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Eye on Extremism
July 19, 2016
Counter
Extremism Project
The
New York Times: German Police Kill Assailant After Ax Attack Aboard A
Train
“A 17-year-old Afghan youth who came to Germany as a migrant last year
attacked several passengers with an ax and a knife on a train in the
south of the country late on Monday, injuring at least four people, while
14 others were treated for shock, the police said. After the train made
an emergency stop, the attacker fled and was pursued by police officers,
who fatally shot him, according to the interior minister of the state of
Bavaria, Joachim Herrmann. The motive for the attack remained unclear.
The young man had entered Germany without his parents and applied for
asylum, Mr. Herrmann said. According to government figures, more than
14,400 unaccompanied minors arrived last year among the more than one
million migrants who entered the country.”
Reuters:
Islamic State Flag Found In Room Of German Train Attacker
“A hand-drawn Islamic State flag was found in the room of the
axe-wielding Afghan refugee who attacked passengers on a train in
southern Germany, a senior state official said on Tuesday. The
17-year-old severely wounded four passengers before police shot him dead
late on Monday, days after a Tunisian delivery man plowed a 19-tonne
truck into crowds of revelers in the southern French city of Nice,
killing 84. The case is likely to deepen worries about so-called ‘lone
wolf’ attacks in Europe and could put political pressure on German
Chancellor Angela Merkel, who welcomed hundreds of thousands of migrants
to Germany over the past year. Bavarian state Interior Minister Joachim
Herrmann said it was still too early to say whether the Afghan youth was
a member of Islamic State, which has claimed responsibility for the
French attack, or any other militant group.”
Daily
Mail: UN Fears IS In Libya Could Relocate From Sirte
“UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon warned that Islamic State fighters
could set up new cells across Libya and north Africa as they are driven
from their stronghold of Sirte. Ban on Monday outlined the threat from
foreign terrorist fighters (FTF) in Libya in a confidential report to the
Security Council, obtained by AFP. Libyan forces allied with the
UN-backed government in Tripoli have been battling to take Sirte from IS
fighters for the past two months. The coastal city is considered one of
IS's most important rear bases outside of Syria and Iraq. There are
between 2,000 and 5,000 IS fighters from Libya, Tunisia, Algeria, Egypt,
Mali, Morocco and Mauritania deployed in Sirte, Tripoli and Derna,
according to the report.”
The
Guardian: How Isis Has Devised New Ways Of Sowing Savagery In Europe
“As its “caliphate” has crumbled, Islamic State has intensified
efforts to export the chaos it used to confine to within its borders. The
response stems partly from the terror group’s anger that it can no longer
hold the territory it seized two years ago. However, even before it lost ground,
Isis had begun trying to ignite terror in Europe – a continent that its
strategists long ago flagged as the next battlefield in its nihilistic
war. Within the group’s upper echelons is a clique that has studied the
ways of its enemies, particularly those in western Europe, the US and
Australia. The group comprises senior leaders, advised and influenced by
foreign ideologues who have joined them from places such as France,
Britain and Belgium.”
Voice
Of America: US Urges Turkey To Respect Rule Of Law As It Probes Coup
Attempt
“The United States is urging Turkey to exercise restraint and act
within the rule of law as it investigates last week’s failed coup, amid
conflicting reports about whether a former Air Force commander confessed
to being a ringleader of the attempted takeover. The state-run Anadolu
news agency reported that 8,777 officers have been suspended and 6,000
members of the judiciary and military have been detained following the
attempted coup Friday, sparking concern from world leaders who warn
against actions that would damage constitutional order.”
Reuters:
UN Says Iraq's Battle Of Mosul May Cost $2 Bln In Aid
“An expected Iraqi assault on the Islamic State stronghold of Mosul is
likely to cause mass civilian casualties and force hundreds of thousands
to flee their homes, the United Nations said on Monday. It appealed for
funds to deal with the humanitarian crisis, saying it would cost $284
million to prepare the necessary aid and up to $1.8 billion to deal with
the aftermath. ‘The impact of the Mosul military campaign on civilians
will be devastating,’ the U.N. said in the summary of its Iraq
humanitarian response plan. ‘Mass casualties among civilians are likely
and families trying to flee areas controlled by ISIL (Islamic State) are
expected to be at extreme risk,’ it said. Large-scale displacement of
people was expected when Mosul city itself came under attack, it said.
Between 1.2 million and 1.5 million people are estimated to live in the
city.”
Reuters:
Afghan Forces See Hopeful Signs As Air Strikes Hit Taliban
“A combination of airstrikes and a Taliban apparently still adapting
to its new leader Mullah Haibatullah Akhundzada has given a lift to
Afghan forces that had braced for heavy fighting at the start of summer.
After 15 years of war, nobody believes a lull in fighting seen over the
past few weeks is a decisive shift in the conflict. Officials even admit
to some surprise at the problems facing the Taliban, which launched its
annual spring offensive in April promising major attacks across the
country. The insurgents started their spring offensive in April with a
major push to take Kunduz, the strategic northern city its fighters
briefly seized last year. A bumper opium crop promised to swell the
coffers of the insurgents who control much of the trade, allowing them to
pay for more fighters and equipment.”
Associated
Press: French Authorities Paint Complex Picture Of Attacker
Authorities investigating the truck driver who killed 84 people in a
Bastille Day attack painted a complex picture Monday of a man who did not
seem devout but had recently become interested in jihadi violence and
researched past attacks in France and the United States, including one on
a gay nightclub in Orlando. Paris prosecutor Francois Molins, who
oversees terrorism investigations, said by all accounts Mohamed
Lahouaiyej Bouhlel drank, ate pork and had an ‘unbridled sex life.’ But
his computer and phone showed online searches relating to IS and other
jihadi groups. ‘A search of his computer illustrates a clear ... and
recent interest in radical jihadism,’ Molins said, adding that Bouhlel
had recently grown a beard and told people it was for religious reasons.
While officials have said the attack was obviously premeditated, they
have not found any evidence that Bouhlel had coordinated with an
extremist network.”
Associated
Press: Palestinian Stabs 2 Israeli Soldiers In West Bank
“A Palestinian stabbed two Israeli soldiers in the West Bank on Monday
before being shot, the military said. The attacker's condition was not
immediately known. Israel's rescue service said the soldiers were lightly
wounded. The violence is the latest in a 10-month wave of attacks that
has seen Palestinians use knives, cars and guns against Israeli civilians
and soldiers. Some 34 Israelis and two visiting Americans have been killed
since mid-September. More than 200 Palestinians have been killed, the
majority said by Israel to have been attackers. The rest were killed in
clashes with Israeli troops. Israel says the violence is fueled by a
Palestinian campaign of lies and incitement. The Palestinians say it is
the result of frustrations stemming from nearly 50 years of Israeli
occupation and a lack of hope for an independent state.”
Daily
Caller: Hezbollah Drone Breaches Airspace And Israel Couldn’t Shoot It
Down
“A Hezbollah drone from Syria breached Israeli airspace
Sunday, and despite efforts from Israel’s missile defense
forces and air force, the drone escaped back across the border. All
three of Israel’s attempts to shoot down the unmanned vehicle
failed, according to reports from the Jerusalem Post. Israeli Defense
Forces launched two ground-based Patriot missiles, but both missed the
target. Then, an Israeli fighter jet launched a missile from the
air, but that attack also failed and the drone escaped back across
the Syrian border. Hezbollah, a Lebanese terrorist organization that
has fought for the Syrian government for the past several years, claims
the drone made it back across the Syrian border safely.”
BBC:
Nigeria Boko Haram: Children Starving, Warns Unicef
“Almost a quarter of a million children in parts of Nigeria's Borno
state formerly controlled by Boko Haram are suffering from severe
malnutrition, the UN children's agency says. Tens of thousands will die
if treatment does not reach them soon, Unicef warns. In areas where Boko
Haram militants had been in control, it found people without water, food
or sanitation. Last month, a charity said people fleeing Boko Haram had
starved to death. The Islamist group's seven-year rebellion has left 20,000
people dead and more than two million displaced.”
United
States
Associated
Press: US Officers Hopeful As Taliban Violence Unexpectedly Slips
“After inflicting heavy losses on weakened Afghan security forces a
year ago, the Taliban under new leadership have been surprisingly slow to
ramp up attacks at the midpoint of the traditional fighting season,
senior American military officers said Sunday. In an Associated Press
interview, Marine Gen. Joseph Dunford, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of
Staff, said he is cautiously encouraged by a relative slackening of the
Taliban's aggressive tactics. Citing ‘a lower level of violence from the
Taliban than we have seen in the past,’ Dunford was quick to say that while
he believes Afghan forces have seized battlefield momentum, there are no
assurances that the balance won't shift again.”
Bloomberg:
U.S. Counting On $2 Billion In Pledges For Iraq At Donor Meeting
“The U.S. expects to raise at least $2 billion from governments around
the world to help Iraq as it retakes territory from Islamic State
militants. Twenty-four countries will take part in a July 20 pledging
conference in Washington where financial commitments will be made, with
the focus on humanitarian assistance, mine removal and stabilization
programs such as jobs, electricity and sanitation, a State Department
official who requested anonymity said Monday on a conference call with
reporters. The event, which will be attended by Iraqi Foreign Minister
Ibrahim al-Jaafari, is partly a bid to refocus attention on Iraq’s needs
after priorities shifted elsewhere in the years since the U.S.-led Iraq
war ended. It’s also an effort to rebuild after the Iraqi army pushed
Islamic State out of Fallujah and other cities, and prepares for an
offensive on the key northern city of Mosul.”
Syria
Reuters:
Civilians Killed By U.S.-Led Coalition Strikes On IS-Held Syrian City -
Monitor
“At least 20 civilians were killed on Monday in air strikes by
U.S.-led coalition planes on the Islamic State-held city of Manbij in
northern Syria, near the border with Turkey, a monitoring group said. The
UK-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said the raids hit the
northern Hazawneh quarter of the besieged city where U.S.-backed Syria
Democratic Forces (SDF), an alliance of Kurdish and Arab fighters, are
engaged in street fighting with the militants. The monitor said more than
100 civilians had now been killed in U.S.-led raids on the city and its
outskirts since the SDF launched a major offensive at the end of May to
seize the last territory held by Islamic State on the frontier with
Turkey.”
Turkey
Reuters:
At Height Of Turkish Coup Bid, Rebel Jets Had Erdogan's Plane In Their
Sights
“At the height of the attempt to overthrow Turkish President Tayyip
Erdogan, the rebel pilots of two F-16 fighter jets had Erdogan's plane in
their sights. And yet he was able to fly on. The Turkish leader was
returning to Istanbul from a holiday near the coastal resort of Marmaris
after a faction in the military launched the coup attempt on Friday
night, sealing off a bridge across the Bosphorus, trying to capture
Istanbul's main airport and sending tanks to parliament in Ankara. ‘At
least two F-16s harassed Erdogan's plane while it was in the air and en
route to Istanbul. They locked their radars on his plane and on two other
F-16s protecting him,’ a former military officer with knowledge of the
events told Reuters.”
BBC:
Turkey Coup Attempt: Police And Officials Purged
“Turkish officials say that nearly 8,000 police officers have been
suspended on suspicion of having links to the coup attempt at the
weekend. Some 6,000 members of the judiciary and military, including
generals, have been detained. President Recep Tayyip Erdogan vowed to
purge state bodies of the ‘virus’ that had caused the revolt. Mr Erdogan
said on Sunday that Turkey would consider reinstating the death penalty -
a suggestion that was met with strong opposition from EU leaders. A
spokesman for German Chancellor Angela Merkel was similarly clear that
such a move would spell an end to Turkey's longstanding, albeit stalled,
application for EU membership.”
Huffington
Post: Turkey’s Coup Is A Nail In The Coffin Of Democracy, Says Top
Turkish Novelist
“The AKP government sees the coup attempt as a major operation against
them. They think there is a sinister organization with connections inside
different state apparatuses. That is why thousands and thousands of
people in the judiciary and police forces have been sacked, removed,
detained. The problem is, while some of these people might
sympathize with the putschists, many others are probably completely innocent
and had no clue what was happening. And that is very scary. Everyone and
everything is lumped together. At times of enormous political turbulence
such as this, nuances are easily lost. ‘Are you one of us or are you one
of them?’ This is the only question hovering in the air. Who is ‘us’
and who is ‘them’ you cannot even begin to question. We are heading into
a Kafkaesque world.”
Afghanistan
Voice
Of America: Taliban Stages Fresh Attacks In Northern Afghanistan
“Afghanistan's Taliban launched new assaults in at least two northern
provinces near the border with central Asian countries, but government
officials have denied insurgent claims of battlefield advances. The
deputy governor of northeastern Badakhsan province, Gul Mohammad Baidar,
said Monday insurgents mounted a three-pronged attack overnight on the
remote Khash district but security forces repulsed it. He told VOA timely
deployment of reinforcements from the provincial capital of Faizabad and
Kabul enabled security forces to defend the area, killing dozens of
assailants in fighting that last several hours. He declined to comment on
losses to government forces, saying there were no confirmed figures
available immediately.”
Reuters:
Suspected Islamist Militant Kills Five In Kazakhstan
“ A lone gunman with Islamist links killed at least three policemen
and two civilians in Kazakhstan's financial capital Almaty on Monday,
senior security officials said, the second such attack in less than two
months. Police detained the attacker, identified as 26-year-old Ruslan
Kulikbayev, in a shootout on a busy central street after he had gone on
the rampage, attacking a police station and an office belonging to the
KNB security service. Kulikbayev had been imprisoned before for robbery
and illegally possessing weapons and had ‘became close to Salafists’ in
prison, KNB security service head Vladimir Zhumakanov told a Security
Council meeting. Salafists adhere to an ultra-conservative form of Islam.
The shootings will stoke fears of a growing Islamist threat to the
oil-producing nation of 18 million people. Last month, men the
authorities said were Islamic State sympathizers attacked gun stores and
a military facility, killing seven.”
Yemen
Reuters:
Suicide Bombers Attack Yemeni Army Checkpoints, Killing 10
“Two suicide bombers tried to ram vehicles laden with explosives
through two Yemeni military checkpoints near the government-held port
city of Mukalla on Monday, killing at least 10 people, the army and
medics said. Al Qaeda's Yemeni branch claimed responsibility for the
attacks near the capital of Hadramout province on the Gulf of Aden, the
latest in a series of bombings since forces loyal to Yemeni President
Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi, backed by troops from the United Arab Emirates,
drove out the Islamist militants from the city in April. The Yemeni
army's Second Military Command, which is based in Mukalla, said militants
had used a booby-trapped bus at a checkpoint in al-Burum, southwest of
Mukalla, and a booby-trapped car in al-Ghaber, to the west.”
Egypt
Fox
News: One Dead After Muslim Mob Attacks Christian Priests In Egypt,
Officials Say
“Christians in central Egypt gathered for protests and prayers Monday
after officials said a Muslim mob attacked priests with knives and batons
over a personal feud, leaving one person dead in the chaos. The fighting
may have stemmed from an argument over whether Christian or Muslim
children had priority to pass through a street, the English-language
site Ahram Online reported. The attack came months after an
armed Muslim mob stripped an elderly Christian woman and paraded her
naked on the streets while looting and torching seven Christian homes in
the same area, security officials said.”
United
Kingdom
Daily
Mail: UK Police And Spy Agency Security Measures Reviewed After Nice
Attack, Says Rudd
“Police and spy agencies in the UK launched a review of security
measures in the wake of the Nice attack, the Home Secretary has revealed.
Amber Rudd said the threat from international terrorism in Britain
remains at ‘severe’ - meaning an attack is seen as ‘highly likely’. She
said: ‘On Friday, following the attack in Nice, the police and the
security and intelligence agencies took steps to review our own security
measures and ensure that we have robust procedures in place, and I am
receiving regular updates.’ All police forces have reviewed upcoming events
taking place in their regions to ensure security measures are
‘appropriate and proportionate’, Ms Rudd told the
Commons. Eighty-four people were killed when Mohamed Lahouaiej
Bouhlel drove a hired lorry through crowds gathered to celebrate Bastille
Day on Thursday. Ms Rudd said the UK has ‘considerable experience’ in
managing and policing major events.”
Germany
BBC:
Germany Axe Attack: Assault On Train In Wuerzburg
“A teenage Afghan refugee armed with an axe and knife injured four
people on a train in southern Germany before being shot dead by police,
officials say. Three people were seriously hurt and one suffered minor
injuries in the attack in Wurzburg, police said. Initial reports said up
to 20 people had been injured but it was later revealed that at least 14
had been treated for shock. The motive for the attack is not yet clear.
Bavarian Interior Minister Joachim Herrmann said the attacker was a
17-year-old Afghan refugee who had been living in the nearby town of
Ochsenfurt. He told public broadcaster ARD that the teenager appeared to
have travelled to Germany as an unaccompanied minor.”
France
The
Wall Street Journal: French Airstrikes Hit Islamic State Targets In Iraq,
Syria
“France carried out airstrikes on Islamic State strongholds over the
weekend, a senior French official said Monday, as the country prepares to
activate thousands of reservists to guard the homeland in the wake of the
deadly truck attack in Nice. The airstrikes hit targets in Iraq and Syria
on Saturday and Sunday, as part of the U.S.-led coalition to roll back
Islamic State, Defense Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian said Monday, after a
defense council meeting with top French officials. French President
François Hollande is under increasing pressure at home, being accused by
some of not having done enough to prevent the latest in a series of terrorist
massacres to strike the country in the past 18 months. On Thursday, 84
people were killed when Mohamed Lahouaiej Bouhlel rammed crowds gathered
to watch Bastille Day fireworks along the French Riviera.”
Sputnik
News: How France May Respond To Nice Terror Attack
“In the wake of Thursday night’s deadly truck attack in Nice, Djordje
Kuzmanovic, a military expert and the head of defense affairs at the
French Left Party, has outlined a list of urgent measures that need to be
taken against the scourge of terrorism. In the wake of Thursday night’s
deadly truck attack in Nice, Djordje Kuzmanovic, a military expert and
the head of defense affairs at the French Left Party, has outlined a list
of urgent measures that need to be taken against the scourge of
terrorism. He then outlined a list of emergency measures that need
to be taken to prevent the loss of national unity and
democratic traditions especially in the run-up to next year’s
presidential elections.”
The
New York Times: Attack In Nice Turns Spotlight On City’s Religious
Divisions
“There is the Nice of popular imagination, the old-world resort dotted
with palm trees and cafes that look out on the Mediterranean Sea,
suffused with an incandescent light prized for centuries by artists. Then
there is the other Nice, one that begins to show its face a few blocks
inland from the seaside Promenade des Anglais, the majestic arc of a
boulevard where 84 people were killed by a 31-year-old Tunisian immigrant
at the wheel of a 19-ton truck. This Nice is home to many Muslim
immigrants from North Africa, including a secular middle-class that has
lived alongside non-Muslim French, and is also a place that local
officials estimate has sent as many as 100 young people to fight in Syria
with extremists.”
Reuters:
Commentary: What France Can Learn From U.S. About Fighting Terrorism
“The horrifying truck attack in Nice, France, that killed at least 84
people is the 10th strike in the country since the beginning of 2015. The
French government is now considering a complete overhaul of its
intelligence agencies to address this persistent threat. A French
parliamentary commission released a report last week that recommended the
government fuse all its security services into one large ‘national
anti-terrorism agency.’ Such an approach would mirror Washington’s
National Counterterrorism Center (NCTC), a bureaucracy created in the
years after the 9/11 terrorist attacks. The objective was to break down
barriers within the U.S. government and pull together all agencies and
departments related to terrorism issues. But Paris should try to improve
on Washington’s experiences. It certainly needs to avoid making the same
mistakes.”
RT:
67% Of French Don’t Trust Govt To Tackle Terrorism – Poll
“A vast majority of the French do not believe their authorities can
deal with the threat of terrorism, a recent poll by Ifop found. Figures
show nearly 70 percent of those surveyed after the tragedy in Nice see
the government failing to provide security. According to an Ifop (French
Institute for Public Opinion) survey conducted for Le Figaro newspaper,
while 99 percent of respondents consider the terrorist threat in the
country ‘high’ or ‘very high,’ only some 33 percent have confidence that
President Francois Hollande and his government are equipped to face and
fight terrorism effectively, while 67 percent do not trust the
authorities in this matter at all.”
CNN:
Nice Attack: Ties To ISIS Not Yet Established, Official Says
“French Interior Minister Bernard Cazeneuve has said that any link
between the man who killed 84 people in a brazen attack on Bastille Day
in the French Riviera city of Nice and ISIS has ‘yet to be established.’
Cazeneuve told RTL France that while ISIS has claimed responsibility for
last week's truck rampage, which he called an attack ‘of a terrorist
nature,’ it remained to be seen exactly how the attacker, Mohamed
Lahouaiej Bouhlel, was connected to the Iraq and Syria-based jihadist
group. ‘What we want to know now is what were the links between the man
who was behind this dreadful attack and the terrorist networks,’
Cazeneuve said.”
Europe
RT:
Illegal Arms Plaguing Europe, Easy For Wannabe Terrorists To Buy Gun –
Italian Carabinieri Veteran
“Europe, along with the rest of the world, is
suffering from a growing threat from terrorism. Citizens are forced to
sacrifice their own liberties as governments invest millions in
reinforcing security. But the peril of Jihadism is being exploited by
organized crime groups, that can’t miss the chance to increase their own
power and profits through collaboration with terrorists. Can mafia groups
and extremists form a dangerous alliance? How do you fight against this
vicious partnership? We ask a member of the Italian Carabinieri who is an
expert on mafia-type organizations, organized crime and terrorism, as
well as the president of the Geocrime Education Association.”
ISIS
All4syria:
Syria: Militias In As-Suwayda Smuggle Weapons To ISIS
“Within less than 24 hours from the time leaders of the Syrian militias
in As-Suwayda cut a deal to unite under "The Mountain Factions"
banner, armed clashes erupted between them. The reason for the
hostilities is linked to the smuggling of arms to ISIS-controlled areas
in Syria's northern regions. Activist Khaled al-Qadhmani said that an
armed group in the town of Shahba surrounded and sealed off the El Haram
Exchange Office. This group, led by Feras el Aridi, a leader of the
National Defense militia, is affiliated with the Air Force Intelligence
branch. They laid siege on the office, claiming that Hassan Mahasin, a
leader of a Baath Brigade group affiliated with the Political Security
branch in As-Suwayda province, was inside. Al-Qadhmani added that el
Aridi's group seized a vehicle belonging to Mahasin's militia, closed
roads in the area and "fired like crazy." The Syrian activist
noted that these actions came following confiscation of a shipment of
arms belonging to el Aridi, which was heading to areas dominated by ISIS
in Syria's northern regions.”
Iran
Hadramaut:
Campaign In Iran To Raise Money To Finance The War In Yemen
“In many Shiite shrines in Iran and throughout the Arab world,
multiple campaigns (Iranian and Yemeni) are underway to gather donations
and assistance for the Houthi group. Many Yemeni delegations secretly
visit Iran and Shiite shrines. None of the Houthi group's media outlets
or Arabic-speaking outlets operated by Iran, or by Hezbollah in Lebanon
which is close to the Houthi group, cover these visits. The delegations
move inside and outside of Iran under the coordination of Iran's
"Yemen Support Committee", headed by Esmail Ahmadi Moghaddam,
the former Tehran police chief.”
Muslim
Brotherhood
Innfrad:
Egyptian Source: Muslim Brotherhood Stole 65 Million Pounds From
Universities To Pay Its Members' Salaries
“Dr. Mohammed Samir, a founding member of Egypt Scholars, said at a
conference of Al-Azhar University Teaching Club convened to discuss the
selection of university leaders, that the Muslim Brotherhood has stolen
65 million pounds ($7.5 million) from universities and research centers
to cover its members' salaries.”
The
Seventh Day: Muslim Brotherhood Obtains Financing From The US, Israel And
Turkey Via Qatar
“Dissident Brotherhood leader Mukhtar Noah asserted that the actions
being carried out by the Muslim Brotherhood at this time are aimed at
harming the Egyptian state while, at the same time, supporting the
Turkish regime. Noah stressed that because the Brotherhood is hopeful it
can reconcile with the Egyptian state, it has taken some steps which the
group believes put pressure on Egypt (to "convince" its leaders
of the need for reconciliation.) He added, "Brotherhood relies on
financial support for its actions from the United States, Turkey and
Israel through Qatar.”
Alkhaleej:
Egyptian Lawyers Union Rebuffs Muslim Brotherhood
“The General Assembly of Egyptian Lawyers Union rejected a
no-confidence vote against its chairman Samih Ashour and its board of
directors. In total, 9974 members voted in favor of renewal of confidence
versus 3064 who backed a no-confidence vote. Hence, the camp which called
to rescind confidence from Ashour suffered a bitter defeat twice in the
course of two years. This camp is composed primarily of Muslim
Brotherhood supporters and vestiges of the dissolved National Democratic
Party. It should be noted that the Lawyers Union's General Assembly was
convened yesterday after obtaining a quorum, amidst intense security
measures. It witnessed rallies attended by thousands of lawyers, both
supporters and opponents of Ashour.”
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