Oh look, its a whole bunch more white guys on this background page - top link:
www.youtube.com/user/talibjan02
www.youtube.com/user/fazalhazswat
#
Blog:
Quote:
http://mypetjawa.mu.nu/archives/202942.php
June 18, 2010
YouTube User Fazalhazswat Doesnt Suppport Terrorism?
YouTube user fazalhazswat, aka Tahreek-e-Taliban Swat, has this on his channel:
Click to enlarge
Take this gun and kill an US NATO & ISAF Soldiers
Put this on your page is you are against terrorism?
Why not go over to Googles YouTuve and report his profile. BTW, the Tahreek-e-Taliban wwere behind Faisal Shahzads failed Times Square bombing. Interesting choice of a YouTube name, wouldnt you say? fazalhazswat
Found him by following subscription link from youtube/user/talibjan02. YouTube still doesnt get, or ignores whats in a name - gawd.
Thanks to Mean Kitteh
By Allahakchew aka SH at June 18, 2010 04:37 PM
Quote:
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/2537877/posts
Pak Taliban paid $12,000 to failed Times Square bomber
Hindustan Times ^ | June 19, 2010 | ANI
Posted on June 19, 2010 4:00:59 AM PDT by csvset
In what further strengthens the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan’s (TTP) direct involvement in the failed Times Square bombing plot, a federal indictment released earlier this week has revealed that the extremist outfit had paid $12,000 to Faisal Shahzad to plot the explosion at the busy commercial intersection.
Shahzad, a US citizen of Pakistani origin currently in detention, has been accused of planting an explosives laden SUV at Times Square.
According to The Washington Post, the 10-count federal indictment alleges that Shahzad received payments of $5,000 and $7,000 in transactions with an accomplice affiliated with the Taliban.
The first payment was received in February in Massachusetts, and the next, two weeks later in New York.
According to reports in the US media, Shahzad, who lived in Bridgeport, Connecticut, had told authorities during his interrogation that he “recently” received bomb-making instructions in Pakistan’s volatile tribal region of Waziristan.
He also told officials that he tried to detonate the improvised bomb in the Pathfinder and tried to flee the US after the failed attack.
It is worth mentioning here that the US officials and analysts had initially brushed off the TTP’s claim of a connection to the May 1 botched terror attempt, as it did not consider it a ‘trans-national group’, however, the growing evidence showcased the lengthening reach of Pakistan-based militants.