Showing posts with label Jakarta. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jakarta. Show all posts

Monday, August 8, 2011

FALSE FLAG LONDON RIOTS?

Louis James, 19, who says he has never held a job and learned to read only three years ago, admitted to looting a $195 sweater. Photo by Tom Pilston for the International Herald Tribune (London Riots Put Spotlight on Troubled, Unemployed Youths in Britain)



The English Riots: Who Benefits?



At http://canspeccy.blogspot.com/ we read:



"The riots now spreading through Britain's major urban centers ... may not have been so spontaneous...



"We have seen how social destabilization in the Middle East and North Africa has been driven by an organized storm of Tweeting and other forms of digital networking, mostly in the English language oddly enough, assisted surely by agents provocateurs on the ground.



"Should we dismiss the possibility of something similar in England?"



Canspeccy speculates that elements of the government may have organised the riots in order to advance their agenda.



"What, then, to do?



"Spark a massive race riot, hold the police back until the thing is blazing across the nation, then use the disaster as the rationale for necessary restraint on immigration, thereby establishing a populist base for the right?"



Tanks in Glasgow, in 1919, ready to shoot the people. "The seriousness of the government's intent can be gauged from Regulation 965 about how to deal with 'civil unrest': 'It is undesirable that firing should take place over the heads of the rioters or that blank ammunition should be used.'" - BBC NEWS.



The riots give the 'powers that be' a chance to crack down on those who might organise against the wealthy elite.



Max Hastings, a friend of the military, explains the thinking of the rich elite (UK riots 2011: Liberal dogma.):



"An underclass has existed throughout history...



"Its spasmodic outbreaks of violence, especially in the early 19th century, frightened the ruling classes.



"Its frustrations and passions were kept at bay by force and draconian legal sanctions."



We can now expect more force and draconian legal sanctions.



We can expect public sympathy to be on the side of law and order.



On 22 July 2011, not far from London, General Petraeus met Brigadier Simon Wolsey, commander of the British Army's 2 (South East) Brigade. Brig Wolsey worked at the Pentagon from 2006 to 2008. (General Petraeus tours Dover war tunnels) Also on 22 July 2011, Petraeus met US Director of the Office of National Drug Control Policy Barry Richard McCaffrey. Petraeus was also in the UK in March 2011.



The police seemed to let the London riots happen.



'White boys ripped off the shutters, then a group of around eight or nine children went in and stole the day’s takings...



'All the time the police were about 15 yards away, just watching.'



So where WERE the police? Shopkeepers mystified at tactics that left them defenceless





"The American government secretly backed leading figures behind the Egyptian uprising who have been planning 'regime change' for the past three years, The Daily Telegraph has learned."



(America's secret backing for rebel leaders.)





Michael Ruppert tells us who is behind the riots.



The UK's General Frank Kitson developed the idea of the 'pseudo gang'. (General Frank Kitson: Trail Blazing Fake Terrorism)



The pseudo gang works for the military but pretends to be a bunch of rioters or terrorists.



The idea of the 'pseudo gang' is to attack innocent civilians and then blame the attacks on the people that the military wants to discredit.



1998 - the CIA reportedly wanted regime change.



In August 2011 - we have Riots in London.



This reminds us of:



May 1998 - when there were Riots in Jakarta, reportedly organised by elements of the military, reportedly trained by the USA.



There may be no strong connection, but there are possible similarities.



White rioter in Hackney, London, 8 August 2011.



In May 1998 it was believed that the economy of Indonesia had been undermined by hidden forces, such as George Soros.



The stock market had plummeted.



Banks had collapsed.



The Jakarta riots were sparked by uniformed men shooting dead four students.



(On 8th August 2011 we learn that in the London Tottenham riot: the Bullet fired at a police officer 'belonged to the police'. The riots in London started after the shooting of Mark Duggan by the police.)



CIA boss General David Petraeus was in London in March 2011.



The riots of May 13-14



On the 13th of May there were reports of rioting in the area around Trisakti University in Jakarta.



President Suharto was attending a conference in Egypt and the military top brass went off to Malang in East Java to attend a ceremony.



(BBC News - London riots: David Cameron on holiday / Tottenham riot: top police officer flew off on holiday.)





1998



On the 14th of May, serious rioting took place in the Jakarta area.



There were no signs of any uniformed soldiers on the streets.



(London riots 2011: 'lack of police on streets'.)



Deaths



Over 1,000 people died during these Jakarta riots, most having been burnt in malls and supermarkets but some having been shot or beaten.



British Prime Minister David Cameron welcomed Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to London on 4 May 2011



Alleged involvement of the military in planning the riots



Father Sandyawan Sumardi, a 40-year-old Jesuit priest and son of a police chief, led an independent investigation into the events of May 1998.



As a member of the Team of Volunteers for Humanitarian Causes he interviewed people who had witnessed the alleged involvement of the military in organising the riots and rapes.



(The Riot Pattern in Jakarta and Surroundings. ( http://www.asiaweek.com/asiaweek/98/0626/nat_6_indoriots.html)



A security officer alleged that Kopassus (special forces) officers had ordered the burning down of a bank.



A taxi driver reported hearing a man in a military helicopter encouraging people on the ground to carry out looting.



Shop-owners at a Plaza claimed that, before the riots, military officers tried to extract protection money.



A teenager claimed he and thousands of others had been trained as protesters.



1998



A street child alleged that Kopassus (US trained special forces) officers ordered him and and his friends to become rioters.



There was a report of soldiers being dressed up as students and then taking part in rioting.



Eyewitnesses spoke of muscular men with short haircuts arriving in military-style trucks and directing attacks on Chinese homes and businesses.



There were reports of children being encouraged to enter malls and then of the malls being set on fire.



There were allegations that muscular men with short haircuts had gang-raped little Chinese girls and then murdered some of them.



~~ David Cameron is to expect regime change?



In Tottenham in London, the local Member of Parliament, David Lammy, has blamed people from outside the area for causing the riots.



The Daily Mail referred to unconfirmed reports that suggest a group of around 150 youths arrived in the north London suburb of Tottenham from 4 p.m.




Igor Gois, a Brixton resident and deputy manager at neighbouring Phones4u, said: "The police are saying that it is the youths that are doing this. But it’s not; it’s big men." (Streatham traders speak of riot drama)



"Rioters were left virtually unchallenged in several neighborhoods and able to plunder from stores at will or attempt to invade homes." (Britain burns: Riots spread through UK cities)



"This kind of behavior makes the police look like the good guys, which is why agent provocateurs are routinely used to stage such violence at major summits.



"That’s not to say some of the chaos isn’t driven by genuine grievances over police brutality and poverty, but the majority of the violence is being committed by mindless teenage thugs who have let themselves be molded by Britain’s broken society into Clockwork Orange-style droogs." (Prison Planet.)



"Residents questioned why no police officers were available to combat rampant looting as thieves methodically cleared stores...



"The most senior officer in Haringey left to go on holiday just hours before rioting began on Saturday.



"Detective Chief Superintendent Sandra Looby jetted off to Florida despite warnings the police shooting of Mark Duggan could spark violence...



"In the busy shopping street of Green Street, in Forest Hill, there were reports that 400 young Asian men had chased off up to 150 rioters...



"Residents in Clapham, Croydon, Peckham and Hackney complained at the absence of police officers during the worst confrontations...



"In Clapham, Owen MacCarthy, 28, a bank worker, said: 'We've been here for an hour and half and we haven't seen a single police officer." (Scotland Yard braced for backlash over 'lack of police on streets )



~~



STAGED BY SPOOKS: FALL OF THE BERLIN WALL, ORANGE ...




TOP TURK FRIEND OF ISRAEL, OBAMA AND HEROIN?

Saturday, July 14, 2007

Saudis Spoil The Party

Saudi players celebrate dramatic win

It is easy with hindsight to say that it was coming but it was. Even the combined wills of 90,000 partisan Indonesian fans couldn’t stop Saad Al Harthi’s header crashing high into Pitoy’s net three minutes into injury time.

The free-kick was taken right in front of the press box – one which seemed to have more supporters than reporters – and the location was an inviting one with several tall Saudis waiting in the middle just one good cross away.

So, instead of 1-1 it was 2-1 to the three-time champions. Instead of a draw against South Korea next Wednesday, Indonesia will almost certainly need to put the Taeguk Warriors to the sword and relieve the visitors of all three points, though in an Asian Cup full of surprises, such a thing is not beyond the realms of possibility.

Indonesian players belt out their anthem

Earlier the same evening, Gelora Bung Karno wasn’t a stadium stunned into silence by Haarthi’s header - it had been rocking. Buoyed by the team’s thrilling 2-1 win over Bahrain four days previously, the locals had responded by snapping up all tickets more than 24 hours before kick-off.

Bangkok and Kuala Lumpur may be resistant to the delights of the Asian Cup but Jakarta has been coming down with a full-blown fever and it was contagious.


To say the atmosphere was deafening would be an understatement. Even 45 minutes before kick-off, it was special. In such surroundings it is easy to get carried away and believe that anything is possible – the fans certainly did.

Gelaro Bung Karno Stadium almost an hour before kick-off


They had been told to come early as President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono had decided to pay his first ever visit to the national arena to see the team. Security was tight and the khaki of the uniformed security guards was a sharp contrast to the strangely attractive green and white shirts that the liaison officers sported.

It was Saturday night with the Saudis. Unlike the fans, most of whom were sporting ‘unofficial’ national team shirts, the local scribes were not confident of keeping out the visitors. “You saw our defence against Bahrain, it is not good,” said one.

That may be but the hosts have buckets of pride and passion and while the three-time continental champs had more of the possession in a lively opening period, it was Indonesia who had the chances.

Elie Aiboy missed a sitter from three yards after ten minutes and will still shaking his head when Saudi striker Yasser Al-Qahtani was sticking his on a great cross from Ahmed Al Bahri to put his team ahead.



The crowd barely missed a beat and continued to roar on the reds and they were rewarded five minutes later as Aiboy made up for his earlier miss by rounding the goalkeeper and coolly slotting the ball home.

Indonesia finished the half with a couple of good chances and hopes were high at half-time. There was still a sneaking suspicion that another goal was necessary to secure the point that would have satisfied every spectator –from the legions of security guards who never took their eyes from the action to the president himself.

Guards glued to game

As the second period progressed, the Saudis took control and started to make chances. The crowd were quieter than they had been all night; they were nervous, the local scribes were nervous and I was nervous.

The referee may have been over-fussy during the game but was correct to award a free-kick just outside the right side of the Indonesian penalty area. As the Saudis lined up the kick, and crowded the six yard box with their tallest players, it was not difficult to predict what was going to happen.

That cross found the head of Saad Al Harthi. Haarthi missed a sitter during injury time against Korea and had been vilified by the Saudi press. Redemption was his as he headed the ball firmly into the net - the Saudis’ second aerial goal of the game.

While the goal was probably deserved, it was cruel as all last-minute winners are. You didn’t need to be an expert in the local language to understand the general sentiments that were being expressed by those in the press box and outside.

The Saudi scribes were on their feet though. One of them seemed to be hit by a missile. I had been warned that Indonesians fans don’t take defeat very well and are prone to fighting after losing. Outside the stadium, that didn't seem to be the case - the atmosphere outside was calm and slightly sad.

There is still one game left though and it should be a cracker.

Copyright: John Duerden & Soccerphile


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