Author sentenced for sharing murder video of Maren Ueland and Danish…
Just before Christmas 2018, friends Maren Ueland and Louise Vestager Jespersen were brutally beheaded during a hike in the Atlas Mountains in Morocco. In both Norwegian and Danish media it is said that the girls were found with “cuts on the neck”. When the terrorists’ own video footage was available, the video showed that the media was covering up the Islamic terrorist murder.
In July this year, the verdict was handed down against ex-Muslim and writer Jaleh Tavakoli. She was given a three-month suspended prison sentence for sharing the video on social media.
In both Norwegian and Danish media it was described in 2018 that Maren Ueland (28) and Louise Vestager Jespersen (24) “were found with cut injuries to the throat inflicted with a sharp object.” But after a short time the terrorists themselves released the video, which shows that the young women had their throats cut and then had their heads chopped off.
This outraged many who have understood the bestial acts Islamic terrorists commit in the name of religion. Among those who did not understand why the media failed to tell the truth about what actually happened was a social debater and author of the book Islam’s Public Secrets, Jaleh Tavakoli. She was born in Iran in 1982 and came to Denmark for family reunification as a 9-year-old. Tavakoli has advocated for Denmark to stop all treatment of asylum seekers in Denmark, and she does not stop there: She explicitly points to Muslim immigration:
Muslim immigration has already caused us so many problems that we cannot continue to accept new arrivals. The integration challenge is in many ways greater today. Today, terrorism is also one of the integration challenges.
There are Muslims among us, who were born and raised in the country, who can think of beating fellow citizens in the name of Islam. The Jewish minority in Europe is once again persecuted.
Our politicians are well aware of problems, but they are affected by an infantile fear of becoming unpopular among the nice and detached from reality in the EU, but also here at home. Our politicians must act like adults, otherwise they will be replaced. However, they can – unfortunately – do much more damage, which is why I and many others feel compelled to write about the problems of immigration.
My focus is then, no surprise, Islam. This is because Islam has also become a Western and Danish problem, regardless of whether we succeed in immediately closing the borders and accepting asylum in Denmark. The problems with immigration are mostly Islam-related problems, not always, but often.
14 charges
Denmark charged a total of 14 citizens for sharing the video of the double murder in Morocco. They were the parents of Vesterager Jespersen who reviewed Tavakoli.
A total of 14 people aged 13-69 are charged in the case.
12 of them are charged under Section 264 d of the Penal Code, which can lead to punishment for a person who shares messages, pictures or videos of people in private situations – even if the person in the picture or video is deceased.
The maximum penalty is three years in prison.
Tavakoli told DR about the background for sharing the murder video as rampant on the web.
“Both the authorities and the mainstream media in Denmark initially did not write what had happened other than that a Danish woman had been killed.
They then wrote about the two videos, but only because they had been spread on the internet. In other words, both the video showing an execution and the video swearing allegiance to the Islamic State.
Tavakoli explained in Danish media that she and alone share the video to show what extreme Islam can lead to. This argument was countered in Denmark, in a similar way to how it was countered in Norway. Here at home, then Prime Minister Erna Solberg went out in Aftenposten claiming that “those who spread the video help the terrorists”.
Convicted
It has been three and a half years since the two girls in the Atlas Mountains were fined with their lives in an encounter with Islamic terrorists, and only now, on July 14, was the verdict handed down in the Tavakoli case. Emil Findalen and Per Lysholt from Freedom letter writes about the matter:
“Debater and author Jaleh Tavakoli was charged in 2019 with having violated section 264 d subsection of the Criminal Code. 2 by sharing a video of the beheading of Danish Louisa Jespersen in Morocco. The freedom letter can now say that on 14 July a verdict was handed down in the case: Three months’ suspended prison sentence. Tavakoli has appealed the sentence, which she calls unfair. She hopes that she can win the case in the high court, because she believes that what she has done is an important and principled case, which is about the authorities “almost lying” to the citizens, and that she has been exposed to a “political frenzy”.
It is no surprise that Tavakoli appealed the sentence. For her part, the case has had great personal costs, in addition to being of a principled nature. The sharing of the terrorist video also led to the authorities wanting to deprive her of her foster daughter. The threat of removing the daughter hung over Tavakoli and her husband for a year and a half before the child’s biological mother approved the adoption, Tavakoli says on own website.