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Eye on Extremism
January 4, 2017
Reuters:
Identity Of Istanbul Nightclub Attacker Established: Foreign Minister
“The identity of the gunman who killed 39 people in an attack on an
Istanbul nightclub on New Year's Day has been established, Foreign
Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu said in a televised interview with the
state-run Anadolu news agency on Wednesday. The gunman, who fled after
the attack, remains at large. Anadolu has said some 20 people have been
detained as part of the investigation into the shooting. Cavusoglu did
not identify the attacker.”
NBC
News: Turkey And ISIS: Istanbul Attack Signals Descent Into 'Open War'
“The massacre targeting New Year's Eve revelers at an Istanbul
nightclub illustrates that the relationship between ISIS and Turkey has
shifted from an uneasy peace to an all-out war, according to experts.
ISIS has claimed responsibility for the shooting, identifying the
attacker who killed 39 people as ‘a heroic soldier of the caliphate.’ The
group said the rampage had been carried out ‘in response to a call’ from
its leader, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, although it didn't say whether it
directed or merely inspired the perpetrator. They did not identify the
attacker by name or provide proof he was acting on their behalf.”
BBC:
Syria War: Air Strikes Kill 25 Jihadists In Idlib Province, Monitors Say
“Air strikes in northern Syria have killed at least 25 members of a
prominent jihadist group, including senior figures, monitors say. The
UK-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights says it is not clear who
carried out the attack against the Jabhat Fateh al-Sham group, formerly
known as Nusra Front. Russia and Turkey say the group is not included in
a ceasefire deal in Syria. Meanwhile, rebel groups say they are halting
preparations for peace talks. A statement signed by a number of groups
cited ‘many big breaches’ by the Syrian government and its allies as a
reason. The ceasefire was brokered by Turkey and Russia last Thursday and
has mostly held since then. Peace talks were planned for later this month
in Astana, Kazakhstan.”
Al
Jazeera: ISIL Ramps Up Fight With Weaponised Drones
“As fighting raged in eastern Mosul on a recent afternoon, a black
Humvee arrived at an Iraqi army command post with a collection of
plastics, electronics and rotor blades lashed to its back. Soldiers
leaped to unload the cargo, which comprised the remnants of the latest
tool in ISIL's armoury: drones. The haul included a number of small
devices of the kind favoured by filmmakers and hobbyists, costing a few
hundred dollars apiece. But there were also larger, fixed-wing craft
fashioned out of corrugated plastic and duct tape, apparently made by the
fighters themselves. Since mid-2014, the Islamic State of Iraq and the
Levant (ISIL, also known as ISIS) group has held Mosul, after sweeping
through northern Iraq in a shock offensive.”
Military
Weighs Expanded Use Of Cyber, Space Weapons Against ISIL
“Military chiefs are prepared to give President-elect Donald Trump the
options he wants to intensify the fight against the Islamic State,
including the possibility of granting commanders greater leeway to use
secret cyber-warfare and space weapons, the top Air Force leader said.
"We’ve heard him loud and clear that he’s going to be looking for
options,” Gen. David Goldfein, the Air Force chief of staff, told USA
TODAY. Goldfein said the recommendations may center on permitting field
commanders more flexibility to deploy an array of weapons against the
militants, who are waging a terrorism campaign beyond their bases in Iraq
and Syria.”
Reuters:
Smuggled By Boat Or Scaling Wrecked Bridges, Residents Escape Mosul's
Besieged West
“They wait for nightfall before attempting the perilous escape across
bombed-out bridges and front lines between Islamic State militants and
Iraqi forces. Some cross the Tigris River by boat, after the U.S.-led
coalition bombed the five bridges connecting the city's two halves to
restrict Islamic State movements. Others scale what remains of the
bridges using a rope. Most of the 116,000 civilians who have fled Mosul
since Iraqi forces launched their campaign to recapture Islamic State's
biggest stronghold came from the eastern half of the city, where
government troops have gradually gained ground. But as the biggest battle
in Iraq since 2003 enters its 12th week, a growing number of people are
escaping from the besieged west bank of the Tigris, a half of the city that
is still fully under the militants' control.”
The
Washington Post: How Iraq And Turkey Could Beat The Islamic State But
Still Lose
“A String of bombings in Baghdad and a gunman’s bloody rampage in an
Istanbul nightclub over New Year’s weekend underlined the continuing
capacity of the Islamic State to strike beyond the borders of its
shrinking territory. In the past two years, the terrorist movement has
lost some 50,000 fighters, according to U.S. estimates, as well as more
than half of the ground it once controlled in Syria and Iraq. But with
offensives to capture its two biggest remaining cities, Mosul and Raqqa,
stalled or moving slowly, the Islamic State retains the potential to
inflict grievous harm on the countries around it, as well as to target
Western cities.”
The
Washington Post: Syrian Cease-Fire Crumbles As Government Forces Advance
Around Damascus
“A Syrian cease-fire backed by Russia and Turkey is crumbling five
days after it began, with government forces pushing offensives around
Damascus and rebels threatening to suspend participation in new peace
talks. The truce was to have been followed by a meeting between
government representatives and mainstream rebel factions in Astana, the
capital of Kazakhstan. But while fighting has largely ebbed in Syria’s
north, where Turkey wields influence over most rebel groups, troops loyal
to Syrian President Bashar al-Assad have continued strategic offensives
in the Damascus suburbs.”
Reuters:
Turkish Foreign Minister Calls On Iran To Stop Truce Violations In Syria
“Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu called on Iran to exert
pressure on Shi'ite-backed militias and the Syrian government to stop
violating a ceasefire in Syria, warning it was putting planned peace
talks in peril. Turkey is working with Russia on the question of
sanctions for those who violate the ceasefire deal, which was brokered by
Ankara and Moscow, Cavusoglu said in a televised interview with the
state-run Anadolu news agency. He warned that peace negotiations being
prepared by Moscow in the Kazakh capital, Astana, could fail if increased
ceasefire violations are not halted.”
Reuters:
U.S.-Led Coalition Carried Out Flights To Support Turkish Forces In Syria
“The U.S.-led coalition carried out flights in support of Turkish
forces near the Islamic State-controlled Syrian town of al-Bab last week
but did not carry out air strikes, Pentagon spokesman Peter Cook said on
Tuesday. The flights were meant as a ‘visible show of force,’ Cook said,
‘My understanding is that last week there was a request when some Turkish
forces came under fire for air support and there... were flights
conducted by the coalition at that time,’ Cook said. U.S.-led coalition
has been reluctant to provide support to NATO member Turkey for its
advance towards al-Bab. Turkey recently called on the coalition to
provide air support for Turkish-backed troops besieging the town.”
CNN:
Water Is The Latest Battleground In Syria
“Some four million people in Damascus have suffered from acute water
shortages for more than a week after springs outside the Syrian capital
were targeted, the UN's Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian
Affairs (OCHA) said in a statement on December 29. Water from the Wadi
Barada and Ain al-Fija springs, which serve 70 percent of the population
in and around Damascus, was cut after infrastructure was damaged in
fierce clashes. OCHA described the damages as ‘deliberate,’ without
saying who was responsible. The Syrian government and rebel forces are
trading blame for the water shortages. Rebels claim the government
destroyed the water pumping station in the Wadi Barada valley, one of the
last remaining rebel-held pockets of Damascus.”
Newsweek:
Berlin Attacker's Route Through Schengen Area Leaves EU Security Services
With Questions To Answer
“By the time police officer Luca Scata fired a bullet into the chest
of Anis Amri, the Tunisian national who plowed a 25-ton Scania truck into
a Christmas market in central Berlin three days earlier, the 24-year-old
attacker had traveled across four European Union countries—Germany, the
Netherlands, Belgium and France. Before meeting his end in the Milanese
suburb of Sesto San Giovanni, Amri had reached into his camouflage
backpack, grabbing a .22-caliber pistol, yelling the words ‘police
bastards’ to spark the shootout. Scata and his colleague Christian Movio
had only stopped Amri for a routine police check in the early hours of
Thursday morning. His intended final destination remains unclear but, if
not for the trainee officer, Amri could have continued his journey,
potentially leaving the European mainland entirely.”
New
York Times: German ISIS Member Who Denied Killing Is Charged In Murders
“German prosecutors have added six counts of murder and war crimes to
the charges against an imprisoned Islamic State member from Germany who
attracted global attention after claiming disillusionment and disgust
with the terrorist group. The new accusations, announced by the
prosecutors on Tuesday, were brought three months after a video surfaced
suggesting that the recruit, Harry Sarfo, 28, had taken part in a Syrian
mass killing. But in previous interviews, he told the authorities and
reporters that he had never killed anyone. Mr. Sarfo, a German of
Ghanaian descent, was convicted last year in a Hamburg court of
membership in a terrorist organization after his arrest upon returning to
Germany in July 2015 from Syria, where he traveled three months earlier
to join the Islamic State, also known as ISIS or ISIL.”
United
States
The
Washington Post: Trump Has Properties All Over The World. They’re Now
Major Terrorism Targets.
“Even before Donald Trump became president-elect, Turkish leader Recep
Tayyip Erdogan called for his name to be scrubbed from Istanbul’s Trump
Towers. Erdogan pinned his plea to Trump’s Islamophobia, saying that the
candidate ‘has no tolerance for Muslims in America.’ Now that Trump is
weeks from assuming the presidency, cities that host his many branded
properties have an additional concern to consider: the potential
terrorism threat brought by his name. ‘Donald Trump is a controversial,
colorful and very high-profile personality,’ said Charles Regini, a
former FBI agent who heads global response for the Unity Resources Group.
‘This type of high-profile behavior has the tendency of drawing the
attention of potential attackers and further increases the risk of
attacks to properties with his name distinctly displayed.’”
Newsweek:
Why U.S. Airstrikes In Afghanistan May Now Be Riskier For Civilians
“Earlier this year, as the war between government forces and the
Taliban continued, Muhammad Ikhlas, a farmer in the southern province of
Helmand, crossed the front lines to visit his brother, a policeman whom
the insurgent group had recently captured. After a short, nerve-wracking
drive, Ikhlas arrived at the Taliban’s makeshift prison, a plain concrete
building with a walled courtyard. The militants brought his brother,
Muhammad Rasul, down to the courtyard, and Ikhlas spoke to him and
pleaded for his release. The militants refused, and as Ikhlas made
his way home, he worried that he’d soon receive the dreaded phone call
informing him of his brother’s death.”
The
Guardian: Republican Senators Introduce Bill To Move US Embassy In Israel
To Jerusalem
“Three Republican senators have introduced legislation to recognise
Jerusalem as Israel’s official capital and move the US embassy there from
Tel Aviv, a plan backed by Donald Trump but likely to ignite fierce
protests. After being sworn into the 115th Congress in Washington, Ted
Cruz of Texas, Dean Heller of Nevada and Marco Rubio of Florida unveiled
the Jerusalem Embassy and Recognition Act. Similar moves by Republican
majorities over the past two decades have come to nought, but this time
they have a sympathetic president-elect in Trump. He has repeatedly
pledged to relocate the embassy to Jerusalem and nominated a US
ambassador who shares that view.”
Syria
BBC:
Syria Monuments Damage 'Akin To Looting Welsh Castles'
“Destruction of Syria's historical monuments is akin to Wales' castles
and Stonehenge being ‘looted and obliterated’, an archaeologist has said.
Swansea University's Dr Nigel Pollard heads a team digitising pre-war
images of the ancient world treasures. The Syrian civil war has seen
precious sites damaged. Dr Pollard said people come first but Syria's
heritage also needs protection. ‘Imagine Wales' castles, Stonehenge and
Hadrian's Wall being looted and seriously damaged. What's happening in
Syria is comparable,’ he said. The nation has historically been a melting
pot of cultures, including Greeks, Persians, Romans, Christians, Muslims
and Jews.”
Iraq
Associated
Press: Iraqi Journalist Kidnapped In Baghdad Has Been Released
“An Iraqi journalist who was abducted from her Baghdad home last week
has been released. "Thank God, I'm fine," Afrah Shawqi al-Qaisi
told the local NRT satellite TV station late Tuesday, shortly after her
release. "The treated me well. They just interrogated me and thank
God they found me not guilty," she added, without providing further
details. Gunmen who said they were members of the security forces asked
to search her home last Monday before abducting her. They also took gold,
money, phones, laptops and her car.”
Turkey
The
Wall Street Journal: Turkey Extends State Of Emergency In Wake Of Attack
Claimed By Islamic State
“Turkey’s parliament voted to extend the government’s
state-of-emergency powers following the deadly New Year’s attack claimed
by Islamic State, as the country struggles to contain rising terrorist
threats and law enforcement contends with depleted ranks in the wake of
last year’s failed coup. The gunman remained at large after the assault
that killed at least 39 people, and there is little information about his
identity beyond photographs of a suspect released by authorities. Police
widened nationwide raids Tuesday, doubling the number of detainees to at
least 16 people, including two foreign nationals who were entering the
international terminal at Istanbul’s Atatürk airport, authorities said.”
Reuters:
Turkey Detains Five In Connection With Istanbul Nightclub Attack - AA
“Turkish police have detained five Islamic State suspects in the
western city of Izmir in connection with the gun attack in an Istanbul
nightclub which killed 39 people on New Year's Day, the state-run Anadolu
agency said on Wednesday. Anadolu reported on Tuesday that 14 people had
been detained over the attack, which Islamic State has claimed, while NTV
reported that two foreign nationals had been detained at Istanbul's main
Ataturk airport. The gunman, who fled after the attack, remains at
large.”
Reuters:
Gunman In Istanbul Nightclub Attack May Have Trained In Syria
“The gunman who killed 39 people in an Istanbul nightclub on New
Year's Day in an attack claimed by Islamic State appears to have been
well versed in guerrilla warfare and may have trained in Syria, a
newspaper report and a security source said on Tuesday. The attacker, who
remains at large, shot dead a police officer and a civilian at the
entrance to the exclusive Reina nightclub on Sunday. He then opened fire
with an automatic rifle inside, reloading his weapon half a dozen times
and shooting the wounded as they lay on the ground. In a statement
claiming the attack on Monday, Islamic State described the club as a
gathering point for Christians celebrating their ‘apostate holiday’ and
said the shooting was revenge for Turkish military involvement in Syria.”
Afghanistan
Associated
Press: Taliban Ambush Kills 4 Police In Northern Afghanistan
“Afghan officials say a Taliban ambush in the northeastern Badakhshan
province has killed at least four police. Deputy Provincial Police Chief
Mohammed Nabi Bayhan says the attack took place late Monday and that
security forces have launched a clearing operation in the area. Ahmad
Bashir Musamum, a provincial council member, confirmed the attack and
said seven police were killed. Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid
claimed responsibility for the attack in a statement Tuesday. Elsewhere
in Afghanistan, Sanatullah Timor, a spokesman for the governor of Takhar
province, said a Taliban fighter was killed Monday while planting a mine.
The Taliban has been at war with Afghanistan's U.S.-backed government
since 2001.”
Deutsche
Welle: Why Is Russia So Interested In Afghanistan All Of A Sudden?
“An increased Russian involvement in Afghanistan has surprised many
observers. What does Moscow want to achieve in the war-torn country?
After Syria, is another US-Russia conflict being played out in a
different arena? For many experts, this is surprising, because
Moscow had maintained an apparent distance from the Afghan conflict for
many years. In fact, Russia even supported the US invasion of Afghanistan
in 2001 and the subsequent toppling of the Taliban regime. At
the time, former Afghan President Hamid Karzai rightly said that
Afghanistan was probably the only place where the interests of Moscow and
Washington didn't clash.”
Radio
Free Europe: Hundreds Of Afghan Shi'a Protest Killings
“Hundreds of Shi'ite Muslims have demonstrated in western Afghanistan
against increasing attacks by radical Islamic groups. Chanting ‘Death to
the enemies of Afghanistan!’ and yelling slogans against Islamic State
(IS) group militants, protesters marched to the governor's office in the
city of Herat on January 3 carrying photos of Shi'ite friends and
relatives killed in recent attacks. Herat, which borders predominantly
Shi'ite Iran, recently witnessed a surge in attacks on Shi'ite mosques. A
Muslim prayer leader was killed and five others were wounded in an attack
on January 1.”
Middle
East
Fox
News: UN Follows Up Settlement Vote With 'Blacklist' Plan For Israeli
Companies
“Critics who thought the U.S. opened the UN’s anti-Israel floodgates
by abstaining on a vote condemning settlements last week say an obscure
subsequent move by the world body to establish a ‘blacklist’ of Israeli
companies proved them right. Lost amid the angry words that followed the
Dec. 23 UN Security Council vote that critics called an American betrayal
of Israel was a Christmas Eve appropriation of $138,700 to fund a
database of companies doing business in the West Bank. The measure puts
UN prestige behind the anti-Israel Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions
(BDS) campaign, say critics. ‘The types of data they are talking about
acquiring would be to form the basis for future sanctions against
companies that did business on the West Bank,’ Fox News contributor and
former U.S. Ambassador to the UN John Bolton told FoxNews.com. ‘That’s
the only purpose of it that I can see.’”
Libya
Reuters:
East Libya Strongman Says No Talks Planned With Rival In West -Paper
“Eastern Libya's dominant military figure has no plans to resume talks
with his U.N.-backed rival in the west, according to comments in an
interview that may further dent foreign hopes of an end to years of
conflict in the divided country. Strongman Khalifa Haftar and Fayez
Seraj, who heads the internationally recognised administration in
Tripoli, were expected to meet in Algiers in coming days, a source close
to the Algerian government said. They were to discuss the possibility of
forming a government of national union, the source told Reuters. But
Haftar said talks with Seraj begun 2-1/2 years ago had yielded no result
and the existing state of war now required combat rather than politics.”
Nigeria
The
Guardian: ‘Boko Haram War Over In North East’
“The spokesman for Defence Headquarters, Brig-Gen. Abubakar Rabe, says
the military has continued to intensify its ‘rescue final and mop-up
operations’ in the North East after the capture of Sambisa Forest last
month. The Boko Haram war, according to him, had been won by the joint
military forces and other security agencies.The military spokesman made
the disclosure in a statement yesterday in Maiduguri. In the meantime, the
Nigerian Army said it would this year consolidate on the gains recorded
by troops in the fight against insurgency.The Director, Army Public
Relations, Brig.-Gen. Sani Usman, gave the assurance yesterday in Abuja
while reviewing exercises and operations conducted by the force last
year.”
United
Kingdom
Daily
Mail: Britain's Small Ports And Marinas Are Wide Open To Returning ISIS
Fighters Because They Are Not Policed, Warns Terror Tsar
“Small ports, marinas and beaches across the UK could give terrorists
an easy route into Britain because they are not policed, a major report
has warned. David Anderson, the terror laws watchdog chief, said
jihadists could attempt to sneak across our porous border at hundreds of
remote locations because of the absence of stringent checks. He expressed
concerns that ‘foreign fighters’ returning from Syria and Iraq could
breach the country’s security checks using small boats and planes.”
BBC:
Terrorism 'First-Aid Training Needed'
“People need to learn lifesaving skills in case they are caught up in
a terror attack in the UK, a team of senior military and civilian medics
has said. They say people need to know how to help each other because it
could take some time before it is deemed safe for paramedics to arrive on
the scene. Their app, called CitizenAID, offers step-by-step advice. The
idea is supported by counter-terrorism police. Security services say a UK
terror attack is highly likely. Although an individual's chance of being
caught up in an incident is small, Brig Tim Hodgetts and Prof Sir Keith
Porter, co-developers of CitizenAID, say it is a good idea for people to
have a plan and the knowledge and skills to help each other. Their app,
pocket book and website suggest how best to deal with injuries in the
immediate aftermath of a mass shooting or bombing incident.”
Daily
Mail: Young British Soldier Who Became A Father Just Three Months Ago
Died On Iraqi Base 'After Being Shot By A Colleague'
“A British soldier who died at an Iraqi base was shot by a colleague,
it has been reported. Lance Corporal Scott Hetherington, 22, died in
mysterious circumstances at a base in Taji, north of Baghdad. The
Ministry of Defence is still investigating the death but said the
'incident' was not the result of enemy activity. Sky News
understands Lance Corporal Hetherington was shot by a fellow British
soldier. The soldier, from Middleton in Manchester, was serving with the
2nd Battalion the Duke of Lancaster's Regiment. He is believed to
have become a father to a baby girl less than three months ago. The MoD
has opened an investigation into the death. The battalion's commanding
officer, Lieutenant Colonel Rob Singleton, said: 'Lance Corporal Scott
Hetherington was a superb soldier and a first class leader.”
Germany
Reuters:
Debate Over Race And Policing Roils Start Of German Election Year
“A new acronym coined by German police to describe troublemaking
migrants from North Africa has sharpened a national debate over
immigration and crime as the country recovers from a deadly attack and
gears up for a vital election this year. Police in Cologne said this week
they had prevented trouble on New Year's Eve by screening some 650
'Nafris' - an abbreviation of 'Nordafrikanische Intensivtaeter' or 'North
African Repeat Offenders' - and removing 190 from the city centre.
Ninety-two were detained. The operation followed intense criticism of the
police for failing to protect hundreds of women from being sexually
molested, mostly by North African men, at the start of 2016.”
Deutsche
Welle: German State Of Brandenburg May Not Deport Far-Right Victims
“The German state of Brandenburg will not deport asylum seekers if
they have been victimized by right-wing violence. Local media reported on
Tuesday that Brandenburg's Interior Ministry had asked local authorities
to use the leeway available to them to make sure foreigners whose asylum
applications had been rejected, but who had been victims of right-wing
attacks, could stay in the country. With the decree issued on December
21, the Interior Ministry implemented a resolution Brandenburg's
parliament had passed in April. The directive posits that victims of
crimes and witnesses to crimes of a certain severity should be allowed to
stay in Germany. This includes crimes such as attempted murder, assault,
arson and bomb attacks, but also kidnapping, theft, blackmail, public
riots and sexual offenses. Asylum seekers who have committed a crime
or share responsibility for a violent incident are exempt from the new
rule.”
The
Guardian: Germany Outlines Plans To Overhaul Security Following Berlin
Attack
“Germany’s interior ministry is seeking to overhaul the country’s
security apparatus and make it easier to deport rejected asylum seekers
in the wake of last month’s terrorist attack on a Berlin Christmas
market. Outlining a raft of measures in an article for the Frankfurter
Allgemeine Zeitung , the interior minister, Thomas de Maizière, said
recent terror attacks, as well as reports of cyber attacks on the
Bundestag, meant ‘we have to face the fact that our state has to be
better prepared for difficult times than it is now’. One step towards
such an overhaul would be to centralise the country’s counter-terrorism
apparatus, said De Maizière, who is a member of Angela Merkel’s Christian
Democratic Union party. ‘We don’t have federal jurisdiction to deal with
national catastrophes. The jurisdiction for the fight against
international terrorism is fragmented,’ he said.”
Deutsche
Welle: Police Raid Berlin Homes Linked To Market Attacker Anis Amri
“German police raided a refugee home and a flat in Berlin on Tuesday
in connection with its investigation into Anis Amri, the man
suspected of killing 12 people in a deadly attack on a Berlin Christmas
market last month. Investigators searched a refugee home, where a
26-year-old Tunisian man they believe knew Amri is living. Police suspect
the man had known Amri since at least 2015 and was in contact with him
shortly before the day of the attack on December 19. The federal
prosecutor's office said there is a ‘suspicion that the suspect knew of
the attack plans and possibly helped Anis Amri.’ Investigators also
raided the apartment of Amri's former flatmate, who they also suspect was
in contact with Amri and may have even been a possible accomplice in the
attack.”
The
New York Times: Call To Centralize Security In Germany Broaches A Postwar
Taboo
“As Germany struggles to respond to worsening attacks inspired by Islamic
terrorists, the country’s top security official on Tuesday strongly
advocated consolidating greater intelligence and security powers with the
federal government, a taboo since World War II. Thomas de Maizière,
Germany’s interior minister and a close ally of Chancellor Angela Merkel,
argued that such a step was needed to steel the country against modern
threats posed by terrorism, cyberattacks and an increased number of
migrants seeking to enter the country. The federal governments of
Germany’s European partners and other established democracies already
hold such powers, he noted, stressing that “it is time” to re-examine
Germany’s security setup.”
Counter-Terrorism
Alhayat:
Tunisia: Presence Of Three Thousand Militants In Hotspots
Tunisian Justice Minister Ghazi Jribi announced that there are 1647
individuals currently being held in Tunisian prisons for their
"affiliation with terrorism." Among them are 160 returnees from
hotbeds of tension and conflict, while an internal controversy is still
stirring in Tunisia between supporters and opponents to allow them to
re-enter the country. Jribi said during a hearing of the Parliamentary
Security and Defense Committee on Monday that "available statistics
compiled by the Ministry of the Interior confirm the presence of 3000
{Tunisian} militants in hotspots." He added that "any suspect
for whom there is evidence of his participation in a terrorist act will
stand trial.”
ISIS
New
Sabah: ISIS Attempts To Smuggle Leaders From Mosul To Syria
The Joint Iraqi Security Forces have foiled a major ISIS's plot. According
to reports, the terror group attempted to penetrate the Iraqi defensive
lines and reach the Syrian border. Their aim was to covertly relocate
ISIS leaders and their families. An Iraqi security source in Nineveh
province disclosed that the Joint Security Forces backed by the Air Force
thwarted a "major scheme by ISIS which tried to open a breach in the
defensive lines on the western side of the Tal Afar district (56 km west
of Mosul) in order to reach the Syrian border to smuggle in its leaders
and their families." The source added, "It was a big force of
the terrorist organization, made up of over 25 armed vehicles including
booby-trapped vehicles driven by suicide bombers."
Muslim
Brotherhood
Source-7:
Egypt: Extended Detention Of Muslim Brotherhood Members Suspected Of
Creating Fake Human Rights Organizations
“The South Cairo Prosecution decided to renew the detention of six
individuals, some belonging to the Muslim Brotherhood, for 15 days
pending investigation. The six are suspected of forming bogus human
rights organizations. The South Cairo Prosecution, presided over by first
Attorney General Wael Shebl, also suspect these individuals of launching
electronic news websites along with Facebook and Twitter accounts aiming
to disseminate false rumors to harm Egypt's economy and state institutions.
Investigations found that those websites attributed false statements to
state officials and spread news of the alleged "forced
disappearance" of citizens. Investigations identified one of these
human rights centers, called "Egyptian Coordination for Rights and
Freedoms," and its website, which the Brotherhood used for its
activities.”
The
Seventh Day: Former Brotherhood Leader: Group Received $2.5 Billion In
Support From USA And Europe
“Tarek Abo Al Saad, a former Muslim Brotherhood leader, claimed that
during the presidency of Barack Obama the group obtained $1.5 billion
from {various sources in} the United States. Meanwhile, he asserted that
in the period between June 30th, 2013 and early 2015, the Brotherhood
received from the European Union, nearly $1 billion. According to Tarek Abo
Al Saad, these sums were spent on the group's foreign activities.”
Houthi
Alhadath:
Houthis' Finance Minister Orders Withdrawal Of 0.5 Billion Riyals From
The Yemeni Youth Care Fund Account
“Saleh Shaban, Minister of Finance under the Houthis, ordered the
withdrawal of 500 million Yemeni riyals ($2 million) from an account
belonging to the Yemeni Youth Care Fund. This order was carried out by
the Central Bank in an alleged violation of the law. The finance
minister, or any other minister, is not entitled to dispose of the Fund's
money, based on the law that established the Fund. It should be noted
that all the money in the Fund's account was obtained from donations. It
is now expected that donors will stop their aid when they hear about the
large withdrawal from the Fund's account. The details on the withdrawal
of the funds are not false, as laid out in the official resignation
letter submitted by Nathmiya Othman, the Executive Director of the Youth
Care Fund.”
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