From CEP's Eye on Extremism <[email protected]>
Subject Boko Haram Claims Kidnapping Of Over 300 Boys In Nigeria, Marking An Alarming Move West
Date December 16, 2020 1:32 PM
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
Boko Haram claimed responsibility Tuesday for abducting more than 300 boys from
a secondary school in northwest Nigeria, marking a striking leap

 

 


<[link removed]>
<[link removed]>
Eye on Extremism


December 16, 2020

 

The Washington Post: Boko Haram Claims Kidnapping Of Over 300 Boys In Nigeria,
Marking An Alarming Move West
<[link removed]>

 

“Boko Haram claimed responsibility Tuesday for abducting more than 300 boys
from a secondary school in northwest Nigeria, marking a striking leap from the
extremist group's usual area of operation and a chilling expansion of Islamist
militancy in West Africa. Hundreds of gunmen surrounded the boarding school in
Katsina state on Friday and opened fire in a community that had never known
such violence, witnesses said, before dragging the students deep into the
woods. The mass kidnapping shocked the continent's most populous country as
deaths from a multifront conflict in the region soar. West Africa is home to
the fastest-growing Islamist insurgencies in the world, conflict researchers
say, with unrest by disparate forces gripping Nigeria and three of its regional
neighbors: Mali, Burkina Faso and Niger. Boko Haram has killed at least 36,000
people and displaced millions over the past decade, but the campaign of
terrorism has rarely stretched far from its stronghold in the Lake Chad Basin.
The assault in the town of Kankara, however, signaled that the fighters’
murderous reach has shifted nearly 500 miles west, endangering peace in new
territory. The extremist footprint is growing five years after Nigerian
President Muhammadu Buhari announced that Boko Haram had been “technically
defeated.”

 

The Washington Post: Lawsuits By U.S. Victims Accuse Top Qatar Banks And
Charity Of Financing Terrorism In Israel
<[link removed]>

 

“U.S. victims of extremist violence in Israel allege that three of Qatar’s
leading financial institutions have secretly funneled millions of dollars to
Palestinian groups responsible for killing Americans, accusing a key U.S. ally
in the Middle East of duplicity. In U.S. lawsuits, victims and their families
claim that the government and royal family members of the wealthy Persian Gulf
nation have spearheaded “a terrorism financing conspiracy” that has channeled
tens of millions of dollars to support Hamas and Palestinian Islamic Jihad
(PIJ), both U.S.-designated terrorist groups. The initial two complaints, filed
in federal court in June and on Tuesday in Brooklyn, assert that payments made
under the guise of Qatari charitable donations have moved through the U.S.
banking system since 2014 and landed in dozens of accounts that are maintained
by Qatar National Bank and used by Hamas leaders and militants and their
relatives. The funds allegedly assisted seven strikes, including stabbings,
car-rammings and rocket attacks, that killed several U.S. citizens. The suits
identified accounts purportedly used by Ahlam Aref Ahmad Al-Tamimi, a Jordanian
woman who is on the FBI’s list of most-wanted terrorists for assisting a 2001
suicide bombing at a Jerusalem pizzeria that killed 15 people and wounded 130
others…”

 

France 24: Verdict Expected In French Trial Over 2015 Charlie Hebdo Attack
<[link removed]>

 

“Judges will issue their verdict Wednesday on 14 suspected accomplices of the
Islamist gunmen who murdered some of France's most famous cartoonists at the
weekly Charlie Hebdo in 2015, killings that horrified the nation. Seventeen
people were killed over three days of attacks in January 2015, beginning with
the massacre of 12 people at the satirical magazine, which had published
cartoons of the Prophet Mohammed. That attack was followed by the killing of a
French policewoman and the hostage-taking at the Hyper Cacher market. The
killings, which signalled the start of a wave of Islamist attacks around
Europe, triggered a global outpouring of solidarity with France under the “I am
Charlie” slogan. All three assailants were killed in shootouts with the police
in the wake of the attacks. Those on trial are accused of assisting the Kouachi
brothers, who carried out the Charlie Hebdo massacre, and their accomplice, the
supermarket hostage-taker Amedy Coulibaly. Over three months long, the trial
was repeatedly held up due to the Covid-19 pandemic. It has again highlighted
the horror of the attacks, during a period when France has again faced killings
blamed on Islamist radicals. Anti-terrorism prosecutors are seeking jail terms
ranging from five year to life imprisonment for the accused.”

 

United States

 

PBS: How Did An American Mom Go From Indiana To ISIS Territory?
<[link removed]>

 

“In November 2020, Sam Sally, also known as Sam Elhassani, was sentenced to
six-and-a-half years in prison for financing terrorism — making her the first
American woman brought back from Syria or Iraq and convicted on ISIS-related
terrorism charges. How did this American mother go from a comfortable life in
Indiana to the heart of ISIS’s self-declared caliphate in Syria, with her
husband a sniper for the terror group and her 10-year-old son forced to
threaten President Donald Trump in an ISIS propaganda video shown around the
world? FRONTLINE tells the inside story in Return From ISIS, a documentary in
association with the BBC that has been nearly four years in the making. It’s a
saga in which truth is stranger than fiction: “I’ve covered many stories about
ISIS and Westerners who’d joined the group,” says the documentary’s director,
writer and producer Josh Baker (Battle for Iraq, I’m Not A Monster). “But I’ve
never encountered anything quite like this.” Baker first received a tip about
an American woman trapped in ISIS territory with her kids in early 2017. At
that time, he was recovering from injuries sustained in an ISIS suicide bombing
in Iraq, where he had been filming a documentary on the fight against the
terror group.”

 

Foreign Affairs: When The Far Right Penetrates Law Enforcement
<[link removed]>

 

“The past decade has seen a notable spike in incidents of far-right terrorist
violence around the world, from the 2011 attack in Norway that left 77 people
dead to the Christchurch mosque shootings in New Zealand in 2019 that killed
51. Americans have mourned slaughters at a Walmart in El Paso in 2019, a
Pittsburgh synagogue in 2018, and a predominantly Black church in Charleston in
2015, among other white supremacist, anti-Semitic, and anti-immigrant assaults.
Far-right activists have recently marched in U.S. cities to protest the
electoral defeat of President Donald Trump, engaging in street brawls,
stabbings, and shootings. People across the globe are waking up to the general
threat of far-right violence, but another troubling development has not won
commensurate attention: the penetration of these extremists within the ranks of
law enforcement and the military—the very institutions charged with keeping the
public safe. Newspaper investigations and government probes in Germany this
year uncovered organized networks of far-right sympathizers in the rank and
file of the country’s security services. Last month, military intelligence
officials questioned eight individuals, including German soldiers, who are
suspected of involvement in an antigovernment “sovereign citizen” movement.”

 

Turkey

 

Daily Sabah: Police Detain 18 Daesh-Linked Suspects In Counterterrorism Ops In
Istanbul
<[link removed]>

 

“Turkish security forces detained 18 Daesh-linked suspects in counterterrorism
operations in Istanbul, reports said Wednesday. Counterterrorism squads from
Istanbul Police raided 11 addresses in nine districts, upon finding out that
the terrorists were planning to carry out attacks, Ihlas News Agency (IHA)
reported. Police confiscated digital materials and organizational documents in
the raid, the report added. The suspects were taken to the Istanbul Security
Directorate after going through routine health checkups. The terrorist group
has been trying to establish a new formation in Turkey after receiving a heavy
blow in Iraq and Syria. According to testimony by terrorists detained in
previous operations in Adana province, Daesh had been attempting to kidnap
judges, prosecutors and tourist groups as ransom in return for Daesh terrorists
held in Iraq and Syria. Turkey detained the so-called “Turkey emir” of Daesh,
named Mahmut Özden, in August. He was planning to carry out an attack on Hagia
Sophia Grand Mosque and target politicians, nongovernmental organization (NGO)
heads and other prominent figures in Turkey, according to the official
investigation. Police deciphered encrypted messages of Daesh sent by the
terrorist ringleaders in Syria and Iraq, with a wide range of instructions,
including kidnapping tourist groups, prosecutors and deputies, attacking
Incirlik Air Base in Adana and other plans.”

 

Egypt

 

The Straits Times: ISIS Steps Up Sinai Fight With Bombs In Civilian Homes In
Egypt
<[link removed]>

 

“Residents of Egypt's restive North Sinai region ran for their lives when an
Islamic State group affiliate occupied their villages. Now, they are returning
to find their homes booby-trapped. “I lost my sister-in-law and her
nine-month-old baby when an explosive device planted in their home went off,”
said a young resident of Aqtiya village, who asked not to be named for fear of
repercussions. Around 15 people have been killed by improvised explosive
devices (IEDs) since mid-October in villages around Bir al-Abd, in the
northwest of the troubled province, say Egyptian security sources. The IED
attacks that have multiplied in the vast, remote and sparsely populated region
which authorities have declared off-limits to journalists recall those the ISIS
launched to sow terror in Iraq and Syria. The recent deaths have badly shaken
the 1,000 or so residents who returned in October after seeking refuge
elsewhere in Egypt for three months as the army continued its grinding battle
to crush ISIS. Another resident, speaking to AFP by phone, said locals found
ISIS had taken over their homes, used them as hideouts and then booby-trapped
them. “They even stole our livestock,” he added. Egyptian security forces have
been battling a long-running Islamist insurgency in the Sinai Peninsula,
spearheaded by a local ISIS affiliate.”

 

Africa

 

Voice Of America: UN Condemns Boko Haram Attack That Kills Refugees, Displaced
People In Niger
<[link removed]>

 

“The U.N. refugee agency has condemned a recent attack by armed assailants on
Toumour, a town in southeast Niger, which killed at least 28 people and injured
hundreds more. Aid workers are doing their best to pick up the pieces after
Boko Haram militants savaged the town and its inhabitants during an attack on
December 12, which lasted four hours. UNHCR spokesman Babar Baloch says there
is heightened concern for the safety of more than 30,000 refugees and
internally displaced people sheltering in the town of Toumour, close to the
Nigerian border. “According to local sources, the assailants destroyed nearly
two-thirds of the town’s homes, burned the Toumour market to the ground, and
killed more than a thousand cattle.  Following the attack, most of the
population fled to the bush, with some people returning only at daytime,”  he
said. Baloch says his agency and others are working with local authorities to
provide emergency shelter, food, water and health care to the distraught
inhabitants of Toumour.  However, access to the area is difficult, he says
because of recent heavy flooding. He notes many of the survivors are on the
move toward Diffa, a town some 100 kilometers further inland.”

 

Reuters: U.S. Designates Bahrain-Based Group As Terrorist, Accusing It Of
Having Iran Backing
<[link removed]>

 

“The United States on Tuesday designated the Bahrain-based Saraya al-Mukhtar
group as a terrorist organization, accusing it of being backed by Iran and of
having plotted attacks against U.S. personnel in the Gulf Arab state. The move,
which comes amid a slew of sanctions announced by Washington as President
Donald Trump’s term nears a close, designates Saraya al-Mukhtar, a marginal
group operating underground, as a “Specially Designated Global Terrorist”. Most
of the group’s members are in jail or in Iran. U.S. Secretary of State Mike
Pompeo said Saraya al-Mukhtar, or Mukhtar Brigades, was designated for “posing
a significant risk of committing acts of terrorism that threaten the national
security and foreign policy of the United States”. “The group has plotted
attacks against U.S. personnel in Bahrain and has offered cash rewards for the
assassination of Bahraini officials,” Pompeo said in a statement. Tuesday’s
action freezes any of the group’s U.S. assets and generally bars Americans from
dealing with it. Pompeo also accused the group of having received financial and
logistical support from Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), which
controls a business empire as well as elite armed and intelligence forces in
Iran.”

 

United Kingdom

 

BBC News: Manchester Arena Inquiry: Bomber 'Sent Money To Family Before Attack'
<[link removed]>

 

“The Manchester Arena bomber transferred money to his family in Libya hours
before the attack, a public inquiry into the 2017 bombing has heard. Rabie
Zreba, who made the transfer, said he was contacted by a man he did not know on
the afternoon of 22 May. The man was Salman Abedi, who provided Mr Zreba with a
fake name and asked him to transfer £470, the inquiry heard. Later that night,
Abedi detonated a bomb at the end of an Ariana Grande concert, murdering 22
people. Mr Zreba told the inquiry he was “well known within the Libyan
community” for being involved in small trade and money transfers. He said he
met Abedi, who gave the false name “Mohamed Araby” and asked him to transfer
the money to his family, outside a mosque. The total amount transferred was
£470 and Abedi gave the recipient's name as “Muad Al-Tabbal”. The surname of
Abedi's mother, who is a suspect in the investigation into the bombing, is
Tabbal. While the attack was being prepared, Salman Abedi and his brother
Hashem Abedi used their mother's benefits money which was paid into a UK bank
account despite her having moved to Libya.”

 

Daily Mail: ISIS Bride Shamima Begum WILL Be Arrested And Must Be Treated As A
Security Threat If She Wins Her Legal Battle To Return To The UK, Met Police
Counter-Terror Chief Neil Basu Says
<[link removed]>

 

“ISIS bride Shamima Begum will be arrested and must be treated as a security
threat if she wins her legal battle to return home, the UK's counter-terror
chief has said. Neil Basu said people who had gone to Syria and made it back
should expect to be investigated and face prosecution. The assistant
commissioner of the Metropolitan Police said the country does not need to
'import a greater problem' on top of the current terrorism threat. It comes
after the head of the terrorism watchdog warned attempts to deradicalise
jihadis using mentoring and theological programmes do not work. Mr Basu told
the Standard Begum was the best example of the problem assessing the risk of
letting someone back into the UK. Begum, who was 15 when she and two other
schoolgirls flew to Syria in 2015, is appealing against a government decision
to strip her of her British citizenship. Her legal team last month told the
Supreme Court about the difficulty in contacting their client, who is being
held in a camp in the country. They claim the only way she can effectively
appeal the Government's decision is to return to the UK.”

 

France

 

Al Jazeera: Far-Right Activists Convicted Following Al Jazeera Investigation
<[link removed]>

 

“Three far-right activists in France caught on camera during an Al Jazeera
undercover investigation have been found guilty of offences that included
assault, and in one case incitement to “terrorism”. A judge at the High Court
in the northern city of Lille said footage from the two-part documentary
Generation Hate, by Al Jazeera’s Investigative Unit, played a key role in
establishing Tuesday’s verdicts. Remi Falize, 33, a former leading member of
the Flanders branch of the far-right group Generation Identity (GI), was
convicted of incitement to “terrorism” and assault. He was sentenced to eight
months in prison, suspended for 18 months. Falize was filmed by an undercover
Al Jazeera reporter who had infiltrated the GI’s Lille branch at the Citadelle
bar in the city centre. Falize was caught on a covert camera declaring at the
bar his dying wish would be to drive a car into the Wazemmes market in Lille, a
place popular with Arabs and Muslims. “The day that I find out I’ve got a
terminal illness, dude, I get a weapon, and I go sow carnage,” Falize said. He
added: “A mosque, whatever … even a car-ramming, I take my car and bam! There
we go! … Next to that, Charlie Hebdo will be like dog’s p***.”

 

Technology

 

USA Today: Google Think Tank's Report On White Supremacy Says Little About
Youtube's Role In People Driven To Extremism
<[link removed]>

 

“A Google-funded report examines the relationship between white supremacists
and the internet, but it makes scant reference – all of it positive – to
YouTube, the company's platform that many experts blame more than any other for
driving people to extremism. The report, by Jigsaw, a “tech incubator” that has
operated within Google for the past decade, draws from interviews with dozens
of former extremists and describes how the internet is a breeding ground for
hate groups. Study after study has shown that YouTube serves as a megaphone for
white supremacists and other hate groups and a pipeline for recruits. YouTube’s
algorithm has been found to direct users to extreme content, sucking them into
violent ideologies.  “They're underemphasizing the role that their own
technology and their own platforms have in pushing people towards extremism,”
said Bridget Todd, a writer and host of the podcast “There are No Girls on the
Internet.” “Individuals certainly have a responsibility to not allow themselves
to be engulfed in extremist content,” Todd said. “But if you’re a platform like
Google, you can’t just emphasize the individual’s responsibility and completely
obscure the fact that your massive platform has allowed online extremist
content to fester and become so popular.”

 

The Jerusalem Post: Online Antisemitism Peaks In National Tension, Helped By
Russian Trolls
<[link removed]>

 

“Soon after the 2017 far-right rally in Charlottesville, Virginia, a Twitter
user going by the name “jojoh888” knew who was to blame for the clashes between
neo-Nazis and the antifa activists who opposed them: George Soros, the Jewish
billionaire and progressive philanthropist. “George Soros is the puppet master.
He’s funding both sides,” the account tweeted, echoing a false claim expressed
frequently by far-right activists. “jojoh888” was a Russian troll controlled by
Vladimir Putin’s government that was suspended in 2018 in an effort to root out
disinformation from Twitter. To the Network Contagion Research Institute, which
studies how hate manifests on social media, the tweet was a perfect
encapsulation of how antisemitism is now showing up online. A new report by the
institute illustrates how antisemitism has been a feature of the widely
publicized Russian disinformation campaigns surrounding American elections and
other moments of social tension, with an eye toward sowing division in the
United States by way of social media. The anti-Jewish slurs from Russian
accounts dovetail with increased online antisemitism around significant dates
like Election Day or Inauguration Day, or during periods of crisis like the
Charlottesville rally or the ongoing pandemic.”

Click here to unsubscribe.
<[link removed]>
 
Screenshot of the email generated on import

Message Analysis

  • Sender: Counter Extremism Project
  • Political Party: n/a
  • Country: n/a
  • State/Locality: n/a
  • Office: n/a
  • Email Providers:
    • Iterable