Attacking a mosque in Poland, the incident is described as çracistão (Photo)

A Muslim cultural centre, including a mosque, was attacked in Warsaw. Police in the Polish capital are looking for the culprits, while a leader of the local Muslim community is sure that the attack had a <x0-racist base “1>. Windows were destroyed during the night, including a mosque, a meeting centre for Muslims, a store and a restaurant. Security images [...]
Windows were destroyed during the night, including a mosque, a meeting centre for Muslims, a store and a restaurant.
Security images are under consideration to identify those behind the attack, in which no one is badly injured, said Warsaw police spokesman Mariusz Mrozek, “RT” Transmission Periscope.
Police have also appealed to the public to help capture the attackers.
Far-right Mloldzie Wszechpolska and ONR had pictures of option politicians in Katowice, Pollanding West will hang them all.
Police officers did not intervene; on the conservation- they protected them and allowed them to completely call to destroy people. Pic.twitter. com/hbrFF25aVr
) Nie-Patrioti UK? (@NiePatrioci en) November 26, 2017
“I am 100 percent sure that this was a racist attack, anti-mysliman”, said the leader of a Muslim community in Poland, imam Yousef Chadid, quoted by “AP”. There are two mosques in the country's capital, mostly Catholic, including the one at the center that was attacked. The Warsaw Muslim community consists of about 22,000 people.
In another incident Saturday, right-wing radicals staged a protest in the town of Katoice in southern Poland. They hung pictures of six Polish lawmakers and members of the European Parliament, calling them “traffickers”. Prosecutors have opened an investigation into the case, which Polish Prime Minister Beata Szydlo has described as a “akt aggression and intolerance”.
This month, to mark the country's Independence Day, about 60,000 people participated in a mass rally in Warsaw, organised by extreme right-wing groups under the “slogan We want God” Yells like “ > Without Islam” and “Jews outside Poland” were also used by demonstrators.
While the event, dominated by anti-Semitic and anti-Muslim chants, was described as one of the largest nationalist gatherings in Europe in recent years. Polish authorities claimed there were only unfortunate “incisive killings” at the gathering and generally called the event an expression of patriotism.
The EU Parliament strongly condemns “marging xenophobia and fascist”. /Periscopi/












