This blog salutes the Planned Muslimhood Leader policy of post birth Isalmic abortions by B. Hussein Obama Chin, as his numbers in fertile womb Islam are quite remarkable in the Obama Peace has now ended the lives of 93,000 Syrians.
Now a Christian American, like myself might not agree with such genocide, but then we are all just sheep in the flock of the feudal lords now, but success should be commended as opium production is up in Muslim lands, oil profits are up in Muslim lands and the only thing down is life expectancy.
Success should always be rewarded. Mr. Obama Chin saying, "God bless you, "to Planned Parenthood is something he should have just said, "I bless you".
The Red Cross has the Red Crescent or something in Muslim lands, and they haul bombs around in ambulances, so I see no real problem in Mr. Obama Chin taking the suicide bomber out of the summation of things, and just performing al Qaeda abortions on masses of humanity.
Look, Planned Parenthood makes like a billion dollars, but Obama's Planned Muslimhood is like making a trillion dollars in blowing Muslims up, and that is just in war costs in his Peace of Nobel Price. Think of the money from dope sales, sex slave sales, oil sales....and couscous sales for funeral celebrations. Obama is great business for dead Muslims.
If dead Muslims could be traded on the Stock Market they would make more money than a Ponzi Scheme.
I know that dead Muslims are traded in oil, military and bank contracts, already, as that is what makes money in dead Muslims, but I just think there should be a Planned Muslimhood stock exchange with the DOW, and it would make it all easier for folks, as why hide all that is behind all that money being made, and just give CEObama the credit and make all this cash flow ......well legal and not hidden behind things like Islamocommunist governments putting Mubarak in a cage.
Birther has made more money for the elite, has gleaned more tissue from Muslim lands and done it all so efficiently that the dead Muslims and those left in the gulags of America, have no clue what has even taken place.
This is something to be ...well give Barack Obama the Congressional Medal of Honor and let him give hisself a Presidential Freedom Award as this is all so very impressive.
From all Mr. Obama Chin manifested, he is like most abortionists in always having wanted to be aborted as a child, but never had the bravery to commit suicide as an adult, so they vent on babies and other tissues to give them the cure, as they know these miserable folks would like to be dead any way.
At the kill rate that is taking place, there really will not be any Muslims to be a bother in another decade. Who knew that such success could come from on Secular Islamist policy in Birther Hussein Obama Chin.
One can only hope that when Mr. Obama is gone, that he has left mandates in place to keep up this profitability structure, as Planned Muslimhood is big business when run out of 1600 Penn Avenue.
For those who need a reminder, it was Obama's Ambassador to Iraq who showed up in Syria on tour and immediately the Syrian slaughter started......just like George Soros was setting terrorists free in Libya and all hell broke loose there.
Say where is Soros? I guess he is too busy counting all these Obama trillions he has made off of dead Muslim.
Yes if only Obama could live forever...........there would be no Muslims in a few years, all the Jews would be Obamians due to Obama raising hisself from the dead, and Catholics could become Obamalics in the Pope answering to Barry Chin.
Yes if only Obama could live forever..........
Yes allah bless you Barack Hussein Obama, you are doing the Obama's work in a Nobel way.
Who needs the Crusades with such a noble leader, yes this too is Obama the Lionhearted.
agtG
UN says nearly 93,000 killed in Syrian conflict
Jun 13, 9:55 AM (ET)
By SARAH EL DEEB and JOHN HEILPRIN
|
BEIRUT (AP) - Nearly 93,000 people have been confirmed killed since
Syria's civil war began more than two years ago, the U.N. said Thursday,
a sharp rise in the death toll as the fighting turns increasingly
sectarian and the carnage gripping the country appears unstoppable.
The grim benchmark came as President Bashar Assad's regime has scored a series of battlefield successes against the rebels seeking his ouster and international efforts to forge a round of peace talks have stalled. After regaining control of the strategic town of Qusair near the border with Lebanon, regime forces appear set on securing control of the central provinces of Homs and Hama, a linchpin area linking Damascus with regime strongholds on the Mediterranean coast, and Aleppo to the north.
In continued violence, a mortar shell slammed into an area near the runway at the Damascus International Airport Thursday, briefly disrupting flights to and from the Syrian capital, officials said, a few weeks after the government announced it had secured the airport road, which had been targeted by rebels in the past.
The country's transportation minister Mahmoud Ibrahim Said told Syrian TV that a shell fired by "terrorists" struck near a warehouse, breaking its windows and wounding a worker there.
He said the attack delayed the landing of two incoming flights, from Latakia and Kuwait, as well as the takeoff of a Syrian flight to Baghdad. No passengers were harmed and no planes were damaged, he said. The regime refers to rebels as "terrorists."
The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said rebel fighters targeted the airport with homemade rockets.
Rebels also battled regime forces for control of a key military base in the central Hama province after chasing soldiers out and setting fire to installations there, activists said.
Following dawn battles, rebels fighting to topple Assad took control of the base on the northern edge of the town of Morek, which straddles the country's strategic north-south highway leading to Aleppo.
By midday, regime forces shelled the base and sent reinforcements in an apparent attempt to regain control of the key base, said the Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.
The
Observatory, which has a vast network of Syrian activists on the
ground, said the rebels killed six government fighters and seizing
ammunition and weapons. Two rebel fighters were killed.
An amateur video posted on Hama activists' Facebook page showed flames
rising from the burning compound and the bodies of some of the killed
fighters. In the video, fighters celebrated the capturing of the base,
calling it one of the "most critical" regime outposts in the region.
The Geneva-based U.N. human rights office said it has documented 92,901 killings between March 2011 and the end of April 2013. But the U.N. high commissioner for human rights, Navi Pillay, said it was impossible to provide an exact number, which could be far higher.
The figure was up from nearly 60,000 through the end of November, recorded in an analysis released in January. Since then, U.N. officials had estimated higher numbers, most recently 80,000. The latest report adds more confirmed killings to the previous time period and an additional 27,000 between December and April.
The conflict in Syria began in March 2011 as largely peaceful protests against Assad's autocratic regime. After a relentless government crackdown on the protests, many Syrians took up arms against the regime, turning the uprising into civil war.
The
figures trace the arc of violence, with the average monthly number of
documented killings rising from around 1,000 per month in the summer of
2011 to an average of more than 5,000 per month since last July. At its
height from July to October 2012, the number of killings rose above
6,000 per month.
"The constant flow of killings continues at shockingly high levels,"
Pillay said. "This is most likely a minimum casualty figure. The true
number of those killed is potentially much higher."
Among the victims were at least 6,561 children, including 1,729 children younger than 10.
"There are also well-documented cases of individual children being tortured and executed, and entire families including babies being massacred - which, along with this devastatingly high death toll, is a terrible reminder of just how vicious this conflict has become," Pillay said.
Her office commissioned San Francisco-based nonprofit Human Rights Data Analysis Group to study eight data sets provided by various groups containing 263,000 reported killings. Those lacking a name, date and location of death were excluded, and some duplicates were found.
"Civilians
are bearing the brunt of widespread, violent and often indiscriminate
attacks which are devastating whole swaths of major towns and cities, as
well as outlying villages," Pillay said.
"Government forces are shelling and launching aerial attacks on urban
areas day in and day out," she said. "Opposition forces have also
shelled residential areas, albeit using less fire-power, and there have
been multiple bombings resulting in casualties in the heart of cities,
especially Damascus."
The vast majority of the victims are male, but three-quarters of the reported killings do not indicate a person's age, and the analysis could not differentiate between fighters and non-combatants.
The most documented killings were in rural Damascus, with 17,800 people dead. Next were Homs, with 16,400; Aleppo, 11,900; and Idlib, 10,300.
The grim benchmark came as President Bashar Assad's regime has scored a series of battlefield successes against the rebels seeking his ouster and international efforts to forge a round of peace talks have stalled. After regaining control of the strategic town of Qusair near the border with Lebanon, regime forces appear set on securing control of the central provinces of Homs and Hama, a linchpin area linking Damascus with regime strongholds on the Mediterranean coast, and Aleppo to the north.
In continued violence, a mortar shell slammed into an area near the runway at the Damascus International Airport Thursday, briefly disrupting flights to and from the Syrian capital, officials said, a few weeks after the government announced it had secured the airport road, which had been targeted by rebels in the past.
The country's transportation minister Mahmoud Ibrahim Said told Syrian TV that a shell fired by "terrorists" struck near a warehouse, breaking its windows and wounding a worker there.
He said the attack delayed the landing of two incoming flights, from Latakia and Kuwait, as well as the takeoff of a Syrian flight to Baghdad. No passengers were harmed and no planes were damaged, he said. The regime refers to rebels as "terrorists."
The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said rebel fighters targeted the airport with homemade rockets.
Rebels also battled regime forces for control of a key military base in the central Hama province after chasing soldiers out and setting fire to installations there, activists said.
Following dawn battles, rebels fighting to topple Assad took control of the base on the northern edge of the town of Morek, which straddles the country's strategic north-south highway leading to Aleppo.
By midday, regime forces shelled the base and sent reinforcements in an apparent attempt to regain control of the key base, said the Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.
|
The Geneva-based U.N. human rights office said it has documented 92,901 killings between March 2011 and the end of April 2013. But the U.N. high commissioner for human rights, Navi Pillay, said it was impossible to provide an exact number, which could be far higher.
The figure was up from nearly 60,000 through the end of November, recorded in an analysis released in January. Since then, U.N. officials had estimated higher numbers, most recently 80,000. The latest report adds more confirmed killings to the previous time period and an additional 27,000 between December and April.
The conflict in Syria began in March 2011 as largely peaceful protests against Assad's autocratic regime. After a relentless government crackdown on the protests, many Syrians took up arms against the regime, turning the uprising into civil war.
|
Among the victims were at least 6,561 children, including 1,729 children younger than 10.
"There are also well-documented cases of individual children being tortured and executed, and entire families including babies being massacred - which, along with this devastatingly high death toll, is a terrible reminder of just how vicious this conflict has become," Pillay said.
Her office commissioned San Francisco-based nonprofit Human Rights Data Analysis Group to study eight data sets provided by various groups containing 263,000 reported killings. Those lacking a name, date and location of death were excluded, and some duplicates were found.
|
The vast majority of the victims are male, but three-quarters of the reported killings do not indicate a person's age, and the analysis could not differentiate between fighters and non-combatants.
The most documented killings were in rural Damascus, with 17,800 people dead. Next were Homs, with 16,400; Aleppo, 11,900; and Idlib, 10,300.