No surrender to Al-Qaeda: 12 terroristi islamici arrestati.Si sospetta che volessero colpire uno stadio. “Little hooliganz” continua a fare discutere: quante polemiche per un videogame…


E’ finalmente disponibile “Lads 2009”. Per informazioni, anteprima e acquisto collegati al link a sinistra alla voce “lads2009” o contatta l’indirizzo italianlads@gmail.com oppure pagina Facebook Italianlads Italy

 

Dodici terroristi islamici sono stati arrestati nelle imminenze dell’ incontro di calcio tra Liverpool e Chelsea. Si sospetta che tra i progetti di dieci di loro vi fosse anche quello di compiere uno spettacolare attentato in uno stadio di calcio e la gara di ieri sera di Champions’ League tra i “Reds” ed i londinesi pare potesse esserne l’ oggetto. Mentre 45mila persone convergevano verso lo stadio i presunti ideatori del folle proposito sono stati arrestati, in quella che gli investigatori affermano essere stata una delle più importanti operazioni messe a segno contro Al-Qaeda.

 

Molto meno fondate sembrerebbero le minacce provenienti dalla distribuzione dell’ innocuo prodotto per ragazzi “Little Hooliganz”. Si continua a mettere in rilievo come tale videogioco istigherebbe alla violenza, in quanto le finalità del giocatore virtuale sarebbero quelle di rubare soldi per acquistare birra ed armi per scontrarsi con le fazioni rivali. Non è il primo articolo, quello riportato in calce, ad accostare gli incidenti del derby tra Cardiff e Swansea con il “boom” del videogame.

 

 


 


FOOTIE TERROR PLOT

ABOVE: Robert Quick with secret papers on view

“
We are talking about something big
”

Police source

9th April 2009

By Bill Marti

Fears were growing over a bomb threat to last night’s Euro cup clash as police foiled a “major” terrorist attack.

 

Armed officers swooped on 10 men, including several British Muslims, at addresses across the north-west.
The raids were brought forward after a serious security blunder.
Britain’s most senior counter-terrorism police officer Bob Quick, head of Scotland Yard’s specialist operations wing, was pictured with sensitive documents going to Downing Street.
Details of a major on-going anti-terror operation could be read.
Anti-terror police later raided properties in Manchester, Merseyside and at Clitheroe, Lancs.
One unconfirmed report said an 11th man was also held in Pakistan.
Senior detectives said they were responding to a “imminent and credible” threat of an atrocity by an al Qaida-linked group.
The arrests came as 45,000 football fans converged on Anfield for Liverpool’s Champions League quarter-final clash with Chelsea. There is no immediate suggestion the stadium was the target but one of the raids was just three miles away.
Police were last night investigating claims that any planned attack might be football related.
They will probe whether Manchester United’s stadium at Old Trafford might also have been in the terrorists’ sights.
A police source said: “These are the most significant terrorism arrests for some time. We are talking about something big.”
Officers raided two properties in the Cheetham Hill area of Manchester, four miles from Old Trafford.
Two men were arrested and led away in handcuffs, locals said.
In Liverpool city centre, John Moores University’s glass-fronted Aldham Robarts library was raided.
Eyewitnesses said two students in their early 20s, thought to be of Pakistani origin, were Tasered then pinned to the floor.
The young men, one bearded and one clean-shaven, were taken away for questioning. Student Sian Hill said: “Suddenly all these men rushed towards us yelling: ‘Look at the floor! Look at the floor!’
“I didn’t know what was going on. One of the police opened the door and pushed me inside.
“The two men they arrested were really quite calm. They did what they were told and laid on the floor.”
Another student said a “distressed voice” came over the Tannoy asking students to stay away from the windows for their own safety.
Mr Quick was snapped on his way to brief Prime Minister Gordon Brown and Home Secretary Jacqui Smith.
But under his arm was a “Top Secret” dossier on full public display giving details of a major on-going anti-terror operation.
Photographers were able to snap the file and details of forthcoming raids could clearly be read.”

Little Hooliganz Angers Welsh Soccer Fans
The Escapist
09 April 2009
Andy Chalk

An online game in which players become football hooligans has Welsh fans up in arms over claims that it encourages real-life violence between soccer fans.

“Little Hooliganz lets players choose their team, buy booze and weapons and commit violence against supporters of rival clubs. Gamers compete to “become the most notorious, respected and meanest Hooligan the world has ever known,” eventually rising to become “King of the hooligans.” But the Welsh Football Association, fans and anti-violence groups have condemned the game, saying that hooliganism is something to be eradicated, not celebrated.

“We are totally opposed to anything which glamorizes any form of violent behavior associated with football,” said Football Supporters’ Federation Chairman Malcolm Clarke. “It is totally irresponsible to be encouraging even cyber-violence among fans at any time, let alone ahead of derby matches. We would hope that genuine football fans and children would not play this game.”

“We have had a hooligan problem for the last 25 years but things have improved remarkably over recent years,” added Vince Alm of the Cardiff City Supporters’ Club. “However, there is still a lot of work to be done as new generations of Asbo troublemakers come through and these games do not help us at all. It is just someone else trying to make a quick buck out of violence in a computer game. It is in very bad taste and sends out a very poor message.”

But Nicolas Jacquart, director of Blouzar, the company behind the game, described Little Hooliganz as “parody” of hooliganism and denied that the game encourages trouble. “I think players can make the distinction between online hooligans and real-life thugs,” he said. “Just because we are giving Cardiff and Swansea fans the chance to buy a gun, sword, baseball bat or knuckleduster and attack their rivals doesn’t mean they are going to do it in real life.”

Despite the subject matter, GameCulture says Little Hooliganz isn’t a “simple Flash one-off” but is instead a “fairly deep affair” with a black sense of humor. And while anger over the game surged in the buildup to the April 6 showdown between Cardiff and Swansea, billed as “the biggest Welsh football derby in history,” Little Hooliganz actually lets players align themselves with a wide variety of teams from various nations.

For the record, the match between Cardiff and Swansea ended in a 2-2 draw; referee Mike Dean was injured when a thrown £1 coin struck him in the head and “running battles” were reported outside the stadium following the game. Given the history of soccer in the U.K. I think it’s safe to say that while Little Hooliganz may be tasteless, its actual role in instigating the fracas is entirely imaginary.”

No surrender to Al-Qaeda: 12 terroristi islamici arrestati.Si sospetta che volessero colpire uno stadio. “Little hooliganz” continua a fare discutere: quante polemiche per un videogame…ultima modifica: 2009-04-09T11:03:00+02:00da misterloyal
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