| 
			  
			 
 
  
			by Sara Malm 
			13 January 2015 
			from
			
			DailyMail Website 
			  
			  
			  
				
					
						
							
							Recep Tayyip 
							Erdogan  
							suggested 
							French security forces knew of attack   
							He deliberately 
							'Blames Muslims'  
							as Conspiracy 
							Theories sweep the Internet  
							accusing Israel 
							of orchestrating it
 
							Turkish 
							President said the West is 
							'playing games 
							with the Islamic world'
 
							Said: 
							 
							'French 
							citizens carried out massacre,  
							and Muslims pay 
							the price'
 
 
			The President of Turkey has suggested 
			French security forces are to blame for the deadly terrorist attacks 
			in Paris last week, since the culprits had recently served prison 
			sentences.
 Recep Tayyip Erdoğan accused the West of 'playing games with 
			the Islamic world', warning fellow Muslims to be 'aware'.
 
 Erdoğan said Muslims are 'paying the price' for the attacks on 
			satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo and a Jewish kosher supermarket in 
			Paris last week.
 
 
 
			
			
			 Blame game
 
			Turkish President 
			Recep Tayyip Erdogan suggested French security forces  
			were behind the Paris 
			attacks as they 'track' former prisoners  
			and the culprits in 
			the Charlie Hebdo shootings had served time
 
			  
				
				'French citizens carry out such a 
				massacre, and Muslims pay the price,' Erdogan said yesterday.   
				'That's very meaningful... Doesn't 
				their intelligence organization track those who leave prison? 
				'Games are being played with the Islamic world, we need to be 
				aware of this.
 'The West's hypocrisy is obvious. As Muslims, we've never taken 
				part in terrorist massacres. Behind these lie racism, 
				hate-speech and Islamophobia,' Erdoğan added.
 
			Erdoğan also denounced Israeli Prime 
			Minister Benjamin Netanyahu for attending a solidarity rally 
			in France on Sunday with other world leaders after the Paris 
			attacks. 
				
				'How can a man who has killed 2,500 
				people in Gaza with state terrorism wave his hand in Paris, like 
				people are waiting in excitement for him to do so? How dare he 
				go there?' he said. 
			  
			  
			  
			Turkish President:
			 
			Muslims paying price 
			for French massacre
 
			  
			  
			  
			
			
			 
			Erdoğan
			denounced 
			Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu  
			for his attendance at 
			the Unity rally in Paris alongside, from left to right,  
			Malian President 
			Ibrahim Boubacar Keita, French President Francois Hollande, 
			 
			German Chancellor 
			Angela Merkel, EU President Donald Tusk  
			and Palestinian 
			president Mahmud Abbas 
			  
			  
			
			
			 
			Erdoğan 
			made the comments at a meeting  
			with Palestinian 
			President Mahmoud Abbas in Ankara on Monday
 
			  
			Erdoğan did not attend the Sunday march, though Turkish Prime 
			Minister Ahmet Davutoglu participated.
 
 Erdoğan is not the only senior Turkish politician publicly voicing 
			conspiracy theories over the Paris attacks.
 
 The Mayor of Ankara, Melih Gokcek, said he was convinced the 
			Israeli intelligence service Mossad was behind the attacks, linking 
			them to France's recent move towards recognizing Palestine as an 
			independent state.
 
				
				'Mossad is definitely behind such 
				incidents… it is boosting enmity towards Islam.' Mr Gokcek said, 
				according to 
				
				Financial Times. 
			In Russia, several pro-Kremlin 
			commentators blamed the United States and the CIA for the attack, 
			the newspaper reported.
 One, Alexei Martynov, director of the International 
			Institute for New States, said,
 
				
				'I am sure that some American 
				supervisors are responsible for the terror attacks in Paris, or 
				in any case the Islamists who carried them out.'                 
			***       
				
				IMAM WHO RADICALIZED CHARLIE HEBDO KILLER 
				CONDEMNS MURDERS
 The former Imam and recruiter of jihadists, and the man who 
				helped radicalize the Kouachi brothers has come forward to 
				condemn the Charlie Hebdo murders.
 
 Farid Benyettou, revealed as working as an intern in the 
				hospital where many of the dead and dying were taken said: 'It 
				was a cowardly assassination and monstrous.'
 
   
				 
				Farid Benyettou 
				has condemned the Charlie Hebdo murders,  
				despite 
				radicalizing one of the brothers involved in the shootings 
 
				His face hidden, the 32 year old told i-Tele:
 
					
					'Whatever was done, whether it 
					be the cowardly and monstrous murder of the journalists, or 
					of the police and members of the Jewish community - it 
					should not be attributed to Islam.
 'If you are murderers then that's your business.'
 
				Benyettou, who has since been 
				removed from the wards of Pitié-Salpêtrière Hospital to finish 
				his studies in training school, said he had come forward in the 
				name of Islam.
 He said:
 
					
					'I am not here to proclaim my 
					innocence but to condemn what has been done. My innocence is 
					not in doubt.
 'Some people will say if I don't that 'Farid Beyettou may 
					agree with what has been done' and some people may identify 
					with that.
 
 'No. Farid Benyettou absolutely does not agree with what 
					happened.'
 
				Benyettou said that he had mentored
				Cherif Kouachi, the younger of the terrorist brothers, 
				for around two months.
 He said:
 
					
					'He came unexpectedly. He wanted 
					discussion. With him it was always the same topic….
 'It all turned around combat. He was fascinated by that - 
					his knowledge of the religion was limited to that. Having a 
					good relationship with his neighbors, the behavior of 
					Muslims in every day life, he had no idea about.
 
 'And the relationship with God did not interest him. 
					He was someone very, very stubborn. I told him I could not 
					agree with what he was saying about violence and that it was 
					probably the worst crime a Muslim could commit.
 
 'He seemed to change his stance, accept criticism. Nothing 
					could have seen what was to come.'
 
				Then in a passionate defence of 
				France he said:  
					
					'Some think that France 
					oppresses Muslims. I am proof to the contrary. Yes I have a 
					criminal record - terrorist written on it.   
					'I think this is the worst thing 
					to happen yet despite this, doors have been open for me.
 'I was given help, never been discriminated against. On the 
					contrary.'
 
				Benyettou was radicalized after the 
				arrest of his brother, Youssef Zemmouri in 1998 when 
				security forces dismantled the Parisian Salafist Group.
 Self taught he became an 'emir' and taught theology courses. He 
				was arrested along with six others in 2005 for helping to send 
				jihadists to Iraq after the US invasion.
 
 Three years later, then aged 27, he was sentenced to six years 
				in prison and release in 2011.
 
			    |