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Eye on Extremism
October 4, 2016
The
Wall Street Journal: Al Qaeda Leader Targeted In U.S. Airstrike In Syria
“A Pentagon airstrike in Syria on Monday targeted a senior al Qaeda
leader whose presence was seen by U.S. officials as a sign of the
resurgence of some elements of the extremist movement inside the country.
Defense officials said an airstrike targeted what they described as a
‘prominent member’ of the core al Qaeda group, which is distinct
organizationally from the al Qaeda affiliate formerly known as the Nusra
Front, which now calls itself the Syrian Conquest Front and claims to
have severed ties with al Qaeda. Defense officials said an Egyptian
cleric, Abu al Faraj al Masri, also known as Ahmad Salamah Mabruk, was
the intended target.”
CNN:
Stakes For Iraq's Future Couldn't Be Higher As Mosul Offensive Looms
“On a dusty plain to the east of Mosul, cranes are lowering concrete
walls into place as prefabricated living quarters are trucked in. It's a
race against time: this will be an improvised base for troops from Iraq's
9th Armored Division amid final preparations for the assault to end ISIS'
control of Iraq's second largest city and the group's last major
stronghold in the country. Iraqi troops were last in this part of
northern Iraq in the summer of 2014, when they were fleeing the rampant
advance of ISIS fighters. Now, as part of an agreement with the Kurdistan
Regional Government and the United States, they are preparing to reverse
that humiliating loss.”
New
York Post: ISIS Leader Al-Baghdadi May Have Been Poisoned
“The Pentagon is investigating whether ISIS kingpin Abu Bakr
al-Baghdadi was poisoned during a lunchtime feast — causing him to fall
seriously ill. The ISIS leader and three commanders were eating in the
small town of Be’aj, Iraq, when all four suffered “severe poisoning” and
had to be “transferred to an unknown location under strict measures,” the
Iraqi news agency WAA said. The barbaric terror group, also known as ISIL
and Daesh, has launched a full-scale investigation to find the culprits,
according to WAA.”
Fox
News: Russia Deploys Advanced Anti-Missile System To Syria For First
Time, US Officials Say
“Russia has deployed an advanced anti-missile system to Syria for the
first time, three US officials tell Fox News, the latest indication that
Moscow continues to ramp up its military operations in Syria in support
of President Bashar al-Assad. It comes after Russia's actions led to the
collapse of a cease-fire and the cut-off of direct talks with the U.S.
While Moscow’s motives are not certain, officials say the new
weapon system could potentially counter any American cruise missile
attack in Syria. Components of the SA-23 Gladiator anti-missile and
anti-aircraft system, which has a range of roughly 150 miles, arrived
over the weekend ‘on the docks’ of a Russian naval base along Syria’s
Mediterranean coastal city of Tartus, two US officials said. It is the
first time Russia has deployed the SA-23 system outside its borders,
according to one Western official citing a recent intelligence
assessment. The missiles and associated components are still in their
crates and are not yet operational, according to the officials.”
CNN:
Syria: Suicide Bomber Kills 22 At Kurdish Wedding Party
“ISIS has claimed responsibility for a deadly suicide bombing on
Monday at a Kurdish wedding party in northeast Syria, the latest violent
act to destabilize the embattled country. At least 22 people were killed
and dozens more wounded in the explosion near the city of Hasaka,
according to the UK-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights. The groom
was among those killed, SOHR founder Rami Abdulrahman said. The group
cited sources as saying a suicide bomber set off the explosion inside a
wedding hall in the village of Tal Tawil, which is under the control of
Syrian Kurdish forces. Kurdish forces are playing a key role in fighting
ISIS in Syria and Iraq.”
Fox
News: US Warships Sent To Area Where Iran-Backed Rebels Attacked
Saudi-Led Coalition Ship
“The U.S. Navy dispatched three warships near the southern coast of
Yemen after four rockets hit and nearly sank a United Arab Emirates
auxiliary ship Saturday, two U.S. defense officials told Fox News.
Iran-backed Houthi rebels in Yemen claimed responsibility for the attack.
There were no reported injuries to the Emerati crew. Al Jazeera reported
on video of the attack. Iran supplied the Houthis with the
‘shoulder-fired rockets’ that nearly destroyed the UAE ship, according to
two U.S. officials. It was not immediately clear what type of rocket the
rebels may have fired. The ship was formerly contracted to the U.S., two
defense officials confirmed, and at one time an American company owned
the vessel.”
Fox
News: Man Living In Maryland Charged In ISIS Group Case
“A citizen of Bangladesh who was living in Maryland has been charged
with attempting to provide material support and resources to the Islamic
State group. A court document says that 24-year-old Nelash Mohamed Das of
Hyattsville was ready to carry out what he thought was an attack on a
member of the U.S. military when he was arrested Friday. The supposed
attack was set up by a confidential informant for the FBI. Das, a legal
permanent resident of the United States, made his first appearance in
federal court Monday. He has been ordered held until a detention hearing
Thursday. Online court records did not list an attorney for him, though a
spokeswoman for the United States Attorney for the District of Maryland
said Das had been assigned a public defender. An attempt by The
Associated Press to reach the attorney Monday evening by phone for
comment was unsuccessful.”
The
New York Times: Emboldened Taliban Overrun Parts Of Kunduz And Taunt
Afghan Forces
“The Taliban overran central neighborhoods in the critical Afghan
provincial capital of Kunduz on Monday, planting their flag in the city’s
main roundabout and shaking the Afghan government in a repeat of the
insurgents’ assault on the city a year ago. Fighting in the city
continued into the night, and American officials said that aircraft were
there to help and that other ‘assets’ were moving in. But on social
media, the Taliban taunted the struggling Afghan forces and their
American allies, providing a blow-by-blow account of their assault even
as senior Afghan leaders traveled to Brussels for an international
conference where they were to present a status report and ask for
sustained international funding. ‘What is point of backing a regime holed
up in Kabul, riven with old rivalries & useless as a turd?’ read one
post from a Twitter account associated with the insurgents.”
Daily
Beast: ISIS Sets Sights On The Rest Of Africa
“Officially, the so-called Islamic State (widely known as ISIS) is on
the run: its manpower reduced in the Middle East, its troops pushed out
of their Libyan strongholds. For President Obama, who conceded that
bungling the aftermath of the 2011 Libyan intervention was the “worst
mistake” of his presidency, the gains made in North Africa represent an
eleventh hour redemption. Headlines are declaring that ISIS is in
retreat. But the question to ask is: retreat to where? In an essay
translated by the Quilliam Foundation, an ISIS supporter identifies Libya
as a “strategic gateway” from which “pandemonium could be wrought in the
southern Europe.” Even more than Syria, the fate of Libya is likely to
color the next president’s foreign policy. While Syria has been a
whirlpool, sucking in the most toxic elements in the region, Libya is a
sandstorm, spreading its mayhem outward. According to the ISIS
supporter’s essay, Libya is “the key to Egypt, the key to Tunisia, Sudan,
Mali, Algeria and Niger too.”
Deutsche
Welle: All-Female 'Islamic State' Cell Arrested In Morocco
“Police in Morocco have captured 10 women who had allegedly pledged
allegiance to the militant group ‘Islamic State.’ The female cell is
suspected of plotting suicide attacks across the country. Morocco's
interior ministry released a statement Monday saying the Central Bureau
of Judicial Investigations had dismantled the group in operations spread
across eight towns. The suspected cell was active in recruiting and
training women in several parts of the country including Tangiers and
towns near the capital, Rabat, authorities said. The women had ‘tried to
obtain the chemicals used to make explosive belts’ and had planned to
attack ‘vital installations,’ according to the ministry.”
Associated
Press: Revenge Against Nigeria's Military Leads Some To Boko Haram
“The desire for revenge against Nigeria's heavy-handed military is a
leading reason that people join the Boko Haram Islamic extremist group,
according to a new study published Monday. Nearly 60 percent of 119
former Boko Haram fighters interviewed in rehabilitation camps in the
country's northeast cited revenge against the military as having a
strong, or being the only, influence in their recruitment. ‘They kill
innocent people that are not (Boko Haram) members ... I think they deliberately
do so. So they (victims) join the group to fight the military,’ the study
quoted one former extremist as saying. The study also found that many
interviewed said they were pressured into joining the extremists.”
United
States
CNN:
US Suspends Talks With Russia Over Syria
“The US announced Monday it is ‘suspending its participation in
bilateral channels with Russia’ that had come about as part of the
short-lived cessation of hostilities in Syria. ‘This is not a decision
that was taken lightly,’ State Department spokesman John Kirby said in a
statement announcing the suspension. ‘Everybody's patience with Russia
has run out,’ White House Press Secretary Josh Earnest told reporters
Monday while addressing the decision. Earnest said Russia had lost
credibility by ‘making a series of commitments without any indication
they were committed to following them,’ accusing Russia and its Syrian
regime allies of trying ‘to bomb civilian populations into submission.’”
Reuters:
Exclusive: U.S. Helped Clinch Iraq Oil Deal To Keep Mosul Battle On Track
“Shuttle diplomacy by the United States' envoy to the anti-Islamic
State coalition brokered an oil deal between Iraq and its Kurdish region
vital to a climactic battle with the jihadists, diplomats, officials and
oil men say. The oil revenue-sharing deal sealed in August was
critical to getting the central and regional governments to coordinate
planning for a push on the Islamic State stronghold Mosul, which Kurdish
peshmerga forces surround on three sides, as soon as this month, the
sources said. Brett McGurk shuttled from Iraqi Kurdistan capital Erbil to
Baghdad and back again from the first half of April, culminating in
a June 19 meeting in Erbil with Kurdistan Regional Government
(KRG) leader Massoud Barzani and Iraqi National Security Advisor Falah
Fayad.”
Syria
The
Wall Street Journal: Syrian Rebels Advance On Islamic State-Held Town Of
Dabiq
“Syrian rebels backed by Turkey have launched an offensive against the
Islamic State held town of Dabiq, which holds religious and symbolic
meaning for the terror group. Fighting on the outskirts of the town in
northern Syria intensified Sunday night, when some 15 rebels were killed
and 35 wounded during heavy clashes, the Turkish military said. The rebel
advance was aided by heavy air and artillery support from the U.S.-led
coalition fighting Islamic State, the Turkish military said. Airstrikes
killed 13 Islamic State militants, it said. ‘We are very close to Dabiq….
We have planned for this,’ said Ahmad Othman, commander of the Sultan
Murad group, one of the Turkish-backed rebel factions advancing on the
town.”
Syria
Conflict: Hospital In Rebel-Held Aleppo 'Bombed Again'
“The main trauma hospital in the rebel-held east of the Syrian city of
Aleppo has been hit in an air strike for the third time in a week,
activists say. The extent of the damage was unclear, but video purportedly
of the aftermath showed damaged walls and craters on one side of the M10
hospital. Three maintenance workers were among those killed, a medical
charity said. Hundreds have died since government forces launched an
offensive to take full control of Aleppo two weeks ago. Earlier, a senior
United Nations official warned that the healthcare system in eastern
Aleppo had been ‘obliterated’ and called on both sides to agree 48-hour
humanitarian pauses to allow in aid.”
Iraq
Reuters:
Suicide Bombers Hit Shi'ite Gatherings In Baghdad, At Least 11 Dead:
Police
“Suicide bombers attacked two Shi'ite Muslim processions in Baghdad on
Monday, killing at least 11 people and wounding more than 40, police and
medical sources said. Islamic State claimed responsibility for the blasts
at the Shi'ite events commemorating the slaying of Prophet Mohammad's
grandson Hussein. A bomber detonated his explosive vest in the middle of
one Shi’ite procession in the Amil district of southern Baghdad, killing
six and wounding 25, the sources said. A similar attack hit a procession
in the eastern Mashtal district, killing five and wounding 18, the
sources added.”
PBS
Newshour: To Drive ISIS From Mosul, A Complicated Coalition Joins Forces
“Now the first of three reports this week on the fight for Iraq.
Thirteen years after the U.S. military invasion, the country still
struggles to stand on its own, as it faces profound challenges, none more
dire than the threat posed by the Islamic State, which controls parts of
the country. Hungry and crushed together in the punishing sun, these
Iraqis, refugees in their own land, desperately grasp for food. They have
fled south of Mosul City, where fighting between government forces and
ISIS has been raging for months. New offensives have ISIS in retreat, but
with their homes, and all they know, engulfed in the battle, they have
come here.”
Turkey
Associated
Press: Turkey-Backed Syrian Rebels Lose 15 In Battles With IS
“Fighting in northern Syria between Turkey-backed Syrian rebels and
Islamic State militants killed at least 15 rebels as the opposition
pressed toward a town of symbolic importance for the extremists, an
activist group and Turkish officials said Monday. The Syrian government
continued to strike besieged, rebel-held parts of eastern Aleppo, hitting
the area's largest hospital, according to activists. A monitoring group
said more than 400 civilians have been killed in and around Aleppo since
the collapse of a U.S. and Russian-brokered cease-fire two weeks ago,
mainly in the rebel-held east. In central Syria, meanwhile, two suicide
bombers struck the city of Hama close to an office of President Bashar
Assad's Baath party, killing three people and wounding at least 11, state
news agency SANA said.”
Reuters:
Fighting In Turkey's Kurdish Southeast Kills 20 Militants, Two Soldiers:
Sources
“Fighting in Turkey's mainly Kurdish southeast has killed 20 militants
and two soldiers, security sources said on Monday. Kurdistan Workers
Party (PKK) rebels in the mountainous Daglica area of Hakkari province,
which borders Iraq, detonated explosives on a road as a military vehicle
passed, killing two soldiers and wounding a third, the sources said. Separately,
soldiers killed a total of 20 PKK fighters in two days of operations in
the Beytussebap region of neighboring Sirnak province, according to a
statement from the governor's office and information provided by security
sources. The autonomy-seeking PKK, deemed a terrorist organization by
Turkey, the United States and European Union, took up arms in 1984, and
more than 40,000 people, mainly Kurds, have died in the conflict since
then.”
The
Wall Street Journal: Turkey Extends State Of Emergency
“Turkey’s government said it was extending the state of emergency
declared after the failed July coup by three months to help it fight
terrorism, as opposition politicians accused President Recep Tayyip
Erdogan of deploying the expanded powers to crack down on critics. The
90-day extension will go into effect Oct. 19, Deputy Prime Minister Numan
Kurtulmus said Monday after a regular weekly cabinet meeting chaired by
Mr. Erdogan at the presidential palace in Ankara. Turkish officials
enacted a state of emergency July 21—six days after the coup attempt—and
launched a purge targeting the followers of U.S.-based Turkish cleric
Fethullah Gulen, who is accused of masterminding the putsch. He denies
the charge and has urged the U.S. to refuse Turkey’s request to extradite
him.”
Afghanistan
Reuters:
At Least Six Killed, 35 Wounded In Afghanistan Market Blast
“At least six people were killed and 35 wounded on Monday, when an
improvised explosive device tore into a crowded marketplace in a northern
Afghan province on the border with Turkmenistan, officials said. The
bomb, hidden on a bicycle, exploded as farmers gathered in Darzab
district of the province of Jawzjan on market day, but there was no
immediate word on who was responsible. ‘People usually come from
surrounding villages on Monday to do their shopping in the city,’ said
Reza Ghafoori, a spokesman for the provincial governor. ‘Enemies of the
people of Afghanistan put an improvised explosive device on a bicycle and
targeted our innocent countrymen who were there to buy their needs.’”
CNN:
Afghan Forces Clash With Taliban In Key City Of Kunduz
“Afghan forces were engaged in fierce fighting in the strategically
important northern city of Kunduz late Monday after the Taliban launched
a pre-dawn raid. Shah Hussain Murtazawi, the deputy presidential
spokesman, said Afghan security forces had recaptured the main square of
Kunduz from the Taliban and special forces had arrived to help regain
control of other areas in the city. The NATO-led Resolute Support mission
said on its Twitter account that the government was in control of Kunduz
and US forces were providing support. The Taliban briefly captured the
city in September 2015, and the memories of that attack spurred huge
numbers of people to flee, one aid worker said.”
Voice
Of America: Afghanistan Appeals For Aid To Keep Afghan Migrants At Home
“Afghanistan is appealing to European donors to open their wallets at
an international donors' conference Wednesday, arguing that jobs created
through development projects will help stem the tide of migrants that is
destabilizing the European continent. High unemployment combined with
growing insecurity drove nearly 200,000 Afghans to Europe last year,
exacerbating the global migrant crisis. European nations have struggled
to cope with the flood of young Afghan asylum seekers, and exerted
pressure on Afghanistan to roll back the human exodus.”
The
Washington Post: Taliban Opens Offensives In Afghanistan Ahead Of
Government Appeal To Donors
“Taliban fighters waged a multipronged assault Monday on the northern
city of Kunduz and sought to gain footholds in the southern Helmand
province, sending a pointed reminder of their resilience and reach as
Afghan officials traveled to Brussels to meet with foreign donors and
make a case for continued support.The twin battles — with reinforcements
called to Kunduz and U.S. airstrikes aiding Afghan forces in the south —
also highlighted the struggle to keep the insurgents at bay despite the
better firepower of Afghan troops and the backing of U.S. airstrikes.
Most NATO forces withdrew from Afghanistan at the end of 2014. The Afghan
air force conducted several strikes over Kunduz, while U.S. military
officials said they were ready to assist Afghan forces and were moving
equipment and aircraft to the region.”
Reuters:
World Powers Seek Billions More Dollars To Keep Afghanistan Running
“World powers will convene on Brussels on Tuesday to raise billions
more dollars for Afghanistan to keep the country running until 2020, but
the bigger prize would be a peace deal after almost four decades of
conflict. Fifteen years after the U.S. invasion that ousted Taliban
rulers harbouring militants behind the attacks on New York and
Washington, Afghanistan remains reliant on international aid and faces a
resurgent Taliban that threatens the country's progress. The two-day,
EU-led donor conference in Brussels will seek fresh funds, despite
Western public fatigue with their governments' involvement in
Afghanistan. Around 70 governments, including the foreign ministers of
the United States, Russia, Iran, China and India, are expected to attend.”
Yemen
The
Huffington Post: Why Putin Is Keeping A Close Eye On Yemen
“On August 21, 2016, former Yemeni President Ali Abdullah Saleh urged
Yemen’s Houthi government to give the Russian military access to all of
Yemen’s bases, ports and airports. To justify this bold policy
suggestion, Saleh praised Russian President Vladimir Putin’s ‘positive
attitude’ in the UN Security Council, and described Russia as Yemen’s
‘closest kin’ in the international community. As the Bush administration
viewed Saleh’s Yemen as a reliable US counter-terrorism partner after
9/11, Saleh’s pleas for Russian military assistance represent a striking
break from his foreign policy approach as president. Even though Russia
is unlikely to intervene in Yemen on Saleh’s behalf, Moscow’s tacit
support for Saleh and Yemen’s Houthi government reveals a great deal
about Putin’s geopolitical ambitions in the Middle East.”
Reuters:
Kidnapped Red Cross Worker Freed In Yemen And Taken To Oman: Agency
“A Red Cross worker kidnapped 10 months ago in Yemen was freed on
Monday and taken to neighboring Oman, Omani state news agency ONA and the
ICRC said. French-Tunisian, Nourane Houas, a staff member of the
International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) office in Sanaa, had been
kidnapped along with a Yemeni man by unidentified gunmen who intercepted
their vehicle in the Yemeni capital Sanaa. The man was released hours
later but Houas held in an unknown location. ONA quoted an Omani foreign
ministry official as saying France had asked Oman to try to locate her.
‘The concerned authorities in the sultanate, and in coordination with
some Yemeni parties, managed to find the aforementioned woman in Yemen
and transferred her to the sultanate this evening, in preparation to
repatriate her home,’ ONA said.”
Egypt
The
Daily Beast: Death Ship Won’t Stop Egypt’s Migrants
“Over 16,863 unaccompanied children have made the perilous
Mediterranean crossing from North Africa to Italy so far this year,
nearly double the 8,354 who traveled last year, according to an
email sent to me by Save The Children. Over 2,666 of those unaccompanied
minors were Egyptian, more than triple the 854 who traveled in the same
period last year. Desperation is driving families to urge their young
sons to take the deadly 10-day sea trip. A crumbling economy in Egypt,
fueled by five years of unrest and political oppression, means few have
opportunities if they stay. For the poorest that means there is no way of
even raising the funds to purchase a ticket for the migrant boats to
Italy. Increasingly, children are signing their lives away to traffickers
promising to pay back the crippling $5,000 fees from their pitiful
earnings when they get to Europe, tying them to traffickers for years.”
BBC:
Senior Muslim Brotherhood Leader 'Shot Dead' In Egypt
“A senior leader of the Muslim Brotherhood organisation has been
killed by Egyptian Interior Ministry forces, the ministry says. In a
statement, it said Mohamed Kamal died in a gun battle along with another
member of the group on Monday. The ministry said Mr Kamal was in charge
of the group's armed wing, although the Brotherhood maintains it is a
exclusively peaceful organisation. He had been sentenced to life in
prison on two counts in absentia. The Muslim Brotherhood said he had
disappeared on Monday.”
Middle
East
The
Times Of Israel: Palestinian Court Orders Local Elections In West Bank
Only
“The Palestinian Authority’s high court on Monday ordered municipal
elections to be held only in the West Bank and not in the
Hamas-controlled Gaza Strip, though a new date for the suspended polls
was not set. The ruling could bring to an end hopes that the municipal
elections would be the first since 2006 in which both Islamist movement
Hamas, which controls the Gaza Strip, and Palestinian Authority President
Mahmoud Abbas’s Fatah, which runs the West Bank, would participate. ‘The
court orders the implementation of the government’s decision on the
holding of local elections,’ court president Hisham al-Hatoo ruled before
a packed courtroom in the West Bank city of Ramallah. He said however the
judiciary in Gaza did not have necessary ‘guarantees’ in place for the
holding of the polls.”
Reuters:
Abbas's Farewell To Israel's Peres Stirs Controversy At Home
“Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas is feeling a backlash at home
over his attendance at the funeral of Israeli statesman Shimon Peres, who
shared a Nobel prize for interim peace deals with the Palestinians. In
Arabic postings on social media, critics of the Western-backed Abbas have
focused on a view of Peres's legacy that jars with his world acclaim as
an architect of the landmark Oslo accords in the 1990s. Peres, a former
prime minister and president, died on Wednesday at the age of 93. He was
buried in a state ceremony in Jerusalem on Friday attended by U.S.
President Barack Obama and dozens of dignitaries from around the world.
But the president of Egypt and king of Jordan, leaders of the only Arab
countries to have signed peace treaties with Israel, stayed away, while
Abbas's main political rival, the Hamas Islamist group that runs the Gaza
Strip, condemned his participation as having betrayed Palestinian
principles.”
Nigeria
Associated
Press: Niger, Chad Forces Kill 126 Extremists Since July, Army Says
“Niger's army says joint operations with Chad's military have killed
about 126 Islamic extremists since July. Niger army spokesman Michel
Ledru Moustapha said Monday that forces from Niger, Chad and Nigeria have
re-occupied several cities in northern Nigeria after Boko Haram
extremists killed more than two dozen soldiers in Niger's town of Bosso
in June. Bosso borders Nigeria, where Boko Haram originates. Moustapha
also says joint forces have captured two of the Boko Haram extremists.
Niger contributes to the multi-national force set up to fight Boko Haram
in the region. The group's seven-year insurgency has killed at least
20,000 people and displaced 2.6 million, according to Amnesty International
and the United Nations.”
International
Business Times: Boko Haram Terrorists 'Recruited By Friends And Family',
Not Imams
“Members of Nigeria-based terror group Boko Haram are often recruited
by people they already know, such as friends and family, a new study has
claimed. This contradicts previous beliefs that the militants were
recruited by religious clerics in mosques and madrasas, Islamic colleges.
The report – by a group of organisations including Finn Church Aid (FCA)
and the International Dialogue Centre (KAICIID) – was unveiled at the
United Nations on 3 October. Researchers interviewed 119 former members
of the extremist group in Borno and Adamawa – some of the states that
bear the brunt of the insurgency – erupted in 2009. ‘Former Boko Haram
fighters explained that people close to them – friends, family and
relatives – introduced 60% of them to the organization,’ said the study.”
United
Kingdom
Daily
Mail: MI5 Missed Chance To Foil Paris And Brussels Terrorists: Undercover
Operation Was Halted Three Months Before Meeting Between Ringleader And
British Extremists
“Police and MI5 could have prevented the Paris and Brussels terrorist
atrocities after a secret operation targeting British suspects linked to
the plot was launched months before the attacks. But senior officers
decided to halt the undercover probe three months before one of the coordinators
of the Paris attacks crossed the Channel to meet extremists in Britain,
it can now be disclosed. The decision meant that investigators missed a
key meeting between a group of alleged Islamic State supporters in
Britain and Mohamed Abrini last summer – which could have led them to the
Brussels-based cell before they carried out a wave of shootings and
bombings, killing 130 people in Paris last November.”
BBC:
Couple Admit Funding Islamic State Fighter Nephew
“A married couple from London have admitted providing funding for
their nephew who was fighting in Syria with militants from the Islamic
State group. Mohammed and Nazimabee Golamaully, from Mitcham, pleaded
guilty at the Old Bailey to transferring £219, knowing it may be used for
terrorist purposes. Nephew Zafirr Golamaully travelled from his home on
the Indian Ocean island of Mauritius to join IS. His uncle and aunt will
be sentenced on 10 November. They did not tell Zafirr's parents and their
money transfer was only discovered during a police investigation into a worldwide
network of terrorism funding. Prosecutors said that, before leaving his
home in Mauritius, Zafirr had spoken to his uncle on the messaging app
Whatsapp, asking for help to deceive his parents.”
Germany
Deutsche
Welle: Troubled Dresden Hopes For Peaceful Day Of German Unity
“Two of Dresden's most attractive buildings will take Germany's center
stage on Monday, when the nation celebrates the 26th anniversary of its
peaceful reunification. An ecumenical service is being held in the
Frauenkirche, the city's symbolic landmark, which was rebuilt with the
support of various citizens' initiatives after being destroyed in an
Allied firebombing during World War II. And the main ceremony will be
held in the world-famous Semperoper. German President Joachim Gauck,
Chancellor Angela Merkel and Bundestag President Norbert Lammert top the
guest list. According to tradition, all 16 federal states are showcasing
themselves on the Day of German Unity. Dresden has acquired a bad image
throughout Germany and internationally because of its weekly xenophobic
marches.”
Sputnik
News: Germany Protests: Refugee Crisis Threatens To Divide Country On Day
Of Unity
“Monday marks 26 years since the reunification of Germany, with the
country holding celebrations throughout the day. However while the
emphasis is on unity, police in Dresden are on high alert for violence
and anti-immigrant protests as Germany’s refugee policy threatens to
divide the country. While all of Germany's 16 states will hold Day
of Unity celebrations, the former East German city of Dresden
will take center stage this year, with German Chancellor Angela
Merkel, President Joachim Guack and the Bundestag leader Norbert Lammert
to attend a ceremony in the city. With Dresden's state
of Saxony famous for its unique traditions and cuisine,
as well as being home to Germany's linguistic minority
of Sorbian speakers, many believe the city is well placed
to celebrate the country's diversity and culture.”
The
Washington Post: Germany Reunified 26 Years Ago, But Some Divisions Are
Still Strong
“Germany celebrated 26 years of reunification on Monday, but not
everyone was convinced there was much to celebrate. In Dresden, eastern
Germany's largest city, protesters called German Chancellor Angela Merkel
and other politicians ‘traitors’ and shouted ‘Merkel must go.’ Those
slogans have become common in the city, where anti-foreigner demonstrations
have taken place every Monday for about two years now. In
a tweet, the regional government of Saxony, which hosted the ceremony
this year, condemned the slogans Monday morning, saying officials
were ‘saddened and ashamed.’ Only a handful of people attended the
demonstration. But their shouting put a painful public spotlight at the
continuing divisions within Germany. Many eastern Germans feel left
behind and excluded from the economic prosperity in the west.”
Europe
Newsweek:
Hungary’s Government Lauds 'Historic' Result Of EU Quota Referendum
“Hungarians went to the polls on Sunday, to choose whether they
supported or opposed EU demands for quotas on refugee intake. The result
was strongly against the EU policy, but the turnout was below 50 percent.
In the aftermath the government shared its opinion with Newsweek. Rarely
have so many Hungarian voters turned out to cast a ballot in support of
one cause as they did in Sunday’s referendum. The 3.3 million ‘no’ voters
constitute one of the strongest mandates of any vote in Hungary—be it a
referendum or general election— since 1989. ‘The weapon will be strong
enough even in Brussels,’ said prime minister Viktor Orbán on Sunday night
as final results were coming in.”
Fox
News: Hungary Hopes To Deploy Thousands Of 'Border Hunters' In Bid To
Stop Migrants
“Hungary is recruiting thousands of so-called ‘border hunters’ to
patrol its razor-wire boundary fence, planning to equip the special unit
with night-vision goggles, riot gear and dogs in an effort to keep
migrants at bay, The Washington Post reported. The nation is hoping to
attract 3,000 border hunters to support the 10,000 police officers and
soldiers already trying to keep migrants – many of whom have come from
war-torn Middle Eastern countries such as Syria and Iraq – at bay in
Serbia, the BBC reported. Hungary hopes to have the hunters in place by
May. Recruits must be 18 and pass a psychological test. They will be
trained for six months before going on duty.”
BBC:
Russian Blogger Anton Nosik Convicted Of Extremism
“Anton Nosik, a well-known Russian blogger and internet entrepreneur,
has been found guilty of extremism by a Russian court. He was fined
500,000 roubles (£6,000, $8,000) but avoided prison. The case centred on
a blog post he wrote on LiveJournal in 2015 with the headline Wipe Syria
off the Face of the Earth. Nosik was charged with inciting racial hatred
after writing that he supported those who were bombing the country. Judge
Yevgeni Naydenov said: ‘Nosik's actions sought to incite enmity and
hatred towards Syrians, a group of people based on ethnic and geographic
characteristics.’ Nosik wrote: ‘My opinion on this issue is that my
statements do not contain any extremist views... I positively do not see
any extremism in the fact that I will not feel sorry for the Syrian
state.’ The case has divided opinion in Russia, with some accusing the
state of double standards while others have criticised Nosik for his
controversial views.”
Associated
Press: Italy: More Than 6,000 Migrants Rescued In Sea Off Libya
“The Italian coast guard says 6,055 migrants have been rescued in one
day in the Mediterranean off Libya. Nine bodies were recovered. The coast
guard said it coordinated a total of 39 rescues Monday in the sea about
30 miles north of Tripoli. Smugglers took advantage of the first day of
calm seas after days of rough waters to launch vessels crowded with
migrants who pay them in hopes of reaching European shores. Most of the
vessels were rubber dinghies, but there were also two rafts. Doctors
Without Borders said the dead included a 23-year-old pregnant woman.
Italian coast guard and navy ships, as well as vessels in European
Frontex sea patrols and several humanitarian organizations, participated
in the rescues.”
India
Newsweek:
India Arrests ISIS Cell Suspected Of Plotting Attacks During Diwali
“Indian authorities have dismantled what they called Monday a ‘terror
module’ inspired by the Islamic State militant group (ISIS) that was
planning attacks on notable individuals and public places during the
Hindu festival of Diwali. The country’s national counter-extremism agency
arrested six men who had gathered at a hilltop shrine in the southern
state of Kerala, who it said were preparing explosives and bringing
together other materials in order to execute attacks on the occasion
known as the Festival of Lights at the end of October. ‘During the
searches, incriminating material, including electronic devices have been
seized from their possession and search of their premises,’ India’s
National Investigation Agency said in a statement, Reuters reported.”
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