This makes it a second time that in spite of the dreadful German government policy, the independent German judiciary has acted on the side of justice in a case involving Islamist fascist terrorists.
The first case was the Mykonos restaurant massacre:
Sharafkandi, Abdoli, Ardalan and Dehkordi were murdered in a mafia-style attack at the Mykonos Greek restaurant located on Prager Strasse in Berlin at about 11 pm on 17 September 1992.[1][2] Three victims died instantly, while the fourth died at a hospital.
“A German court has approved the extradition of an Iranian diplomat to Belgium on a European arrest warrant for allegedly being part of a failed plot to bomb an Iranian opposition rally near Paris.”
Above is from a blog posted nearly two weeks ago, it is time to also thank the civil society of Germans as well, news:
The Lawfare Project announced on Wednesday that a controversial German-Iranian business consultant, who works to boost trade with Islamic Republic of Iran, resigned his position on the board of the umbrella organization for Shi’ite Muslims in Germany--an entity that has a strong presence of radical Islamists, according to the German government.
The stunning revelation surfaced in connection with a lawsuit filed by Dawood Nazirizadeh, the German-Iranian businessman, against the Germany-based Iranian dissident, human rights activist, and blogger Dr. Kazem Moussavi, who has over the years campaigned against the mullah regime’s lethal antisemitism targeting the Jewish state.
According to a Lawfare Project statement, “Mr. Nazirizadeh is suing Dr. Moussavi regarding allegations made in the dissident’s blog, which regularly exposes those alleged to have links to the Iranian regime. Mr. Nazirizadeh has led a number of high-level delegations of German business people to encourage German trade with Iran. The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) plays a dominant role in the Iranian economy.”
Brooke Goldstein, Executive Director of The Lawfare Project, said “The Lawfare Project will continue to support the legal defense of those working to expose radicalization in the West. Libel suits are a common tactic and an act of lawfare, designed to silence and intimidate anyone brave enough to speak out about supporters of extremism and extremist regimes. The Lawfare Project’s legal fund is proud to support the defense of Dr. Moussavi in the interest of upholding freedom of speech on issues of public concern and national security. We are pleased to see that our legal defense has seemingly played a role in Mr. Nazirizadeh’s resignation from a group that, according to the German Ministry of the Interior, is ‘influenced and infiltrated’ by extremists.”’
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