see in Sicily is that when the state tries to better organise the migrants, the Mafia reacts. It tries to push people against the state and the migrants, because it wants the situation to remain blurred and disorganised. That allows them to take control.

    ‘Of course the tension is going to rise when migrant number go up. It is unavoidable in the face of such an emergency.

    ‘We want to better organise migration to lower burden on Sicilian citizens and push for our EU partners to share the burden with Italy. We hope that will ease the situation.’

     Mota Offspring
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    ‘Palermo is a Middle Eastern town in Europe. It is a mosaic city and we are happy about that.'

    não é possivel que todos os politicos dos maiores países europeus são todos tão cucks assim

    imagina essa onda de imigração chegando a Roma? Rest in Peace Vaticano

     Excel Rose
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    o mais dolorido é saber que na itália inteira vc tinha apenas 2000 muçulmanos vivendo nos anos 70 e hoje o número está na casa dos 2 milhões

    é um crescimento absurdo

     Kar
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    Mota Offspring escreveu: ‘Palermo is a Middle Eastern town in Europe. It is a mosaic city and we are happy about that.'

    não é possivel que todos os politicos dos maiores países europeus são todos tão cucks assim

    imagina essa onda de imigração chegando a Roma? Rest in Peace Vaticano
    Quero ver esse Papa comuna pregar tolerância quando a merda começar a bater na porta dele.

     Don Corleone
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    Atentados em Bagdá deixam 27 mortos

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    Ao menos 27 pessoas morreram e mais de 100 ficaram feridas nesta terça-feira em dois atentados executados com poucas horas de intervalo em Bagdá, ao mesmo tempo em que forças governamentais tentam expulsar os extremistas de Mossul, segunda maior cidade do país.

    Um dos ataques foi reivindicado pelo grupo extremista Estado Islâmico (EI), o mesmo que resiste ao avanço das tropas iraquianas em Mossul (norte), onde 200.000 civis estão bloqueados entre os combates, o que preocupa várias organizações internacionais.

    Nesta terça-feira, pouco depois da meia-noite, um carro-bomba foi detonado diante de uma sorveteria no bairro de Kerrada, centro de Bagdá.

    “O balanço subiu a 16 mortos e 75 feridos, incluindo mulheres e crianças”, afirmou uma fonte das forças de segurança.

    Fotografias publicadas nas redes sociais mostram o impacto devastador da explosão, que deixou o local cercado por escombros.

    O grupo EI reivindicou o ataque por meio de sua agência de propaganda Amaq e indicou que tomou como alvo “uma reunião de xiitas”.

    Brett McGurk, enviado da coalizão liderada pelos Estados Unidos, condenou o ataque.

    “Os terroristas do EI atacaram famílias e crianças que tomavam sorvete ao ar livre. Seguimos respaldando o Iraque contra os malvados”, escreveu no Twitter.

    Poucas horas depois, um carro-bomba explodiu na “ponte dos mártires”, uma das principais da capital.

    “Onze pessoas morreram na explosão do carro-bomba contra civis”, afirmou um policial, que citou dezenas de feridos.

    O atentado não foi reivindicado, mas o ‘modus operandi’ recorda o do grupo EI.

    – Condições difíceis –

    os ataques aconteceram durante o mês do jejum muçulmano, o Ramadã, marcado com frequência por atentados jihadistas no Iraque.

    Ao mesmo tempo, a ofensiva para retomar Mossul, último grande reduto do EI no Iraque, prosseguia nesta quarta-feira. As tropas iraquianas, auxiliadas pelas aeronaves da coalizão internacional liderada pelos Estados Unidos, avançavam pela zona oeste da cidade.

    De acordo com a ONU, entre 180.000 e 200.000 civis estariam bloqueados em áreas de Mossul controladas pelos extremistas, a maioria na parte conhecida como cidade antiga.

    A força aérea iraquiana lançou panfletos que recomenda a fuga dos moradores das zonas de combate e dos bairros sob controle dos jihadistas, mas o impacto de um potencial grande êxodo nos próximo dias preocupa a ONU.

    “Provavelmente, os civis correm um risco maior atualmente, nas últimas fases (das operações militares)”, afirmou a coordenadora humanitária da ONU para o Iraque, Lise Grande.

    “Os medicamentos estão em falta, há uma importante escassez de água potável e as reservas de alimentos são muito limitadas”, explicou.

    “As famílias que tentam escapar são alvos frequentes dos atiradores”, disse.

    – Êxodo –

    Com o apoio da coalizão internacional, as forças iraquianas realizam desde outubro uma ofensiva para reconquistar Mossul, controlada pelo EI desde junho de 2014.

    No fim de janeiro, os iraquianos retomaram o controle da zona leste da cidade e em fevereiro iniciaram o ataque contra a zona oeste, apertando o cerco aos jihadistas na cidade antiga, área muito complicada de ser reconquistada.

    “O acesso à cidade antiga está completamente bloqueado pelo sul e nossas tropas estão presentes no norte e oeste”, disse um porta-voz militar. A parte leste fica à margem do rio Tigre.

    Desde o início da ofensiva em Mossul, 760.000 civis abandonaram suas casas, mas 150.000 deles já retornaram para suas casas, afirmou Lise Grande.

    A queda de Mossul representaria um grande revés para o EI, mas não significaria o fim da guerra contra a organização extremista, que ainda controla territórios em três províncias do Iraque.

    http://istoe.com.br/atentados-em-bagda- ... 27-mortos/

    Obrigado Bush

     UltraRS
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    Não para de lutar máfia :malefico: :malefico: :malefico:

     Rules
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    Avanti Máfia

     Lakitus
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    não sabia onde postar isso

     zero_0592
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    frança honrando as tradições

     Lakitus
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