From CEP's Eye on Extremism <[email protected]>
Subject Burkina Faso Counts Ballots; Extremist Threats Affected Vote
Date November 24, 2020 2:30 PM
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Votes are being counted in Burkina Faso after Sunday’s presidential and
legislative elections, where threats of extremist violence linked to al-Qaida

 

 


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Eye on Extremism


November 24, 2020

 

**NOTE: CEP’s Eye on Extremism will be suspended on Wednesday, November 25,
Thursday, November 26 & Friday, November 27 in observance of the Thanksgiving
holiday. It will resume on Monday, November 30.**

 

Associated Press: Burkina Faso Counts Ballots; Extremist Threats Affected Vote
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“Votes are being counted in Burkina Faso after Sunday’s presidential and
legislative elections, where threats of extremist violence linked to al-Qaida
and the Islamic State prevented parts of the country from casting ballots.
Election workers began the counting after polls closed by holding the ballots
up for observers and marking the votes on a chalkboard beside the candidate’s
name. Preliminary results are expected within the next two days. While there
were no reported incidents of major attacks, threats of violence prevented
people from casting ballots in hard-hit parts of the country, in the North,
Sahel and East regions. Nearly 3,000 polling stations expected to open
yesterday didn’t, preventing up to 350,000 people from voting, said Newton
Ahmed Barry, president for the National Independent Electoral Commission, on
local television. In Tapoa province in the east, 224 polling stations out of
335 didn’t open, according to a report from CODEL, a local organization
monitoring the elections. CODEL said it was “concerned about the situation in
areas weakened by insecurity”. Local officials in the Sahel and Center North,
the epi-centers of the violence, told the AP people were angry about not being
able to vote.”

 

Associated Press: Egypt Adds Leading Activist, Politician To Terror Watch List
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“An Egyptian court placed nearly 30 people, including a leading pro-democracy
activist and an Islamist politician, on a terrorism watch list over accusations
they joined the banned Muslim Brotherhood, the official gazette reported
Monday. Activist Alaa Abdel-Fattah, politician Abdel-Monaem Abul Fetouh and 26
others were added to a “terrorism list” for the next five years, the report
said. The ruling by Judge Hassan Farid last week includes a travel ban and
freeze on assets for three years. The decision may be appealed within 60 days.
Abdel-Fattah rose to prominence with the 2011 pro-democracy uprisings that
swept the Middle East and in Egypt toppled long-time President Hosni Mubarak.
To many, his imprisonment three years later — at a time when authorities
imposed draconian laws banning public gatherings and unauthorized
demonstrations — was a sign of Egypt’s return to autocratic rule. Abdel-Fattah
was released in March 2019 after five years in prison for taking part in a
peaceful protest against military trials for civilians. He was re-arrested in
September last year amid a sweeping security clampdown that followed small but
rare anti-government protests. Abul Fetouh, the Islamist politician, was a
longtime Brotherhood member but quit the group in 2011 and established the
Strong Egypt party.”

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United States

 

New York Post: Boy Forced To Threaten Trump In ISIS Video Returns To US
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“The Indiana boy who was brought to Syria and forced to threaten President
Trump in an ISIS propaganda video two years ago has returned to the United
States, where he says it’s “sweet relief” to be back home, according to a
report. Matthew was just 10 years old when he appeared in a 2017 Islamic State
video vowing to attack the West after he was taken to Syria by his mom,
Samantha Elhassani, and his Moroccan-born stepfather, Moussa Elhassani, BBC
reported. “It’s happened and it’s done,” the boy told the outlet in his first
public comments on the agonizing ordeal. “I was so young, I did not really
understand any of it.” The boy has been living with his father for the past
year after being returned to the States by US military officials in 2018. He
has undergone counseling following two years in ISIS captivity in Raqqa and is
recovering well, according to the report. The teen says his stepfather forced
him to take part in the video. “He was starting to lose it, like he was
mentally unstable, very mentally unstable,” Matthew told the BBC. In 2015,
Matthew’s mother took her family from Elkhart, Indiana, into Syria, crossing
into ISIS territory via Turkey, the boy recalled.”

 

Iran

 

Arab News: The Future Of Iran’s Ties With Al-Qaeda Under New US President
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“The announcement of the killing of Al-Qaeda’s deputy commander in Tehran has
again raised questions about the Iranian regime’s relationship with the
terrorist organization and has provided a fresh reminder of the need to analyze
the regime’s strategy based on using the organization as an asset and providing
safe havens for its leaders. On Nov. 14, 2020, American media outlets cited
reports from US officials confirming that a covert joint operation by US and
Israeli intelligence services had resulted in the assassination of Al-Qaeda
commander Abu Mohammed Al-Masri in the heart of Tehran on Aug. 7, 2020.
Al-Masri was involved in the attacks on the US embassies in Kenya and Tanzania
in 1998. The Iranian Foreign Ministry predictably dismissed the reports of
Al-Masri’s killing on Iranian soil, describing them as “fake news.” In the face
of significant evidence from various sources repeatedly confirming the
longstanding relationship between Iran and Al-Qaeda, the regime in Tehran
insists on sticking unyieldingly to its policy of denial. It cites sectarian
differences and conflicting ideological views as supposedly compelling evidence
of the lack of any connection between Tehran and Al-Qaeda, and it reiterates
the animosity between the two sides.”

 

Afghanistan

 

Agence France-Presse: Taliban Rigging Drones To Drop Bombs, Afghan Spy Chief
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“The Taliban have deployed small drones to drop bombs on government forces in
some recent attacks, Afghanistan’s spy chief said Monday, illustrating a new
fighting method used by the insurgents. Ahmad Zia Shiraj, who heads the
National Directorate of Security (NDS), said Taliban fighters were using hobby
drones and rigging them with explosives. “The drones they are using are sold in
the market. They are basically camera drones,” Shiraj said in an address to
parliament, adding the NDS wants to stop the import of the popular devices. In
late October, the Taliban reportedly used a drone to bomb the compound of the
governor of Kunduz province. Shiraj did not confirm the report, but he noted
that the Taliban have used drones in Kunduz and Paktia provinces. While the
technique is new to the Taliban, Daesh militants operating in Iraq and Syria
started using toy planes and hobby drones in 2016 to carry explosives. Daesh
maintain a small but deadly presence in Afghanistan and have resisted
years-long efforts by the US and Afghan forces to wipe them out. “We have
destroyed their leadership circle but their second layer are young are still
active,” Shiraj said."

 

Yemen

 

Agence France-Presse: US Keeps 'All Options' Open For Yemen's Huthis
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“The United States is “keeping all our options open” when it comes to Yemen's
Huthi rebels, the national security advisor said Monday, amid reports the
outgoing Trump administration could tag the group as terrorists. Speaking to
reporters during a visit to the Philippines, Robert O'Brien criticised the
Iran-backed Huthis of failing to engage in a “good-faith peace process” to end
the conflict. The Huthis are at the centre of a flurry of diplomacy as the
Trump administration, which has made isolating its arch-foe Tehran a
centrepiece of its regional policy, enters its final weeks. Washington was
monitoring the situation “very closely”, said O'Brien in response to a question
on whether the US would designate the Huthis a “terrorist organisation”. “We
are constantly considering whether and who and how we should designate
terrorist organisations,” O'Brien said. “President Trump is still the president
of the United States for the next 50 days and this will be something that is
certainly on the agenda and we will have to see how that plays out,” he added.
“Right now we encourage the Huthis to expel the Iranians, to stop attacking
neighbours and stop attacking people within Yemen and engage in a good-faith
peace process with the other stakeholders in Yemen.”

 

Nigeria

 

Al Jazeera: Five Killed By Gunmen In Northwest Nigeria Mosque Attack: Police
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“Gunmen killed five worshippers and kidnapped at least 18 in an attack on a
mosque in northwestern Nigeria’s Zamfara state, police said. Speaking to AFP
news agency on Sunday, state police spokesman Mohammed Shehu said: “The bandits
killed five worshippers and kidnapped 18 others, including the imam.” According
to reports, about 100 cattle thieves on motorcycles opened fire on a Muslim
congregation in remote Dutsen Gari village in Maru district as residents were
observing weekly Friday prayers. Residents and local media said more than 30
worshippers were abducted. “The gunmen attacked the mosque while the imam was
delivering the sermon and took away more than 30 people, including the imam,
after shooting dead five worshippers,” one resident, Ibrahim Altine, said.
Northwest Nigeria is a hotbed of criminal gangs accused of raiding villages,
stealing cattle, kidnapping for ransom and burning homes after looting food
supplies. The country’s northwest sees occasional clashes between the herder
Fulani people, one of the largest ethnic groups widely dispersed across West
Africa, and neighbouring tribes. The Fulani, who migrated to the south to graze
their cattle, claim farmers have tried to steal their animals and attack their
people.”

 

Mali

 

Voice Of America: France At Odds With Mali Plan To Dialogue With Jihadists
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“The eight-year Islamist insurgency in the West African nation of Mali shows
no sign of ending and after an August coup toppled President Ibrahim Boubacar
Keita. The country’s transitional government has indicated it is willing to
open dialogue with all armed groups. France, which has more than 5,000 troops
in the country, has warned against any discussions with jihadists. “With
terrorists, we do not discuss. We fight.” The statement made recently by French
President Emmanuel Macron in an interview is — to some analysts —  a clear
rebuke of the strategy initiated by transitional Malian authorities who are
willing to open discussions with jihadists. “This is at odds with the Malian,
with the desire of the Malian opinion, to undertake a dialogue with Iyad
Ag-Ahly, Amadou Koufa,” said Nicolas Normand,  a former Ambassador of France to
Mali. “Actually, there is nothing to negotiate because jihadists leaders do not
ask for a pardon or reintegration in the Malian society. They want to impose a
totalitarian regime. Of course, Bamako resists to such a will. I think the
population is not really aware of what it is at stake with its own liberty.”
Following the signature of the so-called Algiers Peace Agreement, armed groups
were supposed to join the national army.”

 

Africa

 

Reuters: Ethiopia Arrests Nearly 800 Suspects Over 'Terrorist' Plot - TV
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“Ethiopian police have arrested some 796 people suspected of plotting
“terrorist attacks” in the capital Addis Ababa for the Tigray People’s
Liberation Front (TPLF), the state-affiliated Fana broadcaster said on Monday.
There was no immediate comment from Ethiopia’s government or the TPLF, who are
waging a war in the northern Tigray region.”

 

Al Jazeera: Who Is Al-Qaeda’s New North Africa Chief?
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“The new leader of Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM) is a well-known
veteran among the armed groups wreaking havoc in North Africa but experts say
it is unclear what path he will chart to assert his authority. Abu Obaida Yusuf
al-Annabi, an Algerian national born in 1969, replaced Abdelmalek Droukdel
following his killing by French forces in Mali last June, according to the SITE
monitoring group. Al-Annabi was already head of AQIM’s Council of Dignitaries
and “was also one of its media chiefs”, said Laurence Bindner, co-founder of
the JOS Project that analyses armed group’s propaganda online. “He’s the one
who pledged allegiance in the group’s name to Ayman al-Zawahiri, the main
al-Qaeda chief, in 2011. And he’s authored several of its main statements in
recent years,” said Bindner … Analysts at the Counter Extremism Project say
al-Annabi’s relations with his predecessor may have been tense, another
potential sign of strategic divisions in the ranks.”

 

United Kingdom

 

Reuters: Teen Who Left UK To Join Islamic State Should Not Be Allowed Back,
Supreme Court Told
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“A British-born woman who went to Syria as a schoolgirl to join Islamic State
should not be allowed to return to Britain to challenge the government taking
away her citizenship because she poses a security risk, the UK’s top court
heard on Monday. Shamima Begum, who was born to Bangladeshi parents, left
London in 2015 when she was 15 and went to Syria via Turkey with two
schoolfriends. In Syria, she married an Islamic State fighter and lived in
Raqqa, the capital of the self-declared caliphate, where she remained for four
years until she was discovered in a detention camp. She has had three children
since leaving Britain, but all the infants have since died. Britain’s interior
minister stripped her of her British citizenship but in July, the Court of
Appeal unanimously agreed Begum, now 21, could only have a fair and effective
appeal of that decision if she were permitted to come back to Britain.
Challenging that verdict, James Eadie, the lawyer for the British government,
told the Supreme Court that intelligence agencies concluded those who aligned
with Islamic State posed a serious risk to national security.”

 

BBC News: West Sussex Man Jailed Over Beheading And Terror Magazines
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“A man who downloaded instructions on how to carry out terror attacks, and
images of beheadings, has been jailed for 32 months. Zakaria Yanaouri, 21, of
Congreve Road, Worthing, was arrested in a raid on his home 24 February. He
pleaded guilty to five counts of possessing documents containing information
useful to terrorism. Judge Philip Katz QC described Yanaouri as an extremist
who opted to listen to “notorious terrorist loudmouths”. Sentencing Yanaouri,
the judge rejected his claim that he only watched the materials “out of
curiosity”. He said Yanaouri, who was of previous good character, had been
brainwashed by the propaganda. The raid on his family home took place after he
and his family had been stopped on their way back from Saudi Arabia. Issues of
a digital Islamic State group propaganda magazine were found on a computer and
each had a section labelled “Just Terror Tactics”, the Old Bailey heard. 
Prosecutor Robin Sellers said the seized material helped to show Yanaouri had
“a mindset that is sympathetic to and supportive of the teachings and
propaganda of Isis”. He told the court: “The material included moving images of
beheadings and scenes of execution of Isis captives commonly encountered by the
viewers.”

 

France

 

The New York Times: France’s Dragnet For Extremists Sweeps Up Some
Schoolchildren, Too
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“Armed with assault rifles and wearing balaclavas, dozens of police officers
raided four apartments recently in a sprawling complex in Albertville, a city
in the French Alps. They confiscated computers and cellphones, searched under
mattresses and inside drawers, and took photos of books and wall ornaments with
Quranic verses. Before the stunned families, the officers escorted away four
suspects for “defending terrorism.” “That’s impossible,” Aysegul Polat recalled
telling an officer who left with her son. “This child is 10 years old.” Her son
— along with two other boys and one girl, all 10 years old — was accused of
defending terrorism in a classroom discussion on the freedom of expression at a
local public school. Officers held the children in custody for about 10 hours
at police stations while interrogating their parents about the families’
religious practices and the recent republication of the caricatures of the
Prophet Muhammad in the magazine Charlie Hebdo. The fifth-grade classmates are
among at least 14 children and teenagers investigated by the police in recent
weeks on accusations of making inappropriate comments during a commemoration
for a teacher who was beheaded last month after showing the cartoons in a class
on freedom of expression.”

 

Technology

 

The Interpreter: After Christchurch: Mapping Online Right-Wing Extremists
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“When Australian man Brenton Tarrant conducted a mass-shooting terror attack
last year at two mosques in Christchurch, New Zealand, guns were not his only
weapon. Before commencing, he posted links to a Facebook live-stream of the
attack, while also uploading a self-penned manifesto onto 8chan’s “/pol” board.
As Tarrant killed 51 people and wounded 49, he had effectively weaponised
social media platforms in order to broadcast the propaganda to a global online
audience. In the wake of this international terrorist incident, researchers
from Macquarie University in Sydney, in collaboration with Victoria University
in Melbourne, mined and analysed data from six social media platforms to
examine the spread of right-wing extremist sentiment across New South Wales,
Australia’s most populous state, where Tarrant had lived before travelling in
Europe. A mixed-method research design was created to investigate what had been
this unstudied online community. From August to November 2019, anonymised data
was collected from Twitter (37,422 tweets from 3,321 users), Gab (1,357,391
toots from 23,836 accounts) and a sample of archived message boards on Reddit,
4chan and 8chan (now named 8kun).”



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