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Fake story |
Posted on 12/31/2017 3:55:27 PM PST by grey_whiskers
Saudi Princess Amira Bint Aidan Bin Nayef went on a rampage against the ruling Saudi regime in her exclusive statements to the French newspaper Le Monde, saying slavery in Saudi Arabia has different forms, but it is done in secrecy and permitted only among the primary beneficiaries of the princes of the House of Saud.
She mentioned one of the most repulsive things: buying and renting the children, especially the orphans, from countries like Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, the Philippines, Djibouti, Somalia, Nigeria, Romania and Bulgaria.
(Excerpt) Read more at truepundit.com ...
Fish
This is a great first person book of what Arab Muslim people do to simple black tribal Muslims.
ROTFL!
Google Translate gives a different account from an article at http://www.lemonde.fr/les-decodeurs/article/2017/11/15/la-fausse-interview-de-la-princesse-al-tawil-dans-le-monde_5215115_4355770.html
The so-called “interview of Princess Al-Tawil in The World” never existed
Many foreign sites have resumed an imaginary interview of the Saudi princess Al-Tawil that appeared in “The World”, but has in fact never been given.
The World | 15.11.2017 at 10:22 Updated 16.11.2017 at 10.41 |
By decoders
De nombreux sites étrangers ont repris récemment une fausse interview de la princesse saoudienne Al-Tawil qui serait parue dans « Le Monde », mais qui na jamais été donnée.
“The orgies with minors, drugs and alcohol ...” , dozens of articles in English, French or Arabic resume, since November 12, a false-shock interview that would have given a Saudi princess, Amira Bint Aidan Ben Nayef Al-Tawil Al-Otaibi, better known as Amira Al-Tawil, in the “ World” . What she never did.
The newspaper has never made or published an interview or interview with Princess Amira Al-Tawil, Saudi Arabia’s ex-wife Al-Walid recently arrested by Riyadh.
The false information comes obviously from the Russian site Fort Russ , which published it Monday, November 6th. It has also been relayed in France by several sites like wikistrike.com or lesmoutonsrebelles.com ( two references that appear to us unreliable in the Decodex ). The various articles containing this false news have been shared tens of thousands of times on Facebook .
The website, which provides no link or quotation in its article, explains that the ex-wife of Prince Al-Walid granted an exclusive interview to the “ World” in which she would talk in particular about slavery practiced in Saudi Arabia and would include purchases or rentals of children from various countries.
This pseudo-interview, including by the Iranian news agency Tasnim and the Sri Lankan Daily Mirror , evokes a “slave market” in Jeddah, and orgies involving alcohol, as well as drug trafficking. children.
Again, Amira Al-Tawil, known for his philanthropic actions and his progressiveness, never gave an interview to the newspaper “ The World “ . The entirety of the comments that are lent to him is therefore false.
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I hope she will be safe.
Makes no sense to me, how somebody with a wife as beautiful as she is - and apparently with a good heart too - would want to mess with anybody else.
Holy smokes!
He sure did.
Nonetheless, my meme about Creepy Uncle Joe in post #5 this thread, stands.
Got it
#5
What is harvey weinstein doing to that featherless chicken?
“When it’s the ex-wife of a Saudi billionaire who tried to push Trump out of the race, but recently suffered a reversal of fortunes and was suspended upside-down by his feet and beaten with baseball bats...”
I didn’t know the Saudis played baseball. Learn something new every day...
Insidious American Cultural Imperialism.
But they weren't actually playing baseball.
“But they weren’t actually playing baseball.”
Well close enough. They were swinging bats...
My tagline is still correct...
What a very sick cult...Time for Muslims to stay in their hellholes...
Even if the story is fake as you claim, there are too many other stories over the years mentioning the same behavior in those mussulman tribal societies. They are extremely barbaric with a civilized veneer for naive Westerners to oooh and awh over, which is more of Islam’s taqiyya.
La Monde could likely have came under extreme pressure to deny the story from the hordes of mussulman and French sycophants and assorted politicians. There is no way to prove it true or false - just claims. However, the claims are based on realities inside the mussulman world.
Sure there is. First of all, it's not our job to prove it's false. It's their job to prove it's true. There's no proof at all that Le Monde published such an interview.
"News" without verifiable sources is worth nothing. (That absence in itself should arouse suspicion. When I cite something -- and I'm just a guy making posts, not a news source -- I try to provide some direct quotations, and a link to the source on the internet or specific reference to a book. Look at the thoroughness with which I documented my post 46 and compare that with the article. These people are clowns. There's no link to any such interview in the oldest copy of the claim that I can find on the internet, and no direct quotations from it.)
If the interview really existed, someone somewhere would have direct quotations from it. I suspect that Le Monde slants its stories to the left (as do most of the mainstream media, both in the U.S. and France), and because of the paradoxical alliance of the Western left with Islam, would tend to excuse most things associated with Muslim societies. Still, whether reliable in general or not, it wouldn't have the nerve to deny that the interview had been published in its newspaper if not true, not when people could have copies of it, or have direct quotations from net copies, or graphic images captured from its screens or pages.
This fake princess-interview story is a blatant -- not subtle -- example of fake news. Few things are more obvious. The only mystery is who exactly is responsible for it.
The Fort Russ News article, though, is labeled this way -- "November 6th, 2017 - Fort Russ News - - Breakingnews.sy - - translated by Samer Hussein". So apparently Breakingnews.sy (an Arabic-language source) is claiming that such an interview appeared in Le Monde , or else the "translator" Samer Hussein is misleading us about that claim, or else the Russian Fort Russ News is making this up (and perhaps inventing the character of Samer Hussein -- translators aren't usually cited as sources).
Arabic-language sources don't have a very good record for truth (and if internecine differences will cause Muslims will blow each other up in mosques, I don't doubt that such differences could lead to lies too). Nor do the Russsians have a good record for "pravda" [truth ;-]. I don't know who's responsible for this particular hoax, but I'm confident that the attribution to an interview in Le Monde indicates that it's fake news.
(I agree that outrages such as the ones claimed in the fake interview may indeed be happening in Saudi Arabia -- and if not, there are many other things to criticize about that country -- but to cite fake evidence about it merely causes people to be more skeptical about more legitimate claims. As an anti-Islamist myself, I'm ashamed to be associated with this kind of stuff. Lying idiots don't speak for me. And who but an idiot would fabricate the claim that an interview appeared in a well-known newspaper such as Le Monde, when it can be easily confirmed that it didn't? )
I seem to recall something about that, but do not remember the particulars.
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