Hundreds of thousands for Syria terrorists as UK families go ‘forgotten’ - Islamic Invitation Turkey
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Hundreds of thousands for Syria terrorists as UK families go ‘forgotten’

At a summit held by the group calling itself so-called ‘Friends of Syria,’ British Foreign Secretary William Hague has said the “reality” is that some governments would supply Syria’s terrorists with arms.

The group also announced plans for paying salaries to Syria’s armed rebels as the British government already announced plans for funding the terrorists inside Syria.

The British government’s decision to provide Syria’s armed rebels with half a million pounds comes as reports tell of half a million “forgotten families” with the British economy back into recession.

On Thursday 29 March, British Foreign Secretary William Hague announced that Britain would provide Syria’s armed rebels with half a million pounds to help them “develop themselves as a credible alternative” in the country.

The sum of money that the British government decided to give to Syria’s armed rebels is the same as the number of “forgotten families” of whom a report into Britain’s unprecedented unrest last August talked.

The report was published by the Riots, Communities and Victims Panel, which was appointed by British Prime Minister David Cameron and Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg to explore the reasons behind the unprecedented unrest which swept across Britain in August.

The panel suggested that the government should take measures to help the 500,000 most disadvantaged families in Britain.

These half a million “forgotten families” who “bump along the bottom of society” were described as “rioters” and “looters” by the same British politicians who are spending their money “on setting fire to other people’s countries,” as described by British MP George Galloway.

“We’re spending hundreds of billions of pounds on setting fire to other people’s countries when we can’t keep our own pensioners warm in the winter time when we’re almost bankrupt,” said Galloway in an interview with Sky News after he won a landslide victory in the Bradford West by-election.

Apart from the British government’s spending on waging wars around the globe, another extravagant royal ceremony marks the British Queen’s Diamond Jubilee this year so that the longest-living monarch of the UK can celebrate her 60 years of reign.

The Queen’s Diamond Jubilee includes a seven-mile flotilla of 1,000 boats along the Thames. Over 1200 people would be tasked with hosting thousands of British and international guests.

The anti-monarchy campaign group Republic revealed that supporting the royal family costs the British taxpayer over £200 million a year.

The conflicting information about Britain’s economic situation and the government’s spending is compounded by revelations about the government’s unconventional income sources.

Last month, an independent candidate running in the French presidential election, Jacques Cheminade, said: “a part of the fortune of the Queen of England comes from drug trafficking.”

Moreover, on Thursday 29 March, Sky News reported that increased petrol sales from panic buying, urged by British officials, would bring in over £32m in extra fuel excise duty for the British government.

The 500,000 families were “forgotten” before the UK fell into a double dip recession. The question is what would happen to this number now that the Paris-based Organization for Economic Co-operation (OECD) says Britain is in a double dip recession?

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