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Just a reminder of what a nice person Chris Kaba was

Wednesday-Thursday blog

I started writing this before the reporting restrictions on the adorable Chris Kaba’s productive life were lifted. So I might as well leave this up for at least one day.

Yesterday (Tuesday 22 October) the ever reliable Guardian newspaper reported : “A�Metropolitan police�firearms officer who shot an unarmed suspect in the head has been acquitted of murder.”

This was, of course, a story about the acquittal of the police officer who shot Chris Kaba. The multi-culturally enriching community from which Mr Kaba came are, of course, outraged. And no doubt there will be protests and suchlike demanding ‘justice’ for the ‘innocent’ Mr Kaba:

Kaba’s family and supporters have tried to pull a fast one on us by portraying Kaba as a family man with a great future ahead of him. We were told he was about to become a father and was an ‘aspiring architect’. So let’s deal with these two claims:

About to become a father: Mr Kaba was served by police with a 28-day domestic violence protection order relating to Ms Waite, the mother of his unborn girl. The notice granted at Westminster magistrates� court barred him from contacting her on social media or entering her street in Battersea. It added the order prohibits the �alleged perpetrator from using or threatening violence against Karimah Waite or pester, encourage or instruct any other person to do so�. It seems that one of Mr Kaba’s many talents was beating up women, even ones pregnant with his child.

The aspiring architect: Here Kaba’s family and supporters are really taking the p*ss. When he was still supposedly at school, Mr Kaba was sentenced to a four-year term in a young offender institution for possession of a firearm with intent to cause fear of violence. The conviction dated to an incident in Butchers Road, Canning Town, at 3.25am on December 30, 2017.

�Two years before his killing, on August 11, 2020, Mr Kaba, then 22, was pulled over just four miles away in Cranbrook Road, Thornton Heath, on suspicion of failing to stop a Vauxhall Astra on the order of a police constable in uniform. Bromley magistrates� court heard the officer �had cause to believe it was being used in a manner likely to cause alarm, distress and/or annoyance to members of the public�. During a search, police found a lock knife. Two days later, Mr Kaba pleaded guilty to having a bladed article in a public place and driving without insurance.

In the days before he was shot, Kaba was linked to two shooting incidents – one when he allegedly shot a man in both legs (I can’t show the picture of the wounded man as it belongs to a news agency) and another when he was filmed shoooting a man in a nightclub. Moreover, rather than studying architecture, he actually seems (from what I understand) to have spent his time as a member of a local drugs and extortion gang.

Of course, just because Kaba was (IMHO) a total piece of garbage doesn’t give the police the licence to shoot him. That brings us to what happened when Kaba was killed.

What does ‘unarmed’ mean?

The Kaba family and the bleeding-heart liberals keep bleating that Kaba was ‘unarmed’ when he was shot. But when Kaba’s car was hemmed in by police cars and armed police, he used his car as a battering ram to try to smash a way to escape thus putting the lives of the police in danger. I’m no expert in policing. But if you are surrounded by armed police telling you to put your hands up, it’s probably more advisable to actually put your hands up rather than accelerating towards the police in an attempt to escape.

The usual race-gravy-train-riders will probably still try to milk the Kaba story to create more BLM nonsense. But the world is a much better place now that Mr Kaba has gone to meet his Maker. Perhaps he’ll meet the equally criminal George Floyd in whatever place he ends up?:

5 comments to Just a reminder of what a nice person Chris Kaba was

  • Ian J

    What a role model! Still he will provide material for the perpetually outraged to focus on for a while, until like buses, another will turn up.

  • Val Manchee

    In general I do not like our modern day police but I do acknowledge that they often have a difficult job and sometimes make the correct decisions. This was one of those occasions.

  • A Thorpe

    If we want armed police on the streets we must recognise that it takes a very special officer who is prepared to do this considering the consequences. If this attitude to the police continues we might find none prepared to do this. What happens then, do the criminals take over or do we end up with the army on the streets? It�s the official lack of support for the police that should also concern us.

  • Bill Airway

    I feel that the Crown Prosecution Service let us all
    down by bringing this case against the police officer.

  • Jeffrey Palmer

    Personally I have no problem at all with ‘Diverse’ gangstas culling each other. It seems to me to be a service to civilised society, every time one of them is eliminated.

    But why should our modern ‘Police Service’ waste their time shooting such gentlemen as Mr Kaba, when the Kaba’s of this world have so many business rivals willing, even eager, to do the job for them?

    However, I am vastly amused when such scum as Kaba’s grisly supporters claim that their ‘Community’ is ‘Traumatised’ on the very rare occasions when ‘Diverse’ people are killed by white people.

    Within a quarter of a mile of where my partner lives, in Holloway, London, there were six ‘Diverse on Diverse’ killings in 2023. Curiously, nobody from their community has yet claimed to be ‘Traumatised’ by that.

    Why, it’s almost as though the ‘Diverse’ community resents white people muscling-in on one of its favourite hobbies…

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