Tag: ISIS

  • Arrested ISIS-Linked Cell Members Planning Attacks On Government Buildings, Myanmar Embassy

    Arrested ISIS-Linked Cell Members Planning Attacks On Government Buildings, Myanmar Embassy

    Arrested members of an ISIS-linked cell in Indonesia were planning attacks on government buildings, TV stations, and the Myanmar Embassy in Jakarta, police said, adding that the scale of the attack might have been even bigger than 2002 Bali bombing.

    “They were helping plan a bomb attack against parliament, the national police headquarters, the embassy of Myanmar and several television stations,” national police spokesman Rikwanto said, as cited by AFP.

    He added that the attack planned by Islamic State-linked (IS, formerly ISIS/ISIL) militants could have been even worse that the 2002 Bali bombings.

    The attack on the Indonesian resort island of Bali killed 202 people and injured 200 more, mostly foreigners. Jemaah Islamiyah, a Southeast Asian militant Islamist terrorist group, linked to the Taliban and Al-Qaeda, was reportedly responsible for the attack. Several of the group’s members were convicted on terrorism charges.

    Earlier this week, police arrested Rio Priatna Wibawa, 23, at his home in Majalengka regency, West Java province. Officers discovered large amount of bomb-making material which he allegedly planned to use in the attacks. The bombings were reportedly planned to take place in December, though police failed to find out when exactly.

    Police also found a black flag, rounds of bullets, and several weapons, including an air rifle and a machete, police spokesman Boy Rafli Amar said, as cited by Reuters. He described the suspect as a “self-taught bomb-maker.”

    His two alleged accomplices, all members of Jamaah Ansharut Daulah, a domestic cell affiliated with Islamic State, were arrested on Saturday and Sunday. Jamaah Ansharut Daulah is a splinter cell of the Jemaah Islamiyah group.

    Those arrested were identified as Bahrain Agam and Saiful Bahri, AFP quoted Rikwanto as saying. They reportedly donated money to buy explosives and even helped Wibawa set up a home bomb-making laboratory.

    In January, Indonesia was rocked by terrorist attacks staged by Islamic State sympathizers. At least four people were killed and 23 others, including foreigners, were injured after militants set off multiple explosions and fired guns near a shopping mall in central Jakarta. The attack took place near a UN information center, luxury hotels, and foreign embassies.

     

    Source: www.rt.com

  • Perlu Bayar 5 Euro Dan Daftar Pemeriksaan Online Jika Mahu Ke Negara EU

    Perlu Bayar 5 Euro Dan Daftar Pemeriksaan Online Jika Mahu Ke Negara EU

    Jutaan pelancong seperti dari Singapura yang mengunjungi Eropah perlu melalui pemeriksaan keselamatan secara online dan membayar 5 euro (S$7.60) sebelum ketibaan mereka. Ini sekiranya rancangan EU untuk mengetatkan kawalannya terhadap para pengunjung asing yang tidak memerlukan visa, diluluskan.

    Sistem itu, yang disarankan oleh Suruhanjaya Eksekutif Eropah hari ini (16 Nov), akan memeriksa dokumen-dokumen pengenalan dan maklumat tempat tinggal pengunjung menerusi pelbagai pangkalan data keselamatan dan jenayah Kesatuan Eropah (EU).

    Diberi nama ETIAS, sistem itu juga bertujuan menangani kebimbangan rakyat Eropah berhubung rancangan memperluas perjalanan tanpa visa ke dua negara jiran, iaitu Turki dan Ukraine. ETIAS juga akan dikenakan ke atas para pengunjung dari negara-negara bukan EU di Balkan seperti Albania dan Serbia.

    SERUPA DENGAN SISTEM ESTA DI AMERIKA SYARIKAT

    Serupa dengan sistem ESTA Amerika Syarikat (AS), sistem ETIAS akan menjejas rakyat dari 60 negara yang boleh mengunjungi 26 negara di Eropah yang tidak memerlukan pasport bagi perjalanan singkat tanpa perlu memohon visa terlebih dahulu, termasuk rakyat Amerika, Jepun dan bergantung kepada aturan yang ditetapkan London untuk keluar dari EU – mungkin rakyat Britain juga.

    Sistem ESTA Amerika, yang sah selama dua tahun, berharga AS$14 (S$20) manakala sistem yang serupa di Kanada, eTA, yang sah selama lima tahun berharga AS$5.21 (S$7.40).

    Menyusuli serangan ISIS ke atas Perancis dan Belgium dan kekecohan berkaitan ketibaan ratusan pendatang dan pelarian di Greece, eksekutif itu berharap pemeriksaan sedemikian akan menutup kelemahan-kelemahan di sempadan terhadap anggota militan, penjenayah dan pendatang-pendatang haram pada masa akan datang.

    “Keutamaan kami adalah memastikan keselamatan sempadan dan rakyat kami. ETIAS akan menutupi jurang maklumat menerusi silang pemeriksaan maklumat para pengunjung yang tidak menggunakan visa dengan semua sistem-sistem yang lain,” kata Timbalan Ketua Suruhanjaya, Naib Presiden Pertama Frans Timmermans.

    “Dalam pada itu, ETIAS lebih mudah, cepat, murah dan berkesan,” tambah beliau lagi.

    TUNGGU LAMPU HIJAU PARLIMEN EROPAH

    Skim tersebut kini memerlukan kelulusan daripada pemerintah dan Parlimen Eropah.

    Ia adalah sistem yang diharapkan dapat dibiayai sendiri menerusi yuran permohonan.

    Suruhanjaya itu menganggarkan kos penubuhannya adalah sekitar 200 juta euro manakala kos penyenggaraannya 85 juta euro.

    Tujuannya adalah untuk memberikan kebanyakan pengunjung, dalam masa beberapa minit online, pelepasan bagi seberapa banyak perjalanan sepanjang tempoh lima tahun.

    Sekalipun begitu ia boleh dibatalkan pada bila-bila masa jika terdapat sebarang keprihatinan.

    Mereka yang menolak sistem tersebut boleh membuat rayuan.

    Para pegawai EU berharap ia dapat dilaksanakan setelah diluluskan menjelang awal dekad seterusnya.

    Source: Berita MediaCorp

  • Iraqi Forces Make First Push Into Mosul

    Iraqi Forces Make First Push Into Mosul

    Advancing Iraqi troops broke through Islamic State defenses in an eastern suburb of Mosul on Monday, taking the battle for the insurgents’ stronghold into the city limits for the first time, a force commander said.

    The fighting came after two weeks of advances by U.S.-backed Iraqi forces who cleared surrounding areas of insurgents, in the early stages of the largest military operation in Iraq since the invasion that toppled Saddam Hussein in 2003.

    Commanders have said the battle for the city, the hardline militants’ last big bastion in Iraq, could take months.

    Troops of the Iraqi army’s Counter-Terrorism Service (CTS) moved forward on Gogjali, an industrial zone on the eastern outskirts.

    The commander of CTS forces east of the city, Lieutenant-General Abdul Ghani al-Assadi, told state television his forces had reached the edge of the Karama district inside the city.

    A Reuters correspondent in the village of Bazwaia saw plumes of smoke rising from a built-up area a few kilometers away which a commander said was the result of clashes already under way inside Karama.

    A Kurdish peshmerga intelligence source said he received a report saying seven Islamic State militants were killed in the Aden district, adjacent to Karama, and two of their vehicles destroyed.

    Iraqi state television said there were also clashes inside the city between Islamic State fighters and residents rising up against the group.

    The Kurdish intelligence source said such “resistance elements” had opened fire on an Islamic State police unit in Intisaar district, south of Karama, and armed fighters had spread out in streets across the city apparently fearing revolt.

    Reuters could not independently verify the report. The government and its U.S. allies are hoping an uprising inside the city will help loosen the grip of the fighters, who seized it in 2014 and proclaimed a “caliphate” to rule over all Muslims.

    The fighting ahead in a built-up city still home to 1.5 million people will be more complex than the recent capture of Christian and Sunni Muslim villages and towns outside the city, mostly emptied of their residents.

    Mosul is many times larger than any other city Islamic State has held, and the United Nations has warned of a worst-case scenario of up to 1 million people being suddenly displaced, requiring the world’s largest humanitarian operation.

    “SURRENDER OR DIE”

    Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi, speaking at the Qayyara military airbase south of Mosul, said the Iraqi forces were trying to close off all escape routes for the several thousand Islamic State fighters inside Mosul.

    “God willing, we will chop off the snake’s head,” Abadi, wearing military fatigues, told state television. “They have no escape, they either die or surrender.”

    Iraqi security forces and Kurdish peshmerga fighters started the offensive against the hardline Sunni group on Oct. 17, with air and ground support from a U.S.-led coalition.

    “They are making deliberate progress, they’re on their timeline,” British Major General Rupert Jones, deputy commander for strategy and support of the U.S.-led anti-Islamic State coalition, told Reuters.

    The recapture of Mosul would mark the militants’ effective defeat in the Iraqi half of the territory they seized two years ago.

    Ranged against them are some 50,000 Iraqi troops, policemen and Kurdish peshmerga, with air and ground support from the U.S.-led coalition. Thousands of battle-hardened Iran-backed Shi’ite militia fighters also joined the campaign west of the city two days ago.

    Hadi al-Amiri, leader of the Badr Organisation, the largest of the Shi’ite militia groups, expressed hope that Mosul would not descend into a protracted and devastating conflict like the four-year-old battle for the Syrian city of Aleppo, where Shi’ite militias are also fighting.

    “We are afraid that Mosul would be another Aleppo, but we hope that will not happen,” he told reporters in Zarqa, south of Mosul.

    SCORCHED EARTH TACTICS

    Islamic State militants have been fighting off the offensive with suicide car bombs, snipers and mortar fire.

    Islamic State said on Monday it carried out a suicide operation against a joint convoy of the army and Shi’ite militias south of Mosul. It gave no casualty figures.

    The militants have brought displaced thousands of civilians from villages toward Mosul, using them as “human shields” to cover their retreat, U.N. officials and villagers have said.

    They have also set oil on fire to create smokescreens, choking the region in smoke.

    “Scorched earth tactics employed by retreating ISIL members are having an immediate health impact on civilians, and risk long-term environmental and health consequences,” the U.N.’s Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs said.

    The warring parties have given no casualty figures among their own ranks or civilians. Both say they have killed hundreds of their opponents.

     

    Source: TODAY Online

  • Global Survey: Most Will Trade Freedom For Security

    Global Survey: Most Will Trade Freedom For Security

    Most people think that violent terrorism is a major challenge facing their societies and they support tough measures to counter the problem at the expense of some civil liberties, according to a global survey on public perceptions towards violent terrorism commissioned by the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS), based in Washington.

    According to the findings released earlier this week — derived from 8,000 respondents in eight countries — one in two people feel that their governments have not taken adequate steps to address violent extremism.

    The survey was conducted in August this year and involved participants from China, Egypt, France, India, Indonesia, Turkey, the United Kingdom, and the United States.

    Around 25 per cent of the respondents from Turkey and France felt that violent terrorism is the most important issue facing their countries. Overall, around two-thirds of those polled see violent extremism as a major problem in their country.

    “In everywhere except China, at least 75 per cent of those surveyed expect a terrorist attack in the next year,” said CSIS in a report of the survey findings.

    “On a more alarming note, a majority in every country believes that it is likely that violent extremist groups will acquire and use weapons of mass destruction in their lifetime.”

    The majority of respondents in Turkey, France and the US feel their own governments have not taken adequate steps to contain and prevent violent extremism.

    In late June, a gun and bomb attack on Istanbul’s Ataturk airport killed more than 40 people and injured more than 230. Yesterday, a Turkish official said police in the capital had fatally shot a suspected Islamic State (IS) group militant who was planning a suicide bombing.

    France has also been hit hard by violent terrorism, with 230 deaths and about 700 injuries as a result of attacks said to be carried out by IS.

    Both France and Turkey are both sources of a relatively high number of foreign militants fighting in Iraq and Syria, with an estimated 700 French citizens and 500 Turks fighting under the IS flag.

    Just last month, an Afghan-born American sowed terror across Manhattan and New Jersey, wounding 29 people before he was arrested — the latest in a spate of lone-wolf attacks to rock the US.

    Despite widespread anxiety about the terrorist threat, 73 per cent of respondents in the CSIS survey believe that violent extremism can be eradicated.

    When asked about potential measures to counter violent extremism, 90 per cent were in favour of requiring all citizens and visitors to have identification cards.

    A similar percentage also supported asking Internet companies to do an even better job of shutting down all content from violent extremist groups, while 71 per cent favoured allowing government agencies to monitor all phone records, email and social media for contacts with terrorists.

    Close to 90 per cent of the sample was also supportive of asking Muslim leaders to declare definitively that Islam does not in any way condone violent extremism or the creation of a caliphate. More than 80 per cent of those surveyed also said that immigrants who have not passed rigorous screenings and background checks for connections to extremism should be barred from entering their countries.

    On Monday, Iraqi forces, supported by a US-led international coalition, launched a major offensive on the city of Mosul, the IS’ last major stronghold in Iraq.

    The US expects IS to use crude chemical weapons as it tries to repel the offensive, although experts say the group’s technical ability to develop such weapons is highly limited.

     

    Source: www.todayonline.com

  • Walid J. Abdullah: Muslims Are Biggest Victims Of Terrorism

    Walid J. Abdullah: Muslims Are Biggest Victims Of Terrorism

    Immigration Officer:

    First time you’re presenting at a conference?

    Me: No, but it’s the first time i’m being checked like this even after telling immigration i have a conference.

    Him: Are you nervous?

    Me: No, i’m disappointed.

    Him: Why? I’m just doing my job.

    Me: You didn’t check anyone else, so please don’t tell me this is random.

    *eons later*

    Him: You can have your passport back.

    Me: Can i ask why it took so long?

    *directs to another guy*

    Other officer: Err, we had another name like yours, with same surname too.

    Me: From Singapore? I can guarantee you there is none.

    We both know why it was only me who had to go through this, and no one else. Let’s not pretend.

    ——

    The reality is Muslims are the biggest victims of terrorism, whether directly or otherwise.

     

    Source: Walid J. Abdullah