Tag: Islamic State

  • 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

  • When Children Become Targets Of Terrorists

    When Children Become Targets Of Terrorists

    Last week, Taleban terrorists stormed an army-run school in Peshawar, Pakistan, killing at least 132 children and committing one of the deadliest attacks against children in recent years.

    The incident adds to a decade of terrorist activities which are becoming more cold-blooded and wanton than ever before and are particularly targeted at children, say historians and criminology experts.

    These innocent lives, they say, are regarded by every culture as worth protecting, which makes them the prime targets of modern-era terrorists who are out to make the most impact possible with their acts of violence.

    “Terrorists are looking for something of value that they can strike… targeting children is something that really hurts,” said Professor Emerita of History Anna Geifman of Boston University, who is also senior researcher at the political studies department at Bar Ilan University in Israel.

    “Terrorists want to show that they are willing to do anything so… we should take them seriously,” added Professor Laura Dugan from the Department of Criminology and Criminal Justice at the University of Maryland.

    Previously, terrorists “had their own code of how to behave”, said criminal justice administration professor Gus Martin of California State University.

    American terrorists, he said, would plant bombs and dial ahead so buildings could be evacuated, or Pakistani hijackers would free captives before blowing up the plane.

    But that morality began to shift in the 1990s, especially with the appearance of groups like Al-Qaeda; and on Sept 11, “a new era had dawned”, said Prof Martin.

    “Now the moral compass has completely changed – many of these groups have no hesitation in killing as many as possible.”

    Prof Geifman, who has written a book on terrorism called Death Orders, added that after the 9/11 attacks, terrorists had to look for the next “sensational and impressive” act of violence, and that was when they turned to children.

    One of the most notorious acts of terrorism targeted at children was the school attack and hostage-taking in Beslan, Russia in 2004.

    Rebels took over the school for three days and held 1,200 students, teachers and parents hostage in the school gym. They turned it into a death camp, denying children food and water.

    Many died when a bomb was detonated in the building, while others were shot by the rebels as they tried to escape.

    According to reports, more than 700 were wounded and more than 300 died – 186 of them children.

    Prof Dugan said attacks on educational institutions “started increasing dramatically” that year. And in the years after, it “becomes clear that schools that are targeted have young children attending them”.

    The proliferation of child victims could also have to do with terrorist groups copying each other, said experts. Prof Dugan said such trends have emerged before: “Suicide attacks have spread across groups since the early 1980s… another example is airline hijacking in the late 1960s and early 1970s.”

    In the case of Boko Haram, the terrorist group that kidnapped nearly 300 girls in Nigeria in April – and another batch of at least 185 a week ago – the attacks are a statement against Western education and the education of women. It believes that women should be at home raising children and looking after their husbands instead of getting educated.

    Some of these women are “kidnapped and sold into slavery”, said Prof Martin.

    Another explanation for targeting children is to make a “counterculture” statement, said Prof Geifman.

    “Whatever is precious in the other culture, they will try to negate and destroy.”

    She said that many terrorist groups, including the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria (ISIS) and Al-Qaeda, have a culture of revering death, whereas society in general “chooses life”.

    When they kill children, “they destroy the most precious symbol of life because there is nothing more alive than a child”.

    Many of these groups also believe killing these children is done with the blessing of their god.

    Said Prof Martin: “They feel if they do god’s work they will be clean and god favours this type of behaviour.”

    While governments work to stop these acts of terror, the man in the street also has a responsibility to stand up to such acts, said experts. Prof Geifman believes that while children are the immediate targets, ultimately the terrorist group is signalling to the public at large that the group should be feared.

    “We are the real targets,” said Prof Geifman. “The terrorists are talking to us.”

    But instead of avoiding school or work after an attack, life should go on, she urged.

    “They want to see every one of us act as a hostage… We should do the opposite and not succumb to fear.”

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • Soldier And Firefighter Among Latest Malaysian IS Recruits

    Soldier And Firefighter Among Latest Malaysian IS Recruits

    KUALA LUMPUR: A SOLDIER and a firefighter are among the latest Malaysian recruits to join the Islamic State (IS) movement in Syria.

    Sources revealed that the soldier, who was supposed to attend an 11-month course at the Sungai Besi Army Music Training Centre from April 7, had gone missing on Oct 14.

    Investigations showed that the soldier had applied for an international passport on July 31 at Terengganu Immigration Department before leaving the country on Oct 25 via Bangkok on a 6.05am flight.

    The 27-year-old corporal attached to the 7th battalion Royal Malay Regiment had allegedly taken a flight from Kota Baru, Kelantan, to Kuala Lumpur International Airport 2 the day before.

    The New Straits Times learnt that the corporal, who goes by the name Al-Azhar Malize, is with other Malaysians who have established themselves as senior IS fighters.

    What made him stand out among other Malaysians fighting in Syria is that he is always seen in pictures on Syrian battlefields clad in Malaysian military fatigues.

    Investigations also revealed that his brother, a soldier at the Seberang Takir, Terengganu camp, received a WhatsApp message from him saying he had left to join IS in Syria.

    Sources told the NST that ongoing probes were centred on how he was recruited and who his contacts were.

    “The military’s Defence Staff Intelligence Division is monitoring the status of the corporal and identifying parties who are bent on recruiting more fighters, including military personnel, to join IS,” the sources said.

    Sources said they were establishing the background of the fireman said to be posted at the Shah Alam fire station.

    Meanwhile, the NST was made aware of a Malaysian family of six, including two toddlers, that had made its way to Syria recently.

    “Like other families that have left their home countries in pursuit of martyrdom in Syria, the man will be sent out to the battlefields. The woman will be given specific tasks, and the children will be taken care of,” the sources said.

     

    Source: https://sg.news.yahoo.com

  • 15 Year Old Girl Intent On Joining IS Stopped At Heathrow Airport

    15 Year Old Girl Intent On Joining IS Stopped At Heathrow Airport

    LONDON (AFP) – London police stopped a plane on the runway at Heathrow Airport to remove a 15-year-old girl intent on joining Islamist fighters in Syria, a report said Wednesday.

    Counter-terrorism officers rushed to Europe’s busiest airport and stopped the plane, which was bound for Istanbul, the London Evening Standard newspaper reported.

    They ordered the plane to turn around as it taxied down the runway.

    The girl, from Tower Hamlets in east London, had secretly saved up to buy a ticket.

    The incident happened earlier this month. The girl has returned to her family, the Standard reported.

    “On Dec 6, police received reports of a 15-year-old girl from Tower Hamlets missing from home,” a Scotland Yard spokesman said.

    “Police were able to locate her and she has since returned home safely.”

    Heathrow Airport declined to comment when contacted by AFP.

    The Standard said the incident would heighten concern about the number of girls and young women travelling to Syria and Iraq.

    An estimated 500 Britons have travelled abroad to become Islamic militants, many with the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria (ISIS) extremist group.

    In August, Britain’s terror threat level was raised to severe, the second-highest of five levels, meaning that a terror attack is considered highly likely.

    It came against a backdrop of increasing concerns over aspiring British militants travelling to Iraq and Syria to learn terror “tradecraft”.

    Several teenagers are among those who have gone abroad to join fighters with ISIS and other extremist groups.

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com