Fighting between Libya Dawn forces and the Libyan National Army near Sebha
The southern town of Brak Ashatti was the scene of fighting between Libya Dawn forces and the Libyan National Army (LNA).
Reporting of the details of the clashes by local sources and Libyan media has been slanted according to the sympathies of the various media outlets.
Some have said that the local people, fighting alongside the LNA were able to force the withdrawal of Libya Dawn forces. These same sources reported that Libya Dawn initiated the attack, carrying out indiscriminate bombing in a residential area.
Other sources, sympathetic to Libya Dawn, have reported that the LNA attacked in an attempt to take over the Brak Ashatti airbase.
The fighting has resulted in the closure of a major road linking Sebha, Jufra and Brak Ashatti.
Source: Libyaherald
Pakistan in a fix over Saudi request for help against IS
Islamabad is yet to accept Riyadh’s request for support to prevent military invasions into Saudi Arabia by the Islamic State (IS), the ultra-extremist group that has made significant gains in Iraq and Syria.
The issue was a key item on the agenda during Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif’s visit to Saudia Arabia earlier this month.
Nawaz visited the oil-rich kingdom last week on the special invitation of the Saudi monarch. The two leaders shared similar views on all important issues, including the need to combat terrorism, according to a statement issued by Pakistan’s Foreign Office.
A senior official believed that Riyadh wants Islamabad to send troops to help it in the fight against IS, in a bid to ward off the IS threat at the Saudi border.
In return, the new Saudi monarch has offered Islamabad an economic package: a vast supply of oil on deferred payment.
Foreign Secretary Aizaz Ahmad Chaudhry recently informed the Senate panel on foreign affairs that Pakistan would not become part of any international coalition against IS.
Prime Minister Nawaz has not given Saudi Arabia any firm assurance over the request.
Source: pakistantoday
Kurdish peshmerga launch offensive on Daesh (ISIL) in Kirkuk
Iraqi Kurdish peshmerga troops launched a wide-scale offensive against Daesh, in the northern city of Kirkuk’s south, an Iraqi commander said Monday.
Daesh is the Arabic acronym for the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant, which is also known as ISIL.
Wasta Rasul, the peshmerga commander, said Iraqi Kurdish troops, backed by the U.S.-led international coalition, began the operation at 04.00 a.m. local time (0700GMT).
Rasul said the peshmerga, the armed forces of Kurdish regional government, attacked the militant group’s positions in Maktab Khaled, Dakuk and Harabarut.
“The operation is ongoing and the peshmerga regained Sultan Mari village in the south,” said the peshmerga commander, adding that coalition airstrikes killed at least 40 militants during the operation.
Hiwa Abdullah, the peshmerga commander in the Kirkuk region, said the operation to push back Daesh militants from Nahrawan village in Kirkuk was ongoing and the militants fled their positions.
Peshmerga forces have been making preparations for days to repel Daesh, which posed a threat to Kirkuk. Many troops and military vehicles have been dispatched to the region.
Source: aa.com.tr
Settlement of Libyan crisis: Algeria, Egypt share same views
Minister for Maghreb and African Affairs Abdelkader Messahel announced Sunday in Cairo, that Algiers and Cairo agree on the need to ensure Libya’s stability and its territorial unity through a political settlement of the crisis in this country.
“Algeria and Egypt share the same views on the resolution of the Libyan crisis. We are for a political settlement of the crisis and support the fight against terrorism and the efforts undertaken by the United Nations and the neighboring countries,” Messahel said in a statement after his meeting with Egyptian Foreign Minister Sameh Shokri.
Messahel further indicated that the two neighboring countries of Libya coordinate closely; highlighting the danger of terrorism in this country and the threats it poses to the countries of the region.
“There is a perfect coordination with the Egyptian side about the situation in Libya, but also with the neighboring countries, the UN or any other party concerned about the stability, sovereignty, unity and territorial integrity of Libya,” the minister said.
In this regard, he announced a coordination meeting to bring together soon the neighboring countries of Libya in Chad.
17 people killed in Yemen clashes
Shiite rebels battled an al-Qaida affiliate in central Yemen on Sunday and two tribes clashed east of the capital in violence that claimed a total of 17 lives, security and local officials said.
The officials, speaking on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak to reporters, said the clashes in the central Bayda province broke out after al-Qaida militants attacked three positions manned by Houthi rebels, who swept down from the north and captured the capital Sanaa last year. Twelve people were killed in the fighting.
Yemen’s al-Qaida branch, which Washington views as the terror network’s most dangerous offshoot, has stepped up attacks against the Houthis. Last week, a suicide bomber targeted the gate of a rebel compound in Bayda, killing eight rebels, and clashes in three separate locations killed at least 25 rebels and seven militants.
Also on Sunday, five people were killed in clashes between two tribes, one pro-Houthi and the other opposed to the rebels, in Marib province east of Sanaa.
In January the Houthis disbanded parliament and declared their Revolutionary Committee the country’s highest political body, but their authority does not extend to Yemen’s once-independent south or to the vast and lawless east, where the Sunni extremists of al-Qaida have long maintained a presence despite U.S. drone strikes and Yemeni military operations.
Embattled President Abed Rabbo Mansour Hadi fled to the southern city of Aden last month, and says he is still the country’s legitimate leader.
Somalia to deploy drones in battle with islamic terrorists al-Shabab
The Somali government says it plans to use drones to fight the al-Qaida-linked group al-Shabab, targeting the militants’ bases and rural areas they still control.
A spokesman for the Ministry of Security, Mohamed Yusuf Osman, told VOA on Saturday that the Somali National Army plans to deploy the drones independently of the African Union Mission in Somalia, also known as AMISOM.
But he refused to say where Somalia obtained the drones, or how many there are.
U.S. Special Forces have been involved in drone attacks in Somalia in the past, successfully killing al-Shabab senior leaders and military commanders. Top leader Ahmed Abdi Godane was killed in a U.S. airstrike in September 2014.
Also Saturday, government authorities in Dhusamareb, central Somalia, said senior al-Shabab commander Abdullahi Ahmed Mohumed gave himself up to authorities after renouncing violence in Somalia. VOA sources said Mohumed helped al-Shabab make and plant explosive devices.
Chad and Niger launch joint campaign against islamist terrorist Boko Haram
Chad and Niger have launched a joint military operation against Boko Haram in Nigeria.
The Sunni militant group has expanded cross border raids, spurring Nigeria’s neighbours to retaliate.
The new military campaign comes after suspected Boko Haram insurgents killed at least 50 people in bomb attacks in Maiduguri – the city it wants as the capital of an Islamist state.
Almost six years into its insurgency in Nigeria, the militant group is now attacking villages in the countries bordering Lake Chad – Chad, Niger and Cameroon. Local officials say the motive is greed, not a drive to establish an Islamic caliphate.
In Chad, Boko Haram is said to be behind destruction in the village of N’gouboua – its first attack inside the country. Militants apparently opened fire on residents and burned their homes.
Boko Haram has pledged allegiance to ISIL, which rules a self declared caliphate in parts of Iraq and Syria.
Nigeria is now pleading for more international help to battle the militancy.
Foreign Islamic State militants move families from Mosul
Foreign militants fighting with Islamic State (IS) are moving their families from Mosul to areas in Syria.
Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP) official from the Zumar sub-district Hasan Khalo told BasNews, “Foreign militants and commanders of IS have begun moving their families from Mosul to IS controlled areas in Syria this week, and a large number of them have already left the city.”
“They are leaving Mosul in small groups to avoid causing tension,” Khalo said.
The exodus is thought to be in response to the operation to free Tikrit and other areas of Salahaddin Province, raising fears of an operation to liberate Mosul in the near future.
According to Khalo, more than 85 foreign militants and their families joined commanders of IS in leaving Mosul this week.
Source: BasNews
Libya: Islamic State militants attack al-Dhahara oil field
Islamic State militants have attacked an oil field near Libya’s central coast, prompting a counterattack by the Islamist-backed government in Tripoli that involved airstrikes, an official said Wednesday.
- « Previous Page
- 1
- …
- 154
- 155
- 156
- 157
- 158
- …
- 268
- Next Page »