AZJoe
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New Eye-Opening Documentary Completely Exposes Barbaric Saudi Regime
http://theantimedia.org/new-eye-opening-documentary-completely-exposes-barbaric-saudi-regime/
A British television crew recently filmed an undercover documentary in Saudi Arabia in an attempt to penetrate the world’s most secretive and murderous regime. … It reveals the hidden side of the regime, which buys billions of pounds worth of British arms, accepts training from British security forces, sells oil back to the U.K., and enjoys nothing less than red carpet treatment from the British royal family. …
What they discovered was a state that beheads — and even crucifies — its citizens; where women lack basic human rights and its children are indoctrinated. Patrolled by religious police, citizens are tortured, imprisoned, and sentenced to death for writing blogs and questioning authority. It sounds like the Islamic State, but it’s not — it’s the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia. And it is fully propped up by Europe and the United States.
The mind-boggling documentary reveals how Saudi Arabia’s money and Wahhabi ideology has helped drive terrorism around the world. ...
In January 2015, the Union Jack flew at half-mast at Westminster as a mark of respect for the death of Saudi ruler, King Abdullah. During the same month, young Saudi blogger Raif Badawi received 50 lashes in public. Convicted of insulting Islam after blogging about his government and religion, quoting Albert Camus, he wrote:
[A] brutal and secretive country where the King is all powerful, journalists cannot operate without a minder, and dissent is a cardinal sin … The royal family is worth billions. In contrast, an estimated quarter of the population lives in poverty, and numerous women were filmed begging and being beaten in the streets. …
[Women] are banned from driving and struggle to perform simple tasks, such as going to the doctor without a male guardian. …
The religious police, officially known as the Committee for the Promotion of Virtue and Prevention of Vice, patrol streets and shopping malls … Playing music in public is forbidden … religious police force women to cover themselves and drive people out of cafes to pray. This strict form of Sunni Islam is known as Wahhabism, and it is the religion on which Saudi Arabia was founded. … “It’s no wonder that thousands of Saudis joined ISIS and other terror groups because they were trained in Saudi schools.” …
In 2015, Saudi Arabia executed 157 people. Traditional punishments are employed, and executions are often carried out in public by one sword blow to the neck. Headless bodies are sometimes displayed publicly, and the documentary shows harrowing footage of a Burmese woman screaming for mercy as she is beheaded in the street. …
the regime relies on secrecy; criticism of the government is considered an act of terror. …
“The ideology of ISIS is not much different from the ideology that Wahhabi Salafi Islam Saudi adheres to. … Even if we defeat ISIS there will be another terrorist organization, perhaps with a different name, as long as they have this ideology.” …
Saudi Arabia executed 47 people in January of this year — its largest mass execution since 1980. Some were convicted terrorists, but others were political activists. …
http://theantimedia.org/new-eye-opening-documentary-completely-exposes-barbaric-saudi-regime/
A British television crew recently filmed an undercover documentary in Saudi Arabia in an attempt to penetrate the world’s most secretive and murderous regime. … It reveals the hidden side of the regime, which buys billions of pounds worth of British arms, accepts training from British security forces, sells oil back to the U.K., and enjoys nothing less than red carpet treatment from the British royal family. …
What they discovered was a state that beheads — and even crucifies — its citizens; where women lack basic human rights and its children are indoctrinated. Patrolled by religious police, citizens are tortured, imprisoned, and sentenced to death for writing blogs and questioning authority. It sounds like the Islamic State, but it’s not — it’s the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia. And it is fully propped up by Europe and the United States.
The mind-boggling documentary reveals how Saudi Arabia’s money and Wahhabi ideology has helped drive terrorism around the world. ...
In January 2015, the Union Jack flew at half-mast at Westminster as a mark of respect for the death of Saudi ruler, King Abdullah. During the same month, young Saudi blogger Raif Badawi received 50 lashes in public. Convicted of insulting Islam after blogging about his government and religion, quoting Albert Camus, he wrote:
“The only way to deal with an unfree world is to become so absolutely free that your very existence is an act of rebellion.”
Comments like this earned the father of three 1,000 total lashes and ten years in prison. …
[A] brutal and secretive country where the King is all powerful, journalists cannot operate without a minder, and dissent is a cardinal sin … The royal family is worth billions. In contrast, an estimated quarter of the population lives in poverty, and numerous women were filmed begging and being beaten in the streets. …
[Women] are banned from driving and struggle to perform simple tasks, such as going to the doctor without a male guardian. …
The religious police, officially known as the Committee for the Promotion of Virtue and Prevention of Vice, patrol streets and shopping malls … Playing music in public is forbidden … religious police force women to cover themselves and drive people out of cafes to pray. This strict form of Sunni Islam is known as Wahhabism, and it is the religion on which Saudi Arabia was founded. … “It’s no wonder that thousands of Saudis joined ISIS and other terror groups because they were trained in Saudi schools.” …
In 2015, Saudi Arabia executed 157 people. Traditional punishments are employed, and executions are often carried out in public by one sword blow to the neck. Headless bodies are sometimes displayed publicly, and the documentary shows harrowing footage of a Burmese woman screaming for mercy as she is beheaded in the street. …
the regime relies on secrecy; criticism of the government is considered an act of terror. …
“The ideology of ISIS is not much different from the ideology that Wahhabi Salafi Islam Saudi adheres to. … Even if we defeat ISIS there will be another terrorist organization, perhaps with a different name, as long as they have this ideology.” …
Saudi Arabia executed 47 people in January of this year — its largest mass execution since 1980. Some were convicted terrorists, but others were political activists. …
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