Al Qaeda orders Prince Harry’s death

Al Qaeda orders Prince Harry’s death

Prince Harry’s memoir, ‘Spare’, has sparked all kinds of controversy. The book written by the Duke of Sussex, who currently lives in the United States with his wife Meghan, contains all manner of confessions: from his sexual scandals to his time in spent in Afghanistan with the British army.

Readers were particularly surprised by the prince’s confession of killing 25 terrorists over the course of his six tours of the country with the British Army.

What exactly did Harry say?

“It wasn’t a statistic that filled me with pride, but it didn’t leave me feeling ashamed either. When I found myself immersed in the heat and confusion of combat, I didn’t think of those as 25 people. They were chess pieces removed from the board; the bad people eliminated before they could kill the good people.”

They are words that, far from feeling shame or regret, denote an indifference to the lives of the terrorists. They haven’t gone unnoticed and the terroist group Al Qaeda has since responded to his claims.
Al Qaeda has called for Islamic hands to “take their just retribution.”

In the terrorist group’s magazine One Ummah, senior members have instructed followers to take their revenge on Prince Harry.

They have also ordered the British crown to act by reducing the security measures afforded to him in order to”make way for Islamic hands to be the ones to take their just retribution”

Al Qaeda has also complained about the Western media’s coverage of Harry’s book, above all for the lack of respect shown for the loss of Afghan lives. “As if the blood of Afghans does not have the slightest respect in this arrogant mentality,” they said.

Al Qaeda criticizes “the miserable British life”

According to the terrorist group, Harry’s memoir is nothing but “manifestations and reversals of the standard of the degenerate British miserable life, and the very complex royal education… a reflection of the reality of decadence.”

Al Qaeda has demanded the Afghan people receive compensation for casualties at the hands of Prince Harry, appealing to the UN by citing the Geneva Convention. They expressed their anger at what they perceive to be Britain’s skewed sense of moral authority: “The racist English man is above humans; the others are just pawns and chess pieces that the Englishman can remove from the face of the earth whenever he wants and desires bloodshed.”

The racist English man is above humans; the others are just pawns and chess pieces that the Englishman can remove from the face of the earth whenever he wants and desires bloodshed

Source: marca