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NEWS AND VIEWS THAT IMPACT LIMITED CONSTITUTIONAL GOVERNMENT

"There is danger from all men. The only maxim of a free government ought to be to trust no man living with
power to endanger the public liberty." - - - - John Adams

Thursday, August 7, 2014

Jihadis recruited at Australian colleges


The Australian Protectionist Party protesting against Hizb ut-Tahririn Lidcombe, Sydney.
Photo: Brad Hunter

Importing Islamic Terrorism


Counter terrorism agencies fear Australia universities could be a breeding ground for radicalising overseas students with claims that an Indian student was recruited to Jihad while studying in Queensland.

Indian security agencies believe Adil Fayaz, 26, joined the civil war in Syria last year after becoming radicalised by Islamic fundamentalists while studying an MBA at a Queensland university in 2012.

Senior intelligence officials in Australia claimed they were concerned about the possibility that foreign students could be drawn into radicalised cells in Australia reports the Melbourne Herald Sun.

Fayaz, originally from Kashmir, came to Australia in 2009 and studied for three years.

And the moronic leaders of the world keep importing Muslims into their countries.

After leaving Queensland, it is believed he joined an Australian NGO in Malaysia before travelling to Turkey and finally arriving in Syria last year.

“Senior home ministry officials say Adil was radicalised by Islamic fundamentalists in Australia,” an Indian media report said.

The revelation came just a day after Prime Minister Tony Abbott announced tough new anti-terror laws designed to stop Australians radicalised overseas, returning home.

It also follows a string of other Queensland Muslims to be radicalised and join the jihad in Syria, including former Gold Coast schoolgirl Amira Karroum and her husband Yusuf Ali, killed earlier this year, and the charging of a Brisbane mum accused of trying to fly supplies to her husband fighting in the Middle East.

Fayaz’s family denied his involvement in any jihadi movement.

“He is working in Turkey and is in regular touch with us. Even last night we were speaking to him on Skype till 3am,” a family member told the Hindustan Times.


Creeping Sharia
Sharia a good fit in some areas, says academic
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AUSTRALIA'S Muslims would not move towards a parallel legal system if some Islamic practices were better integrated into the existing legal framework, a University of Sydney academic said.
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The Sydney law school lecturer Ghena Krayem said extensive interviews with NSW Muslim leaders and community members found they were not seeking a recognition of sharia in areas where it was contrary to existing Australian law, such as polygamy.
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But where in practice both systems overlapped - such as marriage and divorce - they sought a better integration of Islamic principles, enhancing social cohesion without legislative change.
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Dr Krayem, whose doctoral thesis on the topic is the first empirical study of its kind, said ad hoc mediation of marriage breakdowns by imams - a practice which already operated in the shadow of the law - would benefit from procedural safeguards such as the transparency and accountability of the dispute resolution system of the Family Law Act.


Read more: Sydney Morning Herald

Gallipoli Mosque, Sydney, Australia
A Muslim insult to every Australian.   The mosque was named to honor Muslim soldiers who killed thousands of Australians during the Gallipoli Campaign of World War I.

And just a few miles from Australia
A masked person canes Indonesian food seller Murni Amris for violating Islamic Shariah law outside a mosque in Jantho, Aceh province, Indonesia.  (Global Post) 
 (Chaideer Mahyuddin/AFP/Getty Images)

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