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Eye on Extremism
July 27, 2016
Counter Extremism Project
Opposing
Views: Man Sentenced to 15 Years For Trying To Join ISIS
“A California man was sentenced to 15 years in prison for attempting
to join the Islamic State and lying on a passport application, federal
officials said. Adam Dandach, 22, was arrested on July 3, 2014 at John
Wayne Airport, where he was planning to board a flight to Turkey en
route to Syria to join the terrorist group, the Los Angeles Times
reported. FBI agents confiscated Dandach's cell phone, which they
said was loaded with songs praising ISIS, maps of ISIS-controlled
territory and Twitter updates from the group's social media
accounts. Dandach also posted online under the Twitter handle
@Al_Fadi1414, where he engaged in conversations with Islamic activists
and used a photo of the U.S. covered by the ISIS flag as his profile
image, according to the Counter Extremism Project.”
BBC:
Syria: Deadly IS Blast Rocks Kurdish City Of Qamishli
“Forty-four people have been killed in a massive bombing in the
Kurdish-controlled city of Qamishli in north-east Syria, Syrian state TV
reports. The blast was caused by a truck bomb which struck near a Kurdish
security headquarters, according to a UK-based monitoring group.
So-called Islamic State (IS) has said it was behind the attack, in
Hassakeh province, near the border with Turkey.”
Reuters:
Syrian Army Texts Residents To Leave Rebel-Held Aleppo - SANA
“The Syrian army sent text messages to residents of rebel-held eastern
Aleppo saying it will grant safe passage to people wishing to leave the
area, which has been effectively besieged by pro-government forces, state
media said on Tuesday. The army called on residents to push ‘mercenaries’
out of the city -- a reference to rebel fighters -- and said it would give
safe passage and temporary accommodation for anyone wishing to leave the
area, state news agency SANA said. The messages also called on armed
groups to lay down their weapons, SANA said. Concern has been growing for
at least 250,000 people who have been trapped in rebel-held eastern
Aleppo since heavy fighting effectively closed the last supply route, the
Castello Road, in early July.”
The
Washington Post: The Force Leading The Iraq Army’s Fight Against ISIS
Went From ‘Dirty Division’ To Golden Boys
“Iraq’s counterterrorism forces, known as the Golden Division, were
once so loathed that they were nicknamed the ‘Dirty Division.’ They were
accused of running secret prisons and carrying out extrajudicial
killings. Some lawmakers called for them to be disbanded. But the
country’s war against the Islamic State has restored the reputation of
the elite forces, which have spearheaded nearly every major fight against
the militants in Iraq. Their commanders have become battlefield
celebrities, while popular songs praise the troops’ prowess. The force of
about 10,000 men is a small bright spot in an otherwise lackluster legacy
of American efforts to rebuild Iraq’s military in the 13 years since the
invasion. U.S. officials say it is their most reliable partner in
fighting the Islamic State on the ground, while the Iraqi army struggles
with corruption and mismanagement.”
CNN:
Hollande: Deadly Church Attack In France Carried Out In Name Of ISIS
“One of two suspects in a church attack that left a priest dead in
northern France was known to anti-terror authorities after attempting a
trip to Syria, a French anti-terrorism prosecutor said Tuesday. Adel
Kermiche, 19, was wearing an ‘electronic tag’ during the deadly hostage
incident at a Catholic church in the town of Saint-Etienne-du-Rouvray,
prosecutor Francois Molins said. The monitoring apparatus was a condition
of his house arrest after two attempts in 2015 to travel abroad -- at
least once to Syria -- using a relative's identification, Molins said.
Kermiche was identified via fingerprints after his arrest in the attack,
which French President Francois Hollande said was committed in the name
of ISIS.”
The
New York Times: Week of Violence Rattles Germany
“In a span of six days in July, four high-profile attacks occurred in
Germany, putting the nation on edge. Ten people were killed and more than
40 wounded in Würzburg, Munich, Reutlingen and Ansbach. Three of the four
attacks were carried out by recent immigrants, two from Syria and one
from Afghanistan. The fourth attacker was an Iranian-German.”
USA
Today: Analysis: String Of Terror Attacks In Europe Likely To Continue
“Europe is the latest front in the Islamic State's war on the
West, and the recent spate of attacks there will likely expand in
coming months. The conditions that have made Europe ripe for terror
attacks, including large marginalized Muslim populations, an influx
of refugees into Europe and overwhelmed security services, won’t be
easily fixed, analysts say. ‘This scenario has been a long time coming
for Europe,’ said Rick Nelson, an analyst at the Center for Strategic and
International Studies. ‘I don’t see this letting up anytime soon.’”
Associated
Press: Israeli Military Says It Killed Palestinian Man Behind Deadly
Ambush
“JERUSALEM – Israeli forces tracked down a group of suspects
behind the deadly ambush of a family car in the West Bank earlier this
month and killed the man who pulled the trigger in that attack in a
shootout early on Wednesday, the military said. The July 1 attack killed
Miki Mark, a 48-year-old father of 10 children, and wounded his wife and
two teenage children. The military subsequently sent hundreds of troops
to the area of the attack to search for the perpetrators in what was the
largest operation in the territory in two years. Israel also vowed to
take unprecedented steps to capture the killers.”
Reuters:
Turkish Military A Fractured Force After Attempted Coup
“Just weeks ago, Commander Adem Huduti was inspecting Turkish troops
on the Syrian border and being praised in the media for his role in the
fight against Islamic State and Kurdish militants. Now, the head of
Turkey's second army, responsible for its borders with Syria and Iraq, is
in prison in Duzce, some 216 km (134 miles) east of Istanbul, the most
senior serving general arrested for suspected involvement in a failed
military coup. At least 246 people were killed and more than 2,000
injured on the night of July 15, when a faction within the army used
fighter jets, helicopters and tanks to try to seize airports and bridges,
attacking buildings including parliament and the intelligence
headquarters in a bid to seize power.”
Voice
Of America: Afghan Leaders See Sectarian Agenda In IS Kabul Attack
“Tensions are rising in Afghanistan after a suicide attack claimed by
the Islamic State killed more than 80 members of a minority Shiite group,
and IS's top commander for the country threatened more violence to punish
Afghan Shi'ites for fighting alongside the Syrian regime. The suicide
attack Saturday, the deadliest in Kabul since the 2001 overthrow of the
Taliban regime, targeted a rally by thousands of Hazaras, a predominantly
Shi'ite ethnic group that was demanding the government reroute a planned
power line through its impoverished region. More than 200 people were
wounded in the bombing. This is an apparent reference to reports that
Iran is covertly training men from the estimated 3 million Afghan
refugees it hosts and sending them to Syria to fight alongside government
forces.”
United
States
Reuters:
Kerry Hopes To Work With Russia On Syria, U.N. Aims To Restart Talks
“The United States said on Tuesday it hoped to announce in early
August details of planned military cooperation and intelligence sharing
with Russia on Syria, and a United Nations envoy said he would also aim
to resume peace talks next month. U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry said
Washington and Moscow, which support opposing sides in Syria's
five-year-old conflict, had made progress in recent days towards working
more closely together. The proposals would have the two powers share
intelligence to coordinate air strikes against the al Qaeda-affiliated
Nusra Front and prohibit the Syrian air force from attacking rebel groups
labeled as moderate.”
Reuters:
U.S. Says Looking At More Counter-Terrorism Cooperation With China
“The United States is looking at ways to increase counter-terrorism cooperation
with China, including information exchanges and helping bring stability
to places like Iraq, a senior U.S. administration official said on
Tuesday. China was angered last month at a report by the U.S. State
Department that said there was a lack of transparency or information from
China about incidents it called terrorism, and said counter-terrorism
cooperation was limited. China has tried to encourage Western nations in
particular to help in its fight against what it calls Islamist extremists
in the violence-prone far western Chinese region of Xinjiang operating as
the East Turkestan Islamic Movement (ETIM).”
Syria
Reuters:
U.N. Aims For Next Syria Peace Talks At End August
“U.N. Syria envoy Staffan de Mistura said on Tuesday he aimed to
convene a new round of Syria peace talks towards the end of August,
quietly scrapping a previous timeline while putting down a new deadline
for a U.S.-Russia deal to support the talks. De Mistura, speaking after a
meeting with U.S. Syria envoy Michael Ratney and Russian Deputy Foreign
Minister Gennady Gatilov, said the United States and Russia both needed
to do more work in the coming days. De Mistura said the trilateral
meeting in Geneva focused on the urgent need for progress on Syria's
cessation of hostilities, access for humanitarian aid, counter-terrorism
and political transition.”
Iraq
Reuters:
From Beirut To Baghdad, 'Useless' Bomb Detectors Guard Against Disaster
“They have been a familiar sight at checkpoints across the Middle East
for about a decade, acquired for thousands of dollars apiece by
authorities desperate to contain deadly waves of bomb attacks. But the
devices - which have even been sold to U.N. peacekeepers - have been
condemned by forensic specialists as a dangerous waste of money, based on
bogus science. Marketed under names such as ADE651, GT200 and Alpha, they
are supposed to respond to the presence of explosives, causing their
metal antenna to swivel on a hinge toward the material. Britain imposed
export bans on ADE651 and GT200 detectors in 2010, warning they were
fake, and the British businessmen who made millions of pounds by manufacturing
and selling them around the world were subsequently sentenced to jail.
Yet is was only this month that Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi -
whose country bought hundreds of ADE651 devices eight years ago - ordered
his security services to stop using them, after a huge truck bomb killed
292 people in Baghdad.”
Daily
Caller: ‘Long And Bloody Insurgency’ Is The Grim Future Facing Operations
In Iraq
“After the eventual defeat of the Islamic State in Mosul, American and
Iraqi commanders are preparing for ISIS to morph back into its terrorist
roots and remain a destabilizing menace for years to come. American
officials pointed to ISIS’s recent attack in Baghdad, which killed
over 300 civilians and was the worst suicide bombing the country has seen
since the U.S. invasion in 2003. Officials told The New York Times ISIS
fighters from the recaptured cities of Fallujah and Ramadi have fully
blended back into the Sunni populations, and are biding their time before
launching more deadly terrorist attacks.”
Turkey
Reuters:
Turkish Troops Hunt Remaining Coup Plotters As Crackdown Widens
“Turkish special forces backed by helicopters, drones and the navy
hunted a remaining group of commandos thought to have tried to capture or
kill President Tayyip Erdogan during a failed coup, as a crackdown on
suspected plotters widened on Tuesday. More than 1,000 members of the
security forces were involved in the manhunt for the 11 rogue soldiers in
the hills around the Mediterranean coastal resort of Marmaris, where
Erdogan was holidaying on the night of the coup attempt, officials said.
Erdogan and the government accuse U.S.-based Muslim cleric Fethullah
Gulen of orchestrating the attempted power grab and have launched a crackdown
on his suspected followers. More than 60,000 soldiers, police, judges and
civil servants have been arrested, suspended or put under investigation.”
Voice
Of America: Foreign, Domestic Media Under Fire In Turkey
“The Turkish government has turned its attention to journalists in the
latest expansion of its purges after a failed coup July 15. Turkish
President Recep Tayyip Erdogan's chief of international relations, Ayse
Sozen Usluer, has released a file of foreign news coverage, indicating
what she says is support of — or failure to oppose — the uprising.
Usluer says much of the foreign media failed the democracy test. ‘Some
coverage in the media is shameful — disgraceful, actually,’ she said. ‘It
seems they can’t leave the politics aside and condemn the coup openly.
The international press have shown an anti-Erdogan attitude in this
matter.’”
CNN:
Turkey Detainees Tortured, Raped After Failed Coup, Rights Group Says
“Captured military officers raped by police, hundreds of soldiers
beaten, some detainees denied food and water and access to lawyers for
days. These are the grim conditions that many of the thousands who were
arrested in Turkey face in the aftermath of a recent failed coup,
witnesses tell Amnesty International. Detainees awaiting trial have been
beaten and tortured in official and unofficial holding centers in
Istanbul and Ankara since the July 15 coup attempt by parts of Turkey's
military, Amnesty International reported this week. The group cites interviews
with detainees' lawyers, doctors and a person who was on duty at one of
the centers in Ankara.”
Afghanistan
NBC
News: Civilian Death Toll Reaches Record As Afghan Troops Fight Taliban:
U.N.
“The number of civilians killed or wounded in Afghanistan's battle
with the Taliban reached a record high in the first half of this year -
with children bearing the brunt of the conflict - the United Nations said
Monday. At least 1,601 civilians were killed and 3,565 wounded in the
first six months of 2016 as militants and insurgents try to topple the
government that was installed in Kabul after the 2001 U.S.-led military
intervention. One in three of those casualties was a child. The figures,
published by the United Nations mission in Afghanistan (UNAMA), came days
after the deadliest bombing to hit Kabul since the U.S. invasion. At
least 80 people were killed and 231 wounded Saturday in a suicide attack
on a peaceful demonstration of the Afghan minority Shiite Hazara
community. Most of those killed were civilians.”
Reuters:
Afghanistan Weighs Islamic State Threat After Kabul Attack
“Islamic State is threatening more attacks against Afghanistan's
Hazara minority after Saturday's suicide blasts in Kabul that killed 80
people, pledging to retaliate against support by some in the mainly
Shi'ite group for the Assad regime in Syria. But assessing the threat
from Daesh, as Islamic State is known in Afghanistan, is difficult. Some
question whether it was really responsible for Saturday's blasts and some
officials ask whether the ultra-radical Sunni movement, hitherto largely
confined to an area near the border with Pakistan, poses a wider
challenge. A Daesh commander who uses the name Abu Omar Khorasani said the
bombing of the rally by thousands of Hazaras protesting about the route
of a new power line was in retaliation for the support offered by some
members of the community to the regime in Syria.”
BBC:
Key Islamic State Leader Saad Emarati 'Killed In Afghanistan'
“A key commander with the Islamic State militant group has been killed
in a military operation in Nangarhar, Afghan security forces say. Saad
Emarati was one of the founders of the IS group's Afghanistan-Pakistan
branch, and led several attacks against the Taliban and the government.
Afghan officials say he was one of about 120 suspected militants killed
in an operation in Kot district. It comes days after a bomb attack in
Kabul claimed by IS killed 80 people. Emarati was formerly a Taliban
commander, but switched allegiance to IS following the death of Mullah
Omar, the Taliban founder. Analysts say he was one of the most important
leaders of IS in the region, and that his death, if confirmed, would be a
serious setback to the group's ability to operate in eastern Afghanistan.”
Egypt
Fox
News: Attacks Against Christians In Egypt Rising At Alarming Rate, Human
Rights Groups Warn
“Human rights groups have been speaking out against what they say is
an alarming escalation of violence in several attacks against Egypt's
Coptic Orthodox Christian community, with police providing
little if any protection for victims.
Mina Thabet, programme director for minorities and vulnerable groups
with the Egyptian Commission of Rights and Freedoms,
told AFP that attacks on Coptic Christians have been
‘escalating in a very short time.’ There have been a number of reports in
separate Egyptian villages in recent weeks of large Muslim
mobs torching Christian houses, preventing them from establishing
churches and gathering to worship. Christians have been beaten and
threatened against practicing their faith, while police and government
officials have been failing to punish those responsible, Thabet said.”
Middle
East
Associated
Press: Hamas 'Summer Camp' Trains Young Gazans For War
“As if from nowhere, a dozen young people surge out of a tunnel,
Kalashnikov assault rifles in hand, to launch a surprise assault on a
military post. This is the Gaza Strip, the Palestinian enclave that has
seen three wars with Israel since 2008, but this time the attack is not
real. The young people, aged between 15 and 20, are taking part in a
summer training camp for the Ezzedine al-Qassam Brigades, the armed wing
of Hamas, the Islamist movement which runs Gaza. Such camps in the
enclave of 1.9 million people have been heavily criticised by rights
groups concerned with young people's welfare. It is the first time that
Jihad, 16, has entered one of the underground tunnels, which Hamas
considers a major strategic asset in its conflict with Israel and which
are usually kept well hidden. The young Palestinian comes from Shejaiya,
a Gaza neighbourhood ravaged by war two years ago, and is carrying out a
drill to kidnap fake Israeli soldiers.”
Libya
Reuters:
Libya's U.N.-Backed Government Summons Ambassador Over French Presence
“Libya's U.N.-backed government said on Tuesday it had summoned
France's ambassador to protest over the presence of French special forces
in eastern Libya. The summons came after France confirmed last week that
three of its soldiers had been killed when a helicopter crashed near the
eastern city of Benghazi. France said they had been conducting
intelligence operations. Special forces teams from countries including
France, Britain and the United States have been on the ground in western
and eastern Libya to fight Islamist militants. The French have been
working alongside forces loyal to eastern commander Khalifa Haftar. ‘The
GNA considered the French presence in Libya's eastern region as a breach
of international norms and sovereignty which it rejects,’ a statement
from the Government of National Accord (GNA) said.”
United
Kingdom
AOL
News: UK Terror Attack Highly Likely, Say Intelligence Agencies
“A terrorist attack in the UK is ‘highly likely’ following attacks in
other parts of Europe, a five-judge tribunal has been told. Britain's
intelligence agencies highlighted the seriousness of the threat as they
defended themselves against accusations of engaging in the mass
collection of communications data and UK citizens' personal information
without proper legal safeguards being in place. The charity Privacy
International has taken the issue before the Investigatory Powers
Tribunal (IPT) in London in a hearing expected to last four days.”
Bloomberg:
Mass Internet Spying Crucial In Terror Fight, U.K. Lawyer Says
“Lawyers for U.K. spy agencies said at the start of a trial over
privacy concerns that the bulk interception of communications is critical
in protecting the country against terrorism. Without the ability to
collect mass data, MI5, MI6 and GCHQ ‘would be less effective in
protecting the U.K. against threats such as terrorism, cyber threats or
espionage,’ government lawyers said in court documents responding to a
suit from Privacy International, an advocacy group that’s seeking to
clarify whether the U.K. government has been acting lawfully. Western
governments have had to tread a fine line between civil liberties and
protecting civilians in the face of an increase in extremist violence
across Europe and the U.S. In the past week there have been attacks in
Germany and France that have seen dozens of people killed or injured.”
Daily
Mail: Theresa May Warns Britain Faces The Same Terror Threat As France
“Theresa May today warned the terror threat in Britain remains
'severe' as she offered assistance to France following the latest ISIS
atrocity. The Prime Minister said the terrorists 'will not win' as she
vowed to stand 'shoulder to shoulder' with France. Mrs May spoke out
in solidarity hours after an 84-year-old priest, named as Jacques
Hamel, had his throat cut and a nun was left critically injured in
hospital. French President Francois Hollande says France is at war
following the raid which saw five people held hostage by ISIS assailants
shouting Allahu Akbar. Speaking in Downing Street, Mrs May said: 'We all
face a terror threat. If you look at the national threat level here in
the United Kingdom, it is at severe. That means that a terrorist attack
is highly likely.”
Germany
Newsweek:
Gunman Kills Doctor In Berlin As Germany Remains On Edge After Week Of
Violence
“A patient shot and killed a doctor at a university clinic in
Berlin before killing himself on Tuesday, police confirmed. Authorities
said the incident showed ‘no signs at all’ of extremism as the country
remains on edge after a spate of violent attacks in the past week. The
gunman opened fire at approximately 1 p.m. local time at the
Benjamin-Franklin Hospital in Steglitz, a southwestern district of
Berlin. Police told NBC News that the patient had a ‘personal motivation’
for the shooting, indicating that the incident was not motivated by
terrorism. But it comes amid heightened security in the country
after four violent attacks in a week, two of which were linked to radical
Islamism, have led to calls from officials for tougher gun control laws.”
BBC:
Germany Must Address Fears After Attacks, Says Bavaria Governor
“The governor of Bavaria has urged the German government to address
public concerns about security and immigration after a spate of terror
attacks. Germans are ‘riled up’ and ‘full of fear’, Horst Seehofer told a
press conference, after four violent attacks in Germany in less than a
week. In the latest, on Sunday, a Syrian immigrant detonated a bomb,
killing himself and injuring 15 people. A gun attack in Munich was the deadliest
- with nine people killed. Mr Seehofer said that Germany must ‘do
whatever is necessary to protect our citizens’.”
France
The
New York Times: France’s Permanent Emergency State
“Shortly after Mohamed Lahouaiej Bouhlel killed 84 people by driving a
truck through the crowd gathered on Nice’s seafront, France’s president,
François Hollande, announced he would ask Parliament to extend for
another three months the state of emergency declared immediately after
the Paris terrorist attacks last November. This was an abrupt reversal
for Mr. Hollande, who had planned to lift the current state of emergency
this week. On Thursday, Parliament, in addition to extending the state of
emergency for six months, added measures to expand already broad police
powers of search and detention, like increasing pretrial detention
periods for children; allowing searches without the approval of a judge;
and authorizing the police to seize data from computers and mobile
phones, and to search luggage and vehicles without judicial approval.”
The
Wall Street Journal: French Say One Of Priest’s Killers Had Tried To Go
To Syria
“Two followers of Islamic State killed a priest while he was
celebrating Roman Catholic Mass Tuesday, the first time a church has been
attacked amid a wave of terrorist violence rocking Western Europe. French
prosecutors identified one of the attackers as Adel Kermiche, a
19-year-old French national who served 10 months in prison for twice
trying to travel to the battlefields of Syria. French judges ordered him
released from prison in March 2016 on condition he wear an electronic
monitoring bracelet, over the objections of prosecutors who still viewed
him as a risk.”
Europe
Deutsche
Welle: Potentially Hundreds Of 'IS' Recruits In Europe
“A spokesman for Europe's policing agency told the Osnabrücker Zeitung
newspaper on Tuesday that IS had enticed about 5,000 ‘foreign fighters’
from within the 28-nation to join its operations in Syria and Iraq.
One-third had returned to Europe, amounting to between 1,500 to 1,800
persons, but there was no indication that IS used people smuggling
routes, the spokesman said. ‘Members of terrorist groups or returning
foreign fighters with EU passports travel as a rule into the European
Union with genuine or faked passports. Many of them have neither the
intention nor the capability to launch terrorist attacks,’ the Europol
spokesman said, but added: ‘Hundreds remain however as potential
terrorists, who pose a danger for security in Europe.’ Europol said it
was assisting national authorities in keeping tabs on suspects.”
Technology
Politico:
Punishing Russia Over The DNC Hack, And Proving They Did It
“When the White House considers punishing the likely culprits behind
the Democratic National Committee hack and embarrassing email leak —
widely thought to be Russian in origin, directed by the government itself
— it will have to tread carefully, Cory and Bryan write for Pros. ‘Any
retaliation would carry a heavy political risk, including offering the
appearance of trying to aid Hillary Clinton's campaign for president,’
they reported, zeroing in on an executive order on cyber sanctions as one
possible tool. But it has other downsides besides the appearance of
political favoritism. ‘Penalties could further destabilize the already
strained U.S.-Russia relationship, triggering a backlash that may hinder
efforts to work out a ceasefire in Ukraine, keep Iran in compliance with
the recent nuclear deal and bring the Syrian civil war to an end. A
number of technical hurdles also stand in the way, according to some
specialists.’”
ISIS
Alghad:
ISIS Blocked From Accessing New Supply Routes And Resources
Foreign and defense ministers, along with senior military officials,
took part last Thursday in a mini-group meeting of the international
opposition, which was held in Washington. Representatives from Jordan
attended the meeting, as did members of the military operation and other
coalition members that provide non-military support. Participants
declared that the mini-group "has reviewed its joint approach to
ISIS branches in Libya and other parts of the world, reinforcing our
common resolve to thwart the aspirations of this global terrorist
organization." The extended coalition mini-group meeting stressed
the "steady progress of Iraqi forces and moderate opposition forces
in Syria (that are fighting ISIS), which has resulted in preventing ISIS
from reaching new areas, supply routes and resources."
Syria
All4syria:
Monthly Salary Of Members Of "Ba'ath Brigades" Militia
“The Baath Brigades militia was founded in the first half of 2012. It
grew to include employees and supporters belonging to the Arab Socialist
Ba'ath Party. Initially, the "Ba'ath Brigades" were deployed to
safeguard government buildings and vital installations. However, its role
was underpinned with its growing numbers, rising from 5000 in November
2012 to 7000 in December 2013, though the exact number of its current
militants is not available. The members of the Ba'ath Brigades militia
undergo training on the use of arms in the Syrian regime's army barracks
and get logistical support directly from the army general staff. Salaries
range between 20,000 to 30,000 Syrian pounds ($93-140) a month. Its funding
come from the Ba'ath Party's budget in addition to support from merchants
loyal to the Syrian regime.”
Muslim
Brotherhood
Albawabh
News: Muslim Brotherhood Prepares To Launch Ikhwanonline.Com Website
“The Muslim Brotherhood has begun preparations to re-launch its
IkhwanOnline.com website, which was suspended after the June 30th
Revolution. Though the group managed to get it online again, it was
eventually taken offline at the end of November 2015, following a major
crisis inside the group between the young and veteran leadership. Sources
within the group revealed that the veterans, led by Mahmoud Ezzat, acting
Brotherhood Supreme Guide, will launch the website once again after
deleting all the news and other materials which contain even the smallest
hint of criticism towards the old generation leaders. The sources
stressed that Ezzat wants to control the group, especially the media
wings, coinciding with calls by the youth to hold internal elections. The
sources noted that the website will be launched from Turkey and
supervised by Mahmoud Hussein, Secretary-General of the Muslim
Brotherhood and Ibrahim Munir, the organizations' Deputy Supreme Guide.
The sources claimed that substantial sums of money will be injected into
redesigning the website prior to its introduction to Brotherhood
supporters.”
Albawabh
News: Documentary: International Arm Of The Muslim Brotherhood Has Four
Offices In London
“A documentary film entitled "The Organization", produced by
Youssef Al Hosseiny, revealed that the International arm of the Muslim
Brotherhood works out of four offices in London. The organization, which
operates through 19 foundations, companies, charities and media agencies,
is working as a single, well-oiled system to fulfil the group's agenda
and goals in Egypt, UAE, Tunisia, Palestine, as well as other countries
around the world.”
Houthi
Yemen
24: Plan To Disburse Nearly $0.8 Billion In The Areas Under Houthi
Control
“Fadhl Muhammad Al-Jadi, the Dhale governor, said that the liquidity
crisis in Yemen will be addressed with the printing of 400 billion riyals
($1.6 billion), which will be distributed equally among the provinces
that are under the control of the government authorities and rebels
(Houthis). The governor in his statement explained that taking such a
step was not arbitrary, and what underlies it is an agreement to support
the act of supplying the local market with banknotes.”
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