The killing of Mark Duggan, by police in London, led to the big riots in England of 2011.
Many people believe that the killing of Duggan was designed to spark the riots.
The UK authorities have a long history of killing unarmed civilians.
In 2009, the police in London killed an innocent man called Ian Tomlinson.
Tomlinson was on his way home from work when he was struck by police officer Simon Harwood, from the notorious Territorial Support Group.
The Guardian published video footage which showed Tomlinson being struck from behind by a police officer.
Azelle Rodney, some years before he was killed.
In 2005, Azelle Rodney, a black Londoner with a minimal criminal record, was shot dead by police in North London.
Five Thoughts on the Killing of Mark Duggan
In 2009, the police in London killed an innocent man called Ian Tomlinson.
Tomlinson was on his way home from work when he was struck by police officer Simon Harwood, from the notorious Territorial Support Group.
The Guardian published video footage which showed Tomlinson being struck from behind by a police officer.
The footage shows no provocation on Tomlinson's part
Harwood was charged with manslaughter but was found not guilty at Southwark Crown Court.
Harwood was charged with manslaughter but was found not guilty at Southwark Crown Court.
Azelle Rodney, some years before he was killed.
In 2005, Azelle Rodney, a black Londoner with a minimal criminal record, was shot dead by police in North London.
A judicial inquiry found that he was unlawfully killed.
No officer has been charged.
According to figures collected by the charity INQUEST, nearly 1500 people have died following contact with the police in England and Wales since 1990.
In that time, inquests or inquiries have returned 13 verdicts of unlawful killing.
Three of those verdicts were quashed or overturned.
Police officers have been put on trial eight times. In every case they were either acquitted or the trial collapsed.
The media is trying to smear Mark Duggan, the unarmed man shot dead by police in London.
Detective Chief Inspector Foote admitted to the inquest on Duggan's death: "I had no information on which I could have arrested Mark Duggan."
Duggan's family have stated that the allegations against Duggan are "disinformation" [30]
Duggan had been convicted of cannabis possession and handling stolen goods.[31]
Noonan
Reportedly, Mark Duggan is related, through marriage, to the late 'Irish gangster Desmond Noonan of Manchester'.
Detective Chief Inspector Foote admitted to the inquest on Duggan's death: "I had no information on which I could have arrested Mark Duggan."
Duggan's family have stated that the allegations against Duggan are "disinformation" [30]
Duggan had been convicted of cannabis possession and handling stolen goods.[31]
Noonan
Reportedly, Mark Duggan is related, through marriage, to the late 'Irish gangster Desmond Noonan of Manchester'.
In the 1980s and 1990s, the ant-fascist Desmond Noonan supported the organisation called Anti-Fascist Action (AFA).
AFA had ties to Searchlight which reportedly has "intimate connections with the Jewish establishment and with British police, security and intelligence agencies." (Andrew Hamilton, "More on the White Rioters in England")On 22 July 2011, in Kent, General Petraeus met Brigadier Simon Wolsey, commander of the British Army's 2 (South East) Brigade. Brig Wolsey worked at the Pentagon from 2006 to 2008. Petraeus was also in the UK in March 2011.
The idea, according to the 'conspiracy theorists', was to discredit 'the rioters' and thus make future riots less likely.
Why choose mark Duggan?
According to Anonymous, word on the street is that when the police killed Mark Duggan, they were "carrying out a hit, for another drug lord."
The police in the Tottenham/Enfield area of London have a bad reputation (Waterboarding / smashing up car)
The CIA and its friends are reputed to work alongside certain drugs gangs, but not others.
Why choose mark Duggan?
According to Anonymous, word on the street is that when the police killed Mark Duggan, they were "carrying out a hit, for another drug lord."
The police in the Tottenham/Enfield area of London have a bad reputation (Waterboarding / smashing up car)
The CIA and its friends are reputed to work alongside certain drugs gangs, but not others.
Mark Duggan
On 4 August 2011, the police shot dead an unarmed man called Mark Duggan, in Tottenham, in London.
Britain's criminal justice system 'has lost credibility'.
A lawful killing - The Economist
The Duggan family's solicitor Marcia Willis Stewart said the jury had made a "perverse judgment".
In August 2011, three separate police units were following Mark Duggan as he travelled in a taxi through Tottenham.
1. According to the police, Duggan threw away a gun.
No witnesses - including the only civilian - describe seeing Duggan throw anything away.
2. The police lied when they said that Duggan fired at the police.
Five Thoughts on the Killing of Mark Duggan.
At the Duggan inquest, the evidence given by some police officers was contradicted by eyewitness video.
Three police officers testified that a weapon was found the other side of a fence. Yet the video footage shows it couldn't have been found at the time they said.
Strangely, on 8 January 2014, a jury found that Mark Duggan was lawfully killed by the police.
Duggan, a father of four, was shot by a police marksman who stopped the taxi in which he was travelling in Tottenham.
"On the evening of August 4th 2011, an unmarked police car rammed a minicab in which Mark Duggan ... was riding...
"On the evening of August 4th 2011, an unmarked police car rammed a minicab in which Mark Duggan ... was riding...
"Mr Duggan leapt out; a police marksman shot him dead.
"The police at first claimed to have killed him after the 29-year-old fired on them.
"The police at first claimed to have killed him after the 29-year-old fired on them.
"That turned out to be untrue."
The Duggan family's solicitor Marcia Willis Stewart said the jury had made a "perverse judgment".
She said: "The jury found that he had no gun in his hand and yet he was gunned down. For us, that's an unlawful killing."
Jean Charles de Menezes, an innocent man murdered by the UK security services in London in 2005, 'as part of a Galdio-style terror operation'.
Jean Charles de Menezes, an innocent man murdered by the UK security services in London in 2005, 'as part of a Galdio-style terror operation'.
In August 2011, three separate police units were following Mark Duggan as he travelled in a taxi through Tottenham.
1. According to the police, Duggan threw away a gun.
A gun was reportedly found 20 feet away from the taxi, on the other side of a fence.
Some people believe that the gun was planted by the police.
No witnesses - including the only civilian - describe seeing Duggan throw anything away.
2. The police lied when they said that Duggan fired at the police.
Five Thoughts on the Killing of Mark Duggan.
Innocent civilians murdered by the UK security services in 1972.
Some people believe that Duggan, who had 'criminal connections', was smeared by the police.
Some of the police intelligence on Mark Duggan was graded 'E', the lowest on the scale the police use to grade accuracy.
The coroner said the intelligence was "certainly a very poor quality indeed".
The coroner said the intelligence was "certainly a very poor quality indeed".
Detective Chief Inspector Foote admitted to the inquest: "I had no information on which I could have arrested Mark Duggan."
In Operation Gladio, run by the CIA and its friends, the security services deliberately murdered innocent civilians.
In Operation Gladio, run by the CIA and its friends, the security services deliberately murdered innocent civilians.
The killing of Duggan looks like something out of Operation Gladio.
At the Duggan inquest, the evidence given by some police officers was contradicted by eyewitness video.
Three police officers testified that a weapon was found the other side of a fence. Yet the video footage shows it couldn't have been found at the time they said.
After the killing of Duggan there were days of rioting, which looked carefully organised by the spooks.
Orchestrated riots.
Arthur Zbygniew commented as follows:
The London riots were orchestrated by outsiders ...
Croydon MP, Gavin Barwell, said: "I have spoken to well into double figures of people who saw people with walkie-talkies and radios directing people around."
Tanks in Glasgow, in 1919, ready to shoot the people. - BBC NEWS.
Andrew Gilligan in The Telegraph writes:
"There appeared to be two kinds of riots.
"The first was heavily orchestrated ... with rioters travelling long distances at short notice to take part.
"Some local opportunists then joined in. ..."
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/
Kitson
The UK's General Frank Kitson developed the idea of the 'pseudo gang'.
Orchestrated riots.
Arthur Zbygniew commented as follows:
The London riots were orchestrated by outsiders ...
Croydon MP, Gavin Barwell, said: "I have spoken to well into double figures of people who saw people with walkie-talkies and radios directing people around."
Tanks in Glasgow, in 1919, ready to shoot the people. - BBC NEWS.
Andrew Gilligan in The Telegraph writes:
"There appeared to be two kinds of riots.
"The first was heavily orchestrated ... with rioters travelling long distances at short notice to take part.
"Some local opportunists then joined in. ..."
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/
Kitson
The UK's General Frank Kitson developed the idea of the 'pseudo gang'.
(General Frank Kitson: Trail Blazing Fake Terrorism)
The pseudo gang works for the military but pretends to be a bunch of rioters or terrorists.
The idea of the 'pseudo gang' is to attack innocent civilians and then blame the attacks on the people that the military wants to discredit.
On 22 July 2011, in Kent, General Petraeus met Brigadier Simon Wolsey, commander of the British Army's 2 (South East) Brigade.
In The Telegraph, on 21 August 2011, Andrew Gilligan relates:
1. Almost none of those charged with rioting in Ealing, Clapham Junction, Enfield and other places comes from the immediate area, court data shows.
Home addresses given by defendants show rioters travelled to London from such places as Tilbury, Maidstone and Winchester.
2. Croydon had rioters from Maidstone, Kent and Cliffe, near Rochester.
The town also offers the clearest evidence of orchestration.
The acting borough police commander, Detective Superintendent Jo Oakley, said that "some [rioters] were minibused in".
The local MP, Gavin Barwell, said: "I have spoken to well into double figures of people who saw people with walkie-talkies and radios directing people around."
Witnesses to the Croydon riot supported these accounts.
3. Saber Ahmadi, 26, working at Pizza GoGo in London Road on the night of the riots, described the looting as a highly organised operation.
"A white van came down Hathaway Road and parked on the corner," he said. "Ten people came out of the van. They had hammers, crow bars and wire cutters. Two or three cars also turned up."
Mr Ahmadi said: "There were a lot of teenagers, maybe 14, 15, 16 years old. But they had a leader who was telling them [what] to take."
He said the ring leader was "a massive guy" who was driving the van.
Reportedly, the American-trained Indonesian military orchestrated the riots in Jakarta in 1998. The CIA chief visited Jakarta not long before the riots.
4. Other witnesses described "two or three co-ordinators" who were standing in the middle of the street dictating which shops the looters should hit. From about 7.30pm until 1am, Dr Kannappar Jeyanthan stood outside his friend's grocery shop as about 300 looters went on the rampage on London Road.
"People came with cars and parked on the side streets," he said. "Then in amongst the crowds you could see a couple of people organising it, instructing people which shops to do. Everything was pre-planned."
5. Mahbub Bhatti, vice president of the local residents' association, said: "People came in with vans, loaded them up and drove off. They would be back again within half an hour for more."
Peter Truman, a local journalist, said: "I certainly saw older kids directing younger kids. There were a load of kids on their phones taking directions."
UK Government 'Agent Provocateur' Mark Kennedy. (Police Agent Provocateur: Mark Kennedy led attack on Irish police ...)
6. A council spokesman said that an apparently orchestrated attempt to attack shops in Croydon the previous night, Sunday, had been foiled by police.
"A convoy of about seven cars came in, with about 30 people," he said. "The police managed to repel that quite successfully and made a number of arrests then."
7. The local council leader, Mike Fisher, said he believed that perhaps the single most significant fire in London, which destroyed the historic Reeves furniture store, was started as a diversion to give looters time to raid their main targets.
The pseudo gang works for the military but pretends to be a bunch of rioters or terrorists.
The idea of the 'pseudo gang' is to attack innocent civilians and then blame the attacks on the people that the military wants to discredit.
On 22 July 2011, in Kent, General Petraeus met Brigadier Simon Wolsey, commander of the British Army's 2 (South East) Brigade.
In The Telegraph, on 21 August 2011, Andrew Gilligan relates:
1. Almost none of those charged with rioting in Ealing, Clapham Junction, Enfield and other places comes from the immediate area, court data shows.
Home addresses given by defendants show rioters travelled to London from such places as Tilbury, Maidstone and Winchester.
2. Croydon had rioters from Maidstone, Kent and Cliffe, near Rochester.
The town also offers the clearest evidence of orchestration.
The acting borough police commander, Detective Superintendent Jo Oakley, said that "some [rioters] were minibused in".
The local MP, Gavin Barwell, said: "I have spoken to well into double figures of people who saw people with walkie-talkies and radios directing people around."
Witnesses to the Croydon riot supported these accounts.
3. Saber Ahmadi, 26, working at Pizza GoGo in London Road on the night of the riots, described the looting as a highly organised operation.
"A white van came down Hathaway Road and parked on the corner," he said. "Ten people came out of the van. They had hammers, crow bars and wire cutters. Two or three cars also turned up."
Mr Ahmadi said: "There were a lot of teenagers, maybe 14, 15, 16 years old. But they had a leader who was telling them [what] to take."
He said the ring leader was "a massive guy" who was driving the van.
Reportedly, the American-trained Indonesian military orchestrated the riots in Jakarta in 1998. The CIA chief visited Jakarta not long before the riots.
4. Other witnesses described "two or three co-ordinators" who were standing in the middle of the street dictating which shops the looters should hit. From about 7.30pm until 1am, Dr Kannappar Jeyanthan stood outside his friend's grocery shop as about 300 looters went on the rampage on London Road.
"People came with cars and parked on the side streets," he said. "Then in amongst the crowds you could see a couple of people organising it, instructing people which shops to do. Everything was pre-planned."
5. Mahbub Bhatti, vice president of the local residents' association, said: "People came in with vans, loaded them up and drove off. They would be back again within half an hour for more."
Peter Truman, a local journalist, said: "I certainly saw older kids directing younger kids. There were a load of kids on their phones taking directions."
UK Government 'Agent Provocateur' Mark Kennedy. (Police Agent Provocateur: Mark Kennedy led attack on Irish police ...)
6. A council spokesman said that an apparently orchestrated attempt to attack shops in Croydon the previous night, Sunday, had been foiled by police.
"A convoy of about seven cars came in, with about 30 people," he said. "The police managed to repel that quite successfully and made a number of arrests then."
7. The local council leader, Mike Fisher, said he believed that perhaps the single most significant fire in London, which destroyed the historic Reeves furniture store, was started as a diversion to give looters time to raid their main targets.
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