“Turkish warplanes carried out new airstrikes against suspected Kurdish
militant sites in northern Iraq on Tuesday, days after a suicide attack in the
Turkish capital. Police, meanwhile, detained almost 1,000 people in raids
across Turkey. A defense ministry statement said the air raids hit 16 targets,
including caves, shelters and depots, used by the outlawed Kurdistan Workers’
Party, or PKK in the neighboring region. It said the operation aimed to protect
Turkey’s borders and prevent terror attacks. It was Turkey’s second
cross-border aerial operation against PKK targets in northern Iraq since the
attack in Ankara on Sunday. Earlier, police conducted raids in several Turkish
provinces, detaining close to 1,000 people, including dozens with alleged links
to Kurdish militants. An opposition news anchor was also briefly detained.
Interior Minister Ali Yerlikaya said that 55 people suspected of being part of
the PKK’s “intelligence structure” were detained in 16 provinces. At least 12
other suspected PKK members were rounded up in a separate operation in five
provinces, Yerlikaya wrote on X, the social media platform formerly known as
Twitter.”
<[link removed]>
<[link removed]>
Eye on Extremism
October 4, 2023
Associated Press: Turkey Hits Kurdish Militant Targets In Iraq And Detains
About 1,000 People Days After Ankara Blast
<[link removed]>
“Turkish warplanes carried out new airstrikes against suspected Kurdish
militant sites in northern Iraq on Tuesday, days after a suicide attack in the
Turkish capital. Police, meanwhile, detained almost 1,000 people in raids
across Turkey. A defense ministry statement said the air raids hit 16 targets,
including caves, shelters and depots, used by the outlawed Kurdistan Workers’
Party, or PKK in the neighboring region. It said the operation aimed to protect
Turkey’s borders and prevent terror attacks. It was Turkey’s second
cross-border aerial operation against PKK targets in northern Iraq since the
attack in Ankara on Sunday. Earlier, police conducted raids in several Turkish
provinces, detaining close to 1,000 people, including dozens with alleged links
to Kurdish militants. An opposition news anchor was also briefly detained.
Interior Minister Ali Yerlikaya said that 55 people suspected of being part of
the PKK’s “intelligence structure” were detained in 16 provinces. At least 12
other suspected PKK members were rounded up in a separate operation in five
provinces, Yerlikaya wrote on X, the social media platform formerly known as
Twitter.”
Reuters: Mali In Meltdown As Militants Advance And U.N. Withdraws
<[link removed]>
“Islamist militants in Mali began a blockade of Timbuktu by cutting road
access in August and then shut off river and air routes in an offensive that
has put the city once again on the frontline of a jihadist insurgency. The
bombing began soon after. On Sept. 21, witnesses said rockets hit a hospital,
killing two children, and landed near a school where survivors of a passenger
boat attack that killed more than 100 people were sheltering. "Our worry is the
shelling," businessman Sory Touré said in Timbuktu, which was occupied by
jihadists a decade ago. "It creates a real psychosis and leaves a lasting
impression. I have this fear within me." Since the United Nations began winding
down its peacekeeping mission in July, al Qaeda affiliated militants launched
an offensive in central Mali, fighting has resumed between the army and Tuareg
rebels from the north and, in the east, Islamic State-allied insurgents have
continued to carry out attacks. Mali, run by a junta that has spurned the
support of U.N. and French forces, is in meltdown and the violence risks adding
to instability across West Africa's Sahel, a region already reeling from
military coups in neighbouring Burkina Faso and Niger.”
<[link removed]>
United States
The New York Times: Lawyers Expand Legal Fight For Longest-Held Prisoner Of
War On Terrorism
<[link removed]>
“Lawyers for the longest-held prisoner in the U.S. war against terrorism have
begun a new legal offensive in multiple courts aimed at securing his release
from Guantánamo Bay. The prisoner, known as Abu Zubaydah, was captured in
Pakistan in March 2002 in a raid by U.S. and Pakistani security services. He
was the first person held in the U.S. secret prison network known as the black
sites and the first to be waterboarded by the C.I.A. The initiative follows the
Pentagon’s disclosure over the summer that a national security parole-style
board deemed Abu Zubaydah too dangerous to release. He has never faced criminal
charges at Guantánamo. U.S. intelligence concluded that while he was a militant
in Afghanistan in the 1980s and ’90s, he had never joined Al Qaeda and had no
link to the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks. Abu Zubaydah, 52, is being held
indefinitely as a detainee of the war on terrorism the United States declared
in response to the Sept. 11 attacks. He is colloquially called a “forever
prisoner” because of the endless nature of that war. Lawyers in Europe and the
United States are seeking compensation and condemnations for Abu Zubaydah, who
is Palestinian but was born in Saudi Arabia. His true name is Zayn al-Abidin
Muhammed Husayn.k, a former federal and New York City prosecutor who recently
joined Abu Zubaydah’s legal team.”
Pakistan
Associated Press: Pakistan Announces Big Crackdown On Migrants In The Country
Illegally, Including 1.7 Million Afghans
<[link removed]>
“Pakistan’s government announced a major crackdown Tuesday on migrants in the
country illegally, saying it would expel them starting next month and raising
alarm among foreigners without documentation who include an estimated 1.7
million Afghans. The country’s caretaker Interior Minister Sarfraz Bugti said
the crackdown was not aimed at Afghans and would apply to all nationalities,
though the vast majority of migrants in the country are Afghans. The campaign
comes amid strained relations between Pakistan and neighboring, Taliban-led
Afghanistan over what the Pakistani government says are attacks in Pakistan by
Taliban-allied militants who go back and forth across the countries’ shared
2,611-kilometer (1,622-mile) border and who find shelter in Afghanistan. Bugti
said that any migrants in Pakistan illegally should go back to their countries
voluntarily before the end of October to avoid mass arrest and forced
deportation. He said the government planned to confiscate the property and
assets of illegal migrants, and would set up a special phone line to offer
rewards to members of the public who tip off authorities about such migrants.”
The Times Of India: Pakistan: 10 Terrorists Killed In Gun Battle With Security
Forces In Khyber Pakhtunkhwa
<[link removed]>
“At least 10 terrorists were killed in a gun battle with the security forces
in the Tank region of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa's Pezu neighbourhood on Tuesday, ARY
News reported citing the country's military media wing. The Pakistani military
media wing, Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR) said on Tuesday that the
terrorists were killed after the security forces carried out an
intelligence-based operation on the "reported presence of terrorists".Ten
terrorists were killed immediately as a result of a fierce firefight with
Pakistani soldiers that took place during the operation. "These terrorists
remained actively involved in numerous terrorist activities against security
forces as well as extortion [and] killing of innocent civilians," the ISPR
said, according to ARY News. The security forces found a sizable stockpile of
weapons, ammunition, and explosives from the terrorists after the operation.
The troops have stepped up operations against militants as a result of an
increase in terrorist activity since the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP)
announced the termination of a ceasefire with Pakistan in November of last
year.”
Middle East
Fox News: Jailed Terrorist's Illicit Acts With Prison Guard Leads To Ban On
Female Workers: Reports
<[link removed]>
“Israel’s prison system is under scrutiny after local media reported a female
prison guard had a sexual relationship with a convicted terrorist, but her
lawyer says his client is the victim and faced assault by the prisoner. The
convicted terrorist threatened to "hurt her and her family, and to ruin her
life," the guard’s lawyer Yair Ochayon, told The Jerusalem Post on Sunday. The
lawyer added that the inmate allegedly assaulted the woman but they did not
have sex. The Times of Israel identified the prisoner in the reported scandal
as Mazen Al-Qadi, a 43-year-old convicted terrorist who was involved in a 2002
attack that left three Israelis dead in Tel Aviv. The prisoner allegedly had a
cellphone he used to talk with the female guard and send photos, according to
the outlet, which reported that other female guards may have also been involved
with the prisoner. Local media reported Friday that female soldiers could no
longer serve in the prison system, with officials citing an investigation into
an alleged relationship between a female guard and an inmate. Initial media
reports stated a female guard had a consensual relationship with the terrorist.
Israel Defense Forces sources said the guard in question was a conscript
serving at a prison, not an Israeli soldier, according to the Jerusalem Post.”
The Jerusalem Post: Israel Arrests Nine In Operation Targeting Online
Terrorism Incitement <[link removed]>
“Nine people were arrested over seven months of operation by a special online
terrorism incitement team established by National Security Minister Itamar
Ben-Gvir, his office announced on Tuesday morning. Since the unit was founded
in February, twenty-five other people were arrested, 100 incidents are under
investigation, 40 other investigations were filed, and 759 posts were removed
from social media. The team was created in response to a wave of terrorism in
2022, which according to the ministry was fueled by incitement by Palestinian
Islamic Jihad, Hamas, Hezbollah, and other terrorist elements. The incitement
led to teenagers as young as 13 being inspired to carry out attacks. he
anti-online incitement team is composed of police officers, Shin Bet officials,
the IDF and prosecutors, and claims to be monitoring and reviewing online
content. Ben-Gvir said that the results proved that the team was having an
impact. "For years, senior security officials in Israel have been warning that
social media is fertile ground for terrorist organizations to exploit," said
Ben-Gvir.”
The Counter Extremism Project depends on the generosity of its supporters. If
you value what we do, please consider making a donation.
DONATE NOW
<[link removed]>
Click here to unsubscribe.
<[link removed]>