First published at 22:06 UTC on January 10th, 2019.
Public policy debate November 12, 2014
Speech:
Mr speaker!
al-Qaeda, al-Shabab, Boko Haram, Hamas, Hizb ut Tahrir, Hezbollah, Islamic jihad, Islamic state, Jemaah Islamiyah, Muslim Brotherhood, Talibans.
the list can be long, considerably longer than th…
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Public policy debate November 12, 2014
Speech:
Mr speaker!
al-Qaeda, al-Shabab, Boko Haram, Hamas, Hizb ut Tahrir, Hezbollah, Islamic jihad, Islamic state, Jemaah Islamiyah, Muslim Brotherhood, Talibans.
the list can be long, considerably longer than that.
Mr Speaker!
The common denominator is that they are all violent and anti-democratic Islamist terrorist organizations.
Every time they use violence as a method, each time the suicide bombers blow up innocent people, Every time they halal slaughter "unbelievers" they find support for this in the Qur'an and in Muhammad's actions.
These organizations are so numerous and their activities so extensive that it can hardly be said that this is a small minority.
The problem, however, is not just these organizations but also countries such as Iran and Saudi Arabia, countries like Pakistan and Afghanistan, Islamic countries that trample on the values we take for granted. Nor in this case can it be said that this is a small minority.
Another example is Turkey, which is undergoing rapid Islamization, or Egypt, where nearly 50 percent of the population of the 2012 election chose to vote for the Muslim Muslim Brotherhood.
In turn, 25 percent chose to vote for the Islamist Salafists. Thus, a devastating majority of voters chose to support anti-democratic Islamists. Do not come and say that it is a small minority!
Mr Speaker!
A few days ago, a Christian couple were attacked by a lynch mob of 1,500 people in Pakistan.
Eagerly encouraged by the local mullahs they were dragged into the street, beaten and thrown into a brick oven and burned to death.
The woman was pregnant in the fifth month. What was the crime then? They were accused of having violated the Qur'an. 1,500 people are not what I call a small minority.
Is there anyone in this hall who can at all think the idea that a few hundred, for example, Simrishamnsbor, eagerly encouraged by some priests, would commit a similar act here in Sweden? I do not think so.
Christians are t..
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