World Terror Watch - News and Discussions

ajtr

Tihar Jail
Banned
Joined
Oct 2, 2009
Messages
12,038
Likes
723
So this is the 2nd case of Indian being involved in terror activities after Dr. Kafeel Ahmed tried to bomb Glasgow airport.

US terror plot: India born gets 8-yr jail term


Washington: An Ohio court has sentenced two American cousins, one born in India and the other in Chicago, to prison terms for supporting terrorists in a plot to attack American soldiers overseas.
While India-born Khaleel Ahmed, 29, was sentenced to eight years and four months in prison, his cousin Zubair Ahmed, 31, was sentenced to 10 years in prison on Monday by US District Judge James Carr in Toledo, Ohio.
"These sentences send a strong message that we will aggressively go after those who would do harm to our servicemen and servicewomen," said US Attorney for the Northern District of Ohio Steven M Dettelbach.
"There is no greater priority for us than combating those who would do us harm."

According to court documents, the Ahmeds, who pleaded guilty in January 2009, admitted that between April 1, 2004, and February 21, 2007, they conspired to provide material support to terrorists in a plot to kill US soldiers serving in Iraq and Afghanistan.
In May 2004, they travelled together to Cairo, where they hoped to make contact with the mujahedeen, receive training and be placed in either Iraq or Afghanistan to fight US troops.
They returned to the US, where they came in contact with an undercover informant and sought military training, the court papers said.
Zubair Ahmed testified twice in related cases in Atlanta.
Both Chicago residents were also sentenced to three years of supervised release and each was ordered to pay a $ 100 special assessment.
 

ajtr

Tihar Jail
Banned
Joined
Oct 2, 2009
Messages
12,038
Likes
723
Arab TV airs video of Times Square bombing suspect


CAIRO: The Al-Arabiya TV station says it has video of the failed Times Square car bomb suspect meeting with Pakistani Taliban leaders along the Afghan border.

Al-Arabiya broadcast excerpts showing Faisal Shahzad saying he planned a ``revenge attack'' against the U.S. that he hoped would touch the hearts of Muslims.

Shahzad appears in the clips sitting on the ground in a black turban and military fatigues, with a gun next to him. He reads from the Quran.

The station also says Shahzad appears in part of the 40-minute video that it did not broadcast with a prominent Pakistan Taliban leader in the tribal regions along the Afghan border.

In June, Shahzad pleaded guilty to carrying out the failed May 1 bombing in Times Square.
 

ajtr

Tihar Jail
Banned
Joined
Oct 2, 2009
Messages
12,038
Likes
723
Two suicide attacks on Iran mosque kills more than 20

15 Jul 2010 19:05:21 GMT
TEHRAN: Two suicide bombings at a Shia mosque in heavily Sunni southeast Iran killed more than 20 people Thursday, including worshippers and members of the Revolutionary Guards, state media reported.

The attack came as people celebrated the birthday of Imam Hussein, grandson of the Muslim Prophet Mohammed, a day also set apart each year to honour the Revolutionary Guards.

More than 100 people were wounded in the attacks, which came only minutes apart, at the Jamia mosque in the restive city of Zahedan, capital of southeastern Sistan-Baluchestan province.

"Two explosions in front of the Zahedan Jamia mosque left more than 100 wounded and more than 20 martyred," Fariborz Rashedi, the head of the emergency services of Sistan-Baluchestan province, told state news agency IRNA.

Zahedan MP Hossein Ali Shahriari told Fars news agency the attacks were carried out by suicide bombers, with the first by a man dressed as a woman.

"The attacker, dressed in women's clothing, was trying to get into the mosque, but was prevented," Shahriari said.

"When people came to rescue those hit in that blast, another bomber blew himself up." IRNA said the first attack was around 9:20 pm (1650 GMT).

Deputy Interior Minister Ali Abdollahi said it was carried out by a suicide bomber where worshippers were being frisked before entering the mosque.

"That attack resulted in the martyrdom of several, including some of the Revolutionary Guards," he said.

Abdollahi said the second attack took more casualties as people rushed to the site of the first bombing.

The head of Guards political bureau, Yadollah Javani, pointed the finger at United States, Israel and other Western countries as possible planners of Thursday's bombings.

"One cannot rule out the direct intervention of America, Zionists and other Western countries in the explosions at Jamia mosque of Zahedan," he told Fars.

Zahedan has been repeatedly hit by attacks blamed on Sunni rebel group Jundallah (Soldiers of God), which plays on feelings of resentment among ethnic Baluchis in the province.

The group's leader, Abdolmalek Rigi, was hanged on June 20 after he was captured in a dramatic operation by Iranian agents. Iranian officials maintain he had received support from US and British intelligence services for carrying out attacks against Iran.

Soon after his death, the group vowed to avenge his execution.

Jundallah says it has been fighting for nearly a decade to secure rights for Sunni Baluchis who form a significant proportion of the population in the province.

It claimed a suicide bombing last October that killed at least 42 people, including seven Revolutionary Guards commanders, in the town of Pisheen in Sistan-Baluchestan.

Jundallah also claimed a May 28, 2009 bombing against Shiite Amir al-Momenin mosque in Zahedan in which more than 20 people were killed and 50 wounded.

That attack came in the run-up to Iran's hotly disputed June presidential election which saw hardline incumbent Mahmoud Ahmadinejad win a second term.
Jundallah is also accused of a 2007 attack that killed 13 Guards.

Analysts estimate that the group was formed somewhere between 2000 and 2003 and has about 1,000 militants trained in small arms and explosives.

In recent years the Iranian authorities have resorted to increasingly tough measures against the outfit.

In July 2009 they hanged 13 of its members in a mass prison execution, terming them "enemies of God" after convicting them of a string of offences, including kidnapping foreigners.

The Revolutionary Guards were formed shortly after the 1979 revolution to defend the purity of the country's Islamic system. They have since become a major military, political and economic force in Iran. — AFP
 
Last edited:

nandu

Senior Member
Joined
Oct 5, 2009
Messages
1,913
Likes
163
Deadly Mexican drug gang attack 'was car bomb'


Emergency services attend the aftermath of the attack

Investigators in Mexico say a deadly attack by suspected drug cartel members in the northern city of Ciudad Juarez was a car bomb set off by mobile phone.

It is believed to be the first attack of its kind since President Felipe Calderon took office in 2006, promising to curb powerful drugs gangs.

Two police officers and two medics answering an emergency were killed.

Police said the attack was retaliation for the arrest of a leader of the La Linea drug gang, Jesus Acosta Guerrero.

La Linea is part of the Juarez drug cartel.

"There were 10kg (22lb) of explosives, activated from a distance by a cellphone," Enrique Torres, a spokesman for the army in Ciudad Juarez, said.

At least 16 other people were injured in Thursday's attack, police said.

Ciudad Juarez is just across the border from El Paso, Texas. It has long been the battleground for cartels fighting for control of lucrative drug smuggling routes into the US.

More than 7,000 people have died in drug-related violence in Mexico so far this year. Almost 25,000 have died in the past three and a half years, according to figures released by the office of Attorney General Arturo Chavez on Friday.

Mr Chavez said the rising figures demonstrated that the cartels were under pressure from the government crackdown.

He said 75,000 weapons had been decommissioned in the same period and 78,000 people had been detained in drug trafficking operations.

President Calderon has despatched thousands of troops to regain control of areas of the country long dominated by powerful cartels.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-latin-america-10669672
 

ajtr

Tihar Jail
Banned
Joined
Oct 2, 2009
Messages
12,038
Likes
723
As usual any terror plots round the world gets pakistani arrested as suspect.....

Pakistani among 20 arrested in Uganda


KAMPALA: Inspector General of police in Uganda Kale Kayihura has said that about 20 suspects have been arrested in connection with the bomb attacks that killed 76 people watching the World Cup final on television.

He said that all those arrested have connections with al Shabaab, and include Ugandans, Somalis, Ethiopians and Pakistani nationals. Al Shabaab, Somalia's most dangerous militant group, claimed responsibility for the attacks.

Kayihura on Saturday said that the 20 suspects were being held by Ugandan security as they investigate Sunday's bombing. He said that 37 bomb victims were still receiving treatment in hospitals. Without disclosing the name or nationality, the Kenyan police said they arrested another suspect at a police checkpoint on Wednesday near the Kenya-Somalia border. ap
And as usual indian paying the price of pakistani terror anywhere in the world....

Dainik jagaran
दीपक कुमार, करतारपुर आज से 25 वर्ष पहले एक मां ने जिगर के टुकड़े को रोजी-रोटी के लिए दिल पर पत्थर रख युगांडा भेजा था। वहां से बेटा तो वापस नहीं आया, हां आया तो बस उसकी मौत का समाचार। युगांडा में गत दिवस हुए बम विस्फोट में शोभी राज उर्फ पहलवान ने दम तोड़ दिया। वर्षो से बेटे के इंतजार में बैठी बूढ़ी मां कृष्णा कांता की आंखें शोभी राज के अंतिम दर्शन भी नहीं कर सकीं। 45 वर्षीय शोभी राज 20 वर्ष की आयु में युगांडा चला गया था। इस दौरान ठेकेदारी करके उसने खूब नाम कमाया व एक नीग्रो लड़की जस्सी से शादी रचाई। उसके दो बच्चे हैं। शोभी राज उर्फ पहलवान उर्फ शविंदर की मौत की खबर सुन कर करतारपुर, गुलाब सिंह वाली गली में शोक की लहर दौड़ गई और घर में सांत्वना देने वालों का तांता लग गया। इस दौरान भाई शिव कुमार व माता कृष्णा कांता का दुख देखा नहीं जा रहा था। छोटे भाई शिव कुमार ने बताया कि उसकी बड़ी बहन साधना, जो कि दरास्लाम (तनजानिया) में रह रही है, गत समय भारत आई तो वह कह रही थी कि अबकी बार भाई शोभी राज भारत आया तो उसका पासपोर्ट फाड़ इसे दोबारा नहीं जाने देना। अपने भाई के इंतजार में बैठे शिव ने शादी तक नहीं रचाई। उसका भाई को घर आने के बाद ही शादी रचाने का प्रोग्राम था। युगांडा में हुए बम विस्फोट में मारे गए करतारपुर निवासी शोभी राज का शुक्रवार को युगांडा में बहन साधना की देखरेख में बड़े बेटे ने हिन्दू रीति रिवाज के साथ पिता को अग्नि भेंट कर अंतिम संस्कार कर दिया।

translation:With heavy heart a mother from kartarpur had sent her son for work in Uganda, 25 years ago. Although the son never came back, a message of his demise did. The Uganda blasts that took place yesterday ended the life of Shobhi Raj aka "Pehelwan". A mother who awaited her son for years could not even get to see the body of her deceased son. 45 year old Shobhi Raj migrated to Uganda at 25 years of age. During the course of his stay he came to establish business as a civil contractor and married a local Ugandan woman whom he lovingly called "Jassi". He has two children from Jassi. A pall of gloom descended in Gulab Singh Wali locality of Kartarpur when the news of Shobhi's demise broke out. The house of family was choc a bloc with people coming over to condole the unfortunate demise. Mrs Krishna Kanta (mother) and Mr Shiv Kumar (brother) were inconsolable upon hearing the news. Shobhi's yonuger brother recounted that his elder sister Sadhna (settled in Dar Es Salam) had insisted on not letting Shobhi go back when around on his next visit to India. An inconsolable Shiv Kumar recounted that he planned to get married during the next visit of his elder brother. Shobhi Raj was cremated on Friday by his elder son as per the Hindu rites under the supervision of his elder sister Sadhna
 

ajtr

Tihar Jail
Banned
Joined
Oct 2, 2009
Messages
12,038
Likes
723
Suicide attacks kill at least 46 in Iraq



BAGHDAD: Two suicide bombers targeting members of a government-backed, anti-al-Qaeda militia struck within hours of each other early Sunday, killing at least 46 people and wounding 52, Iraqi officials said.

The bombings were the deadliest in a series of attacks across Iraq Sunday that were aimed at the Sons of Iraq, a Sunni group also known as Sahwa that works with government forces to fight al-Qaeda in Iraq. The attacks highlighted the stiff challenges the country faces as the US scales back its forces in Iraq, leaving their Iraqi counterparts in charge of security.

The first attack Sunday morning — the deadliest against Iraq's security forces in months — claimed at least 43 lives. It occurred at a checkpoint near a military base where Sahwa members were lined up to receive pay cheques in the mostly Sunni district of Radwaniya southwest of Baghdad.

At least six of the dead were Iraqi soldiers, 34 were Sahwa members and three were accountants, according to hospital and police officials. At least 13 of the wounded were Iraqi Army soldiers, four were accountants and the rest were believed to be from Sahwa, the officials said.

A military official at the base said the explosion was the work of one suicide bomber wearing an explosives vest.

All officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorised to speak to the media.

Iraqi military spokesman Maj. Gen. Qassim al-Moussawi said the bomber struck at 7 a.m. at a checkpoint near the military facility.

The area was immediately closed off, and Iraqi helicopters could be seen flying over the site.

In the second attack, a suspected militant stormed a local Sahwa headquarters in the Anbar province town of Qaim, near the Syrian border, and opened fire on those inside. Sahwa fighters returned fire, wounding the attacker, who then blew himself up as they gathered around him, killing three of the fighters and wounding three others, two police officials said, also speaking on condition of anonymity. Qaim is a former insurgent stronghold.

While violence has dropped dramatically over the past two years in the country, Iraqi security forces remain a favourite target for insurgents bent on destabilising the country and its Shia-led government.

The Sahwa fighters have played a key role in the reduction of violence in Iraq since they first rose up against their former al-Qaeda allies in late 2006, joining the US military and government forces in the fight against the terror group.

In another attack, roughly at the same time as that in Qaim, gunmen in a speeding car opened fire on a Sahwa checkpoint in Mahaweel, about 56 kilometres south of Baghdad, wounding one, according to Babil police spokesman Maj. Muthana Khalid.

Khalid said a roadside bomb went off about 30 minutes later, hitting a car driven by another Sahwa member in Haswa, about 50 kilometres south of Baghdad. The Sahwa member was wounded in the attack.

More than four months after an inconclusive parliamentary election in March, Iraq has no government as politicians continue to bicker over who will lead it. The impasse has raised fears that militants will exploit the political vacuum to re-ignite sectarian violence that brought Iraq to the brink of civil war in 2006 and 2007.

The attacks against the security forces and the Sahwa are especially worrying because they come at a time when the number of US troops in Iraq is dropping and Iraq's nascent security forces are taking over security in the country. All US combat units are scheduled to leave Iraq by the end of next month and the last American soldier by the end of next year.

Insurgents have used an array of attacks to intimidate and kill security forces, such as drive-by shootings, bombs attached to the undercarriage of vehicles and bombing houses where security forces live. But Sunday's attack in Radwaniya was more reminiscent of the type insurgents used in the past to discourage people from joining the security forces.
 

ajtr

Tihar Jail
Banned
Joined
Oct 2, 2009
Messages
12,038
Likes
723
Why Pakistanis have been detained for Al Shabab's Uganda bombings


A week after Al Shabab's Uganda bombings that killed 76 people watching the soccer World Cup final, Ugandan police released reconstructed pictures of two suspected suicide bombers and said that "more than 20" people have been detained in connection with the investigations, including several Pakistani nationals working in Uganda.Last week Sheikh Mukhtar Abdirahman Abu-Zubeyr, spiritual leader of Somalia's Al Qaeda-linked Islamist group, Al Shabab, reportedly claimed responsibility for the blasts in a recorded message. Mr. Abu-Zubeyr said that the attacks had been carried out by members of the Saleh Ali Saleh Nabhan martyr brigade, named after a suspected Islamist leader killed by the US in Somalia last year, in revenge for the indiscriminate shelling of Somali civilians by Ugandan peacekeepers in the country.

Ugandan police chief Kale Kayihura said in a press conference Sunday that there is now "very, very strong evidence," including the unclaimed and unidentified remains of two men found at the blast sites, to suggest that the attacks had been carried out by suicide bombers.

Reconstructed images of suicide bombers

Investigators have reconstructed images of the suspected bombers from the unclaimed heads of the two men, one "definitely Somali looking" and the other a black African "with characteristics not typical of Somalis," found at the sites, Mr. Kayihura said. The images have been released by Interpol in an international effort to identify the suspects.

The Ugandan police are following up "several good leads" on the identity of the suspects, a source close to the investigation said Monday.

More than twenty people are currently in custody in connection with the investigations, the police said.

The Pakistani connection?

These include several Pakistani nationals detained Saturday after a "convergence" of information, including an e-mail sent to a local newspaper naming a Pakistani national in Kampala as a point-man for Al Shabab, led investigators to an address in the city, Kayihura said.

The e-mail, purporting to be from Al Shabab spokesman Abdi Karim Abdulahi Yusuf, named the Pakistani as "country coordinator for all the Al Shabab mission [sic] in Uganda." The address is listed as the Ugandan branch of a Pakistan-based interactive technology firm, on the firm's website.

Kayihura said that people at that address had been on the radar of Ugandan security operatives prior to the e-mail being received. As of Monday, the Pakistani nationals remained in custody while Ugandan police cross-checked their records with other intelligence agencies and Interpol, a source close to the investigation said.

With no one yet charged over the attacks, however, Kayihura played down the significance of the detentions made so far, saying that it was still "too early to talk about any suspects being linked to the blasts."

Four Ethiopian nationals arrested last week as part of the investigations had been released, he said.

A 'local network'

Ugandan officials have been quick to draw a link between Al Shabab and the Allied Democratic Forces, or ADF, a mainly Muslim Ugandan rebel force that has been battling the current Ugandan government from bases in the neighboring Democratic Republic of Congo off and on for over a decade.

Police chief Kayihura said that although there was undoubtedly a "strong foreign element" in the planning, inspiration, coordination and support for the attacks, those responsible must have also used "a local network" inside Uganda.

The Daily Monitor, a Ugandan newspaper, cited a high-level security source Monday as saying that Ethiopian intelligence had over the weekend passed on the name of a Somali national supposed to be the mastermind behind the attacks to Ugandan security.

As the Ugandan authorities step up the efforts to find those responsible for the attacks, investigators from around the world have jetted in to assist the investigations.

"Around 60" agents of the Federal Bureau of Investigation are currently in Uganda to work with local security forces on the bombings, says Joann Lockard, a spokeswoman for the United States Embassy in Kampala. Assistance is also being provided by Britain, Israel, and South Africa, police chief Kayihura said.
 

ajtr

Tihar Jail
Banned
Joined
Oct 2, 2009
Messages
12,038
Likes
723
Car bomb kills four north of Baghdad


Monday, 19 Jul, 2010

BAGHDAD: Police say a car bomb has killed four Iraqis and wounded 21 more in a one-time insurgent stronghold northeast of Baghdad.

Police and hospital officials said the blast occurred Monday evening near a restaurant and coffee shop in Baqouba.

They spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak to the media.

Baqouba is 35 miles northeast of Baghdad. It was once controlled by al-Qaida in Iraq before a series of US-Iraqi offensives led to a drop in violence.

The attack came hours after another car bomb killed a British contractor in Mosul, about 225 miles north of Baghdad.

Violence has dropped sharply since the height of Iraq's insurgency in 2007, but insurgents still wage attacks aimed at destabilizing Iraq's government. -AP
 

ajtr

Tihar Jail
Banned
Joined
Oct 2, 2009
Messages
12,038
Likes
723
Any terror case around the world is incomplete without pakistan name in it.

Two men convicted in Germany over al-Qaida ties


Monday, 19 Jul, 2010


BERLIN: A German court convicted two men of supporting al-Qaida by procuring equipment and undergoing weapons training, and sentenced them on Monday to prison terms.

The two 32-year-olds were convicted by the Koblenz state court after a trial that began in September.

Omer Ozdemir, a Turkish national who grew up in Germany, was sentenced to six years in prison for membership of a terrorist organization, supporting al-Qaida and recruiting fighters for the group in Germany.

Ozdemir had admitted that he twice underwent training at a terrorist camp in Pakistan.

In those camps, he was trained to handle weapons such as mortars and rocket-propelled grenades, the court said in a statement. When he returned to Germany in 2006, it was part of his duties to recruit fighters for al-Qaida, it said.

On his second trip to the Afghanistan-Pakistan border region 2008, he stayed with another al-Qaida member and expected ''to take part in fighting missions in Afghanistan, the court said.

However, he returned to Germany where he was arrested in September 2008.

Co-defendant Sermet Ilgen, arrested in February 2009, was convicted of lesser charges and was sentenced to 2 1/2 in prison.

The court convicted both men for procuring money and equipment such as body armor, a laptop and night-vision goggles for al-Qaida in 2005 and 2006.

The two men, who lived near the German city of Stuttgart, passed on money and equipment to Aleem Nasir, a German of Pakistani origin who was convicted last year of al-Qaida membership and violating export laws, the court said. Nasir was sentenced to eight years in prison.

Defense attorneys had asked for a prison sentence of 4{ years for Ozdemir and sought acquittal for Ilgen.
 

ajtr

Tihar Jail
Banned
Joined
Oct 2, 2009
Messages
12,038
Likes
723
Bomber attacks British firm in Iraq, four killed


Monday, 19 Jul, 2010

MOSUL: A suicide car bomber ploughed into a convoy carrying employees of a British company in northern Iraq on Monday, killing four of them and wounding five Iraqi civilians, Iraqi security officials said.

The suicide bomber targeted the last vehicle of the convoy in restive Mosul, a dangerous city where al Qaeda remains active, and the force of the blast threw the armored vehicle 40 metres into a ravine, killing everyone inside, police said.

"I saw the other members of the convoy bring out four dead foreign civilians from the smashed car. One of them was beheaded," an Iraqi military officer, asking not to be named, said by telephone from the site of the attack in northern Mosul.

Iraqi officials said the firm was a British construction company but its name was not immediately known and there was no independent confirmation. The British embassy had no immediate information on the incident.

The nationality of the dead foreigners was not immediately known.

Mosul is on the front line of a longstanding feud between Iraq's Arabs and minority Kurds over land, power and oil wealth.

The region is also a hub for Sunni Islamist insurgents, and the US military, which will end combat operations on Aug. 31, sees Mosul as al Qaeda's last urban stronghold in Iraq.

Iraq is on high alert for insurgent attacks after a March 7 national election produced no clear winner and left the country adrift in political uncertainty.

Overall violence has dropped sharply since the height of sectarian carnage in 2006-7. But bombings and killings continue daily. – Reuters
 

Neil

Senior Member
Joined
Jun 23, 2010
Messages
2,818
Likes
3,546
Country flag
America's secret army: how the 'war on terror' created a new industry

In the cloak and dagger world of intelligence, the assumption fed by countless spy novels and TV dramas is that top-secret security clearance is restricted to an elite few known only by codes such as M and C. Not so in today's America.

A new survey of the intelligence network created in the wake of the 9/11 attacks estimates that some 854,000 people have been given high-level clearance, making James Bond look decidedly everyday.

The estimate comes from the Washington Post which has dedicated a team of reporters to a two-year project on what it calls "Top Secret America"

In addition to the army of individuals, it has identified some 1,271 government bodies and 1,931 private contractors working on counter-terrorism.

The creation of this extraordinary spider's-web of intrigue can be dated back to 16 September 2001, a week after the attacks, when George Bush announced from Camp David the launch of what he called a "war on terror". The war would take a while, he warned, and the American people would have to be patient, but he was determined.

What he didn't warn the American people was that nine years later that war would have spawned a gigantic proliferation of agencies and spending unparalleled in US history.

Not only is the system huge and massively expensive, it is also highly inefficient and unwieldy, the Post believes. The official US intelligence budget now stands at $75bn, almost three times its size at 9/11, with 263 new bodies dedicated to rooting out violent extremism.

Much of the work is overlapping. The Post cites the example of 51 federal and military units in 15 cities devoted to tracking the financing of terror networks.

Such is the mountain of paperwork generated, with 50,000 intelligence reports a year, that no one can keep a grip on it. Just a handful of top operatives, known as super users, are allowed to have an overview of all the findings – and not surprisingly they are overwhelmed. "I'm not going to live long enough to be briefed on everything," one told the Washington Post.

Still, there are aspects of the new underground world that would please 007. The Post located one secret programme to a tall concrete building in Maryland which had false windows to disguise it. Many new buildings created to house operatives have special rooms enclosed in metal to foil snoopers.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2010/jul/19/us-spies-triple-since-2001
 

Neil

Senior Member
Joined
Jun 23, 2010
Messages
2,818
Likes
3,546
Country flag
Fighting in north and south Yemen leaves 24 dead

Fighting in Yemen has left 24 people dead, with government forces battling Shia rebels in the north and militants in the south.

Nineteen died overnight in the north when Shia Houthi rebels clashed with government-backed militia.

Dozens of people were killed recently in an upsurge of violence in the area, straining a truce agreed in February.

In the south, militants ambushed and killed five soldiers in an area where al-Qaeda is active.

Government forces are now battling insurgents on two fronts, BBC Middle East correspondent Jon Leyne reports from Cairo.

The Houthis are confronting the mainly Sunni government and there are suspicions that Iran is supporting them, but both Iran and some independent experts dispute this.

In southern Yemen, the government has different problems, battling an insurgency believed to be supported by al-Qaeda.

There are growing fears that Yemen could descend into chaos and become a new base from which militants could launch attacks against the West, our correspondent says.

A radical cleric based in the country is thought to have played a key part in the attempt on Christmas Day to blow up a passenger plane headed for the US city of Detroit.

Tribal leader killed
"There were very violent confrontations," a local official in the northern province of Amran told Reuters news agency.

"Nine soldiers and pro-government tribesmen were killed, as well as about 10 Houthis [rebels]."

Fighting between the government and Houthi rebels has been flaring up since 2004 and last year neighbouring Saudi Arabia was brought into the conflict.

At least 49 people were killed in fighting between the rebels and the pro-government Ibn Aziz tribe in recent days.

On Tuesday, a pro-government tribal leader, his son and his bodyguards were killed. The government accused the Houthis of mounting an ambush, but Houthi leaders said the deaths happened in fighting in which they lost men as well.

Houthis, named after their leader's family name, complain that they are the victims of economic and religious discrimination, which the government denies.

There is a history of fighting between the rebels and the Ibn Aziz clan, but these clashes are believed to be the bloodiest since the truce was announced.

Yemen agreed the peace deal with the rebels in order to quell violence in its northern regions, allowing it to concentrate on a simmering separatist struggle in the south, and the presence of al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula.

The ambush on the five soldiers occurred in Shabwa province, and is reportedly the third attack on government troops by militants in the area in five weeks.

"There is suspicion that al-Qaeda was behind the operation," an official in Shabwa told Reuters.

Radical cleric Anwar al-Awlaki, who has been linked to al-Qaeda attacks in the US, is thought to be in the area.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-middle-east-10722635
 

Neil

Senior Member
Joined
Jun 23, 2010
Messages
2,818
Likes
3,546
Country flag
Fanning the Flames of Jihad

On July 11, 2010, al-Malahim Media, the media arm of al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP), published the first edition of its new English-language online magazine "Inspire." The group had tried to release the magazine in late June, but for some reason — whether a technical glitch, virus (as rumored on some of the jihadist message boards) or cyberattack — most of the initial file released was unreadable.

The magazine was produced by someone who has a moderate amount of technological savvy, who speaks English well and who uses a lot of American idioms and phraseology. We did not note any hint of British or South Asian influence in the writing. A government source has suggested to us (and we have seen the claim repeated in the media) that Inspire was produced by a U.S citizen who was born in Saudi Arabia named Samir Khan. Khan is a well-known cyber-jihadist — indeed, The New York Times did an excellent story on Khan in October 2007. Given Khan's background, history of publishing English-language jihadist material and the fact that he reportedly left the United States for Yemen in 2009 and has not returned, it does seem plausible that he is the driving force behind Inspire.

The magazine contains previously published material from Osama bin Laden, Ayman al-Zawahiri, Abu Musab al-Suri and Anwar al-Awlaki. While it also contains new material, this material, especially from al-Awlaki and AQAP leader Nasir al-Wahayshi (aka Abu Bashir), is consistent with their previously published statements. One of the messages by al-Awlaki featured in Inspire, "A Message to the American People," was previously released to CNN and reissued by al-Malahim on the Internet July 19, almost as if to validate Inspire. Even though the way in which some of the material in Inspire is presented is quite elementary, and could lead some to believe the magazine might be a spoof, we have found no analytical reason to doubt its authenticity.

Presentation aside, the material is quite consistent with what we have seen released by al-Malahim Media in its Arabic-language materials over many months. When closely examined, the inaugural issue of Inspire provides a good gauge of AQAP's thought and suggests the general direction of the broader jihadist movement.

Inspiration
In a letter from the editor appearing at the beginning of the magazine, the purpose of Inspire is clearly laid out: "This magazine is geared towards making the Muslim a mujahid." The editor also clearly states that Inspire is an effort by al-Malahim Media to reach out to, radicalize and train the millions of English-speaking Muslims in the West, Africa, South Asia and Southeast Asia.

Inspire does not represent any sort of major breakthrough in jihadist communication. English-language jihadist material has been available on the Internet since the early 1990s on sites such as Azzam.com, and jihadists have released other magazines directly targeting English-speaking audiences. What is remarkable about Inspire is that it was released by al-Malahim and AQAP. Within the jihadist movement, AQAP has assumed the vanguard position on the physical battlefield over the past year with links to several attacks or attempted attacks in the West. AQAP has also been frequently mentioned in Western media over the past several months, and it appears that al-Malahim is trying to exploit that notoriety in order to get the attention of English-speaking Muslims.

Regarding AQAP's links to recent attacks, Inspire follows the trend of AQAP publications and leaders in recent months in praising Fort Hood shooter Maj. Nidal Hasan and failed Christmas Day bomber Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab and lifting them up as examples for all jihadists to follow. "We call on every Muslim who feels any jealousy for their religious beliefs to expel the polytheists from the Arabian Peninsula, by killing all of the crusaders working in embassies or otherwise, and to declare war against the crusaders in the land of the Prophet Muhammad — peace be upon him — on the ground, sea and air. And we call on every soldier working in the crusader armies and puppet governments to repent to Allah and follow the example of the heroic mujahid brother Nidal Hassan [sic]; to stand up and kill all the crusaders by all means available to him."¦"

In the article discussing Abdulmutallab, the author again brags about the manufacturing of the improvised explosive device used in the Christmas Day attack even though that device, like the one used in the assassination attempt against Saudi Deputy Interior Minister Prince Mohammed bin Nayef, failed to achieve the objective. "The mujahidin brothers in the manufacturing department managed with the grace of Allah to make an advanced bomb. The bomb had been tested and proven effective as it has passed through the detector ports. The martyrdom bomber managed with the grace of Allah to reach his target, but due to a technical glitch, the bomb did not explode completely; and we will continue on our path until we get what we want"¦." This statement would seem to indicate that if AQAP is able to recruit a willing suicide bomber who is able to travel to the West, they will again attempt to attack an airliner using a similar device.

Airliners remain vulnerable to such attacks. STRATFOR has previously noted when discussing AQAP and its innovative IED designs, there are many ways to smuggle IED components on board an aircraft if a person has a little imagination and access to explosives. As we wrote in September 2009, three months before the Christmas Day bomber's attempted attack, efforts to improve technical methods to locate IED components must not be abandoned, but the existing vulnerabilities in airport screening systems demonstrate that an emphasis needs to be placed not only on finding the bomb but also on finding the bomber.

Throughout the magazine, articles criticize the U.S. operations in Afghanistan, Iraq and Yemen; Saudi operations against jihadists; the burqa ban in Europe and even global warming — Inspire carried a reproduction of a statement purportedly authored by Osama bin Laden earlier this year titled "The Way to Save the Earth" that criticizes U.S. policy regarding climate change and calls for economic jihad against the United States.

The magazine also contained a portion of a previously-released message titled "From Kabul to Mogadishu" by al Qaeda second-in-command Ayman al-Zawahiri that encouraged the people of Yemen to join al Qaeda in its global struggle. It only quoted a part of the original message that pertained to Yemen and omitted portions that pertained to other locations.

AQAP Revealed
n addition to the recycled content from al Qaeda's core leadership, Inspire also contains quite a bit of new and interesting content from AQAP's military and theological leaders. An interview with AQAP leader Nasir al-Wahayshi provided al-Wahayshi the opportunity to reinforce several points he has been making for months now regarding his call for jihadists to conduct simple attacks using readily available weapons. "My advice to my Muslim brothers in the West is to acquire weapons and learn methods of war. They are living in a place where they can cause great harm to the enemy and where they can support the Messenger of Allah." Al-Wahayshi continued ""¦a man with his knife, a man with his gun, a man with his rifle, a man with his bomb, by learning how to design explosive devices, by burning down forests and buildings, or by running over them with your cars and trucks. The means of harming them are many so seek assistance from Allah and do not be weak and you will find a way."

This call was echoed by Adam Gadahn in March 2010 when the American-born spokesman for al Qaeda prime advised jihadists to strike targets that were close to them with simple assaults and urged his audience to not "wait for tomorrow to do what can be done today, and don't wait for others to do what you can do yourself."

These calls are part of a move toward a leaderless resistance model of jihadism that has accompanied the devolution of the jihadist threat from one based on al Qaeda the group to a broader threat based primarily on al Qaeda franchises and the wider jihadist movement. (STRATFOR is currently putting the finishing touches on a book that details our coverage of this devolutionary process since 2004.) With this shift, more attacks such as the Times Square bombing attempt, the Fort Hood shooting and the June 1, 2009, Little Rock shootings can be anticipated.

In an effort to provide training in terrorist tradecraft to such grassroots and lone-wolf jihadists, Inspire contains a section called "Open Source Jihad," which is the term that AQAP uses to refer to leaderless resistance. This section is intended to serve as "a resource manual for those who loathe tyrants." The material is intended to allow "Muslims to train at home instead of risking a dangerous travel abroad," and one part exclaims, "Look no further, the open source jihad is now at hand's reach." The section also contains a lengthy step-by-step guide to constructing simple pipe bombs with electronic timers, bearing the rhymed title "Make a Bomb in the Kitchen of Your Mom." The images of New York City contained in this section serve as a reminder of the importance New York holds in jihadist thought as a target. Such rudimentary improvised explosive devices are unlikely to cause mass casualties, but like the pipe bombs employed by Eric Rudolph, they could prove deadly on a small scale if they are employed effectively.

When considering this concept of leaderless resistance and of using publications like Inspire to train aspiring jihadists, it is important to remember that this type of instruction has only a limited effectiveness and that there are many elements of terrorist tradecraft that cannot be learned by merely reading about them. In other words, while the jihadist threat may be broadening in one way, it is also becoming less severe, because it is increasingly emanating from actors who do not possess the skill of professional terrorist operatives and who lack the ability to conduct complex and spectacular attacks.

Cartoon Controversy
One of the other features in Inspire is an article by Anwar al-Awlaki, the American-born Yemeni cleric who has been linked to Nidal Hasan, Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab, Faisal Shahzad and two of the 9/11 hijackers. In his article, titled "May Our Souls be Sacrificed for You," al-Awlaki focuses on the controversy that arose over the cartoons of the Prophet Mohammed that first appeared in 2005. Although the cartoons were published nearly five years ago, the jihadists have not allowed the issue to die down. To date, the jihadist response to the cartoons has resulted in riots, arsons, deaths, the 2008 bombing of the Danish Embassy in Islamabad and an attack in January 2010 in which a man armed with an axe and knife broke into the home of Jyllands-Posten newspaper cartoonist Kurt Westergaard in Denmark and allegedly tried to kill him. The Kashmiri militant group Harkat-ul-Jihad e-Islami (HUJI) also dispatched American operative David Headley to Denmark on two occasions to plan attacks against Jyllands-Posten and Westergaard in what HUJI called "Operation Mickey Mouse."

In his Inspire article, al-Awlaki states, "If you have the right to slander the Messenger of Allah, we have the right to defend him. If it is part of your freedom of speech to defame Muhammad it is part of our religion to fight you." Al-Awlaki continues: "This effort, the effort of defending the Messenger of Allah, should not be limited to a particular group of Muslims such as the mujahidin but should be the effort of the ummah, the entire ummah." He also referred to a 2008 lecture he gave regarding the cartoon issue titled "The Dust Will Never Settle Down" and notes that, "Today, two years later, the dust still hasn't settled down. In fact the dust cloud is only getting bigger." He adds that "Assassinations, bombings, and acts of arson are all legitimate forms of revenge against a system that relishes the sacrilege of Islam in the name of freedom."

Inspire also features a "hit list" that includes the names of people like Westergaard who were involved in the cartoon controversy as well as other targets such as Dutch politician Geert Wilders, who produced the controversial film Fitna in 2008; Ayaan Hirsi Ali, who wrote the screenplay for the movie Submission (filmmaker Theo Van Gogh, the director of Submission, was murdered by a jihadist in November 2004); and Salman Rushdie, author of the book The Satanic Verses. Most of these individuals have appeared on previous jihadist hit lists. A new notable addition was American cartoonist Molly Norris, who was added due to her idea to have a day where "everybody draws Mohammed." Norris made her suggestion in response to threats against the irreverent animated television program South Park by Muslims over a brief scene in an episode that lampooned the Prophet. Comedy Central censored the South Park episode featuring Mohammed because of the threats, provoking Norris's suggestion.

Al-Awlaki and AQAP appear to believe they can use the anger over the Mohammed cartoons to help them inspire Muslims to conduct attacks. In this edition of Inspire, they are clearly attempting to fan the flames to ensure that the dust will not settle down. They are also seeking to train these radicalized individuals to kill people, although, as we note above, that is a difficult task to do remotely over the Internet.

One other thing the magazine seeks to accomplish is to help make the jihadist training experience better for English speakers who seek to travel to jihadist training camps abroad. There have been anecdotal reports of Westerners who have traveled to get training and who have not had positive experiences during the process — and of at least one Somali-American who was executed after expressing his desire to leave an al Shabaab training camp and return home. In light of this problem, AQAP includes an article in Inspire titled "What to Expect in Jihad" and designed to reduce the "confusion, shock and depression" that can be experienced by trainees at such camps. The article also provides a list of things to bring to the training camp, including a friend to help ease the loneliness, and recommends that aspiring jihadists learn the local language.

The time and effort that AQAP put into this first issue of Inspire, and the support the magazine apparently receives from important AQAP figures such as al-Wahayshi and al-Awlaki, are strong indicators of the group's intent to support leaderless resistance as a way to attack the West, something AQAP has had some difficulty doing itself.

http://www.stratfor.com/weekly/2010...book&utm_medium=official&utm_campaign=sweekly
 

ajtr

Tihar Jail
Banned
Joined
Oct 2, 2009
Messages
12,038
Likes
723
Foreign Ministry confirms arrest of Pakistani brothers in UAE


Tuesday, August 03, 2010 - By Jamal Khurshid - Karachi

The Foreign Ministry, while confirming the arrest of two Pakistani brothers, including cardiac specialist Dr Akmal Waheed by the UAE authorities, informed the Sindh High Court that the UAE government's response with regard to the detention of Pakistani citizens was awaited.

"The Pakistan embassy has requested the UAE government to let it know the reasons of their arrest to provide them consular access and the response is awaited," Director Foreign Affairs for Gulf Region told the Sindh High Court on Monday. The court was hearing the petition seeking safety and release of two Pakistani brothers from UAE intelligence custody.

Pakistani cardiac specialist Dr. Akmal Waheed and his brother Asad Waheed, who were performing professional duties at Medical Duty and Dental College, Raisul Khaima, UAE, for the last couple of years, have been detained by UAE intelligence agencies since April 4 along with their five other Pakistani colleagues.

Dr Akmal, earlier accused of having links with Al-Qaeda, attacking corps commander convoy in 2004 in Karachi and financially aiding and harbouring banned Jundullah activists but was cleared from all charges, had migrated to Raisul Khaima, UAE, along with his family for the purpose of employment and since then he was earning his livelihood by private employment at the hospital.

Detainees' brother Ajmal Waheed submitted that his brothers along with other Pakistani citizens, including Dr. Ayaz, Faraz Nasir and Dr. Waseem, were detained by UAE authorities on April 4 and they were not produced before any court of law. The petitioner expressed apprehension of shifting of his brothers from UAE to Guantanamo Bay with the consent and permission of Pakistani government although they were not involved in any case. He submitted that the lives of the detainees were in danger and they could be tortured to death by the intelligence agencies of UAE and other countries having influence in the Gulf region, as there was no information regarding the whereabouts of the detainees.

He alleged that US intelligence agencies were bent upon taking the custody of Dr. Akmal Waheed, who had provided medical treatment to Afghan war victims after US and NATO forces invaded Afghanistan in 2001. { these 2 had a brother who was a Kidney specialist who provided his services to taliban escaping bombing in Afghanistan and we know that Osama bin laden needs regular services of a kidney specialist.}

Filing comments on the petition, Director Foreign Affairs for Gulf Region Dr. Abdul Malik submitted that UAE government has been approached by the Pakistan Embassy in UAE regarding the arrest of Dr. Akmal Waheed and others who were picked from Raisul Khaima. He said that the foreign ministry had instructed the embassy in UAE to ascertain the facts about their detention and to get consular access and inform the ministry accordingly, adding that the diplomatic mission has been in correspondence and actively pursuing the case with the UAE government to know the reasons about the detention of the Pakistani citizens and make arrangements for their release.

Petitioner's counsel Shaukat Hayat and Mohammad Farooq said that Consulate General of UAE was also made respondent in the petition for the court's direction to ensure safety and well-being of the Pakistani citizens and furnish all record and charges of detention before the court, however, the comments were not yet filed. After taking the comments on record, the court adjourned the hearing as the response from the UAE government regarding the detention of the petitioner's brothers was awaited.



Follow up news concerning the arrest of above to pakistani brothers in UAE....


Dr Arshad Waheed killed in Wana


Sunday, March 23, 2008 - By Jamal Khurshid

KARACHI: Karachi-based Dr Arshad Waheed, who was running a clinic in Wana, was identified as one of the victims of an alleged US missile attack on a house sheltering militants in Wana on March 16.

Dr Arshad Waheed, a kidney specialist of the Jinnah Hospital, had shifted to Wana with his family, following his acquittal by court of law on charges of attack on the convoy of the Karachi corps commander and a Rangers van and harbouring and training al-Qaeda and Jundullah activists, providing them funds and medical treatment, sources said. When contacted, the sister-in-law of Dr Arshad, who is residing in Karachi, said she had received the information regarding his death in a "US attack". She added that his family, however, was safe. Sources said Dr Arshad was living in Wana, providing medical treatment to the people affected in the ongoing battle between the security forces and the militants there. The sources added that Dr Arshad was out of contact with his family members.

The name of Dr Arshad, along with his brother Dr Akmal Waheed, a cardiac specialist of the National Institute of Cardiovascular Diseases, appeared in the media following their mysterious disappearance on June 17, 2004 in Karachi as then federal Information Minister Sheikh Rasheed Ahmed in his reported statement accused them of involvement in the corps commander convoy attack case and facilitating the militants in Wana.


other story related to UAE arrests....


From The Daily Times (the article dated 06/11/2004 on the attack on the convoy of the Karachi corps commander )
Karachi corps commander survives attack


* Six soldiers, three policemen, one bystander dead
* Musharraf and Jamali express outrage over incident

By Hasan Mansoor and Intikhab Ali

KARACHI: Seven Pakistan Army soldiers, three policemen and a bystander were killed when unidentified people ambushed the Karachi corps commander's motorcade near Clifton Bridge, military and police officials said on Thursday.

"At least six soldiers were killed in the ambush. Some policemen and a pedestrian were also killed," Inter-Services Public Relations Director General Maj Gen Shaukat Sultan told Daily Times.

City police chief Tariq Jamil confirmed the death of three policemen and a pedestrian in the attack. Two of the policemen were identified as Sub-Inspector Hasan Asghar and Head Constable Mohammad Nazeer.

An attempt to assassinate President Pervez Musharraf, reported in April 2002, failed when an explosive-laden car en route President Musharraf's motorcade did not explode. Officials said Corps Commander Lt Gen Ahsan Saleem Hayat left his Bath Island residence for Corps House at about 8:40am and unidentified people ambushed the convoy when it neared Clifton Bridge at about 8:45am.

Witnesses said seven to eight gunmen in a 16-seater Toyota Hiace van ambushed the motorcade with automatic weapons.

"The firing was very intense and lasted for at least 10 minutes," a witness said.
 

ajtr

Tihar Jail
Banned
Joined
Oct 2, 2009
Messages
12,038
Likes
723
Seriously, this thread has to be re-named as Pakistan's role in terror attacks around the world.
 

Neil

Senior Member
Joined
Jun 23, 2010
Messages
2,818
Likes
3,546
Country flag
Japan tanker was damaged in a terror attack, UAE says

A Japanese tanker damaged last week in the Strait of Hormuz near Oman was the target of a terrorist attack, the United Arab Emirates state-run news agency has said.

It said remains of home-made explosives had been found on the hull of the M Star, which was damaged last week while travelling from Qatar to Japan.

Two days ago, an al-Qaeda-linked group said it was responsible.

Officials previously said the ship may have been involved in a collision.

The crew of the ship reported an explosion shortly after midnight on Wednesday last week. One person was injured.

The BBC's security correspondent Nick Childs says the news is likely to raise concerns about security for shipping in the strait, a vital strategic waterway for oil supplies from the Gulf.

Minor damage
"An examination carried out by specialised teams had confirmed that the tanker had been the subject of a terrorist attack," the news agency said, quoting an unidentified coastguard source.

"UAE explosives experts who collected and examined samples found a dent on the starboard side above the water line and remains of home-made explosives on the hull," it said.

"Probably the tanker had encountered a terrorist attack from a boat loaded with explosives," the source was quoted as saying.

The ship's owner, Mitsui OSK, said it could not confirm the reports. Japanese Foreign Minister Katsuya Okada said the government was aware of the report but was yet to confirm its details, the Agence France Presse news agency said.

Previous theories about the cause ranged from a large wave to a US nuclear submarine. Part of the mystery surrounding the incident was the relatively minor damage to the tanker, which did not seem to conform to any particular explanation.

A statement signed by a "battalion" of the Abdullah Azzam Brigades, which is linked to al-Qaeda, said one of its suicide bombers was responsible for the blast.

The claim, posted on a website used by Islamist militants, could not be independently verified, and the group has made false claims in the past.

The French-operated tanker Limburg was badly damaged off Yemen in an attack in 2002, as was the US Navy warship Cole in an incident in the Yemeni port of Aden in 2000, in which 17 US sailors were killed.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-pacific-10890098
 

ajtr

Tihar Jail
Banned
Joined
Oct 2, 2009
Messages
12,038
Likes
723
Pakistani's arrested in Port Shepstone

Aug 14, 2010 3:53 PM | By Monica Laganparsad
Five Pakistani nationals suspected of kidnapping a fellow countryman and keeping him captive for two days were arrested in Port Shepstone on Friday night.


The arrests come after the 44-year-old businessman was kidnapped from his business premises and taken to an unknown location last month.

Police spokesman Colonel Jay Naicker said: "It alleged his attackers held him captive for two days while they withdrew money from his account and used his credit card to purchase goods. When the complainant was released, he reported the incident to police at Margate."

Naicker said police traced the suspects to a house in Uvongo on the KwaZulu-Natal South Coast and on Friday night stormed the house, arresting five people.

"The suspects were found in possession of many cheque books, credit cards, sim cards as well as fraudulent identity documents and passports. At this stage detectives are looking into the activities of the group to determine if they are involved in other criminal activities."

The men will appear in the Margate Magistrate's Court on Monday on charges of kidnapping, armed robbery and fraud.
 

ajtr

Tihar Jail
Banned
Joined
Oct 2, 2009
Messages
12,038
Likes
723
'Five of most dangerous bad guy groups based in Pak'


Al-Qaeda, Taliban's Haqqani network and LeT are among five of the "most dangerous bad guy groups" based in Pakistan's lawless tribal belt and have been targeting countries like the US, Britain and India, America's special envoy for Af-Pak region Richard Holbrooke has said.
"Our enemy is Al-Qaeda. They lurk across the border in the tribal areas of Pakistan, the very areas that have been just hit by the floods. The point I want to make is there are about five of our most dangerous bad guy groups all grouped in this area in Pakistan where the floods are going on now," Holbrooke told the popular Charlie Rose show.

He said al-Qaeda is targeting the US, Britain and other countries as well. "You have the Afghan-Taliban, their expeditionary force in Afghanistan closely allied. You have the Pakistani-Taliban. Now the Pakistani-Taliban targets the Pakistanis, but the Times Square bomber (Faisal Shahzad) went and got trained, luckily badly trained, by the Pakistani Taliban. That's three," he said."Fourth, you have the infamous Haqqani group, a ruthless separate group focussed in North Waziristan, which is in Pakistan but raids all the way into Kabul. Finally, the last group, is a group that the Americans don't pay any attention to called the LeT, but the Indians sure pay attention because it is the LeT who attacked Mumbai in December of 2008," Holbrooke said.

All of these groups are in Pakistan and they are based in an area roughly the size of California in Pakistan's tribal belt, he said.

"As we diminish our combat troops over time according to the conditions, we have to retain the residual capability to strike at these groups while we build up the Afghan security forces," he said.

"The sequencing and the level and pace of all that is something that the President (Barack Obama) will determineafter he holds his policy review later this year in December, and then he will examine the conditions and the President will decide. But the general structure of what we are do is very clear, it seems to me," Holbrooke said.
 

ajtr

Tihar Jail
Banned
Joined
Oct 2, 2009
Messages
12,038
Likes
723
Germany shuts down mosque linked to 9/11


* Cultural association behind the mosque declared banned organisation

HAMBURG: German police shut down a mosque in Hamburg on Monday which was once connected to the 9/11attacks, saying it had links with armed militant groups in Pakistan and Afghanistan.

The Taiba Mosque in the port city was previously known as the Al Quds Mosque and was once frequented by Mohammed Atta, the alleged leader of the group that carried out the attack on the World Trade Center in New York. Despite the name change, the mosque in Hamburg's St George district remained under close watch by security services ever since the 9/11 attacks.

"We believe that the mosque has been supporting terrorism for years," Manfred Murck from the Office for the Protection of the Constitution, a German domestic intelligence service, told a news conference held by Hamburg state authorities. About 20 policemen cordoned off the mosque early on Monday and searched the premises, said the Interior Minister for Hamburg, Christoph Ahlhaus, adding that the cultural association behind the mosque had been declared a banned organisation.

"The association continuously promoted jihadist, aggressive and anti-democratic ideology and religious views in recent years," Ahlhaus said, adding, "We do not tolerate organisations that are against the constitutional order and the idea of understanding between cultures in an aggressive, militant way. But I underline that these measures are not targeted against the majority of the peace-loving, law-abiding Muslims in Hamburg." Ahlhaus said the association had a sophisticated programme of courses, sermons, seminars and online publications to whip up hatred of "non-believers". agencies
 

Latest Replies

Global Defence

New threads

Articles

Top