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Former Michigan Army National Guard member charged with plotting mass shooting at Army base on behalf of ISIS | ||||
2025-05-15 | ||||
A former Michigan Army National Guard member was arrested for allegedly planning a mass shooting at a military base on behalf of the Islamic State terrorist group, the Justice Department announced Wednesday. Ammar Abdulmajid-Mohamed Said, 19, was taken into custody Tuesday after he traveled to an area near the U.S. Army’s Tank-Automotive & Armaments Command (TACOM) facility at the Detroit Arsenal in Warren, Michigan, and "launched his drone in support of the attack plan," officials said. "I recommend everyone have about seven magazines because you don’t want to be in there and run out of ammo," Said allegedly told an undercover FBI agent in the leadup to the foiled plot, according to a criminal complaint. Said is now facing charges of attempting to provide material support to a foreign terrorist organization and distributing information related to a destructive device. He faces a maximum penalty of 20 years per count if convicted. "This defendant is charged with planning a deadly attack on a U.S. military base here at home for ISIS," Sue J. Bai, head of the Justice Department’s National Security Division, said in a statement. "Thanks to the tireless efforts of law enforcement, we foiled the attack before lives were lost. We will not hesitate to bring the full force of the Department to find and prosecute those who seek to harm our men and women in the military and to protect all Americans." The Justice Department said that in April, "two undercover officers indicated they intended to carry out Said’s plan at the direction of ISIS" and "in response, Said provided material assistance to the attack plan, including providing armor-piercing ammunition
The criminal complaint stated that around June 2024, Said started communicating with an undercover FBI agent whom he had thought was a fellow ISIS supporter. "During the course of their interactions, which were audio- and/or video-recorded, Said described his longstanding desire to engage in violent jihad, either by traveling to ISIS-held territory abroad or by carrying out an attack in the United States," the complaint said. "On July 18, 2024, FBI agents executed a search warrant for Said’s iPhone by performing a covert search of that device... when SAID provided it to personnel with the Michigan Army National Guard prior to boarding a military aircraft. During that search, FBI agents identified a Facebook message exchange (in Arabic) that took place on or about October 5, 2023, between Said and another Facebook user located in the Palestinian territories," the complaint continued.
The complaint noted that Said enlisted in the Michigan Army National Guard in September 2022 and attended basic training at Fort Moore in Georgia. He later reported to the Michigan Army National Guard Taylor Armory before being discharged around December 2024. The FBI’s Joint Terrorism Task Force is leading the investigation into the case.
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Africa North | |
EgyptAir pilot told colleagues he was 'ready to die'; Brother calls him a martyr.' | |
2016-05-22 | |
[Right Scoop] Investigators are trying to unravel why the plane went down into the Mediterranean Sea. Is it terrorism? Is it a Muslim suicide pilot? We don’t know for sure yet, but the Muslim pilot of EgyptAir flight 804, Mohamed Said Shakeer, is looking very suspicious! The pilot’s own brother told El Watan News that Shakeer called him before the flight and asked him to pray for him. Not only that, but his brother is calling him a martyr for Islam. Caps removed, still appears viable. Steve White's posting from today appears to rule out suicide.
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Israel-Palestine-Jordan |
Jordan Arrests Brotherhood Leader For Incitement |
2014-09-17 |
[IsraelTimes] Jordan arrested a senior member of the country's Muslim Brotherhood Tuesday on charges of "incitement" against the authorities, a judicial source said, as the group's political wing demanded his release. Mohamed Said Bakr, a member of the Brotherhood's consultative council, was detained for 15 days by prosecutors after criticizing the government at an event marking the end of the conflict in Gaza, the source said. The Jordanian Brotherhood's political wing, the Islamic Action Front, condemned the arrest. "It is unacceptable that clerics and activists should be arrested on the basis of positions they expressed," said IAF Secretary General Mohamed al-Zayoud on the party's website. Zayoud called for the "immediate release" of Bakr, saying that "stable regimes would not be threatened by a speech given at a festival or expressing an opinion." The Hamas movement that dominates the Gaza Strip is officially a branch of the Brotherhood. At the event in Amman on Friday, Bakr used insulting terms to describe Jordan's leaders, and accused the government of being "subject to the United States." He also congratulated Gazans for their "victory" against Israel and said he was "waiting for and hoping to celebrate the victory of Jordan and the victory of Jordanian men and the victory of the Jordanian army, while we are on the longest frontlines" with Israel. Formed in Egypt in 1928, branches of the Muslim Brotherhood appeared across the region in the following years. The Jordanian movement is tolerated by the authorities and has wide grassroots support. |
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Africa North |
Former Brotherhood MP Farid Ismail given seven years in jail |
2014-07-16 |
[Al Ahram] Zagazig's criminal court has given seven year prison sentences to former member of parliament and Muslim Brotherhood leader Farid Ismail along with 10 other supporters of ousted Islamist president Mohamed Morsi . Ismail and the other 10 defendants faced charges of inciting violence after the ouster of Morsi last July. The Zagazig court also sentenced Morsi's nephew, Mohamed Said, to five years in jail in a separate case on charges of inciting violence against police and military forces. Ismail was an MP in the former People's Assembly (lower house of parliament) and was later appointed a member of the Shura Council. He was also member of the Constituent Assembly that drafted the 2012 constitution which was amended and then passed through a referendum in January of this year. |
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Africa Horn |
New lead in Nairobi bus blasts |
2014-05-05 |
Outrage is growing after suspected terrorists targeted two public service vehicles, this time in the capital city Nairobi. The 5.30pm twin blasts on the Thika Superhighway left at least two dead and dozens injured, at least three had their legs severed. Women and children were among the casualties in the latest campaign of terror. It came as police revealed that the terror suspects behind a similar attack on a bus in Mombasa on Saturday had been arrested and released by the courts. The two, Mr Suleiman Mohamed Said and Mr Jamal Mohamed Awadh, were in the Masjid Musa when police raided it in February to flush out radicalised youth who were attending a banned seminar on Islamic jihad. In the Nairobi attacks, Deputy head of bomb disposal Eliud Lagat said improvised explosive devices (IEDs) were used to maim passengersin the two 60-seater buses. Police spokesperson Zipporah Mboroki added that preliminary investigations indicated the IEDs had been planted in the buses. One was headed to Githurai from the city centre and the other to Mwiki. In the first explosion, which occurred at Roasters, the impact of the blast tore off the right side of the bus and shattered all the windows. Minutes later, the second explosion rocked the Mwikiâbound bus on the underpass near the Thika Road Mall. Mboroki said seven passengers suffered serious injuries and morethan 30 others had multiple injuries. The injured were rushed to Kenyatta National Hospital (KNH), St Maryâs and Neema hospital in Kasarani. |
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Africa Horn | ||
Suspected terrorists sent back to Belgium | ||
2014-03-15 | ||
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The two admitted being in the country illegally before a Mombasa court and were imprisoned to one year. Two other Kenyans, Hussein Omar and Ahmed Omar, who were hosting the three denied terrorism charges. In a letter produced in court written to the Director of Public Prosecutions, Keriako Tobiko, Anti-Terrorism Police Unit boss Njeru Mwaniki said the three who were arrested on July 4, 2013 confessed that they were in the country illegally. He said during interrogation, they were found to be illegally present in Kenya and confessed to have come from Somalia. | ||
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Africa North |
Pro-Morsi protester dies after being shot by opposition: FJP |
2013-06-23 |
![]() The FJP said in a statement that Mohamed Said El-Shalakany, 35, was shot by "thugs" of the National Salvation Front (NSF), the main opposition umbrella group, and proponents of the anti-Mohamed Morsi Rebel campaign during a rally supporting the president on 16 June. "The party condemns that criminal act, and offers its condolences to the martyr's family. His blood will be a curse on those who incite violence," the FJP added. Ahmed Ibrahim Bayoumi, a member of the Moslem Brüderbund higher board, stated on 17 June that the Fayoum festivities involving the supporters and opponents of Morsi were instigated by "remnants" of the former regime and not by anti-government 'Rebel' campaigners. El-Shalakany, a father of four, was a tourism worker. He was a member of the hard-line Islamist Gamaa Islamiya group, according to the Brotherhood's satellite channel. |
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Africa North | |
Algeria Hostage Crisis: Al Qaeda Had Help From Inside Claim Security Sources | |
2013-01-21 | |
![]() One of those involved in the "inside job" was of French nationality, the sources told the Daily Telegraph, in what appears to be a blow to those in charge of safety at the highly strategic In Amenas plant, which accounts for 12 per cent of Algeria's gas production. The unnamed French accomplice is said to have changed sides once his comrades in arms had broken into the desert site in southeastern Algeria after attacking bus at a false checkpoint. He then took part in the kidnapping operation before being killed during the Algerian army assault on the site. Some gun-hung tough guys are reported to have known internal procedures at the plant as well as the room numbers of expatriates. Gendarmes are understood to have opened an investigation into four other workers who survived the attack on suspicion of helping the kidnappers enter the tightly-guarded facility, the sources said, without providing further details. "One gave himself up after running out of munitions, while two more were picked up by Algerian special forces after being injured," one local security source told The Daily Telegraph. With the military operation over, forensic scientists from Algeria's national gendarmerie arrived yesterday to begin the macabre task of identifying the bodies. Civil protection workers said they had spent Sunday retrieving a gruesome list of body parts -- "fingers, hands, feet, legs" -- as they sought to piece together who had been killed in a deadly mix of machine gunfire, terrorist kabooms and helicopter gunship attacks. Security services said 25 further bodies were recovered yesterday, with differing reports over how many were hostages. Citing security sources, Anis Rahmani of private television channel Ennahar said all 25 were captives, but The Daily Telegraph was told that 15 of their number were cut-thoats. Either way, Algerian communications minister Mohamed Said made it clear that earlier provisional figures for the number of dead -- 23 hostages and 32 kidnappers -- would likely have to be "revised upward". A civil protection source said that the overall corpse count, including kidnappers and hostages was between 55 and 60, with roughly half foreign hostages. Last night, bomb squads were still combing the area for bombs, with the army saying the kidnappers had placed mines beneath the sand around the factory to hinder the army's advance, but also inside the plant. Sonatrach, the Algerian state oil company running the Ain Amenas site along with BP and Norway's Statoil, confirmed the entire refinery had been mined. "They had decided to succeed in the operation as planned, to blow up the gas complex and kill all the hostages," said communications minister Mohamed Said. The revelation though of the possibility of an 'inside job" follows expressions of surprise by security experts at the apparent ease with which the gun-hung tough guys loyal to Mokhtar Belmokhtar, the one-eyed Islamist who formed his own brigade, the "Signatories in Blood", penetrated the plant.
"These installations are highly protected. The operation must have been prepared over quite some time. Either there was a slip up or it was internal complicity," said Louis Caprioli, adviser at GEOs, the risk management group and a former domestic intelligence agent. A front man for BP refused to be drawn on the possible security beach: "We wouldn't comment on this," he said. ![]() An al Qaeda veteran of 14 years loyal to Belmokhtar, he played a role in the liquidation of Frenchies in Mauritania in 2010, earning himself the nickname of the "Mauritanian Zarkaoui". Yesterday, the local population in In Amenas was in a state of total shock. "This is the first time we have heard the name of our town in the mouths of David Cameron ... has stated that he is certainly a big Thatcher fan, but I don't know whether that makes me a Thatcherite,which means he's not. Since he is not deeply ideologicalhe lacks core principles and is easily led. He has been described as certainly not a Pitt, Elder or Younger,but he does wear a nice suit so maybe he's Beau Brummel ... and Barack Obama My friends, we live in the greatest nation in the history of the world. I hope you'll join with me as we try to change it... . We are furious about this terrorist strike," one local [told] The Daily Telegraph. | |
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Africa North |
Hostage operation over with high casualties |
2013-01-17 |
[VOA News] Algeria's state-run news agency says the military operation at the natural gas complex where Islamic militants seized 41 foreign hostages has ended. But firm information on the fate of the captives is hard to confirm. The country's communications minister, Mohamed Said, said a "large number of terrorists were neutralized" during the raid. But he also said that several hostages were killed. A news agency in Mauritania quoted a militant spokesman as saying 34 hostages and 15 kidnappers were killed when Algerian helicopters attacked as the militants tried to move the hostages. That report has not been independently confirmed. Algeria's news agency reports four hostages - one from Kenya, one from France, and two from Britain - were freed. Other hostages are believed to include Norwegians, Japanese and Americans. Al-Qaida-linked militants stormed the Amenas gas complex in eastern Algeria Wednesday for what they say is retaliation for French military operations in Mali. Islamic militants also with ties to al-Qaida are in control of northern Mali and have threatened to move towards the capital. The gas complex is jointly run by Algerian, British and Norwegian firms. The Pentagon says it is ready to intervene if Algeria asks for help, and a Defense Department official would not deny reports that the U.S. sent a drone over Algeria. |
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Africa Horn |
Puntland prepares to rout militants out of Galgala mountains |
2012-12-14 |
![]() ...a region in northeastern Somalia, centered on Garowe in the Nugaal province. Its leaders declared the territory an autonomous state in 1998. Puntland and the equally autonomous Somaliland seem to have avoided the clan rivalries and warlordism that have typified the rest of Somalia, which puts both places high on the list for Islamic subversion... in north-east Somalia is planning to launch military raids against a turban hid-out in the rugged mountains of Galgala, according to Colonel Jama Said Warsame, the regional army commander in north east Somalia who spoke to Shabelle media network. In an execlusive interview with Shabelle, Col. Warsame told that the authorities in Puntland has prepared special forces who will conduct security operations to rout the turban fighters out of Galgala in particular and boost security in Puntland in general. Galgala is a hide-out for snuffies led by a man called Mohamed Said Atam and they have forged unity with the other cut-thoat group of Al-Shabaab ... the successor to the Islamic Courts... which is based in parts of southSomalia. |
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Africa North |
Al-Shabaab Fighters on the Run |
2012-02-08 |
Source:- Somalia Report : has learned that at least 10 skiffs have left from Qandala region in the semi-autonomous region of Puntland, heading westward along the coast with the expected destination of an al-Qaeda held port in Yemen or to rendevous with Sheik Atams group in southern Somaliland. Qandala is a popular transit point for human smugglers but a minor pirate base of operations. The skiffs were reported to be have left from Marka and are being refueled in Hafun, after which they intend to continue north and westward along the tip of Somalia. The governor of Karkaar region, Abdi Quraan Mohamed Aden was contacted this evening and confirmed that the al Shabaab group arrived in Hafun on Friday. Puntland official have sent police to the coast. It is still not clear if the skiffs separated or if the entire group that left Marka are the terrorists currently in Hafun. They are still in Hafun. They arrived there yesterday (Friday), said the governor. The appearance of al Shabaab from the sea is not new but the number of fleeing jihadis is unusually large. Dabayla Gor, the Governor of Sanaag region told Somalia Report, We heard that a number of al-Shabaab fighters arrived in Puntland by speed boats. We believe that they are planning to arrive into the Al-Madow mountains and will hide in Galgala to join with militants led by Mohamed Said Atam. The Governor of was not sure of the number of insurgents but recalled a similar event. It should be noted that Puntland does not have air assets or maritime presence. Their security forces must travel by rudimentary roads taking over 20 hours to reach the coastal areas. Months before a group of al-Shabaab fighters passed through Hafun, Qandal and Bargaal to near Laqoraay district to joing Atoms group. It happens sometimes but we fight against them, said Dabayla Gor. He estimated that the latest influx was a large number based on the reports he was getting. Elders in Qandala believe that approximately 80 fighters are enroute to Mulaax Beyle near Xiss in Sanaag, on the coast of the breakaway region of Somaliland. This would put the fleeing fighters close to their expected final destination of Zinjabar, Yemen, a port partially held by al-Qaeda militants. It is around 170 miles or or 275 kms across the Gulf of Aden, and ships must pass across the Transit Corridor which is occasionally manned by about half a dozen naval escorts. Although it is yet unknown whether pirate networks in Qandala provided the militants with fuel or other supplies, it would be the first proven instance of a pirate organization giving direct support to terrorist elements. Preliminary phone calls to the pirate groups by Somalia Reportindicate that the skiffs contain only al-Shabaab elements and that no pirate or smuggling group is involved. There have been no independent confirmation of these statements. Somalia Report received reports that al-Shabaab and al-Qaeda fighters had left the southern port of Marka earlier this week in 14 small speedboats heading northwards along the coast. Although local skiffs can easily be fueled to transit the Gulf of Aden, the voyage would necessitate stopping to purchase fuel from local communities, where it would be difficult to disguise the identities of the passengers. Al-Shabaab and al-Qaeda members have frequently travelled along with supplies, between Yemen and the Sanaag region. |
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Africa North |
'Cairo wants dozens of prisoners in exchange for Grapel' |
2011-10-12 |
Al-Ahram: Egyptians seek release of inmates held in jails in Israel and the United States in return for alleged spy Egypt is demanding the release of dozens of Egyptian prisoners in Israel in return for Ilan Grapel, the American- Israeli law student detained in Cairo since June on suspicion of spying for Jerusalem. Al-Ahram newspaper reported that a top-ranking Egyptian military official discussed an Egyptian-Israeli prisoner exchange during US Defense Secretary Leon Panettas visit to Cairo last week. The deal would reportedly include some 25 of the 80 Egyptians held in Israel, most of them convicted of security-related offenses or border infiltration. The paper reported that some two dozen Egyptians could be released from US prisons as well. Egyptian media have reported that Washington has threatened to reduce military aid to Egypt if Grapel remains detained, but has indicated willingness to increase aid should the US-Israeli dual citizen be released. Reports that Grapel could leave Cairo with the defense secretary turned out to be premature. US and Israeli officials, and Grapels family and friends, have dismissed allegations of espionage as absurd, and say the 27-year-old Emory University law student traveled to Egypt to volunteer with an organization aiding African refugees. Maj.-Gen. Sameh Seif El-Yazel, described by Al-Ahram as a security expert, said a prisoner exchange could pave the way for discussions of modifying national security and armament agreements between Egypt and Israel. [T]here is a desire by both sides to hold a more critical dialogue about issues that were previously probed infrequently, he said. It would not do Egypt any good to keep the spy behind bars when there can be more benefits this is standard procedure on such matters in most countries. This weekend the daily quoted Mohamed Said Lotfi, head of the campaign to free Egyptian prisoners from Israeli jails, as saying Grapel should not be released but should be tried as a spy. However, if he must be released, then the deal should be in return for the release of all Egyptian prisoners in Israeli jails, he said. Al-Ahram also reported that the son of Omar Abdel-Rahman (also known as the Blind Sheikh) has filed a request for his father to be included in a prospective exchange. Abdel- Rahman, leader of the radical group Al-Gamaa al-Islamiyaa, is serving a life sentence in North Carolina for seditious conspiracy for his part in planning and promoting a series of terrorist attacks on US targets. On Monday the Islamist group held a protest outside the American Embassy in Cairo calling for Abdel-Rahmans release. Last week Deputy Regional Development Minister Ayoob Kara asked US Ambassador Daniel Shapiro to demand that along with Grapel, Cairo release Ouda Tarabin, an Israeli Beduin shepherd held in Egypt for more than a decade after illegally crossing the border. This is the last chance [to secure Tarabins release] before the rise of the Muslim Brotherhood. Everyone knows what they will do and what his fate will be, the Likud lawmaker said. In 1999 Tarabin was sentenced under Egypts Emergency Law to 15 years in prison for espionage, a crime his family and the Israeli government say he did not commit. In 1996 Azzam Azzam, a Druse-Israeli textile worker, was sentenced to 15 years of hard labor after being convicted of espionage, a charge both he and the Israeli government denied. Following the intervention of the Shin Bet, Azzam was released in 2004 in exchange for six Egyptians convicted of planning terror attacks. |
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