The Islamic State Thread

ISLAMIC STATE GROUP GAINS TOEHOLD IN LIBYA: EXPERTS

With Libya engulfed in chaos, the town of Derna in the east of the largely lawless country is emerging as a new stronghold for the Islamic State jihadist group, experts say.

The North African state has been wracked by instability since the overthrow of autocratic leader Moamer Kadhafi in 2011, providing a fertile ground for Islamic extremists.

IS fighters have already swept across Iraq and Syria, and their leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi recently boasted of vows of allegiance from militants in Libya, Egypt, Algeria, Yemen and Saudi Arabia.

Some Western observers consider Derna, a town of 150,000, to be the home of a third IS franchise in North Africa, after Jund al-Khilifa in Algeria and Egypt's Ansar Beit al-Maqdis declared their support earlier this year.

"The Islamic State is in Derna. It's well documented. There's no doubt," said Othman Ben Sassi, a former member of the now-disbanded Transitional National Council, the political arm of the rebellion that overthrew Kadhafi.

The jihadist group is exploiting "the absence of state authority and porous borders," he added.

Statements and images have for several weeks circulated on extremist forums claiming to depict gatherings of "Libyan jihadists" belonging to IS -- prompting concern in Washington.

"We have seen reports that violent extremists (in Libya) have pledged allegiance to IS and are looking to associate themselves with it," said State Department spokesman Jeffrey Rathke.

Libyan authorities have struggled to control militant groups as well as powerful militias which ousted Kadhafi, and the internationally recognised government has been forced to take refuge in the far east of the oil-rich country.

Derna and large areas of Benghazi, Libya's second city, have served as strongholds for radical groups including Ansar al-Sharia, classed by the UN as a terrorist organisation.

In April, an offshoot of the group announced it had implemented Islamic sharia law in Derna.

The self-proclaimed "Shura Council of Islamic Youth" has reportedly opened Islamic courts and established a religious police force in the town.

Dozens of masked members have appeared in military fatigues, regularly parading in pick-up trucks brandishing rocket launchers and heavy machineguns and toting the black and white flag used by jihadists.

In August the Shura Council posted a video online appearing to show the public execution in a Derna football stadium of an Egyptian man accused of murder.

But the group has yet to formally pledge allegiance to IS, and analysts say there are divisions within its ranks.

"Several extremists in Derna are attracted to IS. But the majority of senior jihadists in Libya are former Al-Qaeda members and there is an ideological fight between IS and Al-Qaeda partisans," said a Libyan expert on jihadists who did not want to be named.

The UN this month branded Ansar al-Sharia a terrorist organisation owing to its affiliation with Al-Qaeda's North African franchise.

"The decision was based on reliable intelligence," the Libyan expert said. "Ansar al-Sharia has closer ties to Al-Qaeda than to any other group."

According to Claudia Gazzini, Libya analyst at International Crisis Group, some Derna factions have pledged allegiance to IS, but it is unclear which ones and how much support they enjoy.

"There is a misguided tendency to automatically associate the establishment of Islamic courts and the killings of soldiers with an IS agenda," she said.

Derna was already considered by many analysts to be a de-facto "Islamic emirate", entirely free from state control, before the reported claims of allegiance to IS.

The town has long been suspected of harbouring and training foreign fighters who then go on to fight in Iraq and Syria, where IS has declared a "caliphate" and imposed its harsh interpretation of Islamic law.

"There are factions in Derna who reportedly swore allegiance to IS in the search for a group that could unify the Muslim community," said a former Libyan official who also asked not to be named for security reasons.

"But ideological differences between jihadist groups and the international coalition offensive against IS means these factions have so far opted for discretion, or have gone to fight in Iraq and Syria," the former official added.

According to one resident of Derna, life in the town goes on largely as normal -- for most people.

"You go out, you do your chores, you visit friends. No one bothers you," the resident said.

"But if you are a policeman, a soldier or a lawyer, you're dead."


Source : Sapa-AFP /kn
Date : 26 Nov 2014 05:07
 
50 IS JIHADISTS KILLED IN KOBANE IN 24 HOURS: MONITOR

At least 50 Islamic State group jihadists have been killed in the past 24 hours in clashes, suicide bombings and US-led air strikes in Syria's Kobane, a monitor said Sunday.

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said the number of deaths was one of the highest daily tolls for the Sunni Muslim extremist group since it launched an assault on the strategic town on the Turkish border in September.

The Britain-based monitoring group said at least five of those killed were suicide bomb attackers, two of them involved in attacks on the border crossing that separates Kobane from Turkey.

Another 11 were killed in clashes that ensued between Kobane's Kurdish defenders and the jihadists at the border after the bombings, but there was no breakdown for the remaining toll.

The group also said 11 Kurdish fighters were killed in the same period in Kobane, along with one Syrian rebel fighter backing the Kurdish forces.

IS began advancing on Kobane on September 16, hoping to quickly seize the small border town and secure its grip on a large stretch of the Syrian-Turkish border.

At one point, it looked set to overrun the town, but Kurdish Syrian fighters, backed by US-led coalition air strikes and an influx of Iraqi Kurdish peshmerga forces, have held back the group.

For now, the town remains roughly evenly divided between IS and Kurdish control.

Source : Sapa-AFP /kd
Date : 30 Nov 2014 12:04
 
IRAQ GOVERNMENT, KURDS STRIKE DEAL ON BUDGET, OIL EXPORTS

Iraq's government and the autonomous Kurdish region have reached an agreement resolving a longstanding dispute over the budget and oil, in a move seen as a key step in improving cooperation against jihadists.

A statement from Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi's office Tuesday said the deal was approved during a cabinet meeting also attended by Kurdish Prime Minister Nechirvan Barzani.

According to the deal, which is due to come into effect at the start of 2015, 250,000 barrels per day (bpd) of oil will be exported from the autonomous region and 300,000 from the disputed province of Kirkuk.

"We have reached an agreement with the Iraqi government which will benefit both parties and whereby we will export 250,000 bpd of regional oil and help the federal government export the Kirkuk oil," Barzani told reporters.

The deal would see oil from the Kurdish region or claimed by its leadership exported via Kurdish pipelines but through the federal oil company.

In return, Baghdad will release the Kurdistan Regional Government's share of national revenue, which had been frozen for more than a year in retaliation for Arbil's efforts to export oil unilaterally.

It will also give a share of its military budget to the Kurdish peshmerga fighters.

"The federal prime minister has expressed his readiness to guarantee one billion dollars from the Iraqi budget for the peshmerga forces," Barzani said.

Abadi's office simply said that the Kurdish military would get a percentage of the federal armed forces' budget.


Source : Sapa-AFP /mm
Date : 02 Dec 2014 12:51
 
IS GROUP HAS TRAINING CAMPS IN EASTERN LIBYA: US GENERAL

The Islamic State group, which overran large areas of Iraq and Syria, has set up training camps in eastern Libya and the American military is closely monitoring, a top US general said Wednesday.

Western countries have been increasingly worried that Libya's political turmoil could provide fertile ground for Islamic extremists, but General David Rodriguez ruled out military action on the "nascent" camps in the immediate future.

"They put training camps out there," Rodriguez, head of US Africa Command, told reporters, referring to the IS organization that seized territory in Iraq and neighboring Syria this year in a brutal and swift offensive of beheadings and forced religious conversions.

He described the IS activity in eastern Libya as "very small and nascent."

"Around a couple hundred" militants were present at the camps and US forces would continue to track the area to see if the IS presence expanded, said Rodriguez.

The United States has been waging an air war against the IS group in Iraq and Syria, but when asked if the training camps in Libya were a potential target for American forces, Rodriguez said: "No, not right now."

The IS group "has begun its efforts over in the east out there to introduce some people over there," he said.

"But we'll have to just continue to monitor and watch that carefully in the future to see what happens or whether it grows on unabated."

The four-star general said it appeared the IS militants in Libya were not volunteers coming from outside the country but militia members who had shifted their loyalty to the jihadist group.

His comments came after the US government and European allies voiced "grave concern" over mounting violence and civil unrest in Libya.

Experts have warned that the IS group has gained a foothold in the eastern town of Derna, exploiting the chaos that has engulfed the North African state.

Libya has been plagued by instability since the overthrow of autocratic leader Moamer Kadhafi in 2011, and IS leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi recently boasted of vows of allegiance from militants in the country.

Analysts say a number of factions in Derna have pledged loyalty to the IS group, but it remains unclear how much support they enjoy.

IS, which aims to establish an Islamic "caliphate" across the region, is the prime target of the US-led bombing campaign in Iraq and Syria.

The group has attracted a wave of global revulsion after a series of horrific executions of Western hostages filmed and released online, as well as gruesome videos depicting the beheadings of Syrian and Iraqi forces.

While largely based in Iraq and Syria, the IS organization has also attracted pledges of allegiance from militant groups in Egypt, with the Ansar Beit al-Maqdis (Partisans of Jerusalem) group last month vowing support for the group.


Source : Sapa-AFP /aw
Date : 04 Dec 2014 02:59
 
Yes, just watch it.. thats the best course of action.... bloody PC nonsense.

Bomb the living shyte out of the place already.
 
AUSTRALIA: IS USING WESTERNERS AS 'CANNON FODDER'

Australia's government accused the Islamic State group of using foreign fighters as "cannon fodder," as the number of Australians killed while fighting alongside militants in Syria and Iraq rose to 20.

Australian Attorney General George Brandis said in a report published Tuesday that members of the Islamic State movement are tricking Westerners into believing they are playing a key part of a religious crusade.

"They are simply using them as frontline cannon fodder, suicide bombers and propaganda tools," Brandis told The Australian newspaper.

Twenty Australians have died in the conflict in Syria and Iraq, Brandis said, with several dying in recent weeks while fighting against government forces in the Syrian border town Kobani. Australia had previously put the death toll at 15.

"Australian youths, and many young men and women from Western countries, are being lured by the falsehood of a noble battle against an oppressive enemy," Brandis said. "In reality, they are merely taking part in acts of thoughtless violence - in many cases against innocent civilians - on behalf of ISIL, which is intent on recklessly enslaving, raping and murdering those with a contrary view to their own."

Last week, Australia used tough new counterterrorism laws to make it a criminal offense for Australians to travel to the Syrian province of al-Raqqa because of the Islamic State movement's hold on the war-ravaged region.

The government estimates at least 70 Australians are fighting with terrorist groups in Iraq and Syria.


Source : Sapa-AP /mm
Date : 09 Dec 2014 08:18
 
MORE THAN 700 IRAQI KURD FIGHTERS KILLED SINCE JUNE IS OFFENSIVE

Iraq's autonomous Kurdish region said Wednesday that 727 of its fighters have been killed in the conflict against the Islamic State group since the jihadists launched their offensive in June.

A statement from the region's military forces, known as the peshmerga, said 3,564 members of the Kurdish security forces had also been wounded over the past six months.

The dead and wounded included "officers, non-commissioned officers, members of the Asayish (intelligence agency), of the police and some peshmerga veterans," the statement said.

The peshmerga ministry said the tally covers the six months going back to June 10, the day after IS fighters who already held swathes of land in Syria launched a devastating offensive in Iraq.

The statement said 34 members of the Kurdish security forces are also still reported as missing.

The last overall toll released by an official Kurdish source was on August 8, when the regional presidency's chief of staff Fuad Hussein said 150 peshmerga had been killed.

When the jihadists launched their major offensive in Iraq on June 9, the federal Iraqi forces collapsed, commanders and foot soldiers alike often abandoning their posts without a fight.

The peshmerga moved in to the vacuum and took over several disputed areas they had long claimed from the federal state, de facto expanding the size of their region by around 40 percent.

However they were forced out of several of their newly acquired territories when IS fighters -- who had made Iraq's second city of Mosul their main hub -- launched a second offensive in August.

The fresh advance brought IS to within striking distance of the Kurdish capital of Arbil, which was one of the justifications put forward by US President Barack Obama when he ordered air strikes four months ago.

Several other nations -- including Britain, France and Australia -- have since joined the air campaign and the peshmerga have also received foreign assistance in the shape of weapons, military advisers and training.

"Peshmerga forces have succeeded in pushing IS away from several Kurdistan regions and in transitioning from a defensive to a offensive phase," Wednesday's statement said.


Source : Sapa-AFP /kn
Date : 10 Dec 2014 11:26
 
ISIS threatens to kill 2 Japanese hostages in 3 days unless $200mn ransom paid


Isis threatens to kill two Japanese hostages unless government pays $200m ransom


article-2917804-24DC448200000578-697_634x355.jpg

Militant warns the Japanese public had 72 hours to pressure their government

Heather Saul
Tuesday, 20 January 2015

Isis appears to have uploaded a video purporting to show two Japanese hostages and demanding $200 million (£132m) from the Japanese government to save their lives.

A militant dressed all in black appears in the footage wielding a knife and standing behind the two kneeling men, who are wearing orange clothing.

The hostages are identified in the video as Kenji Goto Jogo and Haruna Yukawa.

The Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, who was speaking from Jerusalem, demanded Isis release the two men immediately and described the threat to kill them as "unforgivable".

Speaking in English and with a British accent, the militant says: "To the prime minister of Japan: Although you are more than 8,000 and 500 kilometers (5,280 miles) from Isis, you willingly have volunteered to take part in this crusade.

"You have proudly donated $100m (£66m) to kill our women and children, to destroy the homes of the Muslims."

The militant warns the Japanese public had 72 hours to pressure their government to stop its "foolish" support for the US-led coalition waging a military campaign against Islamic State.

"Otherwise this knife will become your nightmare," the black-clad figure said in English. He demanded "200 million" without specifying a currency, but an Arabic subtitle identified it as US dollars.

The video, entitled 'A message to the government and people of Japan' has similar elements to those uploaded showing US and UK hostages being threatened by Isis.

However, this is the first to specifically and openly ask for a ransom. Previous videos preceding the beheading of the British and American hostages had political demands or called for governments to stop bombing Isis targets.

Militants had reportedly instead asked for ransom and the release of prisoners held by the US in exchange for photojournalist James Foley in emails to his family. The US and UK have a stated policy of not paying ransom to kidnappers.
Japanese man Haruna Yukawa is ‘captured and beaten in Syria'

In Tokyo, a Japan foreign ministry spokesman it would, with other countries, make maximum efforts to free the two Japanese if they were in fact being held hostage, a foreign ministry spokesman said by telephone, but he made no comment on the ransom demand, according to Reuters.

Timeline: The emergence of Isis

The foreign ministry said it was checking whether the video is genuine.

Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga declined to say whether Japan would pay the ransom.

"If true, the act of threat in exchange of people's lives is unforgivable and we feel strong indignation," Mr Suga was quoted as saying by the Associated Press. "We will make our utmost effort to win their release as soon as possible."
 
The Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, who was speaking from Jerusalem, demanded Isis release the two men immediately and described the threat to kill them as "unforgivable".

If this was the Japanese from the Shogunate or Imperial days that word would had meant an imminent strike on ISIS.
 
obviously not very smart guys as they just making a case for japan to join the war against them ... and there is no way they will get paid
 
ISLAMIC STATE THREATENS TO KILL TWO JAPANESE HOSTAGES

The Islamic State militant group has threatened to kill two Japanese hostages unless a 200-million-dollar ransom payment is made within 72 hours, the Japanese government said Tuesday.

Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, who is on a tour of the Middle East, condemned the threat as "unforgivable" and demanded the hostages' immediate release.

He added that his country would make the utmost effort to ensure their unharmed release, adding that Tokyo was still trying to verify the authenticity of the video which contained the threat.

During a visit to Ramallah, Abe asked Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas for help in securing the hostages' release. A planned visit to Jericho was cancelled to deal with the crisis, the Kyodo News agency reported.

It is the first time the militant group has threatened Japanese captives. It has beheaded other foreign hostages.

The online video that bore the logo of Islamic State's media arm shows two hostages - whom the militants identify as Kenji Goto Jogo and Haruna Yukawa - in orange jumpsuits.

"To the prime minister of Japan, although you are more than 8,500 kilometres away from the Islamic State, you have volunteered to take part in this crusade," a knife-wielding militant said in the video.

"You have proudly donated 100 million dollars to kill our women and children, to destroy the homes of the Muslims."

The video followed the format of similar ones published by the group showing US and British hostages who were later killed.

Addressing the Japanese public, the man said: "You now have 72 hours to pressure your government to make a wise decision by paying the 200 million to save the lives of your citizens. Otherwise, this knife will become your nightmare."

Goto, a freelance journalist, went to Syria last year to cover the war and was kidnapped near Aleppo.

Yukawa, who works for a private security company, was reportedly captured about 30 kilometres north of Aleppo in August by the Islamic State when he was traveling with another group of rebel fighters, Kyodo said.


Source : Sapa-dpa /kd
Date : 20 Jan 2015 18:15
 
Saudi Arabia Is Building A 600-Mile 'Great Wall' To Shield Itself From ISIS

http://www.businessinsider.com/saud...00-mile-great-wall-to-shield-from-isis-2015-1

Saudi Arabia Is Building A 600-Mile 'Great Wall' To Shield Itself From ISIS
RICHARD SPENCER, THE TELEGRAPH
JAN. 14, 2015, 3:46 PM

When a raiding party from Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant attacked a Saudi border post last week, it was no mere hit on a desert outpost.

The jihadists were launching an assault on the new, highest-profile effort by Saudi Arabia to insulate itself from the chaos engulfing its neighbours.

The Saudis are building a 600-mile-long “Great Wall” — a combined fence and ditch — to separate the country from Iraq to the north.

430-1421230259686332861.png

Plans for the 600-mile wall and ditch Saudi Arabia will build with Iraq in an effort to insulate itself from the chaos engulfing its neighbors.

Much of the area on the Iraqi side is now controlled by Isil, which regards the ultimate capture of Saudi Arabia, home to the “Two Holy Mosques” of Mecca and Medina, as a key goal.

The proposal had been discussed since 2006, at the height of the Iraqi civil war, but work began in September last year after Isil’s charge through much of the west and north of the country gave it a substantial land border with the Kingdom to the south.

The border zone now includes five layers of fencing with watch towers, night-vision cameras, and radar cameras.

Riyadh also sent an extra 30,000 troops to the area.

It is not the only fence with which Saudi Arabia has chosen to surround itself. Despite the difficulty of access to westerners, the country is relatively open to fellow Muslim nations, particularly during the Haj season when pilgrims from across the world come to Mecca and Medina.

However, that is changing in changing times.

It has also created a physical barrier along parts of the even longer, 1,000-mile border with Yemen to the south.

The attack last week is the sort of incident the Saudis hope to avoid. Three border guards, including General Oudah al-Belawi, commander of border operations in Saudi Arabia’s northern zone, were killed.

All four attackers also died.
 
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