Muslim Girlfriend? Was She a Long Distance Girlfriend?
Homo for Allah.
From Israel Matzav:
Many in the politically correct media are becoming annoyed with questions regarding the religious beliefs of Germanwings co-pilot Andreas Gunter Lubitz. Lubitz locked the pilot out of the cabin of an Airbus A-320 jet over the French Alps on Tuesday and crashed the plane into a mountain at 434 miles per hour, killing himself and murdering an additional 140 people.
Questions about the religious background of Andreas Lubitz, the Germanwings pilot who investigators said deliberately crashed a plane in the French Alps this week, killing all on board, have sparked outrage and debate about whether such information is relevant to the investigation. When a reporter asked French Prosecutor Brice Robin of Marseille, during a news conference Thursday, whether he knew Lubitz’s religion, Robin said he did not know and added, “I don’t think that’s where the answer to this lies.”
The question suggested that Lubitz’s religious background was relevant to the investigation behind the pilot’s alleged deliberate downing of Germanwings Flight 9525 on Tuesday. Robin said the crash did not show any signs of terrorism. Some were appalled by the reporter’s inquiry.
“This line of questioning makes no sense to me whatsoever,” said Elizabeth Shakman Hurd, an associate professor of political science with a courtesy appointment in religious studies at Northwestern University in Illinois. “I find it disturbing and depressing that at a time like this some people feel compelled to search desperately for explanations that presume religious causation.”Really, Professor Hurd? NO SENSE? It's all just a coincidence?
In 1999, the pilot of a Boeing 767 intentionally plunged the fully loaded plane into the Atlantic Ocean 30 minutes after takeoff from New York City on a nonstop flight to Cairo. An investigation found the pilot, Gamal al-Batouti, had said several times in Arabic, “I rely on God,” as the plane's autopilot function was disconnected and Egypt Air 999 plunged. The phrase is often associated with the moments before death.
The U.S. National Transportation Safety Board concluded that no mechanical event could have caused the plane to dive. But Egyptian officials never accepted the conclusion that al-Batouti had intentionally crashed, and conspiracy theories spread.While French authorities are refusing to discuss Lubitz's religion, Christian websites are reporting that Lubitz was a recent convert to Islam.
It was said that Lubitz had a Muslim girlfriend. It is unclear if she was still dating Lubitz at the time of the crash. It is unclear if he met the woman through his Muslims friends.
One said that Lubitz had broken off the relationship after he pledged to commit Jihad for Allah.
We do know that Lubitz trained at the Lufthansa Flight Training School in Bremen, Germany.
Bremen is home to the Mosque Masjidu-l-Furqan Mosque:
This Mosque was raided by the police in December 2014
BERLIN, Dec 5 (KUNA) — German authorities have closed a mosque in the northern city of Bremen, after it was accused of encouraging youth to join the extremist Islamic State group (known as ISIL), which is carrying out violent killings across Syria and Iraq.
In unprecedented circumstances, more than 100 German police personnel carried out a search of Masjidu-l-Furqan and its accompanying cultural office, which had both been under police radar since 2007.
The decision comes amid the fight against ISIL ideology, Bremen Interior Secretary Ulrich Maurer said, accusing the mosque’s management of promoting ISIL values and encouraging young Muslims in the city to travel to Syria and Iraq, and join the ranks of the group, along with Al-Nusra Front – another extremist group in Syria.
The centre have so far succeeded in inspiring a total eight men, seven women and 11 juveniles to travel to Syria and join ISIL, according to the official.
Lubitz did his time in Bremen when the Mosque was under surveillance.GO READ THE REST.
...
Lubitz converted to Islam during his break.
Reason that pushed Lubitz over the edge? The raid on the Mosque in Breman this past December?
The Police say they found a significant discovery in his home - not a suicide note:
Police investigating the Germanwings crash said they had made a 'significant discovery' at the home of co-pilot Andreas Lubitz, who deliberately ploughed the Airbus A320 into the French Alps. Officers refused to reveal details of the potential breakthrough but said it was not a suicide note. Speaking outside the flat on the outskirts of Dusseldorf, police said they had 'found something' that would now be taken for tests, adding it may be a 'clue' as to what happened to the doomed jet.Daily Mail Read More>>>Is the significant discovery something Islamic? Something on his computer? A Koran? A Muslim prayer rug?
Express.uk
ReplyDeleteAndreas Lubitz, 28, intentionally started the descent of flight 4U9525 while the pilot was locked out of the cockpit, French prosecutors said yesterday.
Reports this morning suggested the pilot may have been badly affected by a “relationship crisis” and was struggling to cope following a break-up with his girlfriend - who he was due to marry next year.
He is said to have shared an apartment in Dusseldorf - the destination of the doomed plane - with a woman whose surname is Goldbach.
***
UKDailyMail
He was listed on the letterbox with another person named Goldbach.
*****
Now "Goldbach" doesn't much sound like a born RoP'er.
Since this young murderous pilot calmly and deliberately flew a plane load of passengers into the Alps, has anyone read any updates on the status of this lass - alive or dead?
Interesting.
ReplyDeleteMaybe these reports of his Religion of Peaciness are wrong.
Interesting.
ReplyDeleteMaybe these reports of his Religion of Peaciness are wrong.
I still have to wonder why the prosecutor would so strongly refuse to discuss the man's ethnicity or religion.
ReplyDeleteThe authorities have uncovered evidence of long standing treatment for some illness this co-pilot suffered from. Perhaps he was concealing these details because it could cost him his career.
ReplyDeleteFrance24: Germanwings co-pilot Lubitz 'hid sick leave note'
According to German daily Bild, Lubitz had been the recipient of
a “specific and regular medical treatment” ever since his bout of
depression in 2009.
Bild said psychologists were due to examine his medical record and documents provided by the airline on Friday.
WITN: Hospital says it evaluated Germanwings co-pilot
ReplyDelete"A Duesseldorf hospital says the co-pilot of Germanwings flight 9525 had been a patient there over the past two months.
Duesseldorf University Hospital said in a statement Friday that Andreas Lubitz last came to the hospital for "diagnostic evaluation" on March 10. It declined to provide details about his condition but denied German media reports that it had treated the 27-year-old pilot for depression.
The hospital says it has submitted Lubitz's patient record to prosecutors in Duesseldorf, where he lived."
What was the point of the controlled descent over a period of approximately 10 minutes? Wudu, prayers to Allah, etc.
ReplyDeleteIt seems to me that a "standard nutjob" would just plunge the plane to ground instead of engineering a controlled descent.
Good question. Having broken off an engagement, the recent hospitalization and concealment of multiple medical excuses for leave-of-duty which compromised his career...anticipating a job related medical review which would have taken place today...
ReplyDeletePerhaps its the one thing he felt he could control while forcing others (passengers, crew, govt's, flight industry, etc.) to endure the degree of turmoil (terror) he felt he faced.
His hell is only beginning. No explanation will ever temper the hell he left these grieving families with.
FWIW:
ReplyDeleteGermanwings captain Patrick Sondenheimer tried to break into locked cockpit door 'with an axe' as plane was descending
Yet, reports suggest passengers were unaware of any issue until seconds prior to impact when the voice recorder picks up screams from the cabin area.
UKMirror: The 27-year-old attended a clinic at the University of Dusseldorf Hospital in February and March, it has been confirmed
The most recent visit was March 10, exactly a fortnight before he guided the Germanwings Airbus A320 into its fatal descent.
The hospital said Lubitz attended for "diagnostic evaluation" but insisted he was not treated for depression.
No more information will be shared due to patient confidentiality.
They confirmed he was suffering from a serious illness which he had concealed from his employers Germanwings.
One of the sick notes was reportedly signed by either a local neurologist or psychologist.
German newspaper Bild had already claimed Lubitz had 18 months of psychiatric help for a 'serious depressive episode' while he was training six years ago.
Germany’s Federal Aviation Office said there was a note on his file saying he needed "specific regular medical examination", but did not specify whether it was about his physical or mental health.
CNN: Germanwings co-pilot Andreas Lubitz declared unfit to work, officials say
ReplyDelete"Germanwings co-pilot Andreas Lubitz was hiding an illness from his employers and had been declared unfit to work by a doctor, according to German authorities investigating what could have prompted the seemingly competent and stable pilot to steer his jetliner into a French mountain.
Investigators found a letter saying that Lubitz, 27, wasn't fit to do his job in the waste bin of his Dusseldorf, Germany, apartment, city prosecutor Christoph Kumpa said Friday. The note, Kumpa said, had been "slashed."
CBC: Germanwings Flight 4U9525 highlights lack of mandatory psychological tests for pilots
ReplyDelete"To the Dusseldorf crewmates who knew him, First Officer Andreas Lubitz gave no sign he was mentally unstable.
They didn't know about the torn-up doctor's note found in his home, or another sick note excusing him from flying the very day he crashed Germanwings Flight 9525 into the French Alps.
Lubitz had never come forward with any problems.
How and why the 27-year-old apparently hid his illness is now the focus of investigators and is also putting renewed scrutiny on pilot screening, and whether mandatory psychological tests could have prevented Lubitz from downing the airliner, killing all 150 people on board, as is alleged.
All the rules governing international flights are based on standards set by the International Civil Aviation Organization, notes aviation safety expert Suzanne Kearns.
Must 'self-identify' psychological issues...
Germanwings captain Patrick Sondenheimer tried to break into locked cockpit door 'with an axe' as plane was descending
ReplyDeleteYet, reports suggest passengers were unaware of any issue until seconds prior to impact when the voice recorder picks up screams from the cabin area.
Strange.
How could the passengers have been unaware for that long?