Canberra; Muslim Imran Hakimi Jailed For Machete Attack on Passing Motorists

As reported within the past week, from the ABC’s Georgia Hitch.

http://www.abc.net.au/news/2016-06-15/machete-wielding-man-who-attacked-passing-motorists-jailed/7512200

“Machete-Wielding Man Who Attacked Passing Motorists in Canberra Jailed”.

‘A Canberra man (that is: “a Canberra-resident Muslim” – CM) who went on a rampage and attacked passing motorists with a machete last year has been sentenced to three years in jail.

‘Imran Hakimi, 32, was arrested in November after an attack in which two people were injured late at night on Chandler Street in Belconnen.

That is, “after he attacked and injured two people late at night..” – CM

‘The court previously heard that Hakimi had begun attacking cars as they passed on the major road, jumping into one car and holding the blade of the knife to a woman’s throat, breaking the skin.

He struck at the neck, just as the Quran prescribes… – CM

‘He was eventually subdued by two men in a taxi that he tried to enter.

Kudos to those two guys. – CM

‘Hakimi pleaded guilty to seven charges, including intentionally wounding, using an offensive weapon, and property damage.

‘The ACT Supreme Court today heard Hakimi had sought psychological help less than a week before the incident, and had been experiencing depression and possibly post-traumatic stress disorder.

Possibly. But we have plenty of infidels in Australia who have depression and / or PTSD and I don’t see too many of them running at randomly-selected drivers on a main road and threatening to cut women’s throats with a machete.  – CM

‘Hakimi came to Australia as a 16 year old (sic: in light of much that is coming to light in Europe of late among similar Muslim male ‘asylum seekers’, one should probably translate this claiming to be a 16 year old” – CM), after fleeing Afghanistan, and spent four years in the Woomera Detention Centre.

‘Justice John Burns acknowledged Hakimi had been exposed (more than seventeen years ago – CM) to “repeated psychological trauma” after witnessing the deaths of family and friends and during his time in detention.

Reality check: after WWII a lot of Jewish Shoah survivors, both old and young, who had suffered far, far more and worse than Mr Hakimi, and had also – after surviving the death camps – endured pretty miserable conditions of uncertainty and hardship in camps for Displaced Persons (not much different from or superior to Australia’s detention centres) came to Australia; and I don’t recall that any of them ever ran amok on main roads with machetes, attacking and trying to kill random passersby.  – CM

‘Justice Burns told the court that while he did not consider Hakimi’s mental health issues and history as a refugee to be causally linked to the offence, it had to be taken into account.

Did anyone think to investigate whether and how often he was attending mosque, of late?  – CM

“They do operate as part of the background as you as a person who comes before this court”, he said.  

‘Justice Burns said he also acknowledged that Hakimi had expressed remorse for the crimes(I would be interested to know precisely in what terms this expressed ‘remorse’ was couched – CM) and the offences were ‘out of character’ (but there is always a first time for anything, whether an Infidel committing their first common-or-garden crime, or a Muslim ‘flipping’ for the first time from Mecca to Medina, from inactive to inactive, dormancy to Jihad – CM) but that the severity of the offences warranted full-time jail.

‘Hakimi will be eligible for parole in September next year.”

It is a pity that Mr Hakimi was ever permitted into Australia in the first place.  – CM

 

image_pdfimage_print

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

New English Review Press is a priceless cultural institution.
                              — Bruce Bawer

Order here or wherever books are sold.

The perfect gift for the history lover in your life. Order on Amazon US, Amazon UK or wherever books are sold.

Order on Amazon, Amazon UK, or wherever books are sold.

Order on Amazon, Amazon UK or wherever books are sold.

Order on Amazon or Amazon UK or wherever books are sold


Order at Amazon, Amazon UK, or wherever books are sold. 

Order at Amazon US, Amazon UK or wherever books are sold.

Available at Amazon US, Amazon UK or wherever books are sold.

Send this to a friend