Tag: Islamic State

  • IS claims responsibility for Libya attack

    Militants claiming loyalty to Islamic State killed 42 people in suicide car bombings in eastern Libya on Friday, in apparent retaliation for Egyptian air strikes.

    The three car bombs exploded in Qubbah, a small town near the seat of the official government in what appeared to be another high profile attack by the group after the storming of a Tripoli hotel and the killing of 21 captive Egyptian Copts, Reuters reports.

    On Monday, Egyptian air force jets bombed IS targets in Derna in far eastern Libya, after the ultra-radical group released a video showing the Coptic Christian migrant workers being decapitated on a beach.

    “They killed and wounded tens in revenge for the bloodshed of Muslims in the city of Derna,” said a statement issued by the IS in Cyrenaica province.”

    It could not be verified by Reuters but this group has issued statements before which were not subsequently contested by others.

     

  • U.S woman jailed for plotting IS help

    A young Colorado woman has been sentenced to four years in jail after she pleaded guilty to trying to help the militant group Islamic State (IS).

    Shannon Conley, a 19-year-old Muslim convert, was arrested in April while trying to board a flight to Turkey en route to Syria to marry an IS fighter, the BBC reports.

    Prosecutors offered a reduced term if she helped share information about other Americans looking to join IS.

    Conley, who now calls herself Halima, said she deeply regrets her actions.

    Handing down the verdict at a court in Denver, Judge Raymond Moore said the sentence was meant to deter others who wanted to join Islamic militants.

    The judge also expressed doubt about Conley’s claim that she had disavowed jihad.

    “Defiance has been a part of her fabric for a long time,” he said, adding that Conley needed mental help.

    Conley appeared in the courtroom wearing a headscarf with her prison uniform. She had earlier pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy to provide material support to a foreign terrorist organisation.

    She had faced up to five years in prison.

    Conley, who is a nurse’s assistant, told her parents she planned to marry Yousr Mouelhi, who she met online and believed to be a Tunisian IS fighter.

    The FBI became interested in Conley after she alarmed employees of a church in Denver by taking notes on the layout of the building.

    Over the course of eight months, FBI agents repeatedly tried to discourage her from travelling abroad, suggesting she explore humanitarian work instead.

    But her father, who had refused to let her marry her Tunisian suitor, discovered a one-way ticket to Turkey with Conley’s name on it.

     

  • IS executes 100 of its foreign fighters

    THE Islamic State extremist group has executed 100 of its own foreign fighters who tried to flee their headquarters in the Syrian city of Raqqa, the Financial Times newspaper reported yesterday.

    An activist opposed to both IS and the regime of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, who is well-known to the British business broadsheet, said he had “verified 100 executions” of foreign IS fighters trying to leave the jihadist group’s de facto capital.

    IS fighters in Raqqa said the group has created a military police to clamp down on foreign fighters who do not report for duty. Dozens of homes have been raided and many jihadists have been arrested, the FT reported.

    Some jihadists have become disillusioned with the realities of fighting in Syria, reports have said.

    According to the British press in October, five Britons, three French, two Germans and two Belgians wanted to return home after complaining that they ended up fighting against other rebel groups rather than Assad’s regime. They were being held prisoner by IS.

    In total, between 30 and 50 Britons want to return but fear they face jail, according to researchers at the International Centre for the Study of Radicalisation at King’s College London, which had been contacted by one of the jihadists speaking on their behalf.

    Since a US-led coalition began a campaign of air strikes against IS in August, the extremist group has lost ground to local forces and seen the number of its fighters killed rise significantly.

  • U.S hostage killed by IS militants

    U.S hostage killed by IS militants

    A video released onto the internet claims to show that Islamic State militants have killed the captured United States aid worker, Abdul-Rahman Kassig.

    In the video, a masked militant stands over a severed head said to be that of Mr. Kassig.

    It was not immediately possible to confirm the authenticity of the video, showing a group of Syrian troops being killed.

    Mr. Kassig, also known as Peter, was captured last year, the BBC reports.

    In October, an IS video of the killing of British aid worker Alan Henning had ended with a threat to Mr. Kassig.

    The U.S National Security Council said the intelligence community was working as quickly as possible to determine the latest video’s authenticity

    “If confirmed, we are appalled by the brutal murder of an innocent American aid worker and we express our deepest condolences to his family and friends,” NSC spokesperson, Bernadette Meehan, said.

    Mr. Kassig’s parents, who live in the U.S state of Indiana, last month released extracts of a letter written by their son, in which he told of the strains of captivity.

    “This is the hardest thing a man can go through, the stress and fear are incredible,” the aid worker wrote.

    “They tell us you have abandoned us and/or don’t care but of course we know you are doing everything you can and more.

    “Don’t worry Dad, if I do go down, I won’t go thinking anything, but what I know to be true. That you and mom love me more than the moon and the stars.”

  • Egyptian militant group pledges support to IS

    Egypt’s most active militant group, Ansar Bayt al-Maqdis, has sworn allegiance to Islamic State, the al Qaeda offshoot which has seized territory in Syria and Iraq, according to an audio clip posted on its Twitter account.

    If genuine, the declaration of allegiance would be a boost for Islamic State, showing its widening influence in the region alongside its territorial advances in Iraq and Syria.

    The Sinai-based militant group posted the clip, which is 9nine minutes and 26 seconds in length, early on Tuesday morning on a Twitter account that calls itself the official mouthpiece of Ansar.

    The clip was then carried on a website used by Islamists.

    Reuters was not immediately able to verify the authenticity of the statement nor contact the group directly for comment.

    In the clip, a man identifies himself only as part of the group’s “information department.”

    He said the militants had pledged loyalty to Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, head of Islamic State, which is now facing United States-led air strikes.

    The Twitter account has issued other statements on the group’s behalf in recent months. It is often suspended and re-opened, one of these shutdowns occurred hours before the statement was tweeted.

    The posting comes the week after the group distanced itself from a statement pledging loyalty to Baghdadi that appeared in its name online and was reported by Reuters.

  • Australia to join anti-IS force

    Australia to join anti-IS force

    Australia said it is sending 600 troops to the Middle East ahead of possible combat operations against Islamic State (IS) militants in Iraq.

    Prime Minister Tony Abbott said the deployment, initially to the United Arab Emirates, was in response to a specific United States’ request.

    Nearly 40 countries, including 10 Arab states, have signed up to a US-led plan to tackle the extremist group, the BBC reports.

    France is hosting a regional security summit on Monday.

    US Secretary of State, John Kerry, arrived in Paris late on Saturday after a four-day tour of the Middle East trying to drum up support for action against IS.

    Last week, US President Barack Obama presented a strategy to fight the group in both Iraq and Syria.

    Speaking on Sunday, Prime Minister Abbott said Iraq had made it clear that it would “very much welcome” a military contribution to restore security.

    He said the force, which will also include up to eight Super Hornet fighter jets, was part of “an international coalition” not simply an “American-Australian operation.”

    Mr. Abbott said no decision had yet been taken to commit the forces, which will begin deploying next week, to combat action.

    The announcement comes two days after Australia raised its terrorism threat level from medium to high.

    Security officials are thought to be concerned by the growing number of Australians “working with, connected to or inspired by” Islamist groups, Mr. Abbott said on Friday.

  • Kerry in Egypt for IS talks

    Kerry in Egypt for IS talks

    The United States Secretary of State, John Kerry, has arrived in Egypt amid U.S attempts to form a broad coalition to tackle Islamic State (IS) militants.

    Mr. Kerry will meet Arab League chief, Nabil al-Arabi, in Cairo on the latest leg of his Middle East tour.

    He has enlisted the support of 10 Arab states so far, including Saudi Arabia and Qatar, but on Friday he ruled out Iran joining the U.S-led coalition.

    On Friday, the CIA said IS has as many as 30,000 fighters in Syria and Iraq.

    IS controls large parts of both countries and its fighters have become notorious for their brutality, but in recent weeks they have been targeted by US air strikes, the BBC reports.

    On Wednesday, President Barack Obama unveiled plans for an expansion of the U.S campaign against IS.

    He vowed to “hunt down terrorists who threaten our country, wherever they are.”

    The 10 Arab countries that have signed up to the coalition are – Egypt, Iraq, Jordan, Lebanon, Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, and the United Arab Emirates.

    Later on Saturday, Mr. Kerry will meet with Mr. Arabi, the Secretary General of the Arab League, to discuss how the coalition will act against IS.

    Mr. Kerry says military and intelligence experts will spend the coming days working out how each state will contribute.

    But speaking in Turkey on Friday, he said it would be “inappropriate” for Iran to join the group because of its “engagement in Syria and elsewhere.”

  • Islamic State (is): The world’s next scourge and why Nigeria must be alert

    Islamic State (is): The world’s next scourge and why Nigeria must be alert

    It would be quite a shame if the country would sit on its hind legs and wait until Nigerians head to Syria and Iraq to be trained in all the technicalities of decapitating fellow human beings

    If al-Qaeda and its associates have killed in hundreds of thousands, the way The Islamic State, (IS), is going, it  may  account for millions killed by the time the world finally gets clean with it, if ever.  Without a doubt, the world is permanently in a flux but if anybody had suggested that the world was going to contend with anything worse than al-Qaeda so soon after the US dispatched Bin Laden, we all would have told that person to perish the thought. This is not to suggest that there hadn’t been chilling predictions, post Nostradamus, but they were mostly that: predictions that may, indeed, never come till the end of time. No more. They now mushroom like violence is the last name in Christendom.

    Talking about post Nostradamus predictions, there had been many and they keep pouring in. Indeed, 2014 vows to bring the hardest times for mankind. The predictions are terrifying as the world would, according to them, be shocked by natural disasters, assassinations and incurable diseases, and doesn’t Ebola come to mind. The year is believed to be a turning point in the history of humanity. Plagues, wars and disasters threaten the world according to Baba Vanga, a famed Bulgarian prophetess. A blind mystic and clairvoyant, she foresees an epidemic of skin cancer that will decimate the planet’s population and according to the Ukrainian engineer who deciphered Nostradamus quatrains, 2014 will be engulfed in violence.  Famed seers have even seen the beginning of World War111 and Mr. Putin appears to be working unerringly towards that end now that Russia has deployed troops in the Ukraine.

    However, if all these are in the future, not so the mind boggling violence the IS (Islamic State) continues to visit on mankind. Its militants  recently besieged a village in northern Iraq,  gave the residents a deadline to convert to Islam and when they refused, more than 80 men were killed and the women and children of the village became their slaves; this in addition to several weeks of crucifying  Christians, beheading their children and burying others alive. Although it started out like al-Qaeda on an extremist hard line, adhering to global jihadist principles, al-Qaeda has, since February 2004, closed all links to the Islamic State because of its extreme brutality.  Indeed, only two weeks ago, a British-born member of the group was reported to have beheaded the American journalist, Mike Foley, in a horrendous act of brutality that would hardly be equalled.  Its leader, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, claims to be a descendant of the Prophet Muhammad and has proclaimed him the Islamic “caliph”.  Caliph, meaning successor, is a title used by Sunni Muslims for those who led Islam from the death of the Prophet to the 20th century.  When Turkey was made a secular state after World War I, the caliphate was abolished. Now al-Baghdadi claims to have reconstituted it in himself.  He is calling on the Muslim world to move to his Islamic State to support his movement.  Militants are already carrying the IS flag in Indonesia and across North Africa.  Jihadist groups around the world are deciding whether to switch their allegiance from al-Qaeda to him. Al-Baghdadi has announced his group’s intention to march on Rome and Spain, seeking to establish his caliphate across Europe. When he was transferred from American to Iraqi custody in 2009, (from which he was later released), he told his American captors, “I’ll see you in New York.”

    For us as Nigerians, the most important part of this story, and its relevance is this: ‘Now al-Baghdadi claims to have reconstituted it in himself he is calling on the Muslim world to move to IS and to support his movement’. The potency of this statement and its probable dire consequences arise from what we have come to know about our intelligence community. Naturally, one would expect that a country of Nigeria’s economic standing and place in Africa would, by now, be on top of everything concerning the Islamic State. Indeed, going by the experience of how some Nigerians so easily hung on themselves everything concerning the Islamic world, be it in Iran, Afghanistan or Tajikistan, it should not be out of place to expect that there should be in place, as you read this, a desk specifically dedicated to Islamic state affairs in not only our Ministry of External Affairs, Defence Intelligence or at the ubiquitous DSS. But that will be the day!

    Given that it is not unknown for Nigerians to actually make their services available to organisations like Al-Qaeda, and with the entire Northeastern part of the country now being ferociously buffeted by Boko Haram, it should stand to reason that our intelligence community, if not the presidency, should now be fully engaged with all the ramifications of Islamic state activities. But as I indicated earlier, it would be the mother of all surprises if Nigeria is giving this ogre the importance and seriousness it deserves.

    It would be quite a shame if the country would sit on its hind legs and wait until Nigerians head to Syria and Iraq to be trained in all the technicalities of decapitating fellow human beings, causing and fuelling urban terrorism and putting the entire Nigerian government to fright, not to talk of completely destabilising the economy before our government starts running to foreign countries for assistance.

    The Islamic State (IS), formerly the Islamic State of Iraq (ISI or the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS) in its self-proclaimed status as a caliphate claims religious authority over all Muslims across the world and aspires to bring much of the Muslim-inhabited regions of the world under its political control beginning with Iraq, Syria and countries which include Jordan, Israel, Palestine, Lebanon, Cyprus and an area in southern Turkey.  The Economist reported in June 2014, that “it may have up to 6,000 fighters in Iraq and 3,000–5,000 in Syria, including perhaps 3,000 foreigners manly from Chechnya, France and Britain’.

    With a territory bigger than Britain, and assets worth more than 2Billion dollars, oil resources, gold bullions and massive kidnappings from which to easily increase its current holdings and the well known attraction of the young and employed who are relentlessly being recruited via a massive propaganda on the social media, it is obviously a short distance from recruiting hundreds of young impressionable Nigerians who, like the recruits from Europe, will not think twice before returning to Nigeria with their newly acquired capabilities in inflicting complete mayhem on society.

    If Boko Haram is this keen on completely annexing the Northeast, it will not be unreasonable to believe that , if care is not taken, if the Nigerian government does not take appropriate, creative and proactive  measures like keeping on perpetual watch list, the movements and activities of Nigerians who may stray into this weird and dangerous organisation,  Nigeria  may be heading into the mother of all troubles.

    God forbid.