From CEP's Eye on Extremism <[email protected]>
Subject UN Experts: Terrorist Threat Remains High In Conflict Areas
Date July 20, 2022 1:30 PM
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“U.N. experts said Tuesday the threat from Islamic State extremists and
al-Qaida remains high in conflict areas and neighboring countries and warned t











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Eye on Extremism


July 20, 2022



Associated Press: UN Experts: Terrorist Threat Remains High In Conflict Areas
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“U.N. experts said Tuesday the threat from Islamic State extremists and
al-Qaida remains high in conflict areas and neighboring countries and warned
that those conflicts will “incubate” the capability for a terrorist operation
elsewhere in the world unless they are successfully resolved. In a wide-ranging
report to the U.N. Security Council, the experts said both the Islamic State
and al-Qaida operate in the areas of greatest concern -- Africa, central and
south Asia, and the “Levant” which includes Syria and Iraq. The experts said
foreigners who fought with the Islamic State group are “another major potential
threat multiplier” along with their dependents and quoted one unnamed country
reporting that an estimated 120,000 remain in 11 camps and some 20 prison
facilities in northeast Syria. Another country reported that approximately
10,000 “foreign terrorist fighters” remain in custody of the U.S.-backed and
Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces, they said. The panel of experts
monitoring sanctions against al-Qaida and the Islamic State, also known as IS
and ISIL, said that among those being held are 30,000 children under the age of
12, “who are at risk of radicalization by extreme ISIL ideology. It quoted
another unnamed country as saying ISIL is seeking to create a new generation of
extremists and is continuing its “cubs of the caliphate” approach adopted when
its so-called caliphate ruled a significant swathe of Syria and Iraq from
2014-2017.”



Fox News: Africa: The New Ground Zero For Jihadi Terror Groups, Experts Say
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“Africa has been beset by jihadi violence, and it is something the U.S. will
need to pay close attention to, observers warn. On Sunday, a U.S. airstrike
killed two al-Shabab terrorists in response to an attack carried out against
U.S. partner forces in Somalia. “The Islamic Jihad in Africa is real,” claims
Jasmine Opperman, South Africa based security consultant specializing in
extremism and political violence, who believes Africa has taken over from the
Middle East as the jihadis main area of operations. “It definitely is the
case”, Opperman told Fox News Digital. “If one looks at the history of Africa,
I'm going into Mali and the West Africa region, Somalia, the East Africa
region, the Democratic Republic of the Congo and Mozambique, we are seeing that
al-Qaeda has always had an entrenched presence in Africa. We are seeing an
environment conducive for these international terror groups to find themselves,
embed themselves and take the lead in extremist activities in all of these
regions.” Earlier this month, Nigeria's most secure prison was overrun by
jihadis, even though the Nigerian Minister of the Interior Rauf Aregbesola said
Kuje Prison is a world-class facility and “the most fortified in the country”.
However, a platoon of the Nigerian army “with sophisticated weapons” were no
match when an Islamist jihadi movement decided to spring over 60 terrorists
jailed there.”



Syria



The New York Times: ISIS Fighters’ Children Are Growing Up In A Desert Camp.
What Will They Become?
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“Viewed from a helicopter, this enormous camp that holds the wives and
children of dead or captured Islamic State fighters was a sea of white tents
against the desolate landscape of drought-stricken northeastern Syria. From the
ground, the human dimension of this tragedy came into focus. As a convoy of
armored vehicles made its way up a dusty road, children emerged to stand at the
fence amid garbage. Some waved. One boy, in a faded “Star Wars” shirt, stood
with hands clasped behind his back. Another, in an oversize polo shirt, held
aloft a star folded from paper. Al Hol is a detention camp for people displaced
by the ISIS war — guards do not let residents walk out its gates. About 93
percent of the 55,000 people here are women and children, about half under 12
years old. While most have Iraqi or Syrian mothers, thousands come from about
51 other countries, including European nations that have been reluctant to
repatriate them. The world’s attention has largely moved on since the Islamic
State’s last major enclave here crumbled in 2019. But left behind are tens of
thousands of children growing up under brutal circumstances and intensely
vulnerable to radicalization. They are surrounded by hard-line, militant women;
as boys grow into teenagers, they are sometimes transferred to wartime prisons
for fighters.”



AFP: Russia, Turkey And Iran To Continue Cooperation To ‘Eliminate Terrorists’
In Syria
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“Russia, Turkey and Iran on Tuesday vowed to continue their cooperation to
“eliminate terrorists” in Syria, in a trilateral statement after their
presidents met in Tehran. The three countries “reaffirmed the determination to
continue their ongoing cooperation in order to ultimately eliminate terrorist
individuals, groups, undertakings and entities,” the statement read. They
“expressed their opposition to the illegal seizure and transfer of oil revenues
that should belong to Syria”. For the latest headlines, follow our Google News
channel online or via the app. They also “rejected all attempts to create new
realities on the ground under the pretext of combating terrorism, including
illegitimate self-rule initiatives, and expressed their determination to stand
against separatist agendas” in Syria. The trilateral statement was released
after Erdogan urged his Russian and Iranian counterparts to back his efforts to
fight “terrorism” in Syria. It comes after he has lately repeatedly threatened
to launch a military offensive against a semi-autonomous Kurdish administration
in Syria's oil-rich northeast. Turkey has launched waves of attacks on Syria
since 2016, targeting the Kurdish fighters as well as ISIS group extremists.”



SOFREP: US To Fund Syrian Detention Facilities, But Will This Address ISIS
Threats?
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“With looming challenges in Syria, the US Department of Defense (DoD) is
preparing to address them as it faces military challenges and threats to civil
security. The US and its coalition partners said they are proceeding with their
mission in Syria to “Defeat ISIS.” However, more than 10,000 ISIS combatants
are hosted in “makeshift detention facilities” and approximately 60,000
displaced civilians. The latter is housed in the al-Hol and al-Roj camps. These
factors continue to pose a significant threat. During a conversation held at
the Middle East Institute in Washington, District of Columbia, Dana Stroul, the
deputy assistant secretary of defense for the Middle East, stated that: “The
threat which we all know is that ISIS views the detention facilities where its
fighters are housed as the population to reconstitute its army.” Stroul also
emphasized in her statement that ISIS views al-Hol and al-Roj facilities, along
with the children and teenagers housed in those camps, as the organization’s
“future generation.” According to Stroul, the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria
(ISIS) soon crumbled, and as a result, there were insufficient facilities to
imprison all of the seized ISIS fighters. These fighters were held in makeshift
detention facilities, such as schools or office buildings.”



Afghanistan



Human Rights Watch: UN Reports On Taliban Repression, Abuse In Afghanistan
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“A new report by the United Nations Assistance Mission in Afghanistan (UNAMA)
makes for very grim reading, confirming many of the concerns Afghan human
rights advocates have raised since last August, when the Taliban took control
of Afghanistan. UNAMA catalogues serious human rights abuses that Taliban
forces have committed, including summary executions and enforced disappearances
of former members of the Afghan National Security Forces, which have continued
months after the Taliban takeover. It chronicles the series of Taliban decrees
on the rights of women and girls that have given rise to “severe restrictions
on their human rights, resulting in their exclusion from most aspects of
everyday and public life.” And UNAMA describes how “arbitrary arrests and
detention of journalists, human rights defenders, [and] protesters have had a
chilling effect on freedom of the media and civic activism.” The response from
the Taliban authorities was predictable. They ignored the many cases of
extrajudicial killings and enforced disappearances UNAMA documented, and they
denied the Ministry of Propagation of Virtue and Prevention of Vice had “ever
beaten anyone, harmed or forced anyone to do anything … or said anything to
women about dress code.” Much of their response was limited to the situation of
prisoners, including the peculiar and false assertion that inmates “are
satisfied” with prison food.”



Lebanon



Associated Press: Israeli Leader Warns Hezbollah During Visit To Border
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“Israel’s new prime minister paid an unannounced visit to the border with
Lebanon on Tuesday, threatening to unleash a harsh military response to what he
described as “unacceptable” aggression by the Lebanese militant Hezbollah
group. The visit came at a time of heightened tensions with Hezbollah, a
heavily armed group that fought Israel during a monthlong war in 2006. On
Monday, Israel said it intercepted a drone that crossed from Lebanese
territory, and last week, Hezbollah’s leader threatened Israel with military
escalation if a dispute over a maritime border is not resolved in Lebanon’s
favor. “Israel is prepared to act against any threat,” said Yair Lapid, who
took over Israel’s caretaker prime minister on July 1. “We have no interest in
escalation but Hezbollah’s aggression is unacceptable and is liable to lead the
entire region into an unnecessary escalation.” He was joined by Israeli Defense
Minister Benny Gantz and top military officials as he toured the area. Israel
considers Hezbollah its most serious immediate threat, estimating the
Iranian-backed group has some 150,000 rockets and missiles aimed at Israel.”



Middle East



Associated Press: Palestinian Attacker Shot; Israel And Hamas Exchange Fire
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“A Palestinian attacker in Jerusalem stabbed a man on a bus with a screw
driver on Tuesday before he was shot by a bystander, Israeli police said.
Earlier Tuesday, Israeli aircraft struck a post belonging to the militant Hamas
group in the Gaza Strip, in response to a gunshot fired into southern Israel
from the Palestinian territory earlier in the day, the military said. In the
Jerusalem stabbing, hospital officials said the victim, a man in his 40s, was
moderately wounded. The alleged attacker was shot by a nearby bystander and
taken to hospital in critical condition. Police said initial reports indicated
the attack was nationalistically motivated but gave no further details. In the
Gaza airstrike, Palestinian media said the site was struck multiple times by
missiles from the air. Earlier Tuesday, a bullet fired from Gaza hit an
industrial building in the community of Netiv HaAsara, the military said. There
were no reports of injuries in either incident. No one has claimed
responsibility for firing the bullet, but Israel holds Hamas responsible for
all violence originating from Gaza, which has been under the rule of the
Islamic militant since 2007. On Saturday, the Israeli military carried out a
series of airstrikes on a Hamas site in response to a rocket fire toward
Israel.”



Voice Of America: Al-Qaida Positioned To Surpass Islamic State Among Jihadis
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“Al-Qaida, boosted by leadership stability and the Taliban takeover of
Afghanistan, appears to be positioning itself to once again be seen as the
world's preeminent terror group and as the greatest long-term threat to the
West. Intelligence shared by United Nations member states and published in a
new report Tuesday, finds al-Qaida is enjoying a degree of freedom under
Taliban rule that has allowed its leadership to communicate more often and more
easily with affiliates and followers, and sell itself as a more attractive
option than its rival, the Islamic State terror group, also known as IS, ISIS
or ISIL. “The international context is favorable to al-Qaida, which intends to
be recognized again as the leader of global jihad,” according to the U.N.
report. “Al-Qaida propaganda is now better developed to compete with ISIL as
the key actor in inspiring the international threat environment, and it may
ultimately become a greater source of directed threat,” the report added,
noting that IS “has suffered a rapid succession of leadership losses since
October 2019, with an as yet unknown impact on its operational health.” The
report further concludes that al-Qaida leader Ayman al-Zawahiri, long rumored
to be in ill health or dying, is “alive and communicating freely.”



Nigeria



Sahara Reporters: Many Nigerian Soldiers Feared Killed In Fresh Boko Haram
Ambush In Borno
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“A yet-to-be-confirmed number of soldiers has been killed and several others
missing after an ambush by militants from the Islamic State-backed faction of
Boko Haram, the Islamic State West Africa Province (ISWAP), formerly known as
Jamā'at Ahl as-Sunnah lid-Da'wah wa'l-Jihād in Borno State. Multiple military
sources told SaharaReporters that the attack took place in the Gubio Local
Government Area of the state on Monday. The sources added that at least a
military vehicle, several weapons and ammunition were stolen and burnt by the
terrorists during the attack. SaharaReporters gathered that the soldiers were
on patrol to clear some Boko Haram terrorists in the area following credible
intelligence when they were ambushed by the group. The terrorist group in a
statement sighted by SaharaReporters on Tuesday confirmed the ambush. Boko
Haram and its offshoot, Islamic State West Africa Province, have killed
thousands and displaced millions of people in northeastern Nigeria. The
Nigerian military has repeatedly claimed that the insurgency has been largely
defeated and frequently underplays any losses. In the past months, soldiers
have been targeted by insurgents.”



Sahara Reporters: African Union Donates Military Equipment To Fight Boko Haram
Terrorists In Nigeria, Chad, Others
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“The African Union (AU) has donated military equipment to boost the
counter-insurgency operations of the Multinational Joint Task Force in the Lake
Chad region. This is contained in a statement issued by Chief of Military
Public Information, MNJTF, Lt.-Col, Kamarudeen Adegoke, from the MNJTF
Headquarters in N’Djamena, Chad on Tuesday. Adegoke said the donation of the
equipment was done through the Lake Chad Basin Commission (LCBC). The News
Agency of Nigeria reports that the donated equipment includes Armoured
Personnel Carriers (APCs); troop-carrying vehicles, buses, high calibre
generators, Counter Improvised Explosive Devices (IED) equipment, and office
equipment. He said the equipment was handed over to the recipients’ Troops
Contributing Countries (TCCs) of Nigeria, Niger, and Chad after the necessary
paperwork and authorisation by the AU. According to him, the approval comes
after the visit of the Force Commander, MNJTF, Maj.-Gen Abdul Khalifah Ibrahim
to the AU Continental Logistics Base in Doula, Cameroon in November 2021 where
he inspected and identified various equipment that would be useful in its
counter-insurgency operations.”



Africa



AFP: Rebels Kill 10 In Eastern DR Congo
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“Suspected rebels have left at least 10 people dead in a series of attacks in
eastern Democratic Republic of Congo, local sources said Monday, while the army
reported killing 22 insurgents over the week. The feared Armed Democratic
Forces (ADF) faction was believed to have carried out the assault on Saturday
and Sunday in the volatile region. “We discovered eight bodies of civilians
killed by these ADF, one was burned in his home,” on Sunday night at Ndimo
village in Ituri province, local civil-society leader Dieudonne Malangay told
AFP. He added that on Saturday, ADF combatants had also killed two civilians in
the neighboring village of Otmaber, set ablaze 10 houses in the area and
torched two vehicles on national route 4. The army spokesman for Ituri,
lieutenant Jules Ngongo, did not answer reporters about the number of civilians
killed in the latest attacks. However, he said the armed forces “control the
security and operational situation,” in the area. “Twenty-two ADF terrorist
elements” had been killed and soldiers were still carrying out search
operations, he added. The ADF — which the Islamic State group claims as its
Central African offshoot — is among the most violent of the more than 120
militias that roam eastern Congo.”



Reuters: Togo Villagers Flee To Urban Centres After Militant Attacks
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“Civilians in a part of northern Togo attacked by suspected Islamist militants
last week have been fleeing their homes en masse to seek refuge in nearby
cities, a local mayor said. More than 25 people were killed in the attacks on
four villages in the Kpendjal district, near the border with Burkina Faso, two
local activists told Reuters. The government said a number of people were
killed but did not say how many. “People are leaving their villages en masse,”
Arzoume Sambiani, the mayor of a part of Kpendjal, said in a statement on
Monday. He urged civilians to return to their villages and resume their
everyday activities while avoiding travel after dark. Togo's government
declared a state of emergency last month across the wider Savanes region in the
north. Togo has experienced a spate of attacks this year linked to a spillover
of jihadist violence that has ravaged its northern neighbours in the Sahel
region over the past decade. Militant violence previously confined to Burkina
Faso, Mali and Niger has been spreading into coastal West African countries,
including Benin and Ivory Coast, despite the presence of foreign troops across
the region.”



Australia



The Advocate: Sydney Man On Trial For Plotting Mardi Gras Isis-Related Terror
Attack
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“A convicted terrorist recruiter in Australia faced a judge and jury this week
on charges of plotting a terrorist attack against Sydney’s famed Mardi Gras
celebration. Prosecutors argued in a New South Wales courtroom that Hamdi
Alqudsi, 47, was the ringleader of Shura, an Islamic State terrorist cell in
Australia that conspired to hang an ISIS flag from atop the iconic Sydney
Harbor Bridge and kill international tourists at the city's Gay and Lesbian
Mardi Gras celebrations, according to the Australian Associated Press.
Authorities say Alqudsi directed the group's activities from August 30 to
December 31, 2014. Alqudsi was previously convicted in 2016 of helping young
men travel to Syria to fight on behalf of the Islamic State terrorist
organization. According to The Australian, prosecutor Patricia McDonald said
Alquidsi and Shura pledged allegiance to ISIS through Alqudsi's contact in
Syria, Mohammad Ali Baryalie. “I want to make a pledge of allegiance very
soon,” Alqudsi allegedly messaged Baryalie. “I want to write my name down for a
martyrdom operation please as soon as possible. Put my name in this list
because my intention is to execute a great operation, God willing.” “It was a
two-stage process: you give your pledge of allegiance, Islamic State is
informed, and they then determine whether it’s accepted,” McDonald explained to
the court earlier today, according to the paper.”



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