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Eye on Extremism
October 18, 2016
Counter
Extremism Project
Financial
Times: Social Media: Challenging The Jihadi Narrative
"Western governments have criticised social media platforms
incuding Facebook, YouTube and Twitter for being low to stop the spread
of terrorist material. But few critics have as much technical expertise
as Hany Farid, a professor of computer science at Dartmouth College in
the US. Mr Farid developed an algorithm to detct child pornography, work
that is being adapted to curb the proliferation of terrorist videos. "Consciously,
the tech companies know what is happening on their networks. They are not
dumb," he says. "They are choosing not to do something about
it."
Fox
News: Cavuto: Coast To Coast
“CEP Spokesperson Tara Maller is interviewed by host Neil Cavuto
regarding the CIA's determination that Russia has been behind recent
cyber attacks in the U.S. and what that determination means for future
relations between the two countries.”
CNN:
Battle For Mosul Begins With Gunfire And Car Bombs
“Two years ago, Iraqi soldiers in Mosul threw down their weapons and
fled the city in terror as armed militants overran the streets under the
banner of the emerging threat of ISIS. On Monday, invigorated Iraqi
forces and their allies started back down the road to Mosul to try to
reclaim the largest city under ISIS control and its last remaining
stronghold in Iraq. The forces got a taste of what's to come. The
94,000-member Iraqi-led coalition greatly outnumbers its opponents and
has the benefit of air support from roughly 90 coalition and Iraqi
planes. Why the battle for Mosul matters in the fight against ISIS.”
The
New York Times: Why Mosul Is Critical In The Battle Against ISIS
“Iraqi security forces and Kurdish pesh merga fighters have begun an
assault to dislodge Islamic State militants from the city of Mosul. Here
are some reasons the city is strategically and symbolically vital.
Population: Mosul, once home to more than two million residents, was the
biggest prize captured by the Islamic State. It gave the group its best
claim to legitimacy as an Islamic caliphate, and it has been its most
vital source of tax revenue and forced labor. Relief: If recaptured, the
city could eventually welcome back hundreds of thousands of people who
were displaced. It is also where hundreds of enslaved Yazidi women and
children are thought to be held. Culture: Mosul is an ancient Assyrian
city and a vital center of antiquities and historical sites threatened by
the Islamic State, also known as ISIS, ISIL or Daesh.”
Reuters:
Afghan Troops Blunt Taliban Offensive Outside Helmand Capital, Officials
Say
“Afghan government troops say they have fought Taliban forces to a
standstill outside the capital of southern Helmand province, but the city
remains surrounded after the insurgents launched one of their most brazen
offensives. A center of illicit opium production as well as a traditional
Taliban stronghold, Helmand has been one of the areas that suffered the most
violence in the insurgents' battle to topple the Western-backed
government in Kabul. In recent weeks, Taliban fighters battled their way
into the outskirts of Lashkar Gah, the provincial capital, in an attack
that was only blunted after hundreds of Afghan commandos were airlifted
into the area.”
BBC:
Yemen Conflict: Truce To Start On Thursday, Says UN Envoy
“A 72-hour truce in conflict-ravaged Yemen is set to begin on
Thursday, the UN special envoy has announced. Ismail Ould Cheikh Ahmed said
he had received assurances from all Yemeni parties for such a move.
Yemeni President Abdrabbuh Mansour Hadi's forces have been fighting
Houthi rebels, who control the capital Sanaa. Mr Ahmed's announcement
follows international alarm over the deaths of 140 people in a Saudi
airstrike which hit a funeral gathering in Sanaa. Saudi officials say the
airstrike in the capital earlier this month should have hit Houthi rebel
leaders, but erroneous intelligence meant that the wrong site was
targeted. The US, Britain and the UN peace envoy to Yemen have all been
urging warring parties in the country's civil war to declare an immediate
ceasefire.”
The
Jerusalem Post: Report: Hamas Launches Long-Range Rocket Into
Mediterranean Sea
“The Gaza-based terrorist organization Hamas on Monday test-fired at
least one longrange missile into the Mediterranean Sea, according to a
Channel 2 report. Residents situated in Israel’s southern communities
reported hearing an explosion following the event, the report added.
Hamas frequently launches rockets into the sea, honing its technological
capabilities for a possible future confrontation with Israel. Palestinian
terrorists often shoot rockets into Israeli territory as well, with a
number landing in residential areas located primarily in the South.
Earlier this month, Palestinian terrorists in Gaza fired two rockets at
Sderot, setting off air raid sirens and narrowly missing homes. The
rockets exploded in a road in the southern town, failing to cause
physical injuries, but sending one local resident into shock.”
Voice
Of America: Rival Governments Vie For Control Of Libya
“Tensions reached a boiling point in the Libyan capital Monday, as
rival militia groups waged a low-level turf war in a political battle
between the U.N.-backed ‘national unity’ government of Fayez al-Sarraj
and the unrecognized, Islamist-supported government of Khalifa Ghweil.
The ‘unity’ government continued to hold one of the seats of power at the
Rixos Hotel, which the country's former legislative body, the General
National Council, also considers to be its headquarters. Militia forces
loyal to Ghweil, who call themselves the Presidential Guard, seized other
government buildings over the weekend. Libyan TV broadcast a statement by
members of the guard, saying they support Ghweil and the GNC and
asserting the unity government is an attempt to place Libya under a new
military dictatorship.”
Reuters:
Refugee From Iraq Pleads Guilty In U.S. To Attempting To Join Islamic
State
“An Iraqi-born man who entered the United States as a refugee pleaded
guilty on Monday in Texas to attempting to volunteer to fight with
Islamic State, federal prosecutors said. Omar Faraj Saeed Al-Hardan, 24,
pleaded guilty in a federal court in Houston to one count of attempting
to provide material support, specifically himself, to the militant group,
the U.S. Attorney's Office for the southern district of Texas said in a
statement. Al-Hardan, who most recently lived in Houston, faces up to 20
years in prison when he is sentenced on Jan. 17, prosecutors said. The
case comes during a U.S. presidential race in which the question of
admitting refugees from the Middle East, especially Syria, has become a
point of contention between the two leading candidates.”
New
York Daily News: Two Wisconsin Men Arrested For Trying To Join ISIS,
Travel To Syria
“Two blood-thirsty Wisconsin men "tired of living under the
infidel's system" have been busted for trying to join ISIS by
traveling through Mexico to Syria, authorities said. Jason Ludke, 35, and
Yosvany Padilla-Conde, 30, both of Milwaukee, outlined their plan to join
the brutal Islamic State group in Facebook conversations and emails sent
to an undercover FBI agent, a criminal complaint obtained by the Daily
News shows.”
NPR:
Europe Wakes Up To Prospect Of Female Terrorists
“The terrorist attacks in Paris and Brussels over the last two years
have been carried out by male citizens of France and Belgium who had been
radicalized by ISIS. But Europe is now waking up to the prospect of
female terrorists. In the most recent attempted attack, in September,
four women tried to blow up a car filled with gas canisters in central
Paris. Two of them were teenagers. ‘Most of the women who radicalize have
had some sort of trauma in their lives,’ says Fouad Saanadi, the imam at
a French government-supported de-radicalization center in the city of
Bordeaux. Here, at an unpublished address behind heavy, locked doors,
psychologists and counselors try to get through to youths being seduced
by ISIS propaganda. Saanadi says half of the 33 people they are currently
counseling are women. ‘They've nearly all been a victim of violence or
have been raped or have been marginalized in some way. This makes them
more vulnerable to ISIS' messages of a utopian society and revenge
against the West,’ he says.”
United
States
Fox
News: US Airstrikes Against ISIS In Libya Doubled In Less Than A Month
“The U.S. military has ramped up airstrikes against the Islamic State
in Libya--doubling the number of strikes there in less than a
month--according to the latest statistics provided by the U.S. military's
Africa Command, which leads the operation. As of Monday, there have been
324 airstrikes in Libya, a majority from drones and others from U.S.
Marine Corps jets and attack helicopters stationed aboard a US Navy
warship off the Libyan coast. There were 161 US airstrikes against ISIS
in Libya on September 21, according to the U.S. Africa Command. The U.S.
military has been carrying out airstrikes in Libya since August 1, in
support of the UN-backed Government of National Accord, or GNA based in
Tripoli.”
Syria
Reuters:
Coalition Warplanes Kill 20 Islamic State Militants In Syria: Turkish
Army
“United States-led coalition warplanes killed 20 Islamic State
militants in Syria over the last 24 hours, the Turkish military said on
Tuesday, nearly two months into a Turkey-backed rebel operation to drive
the jihadists away from the border. Turkey pushed on with the Syrian
operation as Iraqi forces launched a U.S.-backed offensive to expel
Islamic State (IS) from the northern Iraqi city of Mosul. The 11
coalition air strikes in Syria targeted the areas of Kar Kalbayn, Ghuz,
Hassajik and Tiltanah and destroyed two IS defensive positions and three
vehicles, the army statement. Separately, Turkish warplanes also carried out
air strikes and destroyed several IS targets, it said. Since the
Turkey-backed operation, dubbed 'Euphrates Shield', was launched on Aug.
24, the rebel forces have seized control of some 1,240 square kilometers
(479 square miles) territory from the jihadists, according to the
statement.”
Reuters:
Russia, Syria Stopped Airstrikes On Aleppo At 0700 GMT - Russian Defence
Minister
“Russian Defence Minister Sergei Shoigu said on Tuesday that Russian
and Syrian air forces had stopped airstrikes on Aleppo from 1000 local
time (0700 GMT), ahead of the announced ‘humanitarian pause’ scheduled
for Oct. 20. Russia's Defence Ministry said on Monday that a pause in
strikes on Syria's largest city would be in force on Thursday, from 0800
(0500 GMT) until 1600, to allow civilians and rebels to leave the city.
Military experts will meet in Geneva on Wednesday to begin work on
separating ‘terrorists’ from Syria's opposition, Russia's state Rossiya
24 channel showed Shoigu saying.”
BBC:
Syria War: Russia Announces Aleppo Humanitarian Pause
“Russia has announced a ‘humanitarian pause’ in its bombing of the
Syrian city of Aleppo. Moscow said it would halt operations in Aleppo on
Thursday for an eight-hour span between 08:00 (05:00 GMT) and 16:00. The
Russian defence ministry said the pause was agreed so that civilians and
rebels could leave the city. But UN agencies say at least 12 hours will
be needed for that to happen. ‘We would welcome any pause in the
fighting, but there is a need for a longer pause in order to get the aid
in,’ said UN spokesman Stephane Dujarric. Russia's announcement came on
the day 14 members of one family were reportedly killed in a strike in
Aleppo.”
The
Washington Post: Russian Air Defense Raises Stakes Of U.S. Confrontation
In Syria
“Russia’s completion this month of an integrated air defense system in
Syria has made an Obama administration decision to strike Syrian government
installations from the air even less likely than it has been for years,
and has created a substantial obstacle to the Syrian safe zones both
Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump have advocated. Deployment of mobile and
interchangeable S-400 and S-300 missile batteries, along with other
short-range systems, now gives Russia the ability to shoot down planes
and cruise missiles over at least 250 miles in all directions from
western Syria, covering virtually all of that country as well as
significant portions of Turkey, Israel, Jordan and the eastern
Mediterranean.”
Iraq
The
Wall Street Journal: Iraqi Forces Advance To Edges Of ISIS-Held Mosul
“Kurdish and Iraqi forces captured 17 villages around Mosul on Monday,
Iraq’s military said, but Islamic State slowed their advance with heavy
mortar fire that signaled a potentially fierce battle for the militant
group’s last major stronghold in Iraq. The first day of the high-stakes
fight for Iraq’s second-largest city—located near the Syrian and Turkish
borders—began at dawn with an announcement from Iraqi Prime Minister
Haider al-Abadi. The military campaign could take weeks. Columns of
Kurdish Peshmerga fighters moved from bases east of Mosul in tanks and
armored vehicles, followed by engineers in bulldozers who built berms to
defend the captured villages.”
Reuters:
Iraq Launches Mosul Offensive To Drive Out Islamic State
“Iraqi government forces launched a U.S.-backed offensive on Monday to
drive Islamic State from the northern city of Mosul, a high-stakes battle
to retake the militants' last major stronghold in the country. Two years
after the jihadists seized the city of 1.5 million people and declared a
caliphate from there encompassing tracts of Iraq and Syria, a force of
some 30,000 Iraqi and Kurdish Peshmerga forces and Sunni tribal fighters
began to advance. Helicopters released flares and explosions could be
heard on the city's eastern front, where Reuters watched Kurdish fighters
move forward to take outlying villages. A U.S.-led air campaign has
helped push Islamic State from much of the territory it held but 4,000 to
8,000 fighters are thought to remain in Mosul. The Pentagon said that
Iraqi forces were meeting objectives and were ahead of schedule on the
first day of the offensive.”
Turkey
Reuters:
Turkish Military Says Syrian Border Security Largely Achieved With Dabiq
Seizure
“Turkey-backed Syrian rebels seized control of nine areas, including
the village of Dabiq, from Islamic State on Sunday, largely achieving
border security between the Turkish towns of Kilis and Karkamis, the
country's military said on Monday. Taking control of Dabiq had eliminated
the threat to Turkey from rockets fired by the jihadists, the Turkish
Armed Forces said in a written statement. It said that in the last 24
hours of clashes, nine Turkey-backed rebels were killed and 24 were
wounded while ‘many’ Islamic State fighters were killed. The operation,
dubbed ‘Euphrates Shield’ was launched in late August. The Syrian rebels,
backed by Turkish tanks and warplanes, said they had taken Dabiq after
clashes on Sunday morning, forcing Islamic State from a stronghold where
it had promised to fight a final, apocalyptic battle with the West.”
Reuters:
Turkish Capital Bans Public Meetings Due To Militant Attack Fears
“Authorities in the Turkish capital Ankara have banned public meetings
and marches until the end of November after receiving intelligence that
militants were planning attacks in the city, which has been targeted with
bombings over the past year. The ruling, announced by the Ankara
governor's office, came as Turkey pursued a near two-month-old military
operation in Syria in support of rebels to drive Islamic State militants
away from its southern border. Islamic State and Kurdish militants have
carried out attacks in the capital. This month two suspected Kurdistan
Workers Party (PKK) members believed to be planning a car bomb attack
blew themselves up in a standoff with police in Ankara. ‘Based on
intelligence received by our governorship, it has been determined that
illegal terror groups are aiming to carry out attacks in our province and
have made some preparations,’ the governor's office said in a statement
on its website.”
Reuters:
Turkey Says Ready For 'Hundreds Of Thousands' Who May Flee Mosul
“Turkey is ready for hundreds of thousands of refugees from the Iraqi
city of Mosul if a U.S.-backed operation to drive out Islamic State fuels
sectarian violence, Deputy Prime Minister Numan Kurtulmus said on Monday.
Iraqi government forces, with air and ground support from the U.S.-led
coalition, launched the long-anticipated offensive early on Monday to
push the jihadist group out of Mosul, its last major stronghold in Iraq.
Turkey has repeatedly said that letting Shi'ite militias, which the Iraqi
army has relied on in the past, take part in the assault on the mainly
Sunni Arab city could spark sectarian violence. ‘If the Mosul operation
is handled correctly, there won't be a refugee wave into Turkey,’ Turkish
Deputy Prime Minister Numan Kurtulmus told a news conference in Ankara.”
Afghanistan
The
Guardian: Taliban And Afghanistan Restart Secret Talks In Qatar
“The Taliban and representatives of the Afghan government have
restarted secret talks in the Gulf state of Qatar, senior sources within
the insurgency and the Kabul government have told the Guardian. Among
those present at the meetings held in September and October was Mullah
Abdul Manan Akhund, brother of Mullah Omar, the former Taliban chief who
led the movement from its earliest days until his death in 2013. The two
rounds of talks are the first known negotiations to have taken place
since a Pakistan-brokered process entirely broke down following the death
in a US drone strike of Omar’s successor, Mullah Akhtar Mansoor.”
Yemen
CNN:
Yemen Ceasefire Set To Last For 72 Hours
A 72-hour ceasefire between opposing forces in Yemen is set to begin
this week. Ismail Ould Cheikh Ahmed, United Nations Special Envoy for
Yemen, announced that a break from fighting between a pro-Yemeni
coalition led by Saudi forces and Houthi rebels would begin just before
midnight Wednesday -- at 23:59 local time. According to Ahmed, the
ceasefire terms call for humanitarian workers to have ‘free and
unhindered access’ so they can bring supplies to all parts of Yemen.
‘[It] will spare the Yemeni people further bloodshed,’ Ahmed said.
Saudi
Arabia
Reuters:
Saudi Arabia Says Prepared For Ceasefire In Yemen If Houthis Agree
“Saudi Arabia is prepared to agree to a ceasefire in Yemen if the
Iran-allied Houthis agree, Saudi Foreign Minister Adel al-Jubeir said on
Monday, adding that he was skeptical about efforts for peace after
previous ceasefire attempts had failed. The Saudi-led military campaign
in Yemen has faced heavy criticism since an air strike this month on a
funeral gathering in the Yemeni capital Sanaa that killed 140 people
according to a United Nations' estimate and 82 according to the Houthis.
The United States and Britain, which have both supported the Saudi-led
campaign, called on Sunday for an immediate and unconditional ceasefire
between Houthis and the Saudi-backed, internationally recognized
government.”
Egypt
The
Guardian: 'No End In Sight': Detention Wears On For American Who Ran
Egypt Children's Clinic
“For two years after she was arrested, Aya Hijazi refused to give up
hope that Egypt’s courts would let her, an American who ran a child
welfare clinic, go free to reunite with her family. Nine hundred days
after her arrest, she has started to lose that hope. ‘In the first year
and a half, she had taken it with a lot of grace,’ said her sister, Alaa.
‘After she hit the two-year mark, five-month mark, she’s been despondent.
She’s feeling no certainty or end in sight.’ The whole family has felt
the toll. Their mother recently became bedridden, Alaa said, adding: ‘I
wake with nightmares sometimes, in a panic. You never think that something
like this could happen.’”
Middle
East
The
Times Of Israel: Israeli Bus Driver Lightly Injured In West Bank
Rock-Throwing
“An Israeli bus driver was lightly injured Monday night when rocks
were hurled at his vehicle near the West Bank settlement of Beitar Illit,
west of Bethlehem. The man, around 35 years old, was hit in the face by
broken glass shards, and received bruises to his back as well. Magen
David Adom paramedics who arrived at the scene took the man to a Jerusalem
hospital to receive further treatment. The rock-thrower has not been
caught. Recent days have seen several attacks and violent incidents in
the West Bank and Jerusalem.”
Libya
Reuters:
Tensions High In Libya's Capital As Faction Challenges U.N.-Backed
Government
“Libyan armed brigades allied with rival political leaders in Tripoli
have exchanged sporadic gunfire and set up checkpoints in areas they
control, challenging the authority of the United Nations-backed
government. Opponents of the U.N.-supported Government of National Unity
(GNA) defied it on Friday by taking over a parliamentary building and
demanding a new government, triggering a standoff among rival brigades
operating in the city. Since a 2011 uprising toppled autocrat Muammar
Gaddafi, Libya has fallen into factional fighting among battalions of
former rebels who have turned against one another, backing competing
political leaders in a struggle for control.”
Nigeria
USA
Today: Girls Freed From Boko Haram Reunited With Families
“The 21 girls who were rescued last week after being kidnapped by the
militant group Boko Haram more than two years ago have been reunited with
their families. They were among more than 200 students taken from their
school in the northeastern Nigerian town of Chibok by the extremists in
April 2014, sparking the global ‘Bring Back Our Girls’ social media
campaign. Speaking at a ceremony in the capital Abuja on Sunday, one of
the girls said they were starved, the BBC reported. Many were forced to
convert from Christianity to Islam. The negotiations for the girls’
release were brokered by the International Red Cross and the
Swiss government.”
Germany
Deutsche
Welle: At Least Two Dead, Two Missing And Several Injured After Explosion
At BASF Facility In Ludwigshafen, Germany
“At least two people are dead, two others are missing and several
severely injured following the explosion and fire on Monday at
the world's largest chemicals company, BASF, in western Germany.
Police called on residents in Ludwigshafen, where the BASF complex
is located, and the nearby city of Mannheim to stay indoors and suggested
they close all windows and doors and shut down
air-conditioning. They said they didn't know which chemicals exactly
could be airborne within the plume of smoke rising from the accident
site. The city of Ludwigshafen reported on Twitter that residents
located near the plant were complaining of ‘respiratory irritation.’ The
company said it is still seeking to determine the exact cause of the
blast. However, officials have said they ruled out terrorism.”
Europe
The
Wall Street Journal: Mosul Offensive Highlights Risk Of Fighters Fleeing
To Europe
“European counterterrorism officials have been warning for weeks about
the risk of an influx of foreign fighters following the campaign to
recapture Mosul, but Turkish officials said their military advance into
Syria has cut off the easiest route to Europe. Counterterrorism officials
said Monday they remain watchful and it is too soon to tell exactly what
the impact of Iraq’s Mosul offensive will be. But U.S. and European
officials said they have not changed their assessment that as Islamic
State loses territory, young men who traveled from Europe to fight with
the group will seek to return. ‘The Mosul attack may inspire radical
people to act or eventually return more fighters to Europe,’ said a U.S.
official.”
International
Business Times: Where Is ISIS In Europe 2016: Vienna Muslim Teens Have
'High' Risk Of Being Radicalized For Terrorism In Austria
“Is Vienna the next European capital at risk for domestic terrorism? A
‘high proportion’ of Muslim teenagers there are at risk of being
radicalized, according to a study released Monday by the Austrian capital
city. A total of 401 local teens surveyed were sorted into three groups:
‘vulnerable’, ‘ambivalent’ and ‘moderates.’ More than 200 of them were
Muslims aged between 14 and 24-years-old, according to Ken Güngör, the
author of the study. Twenty seven percent of the Muslim teenagers
showed strong sympathy for jihadism as well as violent and
anti-Western thinking. Güngör looked at factors that could
increase the risk of radicalization including religion, friends, migrant
experience and sex. ‘Radicalization is a male problem,’ Güngör
concluded. A ‘small and dangerous group’ of youths are already
radicalized and it’s too late to try and reach them via youth and social
workers, he added.”
ISIS
Alsumaria
News: ISIS Money Moved Out Of Mosul
“According to a local source in Nineveh province on Monday,
medium-sized trucks have transferred vast sums of money from Mosul-based
banks and ISIS headquarters to an unknown destination amid extremely
tight security. The source added that "the refrigerated trucks were
under strict protection after finance houses and banks were emptied. The
money was being transferred to an unknown destination, amid unconfirmed
reports that the vehicles used shortcuts on the outskirts of Mosul to
drive towards the Syrian city of Raqqa.”
Combating
the Financing of Terrorism
Al
Quds Al-Arabi: Egypt: President El-Sisi's Brother To Lead Efforts To
Combat The Financing Of Terrorism
“Sherif Ismail, Egyptian Prime Minister, issued a decree to form the
Board of Trustees of the Unit for Combating Money Laundering and
Terrorist Financing. It will be headed by Judge Ahmed Saeed Hussain
Khalil al-Sisi, Vice-President of the Court of Cassation, and President
Abdel Fattah al-Sisi's brother. The Unit for Combating Money Laundering
and Terrorist Financing (The Egyptian Financial Investigation Unit),
which is affiliated with the Council of Ministers, was established under
the Anti-Money Laundering Act No. 80 of 2002. The aim of the Unit is to
improve the fight against money laundering and terror financing by all
financial institutions operating in Egypt. The Unit receives
notifications from financial institutions, and then examines and investigates
them in coordination with the competent authorities.”
Muslim
Brotherhood
Shorouk
News: Lawsuit To Cancel Writing-Off Of Muslim Brotherhood NGO Postponed
To January 2017
“Egypt's Administrative Court, headed by Judge Sami Abdel Hamid,
Deputy Chairman of the State Council Club, ruled to postpone the lawsuit
filed by Osman Anani, legal counsel of the Muslim Brotherhood Society.
The lawsuit calls to halt the implementation of an earlier decision
issued by the Prime Minister and the Minister of Solidarity to dissolve
and write off the Muslim Brotherhood NGO. Decision No. 644 of 2013 was
published by the Ministry of Solidarity. The next session {of the
Administrative Court} will be held on January 1st, 2017.”
Albawabh
News: Egypt Demands Freeze On Funds And Extradition Of Brotherhood
Leaders Who Fled Abroad
“Adel Fahmy, Egypt's Assistant Minister of Justice for International
Cooperation Affairs, disclosed that Cairo had contacted several countries
and international organizations demanding the extradition of 130
terrorists who fled to Qatar and Turkey. He stressed that all of them
belong to the Muslim Brotherhood. They were convicted on charges mainly
related to inciting demonstrations and gatherings aimed at wreaking havoc
and disrupting public order. A judicial source added that over the past
few months the International Cooperation {department} has renewed its
request, via diplomatic channels of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, to
hand over 53 fugitive Brotherhood leaders currently residing in several
countries. Egypt claims these leaders have contributed substantially to
the financing of the recent terrorist operations that took place in
Egypt. Cairo also demanded a freeze on their money in foreign banks and a
ban on the sale of their property, in an effort to dry up the sources of
terrorism.”
The
Seventh Day: Egypt: MP Submits Draft Legislation To Confiscate Muslim
Brotherhood Money And Property
“Egyptian MP Amin Massoud pledged he would propose a draft law to
confiscate money and property owned by the Muslim Brotherhood. Massoud
emphasized that this "rogue group uses its funds for carrying out
its despicable terrorist acts against our children, our armed forces and
our brave national police.”
Elbalad:
Egypt: Appeal Against Extended Detention Of Brotherhood Businessman
Hassan Malek Turned Down
“Cairo Criminal Court, headed by Judge Hassan Farid, rejected an
appeal by Muslim Brotherhood-affiliated businessman Hassan Malek
regarding the decision to renew his confinement for 45 days. He is
accused of harming homeland security and the national economy. The
Prosecution hurled several charges at Malek, including crimes of
endangering the nation's security and undermining its economic
foundations. He is also accused of meeting with fugitive leaders of the
Muslim Brotherhood to discuss a scheme to preserve the sources of funding
of the group, as part of a plot to harm Egypt's economy.”
Hamas
Raya:
Hamas Received $ 25 Million From Iran
“Director of the Centre for Arab & Iranian Studies in London, Dr.
Ali Reza Nourizadeh, claimed that last May Hamas received $ 25 million
from Iran. Nourizadeh added that Iran's support for Hamas, despite a
major erosion in their relations, goes on from time to time through
leaders of the {Palestinian} movement who still maintain strong ties with
Tehran. However, Nourizadeh stressed that {continuation of} this support
is on the condition that Hamas will not prosecute some 160 individuals
professing Shiism in Gaza.”
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