sabato 31 gennaio 2015

Kurdistan Region PM Barzani: war against Islamic State will take years


Kurdistan Region Prime Minister Nechirvan Barzani warned that the war against Islamic State is going to last years if current policy continues.


The current stance of the US can hope to achieve nothing aside from containing the organisation, and he called for special forces to fight alongside the Peshmerga.

“With air strikes you cannot destroy this organisation for sure. To destroy this organisation we need some special forces, not boots on the ground, but some joint military operations fighting alongside the Peshmerga.”

In an apparent reference to US President Obama’s commitment to “degrade and destroy” IS, Barzani said, “The question is: is the policy one of containment, or to dislodge and destroy them?”

He went on to reiterate the position of the Kurdistan Regional Government towards disputed areas, claiming that the Peshmerga are fighting only for areas that rightfully belong to the region.

The Kurds, he said, have no interest in being the lead force in any future operation to retake Mosul, “We don’t want to spearhead any attack to retake Mosul. We want to avoid further conflict.”

Therefore the only force that can take on IS in Mosul is the Iraqi army, which is currently a long way from readiness for such an operation.

Barzani ruled out a March launch altogether, questioned the likelihood of a June offensive, believing that September or October is the time the necessary training of new recruits will be completed, and divisions from Baghdad able to redeploy north.

He once more called for heavier weaponry to solidify the gains made by the Peshmerga in the north of the country, “This is not a war you can win with AK-47s and RPGs.”

Towards the end of the interview, the Prime Minister welcomes Haider al-Abadi as a good replacement for former Iraqi PM Nuri al-Maliki whose policies, he believes, were responsible for the environment in which IS was able to grow.

In closing, Barzani points to a difficult future for the country of Iraq.

“There is no loyalty to a country called Iraq. It really is important to find a formula for how to live together within the boundaries of what is called Iraq. Unless that formula is found, there will be more bloodshed and the country will remain a destabilising factor in the region.”

Source: BasNews

Nigeria Army relocates female soldiers from Maiduguri in anticipation of Boko Haram attack


Following recent intelligence indicating that Boko Haram militants were strategizing on a fierce offensive to capture Maiduguri before the February 14 elections, the army moved more than 70 female soldiers last week.

Highly reliable security sources have told SaharaReporters that Nigerian military authorities are moving female soldiers based in various army formations in Maiduguri and other parts of Borno State to Abuja as the army anticipates a massive attack on Maiduguri, the Borno State capital, by terrorists belonging to Islamist group, Boko Haram.
 
The sources said there was heightened apprehension about an impending attack, hence the decision to reassign female soldiers to Nigeria’s capital.

The military action also stemmed from the death of five female soldiers and the abduction of another four by Boko Haram militants when they attacked a military base in Baga a few weeks ago.

Following recent intelligence indicating that Boko Haram militants were strategizing on a fierce offensive to capture Maiduguri before the February 14 elections, the army moved more than 70 female soldiers last week. One of our sources revealed that 146 more female soldiers had been moved to Maiduguri airport, where they are awaiting airlift to Abuja. The source said that all the female soldiers were supposed to have left by 10 a.m. on Thursday, but added that the military did not have a large enough aircraft to take their entire luggage.

The security sources also told SaharaReporters that Maimalari Barracks, home to the 7th Division of the Nigerian Army, is the only military base left standing in Borno State. Maimalari was described as the only military formation capable of withstanding a major attack from Boko Haram militants.

One source said that Nigerian military intelligence had received information that Islamist militants were regrouping in areas around Maiduguri in preparation for a major offensive against the city. The Islamist fighters’ attempt to take over the state capital last week was foiled, with Nigerian troops and civilian vigilante members collaborating to kill more than 100 terrorists.

However, the militants successfully overran Monguno Barrack, killing and injuring many soldiers. One military source revealed that military authorities have so far been able to account for approximately 1,000 soldiers out of the 1,400 soldiers who were stationed in the Monguno Barracks. Most of the soldiers had reported to Maimalari Barracks in Maiduguri, but were locked out for several days by military authorities.

An officer in Maiduguri told SaharaReporters that the troops in the state capital were equal to the task of repelling any attacks by Boko Haram, but a few residents told our correspondent that they were skeptical of such confidence. One resident wondered why the Nigerian military had not adopted an offensive strategy against Boko Haram insurgents, instead of only defending when the Islamist fighters initiate an attack.

Asked why Nigerian soldiers often flee from advancing columns of Boko Haram attacks when Chadian and Cameroonian troops are recording major successes against the insurgents, a Nigerian military source blamed it on the inadequate weaponry as well as poor motivation on the part of Nigerian soldiers. He stated that battle-weary Nigerian soldiers keep hearing reports of their commanders in Abuja who have acquired huge wealth from the burgeoning defense budget. “Even to pay these soldiers their allowance or to buy them good helmets is a problem because of this corruption that is well known,” the officer said.

A source claimed that Chadian soldiers had chased off Boko Haram militants from Gamboru-Ngala, while troops from Niger Republic reportedly pushed out the militants from Malafatori on the Nigerian-Niger border. There were also reports that Cameroonian military forces had pushed Boko Haram from Kirawa and Ashigashiwa on the eastern flank.

Source:  saharareporters

ISIS burning books at Iraq libraries and loading ancient artifacts onto refrigerated trucks at night


When Islamic State group militants invaded the Central Library of Mosul earlier this month, they were on a mission to destroy a familiar enemy: other people’s ideas.

Residents say the extremists smashed the locks that had protected the biggest repository of learning in the northern Iraq town, and loaded around 2,000 books — including children’s stories, poetry, philosophy and tomes on sports, health, culture and science — into six pickup trucks. They left only Islamic texts.

The rest?

“These books promote infidelity and call for disobeying Allah. So they will be burned,” a bearded militant in traditional Afghani two-piece clothing told residents, according to one man living nearby who spoke to The Associated Press. The man, who spoke on condition of anonymity because he feared retaliation, said the Islamic State group official made his impromptu address as others stuffed books into empty flour bags.

Since the Islamic State group seized a third of Iraq and neighbouring Syria, they have sought to purge society of everything that doesn’t conform to their violent interpretation of Islam. They already have destroyed many archaeological relics, deeming them pagan, and even Islamic sites considered idolatrous. Increasingly books are in the firing line.

Mosul, the biggest city in the Islamic State group’s self-declared caliphate, boasts a relatively educated, diverse population that seeks to preserve its heritage sites and libraries. In the chaos that followed the U.S.-led invasion of 2003 that toppled Saddam Hussein, residents near the Central Library hid some of its centuries-old manuscripts in their own homes to prevent their theft or destruction by looters.

But this time, the Islamic State group has made the penalty for such actions death. Presumed destroyed are the Central Library’s collection of Iraqi newspapers dating to the early 20th century, maps and books from the Ottoman Empire and book collections contributed by around 100 of Mosul’s establishment families.

Days after the Central Library’s ransacking, militants broke into University of Mosul’s library. They made a bonfire out of hundreds of books on science and culture, destroying them in front of students.

A University of Mosul history professor, who spoke on condition he not be named because of his fear of the Islamic State group, said the extremists started wrecking the collections of other public libraries last month. He reported particularly heavy damage to the archives of a Sunni Muslim library, the library of the 265-year-old Latin Church and Monastery of the Dominican Fathers and the Mosul Museum Library with works dating back to 5000 BC.

Citing reports by the locals who live near these libraries, the professor added that the militants used to come during the night and carry the materials in refrigerated trucks with Syria-registered license plates. The fate of these old materials is still unknown, though the professor suggested some could be sold on the black market. In September, Iraqi and Syrian officials told the AP that the militants profited from the sale of ancient artifacts.

The professor said Islamic State group militants appeared determined to “change the face of this city … by erasing its iconic buildings and history.”

Since routing government forces and seizing Mosul last summer, the Islamic State group has destroyed dozens of historic sites, including the centuries-old Islamic mosque shrines of the prophets Seth, Jirjis and Jonah.

An Iraqi lawmaker, Hakim al-Zamili, said the Islamic State group “considers culture, civilization and science as their fierce enemies.”

Al-Zamili, who leads the parliament’s Security and Defence Committee, compared the Islamic State group to raiding medieval Mongols, who in 1258 ransacked Baghdad. Libraries’ ancient collections of works on history, medicine and astronomy were dumped into the Tigris River, purportedly turning the waters black from running ink.

“The only difference is that the Mongols threw the books in the Tigris River, while now Daesh is burning them,” he said, using an Arabic acronym for the Islamic State group. “Different method, but same mentality.”

Jihadists increasingly wary of Internet, experts say


After having used the Internet profusely for propaganda and recruitment, jihadist organisations have realised that investigators are gleaning crucial information online and are increasingly concealing their web presence, experts say.

Apart from recent orders given to fighters to limit their exposure, erase the footprint of their online activity and avoid revealing too many place names or faces, the Islamic State and Al-Nusra Front groups are increasingly using the "Dark Web" -- the hidden part of the Internet protected by powerful encryption softwares.

"Sometimes we get the geographical location of some fighters thanks to Facebook," Philippe Chadrys, in charge of the fight against terrorism at France's judicial police, said earlier this week.

"Some even publish it on the public part of their account. That gives us elements to build a case. Because of course we don't go to Syria, we have no one on the ground, and we lack proof."

In November, Flavien Moreau, a 28-year-old jihadist who travelled to Syria and then returned to France, was jailed for seven years exclusively on the basis of what he posted online.

And those who just months ago had happily posted videos, photos of themselves holding Kalashnikovs or of beheadings on Facebook have now realised that they were single-handedly building a case against themselves, if they ever decided to come home.

"We are starting to notice the beginnings of disaffection with Facebook -- they have understood that's how we get incriminating evidence," said Chadrys.

"They are resorting more and more to Skype or WhatsApp, software that is much harder to intercept.
"We realise that the people we are interested in are increasingly specialised in computing. They master encryption software and methods to better erase data."

'Cyber-surveillance' key

Chadrys also said that jihadists were increasingly using the "Dark Web."

"That makes our probes much more complicated. The terrorists are adapting, they understand that the telephone and Internet are handy, but dangerous.

He pointed to Mehdi Nemmouche, sayinglast year's alleged Brussels Jewish museum killer had no mobile phone and no Facebook account.

Faced with this problem, police are resorting to calling in cryptography and computing experts, but there are never enough, which slows down investigations.

Last autumn, the Islamic State group (IS) published guidelines for its members, asking fighters not to tweet precise location names, to blur faces or stop giving too many details about on-going operations.

"Security breaches have appeared, which the enemy has taken advantage of," read the text, written in Arabic.

"The identity of some brothers has been compromised, as have some sites used by mujahedeen. We know that this problem does not only involve photos, but also PDF, Word and video files."

In a recent report, Helle Dale of the US-based Heritage Foundation think-tank wrote that cyber-surveillance was key to the fight against IS "as human intelligence is hardly available on the ground, especially in Syria, and the number of unmanned drones is limited."

But, she added, the group "is changing is communications strategy. It is encrypting its electronic communications, limiting its presence online and using services that delete messages as soon as they are sent."

Source: Al Monitor


Libya is destined to suffer more extreme Islamist violence


The attack by five armed men at the Corinthia Hotel in Tripoli on Tuesday was a game-changer for Libya and a milestone in its post-revolutionary narrative that was perhaps always going to be passed.
Militia violence has dogged the country's progress since Gaddafi's death in October 2011, while the tangle of competing parochial interest groups and international alliances has gradually shaken itself into two rival blocs.
Neither of these blocs has a vision for the future – only a frequently repeated mantra of who and what they oppose. The internationally recognised government, exiled in the east, believes itself to be waging war on terrorism by fighting the militia alliance known as Libya Dawn, commanded nominally from Tripoli.
The Tripoli government is similarly convinced that in fighting the militias collectively known as Libyan Dignity it is combating remnants of Gaddafi's regime in continuation of the February 17 Revolution.
In the background, Libya's ungovernable expanse has largely run itself. It is frequently said that Libya's disunity has often been its greatest friend as well as its greatest enemy – imparting a degree of stability that has thus far prevented all-out civil war.

 But the nucleus of religious extremism present in eastern Libya since the 1990s, increasing levels of internet literacy among Libya's youth and the consistent failure of successive administrations to provide jobs, growth and security have all meant that the uptake of Islamic State-inspired dogma may well have been an ultimate inevitability.

That it hasn't shown itself before is only down to the nature of the Tripolitanian, who abhors the extremist lifestyle, preferring instead to don the latest fashion, order cappuccini, and admire the sea view.

Perhaps unsurprisingly therefore, at least some of the five men who drove their weapons-laden car into the Corinthia's car park at 9.30 on Tuesday morning were not Libyan – a Tunisian and a Sudanese among them. But Libya has not been invaded by IS elements from outside.

The young men who attacked the Corinthia hotel were undoubtedly IS-inspired, but they did not sweep into Libya on the back of Toyotas wearing balaclavas, like their counterparts in northern Iraq.

Several North African nationalities have diasporas in Libya and these communities' youth are just as unemployed and disillusioned as Libyans their age, with the added dejection of being foreigners in a country they likely grew up in.

These young men's Twitter feeds and Facebook pages are the roads along which IS has invaded Libya. The weapons and expertise necessary to execute an operation of this complexity are already here – legacies of a revolution fought by young men with improvised weaponry and guerrilla tactics.

The only component missing up until now has been the intent to target and harm unarmed civilians in large numbers – this was the threshold crossed on Tuesday morning.

A tweet posted in the opening moments of the attack by the 'Islamic State of Libya' justified the attack as an act of revenge for the death of Abu Anas Al Libi, the alleged al-Qaeda militant snatched by US Special Forces from the streets of Tripoli in October 2013 – he died in US custody in New York on January 2, apparently from advanced liver cancer.

In their pursuit of revenge against America, the men shot and wounded guests on the hotel steps before entering the building and calling a lift to take them to the upper floors, where the hotel's few remaining guests were located.

A remote or a timer then exploded a pre-positioned car in front of the hotel, summoning local militia forces to the scene, though by this time, they were chasing the attackers up stairwells.

A dozen employees and guests were corralled high in the hotel. The hours-long hostage ordeal ended with four of the attackers blowing themselves up using a combination of suicide vests and hand grenades.

Another was detained. Most of the hostage group was safely released, but nine of their colleagues had been killed – some in the crossfire, others in cold blood.

Libya Dawn has already attempted to paint the incident as an attack on the city's peace orchestrated by Gaddafi loyalists within the internationally recognised government, a narrative that has taken hold among some sectors of Libyan society.

But the weaponry, the degree of preparation and the appetite for inflicting casualties exhibited in this attack all point toward Islamic extremist violence becoming a greater feature of Libya's security environment in the near future.
Afghanistan: no place for Islamic State fighters in Farah  province

Province of Farah's local security officials have confirmed sightings of the suspected Islamic State (IS) militants in the western parts of the province. 

Provincial council members have stressed that the newly-emerged fighters do not have the support of the people and would not make a place in the western zone.

Following the rumors about the existence of IS fighters in a number of Farah districts, the Afghan National Army (ANA) Zafar Corps commander Gen. Taj Mohammad Jahid confirmed nearly 100 people, including foreigners, such as Arabs and Chechens, had joined the group.

"There are 70 Islamic State fighters including 13 foreigners present in Khak Safid district," Gen. Jahid said. "They don't allow people to get close to their base."

The head of the Provincial Council of Farah, Farid Bakhtawar, said that residents of Khak Safid had not allowed these fighters, who had also shifted their families to the district as well, to station in the district.

"The Islamic State has failed to win public support in Farah," Bakhtawar said. "Their crimes, including the sale of women, have caused the people to stand against them."

Reports indicate that the Iranian border forces have deployed additional troops to their areas that border with Farah after rumors about IS surfaced.

But the Afghan border police officials say they have not yet received any formal information about the presence of IS.

"We have not received any formal information in this regard," said Gen. Mohammad Juma Adeel, commander of the border police for the western zone. "The patrolling of Iranian border guards is normal because they always protect their borders."

However, the Ministry of Interior Affairs (MoI) has repeatedly rejected the rumors, saying they were the same militants operating under new brands to create more attention and increase fears among the people.

Source:  tolonews

Kurdish Peshmerga forces advance in Southern Kirkuk, Islamic State militants retreat


Following intense clashes between Kurdish Peshmerga forces and Islamic State (IS) militants, the Peshmerga have liberated the village of Mulla Abdullah. They are also holding the bodies of 15 IS militants.

A Peshmerga Commander in the west of Kirkuk province told BasNews on Saturday, “On Saturday morning, Peshmerga forces launched a series of attacks on Mullah Abdullah and other areas in southwestern Kirkuk. After several hours, Peshmerga took control of the village and advanced to the bridge that has separated the two sides for months.”

He continued, “All the areas that had fallen to IS insurgents yesterday, have been taken back today.”

Director of Kirkuk Police Sarhad Qadir told BasNews that the Peshmerga forces freed Mullah Abdullah village with the support of US-led coalition jets.

“15 bodies of IS militants are in the hands of the Peshmerga,” said Qadir.

A Facebook page called “The Supporters of Peshmerga Commander Hussein Mansour” published a post on Friday morning quoting Hussein’s speech, “I assure all the people of the Kurdistan Region and Kirkuk that I am ready to sacrifice my soul for the protection of all of you, I am yours.”

Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK) official in Khanaqin Hemin Mansour told BasNews, “Mansour was martyred in today’s fight against IS militants.”


Secretary General of the Kurdish Social Democrats Mohammed Haji Mahmood is on the Kirkuk frontline and told BasNews that Peshmerga forces are continuing to advance and chase down the insurgents.

“Peshmerga forces are defending Kurdistan with strength. What has been seen in the latest clashes, is that a large number of IS insurgents have been killed and they have been defeated on all frontlines. The militants have lost their power,” said Mahmood.

He furthered, “The main aim of IS is to enter Kirkuk. The Peshmerga are attempting to push the insurgents back from areas around Mullah Abdullah.”

“After destroying IS on the frontlines, Peshmerga forces have greater morale and desire to chase down the IS militants,” he added.

Source: BasNews

IS fighters admit loss of Kobani, blame U.S.-led airstrikes


The Islamic State group has acknowledged for the first time that its fighters have been defeated in the Syrian town of Kobani and vowed to attack the town again.

In a video released by the pro-IS Aamaq News Agency late Friday, two fighters said the airstrikes by the U.S.-led coalition were the main reason why IS fighters were forced to withdraw from Kobani.

On Monday, activists and Kurdish officials said the town was almost cleared of IS fighters, who once held nearly half of the town.

One IS fighter vowed to defeat the main Kurdish militia in Syria, the People’s Protection Units known as the YPG, calling them “rats.”

The failure to capture Kobani was a major blow to the extremists. Their hopes for an easy victory dissolved into a costly siege under withering airstrikes by coalition forces and an assault by Kurdish militiamen.

“A while ago we retreated a bit from Ayn al-Islam because of the bombardment and the killing of some brothers,” said one masked fighter, using the group’s preferred name for Kobani. He spoke Arabic with a north African accent.

The United States and several Arab allies have been striking Islamic State positions in Syria since Sept. 23. The campaign aims to push back the jihadi organization after it took over about a third of Iraq and Syria and declared the captured territory a new caliphate.

“The Islamic State will stay. Say that to (President Barack) Obama,” said the fighter, pointing his finger toward destruction on the edge of Kobani.

The Islamic State group launched an offensive on the Kobani region in mid-September capturing more than 300 Kurdish villages and parts of the town. As a result of the airstrikes and stiff Kurdish resistance, IS began retreating few weeks ago, losing more than 1,000 fighters, according to activists.

More than 200,000 Kurds were forced from their homes. Many fled to neighbouring Turkey.

Another fighter, also speaking in Arabic, said while standing on a road with a green sign with “Ayn al-Islam” sprayed on it: “The warplanes did not leave any construction. They destroyed everything, so we had to withdraw and the rats advanced.”

“The warplanes were bombarding us night and day. They bombarded everything, even motorcycles,” the fighter said.
Sisi forms new military entity to combat terrorism in Egypt's Sinai


Egyptian President Abdel-Fattah El-Sisi formed a unified counter-terrorism entity on Saturday, two days after a series of militant attacks killed at least 30 people in the peninsula.

Speaking on camera after a meeting with the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces (SCAF). El-Sisi issued a decree naming Chief of Staff Osama Roshdy as head of the unit, which will deal with terrorist threats in parts of Egypt to the east of Suez – including the restive Sinai Peninsula.

Roshdy has been promoted to lieutenant-general.

Scores of Egyptian soldiers were killed in coordinated militant attacks in North Sinai on Thursday night. An exact death toll has not been confirmed by military officials, but media reports suggest at least 30 died in the attacks, including a number of civilians.

Speaking about the death toll, Tariq Khater, undersecretary for North Sinai in the health ministry, told Ahram Online that only the military can issue an official death toll.

Source:  ahram.org
Africa agrees to send 7,500 troops to fight Boko Haram

An African Union official says African leaders have agreed to send 7,500 troops to fight the Boko Haram insurgency in northeast Nigeria.

The head of the African Union's Peace and Security Council, Samil Chergui, said on Saturday the move came after the council urged heads of state to endorse the deployment of troops from five West African countries to fight the terror group.

African leaders who are members of the 54-nation African Union are meeting in the Ethiopian capital Addis Ababa for a two-day summit that ends on Saturday. UN Secretary General Ban Ki Moon earlier said he support the AU's move to send a force to fight Boko Haram.

Boko Haram is increasing its attacks as Nigeria prepares for February 14 elections. Thousands have been killed in the 5-year insurgency.

Air strike kills ISIL "Chemical weapons expert’


A US-led coalition air strike killed a chemical weapons specialist with the Islamic State group in Iraq who once worked for Saddam Hussein, US military officers said Friday.

The air raid carried out last Saturday near Mosul took out Abu Malik, whose training “provided the terrorist group with expertise to pursue a chemical weapons capability,” the military said in a statement.

Malik had worked at a chemical weapons production plant under Saddam’s regime and later forged an affiliation with Al-Qaeda in Iraq in 2005, before joining the extremist IS group, according to Central Command.

“His death is expected to temporarily degrade and disrupt the terrorist network and diminish ISIL’s ability to potentially produce and use chemical weapons against innocent people,” it said.

US officials had not publicly referred to Malik previously as a key figure.

“Based on his training and experience, he was judged to be capable of creating harmful and deadly chemical agents,” said the official, who spoke on condition of anonymity.

“We know ISIL is attempting to pursue a chemical weapons capability, but we have no definitive confirmation that ISIL currently possess chemical weapons,” the official said.

The US-led coalition has carried out more than 2,000 air raids against the IS group in Syria and Iraq since August 8, including some bombing runs that targeted senior militants.

Source:  iraqinews

Muslim Brotherhood: prepare for Jihad


Egypt’s Muslim Brotherhood, hailed as a moderate voice andwelcomed by officials in the Obama administration just this week, issued separate statements on its English and Arabic websites this week that appear to contradict each other.

A call for “a long, unrelenting Jihad” appeared on the Brotherhood’s Arabic language website Tuesday.

The statement, first reported Friday by the Washington Free Beacon‘s Adam Kredo, starts by invoking a passage from the Quran: “And prepare against them whatever you are able of power and of steeds of war by which you may terrify the enemy of God and your enemy and others besides them whom you do not know but whom Allah knows. And whatever you spend in the cause of God will be fully repaid to you, and you will not be wronged.”

On its English language website Friday, the Brotherhood struck a dramatically different tone in an article in which it “Reiterates Commitment to Non-Violence.”

“The Brotherhood should not have to – every day – reiterate its constants, its strategic stance and chosen path of civil peaceful struggle to restore legitimacy…,” it said.

It does when it posts a call to prepare for jihad invoking assembling the “steeds of war by which you may terrify the enemy of God.”

The English posting says Brothers who stray from non-violence “no longer belong in the Brotherhood, and the group no longer accepts them, no matter what they do or say.”

As the IPT has shown, offering mixed messages in Arabic and English is routine for the Brotherhood.
On Thursday, a speaker on a Brotherhood-affiliated television station warned foreign tourists and business interests to leave Egypt next month, or risk becoming a “target for the revolutionary punishment movements.” A similar statement was posted on Facebook.

The dueling statements come just after the four-year anniversary of the Arab Spring uprising that toppled dictator Hosni Mubarak and led to the Brotherhood’s rise to dominate Egyptian government in his wake. But that rule was short-lived, as President Mohamed Morsi was forced from office by Egypt’s army in July 2013, after millions took to the streets to protest the government’s performance.

This week, dozens of people were killed in protests marking the 2011 revolution. A delegation of exiled Brotherhood officials visited Washington this week, urging support to return Morsi to power.

It was in that context that the Arabic call for jihad was published. According to the Free Beacon, it invoked Brotherhood founding ideologue Hasan al-Banna, who “prepared the jihad brigades that he sent to Palestine to kill the Zionist usurpers…”

“For everyone must be aware that we are in the process of a new phase,” the statement concludes, “in which we summon what of our power is latent within us, and we call to mind the meaning of Jihad, and prepare ourselves and our children, wives and daughters, and whoever marches on our path for a long, unrelenting Jihad. We ask in it the abodes of the martyrs.”

Source:  Investigative Project on Terrorism

Egypt lists Hamas as "Terrorist Organization"


An Egyptian court on Saturday banned the armed wing of the Palestinian resistance group Hamas and listed it as a terrorist organization.

Hamas is an offshoot of Egypt's Muslim Brotherhood which the Egyptian authorities have also declared a terrorist group and have repressed systematically since the army ousted one of its leaders, Mohammed Mursi, from the presidency in 2013.

"The court ruled to ban the Qassam Brigades and to list it as a terrorist group," said the judge of the special Cairo court which deals with urgent cases.

Egypt had previously banned Hamas from operating in Egypt.

Egyptian officials claim weapons are smuggled from the Hamas-ruled Gaza Strip into Egypt, where they end up with militant groups fighting to topple the Western-backed Cairo government.

Islamist militants based in Egypt's Sinai region, which has a border with Gaza, have killed hundreds of police and soldiers since Mursi's political demise. The insurgency has spread to other parts of Egypt, the most populous Arab country.

Hamas on Saturday dismissed Egyptian media accusations for the group of standing behind deadly attacks in the Sinai Peninsula.

"Neither Hamas nor the Gaza Strip have anything to do with what happened in Sinai or any other place in Egypt," Hamas spokesman Fawzi Barhoum said in a statement.

Barhoum termed claims by Egyptian media that Hamas was behind the attacks as "an attempt to demonize" the Palestinian group.

"Hamas does not interfere in the affairs of any Arab country, particularly Egypt," he said.

The Palestinian faction has repeatedly denied accusations that it has carried out attacks in the North African state, saying it cannot act against Egypt's national security.

Since then-army chief Abdel Fattah al-Sisi rose to power in Egypt in 2013 and was elected president, the country’s relationship with the besieged Gaza Strip has worsened.

In November, Egypt decided to create a one kilometer-deep buffer zone in the Sinai Peninsula along the border with Gaza by clearing more than 800 houses, displacing more than 1,100 families, and destroying and neutralizing hundreds of subterranean tunnels.

Gaza, which has been under a brutal illegal Israeli blockade for almost eight years, relied heavily on smuggling tunnels across the Egyptian border to obtain vital supplies. The only border crossing between Egypt and Gaza has also been routinely closed, leaving many Palestinians stranded or without access to important medical treatment.

The Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood has also repeatedly condemned the militant attacks in Egypt and denied any involvement.

However, the Sisi regime has clamped down severely on Mursi supporters. The crackdown has left at least 1,400 people dead and more than 15,000 imprisoned, with hundreds sentenced to death in trials the United Nations described as "unprecedented in recent history."

Source:  al-akhbar
 

Islamic State threatens to invade Saudi Arabia

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lOmQlduR5FM

  Islamic State militants have released a video saying that the group intends to invade Saudi Arabia while the kingdom's throne is changing hands.

According to Fox News, Saudi militants who have joined the IS group in Iraq and Syria issued the statement.
   IS militants have also called upon the sympathizers in the country to attack from within.

Experts said that the terror threat shows the organization's desire to annex the wealthiest Middle East nation.
 

Terrorism: new most wanted terrorist somali-born Liban Haji Mohamed


Liban Haji Mohamed, a naturalized U.S. citizen born in Somalia, has been named to the FBI’s list of Most Wanted Terrorists, and a reward of up to $50,000 is being offered for information leading to his arrest and conviction. Mohamed is charged with providing material support and resources to al Qaeda and al Shabaab, a Somali-based terrorist organization.

“Al Shabaab has claimed responsibility for many bombings in Somalia and Uganda and the 2013 attack on the Westgate Mall in Nairobi, Kenya,” said Carl Ghattas, special agent in charge of the Counterterrorism Division at the FBI’s Washington Field Office. “Liban Mohamed is believed to have left the U.S. with the intent to join al Shabaab in East Africa. We believe he is currently there operating on behalf of that terrorist organization.”

 Traveling with his U.S. passport, Mohamed is thought to have left the United States on or about July 5, 2012. Before his departure, the 29-year-old lived in the Northern Virginia suburbs of Washington, D.C., where he worked as a cab driver.

“While living in Northern Virginia, Mohamed was a recruiter and radicalizer for al Shabaab, which historically has targeted Westerners to go to Somalia and fight for them,” Ghattas said. “Not only did Mohamed choose to go to Somalia and fight with al Shabaab, he took a prominent role in trying to recruit people and have them train with weapons.”

A federal warrant for Mohamed’s arrest was unsealed today by the U.S. Attorney’s Office in the Eastern District of Virginia. In addition to today’s announcement adding Mohamed to the terrorist list and offering a reward for information leading to his arrest and conviction, the FBI is publicizing the case on social media channels in Somalia and elsewhere to encourage people to come forward with information about the fugitive.

“It is important for us to locate Mohamed because he has knowledge of the Washington, D.C. area’s infrastructure such as shopping areas, Metro, airports, and government buildings,” Ghattas explained. “This makes him an asset to his terrorist associates who might plot attacks on U.S. soil.”

Shortly after leaving the U.S, the international police organization Interpol issued a blue notice for Mohamed to collect additional information about his identity, location, and activities. On August 15, 2014, Interpol issued a red notice to seek him as a wanted fugitive.

Mohamed speaks English, Somali, and Arabic. He is black, 6 feet tall, weighs about 194 pounds, and has black hair and brown eyes. He could be using aliases including Abu Ayrow, Shirwa, Shirwac, Qatiluhum, and Qatil. Mohamed was a close associate of convicted terrorist Zachary Chesser, who was sentenced in 2011 to 25 years in prison for attempting to provide material support to al Shabaab.

There are currently 31 individuals on the FBI’s Most Wanted Terrorists list. Those on the list have been charged in the U.S. for their alleged involvement in various terrorist attacks or planned attacks around the world against U.S. interests or persons.

The FBI also announced today it is seeking information about another individual, Ghazi Nasr Al-Din, regarding fundraising efforts on behalf of the terrorist group Hizballah (see sidebar).

Anyone with information about Liban Haji Mohamed or Ghazi Nasr Al-Din should contact the FBI or the nearest American Embassy or Consulate. Tips can be submitted anonymously online.

venerdì 30 gennaio 2015

NATO to boost cooperation with Arab countries to fight terrorism


NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg Friday said the 28-member Alliance will strengthen cooperation with the Arab countries to boost their defence capacities to fight terrorism.

"For NATO it is of great importance that we are able to work with partners all over the world but also in our neighbourhood to create stability," he told a press conference while presenting his annual 2014 report here today.

"It is important to the East with Georgia, Ukraine, Moldova but it is also very important to the south including the Arab World," he stressed.

Stoltenberg recalled that last December he visited Jordan to meet with Mediterranean Dialogue countries and later to Qatar to have a meeting with several Gulf countries.

"The more we can work with partners the better. The aim is to work together in defence capacity building, reform, connecting our armed forces, working against terrorism and improve their defence ability to create stability in their own region," he said.

"It is much better in the long run to project stability by working with partners instead of deploying large number of forces," said the NATO chief.

The year 2014 was a 'black year' for European security but NATO has been able to respond to the changing environment, he noted, and added that extremism close to NATO's southern borders is fuelling terrorism in Allied countries, and that Russia's actions have destabilized eastern Ukraine.

"This Annual Report demonstrates that we are adapting to deal with these changes, and to keep NATO strong," said Stoltenberg.
He added that the Readiness Action Plan, agreed at the NATO Wales summit last year, is being turned into reality: "This will be the biggest reinforcement of our collective defence since the end of the Cold War," he said.

The 20-page report noted that "fighting in Iraq and Syria cost thousands of lives in 2014 and fuelled humanitarian and security challenges for the region and the world. The so-called Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) poses a grave threat to the region and serious challenges for NATO's members and partners." "The Assad regime has contributed to the emergence of ISIL in Syria and its expansion beyond," said the report.

Stoltenberg said that all NATO allies are contributing in one way or another in US-coalition fighting ISIL.
"I welcome that, even though I don't believe that air strikes alone can solve the problem," he said.
He said that the Iraqi government a few weeks ago asked NATO for help to improve their defence capacities.

"We are looking into their request," he said. "NATO is playing its role in the fight against terror partly by exchanging information on foreign fighters who are real threat to all allied countries," he added.
Turning to Afghanistan, he said 2014 was the final year of NATO combat operation in Afghanistan, the largest in Alliance history.

"While many challenges remain, we are determined to support Afghanistan to build on the gains that we have made with great effort and sacrifice. That is why we have launched a new mission, Resolute Support, to train, advise and assist the Afghan National Defence and Security Forces," he said.

On Ukraine the report noted thee impact of the violence and insecurity caused by Russia and Russian-backed separatists has not been limited to Ukraine. "This violence can undermine the safety, stability and well-being of people around the world, as demonstrated by the tragic downing of Malaysia Airlines passenger flight MH17 in July," it warned.

NATO supports the sanctions imposed by the European Union (EU), the G7 and others as part of an international effort to address Russia's destabilising behaviour, it said.

Stoltenberg announced that he will meet with Russian foreign minister Sergey Lavrov at the sidleines of the security conference in Munich, Germany, next week to discuss NATO-Russia ties.

Source:  kuna.net.kw
Pakistan Shiite mosque bomb attack kills at least 40, survivors trapped under rubble


A bomb blast at a Shiite mosque in southern Pakistan has killed at least 40 people and wounded dozens more, officials said, in the deadliest sectarian attack to hit the country in more than a year.

The bomb exploded as worshippers attended Friday prayers in the town of Shikarpur in Sindh province, around 470 kilometres north of Karachi.

Pakistan has suffered a rising tide of sectarian violence in recent years, most of it perpetrated by hardline Sunni Muslim groups against minority Shiite Muslims, who make up around one in five of the population.
Earlier, a spokesman for Sindh police said "at least 15 people have been killed and 40 others wounded".

Shaukat Ali Memon, the medical superintendent of Civil Hospital in Shikarpur gave a death toll of 20, but there was no confirmation of the higher figure.

Witness Zahid Noon said hundreds of people had rushed to the scene to try to dig out survivors trapped under the roof of the mosque, which collapsed in the blast.

Television footage of the aftermath showed chaotic rescue scenes as people piled the wounded into cars, motorbikes and rickshaws to take them for treatment.

"The area is scattered with blood and flesh and it smells of burnt meat, people are screaming at each other... it is chaos," Mr Noon said.

"A huge contingency of police and rangers is present here and ambulances from the nearby towns have started to arrive."

Abdul Quddus, a senior police official in Shikarpur, said the initial investigation suggested it may have been a suicide blast.

Increasing attacks on Shiite targets

It is the bloodiest single sectarian attack in Pakistan since January 22 last year, when 24 Shiite pilgrims returning from Iran were killed when their bus was bombed in southwestern Baluchistan province.

Friday's attack came as prime minister Nawaz Sharif visited Karachi, the capital of Sindh province, to discuss the law and order situation in the city.

Karachi, Pakistan's biggest city and economic heartbeat, has wrestled for several years with a bloody wave of criminal, sectarian and politician murders.

Anti-Shiite attacks have been increasing in recent years in Karachi and also in the southwestern city of Quetta, the northwestern area of Parachinar and the far northeastern town of Gilgit.

Around 1,000 Shiites have been killed in the past two years in Pakistan, a heavy toll, with many of the attacks claimed by the hardline Sunni group Lashkar-e-Jhangvi (LeJ).

Pakistan has stepped up its fight against militants in the past month, following a Taliban massacre at a school in the northwestern city of Peshawar.

Heavily armed gunmen went from room to room at the army-run school murdering 150 people, most of them children, in an attack that horrified the world.

Since then the government has ended a six-year moratorium on executions in terror-related cases and pledged to crack down on all militant groups.

Syria battle between al Qaeda and Western-backed group spreads


Fighting between the Syrian arm of al Qaeda and Western-backed rebels in northern Syria spread from Aleppo province into neighbouring Idlib on Friday, the rebel group and an organization monitoring the civil war said.

Clashes began on Thursday when the al Qaeda Syria wing, the Nusra Front, seized positions from the Hazzm movement west of Aleppo, threatening one of the few remaining pockets of the non-jihadist insurgency.

A Hazzm official said by telephone clashes had spread to Idlib and that his group had retaken some areas previously controlled by Nusra.

"There is now fighting in Idlib, in the Jabal al-Zawiya area," he said. He said in Aleppo province, the two groups were also fighting in Atarib, a town 20 km (12 miles) from the Turkish border.

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said heavy fighting overnight focused on the Regiment 46 base in western Aleppo and overlapping areas between Aleppo and Idlib province, where the Nusra Front pushed out rebels from many areas in October.

The Observatory, which monitors the war, said Hazzm had captured some small checkpoints in Idlib.

Hazzm is one of the last remnants of non-jihadist opposition to President Bashar al-Assad in northern Syria, much of which has been seized by the Nusra Front and Islamic State, an offshoot of al Qaeda that controls roughly a third of Syria.

The Nusra Front said on Friday it was forced to act after Hazzm detained two of its fighters and captured its weapons and offices.

"It's probably most accurate to view this as the latest instance of Nusra efforts to expand their areas of dominance in Idlib and Aleppo at the expense of Western-backed factions, which they are gradually seeking to eliminate from the north," said Noah Bonsey, senior analyst on Syria with International Crisis Group.

The Syrian Islamist militant Ahrar al-Sham, which has worked with both groups, called for an end to the clashes and said the disagreement should be settled in an independent sharia court.

"We are ready to bring back the rights that our brothers in Nusra claimed (were taken) by Hazzm," the statement, posted on the group's Twitter account, said.

Both Hazzm -- part of the Free Syria Army collection of mainstream rebel groups -- and Nusra fight the government. The Observatory said Nusra and other Islamist militants also fought the Syrian army in western Idlib on Friday.

Hazzm has received what it describes as small amounts of military aid from foreign states opposed to Assad, including U.S.-made anti-tank missiles. But it has lost ground to better armed and financed jihadists.

The weakness of the mainstream Syrian opposition has complicated diplomatic efforts to end the conflict that has killed around 200,000 people.

Source:  in.news.yahoo

Germany to provide more weapons and training to the Kurds


In February, the Kurdish Peshmerga forces will receive more Milan-rockets, the German Defence Minister has announced today. Moreover, the German parliament in an outright majority voted to send trainers to Iraqi Kurdistan. This despite of opposition of leftwing parties who claim the mission is unconstitutional.

German Defence Minister Ursula von der Leyen has announced in a television interview, that Germany will provide more heavy weapons and ammunition to the Kurds. Earlier the Kurds have asked the international community to provide more weapons.

According to the Defence Minister the struggle of the Kurds is also in the Germany’s interest.
Frank-Walter Steinmeier from the ruling Social Democratic Party (SPD), the mission will not be a ‘combat mission, it’s about education’.

Moreover, the German parliament has approved a mission of 100 trainers to go to Kurdistan to support the Peshmerga forces. 457 of the 590 MPs voted yes, there were only 79 votes against, and 54 abstentions.

This despite of opposition from the Left Party and the Green party that argue the mission is unconstitutional. According to Germany’s constitution the military can only be deployed in a collective mission under a UN Security Council mandate, NATO, or the EU flag. But the government does not expect any legal action.

Defence Minister von der Leyen says they want to create a new list for further assistance to the Kurds, since the “Peshmerga basically lack everything,” said the politician. The Peshmerga forces especially need ammunition for assault rifles and Milan rockets.

Source: BasNews
Mentre i conflitti in Siria, Iraq, ed Ucraina, continuano a fasi alterne ad essere coperti dai media occidentali, circa 30 altri conflitti ricevono poca o nessuna copertura dalla stampa internazionale, con la mancanza di attenzione della comunità internazionale che, secondo gli esperti, potrebbe avere gravi conseguenze per milioni di persone. Le guerre civili nella regione del Darfur occidentale e del Sudan sono infatti quasi scomparsi dai media, nonostante solo in Darfur esista la presenza di almeno 2,4 milioni di profughi. Anche il Sud Sudan, alle prese con una crisi socio.politica senza precendenti, ha urgente bisogno di attenzione, come riferito da Jean-Marie Guehenno, presidente del think tank con sede a Bruxelles “International Crisis Group“, che attualmente traccia l’andamento di più di 30 conflitti a livello globale.
L’anno scorso,il Sud Sudan era classificato al fianco di Afghanistan e Siria, come i tre paesi più pericolosi al mondo, in un indice annuale compilato dall’Istituto per l’Economia e la Pace. “La violenza orribile che si consuma in Sud Sudan è strettamente correlata alla mancanza di pressione da parte dell’opinione pubblica mondiale“, ha dichiarato Guehenno alla Reuters Foundation Thomson.
Anche la Nigeria è un paese dove si sottostimano sistematicamente i conflitti interni anche se “potenzialmente molto gravi“. E se gli attacchi da parte dei militanti islamici do Boko Haram hanno ottenuto qualche copertura dai media occidentali, altri focolai di tensioni nel paese non interessano. Se l’attuale Presidente nigeriano Goodluck Jonathan perdesse le elezioni nel mese di febbraio, le tensioni nella ricca regione di petrolio del Delta del Niger potrebbero divampare. “Ma questo non interessa” ha dichiarato Guehenno. “Se si arrivasse alla violenza nel periodo successivo alle elezioni, poi improvvisamente questa notizia dalla Nigeria sarà la più importante per Africa. Ma sarebbe meglio se questi problemi venissero affrontati oggi piuttosto che domani” ha aggiunto.
Il numero dei conflitti nel mondo è stato relativamente stabile negli ultimi dieci anni, in un range compreso tra 31 e 37, con il numero di rifugiati in fuga dai combattimenti che nel 2014 è salito al suo livello più alto dal 1996. I conflitti che interessano ai grandi media mainstream mondiali tuttavia sembrano rimanere limitati.
I combattimenti nella parte orientale della Repubblica Democratica del Congo hanno causato lo sfollamento di almeno 770 mila persone nel 2014, portando il numero totale degli sfollati a circa 2,7 milioni, in un paese di 68 milioni di persone. Nessuna notizia. I conflitti in corso in Somalia, Yemen, Libia, Repubblica Centrafricana, Pakistan, Afghanistan hanno invece sempre meno attenzione dei giornalisti e analisti internazionali dopo la partenza di molte truppe straniere.Perchè?
I ricercatori dicono che non è necessariamente la dimensione del conflitto ad attirare l’attenzione dei media. A questo proposito, Virgil Hawkins, professore associato di relazioni internazionali presso l’Università di Osaka in Giappone, cita il conflitto israelo-palestinese perchè “riceve notevole attenzione dei media, anche se il bilancio delle vittime è piccolo rispetto al Congo“. Hawkins ha inoltre confrontato la copertura mediatica determinata dall’attacco islamista contro la rivista satirica Charlie Hebdo a Parigi con il relativo silenzio su una serie di omicidi di massa di Boko Haram in Nigeria avvenuto durante lo stesso arco temporale. “Le vere ragioni delle differenze nella copertura sono meno legate alle atrocità in sè, mentre e più correlata a dove, e contro chi, le atrocità sono perpetrate“, ha scritto.
Ci sono molti piccoli conflitti a lenta combustione in paesi come l’India, la Thailandia, la Russia, la Turchia, Myanmar e l’Etiopia, ma non dovrebbero essere ignorati, ha detto il ricercatore. Conflitti su piccola scala spesso diventano quelli principali, perché questi si collegano a un problema più ampio, ha poi aggiunto.
Per anni nessuno prestò molta attenzione ai piccoli conflitti nel nord del Mali, fino a quando si creò l’occasione per i gruppi jihadisti di formare un movimento transnazionale. “Poi, Improvvisamente diventano una questione strategica”, ha detto Guehenno.
- See more at: http://www.osservatoriomashrek.com/2015-le-guerre-invisibili/#sthash.XKbZ7T0O.dpuf
Mentre i conflitti in Siria, Iraq, ed Ucraina, continuano a fasi alterne ad essere coperti dai media occidentali, circa 30 altri conflitti ricevono poca o nessuna copertura dalla stampa internazionale, con la mancanza di attenzione della comunità internazionale che, secondo gli esperti, potrebbe avere gravi conseguenze per milioni di persone. Le guerre civili nella regione del Darfur occidentale e del Sudan sono infatti quasi scomparsi dai media, nonostante solo in Darfur esista la presenza di almeno 2,4 milioni di profughi. Anche il Sud Sudan, alle prese con una crisi socio.politica senza precendenti, ha urgente bisogno di attenzione, come riferito da Jean-Marie Guehenno, presidente del think tank con sede a Bruxelles “International Crisis Group“, che attualmente traccia l’andamento di più di 30 conflitti a livello globale.
L’anno scorso,il Sud Sudan era classificato al fianco di Afghanistan e Siria, come i tre paesi più pericolosi al mondo, in un indice annuale compilato dall’Istituto per l’Economia e la Pace. “La violenza orribile che si consuma in Sud Sudan è strettamente correlata alla mancanza di pressione da parte dell’opinione pubblica mondiale“, ha dichiarato Guehenno alla Reuters Foundation Thomson.
Anche la Nigeria è un paese dove si sottostimano sistematicamente i conflitti interni anche se “potenzialmente molto gravi“. E se gli attacchi da parte dei militanti islamici do Boko Haram hanno ottenuto qualche copertura dai media occidentali, altri focolai di tensioni nel paese non interessano. Se l’attuale Presidente nigeriano Goodluck Jonathan perdesse le elezioni nel mese di febbraio, le tensioni nella ricca regione di petrolio del Delta del Niger potrebbero divampare. “Ma questo non interessa” ha dichiarato Guehenno. “Se si arrivasse alla violenza nel periodo successivo alle elezioni, poi improvvisamente questa notizia dalla Nigeria sarà la più importante per Africa. Ma sarebbe meglio se questi problemi venissero affrontati oggi piuttosto che domani” ha aggiunto.
Il numero dei conflitti nel mondo è stato relativamente stabile negli ultimi dieci anni, in un range compreso tra 31 e 37, con il numero di rifugiati in fuga dai combattimenti che nel 2014 è salito al suo livello più alto dal 1996. I conflitti che interessano ai grandi media mainstream mondiali tuttavia sembrano rimanere limitati.
I combattimenti nella parte orientale della Repubblica Democratica del Congo hanno causato lo sfollamento di almeno 770 mila persone nel 2014, portando il numero totale degli sfollati a circa 2,7 milioni, in un paese di 68 milioni di persone. Nessuna notizia. I conflitti in corso in Somalia, Yemen, Libia, Repubblica Centrafricana, Pakistan, Afghanistan hanno invece sempre meno attenzione dei giornalisti e analisti internazionali dopo la partenza di molte truppe straniere.Perchè?
I ricercatori dicono che non è necessariamente la dimensione del conflitto ad attirare l’attenzione dei media. A questo proposito, Virgil Hawkins, professore associato di relazioni internazionali presso l’Università di Osaka in Giappone, cita il conflitto israelo-palestinese perchè “riceve notevole attenzione dei media, anche se il bilancio delle vittime è piccolo rispetto al Congo“. Hawkins ha inoltre confrontato la copertura mediatica determinata dall’attacco islamista contro la rivista satirica Charlie Hebdo a Parigi con il relativo silenzio su una serie di omicidi di massa di Boko Haram in Nigeria avvenuto durante lo stesso arco temporale. “Le vere ragioni delle differenze nella copertura sono meno legate alle atrocità in sè, mentre e più correlata a dove, e contro chi, le atrocità sono perpetrate“, ha scritto.
Ci sono molti piccoli conflitti a lenta combustione in paesi come l’India, la Thailandia, la Russia, la Turchia, Myanmar e l’Etiopia, ma non dovrebbero essere ignorati, ha detto il ricercatore. Conflitti su piccola scala spesso diventano quelli principali, perché questi si collegano a un problema più ampio, ha poi aggiunto.
Per anni nessuno prestò molta attenzione ai piccoli conflitti nel nord del Mali, fino a quando si creò l’occasione per i gruppi jihadisti di formare un movimento transnazionale. “Poi, Improvvisamente diventano una questione strategica”, ha detto Guehenno.
- See more at: http://www.osservatoriomashrek.com/2015-le-guerre-invisibili/#sthash.XKbZ7T0O.dpuf

Taliban claims their infiltrator killed 3 US contractors at Kabul airport


The Taliban militants group in Afghanistan claimed responsibility behind an insider attack in kabul airport which left at least three coalition contractors dead.

Taliban group spokesman Zabiullah claimed that the assailant was an infiltrator of the Taliban group who was named as Ihsanullah son of Rahmatullah and a resident of Laghman province.

Mujahid said the attack was carried out at 9 pm local time on Thursday night. However, the coalition forces in Afghanistan said the incident took place around 6:40 pm on Thursday evening.

“We can confirm that there was a shooting incident at North Kabul International Airport complex 29 January at approximately 6:40pm. Three coalition contractors were killed as was an Afghan local national,” coalition forces said in a statement.

No further details have been regarding the identitities of the deceased individuals with coalition forces saying the incident is under investigation and further information will be released as available and appropriate.

The Afghan security officials have not commented regarding the incident and identity of the assailant gunman so far.

Source:  khaama

Wave of islamic attacks in Egypt's Sinai kill 27


The Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS) group’s Egypt wing claimed a series of attacks that killed at least 27 security personnel on Thursday in some of the worst anti-government violence in months, after commemorations around the anniversary of the 2011 uprising turned deadly in the past week.

Egypt is fighting an Islamist insurgency based in the Sinai. Hundreds of security force members have been killed since the army ousted President Mohammed Mursi of the Muslim Brotherhood in July 2013 after mass protests against his rule.

The government makes no distinction between the Brotherhood and the Sinai-based militants. The Brotherhood denies any links to the insurgents.

The most active militant group in Sinai, Ansar Beit al-Maqdis, changed its name to Sinai Province last year when it swore allegiance to ISIS, the hardline militant group that has seized swathes of Iraq and Syria.

A series of tweets from the Sinai Province's Twitter account claimed responsibility for each of the four attacks that took place in North Sinai province within hours of one another on Thursday night.

Thursday's first attack was a bombing targeting a military headquarters, base and hotel in the capital of North Sinai province that killed 25 and wounded at least 58, including nine civilians, security and medical sources said.

The flagship government newspaper, al-Ahram, said its office in the city of al-Arish, which is situated opposite the military buildings, had been "completely destroyed," although it was not clear if it had been a target.

Later, suspected militants killed an army major and wounded six others at a checkpoint in Rafah, while an assault on a checkpoint south of al-Arish wounded four soldiers, security sources said. A roadside bomb in Suez city, not in the Sinai, that killed a police officer was not claimed by ISIS.

After Sinai Province's claim of responsibility, security sources said a suspected militant had been killed while attempting to plant a bomb at a power transformer in Port Said.

Sinai-based militants have killed hundreds of security officers since Mursi was removed from power following mass protests against his rule.

The military said in a statement on its Facebook page that the attacks were the result of a successful campaign to pressure the militants.

Meanwhile, Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi cut short a visit to the Ethiopian capital for an African Union summit, following the wave of deadly attacks.

Sisi's office said in a statement emailed on Friday morning that Sisi was heading back to Cairo to follow the situation.

Sisi had been scheduled to address the AU summit that began in Addis Ababa on Friday morning.

The US State Department condemned the attack, saying in a statement: "The United States remains steadfast in its support of the Egyptian government's efforts to combat the threat of terrorism in Egypt as part of our continuing commitment to the strategic partnership between our two countries."

Fragile recovery
The violence and civil unrest comes as Egypt is trying to burnish its image in the run-up to an investor's summit in mid-March, to be followed by parliamentary elections.

The attacks in al-Arish and Rafah continue a pattern of unrest in the remote but strategic Sinai Peninsula, which borders the Gaza Strip, the Israeli-occupied territories and Egypt's Suez Canal.

But the less common attempts in Port Said and Suez, at opposite ends of the Canal, bring the insurgency nearer to a key source of hard currency for the cash-strapped state.

Income from the canal has not been hurt by the turmoil following the 2011 uprising to the same extent as foreign investment and tourism, and a planned second canal is meant to boost the waterway's value to Egypt.
However, Egypt's attempts to attract investors for mega-projects, such as the second canal, that the government says are key to securing a nascent recovery could stall if instability increases.

The last major attacks in Egypt were on October 24, when militants killed at least 33 members of the security forces. That operation was also claimed by Sinai Province.

That prompted the government to declare a state of emergency in parts of Sinai, allow civilians to be tried in military courts, and close the only border not under Israeli control with Gaza.

Egyptian authorities have also decided to completely demolish the city of Rafah, in a bid to create a buffer zone between Egypt and Gaza.

Earlier in January, the authorities have officially began the second stage of evacuation of Rafah houses.
According to North Sinai district Governor Abdul Fattah Harhour, “it would be necessary to completely remove the city of Rafah in order to create a buffer zone on the borders with Gaza,” adding that the authorities began evacuating 1,220 homes, housing over 2,044 families, in the area demarcated for the establishment of the zone.

The displaced families will receive compensation for the values of their lost homes, but not for the lands upon which the homes were built.

In the first phase, more than 800 homes are being demolished and 1,100 families displaced to build the 500-meter wide, 13.5-kilometer long buffer zone.

Harhour said military engineering units in the area of Abu Shnar have started working on establishing a “new Rafah city,” with residential zones appropriate to the nature and traditions of the residents of Rafah.

The main part of the plan, aimed at blocking the southern borders with Gaza, is being implemented under the pretext of stemming jihadists reportedly infiltrating Egypt's Sinai Peninsula from across the border through the Rafah crossing – Gaza's only outlet to the outside world not under Israeli control.

Protest deaths
Tensions have risen across Egypt in the past week with protests, some of them violent, marking four years since the uprising that ousted dictator Hosni Mubarak from power.

Earlier on Thursday, a group of women protested in Cairo over the death of activist Shaimaa Sabbagh and around 25 others said to have been killed by security forces at rallies commemorating the 2011 uprising.

Sabbagh, 32, died on Saturday as riot police were breaking up a small, peaceful demonstration. Friends said she had been shot, and images of her bleeding body rippled out across social media, sparking outrage and condemnation.

"The Interior Ministry are thugs!" chanted about 100 female protesters at the site of Sabbagh's death. Some held up signs with the word "murderer" scrawled over the face of Interior Minister Mohammed Ibrahim.

The protesters were defying a law that severely restricts protests. "People are here at incredible risk to themselves. But it's a way of standing against the fear they have instilled," said activist Yasmin el-Rifae.

Ibrahim has said an investigation into Sabbagh's death will lead to prosecution if any member of the security forces is found responsible.

One of the organizers of Thursday's demonstration said they had asked only women to attend because they feared infiltration by plainclothes male agents.

Across the street from the protesters, beside police officers, men stood making lewd gestures and yelling profanities. Others chanted in favor of Sisi.

Criticism is growing of the security tactics Sisi has used since Mursi was ousted.

A crackdown that began with the deaths of hundreds of Brotherhood supporters and the imprisonment of thousands more has expanded to include liberals and other activists.

Some of those now opposed to the government initially supported the protests that led to Mursi's removal and Sisi's rise to power, as people who knew Sabbagh said she had.

Moreover, scores of activists who revolted against Mubarak are being held in prison for holding unauthorized protests, while the April 6 Youth Movement that spearheaded the revolt has been banned by a court.

The revolt against Mubarak erupted on January 25, 2011, with hundreds of thousands of protesters taking to the streets across Egypt for 18 days until he stepped down.

The anti-Mubarak revolt was fueled by the police abuses and corruption that marked the strongman's three-decade rule, but the police has since regained popularity amid widespread yearning for stability.

After his ouster Mubarak was detained and put on trial along with his security chiefs on charges of involvement in the deaths of protesters during the revolt.

Most of the charges have been dropped, bringing Mubarak closer to freedom. On the fourth anniversary of the January 25 revolt, his two sons Alaa and Gamal Mubarak walked out of prison pending a separate corruption retrial with their father.

"The Egyptian judiciary has shown a double-standard for justice by exonerating state officials from any guilt in committing human rights violations on the one hand; and on the other, by issuing hefty prison terms against those who exercise their civil and political rights," the International Federation of Human Rights group said.

A lower court had jailed the Mubaraks in May 2014 for embezzling millions of dollars from state funds allocated for renovating presidential palaces.

But an appeals court overturned that verdict and ordered a retrial.

The military crackdown after Mursi’s ouster has killed more than 1,400 people, most of them within hours when police broke up two pro-Mursi camps in Cairo during the summer of 2013.

More than 15,000 Mursi supporters are also imprisoned, while dozens have been sentenced to death after speedy trials which the United Nations has denounced as "unprecedented in recent history."

Sisi has repeatedly defended his regime, and soon after murder charges were dropped against Mubarak, he insisted that Egypt was "on a path to establish a modern democratic state based on justice, freedom, equality and renunciation of corruption."

Source:  al-akhbar

Isis 'attack Saudi border post and infiltrate town' via Iraq

Islamic State (Isis) supporters on social media are hailing dozens of IS militants who have allegedly infiltrated a Saudi Arabian border town via Iraq.

Saudi intelligence services are reportedly on the search for the IS militants after an anti-government Saudi Twitter user, known as 'mujtahidd', tweeted to his 1.2m followers that an attack was launched on border guards.

The Twitter user also claimed IS militants have reached the Saudi town of Rafha.
Neither IS nor the Saudi officials have released an official confirmation on the border infiltration though comments were being exchanged back and forth on social media between IS supporters and Saudi citizens using hashtag #Rafha.

Social media was also abuzz with pictures of the alleged Saudi border checkpoint that was captured by IS militants.

Anti-radicalisation thinktank Quilliam Foundation's researcher Charlie Winter said a "heavy campaign" seems to be brewing inside the Kingdom.

"You have people in Saudi Arabia saying 'be careful with this, it's just a rumour, it's just the Islamic State trying to destabilise the Kingdom,'"said Winter.

"They will always exaggerate, but I have not seen something like this completely pulled out of the bag before.
"In the wake of King Abdullah's death, it would make sense for IS to try and destabilise them in this way, whether it was an incursion or whether it was just by disseminating rumours to scare people."

Meanwhile, Saudi Arabia is in the process of building a 600-mile-long 'Great Wall' along its northern border with Iraq to shield itself from IS.

Construction of the wall started in September last year with the Saudi-Iraq border now featuring five layers of fencing with watchtowers, night-vision cameras, and radar.

On the other side of the wall lies the predominant IS-occupied Iraq territory.

IS has said that their ultimate victory will be conquering Muslim holy cities, Mecca and Medina, in Saudi Arabia.

Source:  ibtimes

African Union proposes 7,500-strong force

to fight Boko Haram

The African Union has called for a regional five-nation force of 7,500 troops to defeat the "horrendous" rise of the Nigerian armed group Boko Haram, AU Commission Chief Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma has said.

The statement on Friday came after Boko Haram increased cross border raids in recent weeks, in neighbouring countries such as Cameroon and Chad, as it continued to take over more territory in Nigeria.

"Boko Haram's horrendous abuses, unspeakable cruelty, total disregard for human lives, and wanton destruction of property are unmatched," Dlamini-Zuma said in a statement after the bloc's Peace and Security Council met late Thursday, ahead of a full AU summit meeting on Friday.

The Boko Haram uprising has become a regional crisis, with the four directly affected countries - Cameroon, Chad, Niger and Nigeria - agreeing along with Benin to boost cooperation to contain the threat and to form a Multinational Joint Task Force (MNJTF).

"I am deeply concerned by the prevailing situation as a result of Boko Haram terrorist activities, including the recent escalation of violence witnessed on the ground," Dlamini-Zuma said after the meeting at AU headquarters in the Ethiopian capital, where the two-day annual summit of the 54-nation bloc is slated to be held.

"The continued attacks in northeastern Nigeria and the increasing attacks in the Lake Chad Basin, along the border with Chad and Cameroon, and in the northern provinces of that country, have the potential of destabilising the entire region, with far-reaching security and humanitarian consequences."

More than 13,000 people have been killed and about one million made homeless by Boko Haram violence since 2009.

Regional nations pledged earlier this month to commit a battalion each to the force, a total of some 3,000 troops, but Dlamini-Zuma said after meetings

'Continental problem'
Chad's President Idriss Deby, who earlier this month sent a convoy of troops and 400 military vehicles into neighbouring Cameroon to fight Boko Haram, said action had to be taken.

"We have seen too many meetings and no concrete action," Deby said.

"Today, there are four countries affected by Boko Haram, but tomorrow it may be a continental problem."
Nigeria has the largest army in west Africa but has come under criticism at home and abroad for failing to stop the advance of Boko Haram.

Earlier this month Nigerian security officials ruled out the need for a United Nations or African Union-backed force to fight Boko Haram, saying the country and its partners could handle the threat.

But international pressure has ramped up, with a top US military commander General David Rodriguez, head of US Africa Command, warning this week that tackling Boko Haram will need a "huge" international effort.

Source: Al Jazeera
Nigerian fighter jets have bombed the northeast town of Malam Fatori, controlled by Boko Haram Islamists, the military said Thursday.
Witnesses and some media reports said troops and airforce planes from neighbouring Chad were involved in the operation on Nigerian soil but Abuja neither confirmed nor denied the claim.
There was no initial word on casualties or whether Boko Haram fighters had fled the area.
“Malam Fatori is within the area of operation covered by the Multinational Joint Task Force (MNJTF) of which Chad has always been a part,” defence spokesman Chris Olukolade told AFP in a text message.
“The Nigerian airforce has also been conducting (an) air mission there for two days now,” he added. “It is all part of the ongoing efforts against terrorism.”
The MNJTF was set up more than a decade ago to combat smuggling in the remote region but as the Nigerian Islamist insurgency in the area intensified, the mandate of the force changed.
Residents in the town of Bosso, which lies next to Malam Fatori but across the border in Niger, said the bombardment began early on Wednesday and lasted for several hours.
“At around 8:00 am (0700 GMT) we started seeing three military jets encircling Malam Fatori and soon after (they) began dropping bombs,” said Idrissa Ari, a Bosso resident.
Reaching locals inside Malam Fatori is difficult given the collapse of the mobile phone network on the Nigerian side of the border.
The authorities in N’Djamena did not respond to requests seeking comment on their alleged involvement in the operation.
The Boko Haram uprising has become a regional crisis, with the four directly affected countries — Cameroon, Chad, Niger and Nigeria — agreeing to boost cooperation to contain the threat.
The African Union’s annual summit in the Ethiopian capital Addis Ababa is this week expected to focus heavily on the threat from Boko Haram.
AU chief Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma has called the insurgency “a threat to the whole continent”.
– Chadian troops in Cameroon –
A brutal attack this month on the Nigerian town of Baga, near Chad and Niger, killed several hundred people and raised fresh questions about the Nigerian military’s capacity to face Boko Haram alone.
An aerial bombardment inside Nigeria by the Chadian airforce, if confirmed, would mark a major development in bilateral security cooperation.
While it was unclear whether Chadian troops had begun operating in Nigeria, security sources said soldiers from Chad had arrived in Cameroon ahead of an expected campaign against the Islamists.
“The first Chadian soldiers were deployed yesterday (Wednesday) in Fotokol,” a Cameroonian security source told AFP, requesting anonymity.
Fotokol is just 500 meters (0.3 miles) from the Nigerian town of Gamboru, currently controlled by Boko Haram.
A senior Cameroonian officer said the deployment was part of “preliminary action” for the Chadian army to take on Boko Haram alongside troops from Yaounde.
The insurgents control large parts of Nigeria’s Borno state, which shares borders with Cameroon, Chad and Niger.
Meanwhile, local sources in three areas of Cameroon’s far north reported that 10 people had their throats slit by suspected Boko Haram militants this week.
- See more at: http://www.vanguardngr.com/2015/01/nigeria-fighter-jets-bomb-town-held-boko-haram-military/#sthash.xjKbote1.dpuf
Nigerian fighter jets have bombed the northeast town of Malam Fatori, controlled by Boko Haram Islamists, the military said Thursday.
Witnesses and some media reports said troops and airforce planes from neighbouring Chad were involved in the operation on Nigerian soil but Abuja neither confirmed nor denied the claim.
There was no initial word on casualties or whether Boko Haram fighters had fled the area.
“Malam Fatori is within the area of operation covered by the Multinational Joint Task Force (MNJTF) of which Chad has always been a part,” defence spokesman Chris Olukolade told AFP in a text message.
“The Nigerian airforce has also been conducting (an) air mission there for two days now,” he added. “It is all part of the ongoing efforts against terrorism.”
The MNJTF was set up more than a decade ago to combat smuggling in the remote region but as the Nigerian Islamist insurgency in the area intensified, the mandate of the force changed.
Residents in the town of Bosso, which lies next to Malam Fatori but across the border in Niger, said the bombardment began early on Wednesday and lasted for several hours.
“At around 8:00 am (0700 GMT) we started seeing three military jets encircling Malam Fatori and soon after (they) began dropping bombs,” said Idrissa Ari, a Bosso resident.
Reaching locals inside Malam Fatori is difficult given the collapse of the mobile phone network on the Nigerian side of the border.
The authorities in N’Djamena did not respond to requests seeking comment on their alleged involvement in the operation.
The Boko Haram uprising has become a regional crisis, with the four directly affected countries — Cameroon, Chad, Niger and Nigeria — agreeing to boost cooperation to contain the threat.
The African Union’s annual summit in the Ethiopian capital Addis Ababa is this week expected to focus heavily on the threat from Boko Haram.
AU chief Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma has called the insurgency “a threat to the whole continent”.
– Chadian troops in Cameroon –
A brutal attack this month on the Nigerian town of Baga, near Chad and Niger, killed several hundred people and raised fresh questions about the Nigerian military’s capacity to face Boko Haram alone.
An aerial bombardment inside Nigeria by the Chadian airforce, if confirmed, would mark a major development in bilateral security cooperation.
While it was unclear whether Chadian troops had begun operating in Nigeria, security sources said soldiers from Chad had arrived in Cameroon ahead of an expected campaign against the Islamists.
“The first Chadian soldiers were deployed yesterday (Wednesday) in Fotokol,” a Cameroonian security source told AFP, requesting anonymity.
Fotokol is just 500 meters (0.3 miles) from the Nigerian town of Gamboru, currently controlled by Boko Haram.
A senior Cameroonian officer said the deployment was part of “preliminary action” for the Chadian army to take on Boko Haram alongside troops from Yaounde.
The insurgents control large parts of Nigeria’s Borno state, which shares borders with Cameroon, Chad and Niger.
Meanwhile, local sources in three areas of Cameroon’s far north reported that 10 people had their throats slit by suspected Boko Haram militants this week.
- See more at: http://www.vanguardngr.com/2015/01/nigeria-fighter-jets-bomb-town-held-boko-haram-military/#sthash.xjKbote1.dpuf