Tag: IS

  • Al Qaeda Claim Of Responsibility In Charlie Hebdo Attack Serves As Reminder Of Danger It Still Poses

    Al Qaeda Claim Of Responsibility In Charlie Hebdo Attack Serves As Reminder Of Danger It Still Poses

    WASHINGTON — The younger of the two brothers who killed 12 people in Paris last week most likely used his older brother’s passport in 2011 to travel to Yemen, where he received training and US$20,000 (S$26,600) from Al Qaeda’s affiliate there, presumably to finance attacks when he returned home to France.

    American counterterrorism officials said on Wednesday that they now believed Cherif Kouachi was the aggressor in the attacks — not his elder brother Said Kouachi, as they had first thought — but that Said might also have travelled to Yemen, as the American and French authorities have said.

    A fuller portrait of the brothers has emerged as an international effort is focused on determining who might have been behind the attack on the French newspaper Charlie Hebdo, and what direct role, if any, that Al Qaeda, its affiliates or their bitter rival, the Islamic State, had in planning and ordering the assault.

    In a video and written statement, the Al Qaeda branch in Yemen on Wednesday formally claimed responsibility for the deadly assault. It said the target had been chosen by the Al Qaeda leadership, but did not specify which leaders.

    If the claim of direct responsibility holds up, it would make the attacks in France the deadliest planned and financed by Al Qaeda on Western soil since the transit bombings in London in 2005 that killed 52 people. It would also serve as a reminder of the continued danger from the group at a time when much of the attention of Europe and the United States has shifted to the Islamic State, the militant organisation that controls large swathes of Syria and Iraq and has become notorious for beheading hostages.

    The new information about the Kouachi brothers could help explain what Cherif Kouachi had told a French television station before his death last week; that he had gone to Yemen in 2011, probably through Oman, and was financed by Anwar Awlaki, the American-born cleric who oversaw attacks against the West by Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula, also known as AQAP.

    The American authorities now believe Cherif most likely had contact with Awlaki in Yemen, possibly in person.

    But it is still unclear what specific guidance the Al Qaeda branch gave the Kouachis about carrying out an attack, though it is believed that the satirical magazine was one of the targets discussed, an American counterterrorism official said.

    “I suspect that Cherif Kouachi did engage AQAP members in Yemen, but that he was not fully brought into the organisation,” said Mr Brian Fishman, a counterterrorism researcher at the New America Foundation in Washington. “Perhaps concerned about infiltration by Western agents, AQAP might have offered minimal training, directed the group towards publicly-announced target lists and sent him on his way.”

    Mr Fisher added that if that had happened, “AQAP did not exactly direct the attack, but it had some knowledge of the Kouachis and could plausibly try to claim credit”.

    The statement by the Al Qaeda branch in Yemen called the Kouachi brothers, who were killed by the police last Friday, “two heroes of Islam”.

    But it referred to the actions of Amedy Coulibaly, who attacked a police officer and was killed by the police after holding hostages in a kosher supermarket, as a coincidence and did not take responsibility for them.

    The Office of the Director of National Intelligence in the US said it had determined that the video clip claiming responsibility was genuine, but that it had not reached a conclusion on whether or not the claims being made in the video were valid.

    “The big question that investigators need to look at is, how much of a role did AQAP play in the actual planning in the final stages of this process?” said Mr J M Berger, a fellow at the Brookings Institution. “They could have given these guys money and training three or four years ago, but when they executed it, it could have been done with money (from other sources).”

     

    Source: www.todayonline.com

  • 3 Million Copies Of Charlie Hebdo Could Hit Paris Newsstands This Week

    3 Million Copies Of Charlie Hebdo Could Hit Paris Newsstands This Week

    PARIS – Up to 3 million copies of Charlie Hebdo could hit newsstands this week, dwarfing its usual print run of 60,000, in response to soaring demand for the first edition of the satirical weekly since last week’s deadly attacks by Islamist militants.

    Seventeen people, including journalists and police, were killed in three days of violence that began on Jan. 7 when militants burst into Charlie Hebdo’s office during a regular editorial meeting and shot dead five of its leading cartoonists.

    Liberation newspaper, now temporarily housing Charlie Hebdo operations, revealed the front page of the Jan. 14 edition via Twitter late on Monday – an image of the Prophet Mohammad holding a sign saying “JE SUIS CHARLIE” (“I am Charlie”) below the headline “TOUT EST PARDONNE” (“All is forgiven”).

    An initial batch of 1 million copies will be available on Wednesday and Thursday, said Michel Salion, a spokesman for MPL, which distributes Charlie Hebdo. A further 2 million could then be printed depending on demand.

    “We have requests for 300,000 copies throughout the world – and demand keeps rising by the hour,” Salion said, adding that the newspaper usually had just 4,000 international clients.

    “The million will go. As of Thursday, the decision will probably be taken to print extra copies … So we’ll have one million, plus two if necessary.”

    On Sunday, at least 3.7 million people took part throughout France in marches of support for Charlie Hebdo and freedom of expression. World leaders linked arms to lead more than a million citizens through Paris in an unprecedented demonstration to pay tribute to the victims.

    The new edition of Charlie Hebdo, known for its satirical attacks on Islam and other religions, will include cartoons featuring the Prophet Mohammad and also making fun of politicians and other religions, its lawyer, Richard Malka, told France Info radio earlier.

    Salion said 60,000 copies of Charlie Hebdo were normally printed, with only 30,000 generally sold.

     

    Source: www.todayonline.com

  • Amnesty International – IS Using Captured Women As Sex Slaves

    Amnesty International – IS Using Captured Women As Sex Slaves

    Captured Yazidi girls in Iraq are killing themselves to escape rape and torture at the hands of Isis militants holding them prisoner.

    Hundreds of women and children were captured during the group’s bloody sweep through northern Iraq earlier this year and have since been trafficked as sex slaves , forced into marriage and imprisoned.

    Victims who managed to escape told Amnesty International that many Yazidi girls killed themselves after losing hope of being saved.

    A 20-year-old survivor, called Luna, said she was held with 20 girls as young as 10 in the Isis-controlled city of Mosul when they were told to dress up.

    “One day we were given clothes that looked like dance costumes and were told to bathe and wear those clothes,” she added. “Jilan killed herself in the bathroom. She cut her wrists and hanged herself. She was very beautiful.

    “I think she knew that she was going to be taken away by a man and that is why she killed herself.”

    Displaced Yazidi women

    Another woman, 27-year-old Wafa, said she and her sister attempted suicide while imprisoned in Mosul after the man holding them gave them the choice of marrying him and his brother or being sold as slaves.

    “At night we tried to strangle ourselves with our scarves,” she told Amnesty. “Two girls who were held with us woke up and stopped us and then stayed awake to watch over us.

    “When they fell asleep at 5am we tried again, and again they woke up and stopped us. I could not speak for several days after that.”

    Relatives of girls who managed to escape fear that the trauma will never leave them, reporting panic attacks and depression.

    The grandfather of a 16-year-old girl who was raped in Isis captivity said: “She is very sad and quiet all the time. She does not smile anymore and seems not to care about anything. I worry that she may try to kill herself, I don’t let her out of my sight.”

    Amnesty interviewed 42 women and girls for its report, “Escape from Hell”, which is being released today.

    It chronicles the torture, rape and sexual violence suffered by women from the Yazidi minority. Women who converted to Islam were forced to marry Isis militants and those maintaining their faith have been trafficked as sex slaves, abused and imprisoned.

    Videos have emerged online of horrifying “slave auctions” of girls in Mosul and Isis members have boasted of the abductions, justifying them by calling Yazidis “apostates”.

    Thousands of people from the religious minority, who are viciously targeted by the Sunni extremist group because they are considered heretics, were driven from their homes in Sinjar by the Isis advance in August.

    Hundreds were killed in raids on towns and more died of thirst or starvation after fleeing up the remote Mount Sinjar.

    Randa, a 16-year-old girl from a village near the mountain, was abducted with scores of her family members including her heavily-pregnant mother and given to a man twice her age who raped her.

    “Da’esh [Islamic State] has ruined our lives … What will happen to my family? I don’t know if I will ever see them again.”

    One woman called Alba, 19, was visibly pregnant with her second child when she was kidnapped with her son but Isis showed no mercy.

    “I had my little boy with me and my pregnancy was very visible already but one of the guards chose me to be his wife,” she told Amnesty, adding that the man threatened to send her to Syria if she resisted.

    Some Yazidi girls forced into marriage have reported being taken to the homes of Isis fighters’ families and even meeting their wives and children. Some received further abuse, while others made friends with their captor’s wives.

    Several girls held by foreign fighters told Amnesty International their families helped them escape and one 13-year-old girl, who was held with her toddler sister, said her captor did not abuse them but instead sent them straight home to their family.

    But even those escaping have a bleak prospect to return to, with the loss of dozens of killed or captured relatives, and home towns and villages overrun by Isis.

    The trauma of survivors of sexual violence is further exacerbated by the stigma surrounding rape. Survivors feel that their “honour” and that of their families has been tarnished and fear that their standing in society will be diminished as a result.

    Donatella Rovera, who spoke to more than 40 former captives in northern Iraq for Amnesty International, said Isis were using rape as a weapon in attacks “amounting to crimes against humanity”.

    “The physical and psychological toll of the horrifying sexual violence these women have endured is catastrophic,” she added. “Many of them have been tortured and treated as chattel. Even those who have managed to escape remain deeply traumatised.”

    She called on Kurdistan Regional Government, UN and humanitarian organisations to ensure they were reaching everyone who needed support.

     

    Source: www.independent.co.uk

  • IS Raih Untung Jual Organ Manusia Untuk Biayai Aktiviti Keganasan

    IS Raih Untung Jual Organ Manusia Untuk Biayai Aktiviti Keganasan

    DAMSYIK: Kumpulan militan Negara Islam di Iraq dan Syria (ISIS) dipercayai meraih keuntungan besar dengan menjual organ manusia dengan hasilnya digunakan bagi membiayai aktiviti keganasan di seluruh Timur Tengah.

    Kumpulan itu dikesan mendapatkan dana sehingga AS$2 juta ($2.63 juta) setahun daripada pelbagai sumber, termasuk pengeluaran minyak, pemerdagangan manusia dan penyeludupan dadah.

    Namun, sejak beberapa bulan lalu militan ISIS menggunakan khidmat doktor asing bagi mengeluarkan organ manusia – bukan saja daripada anggota mereka yang mati, malah daripada tawanan hidup, termasuk kanak-kanak dari seluruh Iraq dan Syria.

    Difahamkan, organ juga diambil daripada militan yang terkorban, mangsa cedera yang ditinggalkan atau individu yang diculik.

    Perkara itu didedahkan portal berita al-Monitor yang berpangkalan di Amerika Syarikat.

    Sumber portal itu dikenal pasti sebagai pakar telinga, hidung dan tekak, Encik Siruwan al-Mosuli.

    Menurut Encik Siruwan, pegawai kanan ISIS melantik doktor asing bagi menjalankan sistem pemerdagangan organ meluas dari hospital di Mosul yang di bawah pentadbiran ISIS.

    Katanya, pulangan perdagangan organ manusia amat menguntungkan.

    Disebabkan itu, ISIS menubuhkan bahagian khas bagi mengendalikan penyeludupan organ yang bertanggungjawab menjual jantung, hati dan buah pinggang manusia di pasaran gelap antarabangsa, katanya.

    “Saya mengesyaki ada sesuatu tidak kena apabila melihat ramai pakar bedah Arab dan asing diambil bekerja, tetapi dilarang berinteraksi dengan doktor tempatan. Desas-desus kemudian mengatakan mereka terbabit dalam aktiviti penjualan organ.

    “Pembedahan dilakukan di dalam hospital sebelum organ diperlukan dipindahkan segera melalui rangkaian pemerdagangan manusia,” kata laporan itu.

    Bagaimanapun, maklumat mengenai penjualan organ akhirnya bocor, lapor Press TV.

    Assyrian International News Agency pula melaporkan, kebanyakan organ diseludup keluar dari Syria dan Iraq ke negara jiran seperti Arab Saudi atau Turkey untuk dijual kepada kumpulan jenayah yang kemudian mendapatkan pembeli dari seluruh dunia.

    Tindakan menjual organ manusia itu merupakan salah satu cara bagi membiayai aktiviti keganasan kumpulan mereka.

    Menurutnya lagi, pembedahan dilakukan di hospital dan organ mayat diedarkan segera melalui rangkaian khusus dalam pemerdagangan organ manusia.

     

    Source: www.beritaharian.sg

     

  • IS Beset By Factionalism, Desertion And Flagging Morale

    IS Beset By Factionalism, Desertion And Flagging Morale

    BEIRUT — Flagging morale, desertion and factionalism are starting to affect the Islamic State, testing the cohesion of the jihadi force as its military momentum slows.

    Activists and fighters in parts of eastern Syria controlled by the Islamic State said as military progress slows and focus shifts to governing the area, frustration has grown among militants who had been seen as the most disciplined and effective fighting force in the country’s civil war.

    The group hurtled across western Iraq and eastern Syria over the summer in a sudden offensive that shocked the world. The Islamic State remains a formidable force: It controls swathes of territory and continues to make progress in western Iraq. But its fighters have reached the limit of discontented Sunni Muslim areas that they can easily capture and United States-led coalition air strikes partnered with offensives by local ground forces have begun to halt their progress.

    The US military announced last week that air strikes had killed two senior Islamic State leaders — although there has been no confirmation of the claim by the group — and on Friday, Kurdish Peshmerga fighters broke the jihadis’ five-month siege of Mount Sinjar in Iraq.

    “Morale isn’t falling — it’s hit the ground,” said an opposition activist from Islamic State-controlled areas of Syria’s eastern Deir Ezzor province. “Local fighters are frustrated — they feel they’re doing most of the work and the dying … foreign fighters who thought they were on an adventure are now exhausted.”

    An activist opposed to both the Syrian regime and Islamic State, and well known to the Financial Times, said he had verified 100 executions of foreign Islamic State fighters trying to flee the northern Syrian city of Raqqa, the Islamic State’s de facto capital. Like most people interviewed or described in this article, he asked for his name to be withheld for security reasons.

    “After the fall of Mosul in June, the Islamic State was presenting itself as unstoppable and it was selling a sense of adventure,” a US official said. He added that the dynamics have changed since the US launched air strikes in August and helped break the momentum of the Islamic State advance, which has helped stem the flow of foreign recruits — although he warned that the change of mood “doesn’t affect the hard-core people of the Islamic State”.

    Analyst Torbjorn Soltvedt of Verisk Maplecroft, a United Kingdom-based risk analysis group, said morale may be taking a hit as militants grapple with the shift from mobile army to governing force.

    “Before they were seizing territory, forcing armies in Iraq and Syria to retreat,” he said. “Now they’re basically an occupying force trying to govern.”

    After flocking to Syria and Iraq during the Islamic State’s heady days of quick victories, some foreigners may also be questioning the long, gruelling fight ahead.

    Mr Soltvedt said his organisation has had many reports of foreign fighters, including Britons, contacting family members and state authorities seeking ways to return home.

    Islamic State members in Raqqa said the organisation has created a military police to crack down on fighters who fail to report for duty. Activists say dozens of fighters’ homes have been raided and many have been arrested. Militants told a local journalist that they must now carry a document identifying them as a fighter and showing whether they are assigned to a mission.

    An opposition activist in close contact with Islamic State fighters in Raqqa showed the Financial Times a document listing new regulations restricting jihadis’ behaviour. The paper, which could not be verified and which did not appear to have been issued in other Islamic State-held areas, warned that those who did not report to their offices within 48 hours of receiving the regulations would be punished.

    “In Raqqa, they have arrested 400 members so far and printed IDs for the others,” the activist said.

    The identification document for one fighter from the Gulf consisted of a printed form stating name, location, section and mission assignment, with his details filled in by hand.

    “The situation is not good,” he grumbled, adding that fighters have become increasingly discontented with their leaders. He refused to give more details, saying only: “We aren’t able to speak the truth and we are forced to do useless things.”

    Activists in Islamic State-held parts of Syria said many fighters in Raqqa were angry about being sent to Kobani, a small Kurdish town near the Syrian border with Turkey that has become a focal point for coalition strikes. The fighters argued that the town was not strategically important enough to justify the losses they were incurring.

    Based on a Dec 7 report by the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a UK-based monitoring group with a network of activists across Syria, the Islamic State lost about 1,400 fighters in 80 days of fighting. The US official said many Islamic State fighters have been killed in the town.

    Foreign militants have often been the most active in major battles, but opposition activists said as fighting intensifies, more demands are being made on local fighters who do not have deep-rooted loyalties to the Islamic State.

    “They pledged allegiance to the Islamic State, so they could keep fighting the (Assad) regime and not have to go against the Islamic State,” the Deir Ezzor activist said. “They feel they are the ones going to die in big numbers on the battlefield, but they don’t enjoy any of the foreigners’ benefits — high salaries, a comfortable life, female slaves.”

    Another problem, locals said, may be a rise in tensions among ethnic groups. Many fighters apparently group themselves by ethnicity or nationality — a practice that undermines the Islamic State’s claim to be ridding Muslims of national borders.

    A widely publicised example was a clash between Uzbek and Chechen fighters in Raqqa last month over control of some villas near the captured Tabqa air base.

    “Just like the Uzbek and Chechen issues in Tabqa, we are having similar issues in Manbij with the Tunisians,” said an activist in Syria’s northern city of Manbij. “They won’t let some of the highest-level security members (of other nationalities) onto their bases.”

    Residents in Raqqa also said they have seen growing signs of discontent. One man recalled a speech at the Fardous mosque last Friday by a Tunisian cleric, who often appears in Islamic State videos.

    “He urged the brothers to put aside their disputes and said all brothers should stay together as one hand,” the man said. “Now I realise why the preacher was saying this … Something is wrong.” THE FINANCIAL TIMES

     

    Source: www.todayonline.com

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