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Israel-Palestine-Jordan
Police: Undercover officers kill two Palestinian gunmen during raid near Jericho
2023-08-16
[IsraelTimes] Border Police say forces entered Aqabat Jabr refugee camp to arrest wanted man; Paleostinian button men also target IDF post near Yabed for 3rd time in days

Two Paleostinian button men were killed early Tuesday during an exchange of fire with Israeli forces amid a raid in the Aqabat Jabr refugee camp, close to the West Bank city of Jericho, Israeli defense officials and Paleostinian health officials said.

A Border Police front man said undercover officers entered Aqabat Jabr to detain a wanted Paleostinian man and to search for weapons at his home.

During the raid, Paleostinian button men shot up the forces, the front man said, adding that the undercover officers returned fire, killing two.

The Paleostinian Authority health ministry said 16-year-old Qusay Omar Suleiman
... Now former Vice president of Egypt. From 1993 until his appointment to that office in 2011 he was Minister without Portfolio and Director of the Egyptian General Intelligence Directorate (EGID)...
al-Walaji and 25-year-old Muhammed Ribihi Nujoom were both fatally shot in the chest.

Police later published a video showing the officers exchanging fire with Paleostinians in the refugee camp.

The IDF, meanwhile, said that troops detained eight wanted Paleostinians during sweeps across the West Bank early Tuesday, with violence in some areas.

Late Monday night, Paleostinian button men opened fire from the northern West Bank town of Yabed at a nearby IDF post, for the third time in four days. The military said the troops at the post, who were unharmed, returned fire at the source of the shooting.

Paleostinians targeted the same IDF post on Sunday and Friday, without causing any injuries.
Related:
Aqabat Jabr: 2023-05-25 6 Palestinians said wounded in IDF raid near Jericho
Aqabat Jabr: 2023-05-02 Palestinian teen killed, six others hurt during IDF raid near Jericho
Aqabat Jabr: 2023-03-07 IDF prepares to demolish home of gunman who killed Israeli-American Elan Ganeles
Related:
Yabed: 2023-08-12 Israeli army raid in northern West Bank kills Palestinian militant
Yabed: 2023-03-24 Wanted Palestinian gunman killed by Israeli forces in West Bank raid
Yabed: 2023-02-10 Bedouin Israeli brothers charged with supplying arms to Islamic Jihad in West Bank
Link


Home Front: Politix
Joo-hating imam delivers opening prayers in US House; separately Farrakhan doubles down on ‘Satanic Jooos’
2019-05-11
[IsraelTimes] Republican Lee Zeldin, who is Jewish, says decision to invite Omar Suleiman
... Now former Vice president of Egypt. From 1993 until his appointment to that office in 2011 he was Minister without Portfolio and Director of the Egyptian General Intelligence Directorate (EGID)...
, who has likened Israeli troops to Nazis and called Zionists ’enemies of God,’ was a ’terribly bad call’.


An imam who has wished for the end of Zionism, called for a third Intifada and likened Israel to Nazi-era Germany delivered the opening prayer for a session of the US House of Representatives on Thursday.

Omar Suleiman, the founder and president of the Dallas-based Yaqeen Institute, an organization that describes itself as a resource about Islam, referred to recent attacks on houses of worship ‐ which has included synagogues in the United States ‐ in his opening remarks.

"Let us not be deterred by the hatred that has claimed the lives of innocent worshipers across the world, but emboldened by the love that gathered them together to remember you and gathered us together to remember them," Suleiman said in a short prayer after being introduced by House Speaker Nancy San Fran Nan Pelosi
Congresswoman-for-Life from the San Francisco Bay Area, born into a family of professional politicians. On-again-off-again Speaker of the House, It's not her fault when they lose, but it is when they win. Noted for her heavily botoxed grimace and occasional senior... uhhh... momentss...
, a Caliphornia, an impregnable bastion of the Democratic Party, Democrat.

Suleiman has a long record of incendiary social media statements about Israel, as compiled two years ago by Petra Marquardt-Bigman, a researcher, and posted on the Algeimeiner Jewish news site. He has on multiple occasions wished for a third Paleostinian Intifada, or violent uprising, likened Israeli troops to Nazis, and has wished for the end of Zionism, calling Zionists "the enemies of God." He is a backer of the boycott Israel movement.

Pelosi’s office did not reply to multiple requests for comment by publishing time.

Farrakhan refers to ‘Satanic Jews’ while denying he’s anti-Semitic

[IsraelTimes] Notorious anti-Semite makes remark after being banned from Facebook for extremist rhetoric, says people shouldn’t be angry with him if ‘I stand on on God’s word’
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Africa North
Hamas denies Mubarak claim it sent fighters to Egypt during 2011 uprising
2018-12-30
Protesting too much.
[IsraelTimes] Terror group decries alleged efforts to ’embroil the Paleostinian movement into Egypt’s internal affairs,’ says its committed to non-intervention in other countries’ affairs

Gazoo-ruling terror group Hamas, the braying voice of Islamic Resistance®, on Saturday denied an allegation by Egypt’s deposed president Hosni Mubarak
...The former President-for-Life of Egypt, dumped by popular demand in early 2011...
that it sent hundreds of men across the border into Sinai during the 2011 uprising.

Mubarak took to the witness stand in a Cairo court Wednesday to testify about jailbreaks allegedly orchestrated by his successor Mohammed Morsi and members of the Moslem Brüderbund.

The former president said he had received information at the time from his intelligence chief on infiltration by gunnies from the Gazoo Strip to the country’s east during the Egyptian uprising six years ago that saw him ousted from power.

"General Omar Suleiman
... Now former Vice president of Egypt. From 1993 until his appointment to that office in 2011 he was Minister without Portfolio and Director of the Egyptian General Intelligence Directorate (EGID)...
informed me on January 29 (2011) that 800 armed bandidos turbans infiltrated through the border," he said, adding that fighters from Hamas, assisted by North Sinai residents, used underground tunnels to cross.

But Hamas said in a statement that it "strongly denies the claims made by Egypt’s ousted president Mohammed Hosni Mubarak during his testimony in court."

"Mubarak claimed that Hamas sent 800 members to Cairo in order to release Paleostinian, Egyptian, and Arab prisoners from the Egyptian jails," it said.

"While Hamas deplores some parties’ insistence to embroil the Paleostinian movement into Egypt’s internal affairs, it reiterates its commitment to its policy of not intervening in the internal affairs of other countries."

Mubarak was pushed out after three decades at the helm, during Arab Spring inspired protests that took over Egypt’s Tahrir Square in early 2011.

In March 2017, he was acquitted of charges of killing protesters, but he remains under investigation for alleged corruption.

Morsi ruled Egypt for just a year before mass protests spurred then army chief and now President Abdel Fattah el-Sissi to overthrow him in July 2013.
Link


Africa North
Mubarak's spy chief feared Jihadists' escape from prisons
2013-11-21
[ENGLISH.ALARABIYA.NET] The biggest fear of Hosni Mubarak
...The former President-for-Life of Egypt, dumped by popular demand in early 2011...
's regime prior to his ouster on Feb. 11, 2011 was the escape of dozens of Jihadists from Egyptian jails, late vice president Omar Suleiman
... Now former Vice president of Egypt. From 1993 until his appointment to that office in 2011 he was Minister without Portfolio and Director of the Egyptian General Intelligence Directorate (EGID)...
said in a recording released on Tuesday.

"Jihadis view the society as an infidel one. Their (escape) from prison is very dangerous. I am afraid of the jihadis who refused the initiative to halt violence," Suleiman said in the recording published by Egyptian news website Youm7.

The former intelligence chief is believed to have made the statement during a meeting in the presidential palace a few days after the deadly violence took place in Tahrir square. The violence was later known as the "Battle of the Camel" because camels were used by anti-revolution forces to attack protesters in Tahrir.

Suleiman, who died on July 2012 in a hospital in the United States, noted in the recording that jihadist prisoners were linked to foreign groups and particularly al-Qaeda and are "exploiting the revolution's youths to cause chaos and impoverish Egypt."

Mubarak's closest deputy was also reportedly saying that ousted President Mubarak was willing to respond to the protesters' demands at the time of the January 2011 uprisings.

"The youth's revolution has its advantages. But we (must not) forget our history. The word 'leave' does not (match) with people's morals," he said in reference to protesters' chant against Mubarakdemanding he leaves and exits power.

He also added during the January 2011 uprising "foreign parties were supporting the revolution to threaten the country's security."

Suleiman was also reportedly discussing amending Article 76 of the Egyptian constitution, which addresses presidential elections. He said there needs to be an amendment in which "the president remains for two terms and that would enable a real decentralization of power."

The intelligence chief also warned about holding early elections in the absence of security which could lead to "massacres."
Link


Africa North
Egypt's scapegoat for the Sinai attack
2012-08-12
Washington Post's David Ignatius:
In firing Egypt's chief of intelligence for his alleged failings in Sinai, President Mohamed Morsi sacked a general who has won high marks from U.S., Israeli and European intelligence officials -- and who, ironically, has been one of the Egyptians pushing for a crackdown on the growing militant presence in Sinai. [The] shuffle is bound to raise concerns among U.S. and Israeli officials about the security policies of Morsi's government and its seemingly mutual self-protection pact with the Egyptian generals who still hold considerable power through the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces, or SCAF. Morsi and the military appear to have concluded that the fired intelligence chief, Gen. Murad Muwafi, was a convenient scapegoat after the attack by terrorists in Sinai that left 16 Egyptian soldiers dead.

After that attack, the Egyptian military launched an armored assault in Sinai to "restore stability and regain control" in the lawless desert that had become a haven for Islamist militants. Ironically, it was Muwafi who had told a visitor two months ago that he favored an assault in Sinai by an Egyptian armored battalion that would include 30 tanks, eight helicopters and other equipment. Such a crackdown had also been urged by U.S. and Israeli officials, but the Egyptian military delayed major action until [August 8th], after the 16 soldiers were killed.

Muwafi looked the part of the traditional mukhabarat chief. U.S., Israeli and European officials intelligence officials saw him as one of the bright lights of the new government. Because of Muwafi's growing reputation with Western governments, some worried that he might position himself as another Gen. Omar Suleiman, the charismatic intelligence chief who was the closest adviser to President Hosni Mubarak and ran some of the country's harshest counterterrorism programs. But the ruling Muslim Brotherhood didn't appear to have that fear -- at least not until this week when Morsi and the military were looking for a fall guy for the Sinai debacle.

The Muwafi incident is just a blip on the broad radar of U.S.-Egyptian relations, and American officials generally think that the Morsi government is off to a good start. But the incident does show two things:

First, the situation in Sinai is dangerous and getting worse. U.S. intelligence believes that scores of jihadists have migrated into Sinai in recent months -- some from the tribal areas of Pakistan, some from Libya and some from Egyptian prisons. Among them are people a U.S. official describes as "al-Qaeda wannabes."

Second, the Egyptian military is preoccupied with buffing its image and fending off potential critics. In that exercise in self-preservation, the generals seem quite happy to work with Morsi and the Muslim Brothers -- as in the firing of Muwafi.
Link


Africa North
Omar Suleiman Dead at 76; Was Mubarak Security Chief
2012-07-19
Egypt's state news agency said Thursday that former spy chief and vice president Omar Suleiman has died in the United States at the age of 76.

Speaking to Reuters earlier, Suleiman's assistant said: "He was fine. It came suddenly while he was having medical tests in Cleveland," said the aide, Hussein Kamal, without giving a reason for Suleiman's death.
Acute cirrhosis?
Link


Africa North
Egypt PM denies businessmen, spy chief departure to escape Brotherhood rule
2012-06-24
[Al Ahram] Egypt's interim premier, Kamal El-Ganzouri, admonished journalists at a presser Saturday for "circulating rumours," strenuously denying recent media reports that prominent businessmen and governmental officials had fled Egypt out of fear the Moslem Brüderbund's presidential candidate, Mohamed Mursi, would assume power.
Some media reports said that former vice president and spy chief Omar Suleiman
... Now former Vice president of Egypt. From 1993 until his appointment to that office in 2011 he was Minister without Portfolio and Director of the Egyptian General Intelligence Directorate (EGID)...
had travelled to the United Arab Emirates with his family closely following him. Many conjectured that Suleiman, who has always been at loggerheads with the Brotherhood and other Islamist forces, decided to leave the country in case Mursi assumed power. The same suspicions were raised relative to unnamed businessmen.

When asked by a news hound to comment on these reports, El-Ganzouri described them as "lies," and called on journalists no to report unconfirmed news. "As citizens you should not repeat allegations that could harm the country," he stated in an angry tone.

During the presser, El-Ganzouri, whose previous tenure as premier was under Mubarak, reiterated that his government will be relieved of its duties 30 June as the new president, set to be announced Sunday, will form a new cabinet.

El-Ganzouri was appointed by the ruling Supreme Council of the Armed Forces (SCAF) in December 2011.
Link


Africa North
Five dead after attackers storm Cairo protest
2012-05-03
[Daily Nation (Kenya)] Five people were killed on Wednesday when attackers stormed an anti-military protest near the defence ministry headquarters in Cairo, medics and a security official said.

The dawn assault sparked fierce festivities between the unidentified attackers and the protesters, who have been there for days calling for an end to military rule, with both sides hurling petrol bombs and rocks, the official said.

A doctor at a field hospital set up in the area said five people had been killed and at least 50 injured.

The health ministry confirmed the toll, while Egyptian state television
... and if you can't believe state television who can you believe?
said the festivities were ongoing.

The protesters, supporters of Salafist politician Hazem Abu Ismail, have been camped out since Saturday after the electoral commission barred the popular hardline Islamist from contesting the upcoming presidential election.

On Sunday, one person was killed and 119 injured in festivities between Abu Ismail supporters and residents of the Abbassiya neighbourhood in Cairo, where the defence ministry is located.

Protests since the popular uprising that toppled president Hosni Mubarak
...The former President-for-Life of Egypt, dumped by popular demand in early 2011...
last year have often turned violent, with thugs working for the country's military leadership frequently blamed.

The electoral commission on April 14 barred 10 candidates, including the Moslem Brüderbund's Khairat El-Shater and the former president's intelligence chief Omar Suleiman
... Now former Vice president of Egypt. From 1993 until his appointment to that office in 2011 he was Minister without Portfolio and Director of the Egyptian General Intelligence Directorate (EGID)...
, from standing in the poll to choose Mubarak's successor.

Abu Ismail's nomination was rejected because his mother had taken joint US citizenship, but many of his supporters believe he was the victim of a "plot" by the authorities.

The first round of the presidential election is scheduled for May 23-24, and the interim military leadership has promised to hand power to an elected civilian president by the end of June.
Link


Africa North
Egypt army passes law banning ex-PM from vote
2012-04-25
CAIRO: Egypt’s ruling military has approved a law that bans top Hosni Mubarak-era officials from running for the presidency, excluding his last prime minister and further depleting a field reduced by the disqualifications of other front-runners.

A copy of the law published on the website of the state-run Al-Ahram newspaper said the legislation would take effect from Tuesday. It showed that the bill had been printed in the official gazette, confirming that the legislation drafted by the Islamist-dominated parliament had been approved by the military.

The law denies political rights to anyone who served as president, vice president or prime minister in the decade prior to Mubarak’s removal from power on Feb. 11, 2011. It further applies to anyone who served in top posts in the ruling party.

That means Ahmed Shafiq, appointed as prime minister by Mubarak in his last days in power, is out of the race. He had been seen as one of four remaining front-runners for the presidency of the Arab world’s most populous country.

The others are Mohamed Mursi, the Muslim Brotherhood’s candidate, Abdel Moneim Abol Fotouh, a former member of the Islamist group, and Amr Moussa, a former Arab League chief and an ex-foreign minister. The law exempts former ministers who were not prime minister, so will not affect Moussa’s candidacy.

Parliament approved the legislation earlier this month, an amendment to an existing law governing political rights, in response to a decision by Omar Suleiman, Mubarak’s former vice president and intelligence chief, to run for the presidency.

But Suleiman was disqualified a few days later for another reason: he failed to gather the required number of voter endorsements required to run.

The committee overseeing the vote also banned nine other contenders, including the Muslim Brotherhood’s first-choice candidate and a popular Islamist preacher.
Link


Africa North
Egypt Court 'Cannot Rule on Poll Ban for ex-Regime Leaders'
2012-04-22
[An Nahar] Egypt's constitutional court refused on Saturday to rule on a parliamentary draft bill barring former regime figures from standing in next month's presidential election, judicial sources said.

The court, asked by the ruling military to decide on the bill's legality, said it could only consider a law after it comes into effect, the sources said.

The military, in charge since an uprising ousted president Hosni Mubarak
...The former President-for-Life of Egypt, dumped by popular demand in early 2011...
last year, must first sign off on laws.

The Islamist-majority parliament hurriedly approved the bill on April 12 after Mubarak's vice president and spy chief Omar Suleiman
... Now former Vice president of Egypt. From 1993 until his appointment to that office in 2011 he was Minister without Portfolio and Director of the Egyptian General Intelligence Directorate (EGID)...
said he would run in the election.

Suleiman has since been disqualified, for not gathering enough endorsements from all the country's provinces, along with the Moslem Brüderbund's Khairat El-Shater, barred because of a previous military court conviction.

The provision, an amendment to the political activity law, excluded any president, vice president or leader of Mubarak's now dissolved ruling party from candidacy in the May 23 and May 24 election.

If ratified by the military it may disqualify Mubarak's last Prime Minister, Ahmed Shafiq, who is also a former air force chief.

But it would not exclude Jerry Lewis doppelgänger Amr Moussa
... who was head of the Arab League for approximately two normal lifespans, accomplishing nothing that was obvious to the casual observer ...
, a front runner who served as Mubarak's foreign minister until 2001 before heading the Arab League
...an organization of Arabic-speaking states with 22 member countries and four observers. The League tries to achieve Arab consensus on issues, which usually leaves them doing nothing but a bit of grimacing and mustache cursing...
. He faces the head of the Moslem Brüderbund's political arm, Mohammed Moursi.
Link


Africa North
Top Egypt Islamist Says Military Seeking to Keep Power
2012-04-19
[An Nahar] The powerful Moslem Brüderbund's Khairat al-Shater, barred from Egypt's first post-Arab Spring presidential election, accused the country's military rulers on Wednesday of seeking to stay in power and promised an anti-government protest.

He spoke after the electoral commission confirmed that 10 candidates had been barred from standing, rejecting challenges by him and another Islamist and the old regime's spy chief.

"The way the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces (SCAF) runs Egypt ... shows manipulation in the democratization process and a desire to prevent people from democratically electing their president," Shater told journalists.

He accused the SCAF of seeking "to extend the transitional period," which is scheduled to end in June after a president is elected.

"The SCAF wants to pull the strings of power from behind the scenes," said the wealthy businessman.

Shater said the Islamists would join a demonstration on Friday organized by the same movements that ousted long-time president Hosni Mubarak
...The former President-for-Life of Egypt, dumped by popular demand in early 2011...
last year.

He called on Egyptians to "protect the revolution," warning that plans for electoral fraud and vote-buying were under way.

He promised "to topple the remains of the Mubarak regime."

Shater also urged support for another Moslem Brüderbund candidate, Mohammed Morsi, chairman of the movement's Freedom and Justice Party.

On Tuesday, the electoral commission confirmed that 10 candidates had been barred from the May 23-24 presidential election, including Shater, Mubarak's ex-spy chief Omar Suleiman
... Now former Vice president of Egypt. From 1993 until his appointment to that office in 2011 he was Minister without Portfolio and Director of the Egyptian General Intelligence Directorate (EGID)...
and Salafist candidate Hazem Abu Ismail.

Shater, who was in jail last year on charges of terrorism and money laundering, was barred because of a law that those who have been freed from jail may only run for office six years later.

Vocally anti-American Abu Ismail is out of the race because his late mother held US nationality, violating electoral rules that candidates, their parents and their wives must have only Egyptian citizenship.

Among the candidates still able to run are former Arab League
...an organization of Arabic-speaking states with 22 member countries and four observers. The League tries to achieve Arab consensus on issues, which usually leaves them doing nothing but a bit of grimacing and mustache cursing...
chief Jerry Lewis doppelgänger Amr Moussa
... who has been head of the Arab League since about the time Jerry and Dean split up ...
and Abdelmoneim Abul Fotouh, a one-time member of the powerful Brotherhood.

"It's a very important decision because it eliminates the most controversial candidates," said Mustafa Kamel al-Sayyed, professor of political science at Cairo University.

It is expected that those who would have voted for Suleiman would support Moussa, and Islamists may back Abul Fotouh.

But with the only Salafist candidate out of the race, "there is fear of reactions from the Abu Ismail supporters, who are not very disciplined," said Sayyed.

Those supporters, many of whom believe the ban is a conspiracy against their candidate orchestrated by Egyptian authorities and backed by the United States, protested outside the electoral commission on Wednesday.

"There was a falsification of documents" to eliminate the candidate, said Osama Sami.

"And if there was fraud this time, then there is likely to be fraud during the presidential election," he charged.

The Salafists
...Salafists are ostentatiously devout Moslems who figure the ostentation of their piety gives them the right to tell others how to do it and to kill those who don't listen to them...
also vented their fury against the army council ruling Egypt.

"Down with the military! The Egyptian army is ours. The council does not represent us," they chanted.

Although expected in some quarters, the news of the decision threw the presidential campaign into turmoil as the fate of a new constitution remains hanging in limbo.

The latest developments in the presidential campaign further complicate the transition to democracy after the ouster of Mubarak.

Last week, a Cairo court suspended the Islamist-dominated commission tasked with drafting a new constitution amid a boycott by liberals, moderate Moslems and the Coptic church.

The panel, which is evenly divided between parliamentarians and public figures, was elected by the parliament. But most of its members were from the Moslem Brüderbund and Salafist fundamentalists who hold the majority in both houses of parliament.

The secular parties claimed their presence was only used as a smoke screen allowing the Islamists to draft a basic law reflecting their ideologies.

The prestigious Sunni Islamic institution, Al-Azhar, and the Coptic Orthodox Church of Egypt have also boycotted the panel.

Islamists believe the commission should reflect the composition of a parliament where the FJP holds nearly half the seats and the Salafist al-Nour party almost one quarter.

The secularists want a more balanced commission, fearing the Islamist grip would lead to the strengthening of a demand for Islamic Sharia law to be the point of reference for legislation.
Link


Africa North
Exit of Presidential Contenders Could Benefit Shafiq, Moussa According to Poll
2012-04-17
[Tripoli Post] A latest presidential election poll in Egypt shows that disqualification of Mubarak's former spy chief and vice president Omar Suleiman
... Now former Vice president of Egypt. From 1993 until his appointment to that office in 2011 he was Minister without Portfolio and Director of the Egyptian General Intelligence Directorate (EGID)...
could benefit Ahmed Shafiq and Jerry Lewis doppelgänger Amr Moussa
... who was head of the Arab League for about 400 dithering years ...
A presidential election poll published Sunday and reported by alahramonline has shown that the disqualification of Omar Suleiman, Mubarak's former vice president and intelligence chief, from the presidential race could benefit Amr Moussa and Ahmed Shafiq, both of whom also previously served in Mubarak's government.

The poll, carried out by the state-owned Al-Ahram Centre for Political and Strategic Studies, showed that Shafiq, Mubarak's last prime minister, was the second choice of 40.4 percent of voters who had been planning to vote for Suleiman before he was disqualified from the race Saturday by the Supreme Presidential Electoral Commission (SPEC) for allegedly failing to secure the required number of recommendations from the governorate of Assiut.

Amr Moussa, who served as foreign minister for ten years during Mubarak's reign, received the next highest approval percentage from Suleiman supporters, with 27.4 percent.

The poll was carried out on April 7-10 from a sample of 1200 Egyptians from all governorates except those on the borders. The border regions heavily supported Salafist candidates during recent parliamentary elections.
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