After all,
his coreligionist Malik Faisal Akram had taken four Jews hostage at a
Texas synagogue, and he had to defend his cult.
But why did Beydoun even bother? Did he not have faith in the media?
The media has mastered the art of protecting the identity of Islamic
terrorists, defending them when their identity is known, and downplaying
their crime. I had to read five news articles to learn the name of the
man who took the hostages in Texas. Some introduced him as the “hostage
taker”; others as a man with a “British accent.” How difficult was it
anyway for an informed reader to figure that a terrorist demanding the
freedom of an Islamic terrorist has to be one as well?
Now that it has been revealed that Malik Faisal Akram was a
44-year-old British Pakistani citizen who had started to show his
jihadist colors from 2001 on and had been banned from Blackburn’s
magistrates’ court for repeatedly threatening the staff, a new story is
being spun around him. The brother of the dead jihadi informs us that
Akram, who had fathered six children, had “mental health issues.” This
is an out-of-date format, a template that has been done to death. It
evokes laughter, not the sympathy our media is trying to create.
Some four months ago, a huge anti-Hindu pogrom broke out in
Bangladesh. Mobs of enraged Muslims were razing Hindu temples, tearing
down makeshift religious pavilions put together for Durga Puja
celebrations, raiding Hindu houses, and killing Hindu devotees in the
International Society of Krishna Consciousness (ISKCON) temple. They
argued that the Hindus had insulted the Quran by placing it in front of a
Hindu diety’s idol. When ISKCON tried to create awareness about this
violence through their official Twitter handle, Twitter, very
conveniently, removed the Bangladesh ISKCON Twitter account.
Locals alleged that three women of a Hindu family, including a minor,
were gang-raped by Muslim rioters; the child had eventually succumbed
to her injuries. A local news channel also acknowledged the incident,
but shortly after airing their report, they edited the video, omitting
the news about the rape and the death it caused.
After investigations, the police discovered that it was not a Hindu,
but a Muslim named Iqbal Hossain who had taken the Quran into the Hindu
pavilion, leading to the communal riots. Soon the Internet was awash
with reports explaining that Hossain was a mentally challenged vagabond,
almost acquitting him of his offense. Do you see a pattern here?
On February 14, 2019, a 21-year-old Kashmiri suicide bomber, Adil
Ahmad Dar, who was working for Pakistan-based terror group
Jaish-e-Mohammad, rammed his explosive-laden car into a Central Reserve
Police Force (CRPF) convoy, killing 40 Indian armed forces personnel.
The media got to work instantly. One Muslim journalist reported
that Dar was a fan of Indian cricketers, implying he was just like any
other Indian boy his age; another media house interviewed Dar’s father,
who alleged that his son was radicalized after being stopped by the
police on his way home from school some three years ago. Since then, he
had been determined to join the jihadis.
Bringing the aging parents of deceased jihad terrorists into the
picture is an effective way of garnering sympathy. After Hizbul
Mujahideen terrorist Burhan Muzzafar Wani was taken down
by Indian forces, media outlets presented him as an innocent son of a
poor schoolteacher who was a victim of extrajudicial killings.
The founder of al-Qaeda, Osama bin Laden, was unarguably one of the
biggest terrorists of our times. On the sixth anniversary of his death,
an Indian news outlet tried to humanize him by featuring an article
describing him as a “loving father” and reiterating the same old “People are not born terrorists… The West knows only the terrorism” baloney. After massive outrage, the site had to reconsider its decision to publish this insensitive piece.
But this did not prevent them from pulling the same stunts again.
After the 2020 communal riots in Delhi, pictures of one Shah Rukh Pathan
brandishing
a gun at a police officer went viral on social media. When the initial
attempt to pass him off as a Hindu rioter failed, the media came out
with a white paper on the accused murderer, watering down his crime.
They painted him as a regular gym enthusiast who loves to wear crisp
shirts after blow-drying his gel-smeared hair, and whose mother was
waiting for him to return home and enjoy a plate of steaming biryani
when he got stuck in the riot.
Very convincing!
These last hours are crucial He will buy Heaven with saying sorry and accepting God as his saviour. Just like the good thief hanging on the cross, did when he asked Jesus: Lord remember me when you go to Paradise.