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Norway Govt Center Bombed, Ruling Party Youth shot. Death Toll Casualty 87

motormafia

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Video on page below

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/07/23/world/europe/23oslo.html

16 Die in Norway Shooting and Bombing

By ELISA MALA and J. DAVID GOODMAN
Published: July 22, 2011

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OSLO — Norway suffered dual attacks on Friday when powerful explosions shook the government center here and, shortly after, a gunman stalked youths at an island summer camp for young members of the governing Labor Party. The police arrested a Norwegian in connection with both attacks, which killed at least 87 people and stunned this ordinarily placid nation.
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Deadly explosions shattered windows on Friday at the government headquarters in Oslo, which includes the prime minister’s office. A spokeswoman for Prime Minister Jens Stoltenberg said he was safe. More Photos »
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"I have friends who are stationed on the youth camp. A friend says she's hiding in a closet. Some of the teenagers have started swimming from the island. Right now I am so scared. Everything has changed in just a few hours. "

Sara, Oslo

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The explosions, from one or more bombs, turned Oslo, a tidy Scandinavian capital, into a scene reminiscent of terrorist attacks in Beirut or Baghdad or Oklahoma City, panicking people and blowing out windows of several government buildings, including one housing the office of the Norwegian prime minister, Jens Stoltenberg, who was unharmed.

The state television broadcaster, citing the police, said seven people had been killed and at least 15 wounded in the explosions, which they said appeared to be an act of domestic terrorism.

Even as the police locked down a large area of the city after the blasts, a man dressed as a police officer entered the youth camp on the island of Utoya, about 19 miles northwest of Oslo, a Norwegian security official said, and opened fire. “He said it was a routine check in connection with the terror attack in Oslo,” one witness told VG Nett, the Web site of a national newspaper.

At least 80 people were killed on the island, some as young as 16, the police said on national television early Saturday.

Terrified youths jumped into the water to escape. “Kids have started to swim in a panic, and Utoya is far from the mainland,” said Bjorn Jarle Roberg-Larsen, a Labor Party member who spoke by phone with teenagers on the island, which has no bridge to the mainland. “Others are hiding. Those I spoke with don’t want to talk more. They’re scared to death.”

Many could not flee in time. The Oslo police said that 9 or 10 people were killed at the camp, but that they expected the toll to rise.

After the shooting the police seized a 32-year-old Norwegian man on the island, according to the police and Justice Minister Knut Storberget. He was later identified as Anders Behring Breivik and was characterized by officials as a right-wing extremist.

The acting chief of police, Sveinung Sponheim, said Mr. Breivik, who is not known to have any ties to Islamic extremists, had also been seen in Oslo before the explosions. The police and other authorities declined to say what the suspect’s motivations might have been, but many speculated that the target was Mr. Stoltenberg’s liberal government.

“The police have every reason to believe there is a connection between the explosions and what happened at Utoya,” the police said. They said they later recovered explosives on the island.

Mr. Breivik had registered a farm-related business in Rena, in eastern Norway, which authorities said allowed him to order a large quantity of ammonium nitrate fertilizer, an ingredient that can be used to make explosives. Authorities were investigating whether the chemical may have been used in the bombing.

As the investigations continued, the police asked people to leave the center of Oslo, stay indoors and limit their cellphone use. They also said they would initiate border checks.

The attacks bewildered a nation better known for its active diplomacy and peacekeeping missions than as a target for extremists.

In Oslo, office workers and civil servants said that at least two blasts, which ripped through the cluster of modern office buildings around the central Einar Gerhardsen plaza, echoed across the city in quick succession around 3:20 p.m. local time. Giant clouds of light-colored smoke rose hundreds of feet as a fire burned in one of the damaged structures, a six-story office building that houses the Oil Ministry.

The force of the explosions blew out nearly every window in the 17-story office building across the street from the Oil Ministry, and the streets on each side were strewn with glass and debris. The police combed through the debris in search of clues.

Mr. Stoltenberg’s office is on the 16th floor in a towering rectangular block whose facade and lower floors were damaged. The Justice Ministry also has its offices in the building.
 
Thus far, it appears that this is more like Oklahoma City than 9-11. It seems to be linked to rightwing extremists inside Norway rather than jihadists outside.
 
Ang Moh Terrorist Dressed Up As MATA!

Shoot the fuck of everyone!


:eek: Now you know who is bigger terrorist, Ang Moh not Asians!
:D


article-2017851-0D1F344300000578-534_306x423.jpg


http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/wor...y-island-shooting-death-toll-rises-to-84.html

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Norway: island shooting death toll rises to 84
A gunman dressed as a policeman killed 84 people at a summer camp, police have now revealed.

Anders Behring Breivik
Image 1 of 6
The suspect is reported to be Anders Behring Breivik

7:41AM BST 23 Jul 2011

The death toll rose sharply after police began recovering bodies from the water surrounding the Utoeya island outside Oslo, where the shootings took place.

The attack at the youth camp came just hours after a bomb attack outside government buildings in Oslo killed seven people.

A 32-year-old man, named by Norwegian media as Anders Behring Breivik who has reported links to the far-Right, was being questioned by police in connection with the attacks.

Initially the number of dead on the wooded island was put at 10, but on Saturday morning they said they had discovered more bodies and confirmed 84 people had been killed in the shootings.

The mass shootings are among the worst in history and is the worst violence to hit Norway since the second world war.
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Mass shooting at Norway island youth camp
22 Jul 2011

Eye witnesses described how a blond man, who was more than 6 feet tall and dressed as a policeman, opened fire on the island with automatic weapons.

Hundreds of young people were attending a summer camp on the island, which had been organised by the ruling Labour Party.

Survivors from the shooting described how many people had laid down on the ground and pretended to be dead after the shooting began, but the gunman began systematically shooting those on the ground through the head.

Many others attempted to swim back the mainland, which was about three quarters of a mile away, but witnesses said the gunman also began shooting people as they tried to swim to safety.

Police director Oystein Maeland said: "It's taken time to search the area. What we know now is that we can say that there are at least 80 killed at Utoya.

"It goes without saying that this gives dimensions to this incident that are exceptional."

Although the motive for the attacks is not yet known, both attacks appeared to be directed towards the left-leaning Labour Party, which leads Norway's coalition government.

The youth camp, which was 20 miles north west of Oslo, was organised by the party's youth wing and the Prime Minister had been scheduled to speak there on Saturday.

One 15-year-old camper named Elise said she heard gunshots, but then saw a police officer and thought she was safe. Then he started shooting people right before her eyes.

"I saw many dead people," said Elise, who did not want her to disclose her last name. "He first shot people on the island. Afterwards he started shooting people in the water."

Elise said she hid behind the same rock that the killer was standing on.

"I could hear his breathing from the top of the rock," she said.

At a hotel in the village of Sundvollen, where survivors of the shooting were taken, 21-year-old Dana Berzingi wore pants stained with blood.

He said the fake police officer ordered people to come closer, then pulled weapons and ammunition from a bag and started shooting.

Several victims "had pretended as if they were dead to survive," Berzingi said. But after shooting the victims with one gun, the gunman shot them again in the head with a shotgun, he said.

"I lost several friends," said Berzingi, who used the cell phone of one of those friends to call police.

Andre Skeie, 26, who took his boat to the island to help evacuate people, said: “I’ve seen it with my own eyes, at least 20 dead people lying in the water.”

The Norwegian Prime Minister Jens Stoltenberg said he had spent many summers on Utoya as a child, describing it as "my childhood paradise that... was transformed into Hell".

"Never since the Second World War has our country been hit by a crime on this scale," he added.

Norway's Foreign Minister Jonas Gahr Store, who visited the camp on Thursday, praised those who were attending.

"The country has no finer youth than young people who go for a summer camp doing politics, doing discussions, doing training, doing football, and then they experience this absolutely horrendous act of violence," he said.

In Oslo, government officials urged people to stay at home and to avoid central areas of the city.

Shards of twisted metal, rubble and glass littered the streets around where the car bomb exploded on Friday.

Most of the windows in the 20-floor high-rise where Prime Minister Jens Stoltenberg and his administration work were shattered.

Other buildings damaged house government offices and the headquarters of some of Norway's leading newspapers.

Seven people are thought to have been killed in the blast, but there were concerns that more victims may still be inside the buildings hit by the explosion.

Emergency services have had difficulty accessing these buildings amid concerns about further possible explosions as well as fears the blast may have left buildings unstable.

Ian Dutton, who was in a nearby hotel, said people "just covered in rubble" were walking through "a fog of debris."

"It wasn't any sort of a panic," he said, "It was really just people in disbelief and shock, especially in a such as safe and open country as Norway. You don't even think something like that is possible."

Police said the Oslo explosion was caused by "one or more" bombs.

A police official said the Oslo bombing occurred at 3:26 p.m. local time (1:26 p.m. GMT), and the camp shootings began one to two hours later.

The official said the gunman used both automatic weapons and handguns, and that there was at least one unexploded device at the youth camp that a police bomb disposal team and military experts were working on disarming.

National police chief Sveinung Sponheim said the camp shooter "wore a sweater with a police sign on it. I can confirm that he wasn't a police employee and never has been."

The United States, European Union, NATO and the U.K., all quickly condemned the bombing, which Britain's Foreign Secretary William Hague called "horrific" and NATO Secretary-General Anders Fogh Rasmussen deemed a "heinous act."

"It's a reminder that the entire international community has a stake in preventing this kind of terror from occurring," President Barack Obama said.

Obama extended his condolences to Norway's people and offered U.S. assistance with the investigation. He said he remembered how warmly Norwegians treated him in Oslo when he accepted the Nobel Peace Prize in 2009.

Nobel Peace Prize Chairman Thorbjorn Jagland said it appeared the camp attack "was intended to hurt young citizens who actively engage in our democratic and political society. But we must not be intimidated. We need to work for freedom and democracy every day."

A U.S. counterterrorism official said the United States knew of no links to terrorist groups and early indications were the attack was domestic.

At least two Islamist extremist groups had tried to take credit for the attacks. Many intelligence analysts said they had never heard of Helpers of Global Jihad, which took initial credit. The Kurdish group Ansar al-Islam also took credit on some jihadist websites.

Norway has been grappling with a homegrown terror plot linked to al-Qaeda. Two suspects are in jail awaiting charges.

Last week, a Norwegian prosecutor filed terror charges against an Iraqi-born cleric for threatening Norwegian politicians with death if he is deported from the Scandinavian country.

The indictment centred on statements that Mullah Krekar - the founder of Ansar al-Islam - made to various news media, including American network NBC.
 
article-2017709-0D1F33FB00000578-704_306x512.jpg


http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/art...eivik-right-wing-extremist-hated-Muslims.html

Norwegian massacre gunman was a right-wing extremist who hated Muslims


Suspect named by Norwegian media as Anders Behring Breivik
Police believe he acted alone and not connected to Islamist organisations

By Daily Mail Reporter

Last updated at 7:11 AM on 23rd July 2011

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Suspect: Norwegian media reported that Anders Behring Breivik has been arrested

Suspect: Norwegian media reported that Anders Behring Breivik has been arrested

The massacre in Norway was the work of a man with extreme right wing views who hated Muslims, police said this morning.

Officers found a series of raving internet posts by 32-year-old Anders Behring Breivik, who was arrested for gunning down children on the island of Utoya yesterday.

National police chief Sveinung Sponheim told public broadcaster NRK that the suspected gunman's Internet postings 'suggest that he has some political traits directed toward the right, and anti-Muslim views, but if that was a motivation for the actual act remains to be seen'.

Six foot tall and blond Breivik is reported to have arrived on the island of Utoya and opened fire after beckoning several young people over in his native Norwegian tongue.

Reports suggest he was also seen loitering around the site of the bomb blast in Oslo two hours before the island incident.

More than 30 are believed to have been killed - seven in Oslo and between 25 to 30 on Utoya Island, 50 miles north of the capital.

Initially it was not known what were the motives of the gunman and architect of the car bomb - whether they or the single person had been radicalised and was part of a militant Muslim group waging Jihad or was trying to further a home-grown political cause.

But it now appears Breivik was behind both attacks, a fact that it took police hours to realise as the mayhem ensued.

Crime scene: The 32-year-old Norwegian used this white van to drive onto the island of Utoya

Crime scene: The 32-year-old Norwegian is said to have used this white van to drive onto the island of Utoya

The incidents come as social tensions with Norway heighten in recent months over the country’s perceived stance on Islamic issues.
Injured: Seven people were killed in the Oslo bomb blast (pictured)

Fatal: Seven people were killed in the Oslo bomb blast (pictured)

Though a long-standing Nato member, Norway has not attracted many enemies because it has tended to stay out of international conflicts.

However, it has recently increased its military presence in Muslim countries such as Afghanistan or Libya, a move bound to anger fanatics.

There was anger among some of the 150,000 Muslims living in Norway when a newspaper reproduced the controversial Danish cartoons of the Prophet Mohammad in January last year.

Last night ‘Helpers of the Global Jihad’ posted a message on the internet claiming the bombing was ‘only the beginning’ of the retaliation over the cartoons.

But this has been dismissed by some commentators as a publicity stunt.

Other Scandinavian countries have faced radical Islamic attacks in the past.

Violence erupted in Denmark after a newspaper published a cartoon of the Prophet wearing a turban in the shape of a bomb in 2005.

And last December an Islamic suicide bomber, who was radicalised in Britain, set off a bomb in Stockholm.

Police would not speculate on who was responsible for the attack or whether international groups were involved.

But the country is also in the midst of grappling with a homegrown terror plot linked to al-Qaida.

Two suspects are in jail awaiting charges.

Last week, a Norwegian prosecutor filed terror charges against an Iraqi-born cleric for threatening Norwegian politicians with death if he is deported from the Scandinavian country.

The indictment centred on statements that Mullah Krekar - the founder of the Kurdish Islamist group Ansar al-Islam - made to various news media, including American network NBC.

Jihadist groups have also made recent threats to Norway over plans to expel Mullah Krekar, the founder of the Kurdish Islamist group Ansar al-Islam.


More...

MASSACRE AT KIDS' CAMP: More than 30 feared dead as terrorist opens fire at Norwegian summer camp and car bomb devastates Oslo
'Norway's 9/11': At least 30 feared dead in double attack on Norwegian capital and holiday island
Terrified teens 'swam for their lives and hid in trees' as island gunman fired at them

Norway's support of NATO's mission in Libya also earned it enemies, Bob Ayers, a former U.S. intelligence officer, told AP.
Shows: Norway attacks suspect Anders Behring Breivik
Shows: Norway attacks suspect Anders Behring Breivik

Suspect: The 32-year-old Norwegian Anders Behring Breivik, who has been arrested after the attacks

'Norwegians are in Afghanistan. They're in Tripoli. They reprinted the cartoons,' he said.

Many intelligence analysts said they had never heard of Helpers of Global Jihad, which took initial credit. Ansar al-Islam also took credit on some jihadist web sites.

And Ayers said it appeared more than one person was involved.
Wrecked: The blast in Oslo was outside a government office

Wrecked: The blast in Oslo was outside a government office

Asked at a press conference in Tripoli about Libya's reaction to the events in Oslo, government spokesman Moussa Ibrahim said, 'We never support any acts of terrorism whatsoever.'

But he suggested NATO's policies could have prompted the attack, saying, 'NATO is planting terrorism in the hearts of many. This is unfortunate and sad.'

Authorities in Norway and other Scandinavian countries have focused on anti-terrorism tactics that frustrate countries like the U.S. that are more aggressive about making arrests.

Scandinavian authorities fight terrorism by disrupting plots, sometimes telling suspects they know what they're up to, and warning them of the consequences.

Terror convictions are also difficult to get because of scepticism in Scandinavian courts toward cases built on intent - as most terrorism trials are - and a demand for more evidence than in the U.S. and many other places.

Europe has been the target of numerous terror plots by Islamist militants.

The deadliest was the 2004 Madrid train bombings, when shrapnel-filled bombs exploded, killing 191 people and wounding about 1,800.

A year later, suicide bombers killed 52 rush-hour commuters in London aboard three subway trains and a bus.

And in 2006, U.S. and British intelligence officials thwarted one of the largest plots yet - a plan to explode nearly a dozen trans-Atlantic airliners.

In October, the U.S. State Department advised American citizens living or travelling in Europe to take more precautions following reports that terrorists may be plotting attacks on a European city.

Some countries went on heightened alert after the May 2 killing of Osama bin Laden.

Intelligence analysts said they doubted the attack was linked to bin Laden's death.

'Al-Qaida would have targeted something closer to U.S. interests if it was related to bin Laden,' Ayers said.
 
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No gov/agency can fight those dare to die. Those like sucide bomber no way anyone can stop them.
Those like President/PM who always travel with bodyguard and amour vehicle. They know that that cannot win. If not why they need to travel ibn amour car.
 
Most likely a false-flag attack by the.......................mossad.......................

Punishment for norway's support for palestine.......................
 
no one is safe if you cross the jews.................Norway supported Palestine............

S'pore is safe becoz it's a jewish colony................



notice the muslims hardly ever attack Israel ?



all major terroriust attacks like 9/11 are all inside-jobs...............led by the mossad.........
 
Initial reports filtering in suggest that the perpetrator is a neo-nazi opposed to immigration. Our so-called terrorism experts sitting inside air-conditioned offices and drawing fat salaries justify their existence by rehashing newspaper reports on terrorist organizations and putting up reports and papers concocting imaginary threats to Singapore. These people should look at the Oslo massacre from the Singapore angle. It occurred because of intense hatred for immigrants by a local Norwegian. A similar situation is developing in Singapore. Locals are angry and furious with the government for liberalizing the entry of foreigners under the guise of foreign talent. Locals have to live with increased cost of housing, squeeze in trains and buses, fight for jobs etc. The simmering anger generated by the preferential treatment for foreigners will explode one day. The Oslo incident should be studied seriously by our Home Affairs Team, particularly by the SID and ISD, with a view to preventing any untoward incidents committed by affected locals.
 
That's one reason why the Singapore government takes security so seriously even though we are just as peaceful as Norway or Sweden.

PAP Govt is a BIG LAUGHINGSTOCK as far as security is concerned.

:p

The so intensively PRETEND to be serious for security whilst SO SLACK & INCOMPETENT and CORRUPTED. Like no other countries in this world.:D

ISD and Gurkhas should had be imprisoned 5 years each. WKS 1 year. For MSK case alone.

The PAP is the only idiot that did not know how bad their own jokes are!:mad:

If any individual or group was serious to target SG, it is the most vulnerable and helpless country in the whole damn world. ISD mata Gurkhas SAF and their PAP Generals are the Biggest WEAKNESS of security. The only remedy is to shoot them all from top down.:eek:

To make SG safer!
:D:D
 
This case is exactly what SGP will need.

You need a bunch of Ang Moh Terrorist like this guy, dressed up in US Army uniforms and gears and weapons. Attack the whole NDP and kill 500 starting from PAP govt.

They will NOT EVEN DARE TO RETURN FIRE.

Fear Ang Moh, Fear US Military, fear Western God!
:eek::*:
:D:D

Just Lan Lan the PAP will get killed.

Think carefully! This is what the attackers can do BEST against SG.

When even a faked US military unit start to slaughter NDP like pigs, they dare not even run!
:D:D

Because Ang Moh's are god, when their god want to kill them, they would be too fearful and in awe to attempt escape. :D:D:D

:oIo: Fuck PAP!


This is the kind of fuckards they are, and this is the way they need to get exposed and insulted.
:D
 
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Very insightful interpretation of the Oslo massacre...

Initial reports filtering in suggest that the perpetrator is a neo-nazi opposed to immigration. Our so-called terrorism experts sitting inside air-conditioned offices and drawing fat salaries justify their existence by rehashing newspaper reports on terrorist organizations and putting up reports and papers concocting imaginary threats to Singapore. These people should look at the Oslo massacre from the Singapore angle. It occurred because of intense hatred for immigrants by a local Norwegian. A similar situation is developing in Singapore. Locals are angry and furious with the government for liberalizing the entry of foreigners under the guise of foreign talent. Locals have to live with increased cost of housing, squeeze in trains and buses, fight for jobs etc. The simmering anger generated by the preferential treatment for foreigners will explode one day. The Oslo incident should be studied seriously by our Home Affairs Team, particularly by the SID and ISD, with a view to preventing any untoward incidents committed by affected locals.

compared to this totally brainless PAP porlumpar

That's one reason why the Singapore government takes security so seriously even though we are just as peaceful as Norway or Sweden.
 
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Christians worst than Muslims!:oIo:

http://news.smh.com.au/breaking-new...-fundamentalist-christian-20110724-1huqg.html

Norway suspect 'fundamentalist Christian'
Pierre-Henry Deshayes
July 24, 2011 - 1:24AM
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AFP

Police say the Norwegian suspect in the two attacks that left at least 92 dead described himself as a fundamentalist Christian, as evidence emerged that he had flirted with the political far-right.

The 32-year-old, previously unknown to police, was arrested on Friday after a bomb blast in central Oslo killed seven people and a shooting rampage at a youth camp near the capital left at least 85 dead and scores wounded.

Local media have identified him as Anders Behring Breivik, whose picture on his Facebook page shows a man with longish blonde hair and piercing eyes.
Advertisement: Story continues below

The posting lists his religion as "fundamentalist Christian" and his political opinions lean "to the right", police said.

"He has certain political traits that lean to the right and are anti-Muslim but it is too early to say if that was the motive for his actions," police commissioner Sevinung Sponheim told public television NRK on Saturday.

In less than two hours on Friday the suspect allegedly carried out two attacks that appeared to target the ruling Labour Party.

The first strike was a bomb attack near the offices of Prime Minister Jens Stoltenberg and those of other ministers in the heart of Oslo's government quarter.

In the second attack, about 40km from the capital, the suspect allegedly masqueraded as a police officer before opening fire on young people attending an island camp run for Labour's youth wing.

The head of the populist right-wing Progress Party (FrP), Siv Jensen, said on Saturday she was sorry to learn that the suspect had been a party member between 1999 and 2006 and for several years a leader in its youth movement.

"Those who knew the suspect when he was a member of the party say that he seemed like a modest person that seldom engaged himself in the political discussions," she said in a statement on the party's website.

He was also a member of a Swedish neo-Nazi Internet forum named Nordisk.

Nordisk hosts discussions rangingfrom white power music to political strategies to crush democracy, according to the Stockholm-based Expo foundation that monitors far-right activity.

Behring Breivik's Facebook profile says he is "conservative", "Christian", and "single", interested in hunting and video games such as World of Warcraft and Modern Warfare 2.

On an Internet debate site www.document.no in 2009, he expressed his frustrations with the Progress Party. In their desperate attempt to satisfy multicultural expectations and "the suicidal ideals of humanism, they have thrown the baby out with the bath water", he wrote.

He also said he was the manager of an organic farm, Breivik Geofarm, which would have given him access to raw materials that could be used to make explosives.

He reportedly bought six tonnes of fertiliser in May, an agriculture cooperative said.

Tax records, which are open to the public in Norway, show that the suspect listed no income for 2009 and modest sums in the previous years.

On his Twitter account, Behring Breivik posted only one message, dated July 17, in English adapted from a quote by British philosopher John Stuart Mill.

"One person with a belief is equal to a force of 100,000 who have only interests," he wrote.

© 2011 AFP
 
A similar situation is developing in Singapore. Locals are angry and furious with the government for liberalizing the entry of foreigners under the guise of foreign talent. Locals have to live with increased cost of housing, squeeze in trains and buses, fight for jobs etc. The simmering anger generated by the preferential treatment for foreigners will explode one day. The Oslo incident should be studied seriously by our Home Affairs Team, particularly by the SID and ISD, with a view to preventing any untoward incidents committed by affected locals.

No need to panic. There is no land to farm in Singapore. With no land, no farming company can be set up, no farming company, no fertilizer can be purchased, no fertilizer, no bomb can be manufactured. Phew..
 
No need to panic. There is no land to farm in Singapore. With no land, no farming company can be set up, no farming company, no fertilizer can be purchased, no fertilizer, no bomb can be manufactured. Phew..

Explosives can be simply made. Nitride is not the only common explosives.

You can make explosion easily from fuel and gas and oxygen etc etc. Don't need to be a PHD chemist to do so. :)
 
Explosives can be simply made. Nitride is not the only common explosives.

You can make explosion easily from fuel and gas and oxygen etc etc. Don't need to be a PHD chemist to do so. :)

Same thing like fertilizer, getting fuel, oxygen, gas etc in bulk is not easy. Don't need to be a Secondary school teacher to know that :)
 
norway does support the muslims, but it's otherwise very much a right-wing capitalist country. i was thinking a anti-government anarchist would attack them, like during the thatcher years in UK.
 
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