Syria-Lebanon-Iran |
Money transfer firms replace banks in crisis-hit Lebanon |
2022-09-05 |
[An Nahar] Like many people in crisis-hit Leb![]() , Elias Skaff used to wait for hours to withdraw cash at the bank but now prefers money transfer companies as trust in lenders has evaporated. Anyone who relies on traditional banks to receive their money "will die 100 times before cashing it," said Skaff, 50, who has survived Lebanon's three-year-old economic downturn with the help of U.S. dollar payments from a relative abroad. Once the flagship of Lebanon's economy, the banking sector is now widely despised and avoided after banks barred depositors from accessing their savings, stopped offering loans, closed hundreds of branches and slashed thousands of jobs. Last month, a local man was widely cheered as a folk hero after he stormed a Beirut bank with a rifle and held employees and customers hostage for hours to demand some of his $200,000 in frozen savings to pay hospital bills for his sick father. Increasingly, as Lebanon's deep crisis shows no sign of abating, money transfer agencies are filling the gap, also offering currency exchange, credit card and tax payment services and even setting up wedding gift registries. Skaff said he now receives his money via a Beirut branch of Western Union's Lebanese agent OMT, which says it operates more than 1,200 branches nationwide and handles 80 percent of money transfers outside the Lebanese banking sector. "We create services similar to those that banks provide at the request of our customers," said OMT front man Naji Abou Zeid. Lebanon has been battered by its worst-ever economic crisis since the financial sector went into meltdown in 2019. The local currency has lost more than 90 percent of its value on the black market, as poverty and unemployment have soared. Angry protesters have often targeted banks, trashing their ATM machines with rocks and spray cans. "We can't even withdraw a penny" from the bank, said 45-year-old Alaa Sheikhani, a customer standing in line at an OMT branch. "How are we supposed to trust them with our money?" |
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Africa North |
French army says senior Al-Qaeda leader killed in Mali |
2022-03-08 |
![]() La Belle France's army said Monday that its anti-jihadist force in Mali had killed Yahia Djouadi, a "big shot" of al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM) responsible for finance and logistics. Djouadi, an Algerian also known as Abu Ammar al-Jazairi, was killed overnight from February 25 to 26 around (160 kilometres (100 miles) north of Timbuktu in central Mali, the army said in a statement. His death "once again weakens al-Qaeda's governance" in Mali, it added, calling him "a major link in northern Mali and especially the Timbuktu area" to the Qaeda-aligned GSIM group. A former "emir" of al-Qaeda's Libyan operations, Djouadi fled to Mali in 2019 and settled in the Timbuktu region, helping organise the group and coordinating supplies, financing and logistics, the army said. It added that he was killed by ground forces supported by a Tiger attack helicopter and two drones. La Belle France is preparing to redeploy some 2,400 troops away from Mali to other countries in the Sahel region ... North Africa's answer to the Pak tribal areas... facing cross-border jihadist insurgencies, after falling out with the military junta in Bamako. While the pullout is set to stretch over six months, the army said that "operations continue against armed terrorist groups, especially against the top leaders of al-Qaeda, GSIM and the Islamic State in the Greater Sahara ![]() ...The country in west Africa that they put where Upper Volta used to be. Its capital is Oogadooga, or something like that. Its president is currently Blaise Compaoré, who took office in 1987 and will leave office feet first, one way or the other... , Niger, and Mali... (ISGS) group." French forces first intervened in Mali in 2013, but disputes between Gay Paree and Bamako since a 2020 coup have prompted the military government to turn to other allies like Russia's Wagner paramilitary group. Even with international allies on the ground, the Malian state has struggled to reassert control of territory from the jihadist insurgency that began in the country's north in 2012 and has since spread to neighbouring Niger and Burkina Faso. The fighting has claimed thousands of lives and forced hundreds of thousands of people to flee their homes. La Belle France has said forces from its Operation Barkhane contingent killed a senior regional al-Qaeda leader in an overnight raid near Timbuktu last week. Meanwhile, ...back at the shootout, Butch clutched at his other leg...... two UN peacekeepers have died in an explosive attack. On Monday, two members of the UN's Multidimensional Integrated Stabilization Mission in Mali (MINUSMA) force were killed in a roadside kaboom when the vehicle they were traveling in hit an improvised bomb. "This morning, a supply convoy ... struck an improvised bomb north of Mopti," MINUSMA front man Olivier Salgado wrote on Twitter. Four other peacekeepers were maimed in the attack. The nationalities of those killed and injured in the attack were not immediately released. FUTURE OF UN PEACEKEEPING MISSION IN DOUBT Western nations participating in the international mission have said the shifting situation on the ground may in fact compromise the 13,000-strong contingent, the annual mandate of which must be renewed this June. As with the French deployment to Mali, UN troops have been on the ground in the Sahel since 2013 in an effort to halt the advance of Islamic fighters who began seriously challenging governments and civilians in the region in 2012. MINUSMA troops have been heavily dependent upon French air and medical support throughout their mission. La Belle France's withdrawal from Mali, as well as the recent coup, has caused contributing nations such as Germany, Sweden and Denmark to rethink their commitment to it. Related: Yahia Djouadi: 2013-06-17 Qaida N. Africa Branch Confirms Death in Mali of Leader Abou Zeid Yahia Djouadi: 2012-02-20 AQIM emir believed dead in ANP airstrike Yahia Djouadi: 2012-01-30 AQIM replaces Sahara emir Related: Operation Barkhane: 2022-02-13 French forces 'neutralize' 40 militants in Burkina Faso Operation Barkhane: 2021-10-22 French Army Kills Senior al-Qaeda Member, 4 Other Terrorists, in Mali Airstrike Operation Barkhane: 2021-09-16 French soldiers kill Islamic State leader in Western Sahara, Macron says |
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Africa North |
Algeria bill targets terror financing |
2015-01-22 |
[MAGHAREBIA] In anticipation of possible attacks on the second anniversary of the Tiguentourine gas plant siege, Algerian troops stepped up security on the southern border. Authorities announced last week the foiling of a series of terrorist operations targeting three areas of oil and gas installations in the south. Army forces already succeeded in dismantling a 12-member terrorist cell that was planning attacks against vital facilities in conjunction with the January 16th anniversary of the In Amenas assault. The group is charged with involvement in terrorist attacks in southern Algeria in 2010, drug trafficking and financing terrorism. Abou Zeid (real name Mohammed Ghadir) was killed in northern Mali in 2013. |
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran |
At Least Two Troops Killed in Hermel Army Checkpoint Blast |
2014-02-23 |
[An Nahar] Two troops were killed on Saturday and several others were maimed in a massive suicide car kaboom at an army checkpoint in the Bekaa town of Hermel. The attack was claimed by Al-Nusra Front in Leb. The suicide car blast destroyed the checkpoint which lies at the entrance of Hermel, and at which cars are routinely stopped and searched by army troops. "A suicide kaboom ![]() "The blast killed two troops, among them an army officer, and maimed five others while other 10 civilians were also lightly injured in the bombing." "One victim's body and 14 maimed were transferred to three hospitals in the region," the news agency said. The NNA identified one injured civilian as Mohammed Dib Ayyoub. Meanwhile, ...back at the the conspirators' cleverly concealed hideout Montefiore's foot was still stuck and the hound had completely soaked his uniform with slobber... al-Jadeen television and al-Mayadeen channel both said three people were killed in the bombing. Military sources told LBCI television that among the maimed were three army recruits and two civilians. "The maimed recruits are Imad Mahmoud Abou Zeid, Hassan Ali Jaafar and Elie Shhade Rizk while the civilians are Khodr Abu Bakr and his wife Rita." Minister of Public Health Wael Abou Faour urged all hospitals in the region to admit those that were maimed in the blast. The NNA provided details on the moment of the kaboom: "When army troops asked the driver to turn the lights on inside the car, he refused to do so and then detonated the vehicle." Media reports also said the checkpoint was not the target. "The attacker was entering Hermel and when army forces at the checkpoint suspected him, he detonated the booby-trapped car," LBCI said. LBCI noted that the checkpoint where the car went kaboom!belongs to the border regiment whose mission is deploying troops on the Lebanese-Syrian border. "Obtained information said two booby-trapped cars were located at the entrance of Hermel, and one of them only went kaboom!at the checkpoint," al-Mayadeen said. In the evening, the army released a statement detailing on Saturday's developments. "At 7:00pm a four-wheeled vehicle driven by a jacket wallah detonated at an army checkpoint, killing and wounding several troops and civilians," the released communique said. The statement noted that the attacker blew himself inside the car when army forces tried to stop him after finding him suspicious. It considered that Saturday's operation requires embracing the military institution. "We will never stop facing anyone trying to harm Leb and we'll work to dismantle terrorist networks and prosecute runaways regardless of the sacrifices to be offered," the statement stressed. "Once again, the army is paying in blood the price of fighting terrorism and attempting to safeguard civil peace in the country. The military institution has warned months ago of what is being planned for Leb and we have intensified our campaigns to arrest planners and executors of these terrorist acts." "We have announced our readiness to confront terrorism that aims at creating chaos and inciting sedition in Leb." Late on Saturday evening, Al-Nusra Front in Leb grabbed credit for the attack. "In a blessed martyrdom (suicide) operation, the Hermel area was struck on Saturday," the Al-Nusra Front in Leb said on Twitter hours after the blast. It also posted photographs of children with amputated limbs, under the headline: "The crimes of the party of Iran (Hizbullah ... Party of God, a Leb militia inspired, founded, funded and directed by Iran. Hizbullah refers to itself as The Resistanceand purports to defend Leb against Israel, with whom it has started and lost one disastrous war to date, though it did claim victory... ) in Syria". Following the blast, the municipality of the Bekaa town urged citizens to stay away from the site of the kaboom. Also, State Commissioner to the Military Court Judge Saqr Saqr tasked police forces with cordoning off the site of the kaboom and gather all found information and clues about the car and the bomber, according to the NNA. "He also tasked forensic doctors with collecting humans remains and carry out the necessary DNA testing," the NNA added. Hermel, in the Bekaa Valley where Hizbullah has a strong presence, has seen multiple attacks in recent months related to the war raging in neighboring Syria. Until Saturday, the attacks had all killed civilians. |
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Africa North |
AQIM replaces dead emirs |
2013-09-25 |
[MAGHAREBIA] Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM) appointed a Mauritanian and an Algerian to replace its slain chiefs, ANI reported on Monday (September 23rd), citing a source from northern Mali. Algerian national Said Abou Moughatil replaces Abdelhamid Abou Zeid as head of the Tariq Ibn Ziyad katibat. As field commander of the terror group's Sahara emirate, Abou Zeid (real name Mohamed Ghadir) was responsible for beheading British hostage Edwin Dyer in 2009 and 78-year-old Frenchie Michel Germaneau in 2010. A Mauritanian citizen known as Abderrahmane (alias "Talha") takes over the Al Vourghan brigade. He replaces Mohamed Lemine Ould Hassen (also known as Abdallah Al Chinguetti), who was killed during the military intervention in Mali. "Talha" reportedly joined AQIM in 2006. He was part of the group that controlled Timbuktu last year before being ousted by the French and African forces. |
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Africa North | ||||||
Mokhtar turns to propaganda to boost image | ||||||
2013-09-04 | ||||||
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The MUJAO and al-Mua'qi'oon Biddam -- Laaouar's group -- grabbed credit for the Niger violence, saying the actions were to avenge the February killing of Al-Qaeda brigade commander terrorist Abdelhamid Abou Zeid by international forces in Mali. Laaouar appears on the tape training fighters for the Niger attacks, dubbed "Sheikh Abdelhamid Abou Zeid's conquest". The video includes photos of Abou Zeid with Belmokhtar, to emphasise their accord. Going at it alone has not proven successful for the one-eyed terrorist. The ousted al-Qaeda brigade leader last month joined forces with Mali-based terror group Movement of Oneness and Jihad in West Africa (MUJAO) to create the "Mourabitounes".
The video shows training and preparations for the 2013 siege at Algeria's In Amenas gas plant, which left dozens of civilian hostages dead. The January attack was a joint operation by the MUJAO and Laaouar's katibat. The tape also features clips of the gunnies in action in northern Mali last year. Laaouar's "Brigade of the Veiled Ones" and their MUJAO allies are seen engaged in bloody festivities in Gao against the National Movement for the Liberation of Azawad (MNLA).
"This latest media production is an attempt by this group to show that it still has the strength and the gear to continue the fight in the Sahel," filmmaker Zine El Abidine Ould Bukhari told Magharebia. ![]()
According to Sahara Media Editor Bashir Ould Babana, Belmokhtar was weakened and his forces divided. "Therefore Laaouar is seeking to reunite the remaining pieces and trying to rebuild an organization through publicity campaigns and buying weapons," Babana said. To that end, the terrorist is now in Libya, Mosaique FM reported on Friday. "Laaouar, who has a network of positive relations with some of the leaders of terrorist organizations in Libya, was accompanied on his trip by Iyad Ag Ghaly, leader of Ansar al-Din," the Tunisian radio station reported. Laaouar is in Libya looking for weapons, unnamed security sources reportedly told the radio station, in order to conduct terrorist attacks in Tunisia and Algeria. | ||||||
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Africa North |
Belmokhtar, MUJAO launch new jihadist group |
2013-08-27 |
[MAGHAREBIA] The al-Qaeda splinter group led by Mokhtar Belmokhtar and the Movement for Tawhid and Jihad in West Africa (MUJAO) joined forces this week. The El Moulethemoune katibat ("Brigade of the Veiled Ones") and fellow al-Qaeda breakaway group MUJAO "decided to unite in a single movement called the 'Mourabitounes' to achieve the unity of Musselmens, from the Nile to the Atlantic", the jihadist organizations said in a statement to Mauritanian daily ANI on Wednesday (August 21st). MUJAO and the brigade led by Belmokhtar (aka "Laaouar") said they had agreed to cede command to a new leader. According to ANI, the unnamed jihadist fought in Afghanistan before arriving in Mali. "We reaffirm our devotion and our loyalty to Sheikh Ayman al- ![]() ... Formerly second in command of al-Qaeda, now the head cheese, occasionally described as the real brains of the outfit.Formerly the Mister Big of Egyptian Islamic Jihad. Bumped off Abdullah Azzam with a car boom in the course of one of their little disputes. Is thought to have composed bin Laden's fatwa entitled World Islamic Front Against Jews and Crusaders. Currently residing in the North Wazoo area. That is not a horn growing from the middle of his forehead, but a prayer bump, attesting to how devout he is... and reiterate our commitment to the jihadist doctrine conceived by the martyr the late Osama bin Laden ... who is no longer with us, and won't be again... ," the statement read, adding that the group drew "its inspiration from al-Qaeda and Taliban". The new entity also threatened in its joint statement to target French interests worldwide. In a statement reported by ANI, MUJAO explained that the merger was based on the principle that "unity is strength". But according to local experts, the alliance is a sign of the terror groups' growing weakness and internal splits rather than strength. "Following the French intervention in Mali, nothing will ever be the same again. The splits within AQIM and the other groups operating in the Sahel-Sahara region were already obvious," analyst Abdou Ould Mohamed told Magharebia. "The dismissal of Belmokhtar by Abou Moussab Abdelwadoud [Abdelmalik Droukdel ... aka Abdel Wadoud, was a regional leader of the GSPC for several years before becoming the group's supremo in 2004 following the death of then-leader Nabil Sahraoui. Under Abdel Wadoud's leadership the GSPC has sought to develop itself from a largely domestic entity into a larger player on the international terror stage. In September 2006 it was announced that the GSPC had joined forces with al-Qaeda and in January 2007 the group officially changed its name to the Al-Qaeda Organization in the Islamic Maghreb.... ] brought these disagreements to light. Within these groups, it's often the law of the jungle that prevails." AQIM is "now split along two fault lines", according to former French Ambassador to Senegal ... a nation of about 14 million on the west coast of Africa bordering Mauretania to the north, Mali to the east, and a pair of Guineas to the south, one of them Bissau. It is 90 percent Mohammedan and has more than 80 political parties. Its primary purpose seems to be absorbing refugees... Jean-Christophe Rufin. "The first is between its leadership, which has remained in the north in the Algerian scrubland around the emir Abdelmalik Droukdel, and the Sahel brigades in the south, which are not only far away from their leadership but also far away from each other," he told Le Figaro. "These phalanxes have become bigger thanks to their hostage-taking and the vast desert area, which has enabled them to come into contact with all kinds of terrorist and mafia groups. As a result, the leadership of AQIM is having difficulty controlling its troops from the mountains," Rubin added. According to Tahalil editor and terrorist expert Isselmou Ould Moustapha, the merger could have multiple implications for the future of terror groups in the Sahel. The 'Mourabitounes' may try to "supplant AQIM in the Sahel-Saharan region, where it suffered a loss in Mali in terms of capabilities as well as its main leaders such as Abou Zeid", he explained. "The survivors have returned to Algeria, the south of Tunisia and Libya." "The merger is partial because it was not signed by the other groups (or what remains of them) including 'Signed in Blood', a battalion of Belmokhtar virtually decimated in In Amenas (January 2013) and other phalanges of MUJAO, such as the Salahedine Brigade and Ousmane Dane Fodio Brigade," the analyst noted. "The two groups thrown out of Mali and greatly weakened by air strikes and near-suicidal operations seek to restore their capability of supporting an operational tempo that has much abated in recent months in terms of attacks and operations. They do not even have the potential for taking hostages, their main source of income. Yet money is the sinew of war!" Ould Moustapha concluded. Belmokhtar (aka Khaled Abou El Abass) orchestrated the siege at an Algerian natural gas plant near In Amenas, killing dozens of civilians. Belmokhtar's splinter group also claimed credit for a twin bombing that left at least twenty Nigeriens dead last May. |
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran |
Muslim Ulemas Regain Sidon's Bilal bin Rabah Mosque |
2013-06-30 |
[An Nahar] A delegation of Mohammedan Ulemas, headed by Sidon Mufti Sheikh Salim Sousan, regained on Saturday control of the southern city's Bilal bin Rabah mosque. The delegation toured the complex that was damaged in the festivities between the army and the mosque's Imam Salafist holy man Sheikh Ahmed al-Asir on Sunday and Monday. Sousan said: "This mosque taught the people peace and stability. It will once again regain its role in the Mohammedan community." "The army and the rest of the city's officials will cooperate in order to restore order and normal life in Sidon," he stressed. Asked by news hounds about the discovery of weapons at the mosque, the mufti replied: "We oppose the illegitimate arms and support the army. We demand a society of law and order." Asked about the people's anger about the festivities, he responded: "Aren't they entitled to be angry given the destruction in their city?" "Israel is our only enemy," declared Sousan. Commenting on the arrests made in the aftermath of the festivities, he said: "Some of the suspects may be innocent and others may be guilty. I predict that several of them will be released in the upcoming days." "The fact that someone is religious does not make them a terrorist," he emphasized. He then announced that the mosque will be reopened in the future and that Sheikh Mohammed Abou Zeid will become its new imam. Eighteen soldiers were killed and 50 were maimed in festivities between the army and armed supporters of al-Asir in Sidon on Sunday and Monday. Meanwhile, ...back at the dirigible, Cynthia backed into the galley, the barbecue fork held in front of her. Jack!she called. Where the hell are you?... State Commissioner to the Military Court Judge Saqr Saqr, who is overseeing the Lebanese Army Intelligence's investigation with the incarcerated Drop the heater, Studs, or you're hist'try! suspects, acquitted 29 placed in durance vile Maw! They're comin' to get me, Maw! men on Saturday and handed over the apartment of al-Asir to its owners. By this, the number of acquitted detainees has reached 101, while 40 are still in jail. More than 20 of al-Asir's supporters were killed, according to a security official. Dozens of them were also arrested, but there was no sign of the holy man. The Ulemas accused on Wednesday Hizbullah fighters of taking part in the battles alongside the army, despite assertions by various officials that the army acted alone in combating the gunnies. The army on Thursday handed over a group of soldiers accused of abusing a detainee to the military police for questioning, a military source and the state-run National News Agency said. The move came after amateur video emerged showing a group of soldiers humiliating, beating and kicking a man suspected of supporting al-Asir. |
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Terror Networks |
Al-Qaida Group Confirms Death Of Abou Zeid |
2013-06-17 |
![]() The death of Abou Zeid, who made millions of dollars kidnapping Western hostages over the past decade, had already been announced "with certainty" by La Belle France in March after festivities with its troops in northern Mali. AQIM, however, had not until now officially confirmed the death of Abou Zeid, the leader of one of its southern brigades and a trusted lieutenant to the group's elusive leader, Abdelmalik Droukdel ... aka Abdel Wadoud, was a regional leader of the GSPC for several years before becoming the group's supremo in 2004 following the death of then-leader Nabil Sahraoui. Under Abdel Wadoud's leadership the GSPC has sought to develop itself from a largely domestic entity into a larger player on the international terror stage. In September 2006 it was announced that the GSPC had joined forces with al-Qaeda and in January 2007 the group officially changed its name to the Al-Qaeda Organization in the Islamic Maghreb..... |
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Africa North |
Qaida N. Africa Branch Confirms Death in Mali of Leader Abou Zeid |
2013-06-17 |
![]() Algerian-born Abou Zeid, considered one of the most radical leaders of al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM), was killed "on the battlefield defending Umma (the Mohammedan community) and sharia law," according to a statement carried by the private Mauritanian news agency ANI. It gave no date for his death. Gay Paree had announced in March that Abou Zeid was killed in fighting with its forces after La Belle France led an offensive to rout al-Qaeda-linked Islamist groups from northern Mali. Both La Belle France and Chad, whose troops were also involved in the offensive, said the 46-year-old bully boy was killed at the end of February. "It is the first time that an AQIM statement has officially referred to the death of Abou Zeid," said ANI director Mohamed Mahmoud Ould Abou al-Maali, a specialist on the Islamist group. In March however, Algerian television said that al-Qaeda had named a replacement for Abou Zeid, Algerian national Djamel Okacha. Abou Zeid had a reputation as a severe, aloof character with an unflinching capacity for violence when required. Born in Debdeb in Algeria, close to the border with Libya, Abou Zeid was a young activist in the FIS Islamist movement that won the country's first democratic elections in 1991 but was denied power. He then disappeared underground for most of the 1990s. He re-emerged spectacularly in 2003 as second in command of the GSPC group which kidnapped dozens of foreigners in southern Algeria, and that would later, along with several other organizations, evolve into AQIM. Latterly, Abou Zeid -- whose real name was Mohamed Ghdir according to Algerian court documents -- was considered a deputy to AQIM's "Saharan emir" Yahia Djouadi and commanded a katiba, or battalion, of fighters from Mauritania, Algeria and Mali known as Tareq ibn Ziyad, named after an eighth-century Mohammedan military commander. |
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Africa North |
Jihadist Belmokhtar "supervised" Niger bombings: spokesman |
2013-05-24 |
![]() "It was Belmokhtar who himself supervised the operational plans of attacks" on the Agadez army base and a French-run uranium mine, El-Hassen Ould Khalil, spokesman for Belmokhtar's "Signatories in Blood" group, was quoted as saying. He said the near-simultaneous bombings "targeted elite French forces" who were providing security at the uranium mine in northern Arlit that is majority-owned by France's Areva. "More than 10 fighters took part in these attacks," the spokesman told the online press agency, adding that they were jointly led with the Movement for Oneness and Jihad in West Africa. MUJAO, one of the extremist groups that seized control of northern Mali last year before being driven out by French-led troops, had earlier claimed the bombings. "Thanks to Allah, we have carried out two operations against the enemies of Islam in Niger," MUJAO spokesman Abu Walid Sahraoui told AFP. The "Signatories in Blood" spokesman, who also goes by the alias "Julaibib," said the deadly operations were carried out in the name of top Al-Qaeda operative Abou Zeid, killed in fighting led by the French army in the Ifoghas mountains in northern Mali in late February. Belmokhtar, a former leader of Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb, left that group late last year to create "Signatories in Blood." |
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Africa North |
Tunisian Salafist Held after Defending Jihad on TV |
2013-04-04 |
[An Nahar] A Tunisian Salafist who fought in Syria was tossed in the clinkYouse'll never take me alive coppers!... [BANG!]... Ow!... I quit! on Wednesday after defending jihad, or Islamic holy war, in a television broadcast, a justice ministry source said. Abou Zeid Ettounsi was incarcerated Drop the heater, Studs, or you're hist'try! under an arrest warrant issued by the public prosecutor after appearing on a private Tunisian TV channel, which questioned him about Tunisians taking part in the Syrian conflict, the source added. During the program, Ettounsi sparked controversy by admitting having killed several people in the war-ravaged country and saying he was ready to wage jihad in Tunisia if such a fatwa, or religious edict, were issued. The justice ministry said the public prosecutor launched an inquiry into Ettounsi based on statements supplied by Tunisia's anti-terrorist squad. The judiciary opened an investigation in mid-March into a network recruiting and sending Tunisians to fight Syrian ![]() Pencilneckal-Assad Despoiler of Deraa... 's forces alongside Islamist jihad boys. The media has accused mosques of playing a key role, saying some imams urge young Tunisians to go to Syria. Some civil activists and secular opposition parties have also accused the ruling Ennahda party of failing to rein in Tunisia's radical Moslems, but the moderate Islamist party insists it firmly opposes armed jihad. No official numbers have been given on Tunisians fighting in Syria, but jihadist websites say dozens have been killed during the two-year conflict. Tunisia's government has warned in recent months of jihadist groups linked to al-Qaeda's north African franchise infiltrating the country's borders and trafficking weapons, notably to northern Mali. |
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