Sunday, June 23, 2013

Flashback: It Was Hezbollah, Hamas and Al Qaeda That Engineered the Prison Escapes of Muslim Brotherhood Leaders Including Morsi

I realize that the story here is about an Egyptian court calling for the arrests of Hezbollah and Hamas and al Qaeda leaders for their role in master minding the prison break of hundreds and thousands of Muslim Brotherhood members and leaders awhile back but what I wanted to focus on is this - the way Muslims act.

Here we have Morsi, the current President of Egypt and leader of the Muslim Brotherhood who was one of those prisoners who benefited by being broken out of prison in Egypt by the plotting of Hezbollah.  So what does Morsi do when he becomes President of Egypt for awhile?  Well, he is formulating efforts in Egypt to aid the Syrian Sunni rebels in their fight against not only Assad but also Hezbollah.

So, to make it perfectly clear, how does Mohammed Morsi repay the Hezbollah leadership that worked to see that he gained his freedom in Egypt?  He masterminds a military plan to see that Hezbollah fighters in Syria are wiped out with the aid of Egyptian funding, weapons and firepower.

Gotta love the way Muslims show their true faces, huh?

The story comes from The Jerusalem Post.



'Hamas, Hezbollah planned jail break that freed Morsi'


An Egyptian court on Sunday called on Interpol to arrest the heads of Hamas, Hezbollah, and al-Qaida affiliated organizations in Sinai for their alleged role in planning and executing the prison escape of key Muslim Brotherhood leaders, including Egypt’s current president, Mohammed Morsi.

According to Al-Ahram’s English-language news site, unknown assailants stormed the Wadi El-Natroun prison during the uprising that led to the departure of Hosni Mubarak.

The newspaper reported that 11,000 inmates escaped and 13 died attempting to flee.

Egypt's Muslim Brotherhood staged a show of strength in Cairo on Friday, rallying a huge crowd to demonstrate support for Morsi - and warn opponents who hope to force him out.

The opposition called it an attempt to "terrorize" them before mass rallies they plan for just over a week's time.

Crowds waving the flags of Egypt and Islamist movements, including hardline allies, packed avenues around a suburban mosque to back the elected head of state before anti-Morsi protests planned for June 30, when he completes a first year in office marked by division and economic problems.

"We promise them, they will be crushed on this day," Tarek al-Zumar, a Salafist former militant told the crowd, many tens of thousands strong, who had travelled from all over Egypt.

"It will be the final blow to anyone who claims that they have tens, thousands or hundreds of thousands with them," said Zumar, who spent 30 years in jail for his role in killing President Anwar Sadat and was freed only after the next Egyptian leader, Mubarak, fell in 2011.

"God is great!" chanted the crowd, packing streets not far from where Islamists gunned Sadat down at a parade in 1981.

The opposition "Rebel!" alliance, campaigning to force Morsi to resign, said on its Facebook page: "These numbers, regardless of how big they get, represent all the strength and arsenal of the Brotherhood. They will not be able to add a single person."

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