Tag: Islamic State of Iraq and Syria

  • Bank Robbers, Ex-ISA Detainee Among Malaysian Jihadists Killed, Wounded in Syria

    Bank Robbers, Ex-ISA Detainee Among Malaysian Jihadists Killed, Wounded in Syria

    KUALA LUMPUR, Aug 22 ― The Malaysian jihadist allegedly killed while fighting in Syria this week had previously been detained in Malaysia for a botched robbery attempt, said Malaysian police yesterday. 

    The 52-year-old man known only as Mat Soh or Abu Turab, was also formerly a member of a locally-based jihadist militant group Kumpulan Mujahidin Malaysia (KMM), Malay daily Utusan Malaysia reported a key police official as saying.

    ISIS_1

    Mat Soh is believed to be Zainan Harith, who was detained under the Arms Act for a robbery in Jalan Gasing, Petaling Jaya in June 15, 2001, it quoted Datuk Ayob Khan Mydin, assistant director-general of the Malaysian police counter-terrorism division as saying.

    “Police has identified 22 Malaysians in those countries who are directly involved in the conflict. There are some who have died but we could not verify it,” Ayob was further quoted as saying.

    It is understood that the Ministry of Foreign Affairs is still verifying the alleged death and injuries in the incident.

    Screenshot of Mat Soh, the 52-year-old jihadist fighter, also known by his nom de guerre Abu Turab, allegedly died from shelling in strife-torn Syria around 2pm local time yesterday. - See more at: http://www.themalaymailonline.com/malaysia/article/bank-robbers-isa-detainee-among-malaysian-jihadists-killed-wounded-in-syria#sthash.27DiApCP.dpuf
    Screenshot of Mat Soh, the 52-year-old jihadist fighter, also known by his nom de guerre Abu Turab, allegedly died from shelling in strife-torn Syria around 2pm local time yesterday. – See more at: http://www.themalaymailonline.com/malaysia/article/bank-robbers-isa-detainee-among-malaysian-jihadists-killed-wounded-in-syria#sthash.27DiApCP.dpuf

    Yesterday, Malay Mail Online reported that the Selangor-born Mat Soh allegedly died from shelling in strife-torn Syria around 2pm local time yesterday, while defending the town of Arzeh with several other jihadist fighters.

    Two other Malaysian jihadist fighters were allegedly injured during the same attack on the town.

    One of the injured, believed to be Zainuri Kamarudin, 47, was Zainan’s accomplice during the 2001 robbery and also his comrade in KMM, according to Utusan Malaysia.

    The other man, believed to be Mohd Rafi Udin, 48, had once been detained under the Internal Security Act (ISA) 1960, it added.

    The critically-injured Rafi was once a taxi driver residing in Cheras, and was detained by Indonesian police in Palu, Sulawesi in April 22, 2003. He was then deported a year later and detained under ISA,  the paper said, citing the police official.

    Zainuri was a technician from Bota, Perak, and had been arrested in 2001 for possessing firearms and jailed for 10 years, it added.

    Both men had received military training in Afghanistan, the paper reported the police official as saying.

    In June, Malaysia’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs said 15 nationals were allegedly killed in Syria after joining in terrorist and jihadist activities with the al-Qaeda offshoot, according to the Permanent Representative of Syria to the United Nations in New York.

    In Malaysia, police intelligence warned this month that Malaysians, who joined the Islamist militant group Islamic State (IS) to launch strikes in Iraq and Syria, are now training their sights on their home government and several other targets in the country.

    The police said 19 suspected local militants have been arrested between April and June this year while they were on their way to Turkey and Syria for training and support from IS under the guise of “humanitarian work”.

    The group was planning to establish a hardline Southeast Asian Islamic caliphate which would include Malaysia, Indonesia, Thailand, the Philippines and Singapore, he said in the English daily The Star this week.

    Putrajaya has designated the IS, formerly known as Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant (ISIL), as a terrorist group.

    Source: http://www.themalaymailonline.com/malaysia/article/bank-robbers-isa-detainee-among-malaysian-jihadists-killed-wounded-in-syria

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  • Wanita Malaysia Tawarkan Diri Untuk Sertai Jihad Seksual, Jihad Al-Nikah

    Wanita Malaysia Tawarkan Diri Untuk Sertai Jihad Seksual, Jihad Al-Nikah

    BILIK JIHAD NIKAH DI SYRIA DILENGKAPI KALIMAH ALLAH DAN WANITA SEKSI

    Wanita Malaysia dipercayai menyertai pasukan kumpulan Negara Islam Iraq dan Syria (Isis) untuk menawarkan Jihad Al-Nikah atau jihad seksual, kata pegawai kanan risikan kepada The Malaysian Insider.

    Pihak berkuasa mengesahkan tiga wanita Malaysia pergi ke Timur Tengah untuk menyertai pasukan Isis.

    Jihad Al-Nikah merujuk kepada konsep kontroversi iaitu wanita Sunni dikatakan menawarkan diri mereka dalam bentuk peranan memenuhi keperluan seksual pejuang yang memperjuangkan undang-undang Islam.

    Konsep itu berasal daripada fahaman Wahhabi sekitar 2013, yang menyeru penyokong wanita Sunni untuk tampil melakukan jihad seks dan menyemarakkan moral pejuang terhadap regim Bashar al Assad di Syria.

    “Wanita ini dipercayai menawarkan diri mereka untuk melakukan hubungan intim kepada pejuang Isis yang cuba memperkenalkan peraturan Islam di Timur Tengah.

    “Konsep ini mungkin kelihatan kontroversi tetapi ia semakin berkembang apabila sesetengah wanita Islam di sini bersimpati dengan kepayahan Isis,” kata seorang pegawai risikan kepada The Malaysian Insider.

    Enggan didedahkan identitinya, pegawai itu berkata seorang wanita Malaysia berlepas ke Timur Tengah pada Disember tahun lalu.

    “Wanita itu, berusia 30-an, pergi ke Turki sebelum bertemu dengan orang tengah yang membantunya melengkapkan perjalanan ke Syria melalui jalan darat.

    “Seorang lagi wanita Malaysia berusia 40-an dipercayai bekerjasama dengan pasukan Isis pada April tahun ini,” kata sumber.

    Pegawai risikan berkata, bukan wanita Malaysia saja yang melakukan jihad seksual kerana ada juga wanita Islam lain terbabit.

    “Pertukaran risikan dengan beberapa negara mendedahkan wanita Islam Sunni dari Australia dan United Kingdom juga menyertai Isis,” katanya.

    Pegawai risikan berkata, Isis mengeluarkan fatwa pada Jun tahun ini menawarkan pengerahan Jihad Al-Nikah atau jihad seksual.

    “Sebaik saja selepas bandar Mosul di Iraq ditawan pasukan Isis, orang ramai diarahkan menghantar wanita tidak berkahwin berjihad untuk seks,” dedah pegawai risikan.

    “Dalam pengisytiharannya, Isis mengancam untuk melaksanakan undang-undang syariah terhadap mereka yang gagal mematuhi fatwa itu,” kata pegawai berkenaan.

    Pegawai risikan berkata, rakan sejawatannya di Britain mendedahkan lebih 600 umat Islam British dipercayai berjuang untuk Isis.

    “Jumlah itu termasuk wanita Islam British yang bukan berjuang di barisan hadapan, tetapi masih terbabit dengan melakukan jihad seksual.

    “Pegawai risikan Australia mendedahkan lebih 100 wanita Islam Australia berada di Syria berjuang di samping Isis,” kata pegawai risikan itu.

    Walaupun Putrajaya pada awalnya mendedahkan kira-kira 30 rakyat Malaysia berlepas ke Timur Tengah berjuang untuk Isis, tetapi angka itu dipercayai sebenarnya lebih tinggi.

    “Pemeriksaan yang dilakukan dengan rakan sejawatan kami di luar negara mendedahkan mungkin jumlah rakyat Malaysia di Timur Tengah mencecah 50 orang,” katanya kepada The Malaysian Insider.

    Setakat ini, 3 rakyat Malaysia dilaporkan maut di Syria ketika berperang menentang pasukan Presiden Syria Bashar Al-Assad.

    Mat Soh, 53, dilaporkan terbunuh selepas dilanggar lori tangki ketika pertarungan sengit antara Isis dengan pasukan Syria minggu lalu.

    Pada Jun, Ahmad Tarmimi Maliki, 26, mati selepas insiden bunuh diri yang menyebabkan lebih 20 askar Iraq maut di pangkalan mereka di Al-Anbar.

    Identiti rakyat Malaysia ketiga yang maut dalam satu insiden masih belum disahkan oleh pihak berkuasa di sini.

    Sejak konflik di Syria meletus pada Mac 2011, lebih 190,000 kematian dilaporkan setakat ini, menurut Pertubuhan Bangsa-bangsa Bersatu.

    Kejadian pembunuhan paling mengerikan ialah pada 20 Ogos ketika Isis melancarkan satu rakaman menunjukkan seorang lelaki yang dikatakan berjihad, bercakap dengan loghat selatan Inggeris, memenggal kepada seorang wartawan dan jurugambar warganegara Amerika, James Foley.

    Foley ditangkap di Syria pada penghujung 2012. Rakaman video itu menunjukkan beliau dibunuh di kawasan padang pasir.

    Video bertajuk ‘Pesanan kepada Amerika’ itu dimuat naik di YouTube sebagai amaran kepada Presiden Amerika Syarikat Barack Obama berhubung serangan terhadap militan di Iraq.

    Sebelum dibunuh, wartawan berusia 40 tahun itu dipaksa membaca satu kenyataan yang menyalahkan Amerika atas kematiannya. – 27 Ogos, 2014.

    Source: https://my.news.yahoo.com/wanita-malaysia-sertai-jihad-timur-tengah-sebagai-perempuan-234310589.html

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  • IS Millitants Asked For Ransom Before Executing American Journalist

    IS Millitants Asked For Ransom Before Executing American Journalist

    Kneeling in the dirt in a desert somewhere in the Middle East, James Foley lost his life this week at the hands of the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria. Before pulling out the knife used to decapitate him, his masked executioner explained that he was killing the 40-year-old American journalist in retaliation for the recent United States’ airstrikes against the terror group in Iraq.

    In fact, until recently, ISIS had a very different list of demands for Mr. Foley: The group pressed the United States to provide a multimillion-dollar ransom for his release, according to a representative of his family and a former hostage held alongside him. The United States — unlike several European countries that have funneled millions to the terror group to spare the lives of their citizens — refused to pay.

    Sensitive to growing criticism that it had not done enough, the White House on Wednesday revealed that a United States Special Operations team tried and failed to rescue Mr. Foley — a New Hampshire native who disappeared in Syria on Nov. 22, 2012 — as well as the other American hostages during a secret mission this summer. Mr. Obama said the United States would not retreat until it had eliminated the “cancer” of ISIS from the Middle East.

    ISIS also appears determined to increase the pressure on Washington. It has now threatened to kill a second of its hostages, Steven J. Sotloff, a freelance journalist for Time magazine who was being held alongside Mr. Foley.

    james foley_2

    In the video uploaded to YouTube on Tuesday, the screen goes dark after Mr. Foley is decapitated. Then the ISIS fighter is seen holding Mr. Sotloff in the same landscape of barren dunes, wearing an orange jumpsuit and his hands cuffed behind his back. “The life of this American citizen, Obama, depends on your next decision.”

    Along with the three Americans, ISIS is holding citizens of Britain, which like the United States has declined to pay ransoms, former hostages confirmed. The terror group has sent a laundry list of demands for the release of the foreigners, starting with money but also prisoner swaps, including the liberation of Aafia Siddiqui, an M.I.T.-trained Pakistani neuroscientist with ties to Al Qaeda currently incarcerated in a prison in Texas. The policy of not making concessions to terrorists and not paying ransoms has put the United States and Britain at odds with other European allies, who have routinely paid significant sums to win the release of their nationals — including four French and three Spanish hostages who were released this year after money was delivered through an intermediary, according to two of the victims and their colleagues.

    Kidnapping Europeans has become the main source of revenue for Al Qaeda and its affiliates, which have earned at least $125 million in ransom payments in the past five years alone, according to an investigation by The Times. Although ISIS was recently expelled from Al Qaeda and abides by different rules, recently freed prisoners said that their captors were well aware of what ransoms had been paid on behalf of European nationals held by Qaeda affiliates as far afield as Africa, indicating that they were hoping to abide by the same business plan.

    While government and counterterrorism officials insist that paying ransoms only perpetuates the problem, the policy has meant that captured Americans have little chance of being released. A handful succeeded in running away, and even fewer were rescued in special operations. The rest are either held indefinitely — or else killed.

    In an opinion article for Reuters, David Rohde, a columnist for the news service and a former foreign correspondent for The Times who was kidnapped by the Taliban, said that the uneven approach to ransoms may have cost Mr. Foley his life.

    james-foley-fbi-570x341

    “The payment of ransoms and abduction of foreigners must emerge from the shadows. It must be publicly debated,” wrote Mr. Rohde, who escaped his yearlong custody of the Taliban only when he climbed out a window and freed himself. “American and European policy makers should be forced to answer for their actions.”

    Mr. Foley, a freelance videographer and reporter for GlobalPost and Agence France-Presse, went missing 21 months ago in a town 25 miles south of the Turkish border. According to Nicole Tung, a close friend and fellow photojournalist, who gave an account of Mr. Foley’s activities before his capture, he had spent weeks in Syria documenting the country’s spiral into civil war, narrowly avoiding a falling tank shell. The normally calm reporter — who had come under fire in Afghanistan and had been kidnapped a year earlier in Libya — was rattled.

    As the Thanksgiving holiday approached in 2012, he contacted Ms. Tung, and they made plans to meet for a few days across the border in Turkey. When Mr. Foley did not show up at the hotel at 5 p.m. as planned, Ms. Tung began calling his cellphone, finally reaching his translator.

    The man explained that Mr. Foley had stopped at an Internet cafe to file his last images in Binesh, Syria. Soon after, armed men sped up behind his car and forced Mr. Foley out at gunpoint.

    “I was sitting on the bed, in this depressing, dark hotel; the fact that the fixer answered the phone — when Jim was not answering his — was the cue that something had gone terribly wrong,” said Ms. Tung, who immediately contacted Mr. Foley’s family and editors.

    Across the ocean at his home in Cambridge, Mass., the chief executive and co-founder of GlobalPost, Philip Balboni, reached for his Blackberry and had a terrible sense of foreboding: The email informing him of Mr. Foley’s abduction was almost an exact replay of the horror his staff had endured a year earlier, when Mr. Foley was kidnapped with three others by Col. Muammar el-Qaddafi’s forces in Libya.

  • Malaysians With ISIS Links Raised Funds to Attack Putrajaya

    Malaysians With ISIS Links Raised Funds to Attack Putrajaya

    ISIS T shirt

    Malaysian militants linked to the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria (ISIS) were planning to overthrow the government in Putrajaya and attack several pubs, discos and even the Carlsberg brewery in Shah Alam, Selangor, according to the police.

    Federal Special Branch principal assistant director Ayob Khan Pitchay Mydin told The Sunday Times yesterday that out of 19 suspects arrested in a clampdown earlier this year, seven are set to face trial in October for security offences.

    “They have the same ideology as groups like Al-Qaeda, where the main objective is to topple the government and install an Islamic state,” said Datuk Ayob, who heads the force’s counter-terrorism efforts.

    The suspects had raised several thousand ringgit for their efforts which were nipped in the bud when the police dismantled the group between April and June.

    “Their plans were not that advanced. They were only discussing (how) to attack but had not obtained material to make bombs,” he said, adding that the police had seized homemade rifles, shotguns and ammunition.

    Mr Ayob said the group had dispersed after their leader and second-in-command were arrested between April and May. The police are searching for the remaining members.

    “Their plan is to go to Syria for training. More than 20 are already there but we have identified them and will nab them if they return,” he said.

    ISIS is a splinter group of Al-Qaeda that wants to set up an Islamic caliphate encompassing both Iraq and Syria.

    Malaysian factory worker Ahmad Tarmimi Maliki died as an ISIS suicide bomber in May, sparking alarm over renewed Islamic extremism in Malaysia.

    Muslim-majority Malaysia practises moderate Islam and has not been the target of any notable terror attacks in recent years.

    But it has been home to several key figures in militant Islamic groups, such as the Al-Qaeda-linked Jemaah Islamiah, blamed for the deadly 2002 Bali bombings.

    Home Minister Ahmad Zahid Hamidi has said that a regional ring he dubbed the “Nusantara network” might be recruiting citizens of Malaysia, Indonesia, southern Thailand and the Philippines to join militant activities abroad.

    In June, the police arrested three alleged militants in Sandakan, Sabah. One of them had allegedly received training from Islamic militant group Abu Sayyaf in the southern Philippines, while another was a Royal Malaysian Navy personnel. The latter was released last month and has since returned to full service.

    In late June, the United Nations revealed that 15 Malaysians were allegedly killed in Syria after joining terrorist and jihadist activities with ISIS.

    ISIS fighters have engaged in a bloody war across Iraq, overrunning large areas of the country and conquering a substantial part of the north.

    Iraq’s Prime Minister-designate Haider al-Abadi said last week that Iraqis must unite to face terrorism, promising that his government will fight to “salvage the country from security, political and economic problems”.

    Source: http://www.straitstimes.com/the-big-story/asia-report/malaysia/story/malaysian-govt-brewery-pubs-militants-target-list-20140817

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  • Could ISIS Launch Attacks on Malaysia and Indonesia?

    Could ISIS Launch Attacks on Malaysia and Indonesia?

    ISIS_2

    ISIS, which now refers to itself as the Islamic State and has claimed the title of Caliphate, has already made it clear that it wants to claim rule over the Muslim world. Now, security officials in both Malaysia and Indonesia claim that ISIS is attracting followers in said countries. How serious is the threat? And could ISIS actually launch global strikes?

    Hundreds of years ago caliphates did rule over most of the Islamic world, though they were often more well-known for their moderation, rather than extremism. ISIS is trying to revive the wide sweeping power of the Caliphate, though they are bastardizing it with extremism and increasing attacks against non-Muslims.

    Security Threat Real Even If Challenge To Power Isn’t

    Whatever ISIS might dream of, the organization simply isn’t in the position to build a global empire. The organization is still small, and its scope is largely limited to Syria and Iraq. Its followers are radicalized and ready to die for their cause. This does allow ISIS to exert a lot of power locally, but expanding that power internationally will be difficult.

    That doesn’t mean, however, that ISIS won’t find supporters abroad. Radical groups tend to attract alienated individuals, and every society has its alienated individuals. Authorities in Malaysia and Indonesia now fear that ISIS will be able to use these individuals to launch attacks within South East Asia.

    Terrorist attacks, by their very nature, focus on creating fear, rather than high casualties. While ISIS might not be able to ever sieze control of territory in Malaysia or Indonesia, that doesn’t mean the organization can strike fear into the hearts of citizens. Indeed, it only takes a single radical to launch an attack.

    Malaysia Is A Prime Targeting

    Malaysia is recognized across the world for being a moderate Muslim country. The rights of other religions and minorities are generally respected, even if tensions do exist. The brand of Islam practiced in the country tends to be more moderate, and individual choices are usually left to individuals.

    Terrorist activities, however, appear to be on the rise. Over the last several months Malaysia has managed to arrest 19 different suspects for being involved in terrorist activities. There are fears, however, that this may just be scratching at the surface.

    Malaysian security officials claim that the government is among the prime targets of the terrorists. As a moderate Islamic government that offers a clear alternative to the extremism espoused by ISIS, the Malaysian government would indeed be a prime target.

    At least 20 Malaysians have gone to fight for ISIS.

    Indonesia ISIS

    Indonesia Also Worried About ISIS

    Indonesia is the world’s largest Muslim majority country, home to nearly 250 million people. Over 87 percent of Indonesians are Muslim, so the country is a prime target for radical groups like ISIS. Indonesian authorities have already had to deal with radical threats in the past, though usually they’ve been domestic groups.

    Perhaps the most famous domestic terrorist, Abu Bakar Bashir, the now jailed leader of Jemaah Islamiyah, an Al Queda-linked terrorist group, has expressed support for ISIS. Jemaah Islamiya carried out the 2002 Bali bombings that claimed the lives of more than 200 people.

    Indonesia is undergoing a rapid period of modernization, which is likely creating a clash of cultures. With rampant poverty and a growing gap between the rich and the poor, the country is also a fertile recruiting ground for radicals looking for new recruits. It should come as no surprise then that at least 56 Indonesians have joined the ranks of ISIS.

    Indeed, ISIS is reportedly able to pay each of its fighters up to $250 dollars a month. While this wage might not seem like much, for people from poorer countries, like Indonesia, this can be quite substantial.

    Source: http://www.valuewalk.com/2014/08/malaysia-and-indonesia-in-cross-hairs-of-isis-terrorists/

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