From CEP's Eye on Extremism <[email protected]>
Subject Exclusive: U.N. Team Finds Houthis Launched Aden Airport Attack That Killed 22 - Diplomats
Date March 30, 2021 1:30 PM
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“An investigation by a U.N. team of experts found Yemen’s Houthis were
responsible for a Dec. 30 attack on Aden airport that killed at least 22 people

 

 


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Eye on Extremism


March 30, 2021

 

Reuters: Exclusive: U.N. Team Finds Houthis Launched Aden Airport Attack That
Killed 22 - Diplomats
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“An investigation by a U.N. team of experts found Yemen’s Houthis were
responsible for a Dec. 30 attack on Aden airport that killed at least 22 people
as members of the country’s internationally recognized government arrived, two
diplomats familiar with the matter said on Monday. The experts presented their
report to the U.N committee that oversees Yemen-related sanctions during closed
consultations on Friday, but Russia blocked its wider release, the diplomats
said. They asked for anonymity because of the sensitivity of the matter. The
Iran-aligned Houthis denied responsibility for the attack when it took place.
The diplomats did not elaborate on why Russia blocked the release of the
findings. The Russian mission to the United Nations did not respond immediately
to a request for comment. The report comes at a sensitive time for new U.S.
President Joe Biden as his administration and the United Nations press the
Houthis to accept a peace initiative that includes a ceasefire. Saudi Arabia
and the Yemeni government have endorsed the initiative but the Houthis say it
does not go far enough. The Houthi movement, which controls most of Yemen’s
north, has been fighting forces loyal to President Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi’s
internationally recognized government and a Saudi-led coalition in what is
widely seen as a proxy war between Tehran and Riyadh.”

 

Reuters: Islamic State Claims Deadly Attack On Northern Mozambique Town
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“Islamic State said on Monday its fighters had carried out an attack on the
northern Mozambique town of Palma, where dozens were killed, thousands
displaced and some remain missing. Islamist insurgents hit the town, adjacent
to gas projects worth $60 billion, with a three-pronged attack on Wednesday.
Fighting continued on Monday, according to a security source directly involved
in efforts to secure the town. The government confirmed on Sunday that dozens
of people had died, including seven when their convoy of cars was ambushed
during an escape attempt. Islamic State claimed the attack via its Amaq news
agency, saying its fighters had taken control of the town after days of clashes
with security forces. They had killed at least 55 people, including a number of
soldiers, destroyed and taken control of buildings including factories and
banks, and seized vehicles, it said. Reuters could not independently verify the
claims. Most communications to Palma have been down since Wednesday. Officials
at Mozambique’s defence ministry and its national police could not be reached
for comment by phone on Monday and did not immediately reply to text messages.
The country’s northernmost province of Cabo Delgado, where Palma is located on
the border with Tanzania, has been home since 2017 to a simmering Islamist
insurgency now linked to Islamic State.”

 

United States

 

USA Today: Judge Sends 3 Suspects To Trial In Gov. Whitmer Kidnap Plot; 1
Terrorism Charge Dismissed
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“A judge on Monday threw out one of the charges against three men accused in
connection with the plot to kidnap Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer, but the men
are still headed to trial court. Judge Michael Klaeren ruled there wasn't
enough probable cause in the case against Pete Musico, 43; his son-in-law,
Joseph Morrison, 26, and Paul Bellar, 22, to send charges forward for
communicating a threat of terrorism. His ruling came at the conclusion of their
preliminary examination in Jackson, Michigan. Musico and Morrison were already
facing charges related to this, but the Michigan Attorney General's Office had
asked that Bellar face such a charge, too. However, charges for providing
material support to a terrorist act, charges connected to gang membership, and
charges of carrying a firearm in the commission of a felony were bound over to
circuit court, marking the end of a multi-day hearing for which testimony was
held earlier in March. Each count is punishable by up to 20 years in prison
upon conviction, except for the weapons charge, which is punishable by two
years in prison upon conviction for a first offense. The men are three of the
14 said to have plotted to target Whitmer in response to her coronavirus
restrictions.”

 

Bloomberg Government: Domestic Terrorism To Skirt Sweeping 9/11-Style Law In
Congress
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“Domestic White-supremacist extremism is the greatest threat to U.S. security,
President Joe Biden’s top homeland security official told Congress — in the
same way Islamist extremists were cast as the greatest threat before and after
the 9/11 attacks two decades ago. But unlike after 9/11, when Congress enacted
broad measures to combat Islamist terrorism — ranging from a new airport
security regime to warrantless wiretapping — key homeland security lawmakers
aren’t likely to pursue expanded powers to fight the domestic threat any time
soon. Some lawmakers believe the solutions to domestic violent extremism can be
found in current rules and better resource allocation. There’s also the reality
that passing legislation could prove impossible in a political climate in which
the definition of domestic terrorism is contested and highly charged. For
example, 12 Republicans opposed a bill to award Congressional Gold Medals to
Capitol Police officers who died from the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol because
the lawmakers disputed the bill’s characterization of the attack as an
“insurrection.”

 

Syria

 

Voice Of America: US-Backed Syrian Forces Launch Anti-IS Campaign In Al-Hol
Camp
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“U.S.-backed Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) have announced a major security
operation against Islamic State (IS) cells inside al-Hol camp in northeast
Syria. The campaign, launched Sunday, is in response to growing violence inside
the camp, which is home to nearly 62,000 people, including thousands of
families of IS foreign fighters. Nearly 6,000 SDF fighters, local security
forces and members of anti-terror units are participating in the operation,
local military officials said. “All these forces are involved in this operation
in order to achieve the goal of clearing al-Hol camp from the remnants of
Daesh,” said Ali Hassan, a spokesman for the SDF-linked internal security
forces in northeast Syria, using an Arabic acronym for the terror group. At
least a dozen individuals with suspected links to IS have so far been arrested
during the operation, local news sources said.    In recent months, the camp
has seen an increase in killings among its population. According to the United
Nations, at least 40 people, including two children, have been killed inside
the camp since the beginning of the year.”

 

Iraq

 

Al Monitor: Iraq Fortifies Syria Border Against Islamic State
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“Iraq's Joint Operations Command has secured about 140 kilometers (87 miles)
of the border with Syria against Islamic State militants in coordination with
Russia, Iran and the Syrian regime. Despite the terror group's defeat in July
2017, IS continues to maintain sleeper cells in large areas of Iraq and Syria
and its sporadic attacks kill and injure many people. Since the beginning of
2020, there has been an uptick in IS attacks, reaching their highest level
since the collapse of IS’ last strongholds in eastern Deir ez-Zor on March 23,
2019. IS now conducts direct attacks on checkpoints and patrols and
assassinates operatives or collaborators with the Syrian Democratic Forces
(SDF). The militants plant improvised explosive devices and place booby-trapped
vehicles on routes used by its targets. A 610-kilometer (380-mile) border
separates Syria and Iraq. Some 220 kilometers (137 miles) held by the Iraqi
Kurdish peshmerga forces in the Kurdistan Region are not fortified. The Iraqi
Ministry of Defense, the Iraqi Ministry of Water Resources and the Popular
Mobilization Units Authority secured a long portion of this porous land strip,
digging a trench three meters deep and four meters wide and installing
embankments, barbed wire and observation towers.”

 

Afghanistan

 

Associated Press: Afghan Group Probes Reports Of 20 Civilians Killed In Khost
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“A human rights group in Afghanistan said Monday it was probing a shooting
last week in which CIA-trained Afghan forces reportedly killed 20 civilians
during an anti-Taliban operation in eastern Khost province. The development
comes as Washington is trying to negotiate a reduction in violence between the
Taliban and Afghan government forces. The reports first surfaced on Sunday,
when residents from the province's Saberi district said pro-government forces —
the so-called intelligence special forces — killed several civilians, including
women and children. The Afghanistan Independent Human Rights Commission said it
launched an investigation. Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid circulated
photographs of the purported victims and urged the government to stop such
attacks if it seeks a reduction in violence. A video taken by an alleged Saberi
resident and circulated on social media shows an old man carrying a child’s
lifeless body, claiming several members of his family were killed. He says no
Taliban were killed in thes operation. The CIA-trained Afghan special forces
have in the past been accused of repeated attacks on civilians and have been
called out by Human Rights Watch and the United Nations for their often
heavy-handed tactics that have left civilians dead.”

 

Pakistan

 

Associated Press: Gunmen Kill Elected Official, Policeman In Kashmir Attack
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“Gunmen killed an official of India’s ruling party and a policeman in disputed
Kashmir on Monday, police said. Police blamed anti-India militants for the
attack. None of the rebel groups that have been fighting against Indian rule
since 1989 immediately claimed responsibility. Police officer Sudanshu Verma
said militants fired at a municipal office in northwestern Sopore town during a
meeting of local councilors. A councilor and a police official were killed, and
another councilor was wounded, he said. Police and soldiers cordoned off the
area and searched for the attackers. The dead councilor was a member of India’s
ruling Bharatiya Janata Party. The Himalayan region of Kashmir is divided
between India and Pakistan, and both countries claim it in its entirety. Many
Muslim Kashmiris support the rebel goal that the territory be united, either
under Pakistani rule or as an independent country. New Delhi describes the
Kashmir militancy as Pakistan-sponsored terrorism. Pakistan denies the charge,
and most Kashmiris consider it a legitimate freedom struggle. Tens of thousands
of civilians, rebels and government forces have been killed in the conflict.”

 

Yemen

 

Arab News: Blinken Urged By Lawmakers To Relist Houthis As Terrorist
Organization <[link removed]>

 

“United States Secretary of State, Antony Blinken, was urged by lawmakers to
redesignate the Iran-backed Houthi militias as a terrorist organization, Al
Arabiya reported on Tuesday. Members of the House Foreign Affairs Committee
wrote in a letter to Blinken that attacks in the Middle East have increased,
which include targeting civilians and energy infrastructures, the report said.
President’s Joe Biden’s administration reversed one of Donald Trump’s decisions
that placed the Houthi militia as a terrorist organization. Former US Secretary
of State Mike Pompeo had blacklisted the Houthis on Jan. 19, one day before
Biden took office. “The designations are intended to hold Ansar Allah
accountable for its terrorist acts, including cross-border attacks threatening
civilian populations, infrastructure, and commercial shipping,” Pompeo said.
“The designations are also intended to advance efforts to achieve a peaceful,
sovereign and united Yemen that is both free from Iranian interference and at
peace with its neighbors.”

 

Lebanon

 

France 24: US Offers $10 Mln For Hezbollah Fugitive Over Hariri Killing
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“The United States on Monday offered $10 million to find a fugitive Hezbollah
suspect who was convicted over the assassination of Lebanon's former prime
minister Rafic Hariri. The State Department said it would offer the reward for
“information leading to the location or identification” of Salim Ayyash or
“information leading to preventing him from engaging in an act of international
terrorism against a US person or US property.” The Special Tribunal for
Lebanon, set up by the United Nations in The Netherlands, in December convicted
Ayyash in absentia to life in prison over the killing of Hariri in 2005.
Ayyash, 57, is believed to be in hiding in Lebanon where Hezbollah's chief
Hassan Nasrallah has refused to hand him over. The tribunal has since said it
will also try Ayyash over three other attacks on Lebanese politicians in the
mid-2000s. The State Department said that Ayyash has also plotted to harm US
military personnel. Hariri, a Sunni Muslim, was allegedly killed because he
opposed Lebanon's control by Syria, which is allied with Hezbollah, a Shiite
Muslim movement backed by Iran. The assassination sparked the Cedar Revolution
which forced out Syrian troops. The United States considers Hezbollah a
terrorist group but the movement wields political power in Lebanon, holding
seats in parliament.”

 

Somalia

 

Africanews: Al-Shabaab Calls For Attacks On U.S, French Interests In Djibouti
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“Al-Shabaab calls for attacks on US, French interests in Djibouti. The leader
of Somali's jihadist group Al-Shabaab has called for attacks on “American and
French interests” in Djibouti, in a video released Saturday night, less than
two weeks before the country's presidential election. Ahmed Diriye, also known
as Ahmed Umar Abu Ubaidah, lashed out at Djibouti's President Ismail Omar
Guelleh, who has been in power since 1999 and is set to run a fifth term in
elections on April 9. TheAlshabaab accused Djibouti President Guelleh of
turning the Horn of Africa country “into a military base from where every war
against the Muslims in East Africa is planned and executed”. “Make American and
French interests in Djibouti the highest priority of your targets,” he told
followers in the video. Djibouti's strategic location as a gateway to both
Africa and the Arabian Peninsula has made it a sought-after destination for
foreign military bases.”

 

Africa

 

Bloomberg: Ivory Coast Blames Terrorists For Border Attacks Targeting Army
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“Ivorian authorities said three soldiers were killed and five wounded in
attacks on two military targets near the country’s border with Burkina Faso
amid an escalation of jihadist violence in the region. Three assailants were
also killed in the first attack on a military base in Kafolo overnight,
according to a statement from Armed Forces Chief Lassina Doumbia Monday. The
army blamed the attack on “about sixty heavily armed terrorists from Burkina
Faso,” without giving details on their affiliation. The authors of a second
attack on a post in Kolobougou are unknown, Doumbia said. The incident comes
less than a year after a similar strike in June, which also targeted Kafolo’s
army base. That was the first suspected militant attack in Ivory Coast since a
March 2016 raid on the beach resort of Grand-Bassam left 19 people dead. The
world’s top cocoa grower has been largely spared from violence that’s ravaged
its northern neighbors in recent years. Insurgents have been moving further
south since groups affiliated to al-Qaeda occupied urban centers in northern
Mali in 2012, and the violence has spilled over to several other countries in
the region. There’s also been a rise in attacks perpetrated by groups
affiliated to the Islamic State.”

 

Reuters: Palma Attack May Show Increasing 'Brazenness' Of Islamic State In
Mozambique -U.S. Official <[link removed]>

 

“An attack on the northern Mozambique town of Palma where dozens were killed
and thousands displaced may show the increasing “brazenness” of Islamic State
in the country, a U.S. official said on Monday. The U.S. Department of State's
acting special envoy for the global coalition to defeat ISIS, John Godfrey,
told reporters the attack was in line with what has been seen from Islamic
State in Mozambique and said the U.S. government is closely monitoring events.
He cited what he said was the brutality of the attack and the killing of
civilians as well as the increased brazenness of the group, which is now
seeking to hold some towns. “The attacks there are horrific, frankly, and show
a complete disregard for the life, welfare and security of the local
population,” Godfrey said of the attacks in Palma. “Attacks such as these are
clear indicators that ISIS continues to actively seek to spread its malign
activity to new fronts,” he added. Godfrey said one American was on the ground
in Palma and that the understanding is the citizen has been successfully
evacuated. Islamist insurgents hit the town, adjacent to gas projects worth $60
billion, with a three-pronged attack on Wednesday. Fighting continued on
Monday, according to a security source directly involved in efforts to secure
the town.”

 

France

 

NBC News: Bill Aims To Tackle Rising Extremism In France. Some Say It's An
Infringement Of Rights.
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“A draft law being debated in the French Senate this week aimed at
strengthening the country and stamping out extremism has unwittingly revealed
just how divided the country is. Proponents of the controversial bill put
forward by President Emmanuel Macron’s government say it is simply intended to
reinforce the nation’s “republican values” — liberty, equality and fraternity.
France defends state neutrality through its distinct secularist model known as
“laïcité.” To crack down on extremist tendencies in the wake of a slew of
terrorist attacks, the legislation would require community groups to sign a
charter on those national principles and cap the funding the groups receive
from abroad. “What the French government right now is trying to tackle is what
they see and what a majority of the French population sees as rising radicalism
in certain neighborhoods,” said Benjamin Haddad, director of the Europe Center
at the Atlantic Council think tank. “It's obvious that some of that
conversation is being hijacked by populist movements,” he said, noting that
Macron’s moves have been criticized not only for pandering to right-wing
voters, but also for being too soft on radicalism.”

 

Australia

 

Brisbane Times: Australian Father-Of-Eight Accused Of Supporting Syrian
Terrorist
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“An Australian father-of-eight will remain behind bars after he was denied
bail during his first appearance in a Queensland court, accused of helping a
terrorist arrange to travel to Syria to fight against government forces in
2013. Ahmed Luqman Talib, 31, from Doncaster East in Melbourne’s north-east,
was extradited from Victoria and applied for bail in Brisbane Arrest Courts on
Monday after he and Gabriel Crazzi, 34, from Chambers Flat, south of Brisbane,
were arrested in a counter-terrorism sting on Thursday. Mr Talib is charged
with one count of preparations for foreign incursions into foreign states for
purpose of engaging in hostile activities between September 1, 2013 and October
1, 2020. He was born in Britain, left there aged four and eventually made his
way to Australia. His father is a biostatistics professor and Mr Talib runs the
family gemstone business, Talib & Sons. Mr Talib completed a bachelor of
international relations at Bond University on the Gold Coast in 2012.
Prosecutor Clare O’Connor said Mr Talib allegedly provided “information and
advice for the safe passage of witness 1 into Syria”. The witness co-operated
with the Australian Federal Police, which led to the arrests.”

 

Southeast Asia

 

The Guardian: Myanmar Military A 'Terrorist Group' That Should Face
International Court, Advisory Council Says
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“The Myanmar military is a “terrorist group” that should be brought before the
international criminal court, and funds flowing to it should be cut via a
global sanctions regime, the Special Advisory Council for Myanmar says. The
council has called for a “three cuts” strategy to combat the Tatmadaw, as the
military is known.First, refer the situation in Myanmar to the international
criminal court. Second, impose a comprehensive and internationally monitored
arms embargo. And third, use targeted financial sanctions against senior
military officials and all military-owned companies. Australian international
lawyer Chris Sidoti, a member of the advisory council and a former member of a
UN independent fact-finding mission on Myanmar, said the international
community must “follow the lead” of the Myanmar people who are defying the
military daily on the streets of the country’s cities. The special advisory
council is an independent group of international experts on Myanmar. “Myanmar
people are calling for international action under the responsibility to
protect,” Sidoti said. “In response, we want to see three cuts imposed on the
Myanmar military: cut the weapons, cut the cash, cut the impunity.”

 

France 24: Newlywed Suicide Bombers Identified In Indonesia Church Attack
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“Two suicide bombers who attacked an Indonesian cathedral on Palm Sunday were
newlyweds who joined a pro-Islamic State extremist group, police said Monday,
as they arrested others suspected in the plot. About 20 people were wounded in
the powerful explosion outside the church in Makassar city on Sulawesi island
while worshippers celebrated the start of Holy Week. Both suspects were killed
instantly after they rode a motorbike into the church compound and, when
challenged by security, detonated a bomb packed with nails, police said. They
were the only fatalities. About 15 victims remained in hospital Monday, with
two in intensive care for burn injuries. Four have been discharged. On Monday,
Indonesian authorities said the pair, identified through DNA and fingerprint
testing, had been married for about six months. The male suspect, who was in
his mid-twenties, left his family a suicide note that said he was ready to die
as a martyr. The couple belonged to an Islamic study group along with several
of nine other suspects arrested since Sunday over their alleged roles in the
attack, police said. “They each had their own role, including buying the
ingredients, teaching bomb making, creating the explosives and using them,”
National Police Chief Listyo Sigit Prabowo told reporters.”



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