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Eye on Extremism
May 25, 2016
New
York Times: Taliban Name New Leader After Confirming Predecessor Died in
U.S. Strike
“The Taliban broke their silence early Wednesday over the death of
their leader, Mullah Akhtar Muhammad Mansour, confirming in a statement
that he had been killed in an American drone strike. Mawlawi Haibatullah
Akhundzada, a deputy to Mullah Mansour, was selected as the new leader of
the Taliban, and Sarajuddin Haqqani and Mullah Muhammad Yaqoub were
chosen as his deputies, the movement’s leadership council said in the
statement. Mullah Yaqoub, believed to be no older than 25, is the son of
the previous Taliban chief, Mullah Muhammad Omar, whose death was
acknowledged in July 2015.”
Fox
News: Human Remains Suggest Explosion Brought Down Egyptair Plane,
Forensics Official Says
“Human remains recovered from the crash site of EgyptAir Flight 804
showed burn marks and were ‘very tiny,’ suggesting an explosion brought
down the plane, a senior Egyptian forensics official told the Associated
Press Tuesday. Meanwhile, a U.S. official briefed on the latest
intelligence told Fox News, ‘All signs continue to point to
terrorism.’ The official who spoke to the AP claimed he personally
examined the remains of some of the plane's 66 passengers and crew at a
Cairo morgue. He said all 80 pieces brought to Cairo so far are small and
that ‘there isn't even a whole body part, like an arm or a head.’ He
added that at least one part of an arm had signs of burns -- an
indication it might have ‘belonged to a passenger sitting next to the
explosion.’ The U.S. official speaking to Fox News said American
satellites could have missed a potential explosion over the eastern
Mediterranean.”
Daily
Mail: Bronx Man Who 'Used ISIS Beheading Videos As Motivation While He
Worked Out' Arrested On Terror Charges During FBI Dawn Raid
“A homegrown terrorist suspect was arrested in his Bronx home in a
dawn raid Tuesday on charges of providing material support to ISIS
and passport fraud. Sajmir Alimehmeti, 22, was rejected twice trying to
enter the United Kingdom after his camouflage clothing, nunchakus and
Islamic State flag images on his cellphone raised suspicions. The New
York City man is also said to have put on ISIS decapitation videos to
keep himself 'motivated' while he worked out, according to the criminal
complaint. According to court papers, Alimehmeti tried this month to
provide advice and assistance to a person he thought was traveling from
New York to Syria to train and fight with the Islamic State. Federal
investigators allege that the 22-year-old has spent the past two years
trying to get to Raqqa, which he referred to as the 'heart' of ISIS's
operation.”
Reuters:
U.S.-Backed Syrian Alliance Launches New Attack Near Islamic State
Capital
“A U.S.-backed alliance of Syrian militias launched a new offensive
against Islamic State fighters near their de facto capital of Raqqa city
on Tuesday, a monitoring group and an official said. The Syria Democratic
Forces (SDF) alliance is the main Syrian partner for the U.S.-led alliance
battling the Islamic State group that controls large areas of northern
and eastern Syria. Its most powerful component is the Kurdish YPG
militia. Aided by U.S.-led air strikes, the YPG has driven Islamic State
from wide areas of northern Syria over the last year or more, though its
advances have recently slowed. There has been no indication of when a
full assault on Raqqa city might take place. A Kurdish official contacted
by Reuters declined to say whether it was a target of the latest
offensive.”
BBC:
Syria Conflict: IS 'Destroyed Helicopters' At Russian Base
“New satellite imagery appears to reveal extensive damage to a
strategically significant airbase in central Syria used by Russian forces
after a reported attack by so-called Islamic State (IS). Four helicopters
and 20 lorries were destroyed in a series of fires inside the T4 base
last week, the images from intelligence company Stratfor suggest. The
cause of the fires is unconfirmed. The Russian military has denied
reports that it had lost helicopters at the base as a result of an IS
attack. A news agency linked to IS, Amaq, was the first to report the
incident, without saying what had caused the fires, says BBC Arabic Syria
correspondent Rami Ruhayem.”
Daily
Caller: Experts Fear A US Arms Shipment To Libya Could End Up In ISIS
Hands
“The Obama administration is pushing for the United Nations to end a
2011 embargo on arms shipments to Libya in order to save the current
regime from falling to the Islamic State, but some experts caution a U.S.
arms shipment may end up in the hands of terror groups. In an effort to
prevent the spread of ISIS, which metastasized after the U.S. toppled the
Gadhafi regime, the Obama administration is looking to provide weapons
and training to the Government of National Accord (GNA), which is a
United Nations-endorsed state entity located in western Libya. The
problem, according to U.S. Africa Command chief Army Gen. David
M. Rodriguez, is it’s unclear which groups the Obama administration
should support since assessing their allegiance to the GNA in Libya
is incredibly difficult. To make matters worse, U.S. intelligence on the
ground is patchy.”
Newsweek:
Extremist Cells Likely Stockpiling Explosives In EU For Attacks: Europol
“Extremist cells in the European Union are likely stocking up on
explosives for future attacks on European soil, a prominent EU security
official said Monday. Manuel Navarrete Paniagua, the head of the European
Counter Terrorism Centre at Europol, the EU’s police agency, told members
of the EU parliament that intelligence gathered from EU member states
suggests that extremists are attempting to stock up on their caches of
explosive material as plots continue to be formed within the political
bloc. ‘We have some information reported by the member states that
terrorists groups are trying to establish large clandestine stockpiles of
explosives in the European Union to be used eventually in large scale
home attacks,’ he said in a briefing of the Europol report on EU
extremism scheduled to be released within the next month.”
RT:
Refugee Reaction? Extremist Violence ‘Explodes’ In Germany In 2015,
Far-Right Crimes Spike By Third
“Crime statistics released by Germany’s Interior Ministry on Monday
reveals that 2015 beats all yearly records in terms of
politically-motivated crimes and acts of violence. Authorities believe
the figures reflect a deepening polarization of German society. Although
most of the recorded crimes are non-violent and deal with spreading
extremist propaganda and inciting hatred, instances of violent crimes
have also gone through the roof. Total growth of politically motivated
crimes has shown a 19 percent surge compared to the previous year,
reports Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung. An absolute majority (22,690) out
of the total 38,981 politically-motivated crimes registered in 2015 were
committed by far-right radicals, their activity growing by a third (34.9
percent). More than twice as little crimes (9,605) have been committed by
the far-left troublemakers (18 percent growth).”
The
Washington Post: What’s Driving Silicon Valley To Become ‘Radicalized’
“Like many Silicon Valley start-ups, Larry Gadea’s company collects
heaps of sensitive data from his customers. Recently, he decided to do
something with that data trove that was long considered unthinkable: He
is getting rid of it. The reason? Gadea fears that one day the FBI might
do to him what it did to Apple in their recent legal battle: demand that
he give the agency access to his encrypted data. Rather than
make what he considers a Faustian bargain, he’s building a system that he
hopes will avoid the situation entirely. In Silicon Valley, there’s
a new emphasis on putting up barriers to government requests for data.
The Apple-FBI case and its aftermath have tech firms racing to employ a
variety of tools that would place customer information beyond the reach
of a government-ordered search.”
The
New York Times: How Kosovo Was Turned Into Fertile Ground For ISIS
“Every Friday, just yards from a statue of Bill Clinton with arm aloft
in a cheery wave, hundreds of young bearded men make a show of kneeling
to pray on the sidewalk outside an improvised mosque in a former
furniture store. The mosque is one of scores built here with Saudi
government money and blamed for spreading Wahhabism — the conservative
ideology dominant in Saudi Arabia — in the 17 years since an American-led
intervention wrested tiny Kosovo from Serbian oppression. Since then —
much of that time under the watch of American officials — Saudi money and
influence have transformed this once-tolerant Muslim society at the hem
of Europe into a font of Islamic extremism and a pipeline for jihadists.
Kosovo now finds itself, like the rest of Europe, fending off the threat
of radical Islam. Over the last two years, the police have identified 314
Kosovars — including two suicide bombers, 44 women and 28 children — who
have gone abroad to join the Islamic State, the highest number per capita
in Europe.”
Syria
The
Washington Post: U.S.-Backed Offensive In Syria Targets Islamic State’s
Capital
“A Kurdish-led force backed by U.S. airstrikes launched an offensive
on Tuesday to seize territory around the northern Syrian city of Raqqa,
the first ground attack to directly challenge the Islamic State’s control
of its self-proclaimed capital. Although the operation appears to have
relatively limited goals, it will serve as an early test of a coalition
being forged with U.S. help between local Arab fighters and the Kurdish
People’s Protection Units, or YPG, to take on the militant group in its
most symbolically significant stronghold. A few thousand Kurdish and Arab
fighters — grouped under the umbrella of the U.S.-backed Syrian
Democratic Forces (SDF) and backed by U.S.-led coalition airstrikes —
began moving south from the existing front line about 30 miles north of
Raqqa, according to a statement from the SDF and the U.S. military.”
Newsweek:
Russia Calls For Syria Truce After Attacks
“Russia’s Ministry of Defence has called for a temporary truce to
begin in two Syrian towns following a series of extremist attacks in the
country that killed at least 150 people on Monday. Although militant
group Islamic State (ISIS) claimed responsibility for the blasts in the
northern cities of Tartus and Jableh on Monday, Russia has called for
calm in southern Syria, where it claims its observers have also observed
militant groups mounting a push. The Ministry of Defence claimed Syrian
government forces were not taking part in military operations in the
towns of Daraya and Eastern Ghouta, outside Damascus. Russian officials
reported militant group the al-Nusra Front was preparing an advance on
the region.”
Iraq
USA
Today: Iraq Hasn't Asked For Extra Help In Fallujah
“Defense Secretary Ashton Carter said Tuesday that Iraq's government
has not made requests for extra help to support a recently launched
offensive to recapture Fallujah from the Islamic State, a battle that
will be a key test for Iraq’s U.S.-backed military. ‘The commanders there
have not brought any request from the Iraqis,’ Carter said during a visit
to a submarine base here. ‘We’re always willing to doing additional
things.’ Carter said the United States is already providing extensive
military support for Iraq’s military, including providing arms,
surveillance, intelligence and advisers. The U.S.-led coalition has struck
targets around Fallujah in recent days.”
CNN:
U.N. Fears For 10,000 Families Trapped In ISIS-Held Falluja As Iraq Army
Advances
“The United Nations says it fears for the safety of an estimated
10,000 families trapped in Falluja as Iraqi forces press in to retake the
city from ISIS. Fierce fighting has been raging around Falluja since
Iraq's military launched an offensive Monday to reclaim the traditionally
Sunni-dominated city, about 65 kilometers (40 miles) west of Baghdad,
from the terror group. And with tens of thousands of residents unable to
flee the clutches of ISIS, the U.N. fears that civilians will pay a heavy
toll for the liberation of the city. Iraq's air force has airdropped
thousands of leaflets on Falluja instructing residents to leave and
promising them passage through ‘safe corridors’ established by the
military to camps outside the city.”
Turkey
Reuters:
Four Turkish Soldiers Killed By Roadside Bomb In Southeast - Security
Sources
“Four Turkish soldiers were killed and another four wounded on Tuesday
by a roadside bomb thought to have been planted by Kurdistan Workers
Party (PKK) militants in the southeastern province of Van, security
sources said. The PKK has waged an insurgency for more than three decades
in the largely Kurdish southeast, to push for autonomy. Violence has
surged since the collapse of a ceasefire last July.”
BBC:
Migrant Crisis: Turkey Could Block EU Deal Over Visas
“Turkey's parliament will block a deal with the EU on migrants if
Turks do not gain visa-free access to the bloc, President Recep Tayyip
Erdogan says. Access to the EU's passport-free Schengen area was a key
demand by Turkey in an agreement struck in March. But the EU says Turkey
still needs to meet certain conditions, including changes to its terror
laws, before access can be granted. The agreement is aimed at halting the
mass movement of people into Europe. Mr Erdogan has also said funds
promised by the EU have not yet been released. Under the agreement,
Turkey has to meet 72 conditions to earn visa-free access to the Schengen
area by the end of June. But German Chancellor Angela Merkel, who met Mr
Erdogan on Monday, said there might not be enough time for it to be
completed.”
Afghanistan
Associated
Press: Official: Roadside Bombing In Southern Afghanistan Kills 5
“An Afghan official says at least five civilians were killed when
their vehicle hit a roadside bomb in southern Kandahar province. Samim
Khpolwak, the governor's spokesman, says the explosion, which took place
in Shah Wali Kot district early on Tuesday, also wounded four people. No
group has claimed responsibility for the attack. Kandahar is regarded by
the Taliban as their heartland. It had been largely peaceful for some
years until a recent resurgence in insurgent violence. In neighboring
Helmand province, police chief Noor Agha Kemtoz says the Taliban shadow
governor, Abdul Manan, was killed by Afghan security forces in Marjah
district late on Monday.”
Reuters:
Afghanistan Says Taliban Shadow Governor In Helmand Killed
“A senior Taliban leader identified by Afghan authorities as a shadow
governor of the southern province of Helmand has been killed by security
forces, officials said on Tuesday, although the Taliban immediately
denied the report. The report came days after Taliban leader Mullah
Akhtar Mansour was killed by a U.S. airstrike in south western Pakistan.
Omar Zwak, a spokesman for the provincial governor of Helmand, said
Mullah Muzamel had died of injuries sustained during an air strike in
Marjah district late on Sunday. ‘First he was wounded and later that
night he died of his wounds,’ Zwak said. Interior ministry spokesman
Sediq Sediqqi said in a tweet that Muzamel had been killed in a special
forces operation along with two of his commanders.”
The
New York Times: Shaken, Taliban Begin Effort To Replace Dead Leader,
Mullah Mansour
“For the second time in less than a year, senior Taliban leaders have
convened in the Pakistani city of Quetta to deliberate how to replace a
dead supreme leader. Unlike last summer’s gatherings, where some leaders
arrived in convoys of hundreds of vehicles to choose Mullah Akhtar
Muhammad Mansour as the successor to their founding leader, Mullah Muhammad
Omar, Taliban figures described the tone of the meetings over the past
three days as decidedly low-key, and even shocked. They described how the
American drone strike that was said to have killed Mullah Mansour in
Pakistan’s Baluchistan Province on Saturday also destroyed the perception
that the protection they had received for years in their Pakistani havens
could be permanent.”
Yemen
Reuters:
Yemen University Bomb Kills Gardener, Injures Two Students
“A bomb at Sanaa University killed a gardener and wounded at least two
students on Tuesday, police and medical sources said, in a relatively
rare attack on the Houthi-ruled Yemeni capital. A police official at the
scene said the explosion appeared to have targeted an exhibition
organized by the Houthi's Ansarullah group, which controls most of
northern Yemen. No one has claimed responsibility for the bombing.
Islamist militants have exploited Yemen's 14-month civil war which has
pitted the Iran-allied Houthis against supporters of President Abd-Rabbu
Mansour Hadi, who is backed by a Saudi Arab coalition, to strike at both
sides at will.”
Egypt
Newsweek:
Metrojet Crash: Why The Insider Threat To Airport Security Isn't Just
Egypt's Problem
“Aviation security experts point out that the insider threat is not
limited to airports in regions with a history of poverty, radicalism and
conflict. In 2007, four men were arrested for conspiring to blow up the
fuel tanks and pipeline at New York’s John F. Kennedy airport. One of the
suspects was a former cargo worker at JFK. In 2010, British Airways
staffer Rajib Karim was arrested in Newcastle, England, for plotting an
aircraft bombing; he was sentenced to 30 years in prison in 2011. In
2013, a 58-year-old Muslim convert and avionics technician Terry Lee
Loewen was nabbed in an FBI sting operation after attempting to explode a
car bomb at the Wichita, Kansas, airport. And in 2014, Eugene Harvey, a
baggage handler at Atlanta’s Hartsfield-Jackson International Airport,
was busted for helping an accomplice smuggle at least 125 guns by loading
them onto flights between Atlanta and New York. All of those incidents
took place at airports that employ some of the most sophisticated
security technology and procedures in the world. Deadly attacks
don’t have to be carried out by suicide bombers—or even by passengers.”
Libya
Deutsche
Welle: Europe Sees Spike In Migrants Crossing From Libya
“Some 3,000 migrants crossing from Libya to Europe were saved from
rickety boats on Tuesday, the Italian coast guard said, bringing the
total rescued in the past 48 hours to 5,600. The Italian coast guard, EU
naval assets and Frontex, as well as a boat from a NGO and two tugs boats
from an oil platform were involved in 23 operations. Separately, the
Libyan coast guard has intercepted about 1,400 migrants on boats in its
territorial waters since Sunday and brought them to camps in the country.
European officials are concerned that with the onset of better weather a
fresh flood of migrants will try to make the dangerous journey from Libya
to Europe. So far this year, more than 37,000 people have been
intercepted in the Mediterranean and taken to Italian ports. That number
is slightly less than the same time last year. The majority of those using
Libya as a springboard to reach Europe are from sub-Saharan Africa.”
Nigeria
Voice
Of America: Sambisa Forest: An Ideal Hiding Place For Boko Haram
“Boko Haram militants are believed to be holding hundreds of captives
in Nigeria's Sambisa forest, including more than 200 Chibok schoolgirls
kidnapped in 2014. The armed forces of Nigeria and Cameroon are trying to
free the hostages, but the forest is a good place for militants to hide
and a dangerous place for soldiers to operate. The Sambisa forest reserve
in northeastern Nigeria has been a key Boko Haram hideout for years.
Colonel Boubakar Bakary, one of Cameroon's senior military officers,
commanding troops fighting Boko Haram around the forest, says Sambisa is
very dangerous because it is one of Boko Haram's main remaining
strongholds.”
United
Kingdom
The
Guardian: Anti-Radicalisation Chief Says Ministers' Plans Risk Creating
'Thought Police'
“The police chief leading the fight to stop people becoming terrorists
has said government plans targeting alleged extremists are so flawed they
risk creating a ‘thought police’ in Britain. Simon Cole, the police lead
for the government’s own Prevent anti-radicalisation programme, said that
the plans may not be enforceable and risk making police officers judges
of ‘what people can and can not say’. His comments in a Guardian
interview expose opposition in part of Britain’s security establishment
against the planned Conservative government bill which was unveiled last
week in the Queen’s speech.”
BBC:
Islamic State Group Recruited Practising NHS Doctor
“An NHS doctor left his family in the UK and joined the Islamic State
militant group in Syria, the BBC has learned from leaked IS recruitment
papers. Dr Abuanza is a Palestinian doctor with British
citizenship who spent seven years working for the NHS. He is the first
practising NHS doctor known to have joined the Islamic State group.
Security minister John Hayes said IS ‘target vulnerable people’. He
added: ‘They also target children, but they target professionals too.
They are trying to corrupt British people of all types, encouraging them
to murder and maim their neighbours and to go and fight in Syria.’”
Daily
Mail: More Bomb Threats Hit British Schools As Sixteen More Are Closed
Just A Day After 27 Were Evacuated
“At least 16 schools have been evacuated today after a series of
chilling bomb threats were made. Police said 'significant enquiries' were
underway after a 'number of schools' across the UK had to be evacuated
and closed this morning following threats to bomb, shoot and behead
children. Schools in Devon, North Wales, Northern Ireland, South
Lanarkshire and across central Scotland have all been either shut or
'cordoned off' amid fears for pupils following the anonymous threats. The
South West Counter Terrorism Unit - the national lead for such alerts -
has now launched a nationwide investigation into the threats which it is
treating as 'malicious hoax communications'. As part of its enquiries,
the unit is speaking with law enforcement agencies in the US, police
said.”
France
Associated
Press: French President In Anti-Extremism Talks With Al-Azhar Imam
“The French president has met with the grand imam of the prestigious
Sunni Muslim center of learning Al-Azhar to share views on the fight
against extremism. The presidency said Francois Hollande detailed
France's priorities on the issue and that French authorities welcomed
Sheik Ahmed el-Tayyib efforts to combat radicalism. Earlier Tuesday, the
Cairo-based grand imam went to the Bataclan concert hall to pay tribute
to the victims of the attacks carried out by Islamic extremists that left
130 dead on Nov. 13. A French government plan presented this month
includes the creation of de-radicalization facilities in every region by
2017.”
Europe
The
Times of Israel: Woman Hurt In Stabbing At Amsterdam Kosher Restaurant
“A woman was lightly wounded Monday in a stabbing incident at a kosher
restaurant in Amsterdam. The woman was stabbed in her arm after 9 p.m.
local time at Grand Café Rimon, the local television station AT5
reported. She was treated at a local hospital. Police arrested the
alleged assailant, telling AT5 they had no indication the attack was a
hate crime. Witnesses detained him until police arrived, the news site NH
reported. Police were not immediately willing to say whether they believe
the suspect and the victim knew each other.”
The
Wall Street Journal: Terror Attacks, Air Crashes Weaken Appetite For
European Travel
“A spate of terror attacks and airliner disasters across Europe and
its periphery is starting to catch up with the region’s travel industry.
Tourism officials and airline executives typically brace for a sudden
drop in flight and hotel bookings after a terror-related incident or
headline-grabbing aircraft accident. Those booking typically rebound
quickly, though, often in just a matter of weeks. This time, however,
things were starting to look different even before EgyptAir Flight 804
disappeared from the radar Thursday and plunged into the Mediterranean
Sea with 66 people aboard. Each time bookings seemed poised to start
ticking back up, another deadly incident struck, extending the dismal
streak.”
Arabic
Language Clips
Financing
of Terrorism
Alkhaleej:
Kuwait's Parliament Approves Amendment To The Financing Of Terrorism
(Act)
Kuwait's Parliament yesterday forwarded to the government a draft law
amending Article 16 of Law No. 106 of 2013 dealing with combating money
laundering and terror financing. This came following its approval in the
first and second readings by consensus of the MPs attending. The
parliament's budgets committee stated that the goal of the amendment of
the 2013 law is to determine the status of the Kuwaiti Financial
Investigation Unit's budget, in order to enable it to carry out its
functions as an independent legal body which enjoys full financial and
administrative independence.
ISIS
Gulf
Eyes: ISIS Bars People In The Province Of Raqqa From Leaving The Areas
Under Its Control
With the imminent battle to liberate the Syrian city of Raqqa from
ISIS's grip, fears are mounting among residents, particularly after the
terror organization banned their departure from the areas under its
control. Many Raqqa residents have tried to exit the city to the rural
areas of Aleppo, which are not subject to ISIS's control. Meanwhile,
private sources have revealed attempts by the leaders of ISIS to extort
the money of residents in exchange for allowing them to leave Raqqa. A
resident identified as Abu Hassan was quoted as saying, "I paid
100,000 Syrian pounds ($455) in exchange for ISIS's permission to leave
the city of Raqqa."
Muslim
Brotherhood
Fielkhabr:
A Jordanian Official: Government Does Not Want The Brotherhood To
Participate In The Elections
A Jordanian official stressed that his government does not want the
Muslim Brotherhood to take part in any future parliamentary or municipal
elections. The official added that the government is still committed to
the closure of the offices of the "Islamic Action Front (IAF),"
the political arm of the unlicensed Brotherhood in the kingdom, despite
numerous calls to re-open them. The official noted that this reiterates
the government's stance towards the Brotherhood. He explained that this
governmental policy shuts the door in the face of the Brotherhood, which
is offering a new bargaining chip – participation in the parliamentary
elections, which they had boycotted for nearly 20 years, in exchange for
re-opening the offices of IAF and the group. The official emphasized,
"The remarks by IAF Secretary General Mohammed al-Zayoud in a press
release issued Monday, that the government practices systematic exclusion
of the party from the political process in Jordan, make it clear that the
government does not want the Brotherhood in the political process."
Albosala:
Brotherhood (In Jordan) Sues (Department) Of Land And Recently Licensed
Society
The Muslim Brotherhood group filed a lawsuit at Amman Court of First
Instance against the Department of Land and Survey and its director, as
well as the newly licensed Brotherhood Society, to prove its rights and
keep its properties registered under its name. Lawyer Bassam Freihat
noted in a statement that the lawsuit, filed by the Muslim Brotherhood
group which demands the return of its property and validation of its
ownership rights to it, came after a judicial warning sent by the group
to the Department of Land and Survey and its director. In this warning,
the group demanded cancelation of registration of its property under the
name of the newly licensed Brotherhood Society.
Houthi
Ababiil
Net: Houthi Militias Deduct Large Amounts Of Remittances To Finance Their
War Effort
The militias of Houthis and ousted Yemeni president Ali Saleh do not
only loot funds of Yemenis in the homeland. They have also gotten their
hands on money sent to Yemen by Yemeni expatriates from all around the
world, especially in the US and the Gulf countries in favor of their
so-called "war effort." Malek Alamari, a Yemeni citizen,
claimed that since these militias took over the country they have
deliberately stifled the economy by preventing foreign exchange trading
in Yemen, either by hiding or looting it. He claimed, for instance, that
his family in America sends him $1,000 a month via Western Union or
MoneyGram. However, he never gets this transfer in US currency but in the
Yemeni riyal. Alamari explained that not long ago, the dollar exchange
rate was 270,000 riyals, but he received the transfer based on the old
rate of 215,000 riyals. This discrepancy of 55,000 Yemeni riyals is used
by the Central Bank to finance the war effort of the Houthi militias, he
asserted.
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