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Eye on Extremism
May 12, 2016
CNN:
ISIS Claims Responsibility For Attack On Baghdad Gas Plant
“ISIS has claimed responsibility for an assault on a Baghdad gas plant
Sunday, the latest in a series of deadly attacks committed by the Sunni
terror group that have claimed more than 100 lives in recent days.
Baghdad Governor Ali al-Tamimi said 10 people, including seven police
officers and three guards, were killed during the assault on the facility
in the Taji area, north of Iraq's capital, at 5 a.m. local time Sunday.
Police officials said the attack began with a suicide car bomb at the
entrance of the plant, then a second suicide bomber detonated an
explosive inside the facility. Six ISIS militants then tried to storm
inside, but security forces were able to repel them, police said. Two
military helicopters were deployed from Taji military base to fight the
militants, police said.”
The
New York Times: Al Qaeda Turns To Syria, With A Plan To Challenge ISIS
“Al Qaeda’s top leadership in Pakistan, badly weakened after a decade
of C.I.A. drone strikes, has decided that the terror group’s future lies
in Syria and has secretly dispatched more than a dozen of its most
seasoned veterans there, according to senior American and European
intelligence and counterterrorism officials. The movement of the senior
Qaeda jihadists reflects Syria’s growing importance to the terrorist
organization and most likely foreshadows an escalation of the group’s
bloody rivalry with the Islamic State, Western officials say. The
operatives have been told to start the process of creating an alternate
headquarters in Syria and lay the groundwork for possibly establishing an
emirate through Al Qaeda’s Syrian affiliate, the Nusra Front, to compete
with the Islamic State, from which Nusra broke in 2013.”
Wall
Street Journal: Islamic State Shifts Tactics, From War-Fighting to
Suicide Bombing
“As Islamic State loses territory in the grinding war in the Middle
East, it is turning to less elaborate but lethal direct attacks on
civilian targets such as this past week’s series of deadly suicide
bombings in Iraq. In three straight days of bombings in Baghdad starting
on Wednesday, the group killed more than 100 people. In the wake of the
terror attacks in Paris in November and Brussels in March, Western and
regional officials said they are seeing more signs the militants are
morphing back into a guerrilla-style insurgency that relies increasingly
on suicide attacks.”
NBC
News: An American ISIS Cell: The Story Of 3 U.S. Recruits
“Jaffrey, Rasel and Zakia are among just a few dozen Americans who
have managed to get to Syria and sign up with ISIS. FBI Director James
Comey said last week that the number of Americans seeking to join its
ranks overseas — already low on a per capita basis — had fallen even
further to just one a month since August. In an interview with NBC News,
Assistant Attorney General John Carlin, the Justice Department's point
person on national security, said he could not discuss specific cases or
say whether federal investigators had missed opportunities to stop the
trio from physically joining ISIS.”
Newsweek:
ISIS Suicide Bomb Kills 47 In Former Al-Qaeda Town In Yemen
“Two suicide bomb blasts claimed by the Islamic State militant group
(ISIS) killed 47 police officers in a Yemeni town on Sunday recently held
by rival Al-Qaeda jihadis. The radical Islamist group struck the outskirts
of the port town of Mukalla in the first blast, killing 41 people and
wounding more than 50 people, medics told AFP news agency.”
The
New York Times: After Years of Distrust, U.S. Military Reconciles With
Nigeria to Fight Boko Haram
“Less than two years after it blocked a sale of American-made attack
helicopters to Nigeria from Israel because of human rights concerns, the
Obama administration says it is poised to sell up to 12 light attack
aircraft to Nigeria as part of an effort to support the country’s fight
against the Boko Haram militant group. The proposed sale reflects the
warming of the relationship between the Nigerian and American militaries,
which had frayed under Mr. Jonathan. The Pentagon often bypassed Nigeria
in the fight against Boko Haram, choosing to work directly with
neighboring Cameroon, Chad and Niger.”
RT:
ISIS Covers Fighters’ Hefty Bills In Turkish Hospitals, Leaked Phone Taps
Reveal
“Islamic State terrorists wounded on the Syrian battlefield regularly
travel to Turkey for complex and costly medical treatment, according to
tapped phone calls apparently ignored by Ankara’s security forces, and
handed to the media by opposition MP Erem Erdem. Transcripts of phone
recordings that were obtained by international media conversations with
Ilhami Bali, a ‘prominent’ figure within Islamic State (IS, formerly
ISIS/ISIL) terror group, who has a US€1.3 million bounty on his head,
shed additional light on the lucrative business of medical treatments
apparently offered by Turkish medical facilities to jihadist fighters.”
The
Times Of Israel: Queen To Announce Major Crackdown On Extremism In UK
“In an upcoming annual speech to parliament, the queen of England is
expected to announce a major UK government crackdown on extremism,
including measures to deny extremists access to vulnerable groups such as
children and students. Her Majesty’s Most Gracious Speech, known
informally as the Queen’s Speech, will include references to the new
Counter-Extremism Bill, which the British government has touted as a
major step in the effort to defeat extremism in the country, The
Telegraph reported Saturday. Officials hope to stop radicals from spreading
extremist ideology in schools, colleges, and other institutes where they
could influence young or vulnerable people and talk them into committing
acts of violence.”
The
Washington Post: Al-Qaeda Affiliates Are Threatening West Africa’s Most
Peaceful Cities
“In a city where nightclubs and mosques coexist peacefully, Islamist
violence long felt like a foreign problem — something residents watched
on news clips from the Middle East or other parts of Africa. But Senegal
and its neighbors are facing a new threat from extremists moving far from
their traditional strongholds in northwest Africa. Since November,
militant groups have killed dozens of people in assaults on hotels, a
cafe and a beachside resort in West Africa, passing through porous
borders with impunity. The attacks have occurred in countries that had
been rebounding from political turbulence, such as Ivory Coast and
Burkina Faso. Now fears of such bloodshed are growing in this pro-Western
democracy, which serves as a regional hub for international organizations.”
The
Wall Street Journal: Turkish Military’s Influence Rises Again
“After 13 years of being methodically marginalized during Recep Tayyip
Erdogan ’s tenure atop Turkish politics, the army is regaining its clout
as the president sidelines his political rivals. Turkey’s military, which
has forced four civilian governments from power since 1960, is re-emerging
as a pivotal actor alongside Mr. Erdogan, who has long viewed the army as
a potentially dangerous adversary. Mr. Erdogan’s moves to sideline
political opponents—he forced out his handpicked prime minister this
month amid a power struggle—has cleared the way for Turkey’s generals to
play a greater role in shaping Mr. Erdogan’s attempts to extend his
global influence.”
The
New York Times: ‘I Will Kill Him’: Afghan Commander Targets Son, A
Taliban Fighter
“Since he first picked up a gun as a 15-year-old, Abdul Basir has
killed a lot of people. Yet the operation on Friday night was different:
He was out to kill his son. In Afghanistan’s long war, Mr. Basir’s
determination to kill one of his children was not unique, but rather just
another sign of how long the violence has dragged on, and of how it has
permeated the deepest levels of society and poisoned the closest of
relationships. Framed by grand ideologies and elaborate strategies at the
top, the perpetual conflict has divided families for a generation.
Guerrillas who took up arms against the Soviet occupation became sworn
enemies of their Communist relatives. Now, a government commander was
hunting down a son who had denounced him as an infidel and forced him
from their family’s ancestral village.”
Reuters:
Boko Haram To Increase Cooperation If Islamic State Boosts Libya
Presence-UK
“Boko Haram jihadists are likely to step up cooperation with Islamic
State should the latter extremist group gain a stronger foothold in
Libya, a senior British official said on Saturday. Boko Haram, which has
been waging a seven-year insurgency in northern Nigeria, last year
pledged loyalty to Islamic State. Little is known about the extent of
cooperation. But Western officials worry that Islamic State's growing
presence in North Africa and ties with Boko Haram could herald a push
south into the Sahel region and create a springboard for wider attacks.
Islamic State first seized parts of Syria and Iraq but later built up a
foothold in Libya, exploiting a security vacuum.”
United
States
ABC
News: Defeating ISIS: An Exclusive Look At What's Next For U.S. Troops In
Iraq
“Major General Volesky commands the nearly 5,000 Americans in Iraq who
are determined to stop the group from wreaking havoc across the country.
Nearly two years ago, ISIS militants overran large swaths of Iraq and
Syria, but General Volesky said that with the help of U.S. forces, the
Iraqis have ISIS on defense. ‘Every day they lose terrain, and they’re
not regaining anything. So that’s really what’s different,’ he said. Just
last December, Iraqi Security Forces recaptured the city of Ramadi, the
capital of Iraq’s largest province, eight months after it fell to ISIS.”
The
Wall Street Journal: Long Emphasis On Terror May Hurt U.S. In
Conventional War, Army Chief Says
“When Gen. Mark A. Milley, the Army chief of staff, stepped off his
jet into the sunshine here on Sunday, it was the first time the Obama
administration had sent its top Army officer to Africa for a high-level
meeting to get the continent’s fledgling militaries in shape to deal with
growing terrorist threats. Instead, the question was whether the new
focus on the ever-widening terrorist threat in Africa — not to mention
the focus on the Islamic State in Syria and Iraq, and the continuing war
in Afghanistan — is taking away from the Army’s ability to fight a land
war against a more traditional military adversary.”
Syria
Reuters:
Syrian Forces Retake Deir Al-Zor Hospital After 'Major' Islamic State
Offensive
“Syrian government forces retook a hospital in Deir al-Zor after
Islamic State attacked it on Saturday following a dawn offensive by the
militants on the besieged eastern Syrian city, a war monitor and state
media said. The British-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, which
monitors Syria's five-year-long war, said Islamic State had killed at
least 35 members of the Syrian armed forces and detained some medical
staff from the hospital. The fighting in and around the hospital also
killed at least 24 Islamic State fighters, the Observatory said. Islamic
State's Amaq news agency said its fighters staged a ‘major offensive’ on
the southwestern edge of Deir al-Zor on Saturday, storming the Assad
Hospital and cutting the supply route between the a Syrian army base and
the airport.”
Iraq
Bloomberg:
Islamic State Says It Destroyed Ancient Gate In Iraq’s Mosul
“Islamic State has taken credit for demolishing the Assyrian Mashki
Gate in Iraq’s northern province of Nineveh, in another example of the
destruction of priceless antiquities in areas under the Jihadist group’s
control. The Gate of Mashki was built during the era of the Assyrian King
Sennacherib in 705-681 B.C. It was located east of Mosul, the capital of
Nineveh province, which was taken over by Islamic State forces in June
2014. Photographs distributed by Islamic State on Sunday show militants using
at least one bulldozer to knock down the ancient ruin, although it was
unclear when the action took place. National Geographic said in April
that it had obtained images revealing the destruction of the Mashki Gate
and the nearby Adad Gate, built around 700 B.C., by Islamic State.”
Reuters:
Islamic State On The Defensive, Territory Shrinking In Syria And Iraq:
U.S. Official
“Islamic State has not gained significant ground since it took the
Iraqi city of Ramadi a year ago, which it then lost in December, as the
U.S.-led coalition in Iraq and Syria has been helped by better
intelligence and better equipped local forces, a senior U.S. official
said on Sunday. Islamic State ‘is shrinking so they are very much on the
defensive,’ Brett McGurk, U.S. President Barack Obama's special envoy in
the fight against Islamic State, told a news conference in Amman. Islamic
State controls the cities of Mosul in Iraq and Raqqa in Syria and is
proving a potent threat abroad, claiming credit for major attacks in Paris
in November and Brussels in March. McGurk said that U.S.-led coalition
effort to capture Mosul and Raqqa was making progress.”
Turkey
The
Jerusalem Post: Turkish, Coalition Forces Hit Islamic State Targets In
Syria, Kill 27
“Turkish and US-led coalition forces struck Islamic State targets
north of the Syrian city of Aleppo, killing 27 militants, broadcaster CNN
Turk and other media reported on Monday. The reports did not say when the
military action, which NTV said consisted of air strikes and shelling,
occurred. There have been a series of such strikes after the Turkish
border town of Kilis, which lies just across the frontier from Islamic
State-controlled territory in Syria, was regularly struck by rockets in
recent weeks.”
Afghanistan
Voice
Of America: Afghan Security Forces Push Back Taliban Advance On Northern
City
“Afghanistan security forces said Sunday they have halted advances
overnight by the Taliban on a key northern city and inflicted heavy
casualties on the enemy. The fighting on the outskirts of Pul-e-Khumri,
capital of Baghlan province, erupted when the Taliban overran several
villages and security outposts, residents and insurgent sources said. The
hostilities temporarily closed the main highway, which links the national
capital of Kabul with eight northern provinces as well as neighboring
countries. After security forces led successful counterattacks and forced
the rebels to retreat, the road was reopened, provincial officials said.”
Yemen
BBC:
Yemen Conflict: IS Suicide Attack Kills 31 Police Recruits
“A suicide attack claimed by the Islamic State (IS) group has killed
at least 31 police recruits in southern Yemen. Officials say the militant
detonated his explosives outside a police base in the port of Mukalla,
killing recruits as they queued up outside the building. IS's jihadist
rival, al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP), was forced out of
Mukalla last month by a Saudi-led military coalition. The conflict in
Yemen has displaced two million people since 2011. Hospitals in Mukalla,
capital of Hadramawt province, said they were treating at least 60 people
wounded in the attack. The bombing is the second such attack in Mukalla claimed
by IS militants since AQAP's withdrawal from the city. The group claimed
a suicide car bomb attack that killed 15 soldiers last week.”
Saudi
Arabia
Voice
Of America: Kerry Seeks Saudi Support For Syrian Cease-Fire
“U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry sought Saudi Arabia's support
Sunday in strengthening a ‘cessation of hostilities’ agreement between
Syrian government forces and rebels ahead of broader talks on regional
crises later this week. Kerry, trying to shore up support for the shaky
cease-fire in Syria, met with Saudi King Salman, whose country has been a
key supporter of rebels fighting to overthrow Syrian President Bashar
al-Assad. The top U.S. diplomat and his Saudi counterpart, Adel
al-Jubeir, discussed developments in Syria, the official Saudi Press
Agency reported.”
Middle
East
The
Washington Post: Israel Tells France It’s Not Interested In Multilateral
Peace Talks
“French officials said Sunday that they will continue to press ahead
with plans to host a multilateral Middle East peace conference later this
year, despite hearing, in blunt language, that Israel doesn’t really like
the idea. French Foreign Minister Jean-Marc Ayrault met with Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Sunday to promote what diplomats are
calling the ‘French Initiative,’ a still evolving and admittedly vague
diplomatic project that seeks to bring global attention to the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict and find consensus among the international
community on how to move forward with a two-state solution. Neither
Israel nor the Palestinians, who support the French Initiative, will
attend the May meeting in Paris.”
NPR:
A Fall In Knife Attacks On Israelis, Amid A Shifting Palestinian Mood
“More than seven months after it began, a wave of Palestinian stabbing
attacks against Israelis appears to be slowing. Israeli military
officials say Palestinian attacks continue, but the number of attempted
attacks has dropped significantly. Notably, they say, stabbing attacks by
teenagers acting alone have gone down. The stabbing attacks against
Israelis, which began in October and for several months continued almost
daily, were initially popular among many Palestinians. They said this was
a legitimate response to Israel's military occupation.”
Nigeria
Voice
Of America: Cameroon, Allies Claim Gains In Fight Against Boko Haram
“Cameroon and its allies in a multinational force are claiming gains
in two operations last week against the Boko Haram militant group in
Nigeria. Cameroonian casualties from the operations have reached
hospitals in Maroua but morale reportedly remains high. Thirty wounded
Cameroonian soldiers have been ferried in the past four days to the
military hospital in Maroua on Cameroon's northern border with Nigeria.
Saturday, the multinational force said five Boko Haram leaders were
captured, dozens of militants were killed and 60 women and children freed
during recent operations. Cameroon spokesperson Issa Tchiroma said
no soldiers were killed, but several were wounded.”
United
Kingdom
The
Guardian: Manchester United Stadium ‘Bomb’ Identified As Training Device
“A fake bomb planted by a security company as part of a training
exercise at Old Trafford caused the cancellation of Manchester United’s
final Premier League game of the season when the firm forgot to take it
away. The security blunder led to United’s home stadium being evacuated
20 minutes before kick-off against Bournemouth after an ‘incredibly
lifelike explosive device’ was found at the ground. Army bomb disposal
experts carried out a controlled explosion on the dummy device, which was
discovered in the toilets within the north-west quadrant, between the Sir
Alex Ferguson Stand and the Stretford End.”
Europe
Deutsche
Welle: Vienna Hosts International Meeting On 'Islamic State' Threat In
Libya
“A conference co-chaired by the United States and Italy is set to
start on Monday in the Austrian capital, Vienna. On Sunday, US Secretary
of State John Kerry met with Saudi Kind Salman to lay the groundwork for
the meeting. Since March, a national unity government has been gradually
exerting its influence in Libya following years of unrest in the country.
However, the government – led by businessman Fayez al-Sarraj and backed
by much of the international community – faces political opposition from
within Libya and the threat of the so-called ‘Islamic state’ (IS)
establishing a bigger foothold. The flow of migrants from Libya across
the Mediterranean to Europe is also a topic for discussion in Vienna. The
meeting is scheduled to last for two days, with the focus shifting to
Syria on Tuesday. Representatives from Iran, Saudi Arabia and Russia are
also expected to attend.”
Arabic
Language Clips
Financing
of Terrorism
Yemen
Akhbar: Yemen On The Blacklist Of States Unable To Combat Money
Laundering Crimes
High-level sources claim that the Middle East & North Africa
Financial Action Task Force (MENAFATF) against Money Laundering and
Terrorist Financing has decided to include Yemen on its blacklist. This
decision comes following the blatant breach of the anti-money laundering
law by the Houthis and the Central Bank of Yemen. The Yemeni government's
response failed to meet the deadline set by MEANFATF. The threat to
blacklist Yemen comes amid intensive pressures exerted by MENAFATF on the
Houthis as a result of their coup and of threats to blacklist Yemen due
to the spread of the money laundering phenomenon in Yemen.
Yemen
Akhbar: Liberation Of (Yemen's) Al-Mukalla Is Strategic Victory Which
Dries Up The Sources Of Terror Financing
The people of the Yemeni city of al-Mukalla, capital of Hadhramaut,
have just ended a very dark era following the strategic victory achieved
by the Arab coalition, led by Saudi Arabia forces. Life is gradually
returning to normal in al-Mukalla, after government authorities took
control of the city and drained it of al-Qaeda's terrorist funding
sources. Now, the battle for reconstruction begins. Experts stressed that
the intervention by the forces of the Arab Coalition for the Liberation
of Yemen saved the whole world from the birth of another entire terrorist
apparatus like the one the international community is witnessing in Iraq
and Syria. They asserted that the terrorists in al-Mukalla tried to
duplicate the ISIS model, claiming there are credible reports which
indicate that the terrorist organizations were on the verge of declaring
a so-called Islamic State. One expert stressed that purging al-Mukalla of
terrorists means draining sources of financing Al Qaeda, which relies
primarily on arms- and oil-smuggling. He explained that terrorist
organizations took control of the most important revenue-generating
facility in Yemen - al-Mukalla Port. This is the sole sea port in
Hadhramaut province, situated on the Arabian Sea. Al Qaeda turned this
port into its "private" property, which generated a weekly
revenue of 1 billion riyals ($4.65 million).
ISIS
Enab
Baladi: ISIS Organization Starts Pricing Traffic Violations In Syria's
Deir Ez-Zour
ISIS's "Islamic Police in Wilayat al-Khair” (the largest part of
Syria's Deir ez-Zour province), issued a new resolution declaring the
launch of the imposition of new fines for traffic violations. According
to sources in Deir ez-Zor, the terror organization "issued a price
list a week ago as well as decisions concerning other legal
violations." They added that ISIS published the equivalent value of
the fines in dollars and gold bullion. The list circulated by the
organization included many parameters for imposing traffic fines,
including lack of a driver's license, carrying an excessive load, driving
in the opposite direction, writing on the car, parking on the left side
of the road, and others. The fines range from 500 to 10,000 Syrian pounds
($2 - $46).
Sputnik:
Turkey Embraces ISIS Funds
Head of Nineveh Media Network, Raafat al-Zarari, disclosed on Sunday
that Eyad el-Khila was killed inside his car, which he was driving on Al
Muthanna Street in Mosul. The car was targeted by aircraft of the
international coalition. Al-Zarari noted that Eyad's brother, Suhail, who
is one of the prominent financiers of ISIS, is also in charge of
transporting foreign aid into the ISIS-controlled areas in Iraq,
specifically Mosul, and Syria. Al-Zarari added that Suhail, who currently
resides in Turkey, transfers the money with the help of taxi drivers
working on the Turkish-Syrian-Iraqi borders.
Muslim
Brotherhood
Elfagr:
Ahmed Musa: 23 Journalists From The Brotherhood Newspaper Are Getting
Money From The State
Egyptian journalist Ahmed Musa unveiled documents indicating that 23
reporters from the Muslim Brotherhood-affiliated Freedom and Justice
Journal are still receiving money from the Journalists' Union. He said,
"They're taking money to kill us." Musa said, during his TV
show, that the Journalists' Union has in essence become a political party
and these journalists have been using the Union's money for internal
activities, in violation of the law."
Almesryoon:
(Egyptian) Legal Experts: State Is Not Permitted To Use Brotherhood Funds
Egyptian legal experts have rejected the demands raised by several MPs
to allocate part of the seized Muslim Brotherhood funds to fulfilling the
goals of the Transitional Justice Law in the clause that deals with
compensation and reparations. The experts assert that the individuals
whose funds were confiscated were not issued judicial rulings against
them. Legal expert, Dr. Ahmed Mahran, stressed that the exploitation of
seized Brotherhood funds in this way runs contrary to the law. He
explained that their money is to be held only until the end of the
investigation, and used for presenting the evidence of their alleged
guilt, finding out its source and what it was used for.
Gulf
Eyes: Is Mauritania Moving To Ban The Brotherhood Party?
The imminent dissolution of the Brotherhood-affiliated National
Coalition Party for Reform and Development (Tawassul) is the hot topic in
the Mauritanian public debate these days. This is true especially after
the remarks by Mauritania's President Mohammed Ould Abdel Aziz, who
stressed in a speech earlier this month that the party "had crossed
red lines." Following his statement, sources close to the
Mauritanian president alluded to the impending dissolution of the party.
They accused it of hostility towards the homeland and "trading"
in religion and national interests. Media Advisor to the President of
Mauritania, Ishaq al-Kunti, said that "the Brotherhood in Mauritania
has obtained huge quantities of money by illegal means, since the money
originates from charity and Zakat, of which they have taken
control." He added, "The Islamists in Mauritania have their own
television channels and they run many news websites. They also control
pharmacies and currency exchange offices. Everyone knows they are rich
and have enormous resources."
Elbashayer
Online: El-Kherbawy: Assassination Of (Egypt's) Attorney General Cost
$80,000
Tharwat el-Kherbawy, former Muslim Brotherhood member and present-day
researcher of Islamist groups, discovered that a Brotherhood leader
called Abu Al-Qasim had purchased the car used in the assassination of
Egyptian Public Prosecutor Hisham Barakat. The Brotherhood terrorist had
received money, estimated at $80,000, from the wife of Yehia Moussa, the
Egyptian Health Ministry spokesman during Morsi's presidency. El-Kherbawy
added that Mahmoud Ahmadi, the first defendant, and his brother had built
the explosive device used in the attack. He noted that the defendants had
undergone training for four months in Gaza by leaders of Hamas. According
to the researcher, Gamal Heshmat, a senior member of the Muslim
Brotherhood in exile, was a driving force behind preparing and equipping
the cell that carried out the assassination of the Attorney General.
Elfagr:
Brotherhood The Hidden Beneficiary Behind The Transfer Of Money From
Abroad To Currency Traders
After regulatory authorities exposed gangs specializing in converting
foreign currency, transferred by Egyptian expatriates to their families
back home, into Egyptian currency through the black market, MPs were
quick to denounce the perpetrators. The parliamentarians claimed that the
sole culprit behind these acts is the Muslim Brotherhood, which strives
to undermine the Egyptian economy. They called to implement deterrent
measures as well as educate and caution the Egyptian community abroad not
to fall prey to such gangs. Foreign Affairs Committee Undersecretary MP
Tarek Radwan condemned the gangs, which collect hard currency and savings
of Egyptians abroad and convert them on the Egyptian black currency
market. He also stressed that the only beneficiary of such transactions
is the Muslim Brotherhood.
Houthi
Ababiil:
Ibb Province Occupies The Top Spot In Money Transfers To The Houthis
The latest statistics on banking operations and money transfers
indicate that Ibb governorate is the leader in internal financial
transfers. Meanwhile, Amran governorate is ranked first in terms of
receiving money. Informed sources suggest that Houthi militia leaders
have been competing for control in Ibb province since the beginning of
the coup. This is because such control could earn these leaders easy and
enormous spoils of the province. It is noteworthy that Ibb can generate
considerable revenues for those leaders due to the large number of
merchants and expatriates from the province, who send hard currency to
their families, especially from the US and the Gulf countries.
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