quinta-feira, 17 de março de 2011

MUBARAK- DARK SIDE OF THE MOONBARAK

k
portugues               
               
   
Alarmados egípcios resgatou dezenas de documentos na posse de estado de segurança do Egito serviço e as publicou na Internet, depois que autoridades de inteligência aparentemente tentou queimá-los. Se os documentos são verdadeiros, o Ministério do Interior egípcio parece ter ordenado a 2.005 ataques terroristas em Sharm el-Sheik.
   
Foram  achado documentos  ou dezenas deles na posse do estado de segunraça
do egito e foi publicado  na internet deois que as autoridades tentou queima-los
o governo egipico ordenou mais de de 2.005 ataques terrorista em Sharm el-Sheik
Seus crime podem ter a iluminação por ter havido um incedio no edificio que
continha o documento que ele se aproveitndo do momento da rebelião mandou incediou o local para destruir  os arquivos confindeciais

Mubarak tinha o apoio dos americanos até agora  e este fato é algo
que não se podia tolerar um politico como Mubarak  no comando
do ERgito ainda mais que seu governo era subsidado em 3 bilhoes de dolares
e muito deste dinheiro foi usado nestes ataques

MUbarak tentou queimar os documentos mas quem ficou queimando foi ele
e  ele esta caindo a escuridão.
               
                                

       

Será que Mubarak' ordenou  ataques terroristas ?   

Por Musharbash Yassin e Windfuhr Volkhard
   
           
                                                                                                                                
                           
                                                        
Um suposto junho 2005 nota postada no Facebook: É uma falsificação ou real?
                           
                            
               
   
Alarmados egípcios resgatou dezenas de documentos na posse de estado de segurança do Egito serviço e as publicou na Internet, depois que autoridades de inteligência aparentemente tentou queimá-los. Se os documentos são verdadeiros, o Ministério do Interior egípcio parece ter ordenado a 2.005 ataques terroristas em Sharm el-Sheik.
   
Particularmente sensíveis são duas notas alegada data de 2005, no que parece ser a"política do departamento secreto" do Ministério do Interior do Egito. Os documentos sugerem que o regime do presidente Hosni Mubarak caiu pode ter ordenado os ataques terroristas mortais no resort do Mar Vermelho da cidade de Sharm el-Sheikh, na península do Sinai, em Julho de 2005.

'Zero Hora', em Sharm el-Sheik

Datado 07 de junho de 2005, o segredo do documento supostamente afirma: "Ontem à 2:30 pm, nos reunimos com Mohammad H., Osama M., M. e A Rafit Siad  concordaram com todos os pontos dos planos para a implementação de Cessão 231 de 29 de janeiro 2005. Acordámos a concentrar-se em três veículos equipados com explosivos, na área ao redor da baía de Naama, de modo que a primeira fosse explodir à entrada do Hotel Mövenpick, o segundo ... perto do hotel e a terceira no Mövenpick Village, que pertencem todos ao Sr. Hussain Salim ... Nós concordamos que a hora zero na manhã de 23 de julho de 2005.
"Aconteceu  realmente naquela manhã, 1h15, em quase exatamente os locais citados no documento, e resultando em mais de 80 mortes. A até então desconhecida grupo dissidente do al- Qaeda reivindicou a autoria do atentado no resort, que é extremamente popular entre os turistas europeus.
Ostensivo Outra nota relativa a "Cessão 231," parece fornecer o contexto para o ato. Ele supostamente relata que uma disputa comercial irrompera entre Gamal Mubarak, filho do presidente Hosni Mubarak, e hoteleiro Hassain Salim.

Alarmed Egyptians rescued dozens of documents held by Egypt's state security service and posted them on the Internet after intelligence officials apparently tried to burn them. If the documents are real, the Egyptian Interior Ministry appears to have ordered the 2005 terror attacks on Sharm el-Sheik.
   
CAIRO/BERLIN -- Egypt's state security apparatus was quite literally a state within a state -- omnipresent, brutal, equipped with immense resources, and uncontrollable. Some of its crimes may now be coming to light. Over the weekend, Egyptian citizens secured secret documents from state security headquarters in Cairo. Shortly before, a fire had broken out in the building. Many in the opposition that helped to topple the Mubarak regime believe it was an arson attack aimed at destroying sensitive files.

An Alleged June 2005 memo posted on Facebook: Is it real or a fake?
                           
                            
               
   
Alarmed Egyptians rescued dozens of documents held by Egypt's state security service and posted them on the Internet after intelligence officials apparently tried to burn them. If the documents are real, the Egyptian Interior Ministry appears to have ordered the 2005 terror attacks on Sharm el-Sheik.
   
CAIRO/BERLIN -- Egypt's state security apparatus was quite literally a state within a state -- omnipresent, brutal, equipped with immense resources, and uncontrollable. Some of its crimes may now be coming to light. Over the weekend, Egyptian citizens secured secret documents from state security headquarters in Cairo. Shortly before, a fire had broken out in the building. Many in the opposition that helped to topple the Mubarak regime believe it was an arson attack aimed at destroying sensitive files.ANZEIGE
Since then, dozens of documents have been posted online. Some appear to be authentic, while others clearly appear to be fakes. Verification of the files is very difficult and manipulation cannot be ruled out. Some of the documents hint at scandalous dealings.
Particularly sensitive are two alleged memos dating from 2005 on what appears to be the letterhead of a "secret political department" of Egypt's Interior Ministry. The documents suggest the regime of fallen President Hosni Mubarak may have ordered the deadly terror attacks in the Red Sea resort city Sharm el-Sheikh on the Sinai peninsula in July 2005.
'Zero Hour' in Sharm el-Sheik
Dated June 7, 2005, the purported secret document states: "Yesterday at 2:30 p.m., we met with Mohammad H., Osama M., Rafit M. and Siad A and agreed on all the points of the plans for the implementation of Assignment 231 of January 29, 2005. We agreed to focus on three vehicles equipped with explosives, in the area around Naama Bay, so that the first would explode at the entrance to the Mövenpick Hotel, the second … near the hotel and the third in Mövenpick Village, which all belong to Mr. Hussain Salim … We agreed that the zero hour should be on the morning of July 23, 2005."
Attacks really did take place on that morning, at 1:15 a.m., at almost precisely the locations cited in the document, and resulting in more than 80 deaths. A previously unknown al-Qaida splinter group claimed responsibility for the attack at the resort, which is extremely popular with European tourists.
Another ostensible memo relating to "Assignment 231," appears to provide the context for the act. It allegedly reports that a business dispute had broken out between Gamal Mubarak, the son of President Hosni Mubarak, and hotelier Hassain Salim.
Opposition Speaks of 'Mubarak's Gestapo'
Was the Egyptian regime unscrupulous enough to instigate mass murder in order to support the private goals of the president's family? For now, the veracity of the document has not been proven. The fact that the circumstances of the attack and the alleged guidelines in the memo fit together so well could be seen as an indicator for either scenario: that the document was forged, or that it is real.
Nevertheless, it would be extremely unusual for a secret service to put an assignment like this in writing. On the other hand, though, who would fabricate a document like that -- why, and on whose behalf? It appears that only state security service insiders, with the help of historians, will be able differentiate between the real and forged documents -- and that work might have to come at a much later date. This uncertainty also applies to the remaining findings, that nevertheless were published. But, in part, they are clearly more plausible. "Mubarak's Gestapo," the name given by the opposition press for the secret service, was involved in criminal activities on all levels.
One example was the sham parliamentary elections in 2010. In those elections, the ruling party, National Democratic Party (NDP), emerged with 97 percent of the vote; attempts to defamethe Mubarak opponent Mohammed ElBaradei and candidates running for president was achieved; carefully planned physical intimidation of well-known opponents to the regime was carried out, as was the safeguarding of illegal transactions involving influential politicians on the ministerial level.
According to preliminary information, it appears high-ranking government officials with close proximity to Mubarak's son Gamal used the power of the secret service for their own purposes. The illegal, but most profitable, usurpation of state-owned land and the lucrative misappropriation of potentially fertile land along the desert highways between Cairo and Alexandria and Cairo and the Suez Canal -- that were supposed to be used to advance urgently needed expansions to agricultural farmland -- all of that would not have been possible without the "cooperation" of the feared agency of oppression.
Work Begins in Dealing with Past
First in Alexandria, then in the large cities along the Nile Delta, such as Damanhur and Kafr el-Sheik, and in the regional capitals, fearless demonstrators succeeded in occupying the branch offices of the secret service, and secured numerous documents detailing the machinations and crimes of the hated agency.
It will only be possible to determine the size of the spoils after a difficult period of stock-taking -- not least of which because the officers responsible either had the compromising documents burned or shredded, often at the last minute. Given the scope of the spying against the country's residents, with the use of the most modern bugging systems and bestial torture, the military's ruling council, as the country's highest authority, moved to dissolve the state security apparatus after Mubarak's forced resignation.
The army has also requested that Egyptians return documents or, at least, not publish them. Indeed, lists are circulating with names of supposed informants that have not been blacked out -- a development that could have devastating consequences for those in question. Even opponents of the Mubarak regime are dicussing the ethics of publishing such documents -- and some are pleading for caution.
What began more than two decades ago far away in in Germany, with the dissolution of the East German Stasi secret police and reunification, now appears to be starting in Egypt. The country is beginning to come to terms with its difficult history under the Mubarak regime.

http://www.spiegel.de/international/world/0,1518,749989,00.html

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