viernes, 20 de junio de 2014

If cannabis were legal in France, Mehdi Nemmouche would be safely in Algeria...


The French (Jihad) Connection

by Theodore Dalrymple

How a routine search for drugs turned up a terrorist

If cannabis were legal in France, Mehdi Nemmouche would be safely in Algeria, instead of under lock and key awaiting extradition to Belgium. Nemmouche was on his way to his father’s native Algeria when French customs agents in Marseille searched the bus on which he had travelled from Amsterdam. They were looking for drugs.

What they found instead in Nemmouche’s possession was a Kalashnikov rifle, a revolver, lots of ammunition, a gas mask, a short video of the weapons in his possession accompanied by a verbal commentary (probably in his voice) on the recent murder of four Jews at the Jewish Museum in Brussels, clothing similar to that worn by the perpetrator of that attack, and a white flag with the words Islamic State of Iraq and of the Levant in Arabic inscribed on it. No man is guilty until proven so in a court of law, of course, but the prosecuting authorities allowed themselves to say that the presumptive evidence against Nemmouche was very strong.

Nemmouche’s story is depressingly banal, at least in this context, and brings to mind that of Mohamed Merah, another young man of Algerian parentage, who in 2012 shot dead three French paratroopers and four other people—three children and a teacher—at a Jewish school in Toulouse, before being killed himself by French security forces after a siege at his home.

Nemmouche was abandoned by his father soon after his birth in 1985, leaving him in the charge of a mother who could not cope; he was placed in foster care at the age of three months. His siblings were likewise placed in care. At his own request, he went to live with his grandmother when he was 17. A teacher took him under his wing, and he tried but failed to become an electrician. Instead, he turned to crime and was convicted seven times for such offenses as driving without a license, auto theft, and robbery. His last sentence, from 2007–12, was for another violent robbery, among other crimes.

Never having been religious, Nemmouche was converted to jihadi Islam in prison.

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Read more: www.city-journal.org




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