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Eye on Extremism
October 3, 2016
Counter
Extremism Project
San
Diego Union Tribune: Former San Diego Cleric A Prolific Terror Recruiter
“Perhaps the most influential recruiter of jihad today doesn’t sit
behind a computer screen in Syria or proposition disenfranchised Muslims
in suburban mosques. He speaks from the grave. The poisonous rhetoric of
Anwar al-Awlaki, a smooth-talking American-born imam who taught Muslims
in San Diego in the years leading up to the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001,
has become a constant factor in homegrown terror plots since his death
five years ago. It’s a phenomenon that law enforcement has found
challenging to battle, as the massive volume of the cleric’s propaganda
materials show no sign of being wiped from the internet any time soon.”
The
Guardian: Russia Warns The U.S. Not To Intervene As Hospital Is Hit In
Latest Aleppo Blitz
“An unrelenting Russian and Syrian blitz of eastern Aleppo heavily
damaged one of the city’s three remaining hospitals on Saturday, as
Moscow warned that any American attempts to stop its assault would lead
to “frightening tectonic shifts in the Middle East”. The Russian raids
struck at least five areas of the opposition-held half of the city, which
is bracing for a ground assault by Shia forces allied to the Syrian
regime. Syrian helicopters are believed to be responsible for the strike
on the M10 hospital, which has left those who remain in the east with
next to no access to essential healthcare.”
Reuters:
Russia Said To Send More Warplanes To Syria, Diplomacy 'On Life Support'
“Russia is sending more warplanes to Syria to ramp up its air
campaign, a Russian newspaper reported on Friday, as the United States
said diplomacy to halt the violence was ‘on life support’ but not dead
yet. Fighting continued to intensify a week into a new Russian-backed
Syrian government offensive to capture rebel-held eastern Aleppo and
crush the last urban stronghold of a revolt against Syrian President
Bashar al-Assad that began in 2011. Moscow and Assad spurned a
U.S.-Russian brokered ceasefire agreed to this month and launched attacks
on rebel-held areas in Aleppo in potentially the most decisive battle in
the Syrian civil war. U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry and Russian Foreign
Minister Sergei Lavrov spoke by telephone for a third straight day, with
the top Russian diplomat saying Moscow was ready to consider more ways to
normalize the situation in Aleppo.”
Voice
Of America: IS Takes To Ancient Strategy As Battle For Mosul Looms
“Reeling from U.S.-led coalition airstrikes and battlefield defeats by
Iraqi and Kurdish forces, the Islamic State (IS) is resorting to an
ancient defense strategy as a massive battle looms to eject the militants
from Mosul. The tactics are drawn from the ‘Battle of the Trench,’ a
story narrated from Islamic history texts in which the Islamic Prophet
Muhammad led 3,000 defenders of Medina to prevail over 10,000 Arab and
Jewish troops in 627 A.D. IS fighters are using the ancient tale -- a
highly significant religious moment for many Muslims around the world --
to rally followers worldwide via internet posts and social media
accounts. The size of the force left to defend IS’s last remaining
stronghold in Iraq has been cut by as much as two-thirds, U.S. military
officials say, leaving only 3,000 to 4,500 fighters left in Mosul, U.S.
officials say. A U.S.-aided Iraqi and Kurdish assault on Mosul could
begin in October, according to reports.”
The
New York Times: Women’s Emergence As Terrorists In France Points To Shift
In ISIS Gender Role
“In France, where terrorist threats have become distressingly
commonplace, these three episodes, all in the last month, stood out for
one reason in particular: Radicalized women were at the heart of each. It
is not yet clear whether the phenomenon is a blip or the beginning of a
trend in which women play a more active role in plotting and carrying out
attacks on the West. Security officials say they are concerned, and they
are seeking to understand whether women are beginning to step up because
so many men are under surveillance or in detention, or whether recruiters
from terror groups are urging women on, in part, as a way to shame more
men into taking action. They also wonder if it is part of a strategy to
make Europeans feel that they should fear men and women alike.”
CNN:
UAE: Aid Ship En Route To Yemen Struck By Rebels
“An Emirati aid ship headed for war-torn Yemen was hit by an airstrike
launched by Houthi rebels, according to official UAE state news agency,
WAM. A Houthi spokesperson told CNN the Iranian-allied group was
responsible for Saturday's attack, which occurred as the vessel headed
for the port city of Aden. The Saudi-led Arab coalition, which has been
fighting in support of the Yemeni government under President Abd Rabbuh
Mansur Hadi, called the attack a ‘dangerous indication’ and launched a
rescue mission for those aboard the stricken ship. The vessel, owned by
the UAE's National Marine Dredging Company, was reportedly delivering
medical aid and other supplies when it came under fire in the Bab
al-Mandab Strait -- which lies between the southern tip of Yemen and
Djibouti and Eritrea in the Horn of Africa -- according to the WAM
report.”
The
Jerusalem Post: 'ISIS-Inspired Jerusalem Cell Planned Terror Attacks
Against Israelis'
“Indictments were filed Sunday against six Israeli Arabs from the
Shuafat refugee camp in east Jerusalem, who were accused of forming an
ISIS cell and plotting to carry out attacks against Israelis. The Shin
Bet (Israel Security Agency) along with Israeli police had been
investigating the group for more than a month-and-a-half. According to
police, the cell had been planning terrorist attacks around the county,
particularly in Jerusalem. The investigation started out as an undercover
investigation and in the last few days arrests were made in three waves.
At the head of the group was a figure who the other members looked up to
as a religious leader and had control over the other would-be ISIS
members, according to police. He allegedly taught them the Koran and
interpretations according to ISIS theology.”
BCC:
Dutch Journalist Oerlemans Shot Dead By 'IS Sniper' In Libya
“A Netherlands photojournalist has been shot dead by a sniper
apparently belonging to the group known as Islamic State (IS) while
reporting on the fighting in the Libyan city of Sirte. Jeroen Oerlemans,
45, was killed while he was out with a team that clears mines. He
was reporting from a part of the city recently freed from IS control.
Oerlemans was abducted and wounded in Syria in 2012 with British
photographer John Cantlie, but freed a week later. Mr Cantlie was later
abducted again, and is believed to remain in IS captivity. Oerlemans had
previously covered conflicts in Afghanistan, Syria and Libya in addition
to writing stories about the journey made by migrants to Europe. He was
working in Libya for numerous publications including the Belgian weekly
Knack magazine, which confirmed his death.”
Telegragh:
French Schoolboy Faces Terrorism Charges As Concern Grows Youths Are
Being Targeted Via Encrypted Messaging
“A 15-year-old schoolboy is the latest French teenager to face
terrorism charges amid mounting fears that jihadists are systematically
targeting minors through encrypted online messaging services. The boy was
arrested at his family home in the Paris suburb of Domont after
investigators found encrypted messages he exchanged with Rachid Kassim, a
notorious French recruiter for the Islamic State group, via the Telegram
service. Telegram is a smartphone app favoured by extremists because of
its impenetrable encryption. The French intelligence chief, Patrick
Calvar, has described it as ‘the main network used by terrorists’. France
and Germany want the EU to force messaging services such as Telegram and
WhatsApp to provide unencrypted records for national security services.”
Deutsche
Welle: Taliban Fighters Launch Assault On Afghan City Of Kunduz
“Fighters mounted a coordinated attack on Kunduz early on Monday -
even entering the city, a senior city police official told Reuters news
agency. ‘We are putting all our efforts together to push them back,’
Sheer Ali Kamal said, adding that the attack began around midnight local
time (19:30 UTC Sunday) and that fighting within the city was
ongoing. The Taliban militants clashed with Afghan government troops
in the southern and eastern approaches to the city, reported a
correspondent with the news agency AFP. Afghan army helicopters were
flying over the city, where streets were empty and shops remained closed.
Another Reuters reporter witnessed at least five Taliban fighters armed
with AK-47 assault rifles, machine guns and rocket-propelled grenades in
the city.”
The
Jerusalem Post: Iranian Revolutionary Guard Unveils New Attack Drones
“Iran's Revolutionary Guards unveiled a home-built drone that they
said was capable of carrying bombs, state media reported on Saturday, in
what appeared to be another copy of a reconnaissance U.S. drone that Iran
captured five years ago. The drone, called Saegheh, or lightning, was
unveiled at an expo showcasing the latest achievements by the
Revolutionary Guards' aerospace arm. ‘This long-range drone is capable of
hitting four targets with smart precision-guided bombs with high
accuracy,’ the head of the Revolutionary Guards' aerospace arm, Amir Ali
Hajizadeh, was quoted as saying by state news agency IRNA.”
International
Business Times: Nigeria: This Is How Mama Boko Haram Believes The
Insurgency Can End
“Boko Haram terrorists have allegedly asked a local human rights
activist and lawyer to start negotiating with the Nigerian government on
their behalf. Barrister Aisha Alkali Wakil told IBTimes UK she
is willing to represent the group during negotiations with the
government. During an interview with David Otto, CEO of UK-based TGS
Intelligence Consultants, Wakil suggested both the Nigerian government
and Boko Haram to engage in a constructive dialogue and identify ways to
help militants who want to surrender reintegrate into society. Wakil,
originally from southern Nigeria, is known to locals in north-eastern
Nigeria – the epicentre of Boko Haram's insurgency – as ‘Mama Boko Haram’
due to her connection with the group. She advocates dialogue, rather than
the use of military force, to defeat the insurgents and was appointed by
the country's previous president, Goodluck Jonathan, as part of a team to
trace nearly 300 girls abducted from the Chibok village, Borno state, by
Boko Haram in 2014.”
United
States
Daily
Caller: Navy Widow First To Sue Saudi Arabia For 9/11 Attacks
“A Navy widow who lost her husband on September 11, 2001 when
terrorists flew a commercial airplane into the Pentagon is the first
American to sue the Saudi government for the attacks that brought down
four planes, the Pentagon, and the World Trade Center towers. Stephanie
Ross DeSimone filed suit against the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia in U.S.
District Court in Washington, D.C. on Friday, alleging that the Saudi
kingdom provided material support to the terrorists who carried out the
attacks, according to Bloomberg. DeSimone was pregnant when the 9/11
terrorists killed her husband, Navy Commander Patrick Dunn. She has also
filed suit on behalf of her daughter.”
Voice
Of America: House Options Grim As Syria Spirals Downward
“Exactly one year after Russia began its air campaign to help Bashar
al-Assad’s government crush opposition rebels, Syria continues a hellish
descent into chaos, carnage and devastation. The White House still has no
effective plan to stop it and there are no good options either, experts
said. Moscow marked the anniversary on Friday by signaling it will ramp
up its bombardments alongside the Syrian government against Aleppo, the
last stronghold of opposition rebels. More than 250,000 people are
trapped in the ravaged city, where the bombings have decimated critical
sites, including water supplies, refugee camps, hospitals and
humanitarian aid supplies. The strikes even targeted an underground
playground, according to the White House.”
Syria
The
Guardian: Syrian Children Return To School As Airstrikes On Aleppo
Continue
“The bombardment of Aleppo by the Syrian government and its ally
Russia continued on Sunday as children in the besieged eastern districts
began their new school year. There were fresh airstrikes and fierce
fighting between the opposition and soldiers loyal to Bashar al-Assad,
while the regime’s military command said it was prepared to offer safe
passage with guarantees from Moscow to rebels in the east of the besieged
city willing to surrender their arms and leave. Hundreds of people have
been killed and more than 1,000 injured in more than a week of relentless
airstrikes by Syrian and Russian warplanes, which have deployed an array
of weaponry including cluster munitions, phosphorus and bunker-buster
bombs in an effort to force the opposition’s surrender before a planned
ground offensive.”
Reuters:
Syria Presses Aleppo Advance, Tells Rebels To Leave
"Syrian government and allied forces have advanced toward Aleppo,
pursuing their week-old offensive to take the rebel-held part of the city
after dozens of overnight air strikes.“The Syrian army told the
insurgents to leave their positions, offering safe passage and aid
supplies. Syrian forces supported by Iranian-backed militias and Russian
air power began their push to take the whole of the divided city after a
ceasefire collapsed last month. An air campaign by the Syrian government
and its allies has been reinforced by a ground offensive against the
besieged eastern half of Aleppo, where insurgents have been holding out.
Hospitals have been badly hit in the assault, medics say.”
CNN:
Russia Warns US Not To Attack Syrian Regime
“Russia warned the United States about taking direct action against
the Syrian regime, saying it would cause negative consequences across the
Middle East, Russia's state-run Sputnik news agency reported Saturday.
Meanwhile, intense fighting continued in the besieged Syrian city Aleppo
on Saturday, with one of the main hospitals bombed by Russian-backed
Syrian forces. Sputnik reported that Russian's Foreign Ministry
spokeswoman Maria Zakharova said, ‘If the US launches a direct aggression
against Damascus and the Syrian army, it will lead to terrible, tectonic
shifts not only on the territory of this country but also in the region
in general.’ She said the United States risked creating a power vacuum in
Syria were it to depose Syrian President Bashar al-Assad. Such a power vacuum
would be filled by ‘terrorists of all sorts,’ Sputnik reported.”
BBC:
Reporting Syria's War - The Images You Won't See
“How do you report something you can't show people because it is
judged too ghastly for them to see? This issue hit me with both barrels
between the eyes this week when I had to wrestle with a series of images
from besieged Aleppo. They had been taken by Syrian doctors in an
underground hospital and forwarded to me by Dr David Nott, the pioneering
war surgeon who has been using social media to teach his colleagues over
the internet how to, for example, rebuild a man's face. I first covered
war in 1988 and I've seen more than enough real horror with my own eyes.
But the Aleppo hospital pictures were grim beyond the saying of it. Be
warned. What I must write and you will now read is a terrible litany of
suffering.”
Turkey
Reuters:
Turkish Military Says 15 Rebels Killed In Clashes In Syria
“Fifteen Syrian rebels have been killed and 35 wounded in clashes in
the last 24 hours in Syria, where Turkey launched a major military
incursion in support of the rebels in late August, the Turkish military
said on Monday. Separately, 13 Islamic State militants were killed in 11
air strikes in the latest operations, which are designed to push the hardline
Islamists back from the Turkish border, the military statement said.”
Associated
Press: Turkey Renews OK For Military Operations In Syria, Iraq
“Turkey's state-run news agency says parliament has extended by
another year a motion allowing cross-border military operations into
Syria and Iraq against Kurdish militants and the Islamic State group. The
resolution, first passed in 2014, was renewed on Saturday, the first and
only item on the parliament's agenda on the first day of the new
legislative year. The state-run Anadolu Agency says it will remain in
force until October 30, 2017. The pro-Kurdish People's Democracy Party
voted against the bill, while the other three parties in parliament
approved it. Turkey sent troops and tanks into Syria in August to help
Syrian opposition rebels re-take Islamic State group strongholds near the
border and curb the advance of Syrian Kurdish militia, which are
affiliated with Turkey's outlawed Kurdish rebels.”
Voice
Of America: Turkey Demands Answer On EU Membership, Visa Deal
“Turkey’s president on Saturday warned that his country had reached
the endgame in its decadelong bid for European Union membership. Speaking
to lawmakers at the opening of the parliamentary session, Recep Tayyip
Erdogan said it is time for Brussels to decide whether it wants Ankara as
a full member. Turkey is ready, he added. Erdogan criticized the stalling
of a visa liberalization deal, which was supposed to be finalized this
month. ‘This stance is a declaration that the European Union does not
wish to keep the promise it made Turkey,’ Erdogan said. The promise is
part of the deal with Ankara to stop thousands of migrants from crossing
the Aegean Sea to Greece. Erdogan told Brussels it needs to start
allowing Turks visa-free travel to the European Union this month.”
BBC:
Turkey Post-Coup Purges Convulse Society
“Fatih is one of 15 universities closed down since 15 July for having
links to Fethullah Gulen, the cleric who the government alleges
masterminded the coup and who lives in self-imposed exile in
Pennsylvania. His educational movement opened schools and universities
across Turkey and in 140 other countries from the 1980s. Now anybody with
alleged links to him or the failed takeover is being rounded up in the
biggest purge in Turkey's modern history. Some 100,000 people have been
dismissed or suspended, 70,000 detained and 32,000 arrested: from
teachers to soldiers, police to judges, aircraft pilots to journalists.
Even the country's most famous baklava chef was interrogated. The depth
of the purge is staggering.”
Afghanistan
Associated
Press: Afghan Military Kill 6 Security Forces In Air Strike Mistake
“Five Afghan soldiers and a police officer were killed in an air
strike carried out by an Afghan military helicopter in western Farah
province, Afghanistan's Ministry of Defense said Saturday. The ministry
said in a statement that the helicopter had used ‘inaccurate information
from ground forces’ when it conducted the air strike late Friday night.
It says the forces were being attacked by insurgents in the Bala Buluk
district. When they called for air support, the helicopter incorrectly
fired a rocket at a checkpoint occupied by Afghan security forces. The
incident is being investigated, the statement said. It comes after a U.S.
air strike in eastern Nangarhar province early Wednesday killed at least
15 people. Officials and the U.N. mission in Kabul say the dead were
civilians. Meanwhile in southern Helmand province, 11 Afghan civilians
were killed when their vehicle hit a roadside bomb late Friday night,
said Omar Zwak, spokesman for the provincial governor in Helmand.”
Associated
Press: Afghanistan Seeks $3B In Aid As Corruption Concerns Persist
“Afghanistan's leaders will head to Brussels this week, seeking
billions of dollars in aid as the country confronts an increasingly powerful
Taliban insurgency and pervasive corruption. President Ashraf Ghani and
Chief Executive Abdullah Abdullah hope to secure pledges totaling about
$3 billion a year at the conference, which will be held on Tuesday and
Wednesday. Afghanistan already receives about $5 billion a year, mostly
from the United States, to cover defense costs. The last donor
conference, in Tokyo in 2012, secured $4 billion in annual subsidies for
development. Afghanistan has been mired in war for decades. At the height
of the 15-year U.S. and NATO intervention, billions of dollars flowed
into the country, creating a false economy with growth in the
double-digits. But the drawdown of troops in 2014 led many aid workers
and international agencies to depart or scale back their operations,
causing the economy to all but collapse.”
Reuters:
Afghan Taliban Fighters Press Advance On Helmand Capital
“Taliban fighters have advanced closer to Lashkar Gah, capital of the
strategic southern province of Helmand, pushing into a farming district
on the other side of the river from the town, officials said on Saturday.
Though the Western-backed government in Kabul pushed the insurgents back
with the aid of U.S. airstrikes in August, it is struggling to reverse
the tide of the fighting. Capturing the city would give the Taliban their
first provincial capital since the northern city of Kunduz fell briefly a
year ago and would reinforce the impression that government forces are
losing momentum in the war. The insurgents, who control large sections of
the opium-growing province, are now in Bolan, an agricultural zone that
links Lashkar Gah with Gereshk, a town that straddles the main Highway
One, as well as Marjah district center to the west.”
Yemen
The
Jerusalem Post: Yemen's Houthis Ask Former Aden Governor To Form
Government
“The High Political Council of Yemen's armed Houthi movement and
supporters of former president Ali Abdullah Saleh has appointed Abdulaziz
bin Habtoor to form a national salvation government, Saba news agency
said on Sunday. Habtoor, the former governor of Aden, hails from Shabwa
province in southern Yemen. A civil war is raging between the Iran-allied
Houthis, who control the capital Sanaa, and Prime Minister Ahmed bin Daghr's
internationally recognized government based in the southern port city of
Aden. The Houthis seized the capital Sanaa and pushed the government out
of its last stronghold in Aden in March 2015. The advances by the group
prompted an intervention by a Saudi-led coalition that has launched
thousands of air strikes on the Houthis and their allies in Yemen's army
but has failed to push them out of the capital.”
Egypt
Associated
Press: Suspected Militants Kill 6 Police In Egypt's Restless Sinai
“Suspected Islamic State militants in Egypt's turbulent Sinai
Peninsula ambushed a taxi in which off-duty policemen were traveling back
to their units on Saturday, killing five of them before fleeing,
according to security and medical officials. They said the incident took
place just south of the coastal Sinai city of el-Arish. The soldiers were
returning to duty from home leave. Earlier on Saturday, a roadside bomb
planted by suspected IS militants hit a police armored personnel carrier
in northern Sinai, wounding nine policemen inside, the local police
headquarters said in a statement. One of the nine later died of his
wounds in hospital.”
Associated
Press: Egypt Arrests 3 Reporters Conducting Street Interviews
“Egyptian police detained three opposition journalists who were
conducting street interviews in downtown Cairo about President
Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi's request for small donations of spare change to fund
development programs, security officials said Saturday. They said the
three — Hamdy Mokhtar, Mohammed Hassan, and Osama al-Bishbishi — were
arrested Sept. 26 and face charges of publishing false news and belonging
to a banned organization, Egyptian parlance for the Muslim Brotherhood
group.”
Libya
Reuters:
Libyan Forces Foil Ambush, Lose Eight Men In Sirte Battle: Officials
“Libyan forces repelled an attempted ambush but lost at least eight of
their men as their battle with Islamic State militants encircled in their
former stronghold of Sirte resumed on Sunday, officials said. A Dutch
photojournalist, Jeroen Oerlemans, was also killed in the fighting. A
spokesman for the Libyan forces, Rida Issa, said militants who staged an
ambush east of central Sirte had apparently arrived from the desert, in
the latest sign of an enduring jihadist threat beyond the battle lines.
Forces dominated by fighters from Misrata and aligned with Libya's
U.N.-backed government have been battling to capture Sirte for more than
four months. Supported since Aug. 1 by U.S. air strikes, they have taken
control of most of the city and have been besieging militants trapped in
a thin residential strip near Sirte's seafront for several weeks.”
Nigeria
Associated
Press: Leader Pledges To Rid Nigeria Of Hunger, Omits Worst Crisis
“Nigeria's president promised Saturday to drive hunger out of Africa's
most populous nation but made no mention of a conflict-driven famine
threatening to kill tens of thousands of children in northeast Nigeria.
The United Nations has warned that 75,000 children could die of
starvation in a year if speedy action isn't taken in northeast Nigeria,
where underfunded aid agencies say 4.4 million people need food and
65,000 are living in famine-like conditions amid an Islamic insurgency by
Boko Haram extremists. Children with matchstick limbs and protruding ribs
already are dying but a regional official for Nigeria's National
Emergency Management Agency, Muhammad Kanar, denied Friday that the
region had even one case of malnutrition. He spoke after the U.N.
Children's Fund doubled its funding appeal to $115 million, calling it
one of the world's worst humanitarian crises.”
United
Kingdom
Daily
Mail: Terror Suspect Was Let Out Of The UK By Police After Telling
Officers He Was Visiting Women He Had Met On A Dating Website
“A terror suspect accused of trying to fight for IS in Syria was
allowed to fly out of Britain after telling police he was visiting women
he had met on a dating website. The British Muslim was quizzed by
officers for ten minutes under the Terrorism Act as he prepared to board
a plane from Gatwick to Turkey in January. But they are said to have let
him go after he insisted he simply wanted to meet potential dates in
Istanbul after chatting to them on Match.com. The man, who cannot be
named for legal reasons, allegedly claimed he had paid for a five-night
stay in a hotel there. But the court was told that just three days later
he was picked up by Turkish authorities at a Syrian border post and flown
back to the UK. The man, who is in his twenties, allegedly stayed only
one night at the hotel before boarding a one-way domestic flight to
Gaziantep airport, which is the closest to Turkey’s border with Syria.”
Daily
Mail: Revealed - Five Schools STILL Open Despite Extremist Fears... And
18 Private Islamic Schools Defy Inspectors Branding Them Unsafe
“Dozens of Islamic schools continue to operate despite inspectors
finding that pupils are unsafe, exposed to extreme views or unaware of
basic British values, a Mail investigation reveals today. The findings
suggest that a supposed Government crackdown on extremism in schools –
following the Trojan Horse scandal – has failed to materialise. Five
Islamic schools have been allowed to stay open after inspections found
they were failing to protect children from extremism or radicalisation.
Some 18 are still open despite Ofsted warning that pupils are ‘unsafe’
there. These include one where children were given books about stoning to
death, and another where 99 pupils were found to have gone missing and to
be ‘at risk of exploitation’.”
Germany
RT:
3 Police Cars Set On Fire In Dresden, As Violence Escalates Ahead Of
Germany Unity Day
“Three police cars were set ablaze by unknown arsonists in the German
city of Dresden in the run-up to German Unity Day, marking 26 years since
the reunification of Germany. No one was hurt in the arson attacks,
Reuters reports. Police believe they were carried out in retaliation to
heightened security measures and police presence. The situation grew
tense last week, following two IED blasts – one near a mosque, the other
at an international conference center. Around 2,600 police officers have
now been dispatched to ensure security around the town. Dresden is a
particularly sensitive front, as the city is the birthplace of the
right-wing PEGIDA movement, which has been focusing its efforts on
grassroots activities and publicly protesting against the influx of
Muslim refugees from the war-torn Middle East.”
France
Telegragh:
Majority Of Paris Attackers Used Migration Routes To Enter Europe,
Reveals Hungarian Counter-Terror Chief
“The majority of the Isil extremists who carried out the November 13
Paris attacks entered Europe while posing as migrants, Hungarian security
officials have disclosed. Seven of the attackers, who killed
130 people and left more than 360 others injured, slipped through
Hungary's borders while posing as migrants. It is understood that
ten extremists in total were closely involved in planning and carrying
out the massacre. A handful of them are also understood to have
taken part in the Brussels attacks last March, which claimed 32 lives.
According to Hungary's centre for counter-terrorism, the group of
fanatics set up a ‘logistics hub’ in the country in the summer of 2015
and began using the so-called Balkans route of eastern European countries
to move fighters trained in Syria into Europe. The disclosure comes
amid a propaganda blitz in Hungary, which on Sunday began voting in a
referendum on whether to accept the EU migrant quotas.”
Europe
Haaretz:
Top Rabbi Warns EU: New Wave Of Anti-Semitism Could Push Jews Out Of
Europe
“The British vote to leave the European Union has resulted in a
destabilized continent vulnerable to the joint threat of Islamic
extremism and the radical right, putting the very existence of Jews in
Europe at risk, one of Europe's top rabbis warned Saturday, The
Independent reported. Speaking to the European Parliament on
Tuesday, Rabbi Pinchas Goldschmidt said that Jews in Europe feel as if
they are standing on a train track with two ‘trains coming at each other
with ever increasing speed.’ ‘One train is the train of radical Islam and
Islamic terrorism... The other train is the anti-Semitism of old Europe,
the extreme right,’said the top rabbi, adding that if nothing is done,
Jewish communities could disappear from Europe within 30 years.”
ISIS
Akhbar
Alaan: ISIS's Exploitation Of Natural Resources Is Not Limited To Oil And
Gas
“After its funding sources were dried up, ISIS now seeks to exploit
natural resources in occupied areas in Syria and Iraq. It does this in
any and all ways that yield high profits to cover its costs and pay the
wages of its militants, without taking into account the tenets of the
Shariah (Islamic Law) which it claims to apply and protect. This was
confirmed by the "Observatory of Takfiri Fatwas and Extremist
Ideologies" at Egypt's Dar al-Ifta. It noted that ISIS's
exploitation of natural resources is not limited to oil and gas, but also
extends to livestock and agricultural resources in the region. The
Observatory claimed the terrorist organization took over food
infrastructures - such as silos - which represent a strategic asset,
which had been kept intact. According to the Observatory, the
agricultural sector had not been affected {until now} by the conflict in
Iraq and Syria, and thus the terrorist organization's revenues from this
sector are substantial. ISIS imposes a tax of 5% on machine irrigated
crops and 10% on rain-fed crops.”
Muslim
Brotherhood
The
Seventh Day: Muslim Brotherhood Spent Millions On A Conference To Address
Violence In Malaysia
“The International Organization of the Muslim Brotherhood arranged a
conference in Malaysia, attended by youth from all Brotherhood branches
worldwide. The event, held under the name of "Youth Facing
Extremism," was attended by several prominent leaders of the
Brotherhood. According to sources close to the Brotherhood, the
conference, which was held in Malaysia, underwent preparations for nearly
a month. Invitations were sent to officials of Brotherhood branches
around the world, who were asked to dispatch their youth representatives
to the conference. The event was coordinated with the Malaysian
government to be held in one of the largest halls in the country. The
sources claimed that the conference came {as a gesture} to please the
West and to send a message that the organization does not commit violence
in the Middle East. The sources claimed the Brotherhood spent a great
deal of money on the conference including the hall, invitations and
travel costs of the group's leaders to Malaysia.”
Filkhbr:
Sudan Dismantles Muslim Brotherhood Network For Human Trafficking
“Private sources familiar with Muslim Brotherhood affairs revealed
that a state of confusion has prevailed among its members in the past few
days. This comes after the Sudanese National Security Service detained
some Egyptian Brotherhood members who had fled to Sudan, on charges of
forming a human trafficking network. The sources disclosed that the
charges presented to the suspects by the Sudanese National Security
Agency include involvement in running a youth-trafficking network, ahead
of committing acts of sabotage inside and outside Sudan. The network was
led by the Sudanese Muslim Brotherhood {leader} Mohammed Alsharif.
Sources asserted that the Brotherhood is fully implicated based on
recordings and correspondence exchanged between members of the network,
which was recently dismantled. In addition, Brotherhood suspects made
confessions during the interrogations carried out by the security
services in Sudan. According to the sources, the Sudanese National
Security Agency continues to investigate the network members as to the fate
of numerous young people who were sent to unknown locations.”
Houthi
Alheyad:
Official At The Central Bank Of Yemen: Houthis Looted Half Of The Bank's
Cash
“An official at the Central Bank of Yemen, which is under the control
of the rebels in Sana'a, revealed that at least 50 per cent of the money
withdrawn from the Central Bank's cash reserves still remains in the
Houthis' coffers. The source claimed that the Houthis had anticipated the
Central Bank would {eventually} no longer be in their hands. Shakib
Hubaishi, a member of the Yemeni Central Bank's Board of Directors,
explained that the Central Bank had financed transactions to import basic
commodities for merchants who benefited from the {lucrative} currency
exchange rates the rebels set for them. The sources added that these
transactions were carried out in regions under the Houthis' influence,
while other areas were ignored.”
Nabd
Hadhramout: Houthi Group Imposes A Levy On Ships In The Port Of Hodeidah
“A document reveals that a {new} levy has been imposed by Houthi
militia on ships unloading cargo at the port of Hodeida (in western
Yemen). The document shows the imposition of the levy by the Houthis and
the management of the {Yemeni} Oil Company in Hodeidah Port which is
loyal to the Houthis. The 10-riyal ($ 0.04) levy is being imposed on each
liter of oil derivatives, with the exception of diesel and petroleum.
Private sources stated that the oil company's management in Hodeidah took
part in huge corruption operations, not to mention providing facilities
for the Houthi leaders to loot public money.”
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