Wednesday, June 10, 2026

Northern Ireland Erupts After Sudanese Asylum Seeker Charged in Brutal Stabbing — Migrant Houses Torched as Angry Crowds Take Over Belfast (VIDEO)


Northern Ireland Erupts After Sudanese Asylum Seeker Charged in Brutal Stabbing — Migrant Houses Torched as Angry Crowds Take Over Belfast (VIDEO)


Hundreds of demonstrators took to the streets of Belfast on Tuesday night after a Sudanese asylum seeke was charged with a brutal knife attack that left a local man with serious injuries.

The protests erupted after footage of Monday night’s attack circulated widely online, sparking further anger against mass immigration.

Police deployed armored vehicles as crowds gathered in several parts of the city.

Some vehicles were set on fire during the unrest, including a bus, while clashes broke out between protesters and officers.

There were also reports of protesters breaking into migrant houses and setting them ablaze.


The victim, a man in his 40s, suffered severe injuries to his eyes as well as slash wounds to his face and back. Police later recovered a kitchen knife from the scene.

Video footage showed members of the public confronting the attacker before police arrived. Senior officers later credited those bystanders with helping save the victim’s life.

The suspect, identified as a 30-year-old Sudanese national, has been charged with attempted murder, possession of a bladed article in a public place, and making threats to kill.

He is due to appear before Belfast Magistrates’ Court on Wednesday.

Police said the man was granted leave to remain in the United Kingdom in September 2023 after claiming asylum.

He had arrived in Belfast from Dublin earlier that year after flying into Ireland from Paris.

Residents had to be evacuated from their homes in east Belfast following fires. Northern Ireland Fire and Rescue Service officers attended the scene at Lendrick Street on Tuesday night. Live updates: https://tinyurl.com/4xdm7tzu








If the woman in the first clip is correct, the handicapped man who was the victim of a near-beheading in Belfast has lost an eye completely and is blind in the other. He was already very hard of hearing. The victim, a Scottish man named Stephen Ogilvie, was helping these two Sudanese move when they jumped him. Only one was captured, allegedly.

The people of Belfast, Catholic and Protestant, are united, and mostly Protestant men are in the streets. Tommy Robinson is trying to unite them with his group to save the British Isles from the lunatics in power who did this to them. They have had enough of massive migration.

The people are rising up, but the British in power will try to quash the rebellion.





“The Bully of the Middle East is DEAD!!!” – Trump Says Iran “Took Too Long” to Negotiate Deal and Will “Pay the Price”, Threatens to Target Power Plants and Bridges


JUST IN: “The Bully of the Middle East is DEAD!!!” – Trump Says Iran “Took Too Long” to Negotiate Deal and Will “Pay the Price”, Threatens to Target Power Plants and Bridges



President Trump on Wednesday appeared to announce the end of the US-Iran ceasefire, declaring that Iran has “taken too long to negotiate a deal that would have been great for them.”

“Now they will have to pay the price!!!” Trump said.

Fox’s Trey Yingst reports that Trump said he “may keep going” with strikes, even targeting Iran’s infrastructure.

This comes after Trump promised a response to Iran shooting down a US Army Apache helicopter on Monday.

“The United States must, of necessity, respond to this attack,” Trump said.

US Central Command later announced it had launched "self-defense strikes" against Iran. The mission is a proportional response to unjustified Iranian aggression,” CENTCOM said.

US Central Command said in another statement on Tuesday night that US forces carried out strikes on "Iranian air defense, ground control stations, and surveillance radar sites near the Strait of Hormuz with precision munitions from U.S. Air Force and Navy fighter jets."

U.S. Central Command (CENTCOM) forces completed self-defense strikes against Iran, June 9, at the Commander in Chief’s direction in response to yesterday’s downing of a U.S. Army Apache helicopter.

CENTCOM forces struck Iranian air defense, ground control stations, and surveillance radar sites near the Strait of Hormuz with precision munitions from U.S. Air Force and Navy fighter jets. The operation was a proportional response to recent attacks on U.S. forces and international commercial ships transiting regional waters.

U.S. forces remain vigilant and postured to defend against unjustified Iranian aggression.


Per Axios's Barak Ravid, Iran retaliated by firing four ballistic missiles and several drones at US bases in Bahrain, Kuwait and Jordan.

Trump said on Wednesday morning that Iran has been "completely defeated," adding, "They’ve taken too long to negotiate a deal that would have been great for them, now they will have to pay the price!!!"



Iran’s Military is a complete and total mess. Much of it, like their Navy and Air Force, doesn’t even exist anymore - They have been completely defeated. Iran is all talk and no action. The Bully of the Middle East is DEAD!!! They’ve taken too long to negotiate a deal that would have been great for them, now they will have to pay the price!!! President DONALD J. TRUMP


Trump further blasted the leftwing media, declaring his blockade in the Strait of Hormuz as "the most successful Blockade in the history of Naval Warfare."

"Iran is doing ZERO business, not paying their military, or any of their bills, and quickly becoming a FAILED NATION! Lots of oil is getting out. Praise be to Allah!" Trump said.







Trump says Iran taking too long to negotiate deal: ‘Now they will have to pay the price!’


Trump says Iran taking too long to negotiate deal: ‘Now they will have to pay the price!’


Times of Israel is liveblogging Wednesday



US President Donald Trump says Iran has “taken too long to negotiate a deal that would have been great for them. Now they will have to pay the price!”

The Truth Social post suggests that the US may attack Iran again, after carrying out strikes overnight in retaliation for the downing of an American military helicopter.

Iran responded with strikes on several US military bases in the region.

Trump, nonetheless, insists in his post that Iran is in a very weak position. “Iran’s military is a complete and total mess. Much of it, like their navy and air force, doesn’t even exist anymore. They have been completely defeated. Iran is all talk and no action. The bully of the Middle East is DEAD!”


UN to send investigators to Lebanon over potential law breaches, rights chief says

The UN human rights office will deploy a team of investigators to Lebanon next week to assess potential violations of international law by all parties during the current war in the country between Israel and the Iran-backed Hezbollah terror group, UN human rights chief Volker Türk says.

“It’s the first time that we are sending this assessment mission, and the idea is indeed to look at violations by all parties — violations of international law, violations of international human rights law, and to document this, and eventually to report back to you on our findings,” Turk says.

Fighting has continued in Lebanon despite repeated declarations of a ceasefire amid direct talks between Jerusalem and Beirut backed by Washington.

Herzog in Arabic message to Lebanese counterpart: ‘Secure Lebanon’s freedom’ from Hezbollah, Iran

In an apparent first for an Israeli president, Isaac Herzog sends an Arabic-language message to Lebanese President Joseph Aoun, telling his counterpart that he hopes for “peace” between their countries but that this depends on Beirut curbing the influence of Iran and Hezbollah.

“I extend a hand of peace to the president of Lebanon and to the Lebanese people. But it is your responsibility to secure Lebanon’s freedom from the dictates of Hezbollah, Iran, and terrorist organizations, so that it may preserve its status as a sovereign and independent state,” Herzog says in a video released by his office, during a tour of Israel’s northern border.

“My dream is to travel to Beirut, and this dream is still alive, but only if Lebanon’s future is determined in Beirut, and not in Tehran,” Herzog adds.

The appeal signals the increasingly open nature of communication between Israel and Lebanon amid ongoing US-hosted direct talks between the two countries, though a long-term agreement has proved difficult to reach: Iran continues to insist that a truce between Israel and Hezbollah in Lebanon be part of any ceasefire deal with the US, while the Lebanese Armed Forces appear unable to keep the Hezbollah in check.

Switching to English, Herzog accuses the Iran-backed terror group of violating Israel’s 2006 and 2024 ceasefire agreements with Lebanon, saying Israel “cannot accept any attacks on our citizens, any attacks crossing our borders, any terror attacks. We have the full right to defend ourselves, and so long as there is no clear arrangement that protects our nation, it will be impossible to move forward.”

Trump shares ‘West Wing’ clip touting virtue of ‘disproportionate response’ after US retaliated against Iran


Trump says he may order new strikes on Iran’s power plants and bridges

US President Donald Trump says he may order fresh strikes on Iran’s power plants and bridges, saying that Tehran is taking too long to reach a deal.

“I may keep going,” he says in comments in a phone interview, cited by Fox News. “They had a chance to sign a deal and survive.”

The reported comments come shortly after the US president said on Truth Social that Iran has “taken too long to negotiate a deal that would have been great for them. Now they will have to pay the price!”

Overnight, the US carried out strikes on Iran in retaliation for the downing of an American military helicopter. Iran responded with strikes on several US military bases in the region.




Turkey vs Israel: Stage Set For Ezekiel 38-39

Turkey wants Jerusalem. Israel has a biblical answer



When Turkey’s Interior Minister Mustafa Çiftçi declared last week that Jerusalem would one day return to Turkish sovereignty, just as in the past,” he was speaking as a senior official of a NATO member state, at a ruling party conference, invoking the name of Allah and the example of his president, Recep Tayyip Erdoğan. The Ottoman Empire, he promised the crowd, is not finished with Jerusalem.

Israel’s Foreign Ministry responded directly. “The corrupt Ottoman Empire is gone. Forever,” it posted on X. Defense Minister Israel Katz addressed the minister directly in Turkish: “Jerusalem is not Constantinople, and the State of Israel is not a crumbling Crusader Empire.”

Çiftçi’s speech was a window into how Erdoğan’s Turkey now sees itself. The minister compared the coming “liberation” of Jerusalem to Turkey’s role in the fall of the Assad regime in Damascus and to Azerbaijan’s recapture of Nagorno-Karabakh, both achieved through Turkish-backed force or Turkish-aligned power. 

The message was clear: Turkey sees itself as the engine of a new regional order, with Jerusalem as its crown.

This is not a new posture for Erdoğan. On March 30, 2025, at a prayer service marking the end of Ramadan, he called on Allah to “destroy and devastate Zionist Israel.” On May 14, 2026, he accused Israel of “trampling on humanity’s shared values” after Israel stopped yet another flotilla attempting to break the naval blockade of Gaza. Turkey regularly hosts Hamas leaders, and Erdoğan has praised the organization’s terrorists as freedom fighters.

Israel’s response drew the correct historical line. Defense Minister Katz reminded Çiftçi that Jerusalem has been the capital of the Jewish people for 3,000 years. That number is not hyperbole; it anchors Jerusalem to King David, to the Beit HaMikdash (the Temple), to a national memory that predates the Ottoman conquest by two and a half millennia. The Ottomans ruled Jerusalem for four centuries, from 1517 to 1917, a brief chapter in the city’s three-thousand-year history.

For the first several decades of Israel’s existence, Turkey stood apart from the Arab world’s rejection of the Jewish state. Turkey recognized Israel in 1949, just months after independence, making it the first Muslim-majority country to do so. Through the 1950s, 1960s, and into the 1990s, the two countries built one of the most substantive bilateral relationships in the region. They shared intelligence, conducted joint military exercises, and signed a landmark defense cooperation agreement in 1996. Israeli pilots trained in Turkish airspace. Turkish officers studied in Israeli military academies. The relationship was the envy of Israeli diplomats trying to break out of the region’s isolation.

The partnership extended well beyond the military. Trade flourished, tourism boomed, and Israeli companies invested heavily in Turkey. At its peak, Turkey was one of Israel’s most important trading partners. There was a genuine warmth between the two peoples, and Israeli tourists flooded Turkish coastal resorts by the hundreds of thousands every year.


The first serious fracture came in 2009, when Prime Minister Erdoğan stormed off a panel at the World Economic Forum in Davos after a heated exchange with Israeli President Shimon Peres over the Gaza war, declaring, “you know well how to kill.” It was a theatrical moment that signaled something real: Erdoğan’s Islamist AKP government had no interest in inheriting the secular, strategically pragmatic relationship that Turkey’s military and foreign policy establishment had built with Israel.

The break became formal in 2010. The Mavi Marmara flotilla, organized by a Turkish Islamist organization with ties to the AKP government, attempted to breach Israel’s naval blockade of Gaza. Israeli commandos boarded the vessel and, in a violent confrontation with activists who attacked them, killed nine Turkish nationals. 

Turkey recalled its ambassador, expelled Israel’s, and downgraded relations to the lowest level. Despite a 2016 reconciliation agreement, in which Israel paid compensation to the families of those killed, the relationship never fully recovered. 

When the Gaza war erupted after Hamas’s October 7, 2023 massacre of Israeli civilians, Erdoğan used it as a platform for the most extreme rhetoric yet, comparing Israel to Nazi Germany, calling Prime Minister Netanyahu a new Hitler, praising Hamas terrorists as freedom fighters, and demanding the United Nations authorize military force against Israel. Turkey suspended all trade and closed its airspace to Israeli carriers.

What makes the collapse so striking is the distance traveled. The country that was once Israel’s most important Muslim ally, the country whose military and intelligence services coordinated with Israel against shared regional threats, is now a state that hosts Hamas leadership, cheers for Israel’s enemies, and whose interior minister publicly prays to become the governor of Jerusalem.

The Ottoman Empire is, as Israel’s Foreign Ministry stated, gone. The British Mandate is gone. Every power that ruled Jerusalem is gone. Israel is here, and according to every covenant in the Hebrew Bible, it is not going anywhere.


Netanyahu brands Erdogan ‘antisemitic dictator’ who supports Hamas after Turkish leader condemned Israeli strikes

Nava Freiberg


Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu hits back at Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s condemnation of Israeli “aggression” in the region, accusing his Turkish counterpart of being an “antisemitic dictator” unfit to criticize Israel.

“The antisemitic dictator Erdogan, who is carrying out genocide against the Kurds, supports the Hamas terrorist organization, oppresses his own people, and imprisons political opponents, is the last person who can preach morality to Israel,” the premier says in a Hebrew-language statement.

“Israel and the IDF, the most moral army in the world, will continue to act with strength against Iran and its proxies, which threaten the Middle East and the entire world,” Netanyahu adds.

Some human rights groups and Western governments have long accused Turkey of repressing political opponents. Ankara has also faced criticism over its military campaigns against Kurdish groups in Turkey, Syria, and Iraq, though it rejects allegations of genocide. 

Israel has frequently accused Erdogan of supporting Hamas, many of whose leaders are hosted in Turkey. The president has praised the group’s terrorists as “freedom fighters” while condemning Israel, including by comparing it to Nazi Germany and likening Netanyahu to Adolf Hitler.

Erdogan said earlier today that Israel’s attacks on Syria and Lebanon have reached a point where they also threaten Turkey, adding Israel’s “aggression” poses a threat to the whole world and must be stopped.


Erdogan: Israel’s strikes on Lebanon and Syria threaten Turkey, its ‘aggression’ must be stopped


Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan says that Israel’s attacks on Syria and Lebanon have reached a point where they also threaten Turkey, adding Israel’s “aggression” poses a threat to the whole world and must be stopped.

Israel says it is acting against the ongoing threat posed by the Hezbollah terror group in south Lebanon, and argues that the terms of the ceasefire allow it to do so.

In Syria, Israel has carried out hundreds of strikes since the overthrow of president Bashar al-Assad in December 2004 — though not since March — while also initiating an unprecedented dialogue with the new authorities.

Speaking to lawmakers in parliament, Erdogan also claims there were initiatives led by Israel to destabilize the Mediterranean region and warns that “nobody should chase adventures” or join Israel’s “boat of mischief.”

He says any moves violating the rights of Turks and Turkish Cypriots will be met with a clear and strong response from Ankara. It is unclear what Erdogan was referring to.

The comments come just days after Turkey’s interior minister said that his country will one day bring about the “liberation” of Jerusalem, vowing to restore Turkish control to the city that the Ottoman Empire ruled for hundreds of years.

Those comments drew sharp rebuke from Israel, with the Foreign Ministry saying that the “Ottoman Empire is gone” and that Jerusalem “shall remain the eternal capital of Israel.”

Israel’s relations with Turkey, which were once the Jewish state’s strongest with any country in the region, have drastically deteriorated in recent years, especially since the start of the war sparked by the Hamas-led October 7, 2023, attack.

Erdogan has since been one of the most harshly critical foreign leaders of Israel, accusing Jerusalem of genocide and war crimes, praising ICC arrest warrants against Israeli leaders, and calling on the UN to recommend the use of force against Israel.

Turkey regularly hosts Hamas leaders, and Erdogan has praised the group’s terrorists as “freedom fighters” while condemning Israel, including by comparing it to Nazi Germany and likening Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to Hitler. The country has also suspended trade with Israel, and Turkish air carriers have stopped flying to Israel.



DIGITAL ID: THE LOCKDOWN THEY NEVER ABANDONED


DIGITAL ID: THE LOCKDOWN THEY NEVER ABANDONED
Martin Armstrong



Governments never abandon an idea once they discover it increases control. They simply wait until the public is distracted and repackage it under a different name. The lockdowns may be over, but the mentality that produced them never disappeared. It merely evolved.

The United Kingdom is now moving toward a digital identity system tied to smartphones through the GOV.UK Wallet and digital credentials. 

The politicians sell it as convenience. They always do. It is easier. It is faster. It is more secure. Those are the same promises made every time governments seek to consolidate information and authority into a single system. What begins as a voluntary tool gradually becomes expected, then preferred, then required. Before long, participation in normal life depends on compliance.

The concern has never been the technology itself. The danger is the inevitable expansion of purpose. Today, it is proving your age, identity, or right to work. Tomorrow, it becomes the preferred method for accessing benefits, taxes, banking services, healthcare, travel, voting, and countless other activities. Every government insists it will never go too far, yet history repeatedly demonstrates that once infrastructure exists, future politicians inherit powers they never had to build themselves.

Privacy advocates, cybersecurity experts, and civil liberties groups have already warned that digital identity systems will erode privacy and place sensitive information in a centralized database, ripe for the taking. Once your identity, credentials, permissions, and access are concentrated inside a digital ecosystem, the relationship between citizen and state fundamentally changes.

What few people appreciate is how quickly a digital identity can become the master key for everyday life. Once your government-issued digital credentials are stored on your phone, they can be linked to tax records, healthcare access, benefits, banking verification, travel documents, age verification, employment eligibility, and countless other services. Before long, those who refuse to participate find themselves navigating endless hurdles while everyone else is funneled into a single digital ecosystem. 

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