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- Mar 11, 2013
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Note that the woman’s father is described as “strictly religious” in his demand that she and her seven-year-old daughter have their genitals mutilated “according to Islamic law.” Yet the establishment media in the West consistently and indefatigably insists that female genital mutilation has nothing, nothing whatsoever, to do with Islam. How did these Iraqis get the idea that the two were related? Have they been listening to greasy Islamophobes? Why did they think German authorities would be susceptible to such an appeal, when the primary concern in the West has been not to save potential victims of female genital mutilation, but to make sure no one thinks ill of Islam?

On Friday (October 9th), four passengers stood in front of federal police officers at the airport. The Iraqis – father (49), mother (44) and two children (12 and 7) – did not travel on a scheduled plane, but in a business jet.
One after the other: On Friday afternoon, a federal police officer checked the passengers of a business jet that had arrived from Istanbul in the “General Aviation Terminal”. The Iraqi family, diplomats according to the announcement, was allegedly en route from the Bosporus to the Caribbean island of Dominica.
In Munich, a stay of only one night with a subsequent change of aircraft was planned, the handling agent informed the officials. When checking the travelers, however, he noticed that the would-be diplomats could neither speak French nor English.
The examination of the diplomatic accreditation cards of the Caribbean state St. Kitts and Nevis should then bring certainty: They were fake. The twelve-year-old son was able to explain to the border police officer that the family was on the run.
During the subsequent questioning, the parents said that they were on the run from the woman’s father. This man is strictly religious and demands that the 44-year-old woman and her seven-year-old daughter be circumcised according to Islamic law. After the family did not comply with this request, the father-in-law threatened him and his wife, said the 49-year-old.
As a result, he sold his house, garden and restaurant in northern Iraq and fled to Turkey with his family six days ago. There they were then brought to an Istanbul airport by a Syrian smuggler for a payment of around 60,000 euros. Then the business jet went to Munich, where he wanted to ask for asylum.
The Federal Office for Migration and Refugees is responsible for examining and processing this request for asylum. Therefore, after the police measures on site were completed, the federal police forwarded the Iraqis to an AnkER center in Bavaria. The investigation against the smugglers is ongoing.

On Friday (October 9th), four passengers stood in front of federal police officers at the airport. The Iraqis – father (49), mother (44) and two children (12 and 7) – did not travel on a scheduled plane, but in a business jet.
One after the other: On Friday afternoon, a federal police officer checked the passengers of a business jet that had arrived from Istanbul in the “General Aviation Terminal”. The Iraqi family, diplomats according to the announcement, was allegedly en route from the Bosporus to the Caribbean island of Dominica.
In Munich, a stay of only one night with a subsequent change of aircraft was planned, the handling agent informed the officials. When checking the travelers, however, he noticed that the would-be diplomats could neither speak French nor English.
The examination of the diplomatic accreditation cards of the Caribbean state St. Kitts and Nevis should then bring certainty: They were fake. The twelve-year-old son was able to explain to the border police officer that the family was on the run.
During the subsequent questioning, the parents said that they were on the run from the woman’s father. This man is strictly religious and demands that the 44-year-old woman and her seven-year-old daughter be circumcised according to Islamic law. After the family did not comply with this request, the father-in-law threatened him and his wife, said the 49-year-old.
As a result, he sold his house, garden and restaurant in northern Iraq and fled to Turkey with his family six days ago. There they were then brought to an Istanbul airport by a Syrian smuggler for a payment of around 60,000 euros. Then the business jet went to Munich, where he wanted to ask for asylum.
The Federal Office for Migration and Refugees is responsible for examining and processing this request for asylum. Therefore, after the police measures on site were completed, the federal police forwarded the Iraqis to an AnkER center in Bavaria. The investigation against the smugglers is ongoing.