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Eye on Extremism
October 26, 2016
ABC
News: ISIS Committing 'Murderous' Atrocities On Iraqi Civilians, UN Says
“As Iraqi and Kurdish fighters move in on the city of Mosul, the
United Nations says it is receiving reports of the ‘murderous’ atrocities
committed by ISIS, including extrajudicial killings and summary
executions against women, children and male civilians in Iraq. The UN
also said it continues to receive information that ISIS fighters are
‘deliberately’ using civilians as human shields – ‘forcing them to move
to sites where ISIL fighters are based, or preventing them from leaving
other places for strategic reasons.’ On Saturday, ISIS fighters
reportedly shot and killed three women and three girls from a village
called Rufeila in the al-Qayyarah sub-district, south of Mosul. The
victims were allegedly shot because they were trailing about 100 meters
behind other villagers who were being forced by ISIS to relocate to
another sub-district, according to the UN.”
CNN:
Mosul: ISIS Sends 'Suicide Squads' To Iraqi Stronghold
“ISIS is sending "suicide squads" from Syria to its Iraqi
stronghold of Mosul, witnesses have told CNN, as tens of thousands of
troops close in on the key city to take it from the militant group's
control. Witnesses said hundreds of new arrivals had streamed into Mosul
from the group's heartland of Raqqa, Syria, in the past two days,
describing them as foreign fighters wearing distinct uniforms and suicide
belts, and carrying light weapons. ISIS fighters have been seen rigging
bridges across the strategic Tigris river with explosives and have
prepared dozens of vehicle-borne suicide bombs.”
Associated
Press: US Official: Russia Might Shoot Down US Aircraft In Syria
“Russia could shoot down a U.S. aircraft if a no-fly zone were imposed
over Syria, National Intelligence Director James Clapper said Tuesday. ‘I
wouldn't put it past them to shoot down an American aircraft if they felt
that was threatening to their forces on the ground,’ Clapper said, speaking
with CBS' Charlie Rose at the Council on Foreign Relations in New York
about several national security issues. Russia has deployed a very
advanced and capable air defense system in Syria and would not have done
that if it wouldn't use it, Clapper said. The Obama administration has
refrained from setting up a no-fly, or safe, zone for civilians in Syria
partly because of the complexity in staffing and enforcing it and the
potential for direct military confrontation between the U.S. and Russia.”
Newsweek:
Iraqi Militias Tasked With Barring ISIS From Syria
“An Iraqi paramilitary umbrella group made up of Iranian-backed Shiite
militias has been ordered to cut off the Islamic State militant group’s
(ISIS) access to Syria in northern Iraq, in a bid to prevent thousands of
jihadis fleeing to the war-torn country, its spokesman said Tuesday.
Hashd al-Shaabi, whose militias are feared for their brutality, has been
a significant player in the battle to recapture ISIS-held cities in
western Iraq, particularly Fallujah and Ramadi, but its role has been
limited in the operation to liberate Mosul.”
The
Washington Post: With The Battle For Mosul Underway, U.S. Sets Sights On
ISIS Capital Of Raqqa
“As thousands of Iraqi troops slowly encircle the city of Mosul,
Defense Secretary Ashton B. Carter met here Tuesday with key coalition
members, suggesting that the battle for the Islamic State’s de facto
capital in northern Syria could soon begin. Carter spoke alongside French
Defense Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian, discussing what will come after the
last Islamic State fighters are purged from Mosul and the coalition sets
its sights on Raqqa, Syria. Carter said the U.S.-led coalition is helping
to build the local force, including a contingent of Arab
fighters, that will be used to enter Raqqa.”
Reuters:
U.S. Air Strikes Spike As Afghans Struggle Against Taliban, Islamic State
“American air strikes in Afghanistan this year have already
significantly surpassed the total number conducted in 2015, a stark
indicator of the United States' struggle to extricate itself from the
conflict and stick to its declared ‘non-combat’ mission. American
warplanes have conducted around 700 air strikes so far this year,
compared to about 500 in total last year, according to U.S. military
officials, signaling a deeper role for American forces that is expected
to continue for the foreseeable future. Ending American involvement in
Afghanistan was one of President Barack Obama's signature promises and he
declared the combat mission over at the end of 2014.”
The
Wall Street Journal: Police Academy Attack Shows New Security Threat To
Pakistan
“A Pakistani militant group said it cooperated with Islamic State to
carry out a deadly nighttime attack on a police academy in the
southwestern city of Quetta, demonstrating how the group based in Iraq
and Syria can operate in new territory. Islamic State claimed it carried
out the attack—a sign that while the group is losing ground in the Middle
East, it is looking to go on the offensive in South Asia, alongside local
jihadist organizations. Islamic State has claimed responsibility for
other recent attacks in Pakistan and Bangladesh. In Monday night’s
assault, three militants armed with guns and suicide vests stormed a
dormitory filled with police cadets, killing more than 60 people and
injuring scores of others. The head of the provincial paramilitary force
blamed the assault on the local group Lashkar-e-Jhangvi al Alami. One
security official said it appeared the group had worked with others.”
Reuters:
Israeli Teenage Worker Killed By Gunfire Along Egyptian Border
“An Israeli civilian, who was aged 15 according to his father, was
killed by gunfire along the border with Egypt on Tuesday, the Israeli
military said. The army said in a statement that the shooting did not
appear to be connected to militant action and that the Israeli and
Egyptian militaries were investigating the incident. Israel's defense
ministry named the victim as Nimr Abu-Amar an Arab Israeli working for a
contractor firm it had hired to carry out maintenance work on the border
fence. He died of his wounds while being airlifted to an Israeli hospital
from the remote Israel-Egypt border area in the Negev desert where the
shooting occurred, an army spokeswoman said. Bassam Abu-Amar, Nimr's
father, said his son had accompanied family members working on the border
fence doing odd jobs and preparing coffee for other members of the crew.”
Reuters:
Two Women Convicted In U.S. Of Financing Somali Group Al Shabaab
“Two women who U.S. prosecutors say led an online group in raising
money to support the Somali insurgent group al Shabaab were convicted by
a federal judge on Tuesday following a trial in U.S. District Court in
Virginia. Muna Osman Jama, 36, and Hinda Osman Dhirane, 46, were found
guilty of organizing the so-called "Group of Fifteen" women
from eight countries that helped finance al Shabaab military operations
and safehouses in Somalia and Kenya, according to the U.S. Attorney's
Office for Eastern Virginia.”
Wall
Street Journal: African Terror Franchise Now Has Competition From Islamic
State
“Islamic State’s push to co-opt one of Africa’s deadliest jihadist
movements has come with an attempt to present a softer face to potential
recruits. Over the past year, the jihadist group also known as ISIS and
Daesh has launched a broad recruitment campaign across Somalia to pry
foot soldiers and senior operatives from al-Shabaab, a two-decade-old
insurgency allied with al Qaeda that has made it very clear they have no
desire to switch franchises. Stung by battlefield losses to larger
al-Shabaab forces, Islamic State has offered promises of an easier life:
lower taxes, more tolerance for substance abuse and fewer political
diatribes.”
Wall
Street Journal: 'There Are No More Panes Of Glass Left In Aleppo'
“When the bodies of 16 members of the Qasim family were pulled from
the rubble of their home last month, there was no space left in one of
Aleppo’s largest cemeteries to bury them. Gravediggers unearthed seven
graves of relatives and divided the newly dead among them. They buried a
mother, her two children and sister with her grandmother. Other children
were buried in their grandfather’s grave. The men were buried with their
fathers. “We pushed the old bones to one side and then lowered the new
body in,” said Ahmad Sabbagh, an embroiderer-turned-gravedigger.”
United
States
CNN:
Opium Fuels The Stalemate In America's Longest War
“America's longest war received only a passing mention during the
three debates between American presidential nominees Donald Trump and
Hillary Clinton. That is a strange omission, because the war in
Afghanistan -- a decade and half after the first US soldiers deployed
there -- is now, at best, a stalemate, with the Taliban having gained
significant ground in recent years. This week I traveled to Afghanistan,
accompanying Gen. Joseph Votel, the commander of U.S. Central Command who
oversees America's wars in Afghanistan, Iraq and Syria. What to do about
Afghanistan is clearly one of the most urgent decisions that will face
the next president.”
Syria
Reuters:
Russia Says It Extends Moratorium On Aleppo Air Strikes
“Russia said on Tuesday it would extend a moratorium on air strikes on
Syria's Aleppo into a ninth day, but a monitor and a civil defense
official said that rebel-held parts of the divided city had been struck
in recent days. Defence ministry spokesman Major-General Igor Konashenkov
said Russian and Syrian planes had not even approached, let alone bombed,
the devastated city since last Tuesday when Russia suspended air strikes
ahead of a pause in hostilities. That moratorium on air strikes was being
extended, Sergei Rudskoi, a defense ministry official, said separately on
Tuesday, without specifying for how long.”
The
Guardian: Coalition Airstrikes In Syria Have Killed 300 Civilians, Says
Amnesty
“The US-led coalition fighting Islamic State in Syria has killed at
least 300 civilians in airstrikes, and must do more to prevent further
civilian deaths as the battle for Mosul intensifies in neighbouring Iraq,
Amnesty International has warned. More than half of the victims
identified in a new report by the rights group, which looked at deaths
over the two years since western forces joined the fight against Isis in
Syria, were killed during the fight for the city of Manbij. It is
important the lessons from those deaths are learned as a broad coalition
of troops backed by US air power and special forces push towards Mosul, a
much bigger city that is still home to around 600,000 civilians, the
group says.”
Iraq
Reuters:
Sunni Arabs Forced To Leave Kirkuk After Islamic State Attack, Residents
Say
“Hundreds of displaced Sunni Arab families have had to leave Kirkuk
after an Islamic State attack on the Kurdish-controlled city which
authorities suspect was helped by Sunni sleeper cells, humanitarian
workers and residents said on Tuesday. The Sunni families, who had been
sheltering in Kurdish-controlled Kirkuk province from the conflict with
Islamic State, began moving out after authorities told them on Sunday to
leave or face being forcibly expelled, the sources said. About 330,000 Sunni
Arabs have taken refuge in the oil-rich Kirkuk province in the last two
years, after Islamic State swept through northern, central and western
Iraq in 2014. Some had fled because of the fighting and others because of
the hardline Sunni group's harsh rules and the difficult living
conditions in their villages and towns.”
Reuters:
Iraqi Army's Elite Force Pauses Advance Near Mosul
“An elite unit of the Iraqi army paused its week-long advance on Mosul
as it approached the city's eastern edge on Tuesday, waiting for other
U.S.-backed forces to close in on Islamic State's last major urban
stronghold in Iraq. On the ninth day of the offensive on Mosul,
government forces and allied Kurdish Peshmerga fighters are still
fighting their way towards the outer limits of the northern city, in the
early stages of an assault which could become the biggest military
operation in Iraq in over a decade. The first force to get near to Mosul,
advancing to within two kilometers (just over a mile) of Iraq's second largest
city, was the elite U.S.-trained Counter Terrorism Service (CTS).”
The
Daily Beast: The Painful Liberation Of Iraq’s Christian Heartland
“The church’s interior has been blackened by fire, and the altar has
been vandalized. ISIS graffiti has been smeared on the walls, and
songbooks lie burned on the ground. But the two priests, undeterred, make
their way through the nave of the Church of the Immaculate Conception,
climbing the narrow stairway to the mezzanine where the organ has been
smashed, and emerge on the flat rooftop next to the belfry. Here, the
tolling of the bell of Iraq’s largest church once summoned 3,000 people
to prayer on Sundays. Now the belfry is disfigured by cannon fire and the
bell itself is gone, snatched from its chain. Without hesitation, the
priests climb on top of the arched roof running along the spine of the
building. They are followed by a handful of men in military fatigues. A
makeshift cross—two pieces of plywood strung together with copper
wire—quickly follows, and the men begin feverishly to pile up stones to
create a simple foundation.”
Turkey
Reuters:
Explosion Hits Southern Turkey's Antalya, Some Casualties
“An explosion outside a chamber of commerce building in Turkey's
southern resort city of Antalya wounded several people on Tuesday but the
mayor said there were no life-threatening injuries and the blast may have
been an accident. Turkey is on high alert after repeated bombings blamed
on Islamic State and Kurdish militants this year. Authorities in the
capital Ankara banned public meetings this month for fear of further
attacks, and the U.S. State Department has urged U.S. citizens to
carefully consider the need to travel to Turkey. The cause of the blast a
few kilometers from the airport in Antalya, a major tourist resort on the
Mediterranean coast, was not immediately clear. In August, two rockets
hit a commercial facility near a resort town in the province, but caused
no casualties.”
Associated
Press: Rights Group: Torture Reports After Failed Coup In Turkey
“A human rights group said Tuesday that Turkish police have tortured
or abused detainees following the failed coup attempt in July, a claim
that Turkish officials deny. In a 43-page report published Tuesday, Human
Rights Watch said that a state of emergency adopted after the coup
attempt - which is still in effect - has weakened safeguards against
torture. It details 13 alleged abuse cases, including sleep deprivation,
severe beatings, sexual abuse and rape threats. ‘The prohibition of
torture in international law is absolute and cannot be suspended even in
times of war or national emergency,’ the report said. ‘And yet, the
emergency decrees remove crucial safeguards that protect detainees from
ill-treatment and torture.’”
Associated
Press: Turkey, US To Discuss Muslim Cleric Wanted By Ankara
“Turkey's justice minister says the country has provided ‘more than
sufficient’ evidence to the United States for the extradition of a
U.S.-based Muslim cleric accused by Turkey of orchestrating the July 15
failed coup attempt. Bekir Bozdag was speaking to reporters Tuesday
before departing to the U.S. for talks with U.S. Attorney General Loretta
Lynch over Turkish requests for Fethullah Gulen's arrest and eventual
extradition. Bozdag said it was ‘unacceptable’ that Gulen was allowed to
continue to lead his organization from a country considered to be ‘a
friend and ally’ of Turkey. He said any delays in the extradition process
would threaten ties between the countries.”
Radio
Free Europe: Turkey Does Not Rule Out Ground Operation In Iraq
“Turkey's foreign minister says Ankara could launch a ground operation
in neighboring Iraq if it feels its security is threatened. Mevlut
Cavusoglu told local television on October 25 that ‘we are ready to use
all our resources including a ground operation.’ He added that Turkey's
activities in Syria were an example of Ankara's readiness to ensure its
own security. Baghdad has said Turkey is not participating in the ongoing
offensive to remove Islamic State militants from the city of Mosul.
Cavusoglu said Turkey has four F-16 fighter jets ready to participate in
international-coalition air strikes in Iraq if necessary. Turkey has been
fighting Kurdish militants associated with the outlawed Kurdistan Workers
Party (PKK), including the Kurdish People's Protection Units (YPG) in
Syria. Ankara regularly carries out air strikes against Kurdish
bases in northern Iraq.”
BBC:
Mayors Of Kurdish Turkey City Diyarbakir Held In Terror Probe
“The co-mayors of Diyarbakir, Turkey's largest Kurdish-majority city,
have been detained as part of a terrorism investigation, security
officials say. Gultan Kisanak was held at the local airport, while Firat
Anli was arrested at his home in the south-eastern city. President Recep
Tayyip Erdogan has vowed to prosecute local officials accused of links to
the banned Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK). In September, 28 elected
mayors in largely Kurdish towns were sacked. They were replaced by
trustees appointed by the government using an emergency law that came
into force following a failed army-led coup in July. The pro-Kurdish
Peoples' Democratic Party (HDP), whose mayors were principally affected,
condemned September's sackings as a ‘coup by trustees’. The PKK was
formed in the late 1970s and launched an armed struggle against the
Turkish government in 1984, calling for an independent Kurdish state
within Turkey.”
Afghanistan
Reuters:
Islamic State Kills Dozens Of Civilians In Afghanistan: Official
“Suspected Islamic State fighters killed dozens of civilians in the
remote Afghan province of Ghor in revenge for the death of one of their
commanders, a provincial official said on Wednesday. ‘Afghan police
killed a Daesh commander in Ghor province during an operation yesterday
but Daesh fighters abducted some 30 civilians from near the provincial
capital and shot them all dead in revenge,’ said Abdul Hai Khatibi, a
spokesman for the governor, using a name commonly given to Islamic State.
The killings followed an attack by militants near Feroz Koh, the
provincial capital, on Tuesday. Ghor, in central-western Afghanistan, has
not been known as a major center for Islamic State, which has been
concentrated in the eastern state of Nangarhar.”
Saudi
Arabia
Fox
News: Saudi Arabia: 2 Security Officers Shot, Killed In Its East
“Saudi Arabia says two security officers have been shot and killed in
the kingdom's predominantly Shiite east. The Interior Ministry said on
Tuesday that the two officers were shot dead in Dammam amid heavy fog.
The ministry says it has launched an investigation into the shooting. It
didn't name any suspects in its brief statement, which was carried by the
state-run Saudi Press Agency. Saudi Arabia's Eastern Province has seen
low-level unrest since the January execution of Shiite cleric Nimr al-Nimr.
There has been a series of shootings there in the time since then. A
local affiliate of the extremist Islamic State group also has carried out
attacks in the kingdom in recent months.”
Middle
East
The
New York Times: Pakistan Reels After Attack On Police Training College
Leaves 61 Dead
“Pakistan was reeling on Tuesday from a major terrorist attack: an
overnight assault on a police training college in the southwest that
officials said had killed at least 61 people, most of them cadets. The
attack, carried out by three militants wielding guns and explosives, also
wounded 120 people at the college near Quetta, the capital of
Baluchistan, a restive province. The militants struck late Monday and
battled security forces for several hours before they were killed. Two
detonated suicide vests, and the third was shot, said Mir Sarfraz Bugti,
a provincial minister. The Amaq news agency, which acts as a news service
for the Islamic State, posted a picture of three men holding guns and wearing
ammunition vests who it said were the attackers.”
The
Washington Post: A Palestinian Paper Interviewed An Israeli Minister, And
Now It Could Be Banned In Gaza
“The article was wide-ranging. It covered opinions about the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict and talk about what Israel might do the next
time it comes up against the Islamist militant group Hamas in the Gaza
Strip. But it was not the contents of the rare interview that Israeli
Defense Minister Avigdor Lieberman gave to the Palestinian newspaper
al-Quds this week that has drawn the ire of Palestinians. It’s that the
article gave voice to one of Israel’s most hawkish, hard-line
politicians. And he’s a settler to boot. Now, the Palestinian newspaper,
which has the largest circulation in the West Bank, may be banned in
Gaza. Other journalists have asked its editor in chief to justify the
interview, which is viewed as ‘normalizing ties’ with Israel. And even
colleagues at the paper say publishing the interview was a mistake.”
Fox
News: Christian Shrine Vandalized, Robbed In Northern Israel
“An immensely important Christian shrine, thought to be on the site
where Jesus Christ spoke to the prophets Elijah and Moses, was robbed and
vandalized in a brazen attack, officials announced Tuesday. Valuable
chalices and donations were stolen from the Church of the
Transfiguration, and communion bread was thrown on the ground, AFP
reported. The church, located on Mount Tabor near the Sea of Galilee in
Northern Israel, is a popular pilgrimage site for Christians. The
structure itself suffered no marks of graffiti or other signs which would
point to religious extremists, according to Wadie Abunassar, a spokesman
for bishops in the Holy Land. He said the attack unfolded sometime
between Sunday night and Monday morning.”
The
Jerusalem Post: Analysis: Israel Likely To Lose Big In Wednesday’s UNESCO
Vote
“If you thought the results of the UNESCO Executive Board vote two
weeks ago expunging a Jewish connection to the Temple Mount was bad, wait
until you see the likely tally of a vote on a similar resolution in
UNESCO’s World Heritage Committee on Wednesday. The result of the vote in
this forum -- if there is a roll-call vote -- will likely make the
previous UNESCO’s Executive Board look like a victory in comparison. And
Israel lost that vote 24 to six, with 26 abstentions. Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu knows this, and even before Wednesday’s vote issued a
statement condemning the result.”
Libya
Fox
News: Aid Group Urges EU To Reconsider Libya Training After Attack
“A German aid group urged the European Union on Tuesday to reconsider
its plans to train Libyan forces to conduct sea rescue operations after a
vessel labeled as belonging to the country's coast guard attacked a
dinghy full of migrants last week. Dozens of people were feared dead in
the incident. Sea-Watch, a privately-funded group that operates a rescue
ship in the Mediterranean, said the attack early Friday showed it was
important for the EU to scrutinize who exactly it was training and giving
equipment to. ‘We have called on them (the EU) to reconsider the training
missions,’ said Ruben Neugebauer, a spokesman for the Berlin-based group.
‘We fear that in the course of this cooperation (with the Libyan coast
guard) much more terrible things will happen.’”
Associated
Press: 3 Russian Sailors Held In Libya Released
“Russia's Foreign Ministry says three Russian sailors have been freed
from captivity in Libya. The ministry said Tuesday that Andrei Krynin,
Stanislav Sirotkin and Valery Savitsky returned to Russia after the end
of legal procedures in Tripoli. The men arrived on a specially-chartered
plane in Grozny, the capital of Russia's Chechen Republic. The sailors,
who were accused of smuggling oil, were on board the Russian oil tanker
Mekhanik Chebotarov when it was seized in September 2015 off the Libyan
coast. Three other Russian sailors are still being held in Libya,
according to the Foreign Ministry. Ramzan Kadyrov, the authoritarian
leader of predominantly Muslim Chechnya, took a leading role in the
negotiations to free the sailors and Chechen officials traveled to Libya
to arrange the release.”
Sputnik:
Russia Ready To Consider Requests From Libya, Iraq On Counterterror
Efforts
“Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Mikhail Bogdanov said Tuesday that
the country would consider requests from Iraq and Libya on Russian
participation in counterterrorist operations in these countries should it
receive such requests, the Valdai Discussion Club said. The armed conflict
in Libya began in February 2011, after protests erupted
in Libyan provinces with demands for the resignation
of Muammar Gaddafi, who had ruled the country for over 40
years. After Gaddafi was overthrown, leadership was contested by two
rival governments — the internationally-recognized Council
of Deputies based in Tobruk and the Tripoli-based General
National Congress.”
United
Kingdom
Daily
Mail: The British Toystore Selling ‘Muslim Barbies’, Koran Cards And Prayer
Mats: Mother-Of-Two Launches Islamic Play Range For Children Which She
Hopes Will Help Battle Extremism
“A British Muslim 'Mumpreneur' has set up the world's first Islamic
online toy store. Nazia Nasreen, 31, says her range of 'Muslim
Barbies', colourful prayer mats, Koran cards and Arabic letter blocks
fill a gap in the market and also help battle extremism. Mrs Nasreen,
from Birmingham, set up Ibraheem Toy House in 2014 and sells her products
all over the world. She said: 'A lot of times children learn the wrong
things and that's where the extremism kicks in. If the right educational
toys and books are provided from a young age, we can instil the correct
Islamic ethos and values in our children'. She is in a group of leading
British 'Muslim Mumpreneurs', which also includes Bake Off
winner Nadiya Hussain, who juggle bringing up children and running
successful businesses in what has traditionally been a male-dominated
world.”
Germany
Associated
Press: German Police Search Apartments In Chechen Extremism Probe
“Police conducted simultaneous raids on premises in five German states
Tuesday as part of an investigation into Chechen asylum-seekers suspected
of involvement in Islamic extremism. Officers searched 13 dwellings
across the country following a yearlong probe of a 28-year-old Russian
citizen of Chechen background who is suspected of intending to join the
fighting in Syria on behalf of the Islamic State group. The investigation
later developed into a probe of 10 further men and three women suspected
of financing extremist activity. All were Chechens with Russian
citizenship seeking asylum in Germany, and whose status has not yet been
decided, police in the eastern region of Thuringia said. There was no
concrete danger of an imminent attack, they said in a statement, adding
that further information would be releasing during the course of the
day.”
BBC:
Germany Anti-Terror Raids: Chechen Man Held
“Police in Germany have searched 13 homes in five states, arresting a
Chechen man and questioning 13 others suspected of financing terrorism.
The man had been planning to join so-called Islamic State, according to
police in the state of Thueringen. All 14 are asylum seekers, police say
on their website. Local media say a white powder was found in one of the
flats, but police say they have found no evidence of a concrete threat of
attack. Police had been investigating the 28-year-old since last year.
They say they are now also questioning 10 Chechen men and three women
between the ages of 21 and 31.”
Daily
Caller: Germany Can’t Get Enough US ISIS Intel, After Crying About
Snowden
“Germany is increasingly relying on the U.S. to tip them off to domestic
terrorist threats, after decrying U.S. surveillance programs amid Edward
Snowden’s revelations. ‘In a way, we have outsourced our counterterrorism
to the United States,’ German Institute for International and
Security Affairs terrorism expert Guido Steinberg told The New York
Times, adding that ‘the Germans are not ready to build up their
intelligence capabilities for political reasons, so this will continue.’
Steinbergs comments come after U.S. counter-terrorism authorities tipped
Germany off to a sophisticated plot by a Syrian refugee to attack
Berlin’s airport. The refugee was granted asylum in February 2015 by
German authorities and reportedly traveled to Turkey and Syria without
coming on the radar of German intelligence authorities.”
France
The
New York Times: Shouts Greet Migrants In The Streets Of France: ‘We Don’t
Want Them’
“The protests began even before the migrants had arrived. ‘We don’t
want them!’ shouted the demonstrators in this village of 1,900 people, 80
miles from Calais, where the migrants were bused from a camp known as the
Jungle on Monday. ‘This is our home!’ others yelled at the darkened,
disused retirement home where the migrants were being housed. Inside the
building, a young Sudanese man pressed his face to the window and looked
out at the angry crowd, bemused. All over France, tiny communities like
this one, in the old battlefields of the country’s north, are being
forced to deal firsthand with Europe’s migrant crisis. It has not been
easy. The effort to relocate many of the 6,000 or more people who had
made the Jungle their home has thrust France’s divided view of the
migrants into plain view.”
BBC:
Calais Migrants: Hundreds Moved From 'Jungle' Camp
“Almost 2,000 migrants have been bussed away from the ‘Jungle’ in Calais
as French authorities clear the camp. At least 7,000 people have been
living there in squalid conditions. Migrants queued peacefully to be
processed, but there are concerns some will refuse to go because they
still want to get to the UK. Almost 200 children from the camp have been
brought to the UK, some of them under the ‘Dubs’ arrangement, according
to UK Home Secretary Amber Rudd. The number includes 60 girls who were at
high risk of sexual exploitation, she said. But the process of
transferring some of the estimated 1,300 unaccompanied children from the
camp was halted on Monday at the request of the French. The dismantling
of the camp is expected to start on Tuesday.”
Sputnik
News: Hollande Calls For Vigilance As Foreign Fighters May Carry Out
Terror Attacks
“French President Francois Hollande said that the need for cooperation
and a coordinated exchange of intelligence data to help detain the Daesh
militants and prevent them from committing new acts of terrorism. t is
necessary to prevent foreign fighters who have been fighting
alongside the Islamic State (ISIL or Daesh) militants and may return
to their countries from Iraq and Syria from carrying
out terrorist acts, French President Francois Hollande said
on Tuesday. Daesh will attempt to commit new attacks, no matter
where, the French leader noted. He stressed the need for cooperation
and a coordinated exchange of intelligence data to help detain
the militants and prevent them from committing new acts of terrorism.”
Europe
International
Business Times: Where Is ISIS In Europe? Islamic State Fighters Could
Return Home To Denmark, France, Belgium And Russia And Carry Out Attacks
“German authorities Tuesday carried out 13 raids throughout five
states targeting terror financing rings, Australian Associated Press
reported. The searches were conducted in 12 homes and an accommodating
facility for refugees located in Thuringia, Saxony, Bavaria, North
Rhine-Westphalia and Hamburg. The raids marked the latest attempt by a
European country to counter threats made against targets in the West by
global terror group Islamic State. The militant organization, also known
as ISIS, has managed to attract followers and fighters from across the
world, including many countries in Europe. Foreign fighters have swelled
the group’s ranks in Iraq and Syria, allowing it to take over massive
amounts of territory and enforce its self-proclaimed caliphate.”
ISIS
Albawabh
News: Libya: The Cost Of The War Against ISIS In Sirte
“Libyan rights activist Ashraf Alkitany claims that the cost of the
war against the terrorist organization of the (Islamic) State in Sirte,
central Libya, comes to three million Libyan dinars ($ 2.1 million) a
day. Alkitany stated on Monday that, according to statistics recently released
by the council of the city of Misrata, which is financing the
"Al-Bonyan Al-Marsous" forces fighting ISIS in Sirte, the cost
has reached 3 million dinars per day. The money, which comes from the
Presidential Council, merchants and business leaders, is being delivered
daily to the leaders of "Al-Bonyan Al-Marsous" who are backed
by the Libyan Presidential Council, headed by Fayez al-Sarraj. According
to the same statistical report, "Al-Bonyan Al-Marsous" forces
lose, on average, four fighters every day.”
Al-Qaeda
Okaz:
Saudi Arabia: Involvement Of Al-Qaeda In Drug Trafficking Proved
“The sentencing hearing in Riyadh's Specialized Criminal Court of two
Saudi terrorists belonging to al-Qaeda in Saudi Arabia heard evidence of
the involvement of the organization in drug trafficking. The court was
presented with proof that one of the defendants, an Al-Qaeda activist,
who promoted drugs inside Yemeni territory, had started smuggling them
into Saudi Arabia. Thus, Riyadh's Specialized Criminal Court, in an
initial ruling yesterday (Tuesday), condemned the two accused (Saudi
citizens) for serious terrorist offenses and sentenced them to a total of
33 years in prison.”
Muslim
Brotherhood
The
Seventh Day: Expert: Brotherhood In Qatar Backs Violent Movements In
Egypt With Money And Weapons
“Dissident Brotherhood leader Mukhtar Noah claimed that the Muslim
Brotherhood in Qatar plays a major role in supporting violent movements
which have claimed {credit for} terrorist acts in Egypt. At the top of
these movements are "Hasm Movement" and "Lewaa
Al-Thawra" [Revolution Brigade] which have claimed responsibility
for several terrorist operations, most recently the assassination of
Brigadier General Adel Ragai {commander of the army's Ninth Armored
Division}. Noah stressed that Qatar, joined by Turkey, stand behind the
Muslim Brotherhood's terrorist movements, {supplying them} with
sophisticated weapons. He explained that such movements use advanced
weapons to perpetrate terrorist operations requiring huge amounts of
money, which is being sent from Qatar.”
Albawabh
News: An Egyptian Court Orders Invalidation Of Decision To Seize Funds
Owned By Brotherhood-Affiliated Sports Commentator And His Daughter
“The first circuit of the Egyptian State Council's Administrative
Court, headed by State Council Vice-President Judge Bekheet Ismail, ruled
on Tuesday in favor of two lawsuits submitted by sports commentator, Alaa
Sadek and his daughter Engy Alaa Sadek. They demanded the cancellation of
the decision to seize their assets, and the court {indeed} ruled to
overturn that decision. Alaa Sadek, who is known for his support of the
Muslim Brotherhood and his strident criticism of the current Egyptian
regime, previously submitted a lawsuit to the Administrative Court,
demanding the annulment of the decision on the appropriation of his
assets. He explained that the seizure decision was reached in violation of
the principles of law and pillars of the constitution. He stressed that
the decision has personal consequences, which cannot be rectified, most
notably being deprived of his most basic needs. Sadek added that the
Brotherhood Asset Freeze Committee had exploited the implementation of
the ruling by the Urgent Matters Court, which banned the activities of
the Muslim Brotherhood and authorized seizure of funds owned by
group-affiliated individuals, as a pretext to seize his assets and those
of his daughter.”
Houthi
Ababiil
Net: Houthis Embezzle 5 Million Saudi Riyals From Yemen's Hajj And Umrah
Sector
“A Saudi newspaper revealed corruption and embezzlement of funds
belonging to Yemen's Hajj and Umrah sector by Houthi-affiliated figures.
The newspaper reported that three group's leaders had confiscated a sum
of money estimated at nearly five million Saudi riyals ($ 1.35 million)
and turned them into their personal funds. Sources inside the Houthi
group, requesting anonymity, disclosed that employees at the Endowments
& Guidance Ministry have expressed their dismay over the corruption
and called for accountability of these three figures. They also announced
their intention to go on strike, refusing to resume their duties unless
the three suspects are put on trial immediately. Senior ministry
officials, however, refused to heed the employees' complaints,
threatening to dismiss them and halt payment of their salaries if they do
not stop their protests. These threats have forced the employees to go
back to work.”
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