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Eye on Extremism
September 27, 2016
Reuters:
Islamic State 'Dead Set' On Using Chemical Arms: Pentagon Spokesman
“Islamic State militants are ‘dead set’ on using chemical arms and are
likely to try them again as Iraqi forces advance on Mosul, a Pentagon
spokesman said on Monday, a week after a rocket with a possible chemical
agent landed near U.S. troops. The rocket fired Tuesday landed in an
unpopulated area near Qayyara West base, several hundred yards from where
hundreds of U.S. troops are working to prepare an airfield for an Iraqi
offensive to recapture the city of Mosul. No one was hurt in the attack.
The shell initially tested positive for a mustard agent, but two
subsequent tests have been inconclusive and the device is undergoing
further tests, Navy Captain Jeff Davis, a Pentagon spokesman, told
reporters.”
CNN:
Senate To Vote Wednesday To Override 9/11 Lawsuit Bill Veto
“The Senate will vote Wednesday to override President Barack Obama's
veto of a bill to give victims and families of the 9/11 terrorist attacks
the legal right to sue Saudi Arabia for any purported role in the plot,
Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell said Monday. The measure will need
a two-thirds vote of the chamber to succeed -- which is expected --
before going to the House for a similar override vote later this week. It
would be the first time in Obama's nearly eight years in office that one
of his vetoes will be overturned. The President opposes the bill because
he says it could open the door to lawsuits against the US for actions
taken by military service members, diplomats and others.”
The
Wall Street Journal: Syrian Regime Presses Aleppo Offensive
“The Syrian regime and its allies pushed ahead with their bombardment
of the rebel-held side of Aleppo on Monday despite global condemnation
over the newly launched offensive that has killed hundreds in the
past several days. The U.K.-based opposition monitoring group Syrian
Observatory for Human Rights said there were more airstrikes on eastern
Aleppo, but a hospital worker in the city said the intensity had eased
compared with Sunday. Rescue workers with a civil defense group known as
the White Helmets said on Sunday that more than 300 people had been
killed since a cease-fire collapsed last week. Most of the deaths came
since the regime declared its new Aleppo offensive on Thursday night.”
BBC:
Afghan Forces 'Kill Pakistan Taliban Commander Azam Tariq'
“A leading Pakistani Taliban commander has been killed by special forces
in eastern Afghanistan, the militants say. Azam Tariq died in Paktika
province, near Pakistan's border. His son and nine others were also
reported killed. Tariq was a former Pakistani Taliban spokesman and part
of a breakaway faction after the group split in 2014. Many Pakistani
Taliban now operate from Afghanistan after they were dislodged from
strongholds in north-west Pakistan by a military offensive. Reports say
Afghan special forces backed by Nato troops killed Azam Tariq in the
Barmal district of Paktika on Saturday night, but it took a day for his
death to be confirmed.”
Voice
Of America: IS Retakes Control Of Former Strongholds In Afghanistan
“Officials and witnesses in Afghanistan say fighters linked to Islamic
State have regained control of most of the militant group's former
strongholds in the country, weeks after retreating to remote mountain
hideouts in the face of major Afghan security operations. The
troubled areas are located in Achin, Naziyan, Kot and Haska Meena
districts of the eastern Nangarhar province, which borders Pakistan. A
reporter for VOA’s Afghan service this week traveled to Achin, the main
IS base in the country, and says government security forces have
relocated to positions they were occupying prior to the launching of an
anti-IS ‘Qahr-e- Sellab’ offensive in June. Regional military spokesman
Shreen Aqa confirmed to VOA that IS militants have returned to parts of
the troubled districts, but said Afghan forces are preparing to undertake
a fresh offensive for their eviction.”
NBC
News: Dresden Blasts: Mosque, Conference Center Attacked In German City
“Two home-made bombs hit a mosque and a conference center in eastern
Germany late Monday in what officials called a "xenophobic" and
"cowardly" attack. No one was injured by the blasts in Dresden,
birthplace of a German grassroots anti-Islam movement known as PEGIDA.
The city's police chief said officials were "now in crisis
mode." Police said the first bomb exploded outside a mosque in the
western part of the city at around 10 p.m. local time [4 p.m. ET] while
the imam, his wife and two sons were inside.”
Reuters:
California Man Convicted As Would-Be Islamic State Recruit Gets 30 Years
“A would-be Islamic State recruit from California was sentenced on
Monday to 30 years in prison for his conviction on charges he sought to
join the militant group in Syria and committed bank fraud to pay for a
plane ticket there, federal prosecutors said. Nader Elhuzayel, 25, was
found guilty in June by a U.S. District Court jury in Santa Ana,
California, of conspiring and attempting to provide material support,
namely himself, to a terrorist organization, and 26 counts of bank fraud.
He became the first person tried, convicted and sentenced for such
charges in federal court, the U.S. Attorney's Office in Los Angeles said.
More than 70 individuals have been charged in the United States with
trying to travel abroad to enlist with Islamic State, with most cases
resulting in guilty pleas.”
The
Times Of Israel: Facebook Apologizes For Suspending Palestinian
Journalists’ Pages
“Facebook apologized Monday after temporarily disabling accounts
linked to two Palestinian news sites critical of Israel. Facebook pages
of a number of editors of Quds News Network were suspended for several
hours last Friday, a campaigner said, in what the social media giant
later called a ‘mistake.’ Pages linked to the Shehab News Agency were
also disabled, an editor there said. Quds has 5.2 million likes on
Facebook, while Shehab has 6.35 million. The Arabic versions of the
online newspapers are supportive of the Hamas terror group and have been
accused of incitement to violence against Israelis.”
Daily
Mail: ISIS Are Plotting Wave Of Car Bomb Attacks Across Europe,
Intelligence Chiefs Fear, Amid 'Exodus' Of Its Fighters In Syria And
Iraq
“Intelligence chiefs fear Islamic State is planning to launch deadly
car bomb attacks on European cities, it was revealed yesterday. Officials
believe the jihadi terrorists could use vehicles packed full of
explosives as a new ploy to bring fresh devastation to the continent. The
EU's counter-terrorism coordinator Gilles de Kerchove warned Europe
needed to prepare for an 'exodus' of thousands of fighters returning from
Iraq and Syria. He also cautioned there is an increasing risk Libya
will be used as a 'springboard' to launch attacks on Europe. Mr de
Kerchove, who is the EU's senior anti-terror official, told MEPs: 'The
terrorist threat has never been so high in the last 20 years. 'We fear
that Daesh might step-by-step move to other modus operandi. Car bombs
might be one. We know how much they learn how to build vehicle-borne
improvised explosive device. And there is a concern as well on the use of
chemical weapons.' Car bombs can be particularly deadly as vehicles can
be packed with large amounts of explosives and driven into the centres of
busy cities areas without attracting suspicion.”
Voice
Of America: Nigeria's Buhari Talks Boko Haram, Niger Delta Avengers,
Corruption
“Nigerian President Muhammadu Buhari has said his government is not ready
to negotiate with Boko Haram until it is clear who is leading the terror
group. ‘I gave directives on three different occasions and I am not ready
to go beyond this unless the leaders of Boko Haram come out in the open
and say that they are leaders of Boko Haram,’ he told VOA last week on
the sidelines of the United Nations General Assembly in New York. ‘Then I
will be ready to talk to them but not [to] somebody coming to tell me
that they are bringing one person or two people today and that they are leaders
of Boko Haram,’ he said, speaking in Hausa. In recent weeks, longtime
leader Abubakar Shekau and former spokesman Abu Musab al-Barnawi have
each stated they are leading the Islamist extremist group.”
CNN:
Houston Shooting: Nine Injured, Suspect Dead
“Nazi emblems were found among the ‘personal effects’ of the man who
was killed in Houston Monday after wounding nine people in a mass
shooting, according to the head of the police homicide division. Capt.
D.W. Ready said the shooter was dressed in some kind of military uniform
and had Nazi emblems with him and at his house. However, Ready would not
speculate on whether the Nazi insignia would help establish a motive. He
said the emblems may have been collector's items. At the shooter's home,
police found vintage military equipment and paraphernalia dating back to
the Civil War. ‘At this point we are very open-minded as to the
motive,’ said acting Chief Martha Montalvo. She described the shooter as
a lawyer who had ‘issues’ at his law office.”
United
States
The
Wall Street Journal: Houston Shooting Suspect A ‘Disgruntled’ Lawyer,
Authorities Say
“The suspect in Monday’s shooting in Houston that wounded nine
people was a heavily armed, ‘disgruntled’ lawyer who died at the
scene, city officials said. The shooter had two weapons and more
than 2,500 rounds of live ammunition when he randomly sprayed bullets at
drivers in southwest Houston on Monday morning, hitting six
people, according to the Associated Press. Police responding to the
scene shot and killed the suspect, whom the Houston
Chronicle identified as a local attorney named Nathan DeSai.
The motive was unclear. Police said the gunman was wearing
‘military-style apparel with old Nazi emblems’ during the attack, the AP
reported.”
Reuters:
Gulf May Arm Rebels Now Syria Truce Is Dead: U.S. Officials
“The collapse of the latest Syria ceasefire has heightened the
possibility that Gulf states might arm Syrian rebels with shoulder-fired
missiles to defend themselves against Syrian and Russian warplanes, U.S.
officials said on Monday. Still, the U.S. administration continues to
maintain that negotiations are the only way to end the carnage after
Russian-backed Syrian forces intensified their bombing of Aleppo, the
last major urban area in rebel hands. The latest U.S. attempt to end
Syria's 5-1/2 year civil war was shattered on Sept. 19 when a
humanitarian aid convoy was bombed in an attack Washington blamed on
Russian aircraft. Moscow denied involvement. On Monday, medical supplies
were running out in rebel-held eastern Aleppo, with victims pouring into
barely functioning hospitals as Russia and its Syrian ally President
Bashar al-Assad ignored Western pleas to stop the bombing.”
Fox
News: Mall Shooting Suspect Had Blog With Picture Of ISIS Leader
“The Turkish immigrant accused of gunning down five people at a
Washington mall smirked at his first court appearance Monday even as
reports revealed he had a blog with photo posts of ISIS leader Abu Bakr
al-Baghdadi and Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Khamenei. Accused
shooter Arcan Cetin, smirking slightly and wearing a blue, collared
shirt, appeared for his first court appearance late Monday morning.
Charged with five counts of premeditated murder, Cetin was held on $2
million bail. He only spoke twice, both times to answer ‘yes, your honor’
to a judge's question. Authorities said they have not ruled out terrorism
as a motive in the shooting at the Cascade Mall in Burlington. Police
arrested Cetin on Saturday evening after a nearly day-long manhunt. He
was described as being ‘zombie-like’ when he was taken into custody.”
Syria
BBC:
Syria Conflict: Aid Reaches Madaya And Other Besieged Towns
“Aid has been delivered to four besieged towns in Syria for the first
time in almost six months, the International Committee of the Red Cross
says. Seventy-one lorries reached rebel-held Madaya and Zabadani, near
Damascus, and government-controlled Foah and Kefraya, in Idlib province,
on Sunday. They brought food, medical supplies and hygiene kits for
60,000 people. Last week, the UN suspended aid deliveries across Syria
for 48 hours after a deadly attack on a convoy. The US and Russia, which
support opposing sides in the country's five-year civil war, have blamed
each other for the incident. It came as a week-old truce brokered by the
two powers collapsed and the government's bombardment of rebel-held areas
of Aleppo resumed.”
CNN:
Monitoring Group: At Least 12 More Die In Aleppo Airstrikes
“At least 12 people were killed, including three children, in
airstrikes Monday targeting rebel-held areas of the northern Syrian city
of Aleppo, according to the UK-based monitoring group Syrian Observatory
for Human Rights (SOHR). Nine other people were wounded, some in critical
condition, SOHR said. CNN has not been able to independently verify such
claims. It wasn't clear who conducted the airstrikes, but the opposition
and the US have blamed the Syrian regime and Russian warplanes for such
attacks since a ceasefire broke down.”
Voice
Of America: Russia: Critical US, British Statements Could Hurt Situation
In Syria
“Russia says it is not losing hope for reaching a political resolution
to the crisis in Syria, but that statements made by U.S. and British
envoys at the United Nations could hurt the process. President Vladimir
Putin's spokesman Dmitry Peskov also said Monday ‘terrorists’ were using
a cease-fire to regroup and rearm themselves. The Syrian government, a
Putin ally, often refers to rebels as terrorists. The comments came a day
after the U.N. Security Council held urgent talks about the deadly surge
of violence in Aleppo, where Syrian and Russian jet fighters bombarded
the rebel-controlled eastern sector of the city.”
Turkey
Reuters:
Six Soldiers Killed In Clashes With Militants In Southeast Turkey:
Sources
“Six Turkish soldiers were killed and one was injured on Monday in clashes
with militants in the largely Kurdish southeast, security and hospital
sources said. The clashes with militants from the Kurdistan Workers Party
(PKK) broke out in the Uludere district of Sirnak province at a check
point near a prison, the security sources said. The autonomy-seeking PKK
has waged a three-decade insurgency in southeast Turkey, home to most of
the country's 15 million Kurds. Fighting flared anew in July 2015 after a
two-year ceasefire collapsed, and hundreds of rebels, security forces and
civilians have died in the violence.”
Reuters:
U.S. Hotels In Adana, Turkey, Could Be Targets Of Attacks -U.S. Consulate
“The U.S. Consulate in Adana, Turkey, warned Americans on Monday that
it had received specific and credible threats of potential terrorist
activity targeting U.S.-branded hotels in Adana. ‘U.S. citizens in Adana
are advised to exercise caution when patronizing these establishments,’
the consulate said in a statement on its website. The warning did not
name the hotels. Adana's hotels include properties operating under the
Sheraton and Hilton brands. Adana, in southeastern Turkey, is about 10
miles (16 km) from Incirlik Air Base, which the U.S. military uses to
launch attacks against Islamic State militants in Syria. The State Department
has warned U.S. citizens to avoid travel to southeastern Turkey.”
Voice
Of America: Kurdish Teachers' Arrests Heighten Concerns About Turkey's
Emergency Rule
“The arrests of 24 Kurdish teachers, accused of
supporting the PKK Kurdish rebel group, has intensified criticism of the
Turkish government's use of the emergency powers it introduced following
July's failed coup. Early Sunday, loud banging on the door woke up the
Dogan household. Heavily armed anti-terror police stormed into their
apartment and arrested Gulizar Dogan, a teacher and a mother of two,
including an eight-week-old baby. At the door were five to six
heavily armed police officers with their weapons drawn, said Gulizar
Dogan's husband, Zeynel. A few other masked policemen stood behind with
shields. Zeynel Dogan says he told the offciers to calm down, and they
started beating him and asking this was the home of Gulizar Dogan.”
The
Wall Street Journal: Turkey’s Post-Coup Crackdown Hits Kurds
“A post-coup crackdown in Turkey has expanded into the restive Kurdish
minority’s heartland, exacerbating tensions after a rare show of
solidarity by Kurdish lawmakers with the democratically elected
government. Turkey’s Education Ministry suspended 11,285 teachers this
month for allegedly supporting Kurdish separatists. The government also
removed by decree 24 elected mayors from pro-Kurdish parties accused of
aiding the outlawed Kurdistan Workers’ Party, or PKK. President Recep
Tayyip Erdogan says the moves are part of a campaign against Kurdish
terror groups, billing it as the biggest operation yet against the PKK.
But the fresh crackdown worries some in Turkey and its Western allies
that the policies are stoking ethnic rivalries, rather than capitalizing
on a brief sense of national unity to negotiate an end to the PKK’s
three-decade uprising.”
Afghanistan
Daily
Caller: Supposedly ‘Decimated’ Al-Qaida Spreading Like Wildfire Across
Afghanistan
“U.S. officials now admit they are hunting al-Qaida in new Afghan
provinces, after nearly a decade of referring to the group as
‘decimated.’‘Al Qaeda’s core leadership has been decimated,’ President
Obama roundly declared at his foreign policy debate with then-Republican
presidential nominee Mitt Romney in 2012. The U.S. Department of State
even claimed al-Qaida was ‘severely degraded’ in its 2016 country report
on terrorism. The military is now hunting al-Qaida leaders in seven
different provinces, indicating a high level of growth since the U.S.
invasion in 2001, Commander of all U.S. forces in Afghanistan Army
Gen. John Nicholson admitted to reporters yesterday.”
Egypt
Associated
Press: Islamic State Militants Kills 5 Civilians In Egypt's Sinai
“Egyptian officials say Islamic State militants have killed five
Egyptian civilians and dumped their bodies, wearing orange jumpsuits, in
a restive corner of the Sinai Peninsula. They say two of the men
were beheaded and the others shot in the head over accusations they had
collaborated with the Egyptian army, which is fighting the insurgents in
the area around the city of Rafah and the town of Sheikh Zuweid, where
the bodies were found. The officials spoke on condition of anonymity
because they weren't authorized to release the information to
journalists. The army has been battling militants in the area for years,
with hundreds of casualties on both sides. The army often claims it has
killed dozens of militants. Journalists are banned from the area.”
Middle
East
The
Jerusalem Post: Majority Of Palestinians Oppose Suspension Of Elections
“An overwhelming majority of Palestinians opposes the Palestinian
Authority High Court’s decision to suspend municipal elections that were
supposed to take place on October 8 in the West Bank and Gaza, a new
public opinion poll has found. The Arab World for Research and
Development (AWRAD) conducted a poll between September 18-21 on the PA
court’s decision, sampling 1,200 persons from the West Bank and Gaza.
Sixty-eight percent of Palestinians, 66% of West Bank and 72% of Gaza
Palestinians said they oppose the High Court’s decision. AWRAD president
Nader Said told The Jerusalem Post that most Palestinians opposed
suspending the elections because they are particularly concerned about
daily issues and services such as water, electricity and general
infrastructure.”
Libya
The
Wall Street Journal: U.S., U.K. Diplomats Meet Libyan Militias To Restart
Oil Exports
“The latest ominous sign for global oil prices: Western officials are
pushing for Libya to boost oil exports, part of an effort to help the
country fund its fight against Islamic State. In recent weeks,
diplomats from the U.S. and U.K. have met with Libyan militia officials
to urge them to restart crude shipments from long-closed ports, militia
and Western officials said. The meetings with a convalescing militia
leader in Istanbul and his rivals in Tunis, Tunisia, seem to have paid
off; Libya resumed shipments from a formerly blockaded port last week.
Now, those shipments are roiling the world crude market, undermining the
Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries’ attempt to curtail an
oil glut.”
Nigeria
CNN:
Missing Chibok Girls' Parents React To New Boko Haram Video
“Boko Haram's Abubakar Shekau seems to be the proverbial cat with the
nine lives, given the number of times the Nigerian army has claimed to
have killed or ‘fatally wounded’ him. The seemingly indestructible Boko
Haram leader was back again on Sunday in a video this time mocking not
only the Nigerian army who he urged to ‘die with envy’ but also the parents
of the abducted Chibok girls and the Bring Back our Girls movement. ‘To
the people of Chibok: there's still a long way to go,’ he says towards
the end of the nearly 40-minute long video. ‘There's still more to do by
Bring Back Our Girls. We don't (bring) back your girls. If you want your
girls, bring back our brethren. Bring back our brethren.’”
BBC:
The Six Lives Of Boko Haram's Abubakar Shekau
“Cheta Nwanze, Security Expert and Founder of SBM Intelligence,
believes that the extremist group uses the Shekau brand name as a
convenient and recognizable moniker to get their information out. He says
the Nigerian military's focus should lie on communicating real tangible
victories in the fight against the Islamist insurgency. ‘There is no
doubt that the Nigerian military is winning and will win the fight again
Boko Haram, but communication needs to be handled better. These claims of
death and disclaims by Shekau damage the credibility of the military.
This is a guerrilla warfare not a conventional battle and communication is
important. The real tangible victories being made should be focused on
and announced.’”
Germany
CNBC:
Right-Wing Extremism Is Hitting The German Economy
“A rise in right-wing extremism is posing a serious threat to the economy
in East Germany, according to a government report. One such industry
affected is tourism. The Dresden marketing organization told CNBC via
telephone that domestic visitor numbers, based on overnight stays in the
city, were down 3.7 percent year on year in the period of January to July
2016. This is a significant amount when you take into consideration that
domestic holidaymakers account for 80 percent of the total tourism in
Germany, according to the German National Tourist Board (GNTB). The
visitor drop in Dresden was partly blamed on xenophobic statements made
during Pegida demonstrations. Pegida is a far right, anti-immigration
group originating in Dresden.”
France
Reuters:
French Shooting Does Not Appear To Be Terror Act: Spokeswoman
“A man who opened fire near a supermarket west of Paris and seriously
injured two people is an incident not at first sight considered to be a
possible act of terrorism, said a spokeswoman for the Versailles public
prosecutor's office. The spokeswoman said the man, believed to be in his
60s, went back to his home and elite police were now at the building. The
incident happened near a supermarket in Port-Marly, about 20 km or so
west of Paris. ‘He went home and the RAID (elite police unit) is readying
for negotiations with him,’ said the spokeswoman.”
The
Atlantic: What Would It Mean For France To Accommodate Muslims?
“Last year, a distinguished French philosopher named Pierre Manent attempted
to offer an answer in a book-length essay, Beyond Radical Secularism. He
began writing after the Charlie Hebdo attacks in January 2015, and
published just before the atrocious mass murders of November 2015. The
book was very widely debated and discussed in France. Americans may have
more trouble assimilating it, because of its very French style. Beyond
Radical Secularism is a book of bold assertions and heroic
generalizations. We flinch from those on the western side of the Atlantic
(if I may hazard a bold assertion and heroic generalization of my own).
But if we flinch in this case, we’ll miss something important—not only to
our French friends and partners, but to ourselves.”
Reuters:
Calais Migrant Camp Demolition Raises Child Trafficking Fears, U.N. Says
“Lone children living in the shanty town near Calais are likely to go
missing or risk being trafficked when France dismantles the migrant camp,
the United Nations said on Monday, urging authorities to speed up the
reunion of children with families in Britain. The U.N. children's
agency, UNICEF, said it was concerned for the safety and future of
unaccompanied minors living in the so-called ‘jungle’ camp, on the
outskirts of the northern French port town. ‘Before the bulldozers arrive,
there must be robust plans to safeguard the hundreds of unaccompanied
children currently stranded in the camp,’ said Lily Caprani, UNICEF UK's
Deputy Executive Director. Clashes with police broke out in February when
authorities began evicting refugees from the southern part of the camp.”
Europe
Newsweek:
Spanish Police Arrest Two Moroccans Accused Of Plotting Isis Attack In
Europe
“Spanish police have detained two Moroccan nationals on suspicion of
aiding the Islamic State militant group (ISIS) and planning an attack on
European soil, the Interior Ministry announced Monday. The ministry said
that one of the pair had traveled to Turkey to meet an ISIS member near
the Syrian border, where he had received training and planned to return
to Europe to carry out an attack. He had also planned to join the radical
Islamist group, it added. Turkish police arrested the unidentified
suspect before returning him to Spanish authorities. Upon his release, he
continued to work towards joining ISIS. The ministry did not specify how
long the suspect was held in Spanish custody before his release.”
The
Jerusalem Post: 'Axing Hamas From EU Terror List Would Be Lowest Point
For European Jews Since Holocaust'
“ One of the largest Jewish umbrella organizations in Europe has
condemned the EU's top court for moving toward the removal of Hamas from
the bloc's terrorism blacklist. European Jewish Congress (EJC) on Monday
berated last week's recommendation by a top legal advisor for the
European Court of Justice in favor of taking Hamas off of the EU's terror
list, and effectively unfreezing the Palestinian movement's currently
sanctioned assets. ‘If Hamas is indeed removed from the terror watch
list, then this will be the lowest and most worrying point for European
Jewry in 70 years,’ stated EJC President Dr. Moshe Kantor in reference to
the period since the Holocaust. On Thursday, European Court of
Justice advocate-general Eleanor Sharpston argued that the placement of
Hamas, along with the Sri Lankan Tamil Tigers, on the EU blacklist had
been decided without sufficient, independent evidence.”
Associated
Press: EU Launches Large Cash Aid Project For Refugees In Turkey
“The European Union on Monday launched a 348 million-euro ($391
million) aid project to help up to a million of the most vulnerable
refugees in Turkey — part of a landmark EU deal with Turkey aimed at
curbing the flow of migrants to Europe. The refugees, living outside of
camps, are to receive debit cards that will allow them to buy their own
food and pay for other basic needs. The cards would be topped up monthly,
with payments dependent on the size and needs of the families. The
program has been billed as the EU's largest humanitarian program. ‘I am
here today in person to demonstrate that the EU stands with Turkey, ‘said
EU Humanitarian Aid and Crisis Management Commissioner Christos
Stylianides at the program's launch. ‘An unprecedented crisis requires an
unprecedented response,’ Stylianides said. ‘We are launching a
ground-breaking humanitarian program to respond to this crisis.’”
ISIS
Almowaten:
Iraq: Eight ISIS Members Flee With 600 Million Dinars
“Eight employees at ISIS's "Zakat Chamber" reportedly
vanished, coinciding with the disappearance of 600 million Iraqi dinars
($515,000). The incident occurred in the district of Hawija, west of
Kirkuk. The employees vanished on Sunday under mysterious circumstances.
Inspections and raids on their homes turned up nothing, amid strong
suspicions that the employees took the money with them and fled out of
Hawija.”
Voice
Of Iraq: Iraq: ISIS Destroyed More Than 17,000 Homes In Salahuddin
Province
“On Monday, the governor of Salahuddin, Ahmed al-Jubouri, revealed
that more than 17,000 homes were devastated in the province after ISIS's
occupation of cities and regions there. Al-Jubouri claimed in his speech
during the opening of Iraq's Show for the Reconstruction of Liberated
Cities, at Baghdad's International Fair that "more than 17,000 homes
have been destroyed in cities and villages, and this necessitates a huge
effort for the reconstruction of what was ruined, with the aim of
returning the displaced persons {to their homes}." He added:
"We have many factories and plants which came to a standstill
because of ISIS." The governor also outlined for "international
organizations and the central government the need to intensify efforts
and support the liberated areas, which were heavily damaged during the
rule of ISIS gangs. This prompted thousands of families to flee from
ISIS's severe oppression.”
Muslim
Brotherhood
Constitution:
1 Billion Egyptian Pounds Per Year – Muslim Brotherhood Revenues From
Membership Fees
“The value of Muslim Brotherhood membership fees - which are the No. 1
article in the group's budget – comes to roughly 1 billion Egyptian
pounds per year ($113.6 million). This is paid by some 400,000 regular
members, according to the group's last internal census published in 2008.
The value of the monthly membership fees was set by the group at 8% of
the gross monthly income of each member. The fee is paid on the 1st of
each month. Given the income disparities between members of the group and
sometimes even {fluctuations} in the monthly income of the same member,
the value of the monthly membership fees also varies. However, a simple
calculation indicates that the average monthly fee per member comes to
200 pounds ($22.7). If students and the poor are excluded {from the
statistics}, the group's annual income is worth 80 million pounds ($ 9.1
million), nearly 1 billion pounds per annum – a fixed income for the
group from membership fees alone.”
Albawabh
News: Expert: Muslim Brotherhood Has Strengthened Its Presence In Britain
Through Universities
“Dr. Mohammad Al Bishari, Chairman of the Institute of Ibn Sina and
Secretary General of the European Islamic Centre (EIC), stated:
"The Muslim Brotherhood has succeeded in consolidating its presence
in British society through activities of dozens of professors belonging
to the group in local universities. The majority of them are Iraqi,
Syrian, Sudanese and Malaysian nationals, while others belong to the
Islamic Group in Pakistan. Just a handful of them are Egyptians."
France-based Al Bishari, in a statement to Albawabh News, asserted that
the group has exploited the British law in this field, which allows the
presence of leaders affiliated with the Brotherhood's international
organization in British universities. He stressed that these professors
have organized Islamic associations in universities, which allow them to
hold seminars and conferences with the participation of
Brotherhood-affiliated students.”
Sada
Elbalad: Six Muslim Brotherhood Suspects Detained On Charges Of Wreaking
Havoc On The Egyptian Public Transport Authority
“The Public Prosecutor decided to detain six suspects belonging to the
Muslim Brotherhood for 15 days pending investigations. The detainees, who
are employed by the Egyptian Public Transport Authority, face charges of
attempting to wreak havoc and incite against the State. They are
suspected of inciting Transport Authority employees to protest.
Authorities suspect the detainees tried to create turmoil in this
government agency concurrent with the first day of the school year.”
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