News Killing of CARE Worker in Iraq Highlights Terrorists' Cruel Intentions

  • Thread starter Thread starter Dagenais
  • Start date Start date
AI Thread Summary
Hassan, a dual Irish-British-Iraqi citizen and chief of CARE International in Iraq, was kidnapped in Baghdad on October 19. No group has claimed responsibility, but Al-Jazeera reported threats from her captors to hand her over to al-Qaida-linked militants unless Britain withdraws its troops from Iraq. The discussion highlights the troubling trend of targeting aid workers, suggesting that insurgents are not only opposing foreign forces but also harming Iraqi citizens, including those with dual citizenship. This behavior indicates a broader conflict against the Iraqi populace and a struggle for power in the aftermath of coalition forces. The conversation also touches on the high civilian death toll in Iraq, emphasizing that the violence is not limited to foreign nationals but affects local individuals as well. The motivations behind these kidnappings appear to be tied to political agendas and a desire for media attention rather than a straightforward anti-Western sentiment.
Dagenais
Messages
289
Reaction score
4
http://www.canada.com/national/story.html?id=ccbc6dbf-80ac-4d8c-a04c-166a4d5d0985


Hassan, an Irish-British-Iraqi citizen who was chief of CARE International in Iraq, was abducted Oct. 19 from her car in Baghdad. No group has claimed responsibility for her kidnapping and there was no sign on a previous brief broadcast of any banner identifying who held her.



On Nov. 2, Al-Jazeera reported that Hassan's kidnappers had threatened to turn her over to al-Qaida-linked militants notorious for beheading hostages unless Britain agreed within 48 hours to pull its troops from Iraq.

So now, they're killing CARE workers trying to help Iraq too. What are they trying to accomplish? This further proves that terrorists aren't fighting for their country.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
Physics news on Phys.org
I suppose they want media attention and tell any foreigners to keep out of Irak. Of course, it can only keep civilian help out, and make Bush want to bring in more soldiers. Seems like digging deeper than they already are.
 
Gonzolo said:
I suppose they want media attention and tell any foreigners to keep out of Irak. Of course, it can only keep civilian help out, and make Bush want to bring in more soldiers. Seems like digging deeper than they already are.
This woman wasn't simply a foreign aid worker: she was an Iraqi citizen of dual citizenship.

This clearly shows that many (how many?) of the so-called "insurgents" are fighting against the Iraqi people themselves. It isn't just the American soldiers or all Americans or even all westerners - its civilization itself that is the enemy to these people.
 
Yup, they seem to want some other kind of civilization, because they are pissed at the present one. Hassan did have British ties though, so from their point of view, it might be some revenge towards Blair's decision to join Bush's invasion.

An Iraqi with no western world ties is probably safer from the insurgents, but these poor guys are on a thin line, have to choose between the coalition view of civilisation, and whatever it is exactly that the insurgents want.

I believe having heard that some kidnapped Lebanese, and French have been released, instead of being executed. I'm not convinced everyone from the civilized world is a potential hijack victim. It's mostly those who are associated to, or can be claimed to be associated to, the coalition agenda.
 
Here's a case where an Iraqi-born Canadian victim was freed :

http://cnews.canoe.ca/CNEWS/World/Iraq/2004/09/23/640946-cp.html

In this case, the group wanted a company to pull out in return.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
russ_watters said:
This woman wasn't simply a foreign aid worker: she was an Iraqi citizen of dual citizenship.

Ahum, according to the Iraq Body Count (http://www.iraqbodycount.org/), a respected organization according to the BBC, estimates the amount of killed Iraqi civilians somewhere between 14.000 and 16.000.

Amongst them are a number of local people being killed by the same terrorists, especially people volunteering to serve and protect the frail democracic process as soldiers or policemen. It was already clear for a long time the terrorists are not only targeting the "imperialistic" intruders.

Does it make a difference if somebody dies of beheading, a car bomb, ... ?

I think it's clear that what we see in Iraq is just a struggle for power after the coalition forces have left the country. Killing allies has become mere a marketing exercise for these people to make themselves popular with that part of the people who will assist in getting or keeping them in power.

Greetz,
Leo
 
Similar to the 2024 thread, here I start the 2025 thread. As always it is getting increasingly difficult to predict, so I will make a list based on other article predictions. You can also leave your prediction here. Here are the predictions of 2024 that did not make it: Peter Shor, David Deutsch and all the rest of the quantum computing community (various sources) Pablo Jarrillo Herrero, Allan McDonald and Rafi Bistritzer for magic angle in twisted graphene (various sources) Christoph...
Thread 'My experience as a hostage'
I believe it was the summer of 2001 that I made a trip to Peru for my work. I was a private contractor doing automation engineering and programming for various companies, including Frito Lay. Frito had purchased a snack food plant near Lima, Peru, and sent me down to oversee the upgrades to the systems and the startup. Peru was still suffering the ills of a recent civil war and I knew it was dicey, but the money was too good to pass up. It was a long trip to Lima; about 14 hours of airtime...

Similar threads

Replies
2
Views
2K
Replies
2
Views
4K
Back
Top