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Eye on Extremism
April 25, 2016
Counter
Extremism Project
The
New York Times: ISIS Targeted By Cyberattacks In A New U.S. Line Of
Combat
“The United States has opened a new line of combat against the Islamic
State, directing the military’s six-year-old Cyber Command for the first
time to mount computer-network attacks that are now being used alongside
more traditional weapons. The effort reflects President Obama’s
desire to bring many of the secret American cyberweapons that have been
aimed elsewhere, notably at Iran, into the fight against the Islamic
State — which has proved effective in using modern communications and
encryption to recruit and carry out operations.”
Wall
Street Journal: Two British Men Sentenced To Life For Terrorism Plot
“Since the arrests of Messrs. Hassane and Majeed, the pursuit of
Syria-linked terror suspects by the U.K. police and intelligence services
has intensified to the point where arrests now average almost one a day,
according to senior commanders. Of the 350 British foreign fighters to
have returned to the U.K., at least 70 are considered ‘potentially
extremely dangerous,’ said Mark Simmonds, the chief operating officer of
the Counter-Extremism Project and a former senior government official.
Separately, detectives in the city of Birmingham investigating possible
U.K. links to the Paris and Brussels attacks said they had been given
more time to question three suspects arrested last Thursday and Friday.”
CNN:
Obama Expected To Announce An Additional 250 Special Operations Forces To
Syria
“President Barack Obama is expected to announce Monday an additional
250 special operations forces will be sent to Syria in the coming weeks,
according to two U.S. officials. The expected announcement will come
while the President visits Germany. The troops will be expanding the
ongoing U.S. effort to bring more Syrian Arab fighters into units the
U.S. supports in northern Syria that have largely been manned by the
Kurds, one of the officials said. One of the officials emphasized the
plan calls for the additional U.S. forces to ‘advise and assist’ forces
in the area whom the U.S. hopes may eventually grow strong enough to take
back territory around Raqqa, Syria, where ISIS is based. These troops are
not expected to engage in combat operations or to participate in
target-to-kill teams but will be armed to defend themselves, one official
said.”
The
Washington Post: A Syrian Rebel’s Slaying In Turkey Points To The Long,
Lethal Reach Of ISIS
“On a drizzly afternoon this month, they gathered in the tree-lined
cemetery here to bid farewell to a charismatic rebel and outspoken enemy
of the Islamic State. An apparent Islamic State militant followed the
36-year-old into an alley in the Turkish city of Gaziantep and fired
a round into his head. He was the fourth prominent Syrian critic of the
Islamic State to be assassinated in the past six months in southern
Turkey, far beyond the militants’ stronghold in Syria. After rising to
prominence as leader of a rebel brigade and then as a television host,
Shurqat eventually fled to southern Turkey for safety. But even in exile,
he couldn’t escape his radical Islamist foes back home. The Islamic State
asserted responsibility for his killing, an attack that further
demonstrates how the group can still strike beyond its center of gravity
despite suffering mounting losses on the battlefields of Iraq and Syria.”
Reuters:
Yemeni, UAE Troops Seize Qaeda-Held Seaport City: Residents
“Yemeni and Emirati soldiers seized Yemen's seaport of Mukalla from al
Qaeda fighters on Sunday, depriving the group of the seaport that enabled
it to amass a fortune amid the country's civil war. Around 2,000 Yemeni
and Emirati troops advanced into Mukalla, local officials and residents
said, taking control of its maritime port and airport and setting up
checkpoints throughout the southern coastal city. There was little
fighting after a mostly Gulf Arab alliance and Yemeni forces mobilised
their forces at Mukalla's suburbs, and the militants may have chosen to
leave peacefully.”
Fox
News: ISIS Suspect Reveals Plans To Open Up Route From Syria To U.S.
Through Mexico
“One of the American men accused in Minnesota of trying to join the Islamic
State group wanted to open up routes from Syria to the U.S. through
Mexico, prosecutors said. Guled Ali Omar told the ISIS members about the
route so that it could be used to send members to America to carry out
terrorist attacks, prosecutors alleged in a document filed this week. The
document, filed Wednesday, is one of many filed in recent weeks as
prosecutors and defense attorneys argue about which evidence should be
allowed at the men's trial, which starts May 9.”
Voice
Of America: Cost Of War And Peace In Iraq
“Humanitarian agencies are warning the fight to free Mosul from
Islamic State control could have a huge impact on the civilian population
caught in the crossfire. ‘If you have the high levels of destruction that
we saw in Ramadi, there’s going to be a massive humanitarian impact,’
Lise Grande, the U.N. humanitarian coordinator for Iraq, told VOA.
Between 300,000 to 1.2 million people could be displaced by the fighting,
Grande said. Iraq is ‘one of the largest, most volatile humanitarian
crisis in the world,’ Grande said. In the past year, 1 million people
have been displaced, bringing the total to 3.5 million. That number is
expected to rise as the campaign against Islamic State intensifies.”
Premium
Times: Two Million Nigerians Still Displaced By Boko Haram Insurgency
“A total of 1,934,765 displaced persons, IDPs, are currently living in
formal camps, host communities and satellite camps in liberated
communities as a result of insurgency in North Eastern States of Borno,
Yobe, Taraba, Gombe, Bauchi and Adamawa states. This was disclosed by the
Yola Camp Coordinator , Saad Bello, who, on behalf of the Director
General of NEMA, Muhammad Sani Sidi, took the United States Ambassador to
the United Nations, Samantha Power, round the facilities at Malkohi IDP
Camp in Yola, Adamawa State at the weekend. He said there were 32 formal
camps in Borno, Yobe and Adamawa States with a total of 189,783 IDPs.
Borno has 19 camps with 150, 858 IDPs; Yobe has 9 camps with 31, 988 IDPs
and Adamawa 4 camps with 6, 937 IDPs.”
New
York Times: An Amateur Vs. ISIS: A Car Salesman Investigates And Ends Up
In Prison
“By his own account, Toby Lopez was a supremely ordinary guy. He sold
Toyotas and lived with his mother in a tidy rancher here with a cherry
tree out front. He was proud that he could connect with customers —
anyone from a Superior Court judge to, as he put it, “Redneck Bill from
down on the farm.” What passed for excitement was the time his young
niece won a beauty contest and he chauffeured her in a red Corvette in a
local parade. Then a high school friend was killed in Afghanistan, and
the Islamic State began beheading American journalists. Horrified, Mr.
Lopez heard on CNN one day in the fall of 2014 that the Islamic State was
active on Twitter, and he went online to see what he could find.”
Defense
One: Meet The Small Iraqi Town That Breeds Jihadis
“No matter where you turn when covering ISIL’s two years of terror in
Iraq and Syria, one name repeatedly crops up: Tal Afar. The town, with an
estimated 200,000 residents when ISIL (a.k.a. the Islamic State),
captured it two years ago, is perched on the dusty plains of northern
Iraq, just shy of the Syrian border. Its native sons are thought to have
taken a lead role in massacring Yazidis in nearby Sinjar during the
summer of 2014. When ISIL seized the Mosul Dam for 12 days that August, a
water engineer who’d previously managed Tal Afar’s drainage system was
put in charge of it.”
United
States
Fox
News: Obama Rules Out Sending US Ground Troops To Syria
“President Obama ruled out Sunday sending U.S. ground troops to Syria,
saying that military efforts alone aren’t going to solve the conflict.
‘It would be a mistake for the United States, or Great Britain, to send
in ground troops and overthrow the Assad regime,’ he said in
an interview with the BBC. Obama said he didn’t think the Islamic
State would be eradicated in his last nine months in office, but he still
believes the territory that the terror group controls can shrink. Obama
called the conflict a ‘heart-breaking situation of enormous complexity.’
Obama told the BBC the U.S.-led coalition will continue its air campaign
against ISIS and target key areas like Raqqa to try and ‘lockdown
particular areas where the terror group can import foreign fighters into
Europe.’”
The
New York Times: Obama Calls Meeting With European Leaders Over Shared
Challenges
“President Obama will meet with Western European leaders on
Sunday and Monday amid a growing sense in his administration that Europe
is faltering in the face of multiple challenges, undercutting the trans-Atlantic
alliance at a critical time. Even as Mr. Obama has tried to focus United
States foreign policy more on Asia and China’s rising power,
administration aides say they have watched with concern as European unity
has come under increased strain at a time of increased Russian
aggression, slow economic growth, a virulent terrorism threat, and a huge
influx of migrants from the Middle East and beyond.”
Syria
Associated
Press: At Least 26 Killed As Fighting Rages In Syria's Aleppo
“Air strikes and shelling pounded Aleppo for a third straight
day on Sunday, killing two young siblings and at least 24 others in
Syria's largest city and former commercial capital. The northern city has
been bitterly contested between insurgents and government forces since
2012. Opposition groups control the eastern part of the city but have
come under intense strain as the government has choked off all routes to
the area except a narrow and perilous passage to the northwest. At least
10 people were killed by rebel shelling on government-held areas in the
city, according to activists and Syria's state news agency, SANA. Rockets
struck schools and residential areas, SANA reported. The Britain-based
Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said two young siblings were among
the dead. Air strikes on the opposition side of the city killed 16,
including a mother and her daughter, the Observatory said.”
Reuters:
Kurdish Forces To Keep Areas Taken From Syrian Government Forces Truce
“Kurdish security forces will keep territory taken from pro-government
forces during a rare three-day outbreak of violence in a city in
northeastern Syria, a truce announced by Kurdish authorities on Sunday
indicated. The fighting in Qamishli, near the Turkish border, disturbed a
largely peaceful coexistence there between the Kurds' Asayish internal
security forces that control most of the city and pro-government forces
holding the airport and part of its centre. During the fighting that
broke out last Wednesday and was halted late Friday afternoon, Asayish
forces seized the main prison and several government-controlled positions
in the city. The truce, which seemed to be holding on Sunday, headed off
possibly wider fighting between the pro-government forces and the Kurds,
whose YPG militia is an important ally in the U.S.-led campaign against
Islamic State on other fronts in Syria.”
Iraq
The
Washington Post: Fighting Erupts In Iraq, And The Islamic State Isn’t
Part Of It
“Kurdish troops and Iraqi Shiite forces exchanged mortar and
machine-gun fire Sunday in a flare-up that killed at least 12 people and
raised concerns about the state’s ability to control an array of armed
militia groups as areas are freed from the Islamic State. The fighting
broke out in Tuz Khurmatu, an ethnically and religiously mixed tinderbox
town that is 120 miles north of Baghdad. Both sides blamed each other for
the conflagration. The Islamic State was pushed out of the surrounding
area in 2014, but the armed groups here have since jostled for control
and influence. Keeping militias under state control, and preventing them
from turning on one another, is a major test for the Iraqi government as
it slowly claws back territory from the Islamist militants.”
Associated
Press: Clashes Erupt Between Kurdish, Shiite Fighters In Iraqi Town
“Heavy clashes erupted Sunday between Kurdish peshmerga forces and
Shiite paramilitary troops inside a contested town north of Baghdad, a
spokesman said. A quarrel between two neighbors, a Kurd and a Shiite
Turkoman, evolved into a military confrontation between the peshmerga
forces and Shiite fighters who share the town of Tuz Khormato, said Karim
al-Nouri, the spokesman for Iraq's paramilitary forces — which are made
up mainly of Shiite militias. Al-Nouri accused the Kurds of using tanks
and shelling homes belong to Turkoman residents, saying senior officials
were in talks to end the conflict. He said the clashes resulted in
causalities, but didn't give a specific number.”
Turkey
Reuters:
One Dead, 26 Wounded As Rockets Hit Turkish Town Near Syrian Border
“Rockets pounded the Turkish town of Kilis near the Syrian border on
Sunday, a Reuters witness reported, killing one person and injuring 26, a
day after the government promised to protect the area from repeated
attacks by Islamic State militants. Two rockets struck houses in a poor
neighbourhood near the town centre in the morning. Sixteen people were
injured and Turkish soldiers near the border returned fire into Syria,
security sources said. Later in the day, one person was killed and 10
more injured when two more rockets crashed into a mosque, Hurriyet Daily
News reported. The mosque was 100 metres from the governor's office,
where Deputy Prime Minister Yalcin Akdogan was holding talks at the
time.”
AFP:
Turkey Kills Almost 900 ISIS Members In Syria Raids
“Turkey has killed almost 900 alleged ISIS members since January
through artillery fire and air raids, the state-run Anatolia news agency
said Monday, citing military sources. The country, a member of a US-led
coalition fighting ISIS, has killed 492 "terrorists" since
January 9 in air raids, while another 370 were killed in artillery strikes
which also destroyed arms depots, the agency said. These figures could
not be independently verified. Turkey, which has been hit by attacks
blamed on jihadists, including two deadly suicide bombings in Istanbul
that targeted foreign tourists, began to carry out air strikes against
the group in Syria last summer.”
Afghanistan
Telegraph:
Afghanistan In 'Worst Humanitarian Crisis' Since 2001 Following Nato
Drawdown
“Afghanistan has plunged into its worst humanitarian crisis
since the start of operations in 2001 after American and British forces
pulled out 18 months ago, the outgoing head of the international Red
Cross has said. The drawdown of Nato troops including the British and
Americans has seen an upsurge in fighting, with the Taliban now able to
bring the war to major cities for the first time, Jean-Nicolas Marti told
The Telegraph. Last year saw the number of war wounded evacuated by the
International Committee of the Red Cross grow by 30 per cent on the year
before. This year’s figure is already on course to outstrip that, even
before the summer ‘fighting season’ starts. The number of civilian
casualties overall was also the highest since 2001.”
Yemen
The
Washington Post: War In Yemen Takes A Major Turn With Offensive Against
Al-Qaeda
“Signaling a major shift in Yemen’s grinding civil war, Saudi-backed
forces Sunday appeared to mount a large-scale offensive to drive
militants aligned with al-Qaeda out of their strongholds in the country’s
south. The coordinated attacks on strongholds held by al-Qaeda in the
Arabian Peninsula, known as AQAP, would be a first for the coalition
dominated by Saudi Arabia, which began launching airstrikes and
then ground attacks last year against Shiite rebels, known as
Houthis. Saudi Arabia views the Houthis as proxies of its primary
regional rival, Shiite Iran, and has refrained from targeting AQAP. Under
cover of airstrikes by the coalition, fighters aligned with Yemen’s
internationally recognized government pushed toward the city of Mukalla
and surrounding areas. Mukalla has become AQAP’s de facto capital.”
Middle
East
Haaretz:
Youngest Female Palestinian Jailed By Israel Released Two-And-A-Half
Months After Arrest
“A 12-year-old Palestinian girl convicted of attempting to stab an
Israeli was released from prison on Sunday and returned to her family,
two-and-a-half months after becoming the youngest female Palestinian ever
incarcerated by Israel. D. was convicted in a plea bargain in
February of attempted voluntary manslaughter and illegal possession of a
knife by a military court. According to the indictment, she set out to
stab a Jew, but was apprehended at the entrance to the settlement of
Karmei Tzur, where a knife was found in her possession.”
Libya
Reuters:
Militants, Guards Clash Near Libya's Brega Port, Oil Commander Wounded
“Islamic State militants clashed with a Libyan force guarding oil
ports near Brega terminal on Saturday, killing one guard and wounding
four including Ibrahim Jathran, leader of the Petroleum Facilities Guard
(PFG), a spokesman and medical sources said. Islamic State has a base in
the Libyan city of Sirte and has launched frequent attacks against oil
facilities and ports, including major export terminals that are closed
but controlled by Jathran's PFG brigades. The PFG is one semi-official
armed group that is backing a new unity government in Libya, where two
rival administrations and their loose alliances of former rebels have
been battling for control after the 2011 fall of Muammar Gaddafi.”
Nigeria
Bloomberg:
Nigeria Intercepts Suspected Boko Haram Bomber In Borno State
“The Nigerian army said it intercepted a suspected Boko Haram suicide
bomber in Ummarari in the country’s north-eastern Borno state. The man
died on Saturday morning when he detonated explosives strapped to his
body after being stopped, Colonel Sani Kukasheka Usman, acting director
of public relations for the Nigerian army, said in an e-mailed statement
on Sunday. The army is questioning four Boko Haram leaders, including a
radio technician, who were arrested on Friday in Borno, according to a
separate statement.”
United
Kingdom
Newsweek:
Britain Not Ruling Out Sending Troops To Libya
“British Foreign Secretary Philip Hammond said on Sunday that he could
not rule out sending troops to Libya if requested to do so by the Libyan
government, but that any deployment would need to be approved by
Parliament. Western powers are backing a new Libyan unity government,
hoping it will seek foreign support to confront Islamic State militants,
deal with migrant flows from Libya to Europe and restore oil production
to shore up Libya's economy. Hammond said he did not think it was likely
that Libya would invite foreign military intervention, but highlighted
the risk that an Islamic State militant group stronghold in the
country could pose to mainland Europe.”
Telegragh:
Complacent’ Anti-Terror Minister Says UK Borders Are ‘Adequately
Prepared’ To Keep Britons Safe
“Government minister in charge of tackling extremism has been accused
of ‘complacency’ after claiming the UK is ‘adequately prepared’ to combat
the threat of terrorists exploiting porous borders.
Lord Ahmad of Wimbledon denied that a review of security at
borders was necessary and ruled out an increase in Border Force numbers
insisting that ‘we meet the challenges we currently face’. The news came
after Eurosceptic justice minister Dominic Raab suggested Britain
could turn away ten times more extremists and criminals of the UK left
the European Union.”
BBC:
UK 'Anti-IS Fighters' Freed In Iraq
“Two Britons and an Irishman have been freed in Iraq after being held
on their way home from fighting against so-called Islamic State (IS), the
Foreign Office has said. Jac Holmes from Bournemouth, Joe Ackerman from
Halifax and Irish citizen Joshua Molloy had been detained in
Kurdish-controlled northern Iraq. IS controls large swathes of territory
in Syria and north and west Iraq. Mr Holmes's mother met Kurdish
officials on Friday to help secure his release. The three men were held
for more than a week in a prison in the Kurdish city, Erbil.”
Australia
Reuters:
Police Charge Australian Teenager With Planning ANZAC Terror Attack
“Australian police have arrested and charged a teenager with a
terrorism offense related to planning an attack at Monday's
commemorations of the ANZAC landings at Gallipoli during World War One.
The 16-year-old boy was arrested near his Sydney home on Sunday and will
appear before a children's court on Monday, police said. The offense
carries a maximum penalty of life imprisonment. ANZAC Day, April 25, is a
major annual holiday in Australia and New Zealand marking the date of the
first Gallipoli landings in 1915, in which large numbers of Australian
and New Zealand troops fought and died. Dawn services and military parades
are held around the country, with the largest drawing crowds of tens of
thousands in Sydney and Melbourne.”
Arabic
Language Clips
ISIS
Akhbar
Libya: ISIS In Sirte Confiscates Property And Money Owned By Residents
Under The Pretext Of Negligence In The Implementation Of The Law Of
God,"
ISIS in the Libyan city of Sirte launched a campaign of random raids
in which it captured all residents rumored to own real estate in the
city. Eyewitnesses in Sirte said that on Friday and Saturday ISIS gunmen
launched a massive campaign of raids and arrested property-owners, while
its militants did not provide reasons to justify these arrests. It is
noteworthy that in a similar manner ISIS recently took merchants and
businessmen captive and confiscated money and properties owned by
residents.
Al-Alam:
Stunning Facts... Germany Funds ISIS Whose Wealth Comes To $1 Billion
A German security report revealed that the treasury of the ISIS
terrorist organization comprises nearly $1 billion. It indicated that
ISIS has amassed its wealth from "taxes and compulsory fees imposed
in areas under its control (in Syria and Iraq), as well as oil profits,
smuggling of antiquities and ransom money." The report, prepared by
the Federal Criminal Police Office of Germany (BKA), claimed that
"convoys" of financial aid from Germany are being provided by
affluent families and friends of jihadist groups. It stressed that such
assistance "plays an important role." The German report added
that "in addition to these funds, Germany is a source of aid in the
form of medicine, clothing, vehicles and protective vests. Germany is
also a source of donations through social media websites."
Masralekhbaria:
Israeli Newspaper: Hamas Witnesses A Strategic Shift On The Road To
Mending Relations With Cairo
The Israeli Haaretz newspaper reported that the Egyptian government
was able to persuade the tribal leaders in Sinai to cooperate with Egypt's
army against ISIS. Now, tribal chiefs are awaiting implementation of the
ambitious economic plan that will provide jobs for the people of Sinai as
a substitute for the monetary enticements offered to them by ISIS. In
addition, the Saudi aid of $1.5 billion, which was said to be dedicated
to the development of North Sinai, comes specifically to achieve this
goal in the hope of purging Sinai from terrorist organizations and
restoring foreign tourism, which used to be an important source of hard
currency.
Muslim
Brotherhood
Alkhbr:
Egypt: Extending Detention Of (Brotherhood-Affiliated Businessman) Hassan
Malek For The Eighth Consecutive Time
The Egyptian Supreme State Security Prosecution on Saturday remanded
businessman Hassan Malek in custody for the eighth time. His detention
was extended for 45 more days pending investigations conducted into
charges of joining and financing the Muslim Brotherhood. He is also being
charged with conspiring to harm the Egyptian economy through currency
exchange companies owned by him, as well as financing anti-regime
demonstrations.
Alhyat
Almasrya: Eradication Of All School Maps Printed During The Rule Of The
Muslim Brotherhood
Egypt's Minister of Education, Dr. El Helali el Sherbini, stated that
the Ministry's committees of expert advisers are currently conducting a
full review of the maps appearing in the curricula of all public and
private schools. The committees' task is to ascertain the accuracy of the
information contained in these maps after having found maps, printed
during the rule of the Muslim Brotherhood, which featured false and misleading
information. This misinformation contained, for instance, the inclusion
of the towns of Halayeb and Shalateen within the borders of Sudan, not of
Egypt. The Egyptian minister asserted, in a report sent to several
Members of Parliament following urgent petitions, including those made by
representatives of Halayib and Shalateen, that all of these maps have now
been destroyed. El Sherbini also disclosed that it was decided to inform
the committee tasked with seizing funds of Brotherhood schools about the
obliteration of these maps, so as to deduct the costs of this action from
the budgets of these schools.
The
Seventh Day: Mostafa Bakry: Names Of (Brotherhood-Affiliated) Ayman Nour
And Abdel Moneim Aboul Fotouh Must Be Included On The List Of Instigators
Egyptian parliamentarian Mostafa Bakry noted he does not rule out the
possibility that Dr. Ayman Nour, founder and chairman of the Ghad
El-Thawra Party, transferred huge sums of money to several activists to
support the demonstrations on April 25th. Bakry claimed that
Nour holds enormous assets obtained from questionable sources. The
Egyptian parliamentarian stressed that Ayman Nour plays an instrumental
role as a Muslim Brotherhood pawn, so it is only natural to presume he
was secretly transferring funds to such groups. He went on to say, "There
are people who travel to Turkey and meet with Ayman Nour, including
dubious figures who played and still play a role in inciting (against the
Egyptian regime)."
Moheet:
Economist: Brotherhood Smuggles $40 Million A Day Out Of (Egypt)
Egyptian economist Soliman Fouad claimed that the Muslim Brotherhood
smuggles abroad nearly $40 million per day from the Egyptian market. The
expert, in an interview on the LTC TV channel, called on security and
regulatory agencies to intensify their campaigns to detain smugglers of
hard currency out of the country. He noted that Turkey and Qatar are not
behind the current crisis of skyrocketing dollar rates. He affirmed that
10 businessmen own 75% of the Egyptian currency exchange market and that
14 foreign currency exchange companies affiliated with the Brotherhood
are manipulating the dollar rates.
Direct
Egypt: How Does (Former Egyptian Minister) Al-Zend Help Leaders Of The
Brotherhood Overturn Decisions To Seize Their Money?
An Egyptian judicial source revealed a new violation of the law by
ousted Justice Minister Ahmed al-Zend; i.e., aiding the Muslim
Brotherhood leadership in the annulment of decisions to seize their
properties. The source said that al-Zend had violated the law by
appointing Ezzat Khamis as a technical consultant in the ministry despite
his reaching retirement age in July 2015. Granting judicial capacity to a
judge who reached retirement age represents a loophole and a breach of
the law by the minister. This loophole was exploited by the Brotherhood
and eventually led to the dismissal of Khamis. The judicial source
provided more details: "The reason for firing Ezzat Khamis from the
Brotherhood Asset Freeze Committee represents the State Commissioners
Authority's acceptance of a lawsuit filed by Muslim Brotherhood leaders
whose funds were seized. It also signifies the annulment of the asset-seizures
explained by several arguments, including the fact that the Committee
Chairman is no longer considered a judge after retirement."
Hezbollah
Al
Quds Al-Arabi: Lebanese Banks Will Close The Accounts Of Hezbollah In
Accordance With US Sanctions
In his first response to the entering into effect of the US law
imposing sanctions on Hezbollah, the Governor of the Central Bank of
Lebanon, Riad Salameh, stressed that "banks must not carry out
large-size operations which can be of benefit to Hezbollah." He
noted that banks are accountable for their decisions. Salameh asked the
banks to close the accounts of anyone included in the US sanctions and to
refrain from opening new accounts for them. In any case, the banks must
notify the Special Investigation Commission at the Central Bank of
Lebanon and await its response. US President Barack Obama signed the
Hezbollah International Financing Prevention Act, and now Lebanese banks
must comply with it.
Houthi
Filkhbr:
The Houthis Loot Yemeni Funds After Realizing The End Of Their Coup Looms
A senior Yemeni source requesting anonymity revealed that the Houthi
militia had confiscated taxes paid by private telecom operators in the
country. These taxes are estimated at roughly 100 billion riyals
(equivalent to some $400 million) which were supposed to be deposited in
the Central Bank. On his part, Yemeni economic analyst Hussein al-Bakri
ruled out the possibility that such a vast amount of money will be used
militarily. He said, "Preventing the provision of the
telecommunications companies' taxes for 2015 by the Houthi and
ex-President Saleh's militias is a serious move, indicating that the
(Houthi) group has begun to accumulate resources to secure its financial
future. This means that the leadership of the militia realizes it is in
the final chapter of its coup."
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