Wanted Person No: 1202 |
Najar Kidnapping |
Sent-Complain Letters |
Published: 28.02.2012 Updated: 28.02.2012 |
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Information wanted on this person (please send to NajarWantedPersons@Yahoo.com)
Name and Aliases |
King Harald V
of Norway husband of Queen Sonja of Norway This person is identified as: 1.
One of the
persons that persecuted me to death to cover up for their brotherhood and his
fake wife Queen Sonja of Norway alias a man disguised as a woman alias my fake mother Hayat Baroudi that was going around the world and
raping uncountable women enable to enlarge it is hidden children that builds
the new brotherhood that stretches in many countries, among others in Egypt, Jordan, Lebanon, Saudi Arabia,
Germany, England,
Switzerland, Russian
Federation, USA and many others unknown to
me countries, these are the countries that I am certain this piece of shit
was there and raped many women and hid his children |
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Special Crimes Against Me |
See more description/Details below the photograph
King Harald V a most wanted criminal for covering up for my
kidnapping but also for persecuting me to death with his hidden brothers,
children in Germany, USA, Netherlands and the Middle East. |
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Other Knowledge |
Will follow |
Harald V of Norway
From
Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Jump
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Harald V (born 21 February 1937)
is the king of Norway. He succeeded to the
throne of Norway
upon the death of his father Olaf
V on 17 January 1991. The son of the then-Crown
Prince Olaf and of Princess Märtha of Sweden, Harald was
born at the Crown Prince Residence at Skaugum, Akershus,
Norway. A member of the House of
Schleswig-Holstein-Sonderburg-Glücksburg, originally from Northern
Germany, Harald became the first Norwegian-born prince since Olaf IV, who was born in 1370. Harald V is the
formal head of the Church of Norway and the Norwegian Armed Forces. He has two
children, Crown Prince Haakon and Princess Märtha Louise.
His grandchildren are Maud Angelica (2003), Leah Isadora (2005), Emma
Tallulah (2008), Princess Ingrid Alexandra
(2004), and Prince Sverre Magnus (2005). Harald has two older
sisters: Princess Ragnhild of Norway, Mrs.
Lorentzen (Ragnhild Alexandra, born Oslo, 9 June 1930), who lives in Brazil, and Princess Astrid of Norway, Mrs. Ferner
(Astrid Maud Ingeborg, born Oslo, 12 February 1932), who lives in Oslo.
[edit] Childhood and education
Crown
Prince Harald Prince Harald was born
in Skaugum.
The young prince was baptised in the Royal Chapel in the Royal Palace in Oslo
on 31 March by Bishop Johan
Lunde. In 1940 the entire royal
family had to flee their homes because of the German invasion. The dramatic journey
northbound was marked by the Germans' repeated attempts to kill the King
through bombing. It was deemed safer for the family to split up. The King and
Crown Prince Olav would remain in Norway and the Crown Princess was to make
her way to Sweden with the three children. The latter party reached Sweden on
the night of 10 April, but although Crown Princess Märtha was
Swedish-born, they encountered problems at the border station. According to
Princess Astrid and others who were present, they were admitted only after
the driver threatened to ram the border gate. Another account does not
describe the escape so dramatically.[3]
However when the King and Crown Prince inquired of Swedish foreign minister Christian Günther whether they could
sleep one night in Sweden without being interned, they were denied.[3] Prince Harald spent the
following days in Sälen before relocating to Prince Carl Bernadotte's
home in Frötuna
on 16 April. On 26 April the group moved to Drottningholm
in Stockholm. King Gustaf V has been accounted to have had
an amicable relationship with his Norwegian guests, but the topic of the war
in Norway was not to be raised. However, influential Swedish politicians
including Minster of Justice Westman wanted the Crown Princess and Prince
Harald to be sent back to Norway so he could be proclaimed King by the
Germans.[3][4]
After the King and Crown Prince had to leave Norway on 7 June they felt
Sweden might not be the best place for the rest of the family. They started
planning for them to be relocated to the USA. On 17 August the Crown Princess
and her children left for the USA from Petsamo, Finland, aboard the ship American Legion.[3] Harald and his mother
and sisters lived in Washington, D.C., during the war,[5]
while his father, Prince Olav, and his grandfather, King Haakon, stayed in
London with the Norwegian government-in-exile. One of the notable events he
remembers from that time is standing behind Franklin D. Roosevelt when he was sworn in
for his fourth term on the South Portico of the White
House in 1945. Such childhood experiences are reflected in a trace of an
American accent when he speaks English.[6]
The Doris Kearns Goodwin book No Ordinary Time: Franklin and Eleanor
Roosevelt and the Home Front in World War II contains a picture of the
King (then Prince) playing with FDR's dog, Fala, on the North Lawn of the
White House in 1944. Prince Harald visited
Norwegian servicemen on training in the United States. The prince also
visited outside America, travelling north to visit Norwegians training in
Canada's "Little Norway" in Ontario, Canada. He attended
The White Hall Country School from 1943. Prince
Harald returned to Norway along with his family at the war's end in 1945. In the autumn of 1945 he
was enrolled in third grade of Smestad
skole as the first royal to attend a public school. In 1955 he
graduated from Oslo katedralskole and in the autumn of that
year, Harald began studies at the University of Oslo. Later he attended the Cavalry
Officers' Candidate School at Trandum,
followed by enrollment at the Norwegian Military Academy, from which
he graduated in 1959. In 1960, Harald entered Balliol College, Oxford where he studied
history, economics and politics.[6]
He was a keen rower during his student days at Oxford. In 1960 he also made
his first official journey abroad, visiting the United States in connection
with the fiftieth anniversary of the American Scandinavian Foundation. [edit] Adult
life
Crown Prince Harald
attended Council of State for the first time on 27 September 1957 and took
the oath to the Constitution of Norway on 21 February 1958. In the same year,
he also served as regent in the King's absence for the first time. Harald married a commoner, Sonja Haraldsen, at Oslo
Domkirke in Oslo on 29 August 1968, a marriage that sparked much public
controversy. The couple have two children, Princess Märtha Louise
and His Royal Highness Crown Prince Haakon, heir-apparent
to the Norwegian throne. The King heads the
government meetings at Oslo Palace every Friday (Council of State). He also
has weekly meetings with the Prime Minister and the Foreign Minister. He
receives foreign envoys, and opens parliament every September. According to
the Norwegian constitution, he appoints his government. Since 1884
parliamentarism has been in place in Norway, so the government has to have
support from Parliament. The King appoints the leader of the parliamentary
block with majority as prime minister. When the parliamentary situation is
unclear the king relies on the advice of the president of Parliament and the
sitting prime minister. He travels extensively throughout Norway and makes
official state visits
to other countries. An avid sailor,[7]
Harald represented Norway in the yachting
events of Olympic Games in Tokyo in 1964[8]
and in Mexico City in 1968[6]
and the Munich 1972. The Crown Prince
carried the Norwegian flag at the opening parade of the 1964 Summer Olympics. In 1994, both the King
and Crown Prince Haakon played roles during the opening ceremony of the Lillehammer Olympics. The King declared
opened the games, while the Crown Prince lit the cauldron,
paying tribute to both the King and his grandfather
as Olympians. The King has also represented Norway at opening ceremonies of
Olympic Games, among them Torino and Beijing. However, he wasn't
present in Vancouver, the Crown Prince
attended instead, with the King and Queen attending later in the games. With his sailing crew he
won World Championship bronze, silver and gold medals, in 1988, 1982 and
1987, respectively. In July 2005, the King and his crew aboard the royal
sailboat Fram XV won the gold medal at the European Championships in
Sweden. In the 2007 World Championship the King obtained a sixth place.[9] Twice during recent
years, King Harald has been unable to perform his monarchial duties, owing to
hospitalization and convalescence: in December 2003 to mid-April 2004 due to
urinary bladder cancer, and in April to early June 2005 due to aortic
stenosis (for details see "The King's health", below). Crown Prince
Haakon served as the country's regent on both occasions. [edit] Positions as King of
Norway and honorary titles
[edit] As King of Norway
Royal
Monogram The King is the nominal
head of the Church of Norway. He is a Four-star General, an Admiral and formally the Supreme
Commander of the Norwegian Armed Forces. The infantry battalion
His Majesty the King's Guard are
considered the King's and the Royal Family's bodyguards, they guard the Royal
residences, including the Royal Palace and the Crown Prince Residence at
Skaugum, as
well as the Royal Mausoleum at Akershus Castle. [edit] Honorary titles
In the British
Army, the King was the final Colonel-in-Chief
of the Green Howards. It remains to be seen whether there
will continue to be an active association between the 2nd Battalion,
Yorkshire Regiment (Green Howards) and the Norwegian Royal Family. He is also
an honorary Colonel in the British Royal
Marines. The King is The Grand
Master of the Order of St. Olav and the Royal Norwegian Order of Merit. He
is a Knight of the Garter, and he is also a Knight
Grand Cross of the Royal Victorian Order, and a recipient of
the Royal Victorian Chain as well as numerous
other orders of chivalry. The King is patron of
the Anglo-Norse Society in London,
together with Queen Elizabeth II, his second
cousin. He is also patron of the Norwegian-American Foundation (Norge-Amerika
Foreningen) and the Norse
Federation (Nordmanns-Forbundet) in the United States. He received the honorary
degree Doctor of Civil Law from Oxford University in
2006 (as did his father, King Olav, in 1937, and his grandfather, King
Haakon, in 1943).[10]
The King has earlier been appointed an honorary doctor of law by the University of Strathclyde (1985) in Scotland and
by Waseda University (2001) in Japan (2001). He is
also an honorary fellow at Balliol College, Oxford. King Harald V is
Honorary President of the Offshore Racing Congress[11]
and also the Co-President of Honour of the International Sailing Federation
with the King Constantine II of Greece.[12] [edit] Other honors
·
Norway –
Grand Master of the Royal Norwegian Order of St Olav – Grand Cross with
collar of the Royal Norwegian Order of
St. Olav ·
Norway –
Grand Master of the Royal Norwegian Order of Merit
– Grand Cross ·
Norway – Defence Service Medal with Laurel Branch ·
Norway – The Royal House Centenary Medal ·
Norway – Haakon VIIs Commemorative Medal 1. October 1957 ·
Norway – Haakon VIIs Jubilee Medal 1905–1955 ·
Norway – Haakon VIIs Centenary Medal ·
Norway – Olav Vs Commemorative Medal of 30. January 1991 ·
Norway – Olav
Vs Jubilee Medal ·
Norway – Olav Vs Centenary Medal ·
Norway – Defence
Service Medal with three stars ·
Norway – Army National Service Medal with three stars ·
Norway –
Krigsdeltakerforbundet Badge of Honour ·
Norway –
Norwegian Red Cross Badge of Honour ·
Norway –
Norwegian Reserve Officers Federal Badge of Honour ·
Norway –
The Naval Society Medal of Merit in gold ·
Norway –
Norwegian Shooting Society Badge of Honour ·
Norway –
The Norwegian Confederation of Sports Centenary Medal ·
Norway –
Norwegian Shooting Society Commemorative Medal in gold ·
Norway –
Oslo Military Society Badge of Honour in Gold ·
Commonwealth realms – Royal Victorian Chain ·
Commonwealth realms – Knight Grand Cross of the Royal Victorian Order ·
United
Kingdom – Honorary Freedom of Newcastle upon Tyne[13][14] ·
Denmark –
Grand Commander of the Order of the Dannebrog ·
Denmark –
Knight with Collar of the Elephant ·
England –
Stranger Knight of the Order of the Garter ·
Finland –
Commander Grand Cross of the Order of the
White Rose ·
Iceland –
Grand cross with Collar of the Order of the
Falcon ·
Sweden – Knight with Collar of the Order of the Seraphim ·
Sweden –
Gustaf Vs 90th Anniversary Medal ·
Sweden – HM
King Carl XVI Gustaf 50th Anniversary Medal ·
Austria –
Decoration of Honour for Merit ·
Belgium –
Grand Cordon of the Order of Leopold ·
Brazil – Grand Collar of the Order of the Southern
Cross ·
Bulgaria
– Grand Cross of the Order of Stara Planina ·
Estonia –
The Collar of the Cross of Terra
Mariana ·
France – Grand Cross of the Légion d'honneur ·
Germany –
Grand Cross 1. class of the Order of Merit of the
Federal Republic of Germany ·
Greece – Knight Grand Cross of the Order of the Redeemer ·
Greece –
The Royal House of Greece Centenary Medal ·
Hungary –
Grand Cross with Collar of the Order of Merit of the
Hungarian Republic ·
IOC – The
Golden Olympic order ·
Italy – Grand Cross with Collar of the Italian Order
of Merit ·
Japan – Grand Cross with Collar of the Order of
the Chrysanthemum ·
Jordan – Grand Cross with Collar of the Order of al-Hussein bin
Ali ·
Yugoslavia – Order of the Yugoslav Great Star ·
Latvia – Commander Grand Cross with Chain of the
Order of the Three Stars ·
Lithuania
– Grand Cross of the Order of Vytautas the
Great ·
Luxembourg
– Grand Cross of the Order of Adolph of
Nassau ·
Luxembourg
– Grand Cross of the
Order of the Gold Lion of the House of Nassau ·
Luxembourg
– Medal to commemorate the wedding of Grand Duke Jean and Grand Duchess
Josephine-Charlotte ·
Netherlands
– Grand Cross of the Order of the
Netherlands Lion ·
Netherlands
– Grand Cross of the Order of the
Crown ·
Netherlands
– Commander of the Order of the Golden Ark ·
Netherlands
– Medal to commemorate the enthronement of Queen Beatrix ·
Poland – Grand Cross of the Order of the
White Eagle ·
Portugal
– Grand Cross with Collar of the Order
of St. James of the Sword ·
Portugal
– Grand Cross of the Order of Aviz ·
Portugal
– Grand Cross with Collar of the Order of
Infante Dom Henrique ·
Romania –
Grand Cross of the Order of the Star of Romania ·
Spain –
1,192nd Knight
and Collar of the Order of the Golden Fleece
in 1995 ·
Spain – Grand Cross Collar of the Order of Charles III ·
South
Africa – Grand
Cross of the Order of Good Hope ·
Thailand
– Knight Grand Cordon of the Order Chula Chom
Klao (First Class) ·
Ireland – Freedom of the City of Cork. ·
Croatia –
Grand Order of King Tomislav ·
Spirit of Luther Award,
awarded by Luther College of Decorah,
IA ·
A 230 000 km² area
in Antarctica
is named Prince Harald Coast in his honour. ·
In 2007 King Harald was
awarded the Holmenkollen medal with Simon
Ammann, Frode Estil, Odd-Bjørn Hjelmeset, and his
wife Queen Sonja. [edit] Health
On 1 December 2003, King
Harald was announced to be suffering from bladder
cancer. A successful operation took place on 8 December at Norway's
National Hospital, Rikshospitalet, in Oslo: his bladder was removed
and a new one constructed. The King was then on sick leave from all official
duties. Crown Prince Haakon was Norway's regent during
King Harald's illness and convalescence. The King resumed his duties on 13
April 2004. The King was once known
to be a chain-smoker, but quit that habit entirely when he
was diagnosed with cancer. On 1 April 2005, Harald
underwent successful heart surgery, an aortic valve replacement,
correcting his aortic stenosis. It had been known for some time
that he had this condition; however, until early 2005 it had only been of a
moderate degree. During the three-hour operation at Rikshospitalet the
doctors also performed a coronary bypass procedure on the
King. On 10 April, it was announced that the King had also undergone a pericardiocentesis to treat a complication of
surgery, a pericardial effusion (an accumulation of fluid around the heart). After the two operations
in the spring of 2005, King Harald remained on sick leave for almost two
months, Crown Prince Haakon again substituting as the country's regent. The
King returned to work on 7 June, a date which carried particular significance
in 2005, with Norway celebrating the centennial of the dissolution of the 1814–1905 union with Sweden.
The King recuperated well enough to win the European Championships in ocean
sailing just three months after his latest operation. Following advice from
his personal physician, King Harald finally decided in late 2005 to scale
down his official duties, primarily effected by taking Wednesdays off and
trying to keep weekends free as much as possible. However, he planned to
continue attending weekend sports events of interest, and to lead Friday
Cabinet meetings and carry out other constitutional duties. [edit] Patronages
·
The Royal Norwegian
Society of Sciences and Letters ·
The National Rifle
Association of Norway ·
The Norwegian
Association of UN Veterans ·
The Norwegian Reserve
Officers’ Federation ·
Norges Militære
Kameratforeningers Forbund ("The Norwegian Federation of Military
Associations") ·
The Norse
Federation ·
The Norway-America Association ·
Det Nasjonale Aldershjem
for Sjømenn ("The Norwegian Seamen’s Retirement Home") ·
Norsk Anchorite Klubb
("The Norwegian Anchorite Club") ·
The Norwegian
Association of Hunters and Anglers ·
The Norwegian Bible
Society ·
The
Norwegian Seamen’s Church – Church of Norway Abroad ·
The Offshore Northern
Seas Foundation ·
The Bergen Philharmonic Orchestra ·
The Norwegian Academy of
Technological Sciences ·
Bergen International Festival ·
The Norwegian Cancer
Society ·
Lions Clubs International – Norway ·
Nasjonalforeningen for
folkehelsen ("The National Association for Public Health") ·
The Norwegian Olympic
Committee and Confederation of Sports ·
The Norwegian Choir
Association ·
The Norwegian Forestry
Society ·
Friends of the Earth Norway/Norwegian
Society for the Conservation of Nature ·
Ridderrennet ("The
Knights’ Race", a Norwegian skiing event for the blind and
mobility impaired) ·
The Norwegian Society for Sea
Rescue ·
The Sons
of Norway Foundation ·
The American-Scandinavian Foundation ·
The Norwegian Lutheran
Memorial Church, Minneapolis, Minnesota[15] ·
Skogfjorden,
the Norwegian language program of Concordia Language Villages, Bemidji, Minnesota [edit] Ancestors
[edit] Patrilineal descent
[edit] Issue
·
Her Highness Princess Märtha Louise,
born on 22 September 1971. She was married to Ari Behn,
born on 30 September 1972, on 24 May 2002. They have 3 daughters: o Maud Angelica Behn, born 29 April 2003 o Leah Isadora Behn, born 8 April 2005 o Emma Tallulah Behn, born 29 September 2008 ·
His Royal Highness Crown Prince Haakon Magnus,
born on 20 July 1973. He married
Mette-Marit Tjessem
Høiby, born 19 August 1973, on 25 August 2001. She has a son from
a previous relationship, Marius Borg Høiby, born 13
January 1997. The Crown Prince and Princess have 2 children: o Her
Royal Highness Princess Ingrid Alexandra,
born 21 January 2004, Hereditary Princess of Norway o His
Highness Prince Sverre Magnus, born 3
December 2005 [edit] References
1.
^
Coronation discarded by constitutional amendment in 1908. Harald V swore the
Royal Oath in the Storting on 21 January 1991 and received the benediction
in the Nidaros Cathedral on 23 June 1991. 2.
^ VG
– Kongen og kronprinsen på moskébesøk: –
Kongen i Norge skal være kristen 3.
^ a
b
c
d
Hegge,
Per Egil; Harald V, En biografi; N.W. Damm & Søn AS; 2006. 4.
^ "Kidnapper
Foiled?". Time. 2 September 1940.
http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,764542,00.html. Retrieved 17 January 2009. 5.
^ "Non-Political
Campaign". Time Magazine: p. 2. 9 September 1940. http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,764591-2,00.html. Retrieved 17 January 2009. 6.
^ a
b
c
"Those
Apprentice Kings and Queens Who May – One Day – Ascend a
Throne," New York Times. 14 November 1971. 7.
^ "Victory
by Design". Time Magazine: p. 1. 27 September 1963. http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,875198,00.html. Retrieved 17 January 2009. 8.
^ "HP-Time.com".
Time Magazine: p. 2. 26 June 1964. http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,898168-2,00.html. Retrieved 17 January 2009. 9.
^ Sandefjords Blad on
the King's performance in the World Championship (Norwegian) Retrieved 10 September
2007. 10.
^ Article in VG on the
honorary doctorate (Norwegian) 11.
^ ORC web site. Committees.
Retrieved November 2010. 12.
^ http://www.sailing.org/26220.php 13.
^ "King
of Norway awarded Honorary Freedom of Newcastle". Norwegian Ministry of Foreign
Affairs. http://www.norway.org.uk/norwayuk/news/newcastle.htm. Retrieved 18 December 2008. 14.
^ Solholm, Rolleiv (14 November 2008). "King
Harald receives honorary title". Norwegian Broadcasting Corporation
(Norway Post). http://www.norwaypost.no/Culture/King-Harald-receives-honorary-title/menu-id-32.html. Retrieved 14 November 2008.dead link] [ 15.
^ Royal
House web page on the King's patronages Retrieved 7 November 2007 16.
^ "Oslo
Militære Samfunds historie" (in Norwegian). Oslo Militære Samfund. http://www.oslomilsamfund.no/oms/oms_historie.html. Retrieved 5 February 2009. [edit] External links
·
Official Website of the
Norwegian Royal Family ·
Official
Website of the Norwegian Royal Family: biography of the King ·
Biography
from Norwegian government web site ·
Summary
biography of the King ·
The Royals –
Regularly updated news coverage of the Norwegian royal family (Aftenposten) ·
The Royal
Norwegian Order of St Olav ·
The Royal Norwegian Order of St Olav –
H.M. King Harald V the Grand Master of the Order ·
(Norwegian) Announcement
of King Harald V & Queen Sonja's awarding of the Holmenkollen medal
– Accessed 18 March 2007 ·
(Norwegian) His Majesty The Kings Life Guard
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