At least 10 Boko Haram terrorists have been killed in clashes with a joint Cameroonian-Chadian force in the Northern Cameroonian town of Kerawa near the border with Nigeria, a security source said Monday.
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At least 10 Boko Haram terrorists have been killed in clashes with a joint Cameroonian-Chadian force in the Northern Cameroonian town of Kerawa near the border with Nigeria, a security source said Monday.
Various armed groups in Libya have violently attacked, kidnapped, intimidated, threatened, and killed Libyan journalists with impunity over the past two years, causing many to flee the country or impose self-censorship, Human Rights Watch said in a report released today.
At the same time, courts are prosecuting journalists and others for defaming public officials and other offenses that violate freedom of expression. The failure by successive governments and interim authorities to protect journalists has wiped out much of the limited media freedom that existed following the 2011 uprising that ousted the Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi.
The 54-page report, “War on the Media: Journalists Under Attack in Libya,” says that authorities failed to hold anyone accountable for attacks on journalists and media outlets since 2012, most of which were committed by non-state actors.
Meanwhile, courts are prosecuting people, including journalists, for speech-related offenses, particularly for defaming public officials. The situation only worsened for journalists when armed conflicts erupted and became endemic in May 2014, hastening the exodus from Libya by journalists fearing for their safety.
“The climate of impunity has allowed militias to assault, threaten, kidnap, or even kill journalists because of their reporting or views,” said Joe Stork, deputy Middle East and North Africa director at Human Rights Watch. “Government authorities and non-state actors who control territory should urgently condemn attacks on journalists and where possible hold those responsible to account.”
Human Rights Watch, through interviews conducted in Libya and remotely, documented at least 91 cases of threats and assaults against journalists, 14 of them women, from mid-2012 until November 2014. The cases include 30 kidnappings or short-term arbitrary detention and eight killings, although in some cases journalists may have been unintentionally killed while reporting on violent incidents.
Human Rights Watch also documented 26 armed attacks against the offices of television and radio stations. In most of the cases Human Rights Watch documented, evidence suggested that the armed groups sought to punish journalists and media outlets for their reporting, their opinions, or their perceived sympathies.
Consecutive interim authorities and elected governments have been unable to rein in abusive militias that have proliferated since the end of the 2011 uprising, allowing them to operate with total impunity, Human Rights Watch said. The failure to protect journalists, media workers, and writers was only exacerbated with the outbreak of the armed conflicts in eastern Libya in May 2014, which spread to the west in July.
The fighting has left the country with two governments claiming legitimacy, one an internationally recognized government based out of al-Bayda and the other a self-proclaimed government controlling Tripoli and parts of western Libya, yet neither able to assert control over the entire territory. As the violence spread, an increasing number of courts and prosecutors’ offices suspended operations, leaving the judicial systems in a state of near- collapse in some areas.
Journalists were among the 250 people killed in apparent politically motivated assassinations in Libya in 2014 that Human Rights Watch documented. On May 26, unidentified assailants shot dead a prominent journalist, Miftah Bouzeid, in Benghazi.
Bouzeid, the editor-in-chief of Burniq, an independent newspaper issued three times a week in Benghazi, was a prominent and frequent critic of Islamist militias and political parties. Despite local and international calls for a swift investigation, Bouzeid’s assassins remain at large. Al-Mutassim al-Warfalli, a radio host for the Libya al-Watan radio station, was shot dead by unknown assailants on October 8 in Benghazi. Al-Warfalli was a purported supporter of Islamist militias.
Some media outlets appeared to be attacked for having backed particular parties to a conflict. Militias attacked Alassema TV station in Tripoli on August 23 and 24, destroying equipment and knocking it permanently off the air. Fawzia al-Balaazi, general director of the station then, told Human Rights Watch that the attacking militias accused the channel of supporting their adversaries.
On January 9, 2015, unknown assailants attacked Al-Nabaa TV in Tripoli, a Libyan private satellite TV station that backs the Tripoli-based self-declared government, with rocket-propelled grenades heavily damaging the building.
In none of the cases that Human Rights Watch examined did the authorities conduct a serious investigation, if they investigated at all. No one is known to have been prosecuted for wrongdoing in any of the cases of attacks against journalists. Most Libyan journalists told Human Rights Watch they saw no point in even reporting incidents to the police since they would not pursue the attackers.
Meanwhile, prosecutors have been bringing charges against journalists and others for non-violent speech offenses. On November 17, Amara al-Khatabi, editor of al-Ummah newspaper, was informed by a criminal court that he had been sentenced in absentia on August 17 to five years in prison and a heavy fine.
The judge, who sentenced al-Khatabi for “insulting and slandering” public officials by publishing a list of allegedly corrupt judges in November 2012, also ordered the suspension of al-Khatabi’s civil rights during his imprisonment and for a year after his release, and banned him from practicing journalism for the duration of his prison term. Al-Khatabi, who remained provisionally free, told Human Rights Watch he would seek a retrial.
Two Tunisian journalists, Sofiene Chourabi and Nadhir Ktari, were reported missing in eastern Libya in September 2014 and their fate remains unknown. Human Rights Watch could not independently verify conflicting reports of their alleged capture by militias affiliated with the extremist group Islamic State (also known as ISIS). All parties in Libya should work toward the release of the two journalists, immediately and unharmed.
All government and other entities in Libya should unequivocally condemn attacks against journalists and media workers and carry out prompt, transparent, and impartial investigations where possible, Human Rights Watch said. Libya’s House of Representatives should amend or revoke laws that restrict the right to freedom of expression and the media, particularly defamation and insult laws.
Member countries of the UN Human Rights Council should convene a special session on accountability in Libya with a view to establishing a Commission of Inquiry or a similar mechanism to investigate serious and widespread human rights violations in Libya.
The potential violations should include those that may amount to war crimes and crimes against humanity, such as politically motivated assassinations and attacks against journalists. The UN and African special rapporteurs on freedom of opinion and expression should pay particular attention to attacks against journalists and media professionals in Libya, and visit the country to investigate attacks against journalists and to make recommendations on how to promote press freedom there.
“This is a very dangerous time to be a journalist in Libya,” Stork said “Too many journalists in post-Gaddafi Libya face a situation where saying what you think can get you killed.”
Source: hrw.org
The situation along the Lebanon-Israel border is “under control” after the recent tit-for-tat attacks between Hezbollah and Israel, UN spokesman Andrea Tenenti said Monday.
“The situation at the border is stable and under control,” Tenenti told local daily As-Safir.
He said UN peacekeepers were exerting “maximum efforts” along the Lebanese-Israeli border.
“UNIFIL troops have bolstered their presence on the ground and stepped up patrols in all areas of operation in cooperation with the Lebanese Army,” he said.
“At the moment, the situation along the Blue Line is quiet.”
Two Israeli soldiers were killed in the latest flare-up of violence between Hezbollah and Israel in the occupied Shebaa Farms on Lebanon’s southeastern border on Jan. 28.
The Hezbollah attack was to avenge the killing of six party members in a Jan. 18 Israeli airstrike on a Hezbollah convoy in Syria’s Golan Heights town of Qunaitra.
Among the fatalities was Jihad Mughniyeh, son of Hezbollah’s late top commander Imad Mughniyeh.
A Spanish peacekeeper was also killed in Israeli shelling in the exchange of fire following Hezbollah’s attack.
Source: albawaba
The Director of the Moroccan Center for Strategic Studies , Mohamed Benhamou revealed that ISIS terrorist organization is recruiting Moroccan prostitutes and tempting them with money and “the sincere repentance” in order to perform “jihad marriage” with its elements in Iraq and Syria
.
The Moroccan academic cited analysis of US military command in Africa site, “AFRICOM” that “ISIS embarked on the exploitation of Moroccan prostitutes, through tempting them across networks and intermediaries to Turkey then abducting them to be sold to the organization in “Syria and Iraq,” where they are forced to do what is called “Jihad marriage
.”
The same speaker pointed to the involvement of global networks to exploit Moroccan prostitutes in both Jordan and Turkey to ISIS by attracting prostitutes of initially migrating to Europe through Turkey, without telling them that they will be “detained” at the organization
.
The Moroccan expert said that ISIS goes to the temptation of prostitutes with money and psychological incentives such as monthly salaries, as trying to make them to practice Jihad marriage with its fighters, as if it was an opportunity to repent and atone for sexual relations they have done in the past
.
He added that the “Islamic state” guaranteed to its victims that a living will be stopped, convincing them they earn Halal money, by satisfying the sexual desires of jihadists, even though not in the framework of known customary marriage, where a number of individuals may have sex with one”prostitute”
.
The researcher revealed the link between the “Islamic state” and global networks of prostitution, where the organization is trying to make a psychological stability to its fighters, who often come to the battlefield, leaving behind wives, while prostitution networks care only about money
.
According to estimates by the American site, the Moroccan women who travelled toward ISIS has increased markedly in recent months, their numbers are between two hundred to five hundred who went to ISIS, while the security interests in the cities of Ceuta and Melilla, occupied by Spain has halted a number of women who tried to emigrate to “ISIS
.”
In the meantime, the human rights reports have confirmed trafficking of women to the organization, especially among Yazidi and Christian women who had been abducted in the framework of the so-called “slavery”, after the expansion of its fighters in Iraq last summer, so that the one girl’s price was 1000 dollars
.
ISIS Women do not reach often to the ranks of the fighting, as they play their “sexual” roles provided for fighters, as well as cooking food and cleaning , while Moroccan jihadist, Um Adam al-Majati emerged remarkably in the organization, after her migration to “ISIS” through Turkey.
Source shafaaq.com:
To an outsider, the Middle East has always been somewhat confusing, and with good reason. The region seems to be in perpetual turmoil, constant anger and increasing hate and growing violence. Recently, the perpetual anger, hate and violence have taken the region to a dimension of new horror. What exactly seems to be the issue in the Middle East?
Well in very simple terms it’s like this:
The civil war in Syria has weakened the government of President Bashar Assad and allowed resistance groups to establish a foothold in territory taken over when government forces were defeated.
The strongest of the rebel forces was the group that became known as the Islamic State, also known as the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria, also known as Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant.
Unlike most of the other Syrian resistance groups who are fighting to liberate Syria from Bashar Assad, ISIS wants much more. As a first step ISIS wants to take over the countries surrounding Syria and Iraq.
They use extreme violence as means of intimidation and do not shy away from killing people by the thousands. They claim to be purists in Islam, but have been denounced for their terror behavior by most of the Arab and Muslim world.
Even al-Qaida, condemned them for the horrific manner in which the captured Jordanian pilot was murdered. Osama bin-Laden and his replacement, Ayman al Zawahiri, were both against the pre-mature establishment of the caliphate, and told Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi not to go ahead. He did anyway.
ISIS is a Sunni Muslim movement, though that has not prevented them from going to war with the Kurds who are also predominantly Sunni. The top leadership and many of the initial members of this organization are former members of the Iraqi Baath Party under former leader Saddam Hussein. Many are battle hardened.
The dual conflict — the war in Syria and the absence of peace in Iraq – have given rise to a plethora of alliances, counter-alliances and counter, counter–alliances, and in the process rendering the age-old adage “that the enemy of my enemy is my friend,” somewhat irrelevant. Sometimes the enemy of my enemy is now my enemy and sometimes not.
Who are the friends and who are the enemies? ISIS has murdered thousands of Shiites simply because they were Shiites. The government in Baghdad is mostly Shiite and is supported by the United States and by Iran. So the US and Iran finally see eye-to –eye and are fighting on the same side? Not exactly.
Iran also supports the regime in Damascus, whom Turkey, and the U.S. want to see toppled, and while the US and Iran find themselves on the same side, yet one should add, at the same time, the U.S. and Iran are involved in nuclear talks. Additionally, Iran supports the Lebanese Shiite movement, Hezbollah, which the United States considers a terrorist organization.
And while Turkey, a member of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, along with the U.S., find themselves allies in NATO, they disagree over which side to support in the Syrian conflict.
Washington continues to disagree with its regional allies on how to proceed in Syria. Although Washington is leading the campaign against IS, it does not seem fully committed to the task. Frustrated by Washington’s half measures, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, in a speech in early January criticize President Obama, saying: “If you are doing something, do it properly. If you are going to do it with us, you need to value what we say.”
The end game for IS is to topple the government of Saudi Arabia and destroy the state of Israel. Strange as it may seem, this has not prevented Saudi Arabia from offering limited support to IS, not so much for its willingness to take on Israel, but more so because IS is possibly the only entity capable of defeating the Syrian government.
Israel on the other hand must be delighted to see both ISIS and the Syrians weakened. However it is very premature and potentially very dangerous for the Jewish state to think that this is a good thing in the long run. A victory by the Islamic State over Damascus would place the IS terrorists right on Israel’s back door.
This in a nutshell is the Middle East today. To paraphrase a former French ambassador in the region: “If you think you understan the problems of the Middle East it means it was badly explained to you.”
Indeed, to begin to understand the full complexities of the region it could well require a thousand and one nights, and then some.
Source: Claude Salhani- Trend
A drone strike in Afghanistan killed six people on Monday including a veteran militant suspected of having defected to Islamic State from the Taliban, senior Afghan officials in Helmand province told Reuters.
A former Guantanamo Bay detainee, Mullah Abdul Rauf has been influential in Afghanistan’s jihadi movement for more than a decade. The US-led coalition in Afghanistan did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
The police chief and the deputy governor in Afghanistan’s southern province of Helmand both said Rauf was killed.
Police chief Nabi Jan Mullahkhel said Rauf was travelling in a car when the drone attacked. The other casualties included his brother-in-law and four Pakistanis, Mullahkhel said.
President of the leadership of (Davos) College of the Iranian Army Brigadier , Hussein Weleonid on Monday, his country’s readiness to train Iraqi officers, including officers of Peshmerga.
Brigadier-General Weleonid said in a press statement that the issue of training Iraqi officers was submitted during the last visit of the Iraqi Minister of Defense to Iran, declaring that the Iranian army is ready to do so.
In response to a question asked whether Iran is ready to train Kurdish Peshmarga forces in Iraq, he said that Davos has ties of cooperation with the armies of the world, announcing a willingness to train officers in the armies of friendly countries.
He explained that Davos College is develop training courses for officers of other states or the dispatch of the trainees to it in the framework of the security and defense cooperation agreement to be signed with the Ministry of Defense and support of the Iranian armed forces.
Source: shafaaq.com
Iraqi troops will begin a “major ground offensive” in coming weeks to regain control of territories captured by the Islamic State group, General John Allen, the U.S. coordinator for the anti-ISIS coalition, said, in an interview to Jordan’s Petra news agency on Sunday.
“In the weeks ahead, when the Iraqi forces begin the ground campaign to take back Iraq, the coalition will provide major firepower associated with that,” Allen reportedly said, adding that the U.S. is “doing all it can” to aid the Iraqi army.
Since June last year, ISIS has seized vast swathes of territory in Iraq, including the cities of Mosul and Tikrit. In November last year, the Iraqi army had reportedly retaken the Baiji oil refinery, the biggest in Iraq, located about 130 miles north of Baghdad. However, fierce fighting has continued in the region and nearly 150 people were killed during the most recent clashes in the town on Sunday, according to media reports.
Allen also said, in the interview, that the anti-ISIS offensive in Syria would take much longer as the U.S. lacked a coalition partner in the country. “We have a partner at all levels in Iraq but we don’t have a similar partner in Syria. So the work that must be done by the coalition in Syria is going to take longer,” he reportedly said.
Meanwhile, Jordan announced on Sunday that it had destroyed 20 percent of ISIS’ military capabilities so far, according to media reports.
“We achieved what we aimed for. We destroyed logistics centers, arms depots and targeted hideouts of their fighters,” General Mansour al-Jbour, head of the Jordanian air force, said on Sunday, adding that Jordanian warplanes had carried out 56 airstrikes on ISIS targets in Syria since Thursday, according to media reports.
“We are determined to wipe them from the face of the Earth,” al-Jbour reportedly said.
Jordan has stepped up its military offensive against ISIS after the group released a video last week showing Jordanian pilot Muath al-Kaseasbeh being burned alive in a cage. Following the release of the gruesome video, the Jordanian government vowed a “relentless war” against the militant group.
A US shipment of military equipment worth US$25 million arrived at Beirut’s port on Sunday, as it was announced that the first deliveries of Saudi-funded French weapons to Lebanon would begin in April.
Both are aimed at bolstering the Lebanese army’s fight against extremist forces on the border with Syria.
The US shipment included howitzers, Humvees and 26 million rounds of ammunition. It comes in addition to more than $100m (Dh367m) in military aid that Lebanon received from the United States last year.
A time frame for the French weapons delivery was confirmed by France’s foreign minister Laurent Fabius in a meeting with Lebanese prime minister Tammam Salam at the global security conference in Munich on Sunday.
It comes after Saudi Arabia pledged $3 billion to fund the purchase of French weapons – including helicopter gunships, armoured personnel carriers, heavy artillery and surveillance drones – in December 2013.
The military aid, which will allow the Lebanese army to modernise, will be supplied over the next three years.
The announcement will come as welcome news to Lebanon, which has been facing growing daily battles with ISIL and Jabhat Al Nusra on the country’s eastern frontier.
Military experts previously expressed fears that the army’s fight against the militants was being hampered by the delay in military aid arriving, and had called for the speedier delivery of arms.
The US stepped up its shipments of military aid to Lebanon when the threat of extremists on the border became clear and the UK has helped the Lebanese army reinforce its frontier with watchtowers, materials to build defensive positions and donations of body armour and Land Rovers.
But the biggest prize so far has been the arms pledge from Saudi Arabia, which was formally signed in November last year. Last August, the Saudis also announced they were giving Lebanon’s security forces an additional $1bn grant to confront ISIL and Jabhat Al Nusra, who have launched a series of brutal attacks on the country.
On January 23, militants attacked a remote Lebanese army outpost on the border, killing eight Lebanese soldiers. Last August, Jabhat Al Nusra and ISIL captured the Sunni border town of Arsal in a joint attack before Lebanese artillery and armour wrested control of the town from the militants.
Despite news of the impending weapons deliveries from France, however, the impact of the Saudi-French arms deals may not be felt for some time.
“It’s not really a direct impact because you need time … to train the people, to incorporate it into the system,” said Elias Hanna, a retired Lebanese army general. “If they start today they need more than six months for good results.”
Of the additional $1bn grant announced in August, more than $500m is earmarked for the Lebanese army, according to Aram Nerguizian, a senior fellow at the Washington-based Centre for Strategic and International Studies. Mr Nerguizian said this would probably be spent on US weapons, including advanced systems that Lebanon has never had before.
“If you didn’t have the Syrian civil war and the threat from [ISIL] and Nusra … you wouldn’t have this degree of willingness to entertain the kinds of transfers that might take place” within the coming months and years, he said.
But considering the scale of the threat, the pace of delivery has been slow.
While the US has increased its arms transfers to Lebanon, some say the army has so far received relatively little. “I wouldn’t say peanuts, but not sophisticated or heavy weapons”, said Hisham Jaber, a retired Lebanese general, who also served as the country’s defence attaché to France. He said Western nations’ long-standing hesitancy to give Lebanon sophisticated weapons was driven by a desire to appease Israel.
“We need everything: we need tanks, we need artillery, we need helicopters, we need hospitals,” he said.
Before France’s announcement on Sunday, Gen Jaber had said that Beirut should entertain previous Iranian offers to arm the military. In supporting the Assad regime in Syria and government-aligned Shiite militias in Iraq, Tehran has shown its ability to flood conflict zones with arms quickly and effectively.
Hizbollah politicians had also decried how long the Saudi-French arms transfer has taken and encouraged Lebanon to seek arms from Iran.
But Gen Hanna said that the kinds of arms that could be immediately furnished by Iran would not necessarily be of the type required by the Lebanese Army in its fight against the militants.
“We don’t need heavy arms to defeat [ISIL] … we need drones, night-vision goggles, information [gathering technology], choppers – they don’t have it in Iran,” he said.
And so far, the violence on the border has been light compared to the bloodshed across in Syria. The Lebanese army, while suffering some losses, has proven capable of holding its ground.
Mr Nerguizian said he was confident that the army could hold its line on the eastern front, citing the recent acquisitions of US-made Hellfire missiles and large ammunition transfers by Washington.
But Gen Jaber believes cracks could begin to show if the impact of military aid in Lebanon is not felt soon.
“[ISIL] and Al Nusra will make a breakthrough somewhere.” he said. “They cannot stay where they are. They did not come to Lebanon for tourism.”
Source: thenational.ae