ISIS Trials Start in Germany

The New Observer
May 5, 2016

The first of what promises to be several major trials of ISIS terrorists—all “German nationals”—has started, highlighting the danger of legal nonwhite immigration to Europe.

German police are currently investigating at least 30 cases of nonwhite legal immigrants in Germany for having fought for ISIS and subsequently having returned to Germany.

Aria-Ladjedvardi

 

A 21-year-old Iranian, living permanently in Germany, has gone on trial in Frankfurt after pictures on social media emerged of him posing in Syria hold the severed heads of two people murdered by ISIS in Syria.

Aria Ladjedvardi, 21, described by media as a “Frankfurt man,” is accused of a war crime as he had treated the unidentified victims “in a degrading and humiliating manner.”

Although it is clear from the photographs of Ladjedvardi (taken in 2014 and posted on Facebook), that he had taken part in the brutal beheadings, federal prosecutors cannot prove that part of the allegation, and so have only charged him with the lesser offences.

If found guilty, Ladjedvardi faces a year in prison, and probably less with “good behavior.”

Prosecutors have evidence that Ladjedvardi, a “German of Iranian origin,” travelled to Syria in early 2014 to join the Islamist uprising against the Syrian government, which was—and still is—financed and supported by the US government, and Angela Merkel’s Turkish government allies.

Although he said he had become more religious before his departure for Syria, Ladjedvardi denied being part of any jihadist groups. Instead, he said, Islam and sports helped him turn around his life, after a youth marred by alcohol and cannabis abuse as well as delinquency.

Ladjedvardi was arrested in October 2015 in the Frankfurt region, after police raided his apartment. He has been in custody ever since.

German federal prosecutors are currently investigating 10 cases of alleged atrocities in Syria or Iraq, along with more than 30 cases of suspected membership of a terrorist group involving jihadists returning from the Middle East.

All of these jihadists have German citizenship, and have been allowed to move freely back and forth between the ISIS territories and Europe. This “freedom of movement” has been greatly exacerbated with the mass invasion of Europe by in excess of 1.5 million nonwhites posing as refugees last year, as demonstrated by the attacks in Paris and Brussels.