Continuing our occasional series of posts highlighting the wave of violent and sexual crimes commited by immigrants and people of an immigrant background in the towns and cities of Europe. Taken individually these incidents may not seem to be of global importance, but as they are happening all over Europe, in North America, Australia and anywhere that large numbers of immigrants from certain medieval cultures have congregated, they add up to a crisis for civilisation.
Even though the link between immigation and the rise in violent crime is now established beyond doubt, we continue to learn of cases in which the 'human rights' of those of immigrant who commit the most serious of crimes are given more importance than the rights and liberties of we who live peacefully in our communities. What greater violation of human rights can there be than depriving a young child of the right to live and develop into an adult.

A court in Utrecht, Netherlands was told that the man accused of stabbing 11-year-old Sohani to death in Nieuwegein was a “ticking time bomb,” according to reporting by RTL.
Sohani was killed last year as she walked in the street with her brother and other children. The suspect, 30-year-old Hamza L., stabbed her to death on the day of her birthday party. The court heard that the defendant had told police after his arrest, "I did it because I felt like it."
Although the risks were known, his psychiatrist had recently agreed to reduce the dosage of medication he was taking for psychosis.. At the time of the killing the accused appeared to be doing reasonably well.
“His family also thought he was doing reasonably well,” the judge noted during the hearing.
The court heard that Hamza L.’s neighbors raised the alarm about his erratic behaviour several times in the days before the killing, and he narrowly avoided arrest shortly before Sohani’s death. On the morning before the murder,.Police also received multiple reports from residents in his neighborhood alleging aggressive and disruptive behavior. A concerned neighbor called officers a few nights before the killing after seeing the man standing in the street in the middle of the night, shouting threatening and incoherent messages. Officers who responded were reportedly worried by the situation, but, after deliberation, decided not to arrest him.
The court heard how Hamza L. had no fewer than 75 encounters with police, with his mother, nurses ad therapists, and police officers themselves among those targeted during psychotic episodes. At the same time, testimony also portrayed him as a man who could be kind and caring, with a love of family and nature.
The defendant told the court he remembers almost nothing of the period when his condition deteriorated. “I saw demons and hallucinated,” he said when repeatedly questioned about his memories. He explained that recollections he still had during earlier police interviews had faded over the past year because he had since suffered several further psychotic episodes.
Psychiatrists and psychologists at the Pieter Baan Center examined Hamza L. over the past year and concluded that he suffers from severe psychosis. They also stated that he had used drugs. Medical experts concluded that he should be declared fully criminally irresponsible, thus avoiding prison.
Despite Sohani's killing, prosecutors are only calling for psychiatric treatment after medical experts found that Hamza was not criminally responsible for the attack.
Once again we see a case of law abiding citizens being placed at risk of violence from a dangerous and uncontrollable person because the authorities are so afraid of being accused of racism by far left extremists they abandon their duty (as in the UK case of grooming gangs,) to those of us who pay taces and abide by the laws of our civilised societies.
FROM THE ARCHIVE: