Isis

Can we combine all the ISIS threads please.

  • Yes

    Votes: 14 45.2%
  • Why of course

    Votes: 5 16.1%
  • Yep

    Votes: 3 9.7%
  • Well I mean really, yes

    Votes: 9 29.0%

  • Total voters
    31

spaminator

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Oct 26, 2009
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Mosul morgue workers see Islamic State atrocities
Associated Press
More from Associated Press
Published:
December 23, 2017
Updated:
December 23, 2017 1:16 PM EST
In this Nov. 9, 2017, photo, Federal policemen pray inside an abandoned house used as a temporary base in the hospital complex where the morgue was located in Mosul, Iraq. Much of the complex was destroyed in fighting to wrest the city from Islamic State group militants earlier this year.Felipe Dana / AP
MOSUL, Iraq — The young man ended up on the morgue’s examining table in two parts.
He had been seized for selling cigarettes, a crime usually punished by flogging by the Islamic State group extremists who had occupied Mosul. But while he was being whipped, he shouted a curse insulting religion. On the spot, they cut off his head for blasphemy.
Sameh al-Azzawi, the 35-year-old medical assistant examining him, was sick of seeing Mosul’s youth butchered for the slightest reason. The man was a newlywed. His family was waiting outside; it was one of the occasional times when the fanatics allowed the return of someone killed by the group. So al-Azzawi violated the rules: He picked out some thick thread and quickly sewed the man’s head back on, then zipped him up in the body bag. He could sew a head back on a body in four minutes.
The family quietly thanked him.
The morgue in the northern Iraqi city of Mosul was where atrocity met bureaucracy, the processing point for the machine of butchery that the Islamic State group created across its territory in Iraq and Syria. Every day, the doctors and staff witnessed the worst of what the militants were capable of inflicting on a human being, constantly fearing they could be next.
Yet the morgue men of Mosul found ways large and small to defy their captors by honouring the dead as best they could.
“Our profession as doctors is all about humanity,” said the morgue’s senior examiner, Modhar al-Omari. “They were doing the exact opposite.”
In this Nov. 9, 2017 photo, unexploded mortar shells are gathered on a street in the main hospital complex area in Mosul, Iraq. The complex, which housed the morgue, was the main medical center for the Islamic State group, which brought many of its wounded to the hospital there and many of its victims ended up in the morgue.
The staff sometimes faced up to 60 or even 100 corpses a day. As pickup trucks laden with bodies did three-point turns to back through the morgue’s gates, hands, legs or heads fell off onto the ground.
Some were the mangled bodies of civilians and IS fighters killed in bombardment by the U.S-led coalition or fighting with Iraqi troops. Others bore the marks of IS’ brutal enforcement of its radical version of Islamic law. A broken skull on a man with internal bleeding could mean he was thrown from a rooftop, the punishment for those suspected of being gay. A woman with a split skull from a blunt force was likely stoned to death, the sentence for accused adulterers. Then there were punishments for spying or blasphemy: a gunshot wound through the head or decapitation.
Convinced its “caliphate” was here to stay, the Islamic State group was keen on keeping records like a government. As they put together death certificates, the examiners quietly documented IS atrocities . They surreptitiously put an Arabic letter alif to mark a member of the group, and an M, the first letter in the Arabic word for “executed,” for the group’s victims.
One Excel sheet shows more than 1,200 people shot in the head, a likely sign of IS “executions,” between June 2014 when IS took over Mosul and January 2017, when Iraqi forces were fighting to take the city back — an average of 11 a week. The list has 12 women marked as “stoned to death.” It also lists 95 people who were beheaded and 50 men and boys who died from a “fall from a height,” likely hurled from rooftops.
The staff operated under close scrutiny by IS officials and threat of punishment if they broke the rules or tried to leave. Among those rules: The bodies of those “executed under religious law” could not be returned to their families, except in cases where an IS commander allowed it. Instead, they were dumped in mass graves. Thousands more went directly into mass graves without ever coming to the morgue ad IS brought at least 1,000 bodies to the morgue that they did not allow the staff to examine, so they have no idea who they were and did not record them.
Al-Azzawi managed to sew the heads back on about 10 bodies, he estimates. It had to be quick. He did it after midnight in the washing area, which IS fighters tended to stay out of because it was the worst smelling part of the morgue.
He stopped when one militant saw a body with the head restored. “We cut it and you put it back?” the fighter shouted. He warned that any examiner caught doing it would himself be beheaded.
“HE’S STILL ALIVE!”
A pickup truck dumped nearly a dozen bodies onto the pavement of the morgue courtyard, the latest delivery. “Get up!” an IS fighter screamed at the staff, summoning them to begin their daily task of sorting through the dead.
As the medical assistants went to work, one of them stopped short in surprise: Among the bodies, a young man in a soccer jersey and training pants who had been thrown off a rooftop was breathing.
“He’s still alive!” the assistant shouted instinctively.
He hardly had time to realize his mistake. The IS fighter opened fire with his automatic rifle, spraying the bodies. Bullets thumped into the already dead and finished off the young man.
“It’s a lot of pressure. Pressure, pressure, pressure,” said Raid Jassim, the chief medical assistant. “I always expected them to come at any moment and kill or behead us.”
In 2005, Jassim was overjoyed to get a government posting at Mosul’s Forensic Department, the morgue. The pay was several times more than what he’d earn in a government hospital. He was a graduate of a medical institute, a two-year diploma after high school, and had gone on to serve as an army nurse. At the morgue, he carried out examinations of bodies under supervision of doctors like al-Omari.
But no training prepared him for what he saw under the killers ruling his city.
In this Nov. 9, 2017 photo, aerial view of the damaged hospital complex and surrounding areas in Mosul, Iraq. The complex, located in Mosul’s al-Shifaa neighborhood, was the main medical center for the Islamic State group during its rule and was heavily damaged during fighting when Iraqi forces wrested Mosul back from the militants.
A few months after IS took over, a militant brought in the body of a Yazidi woman, one of thousands from the religious minority group taken as sex slaves. She had hanged herself after being repeatedly gang-raped.
Jassim, 48, watched in horror and disgust as the militant spoke to the body. “Why did you kill yourself? I told you I am not selling you to the commander. I told you I was going to marry you,” the fighter pleaded.
One evening, fighters drove up with two men, alive, in the trunk of their car. They pulled them into the morgue courtyard and — in front of staffers too terrified to say a word — they shot one in the head and decapitated the other.
“This is a message to anyone who betrays the Caliphate,” one fighter yelled. The examiners suspected the two were IS members who had turned against the group. But they didn’t know why the fighters brought them to the morgue to kill. Was it a message for the staff somehow?
“In these occasions, we don’t open our mouths. We just stay silent,” Jassim said.
The morgue was located in the al-Shifaa medical complex, a large compound in the western half of Mosul that included the city’s main hospital, Jomhouriya, and other facilities. It was the primary medical facility for the militants, so fighters were brought from elsewhere in Iraq and even Syria for treatment. The office of the IS health minister was located there. That meant the staff was under the militants’ eyes all the time.
Jassim is a chain smoker and smoking was a crime. He hid his pack under his belt, covering up the smell with a spray of musk. Still, he was caught and punished with 30 lashes.
Another time he was severely beaten with a rifle butt in the office of IS’s deputy health minister, where he was taken after he refused a fighter’s demand that he forge a death certificate. Jassim’s two young sons, outside the office, heard their father’s screams.
But in a few cases, he and other staffers smuggled the dead to their families before they vanished into mass graves. They did it in secret, at night, cutting electricity to shut off the morgue’s security cameras as they hustled the bodies into their cars.
In one case, Jassim inspected the body of a woman who had been killed for allegedly feeding information to the Iraqi military.
In February 2016, she had posted on her Facebook page, “Snow is falling.” That seemed suspiciously like code to the Islamic State group, and she was arrested. The judge allowed her husband and children to meet with her for an hour before she was taken out to a public square and shot to death.
After that excruciating torment, the family should at least to be able to bury her, Jassim thought.
He met the businessmen at night in a parking garage, switching off the headlights of their cars off for fear of airstrikes. “You brought her?” the businessman asked. “Yes,” Jassim replied. The man broke into tears and hugged him in gratitude. Jassim then opened his car’s trunk so they could pull out his wife’s corpse.
BURYING THE TRAUMA
Al-Azzawi recounts how tragedy after tragedy broke him down.
One day, he was going through the latest body bags when he saw a name he recognized pinned to a corpse. It was his cousin. The face was unrecognizable; he had been shot in the head for allegedly spying.
“I couldn’t believe it, I was reading the piece of paper over and over,” he said.
Months later, al-Azzawi tried to escape Mosul with a smuggler’s help. He and dozen others hid under boxes of potato chips in a truck but were caught near the Syrian border. He spent 10 days in detention, released only after he signed a pledge never to flee again on pain of death.
After that, “anything they ask for I do without complaint.”
One day after seeing 60 bodies, he went home and smashed his TV set.
Iraqi troops liberated western Mosul in the summer of 2017, and much of the medical complex where the morgue is located was bombed into ruins during the fighting that drove out the militants.
A stench now pervades the morgue from bodies that were in the refrigerators and are now buried in the rubble. The metal desks in the morgue offices have IS stickers on the drawers. Written on a wall is one of the slogans of the group, “Baqiya” — Arabic for “We will remain.” Next to it, someone has scrawled an insult, “Son of dog.”
Freed, the morgue men struggle with what they endured. Jassim can’t sleep without popping multiple valiums. His 13-year-old son — fearing for his father — won’t sleep apart from him. Some staffers have disappeared since liberation, simply not showing back up to work.
Al-Omari, the chief examiner, has been numbed by the helplessness he felt in the face of the fanatics’ dictates and butchery.
The 43-year-old veteran doctor and surgeon was well known among his staff for his calm. He was used to wearing suits, but under IS he was forced to wear the “Islamic” garb of shortened pants and a long beard that the group said was the style of the Prophet Muhammad.
The atrocities his staff was forced to contend with seemed endless: 16 boys under the age of 14 shot in the head. Six girls shot in the head. His job was to sign off on the cause of death for victims’ brutalized corpses. As a forensics doctor, he also had to investigate the “crimes” of the living — like signing medical examinations of whether women accused of adultery were virgins or not.
He got some revenge by passing on information. He secretly told the government in Baghdad when several senior commanders were killed in airstrikes.
But he says he has never cried for the dead.
“You can’t talk or explain. You just keep it inside,” he says. “If I cried, I’d cry every day for every single body.”
Mosul morgue workers see Islamic State atrocities | Toronto Sun

'Ready to die': San Francisco tow-truck driver facing terror-related charges in alleged Christmas Day threat on Pier 39
Associated Press
More from Associated Press
Published:
December 22, 2017
Updated:
December 22, 2017 5:45 PM EST
Everitt Aaron Jameson, 26, is facing terror-related charges involving an alleged plot against Pier 39 in San Francisco.Facebook/Google Maps
SACRAMENTO, Calif. — The FBI said Friday that it found a martyrdom letter and several guns in the home of a former Marine who may have been planning a Christmas Day attack on a popular San Francisco tourist destination.
Everitt Aaron Jameson, 26, a Modesto tow-truck driver, was charged Friday with attempting to provide material support to a foreign terrorist organization. It was not clear if he had an attorney.
Everitt Aaron Jameson (Facebook)
Jameson told an undercover agent he believed to be associated with senior leadership of the Islamic State group that he wanted to conduct a violent attack on Pier 39 in San Francisco because it was heavily crowded, according to an FBI affidavit.
He told the undercover agent that Christmas Day would be “the perfect day to commit the attack” and that he “did not need an escape plan because he was ready to die,” according to the affidavit.
Pier 39, packed with restaurants, bars and souvenir shops, is one of San Francisco’s most popular tourist spots. Home to the city’s aquarium, the pier offers free live music and street performances and offers a good spot to photograph sea lions that gather in the marina below.
An FBI spokeswoman said there is currently no specific or credible threat to the Bay Area.
Jameson previously posted radial jihadist messages online, including expressing support for the Halloween terror attack in New York City in which a driver used his truck to kill eight people, the FBI said. Jameson offered to use his tow truck to support the cause, the affidavit says.
The FBI began investigating in mid-September when it learned that Jameson was expressing support for posts that favoured terrorism or the Islamic State group. He “loved” an online post that showed Santa Claus threatening an attack in New York with a box of dynamite.
Agents raided his home Wednesday, finding a martyr’s letter signed with an Islamic variation of his name, along with his last will and testament updated in November. They also found fireworks, two rifles and a 9mm handgun.
During the search, Jameson “stated his support of ISIS and terrorism and discussed aspects of the plan to carry out an attack, noting that he would be happy if an attack was carried out,” the affidavit says.
Jameson, who was set for an afternoon court appearance in federal court in Fresno, had attended Marine basic recruit training in 2009 and earned a sharpshooter rifle qualification.
He was discharged for failing to disclose a history of asthma, the affidavit said. He referred to his military service in comments to undercover agents.
“I have been trained in combat and things of war,” he told one agent.
‘Ready to die’: San Francisco tow-truck driver facing terror-related charges in alleged Christmas Day threat on Pier 39 | Toronto Sun
 

spaminator

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Islamic State claims 'horrific' attack on Shiite centre in Kabul, 41 dead
Associated Press
More from Associated Press
Published:
December 28, 2017
Updated:
December 28, 2017 7:06 AM EST
KABUL — A brutal attack claimed by the Islamic State group devastated a two-story Shiite Muslim cultural centre in the Afghan capital on Thursday, killing at least 41 people and wounding another 84, many suffering severe burns from the intensity of the explosions.
The IS-linked Aamaq news agency said three bombs were used in the ferocious assault as well as a single suicide bomber who blew himself up inside the centre, where scores of people had gathered to mark the 1979 invasion of Afghanistan by the former Soviet Union.
The claim reflects eyewitness reports that said one bomber sneaked into the centre and exploded his device. Other explosions occurred outside the building, which also houses the pro-Iranian Afghan Voice news agency, which may also have been a target in the attack.
Earlier, Interior Ministry spokesman Najib Danish said an unknown number of suicide attackers set off an explosion outside the centre before carrying out an attack inside.
In its statement to Aamaq news agency, the IS said the centre was being funded by Iran and used to propagate Shiite beliefs.
Ali Reza Ahmadi, a journalist with the Afghan Voice, told The Associated Press he had been in his office when the explosion shattered the building. He leapt from his second-story office to the roof of the building where he saw flames from the basement.
Afghans gather in front of the Shiite cultural center after a suicide attack in Kabul, Afghanistan, Thursday, Dec. 28, 2017.
“I jumped from the roof toward the basement yelling at people to get water to put out the fire,” he said.
Shiite leader Abdul Hussain Ramazandada said witnesses reported at least one suicide bomber sneaked into the event and was sitting among the participants. He exploded his device and as people fled more explosions occurred, he said.
At nearby Istiqlal Hospital, director Mohammed Sabir Nasib said the emergency room was overwhelmed with the dead and wounded. Additional doctors and nurses were called in to help and at the height of the tragedy more than 50 doctors and nurses were working to save the wounded, most of whom suffered severe burns.
The death toll rose as the day progressed. By late afternoon Wahid Mujro, spokesman for the public health ministry, said 41 were dead and 84 others were wounded.
The two-story cultural centre is located in a poor area of the Shiite-dominated Dasht-e-Barchi neighbourhood in the west of the capital. The centre is a simple structure surrounded by sun-dried mud homes where some of Kabul’s poorest live.
In an interview with The Associated Press, a senior member of the Shiite cleric council, Mohammad Asif Mesbah, said the centre may have been targeted because it houses the deeply pro-Iranian Afghan Voice news agency. Its owner Sayed Eissa Hussaini Mazari is a strong proponent of Iran and his publication is dominated by Iranian news. Iran is a majority Shiite Muslim nation.
The local Islamic State affiliate has carried out several attacks targeting Shiites in Afghanistan. The IS issued a warning earlier this year following an attack on the Iraqi Embassy in Kabul vowing to target Afghanistan’s Shiites. Since then, the IS has taken credit for at least two attacks on Shiite mosques in Kabul and one in the western city of Herat, killing scores of worshippers.
(AP Photo/ Rahmat Gul)
In a telephone interview with The AP, Taliban spokesman Zabiullah Mujahid denied involvement in Thursday’s attack on the cultural centre.
The IS affiliate, made up of Sunni extremists, view Shiites as apostates. The IS in Afghanistan is a toxic mix of Uzbek militants belonging to the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan who broke with the Taliban, as well as disenchanted insurgents who left the much larger and more well-established Taliban.
As attacks targeting Shiites have increased in Kabul, residents of this area have grown increasingly afraid. Most schools have additional armed guards from among the local population. Still, Ramazandada said security at the cultural centre was light.
Afghan president Ashraf Ghani called the attack a “crime against humanity.”
In a statement released by the presidential palace, Ghani said: “The terrorist have killed our people. The terrorists have attacked our mosques, our holy places and now our cultural centre.” He called them attacks against Islam and “all human values.”
In a statement, the U.S. ambassador to Afghanistan, John R. Bass, called the attack “horrific” and said “we remain confident the Afghan government and people, supported by their friends and partners, will defeat those behind these terrible acts.”
Separately, Dawlat Abad District Gov. Mohammad Karim said a powerful mine killed six shepherd children ranging in age from 8 to 10 on Wednesday.
Afghanistan has the highest number of mine victims in the world, which along with other roadside bombs, kill or wound an estimated 140 people every month.
Elsewhere, a Taliban attack on a security police post in central Ghazni province Wednesday night left three police dead and one other wounded, said Mohammad Zaman, provincial chief of police.
Islamic State claims ‘horrific’ attack on Shiite centre in Kabul, 41 dead | Toronto Sun
 

darkbeaver

the universe is electric
Jan 26, 2006
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RR1 Distopia 666 Discordia
The Real “Bad Guys”
http://journal-neo.org/2017/12/23/the-real-bad-guys/




After 9/11, America went on a rampage around the world. It fabricated intelligence and unleased thousands of armed gangsters, kidnapping innocent victims from around the world, labeling them terrorist, torturing some for years then quietly releasing most with a lame apology and a few thousand dollars in their pockets.
What isn’t told is the tens of thousands who didn’t survive kidnapping and rendition, buried in mass graves in Poland, Ethiopia, Libya, Romania and a dozen other nations, exactly like the mass graves excavated after World War II, victims of what is called the “holocaust.”
Add to these two million Iraqi dead, mostly children, victims of sanctions, 30,000 Syrian dead from “bombing errors” and the tens of thousands of mistaken drone killings in 45 nations as well and the actions of the “freedom loving” United States begin to deeply parallel those of histories most brutal regimes.
We will discuss a simple issue here, whether it is a reasonable assumption to assess the United States of America as “bad.” Is America, as the United States calls itself, a “bad nation,” representing injustice, aggressive war, religious, racial and sexual discrimination and supporting criminal activities around the world?
Can we go further? Does America support global economic injustice, stifle the growth of democratic governments or even interfere with scientific studies and cultural development? If you are a minority of better educated Americans or a majority of others around the world, the answer is simple, a resounding “yes.”
What is changing is the view of everyday Americans who really aren’t obsessed with Trump’s tweet of the day or what CNN wants people to worry about. That general suspicion that America runs the world’s heroin business and invented both al Qaeda and ISIS is there, average Americans believe it and not because of something crazy they heard on a podcast or read in an email. They figured it out for themselves. “Regular people” aren’t really as stupid as politicians and journalists.
A key area of debunking America’s disease of self-righteousness is the result of satellite-cable television. You see, with dozens of new networks, documentary research usually under tight control by universities long controlled by organizations like the CIA and MI 5/6, only publish books or journal articles. Nobody reads their books, no one sees their articles. All are based on research in libraries filled with other books and research articles, all fabricated and filtered by earlier generations of academic hacks.
Video documentaries are something else entirely. A mixed bag of lunatic fringe and breakthrough research, the public gets to see, firsthand, historical discoveries or, worse still, entire networks dedicated to debunking the lies of the past.
So, when someone says that “Hitler was a nice guy” or that “the holocaust never happened,” things that would cost a university professor not just their job but jail time as well, documentary film makers rake in the profits. Not only that, asking this type of question opens doors. Where Hitler may not be vindicated, though some might hope this to happen, it is generally accepted that the 1967 War was begun by Israel, not Egypt.
It is also accepted that the US has committed horrible crimes against nations like Iran or Vietnam, so many others, and that the excuses given during the Cold War about opposing “the Evil Empire” of the Soviet Union are no longer plausible. America, or those secretly running America, were simply robbing the world blind by putting puppet governments in power around the world.
Everyday Americans, perhaps a majority, do believe this now, though no poll on this subject will ever be published.
Only a few days before this was written, the US Ambassador to the United Nations, Nikki Haley, chastised the Security Council for passing, except for a lone American veto, war crimes sanctions against Israel for claiming its capitol in occupied Palestinian territory.
The “special relationship” between America and Britain died that day. In reality, NATO died that day as well. The “triumvirate “put- together by slumlord turned diplomat Jared Kushner, of Saudi Arabia, Israel and the Trump regime, has alienated every American ally. Were one to believe polls published in America, few take American foreign policy seriously nor support any suggested Trump based military action against any nation, North Korea, Canada, Iran, China or Britain. Any of those, or any other, could and likely will, at some time, be victim of a Trump “tweet” threatening nuclear holocaust.
Re-examination of history, be it the Napoleonic Wars or history of the Vatican, is no long consigned to “revisionism” or “conspiracy theory.”
This, of course, explains the flurry of internet insanity, where, were one to scratch the surface, one would find security agencies funding hundreds, even thousands of fake news and conspiracy websites hoping to literally drown newfound truths in a sludge of toxic slander and manufactured but pointless “controversy.”
Behind this is an even nastier reality, one also generally accepted around the world, that governments in general are all controlled by global interest groups that exploit resources, impoverish nations with contrived debt and do so behind a veneer of war and fake discord misnamed “terrorism” or “extremism.”
This leaves a select few nations that refuse to submit. Is there a list, Venezuela, Syria, Cuba, Iran, North Korea, how many others? Do Russia and China belong on the list, protected by their nuclear arsenals?
Behind this all is a shadowy world of international trade, trade in equities, bonds, imaginary bonds, commodities, real or imaginary, futures of commodities real and imaginary, trade in metals and, most insane of all “currencies.” All is artifice, none is real, all involves the creation of “wealth” and “power” without power at all, only deception and submission.
Were one to return to the world of newfound documentary research, are questions such as these, and individuals such as Hitler, Stalin or even the Kaiser, to be judged on their horrific crimes, which may just possibly be tainted by fake history, or by their lack of cooperation with the institutions of eternal human slavery? We ask.
Gordon Duff is a Marine combat veteran of the Vietnam War that has worked on veterans and POW issues for decades and consulted with governments challenged by security issues. He’s a senior editor and chairman of the board of Veterans Today
http://journal-neo.org/2017/12/23/the-real-bad-guys/
 

spaminator

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Former topless model cleared in ISIS terror probe
Brad Hunter
More from Brad Hunter
Published:
December 28, 2017
Updated:
December 28, 2017 5:18 PM EST
Former topless model Kim Miners has been cleared of terror-related charges.DAILY STAR
A former topless model turned ISIS fan girl has escaped being charged by British cops.
Counterterrorism agents feared Kim Miners — who appeared scantily clad in numerous publications — was being groomed by the death cult’s recruiters to unleash bloodshed in the U.K.
A number of female British converts have played key roles in the jihadist’s wicked machinations, including Sally ‘White Widow’ Jones, who was obliterated by a drone strike last summer.
Former topless model Kim Miners has been cleared of terror-related charges. TWITTER
Miners had been arrested on suspicion of being in possession of terrorist material last October, the Daily Star reports.
The 27-year-old has since appeared on social media using the alias Aisha Lauren al-Britaniya. She enjoys posting terrifying images of Muslim women wielding weapons.
Investigators feared she was in contact with an ISIS fighter in Syria who was urging western women to join the faltering terror group.
However, she has told British media her primary concern was for Syrian children.
Sally ‘White Widow’ Jones was an ardent ISIS follower — until a drone came calling. FACEBOOK
“I remember seeing a three-year-old and a little baby at the side of the road,” Miners told the Sunday Times. “I felt like I needed to carry on telling everyone this is what’s really going on. I just want to help them, children … it’s so sad what they’re going through.”
She added: “I’ve gone from glamour model to something completely different. But that again makes me wonder. You don’t get s— from wearing (nothing), but the second you start wearing (the veil), you get accused (of extremism) and stuff.”

Former topless model cleared in ISIS terror probe | Toronto Sun
 

spaminator

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Legendary sniper with 400 Islamic State kills a saint for Iraqi Shiites
Associated Press
More from Associated Press
Published:
December 30, 2017
Updated:
December 30, 2017 11:09 AM EST
In this Tuesday, Dec. 5, 2017 photo, Talib, the son of Iraqi sniper Ali Jayad al-Salhi, poses with a weapon next to his father's poster in his home in Basra, Iraq. Nabil al-Jurani / AP
BASRA, Iraq — In his martyrdom, he has virtually become a new saint for Iraq’s Shiites.
His poster adorns shop windows, men and women wear his image as badges.
Poems praise his valour. His sniper’s rifle, with which he’s said to have killed nearly 400 Islamic State group militants, is now enshrined in a museum in the holiest Shiite city.
Ali Jayad al-Salhi, an expert sniper in his early 60s and veteran of multiple wars, was killed in September in clashes with IS in northern Iraq. He then was vaulted into legend.
Shiites around Iraq trade stories of how, out of piety, he left his home, wife, 10 children and 20 grandchildren to join a Shiite militia to fight in what he saw as a war between humanity and evil.
Al-Salhi is a powerful symbol in the religious, near messianic mystique that has grown up around Iraq’s Shiite militias in tandem with their increasing political and military might after they helped defeat the Islamic State group.
Known as the “Popular Mobilization Forces” or “Hashed” in Arabic, the militias have emerged from the war with the image of an almost holy force protecting the Shiite Muslim majority. That popular aura helps enshrine the Hashed as a major player in post-IS Iraq.
It’s a stark contrast to how the Sunni Muslim minority views the fighters. The Hashed controls significant areas in northern and western Iraq seized back from IS, and they are accused of abuses against the Sunni population. Sunnis see the militias as a tool for Shiite powerhouse Iran to dominate Iraq.
The war against the Islamic State group left a divided legacy in Iraq. The Sunni community has been shattered, its cities wrecked, its population scattered and unsure of their future, with some 3 million people uprooted and mostly languishing in camps. Meanwhile, Shiites are riding on victory, having defeated a fanatical group that targeted their sect as heretics.
Many Shiites trumpet the Hashed militias as the champions bringing their community out of centuries of oppression and embodying a belief central to Shiism — that victory will come from martyrdom. The militiamen are seen as the successors to one of the faith’s most revered figures, Imam Hussein, a grandson of the Prophet Muhammad who was killed in the 7th century by rival Muslims at Karbala, in what is now southern Iraq, in a battle that led to the Sunni-Shiite split.
Some even speak of the Hashed in apocalyptic terms, linking it to Imam Mahdi, a Shiite religious leader said to have vanished 1,100 years ago and expected to return, leading an army of the faithful to defeat evil in the world. The Hashed, supporters say, will be that army.
“When the time comes for the reappearance of Imam Mahdi, we will be ready and honoured to be among his soldiers,” Sajad al-Mubarkaa, head of the Hashed’s Indoctrination Department, told The Associated Press at his Baghdad office.
He dismissed criticism that such talk emphasizes the sectarian nature of the force. “What harm could come from invoking the name of Imam Mahdi?” he said. “What harm could come if we are inspired by the sacrifice of Imam Hussein?”
The Hashed emerged out of a call in June 2014 by Iraq’s top Shiite cleric, Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani, for volunteers to join jihad against IS militants, who had overrun the northern city of Mosul and swept nearly to Baghdad and Shiite shrines farther south as the military and security forces collapsed. Tens of thousands heeded the call, enlisting in multiple militia factions, many of which existed for years and fought American forces in Iraq in the 2000s.
The Shiite-led government has rejected demands that the force now be disbanded, and parliament has given it legal status as part of the country’s armed forces.
The whipping up of religious fervour around the militiamen is also part of an ongoing struggle for leadership of Iraq’s Shiites between Iran and al-Sistani. Though Iranian-born, the aging al-Sistani has resisted Iran’s doctrine of direct rule by clerics. Iraqi Shiites’ deep devotion to him and nationalist sentiment have hindered Tehran’s attempts to dominate the community.
That rivalry is played out within the Hashed. Three of its strongest brigades were directly created and bankrolled by the “Marjaiyah,” the Shiite religious leadership that al-Sistani heads. Many of the others are backed by Iran.
Iranian-backed militias evoke connections with Imam Hussein and Imam Mahdi to gain legitimacy among the Shiite community. That forces supporters of al-Sistani, who has traditionally played down talk of Imam Mahdi’s imminent return, to also join the apocalyptic and martyrdom narratives to compete with “the well-oiled propaganda machine of Iran and its proxies,” said Philip Smyth, a researcher on Shiites at the Washington Institute for Middle East Policy. Ultimately, Iran is angling to ensure a pro-Tehran cleric succeeds al-Sistani, he said.
The result is a passionate mix of religious tradition and pop culture, poetry and song surrounding the Hashed.
“We will not stay speechless any longer,” chants singer Muhanad al-Mowali, alluding to oppression of Shiites since Hussein’s martyrdom. Another, Mahdi al-Aboodi, sings that he wishes the Hashed was at the battle of Karbala to fight on the side of Hussein. At a recent gathering of hundreds of Shiites in Karbala, a poet recited a verse telling Imam Mahdi he should not bother bringing an army with him when he returns because the Hashed was ready.
Supernatural stories are passed among Hashed supporters on social media. One video purports to be drone footage showing Imam Mahdi himself backing militiamen defending the shrine of Mahdi’s father in the city of Samarra. In another story, a Hashed fighter says the imam came to him when he was mortally wounded, saving his life by washing his wounds and telling him, “I am by your side and will never abandon you.”
One of al-Salhi’s sons, Tayseer, says his father came to him in a dream the night he was killed, instructing him not to allow women to wear black, a reference to the belief that martyrs remain alive in the eyes of God and should not be mourned.
The Hashed has intensely publicized the deaths of its commanders, announcing their martyrdom on giant street posters in Baghdad, the mostly Shiite south and even Sunni majority areas taken back from IS.
Since his martyrdom, al-Salhi has been held up as the ideal pious Shiite.
Poems in his honour have been read to mournful crowds. Thousands showed up for his funeral in the holy city of Najaf, where he was laid to rest in the Valley of Peace, a vast Shiite cemetery near the shrine of Imam Ali, the Shiites’ most revered figure. His rifle is on display at a museum near the shrine of Imam Hussein in Karbala.
Neighbours in al-Salhi’s home district in the southern city of Basra decorate cars and homes with posters of him in military gear, rifle in hand, standing next to Shiite saints. His face appears on wristwatches for sale in the markets and on cakes in a bakery. One of Iraq’s top sculptors, Ahmed al-Bahraini, has started work on a 6-meter (20-foot) bronze statue of al-Salhi for a main square in Basra.
A bear of a man with a long bushy salt-and-pepper beard, al-Salhi’s real life has intertwined with the hagiography, making it difficult to confirm the stories told of him.
As a young man, he dabbled in boxing, athletics and horseback riding and swam in the Shatt al-Arab, the riverway where the Tigris and Euphrates meet, family say.
In the early 1970s, he graduated from an elite snipers’ school in Belarus. During his career in the Iraqi army, he fought alongside Syrian forces in the Golan Heights against Israel in the 1973 Middle East war. A year later, he fought Kurdish separatists in Iraq’s north. He is also a veteran of Iraq’s 1980-88 war against Iran and lost a brother to Saddam Hussein’s executioners in the 1991 Shiite uprising in southern Iraq.
His family and Hashed comrades tell of his intense piety. They say he took the Shiite tradition of travelling on foot to holy sites for pilgrimage to a punishing extreme: When other pilgrims rested at night, he walked all day and all night, only resting at his final destination. His son Tayseer said his father walked for 40 days to a shrine in Mashhad, Iran, nearly 800 miles (1,300 kilometres) from Basra.
In 2014, al-Salhi answered al-Sistani’s call to fight IS and joined the Ali al-Akbar Brigade, one of the three created by the Marjaiyah. He didn’t consult his family, Tayseer told the AP. “He said ‘I am going and that’s that.”‘
The 33-year-old Tayseer spoke at the family’s Basra home, where the walls of the reception room were hung with his father’s relics — a Russian-made sniper rifle inside a glass box, along with a pistol and an ammunition belt, and a large portrait of al-Salhi in military fatigues.
Al-Salhi took part in the Hashed’s biggest battles against IS, from Fallujah and Jurf el-Sakhr near Baghdad to Mosul in the north. Along the way, he became well known, appearing in television interviews that have since racked up hundreds of thousands of views on YouTube.
“Iraqis, we are here in the trenches on your behalf,” he said in one interview. “For you, we fight to win freedom for the Iraqi people and for humanity. We want nothing from you except your prayers.”
He took pride in his skill. He told of how a flying bird gave away the location of an IS sniper atop a date palm in a grove outside Baghdad. He often told of a duel with a female IS sniper known only by her codename, Umm Ahmed, overheard in IS radio messages. For an hour, they traded shots, each peeking out from hiding just enough to draw the other into firing.
“I finally killed her when I tricked her into thinking I was dead and she rose from her hiding place,” he said, adding that he then killed two fighters trying to retrieve her body.
His commander at the Ali al-Akbar Brigade, Haidar Mukhtar, told the AP that on the day he died, al-Salhi was positioned hundreds of meters ahead of the rest of his battalion during an assault on an IS-held town near Kirkuk.
Al-Salhi picked off four IS fighters, bringing his kill tally to 384, Mukhtar said. But then he and two other snipers were surrounded by the militants and killed. He died on September 28, the 8th day of Muharram, a holy month in the Muslim calendar when Imam Hussein was also martyred.
Mukhtar retrieved a final relic of al-Salhi: The casing from the last bullet he fired, jammed in his rifle. “I have kept it as a souvenir.”
Legendary sniper with 400 Islamic State kills a saint for Iraqi Shiites | Toronto Sun
 

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Couple who met on Muslim dating site found guilty in U.K. bomb plot
Associated Press
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Published:
January 8, 2018
Updated:
January 8, 2018 1:00 PM EST
The online dating site SingleMuslim.com is photographed on Jan. 8, 2018.Postmedia Network
LONDON — A man and woman who met on a Muslim dating website have been convicted of plotting a bomb attack in Britain.
Prosecutors say Munir Mohammed, an asylum-seeker from Sudan, and London pharmacist Rowaida El-Hassan met on SingleMuslim.com and bonded over their shared extremist views.
Both defendants denied the charges. Jurors at London’s Central Criminal Court found them guilty on Monday of preparing terrorist acts.
Prosecutors said Mohammed volunteered to carry out an attack during Facebook exchanges with a man he believed to be an Islamic State group commander.
Police said they found bomb-making instructions and components for the explosive TATP at Mohammed’s home when he was arrested in December 2016.
Prosecutors say Mohammed drew on El-Hassan’s knowledge of chemicals during his preparations.
They are set to be sentenced Feb. 22.
http://singlemuslim.com
http://theguardian.com/uk-news/2018...nd-guilty-of-plotting-christmas-terror-attack
Munir Mohammed will probably not be the last terrorist Derby sees, warns top cop - Derby Telegraph
Couple who met on Muslim dating site found guilty in U.K. bomb plot | Toronto Sun
 

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ISIS fans claim death cult putting out fake news
Brad Hunter
More from Brad Hunter
Published:
January 10, 2018
Updated:
January 10, 2018 2:50 PM EST
Islamic State fan boys miss the "good old days" when Jihadi John executed innocents.THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Idiotic Islamic State supporters are complaining bitterly that the death cult’s media machine is churning out fake news.
Among their miscues: Claiming Allah was causing snowstorms in the U.S. because the Great Satan has raised his ire.
The ISIS propaganda arm has previously been highly skilled at pumping out terror-porn featuring executions, explosions and bizarre manifestos of mayhem.
A jihadi frolics in the snow in New York City.
No more. Since the caliphate was pulverized by allied bombs and bullets, the jihadists have lost their main source of media and some of their top propagandists were iced in the attacks.
And the group’s sicko supporters aren’t happy, the U.K. Sun reports.
Instead, ISIS has been reduced to crowdsourcing their diet of disaster and often with hilarious results via botched Photoshopping that jihadists still hope to “freak out the kuffar (non-Muslims).”
As a result, the output of material has slowed to a trickle of boasts and threats.
Riddled with spelling errors, jihadis tripping over their threats and hilarious miscues, the terrorists’ message of mayhem has become like a Family Guy gag. In addition, the ISIS hate magazine, Rumiyah, has suspended publication.
According to the Brit tabloid, jihadists are pining for the “good old days” when vile executions and beheadings were shared every week.

http://thesun.co.uk/news/5303763/isis-fake-terror-images-photoshop
ISIS fans claim death cult putting out fake news | Toronto Sun
 

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Boy who endured three years as ISIL captive asks for meeting with Justin Trudeau
Canadian Press
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Published:
January 21, 2018
Updated:
January 21, 2018 5:41 PM EST
Nofa Mihlo Rafo (left) is reunited with her son Emad Mishko Tamo at Winnipeg's James Armstrong Richardson International Airport on Thursday August 17, 2017. Emad Mishko Tamo was rescued by Iraqi forces in July, after being held captive by ISIL for the past three years.
A Yazidi boy who was held captive for three years by Iraqi militants before being reunited with his family in Winnipeg last year is requesting a meeting with Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.
In a video posted to Facebook by the Yazidi Association of Manitoba, 13-year-old Emad Mishko Tamo holds up a sign thanking Canada for helping him, followed by another sign stating that he wants to share his story and be a voice for other Yazidi children still in captivity.
“There’s a thousand other kids like me who are still held captive,” one of Emad’s signs states.
“Hon. Justin Trudeau, will you meet me?”
Hadji Hesso, the association’s president, said the organization hopes the federal government can bring more Yazidi refugees to Canada, noting there are children who have been freed after the defeat of ISIL in Iraq, but who have no one to help them.
“A lot of these children are coming back but there’s no parents, there’s no family left. They’ve all been killed or massacred and nobody knows where the rest of their families are,” Hesso said.
Emad was separated from his mother, Nofa Mihlo Zaghla, after the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant displaced thousands of members of the Kurdish-minority Yazidis in 2014, but he was freed last summer in the city of Mosul.
Zaghla had been living in Winnipeg as a refugee but had no idea if her son was still alive until a relative recognized him, looking dirty and dishevelled, in a photo on social media.
Still recovering from gunshot wounds, Emad was brought to Canada last August with the help of the Yazidi association. After landing in Winnipeg, he entered a room at Winnipeg’s James Armstrong Richardson International Airport, where his mother, siblings, uncle, cousins and grandmother were eagerly waiting.
Emad rushed to his mother, who hugged and kissed him for the first time in years.
“Now he’s in school, now he’s been seeking treatment and is getting better. Slowly, though,” Hesso said.
Hesso said Emad’s father — as well as one of his brothers — remain unaccounted for.
The House of Commons unanimously passed a motion in 2016 calling the persecution of Yazidis a genocide and committing to provide asylum to Yazidi women and girls.
A subsequent commitment to bringing in 1,200 people by the end of 2017 was made last February.
An email from a spokesman for Immigration Minister Ahmed Hussen states that as of December 31, 2017, the government issued just over 1,200 visas to government-supported survivors of ISIL.
More than 1,000 had arrived in Canada and 81% of them were Yazidi, the email states.
The remaining few hundred have been delayed by international air travel restrictions in northern Iraq.
“Arrangements were made to fly individuals from another airport in Iraq. However, this required additional and different documentation to be obtained, a process that took weeks and, in some cases, months to arrange,” Hursh Jaswal said in the email, noting the remainder will continue to arrive in Canada in early 2018.
Jaswal said the government will not be receiving any new applications under the initiative.
Hesso said there are people, including his association, who want to help more refugees come to Canada.
“The Yazidi people … want to build life, they want to build a home, they want to live here and they want to be contributors to this country,” he said.
Boy who endured three years as ISIL captive asks for meeting with Justin Trudeau | Toronto Sun

FUREY: New docs reveal CSIS foreign fighter concerns
Anthony Furey
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Published:
January 22, 2018
Updated:
January 22, 2018 7:26 AM EST
Dressed in the garb of the mujahideen, John Maguire is shown on six-minute video posted to YouTube - and later taken down - and linked on several jihadist websites. (YouTube Video Screenshot)
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau shows little concern over the threat posed by battle-hardened jihadists returning to Canada. He even argues they can be rehabilitated. But documents unearthed from CSIS – some of them marked “top secret” – reveal alarming information about how Canada’s spy agency views the jihadist threat, what they’re doing to track it and their concerns about future attacks on home soil. Anthony Furey reports in this three-part series.
The terrorism threat in Canada posed by jihadists is ever-changing, hard to pin down and requires continual monitoring, according to the upper brass at the Canadian Security Intelligence Service.
“The Service has never before faced a terrorist threat of the scope, scale and complexity of Sunni Islamist-inspired terrorism,” reads an unclassified committee briefing note prepared for an unidentified individual in October 2016.
The document not only reveals troubling news about the severity of the threat in Canada, but appears to conflict with the tone of public statements previously made by both Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale.
During a 2017 year-end interview with CTV, Trudeau said remorseful returning fighters “can be an extraordinarily powerful voice for preventing radicalization in future generations.”
If CSIS agrees with this assessment, there is no such indication of it in the documents received by the Toronto Sun, which were obtained under access to information laws. “CSIS is seized with this issue,” the note states, “as extremists returning to Canada have the potential to pose a significant threat to our national security.”
Canada’s spies also worry that the problem is larger than their official statistics indicate. “I should point out that we remain concerned about the number of individuals that we are not aware of, or about whom we have incomplete information, due to the significant operational challenges associated with such investigations,” the document reads.
Contrary to Trudeau’s remarks, Goodale has previously acknowledged the prospects of rehabilitating fighters are “pretty remote.” And according to the CSIS document, it’s hard to say how a returnee will behave: “Returnees may respond in a number of different ways – from returning to regular life, radicalizing others, or financing and facilitating the travel of others, to attack planning.”
At no point in the document – or any of the other related CSIS material the Sun received – is there talk of deradicalization. “The number of Canadians abroad for terrorism-related purposes has, after a surge, leveled off. But the terrorist threat at home has not diminished. Indeed, preventing individuals from travelling abroad for extremist purposes may in fact increase the threat at home.” They write that this “requires ongoing investigation.”
Ralph Goodale, Minister of Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Ben Nelms
The spies’ rhetoric surrounding the number of fighters is also something of a departure from that used by politicians. Goodale has stressed that the number of returning fighters has remained constant at 60 for the past two years. While the CSIS report doesn’t directly discuss the number of returnees, they do say “there is not a lot to be gained by reporting frequently on incremental changes in these numbers, which fluctuate constantly.”
The document also points out that these counts leave out radicals in our midst who’ve never left. “Nor do numbers of ‘travelers’ or ‘returnees’ adequately capture the scale of this threat: Individuals who have never travelled – whether they aspire to, have been prevented from travelling or, for a variety of reasons, choose to remain in Canada – and are engaged in threat-related activities at home are not included.”
One top security expert isn’t surprised to learn any of this. “It’s very difficult to track people going overseas if you don’t know beforehand who they are and where they’re going,” says Tom Quiggin, a former military intelligence officer, RCMP contractor and author of the new book Submission: The Danger of Political Islam to Canada. “Actually tracking this is an incredibly difficult problem, both coming and going.”
CSIS director Michel Coulombe waits to appear at the Senate national security committee meeting to discuss Bill C-51, the anti-terrorism Act, in Ottawa on April 20, 2015.
Some of the sections in the note are similar to remarks previously made by senior CSIS officials in public testimonies but others appear to be fresh revelations. The top level note also shows that the words used by CSIS in documents can differ from the language employed in public statements.
It’s unknown who the note was made for, although it was prepared around the time of then CSIS director Michel Coulombe’s appearance before a House of Commons committee. However the director did not discuss the issue of returning foreign fighters during that appearance. Instead, the note appears to guide remarks given by Brian Rumig, assistant director of operations, at a Senate committee appearance he made that November.
While Rumig speaks about “the scope, scale and complexity” of terrorism in his Nov. 28 testimony exactly as the memo writes it, he removes reference to Sunni Islamism. Rumig doesn’t reference Islam at all during his remarks, aside from one mention of the Islamic State.
— Part two of this series will look at ‘top secret’ documents that shed a light on how CSIS tracks foreign fighters when they’re abroad. Don’t miss it.
afurey@postmedia.com
FUREY: New docs reveal CSIS foreign fighter concerns | Toronto Sun
 

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FUREY: Top secret CSIS reports shed light on tracking homegrown jihadists
Anthony Furey
More from Anthony Furey
Published:
January 22, 2018
Updated:
January 22, 2018 9:06 PM EST
Minister of Public Safety Ralph Goodale stands during question period in the House of Commons on on Parliament Hill in Ottawa on Tuesday Nov. 7, 2017. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Sean KilpatrickSean Kilpatrick / THE CANADIAN PRESS
PART TWO
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau shows little concern over the threat posed by battle-hardened jihadists returning to Canada. He even argues they can be rehabilitated. But documents unearthed from CSIS – some of them marked ‘top secret’ – reveal alarming information about how Canada’s spy agency views the jihadist threat, what they’re doing to track it and their concerns about future attacks on home soil. Anthony Furey reports in part two of this three-part series.
The issue of homegrown jihadists abroad is such a concern for Canada’s top spy agency that they’ve been running internal reports on the extremists’ whereabouts on as much as a weekly basis.
Documents marked “top secret” and “secret” obtained via access to information and made available to the Sun reveal the frequency with which CSIS was updating its tally of foreign fighters.
The weekly reports, which span most of 2016 and early 2017, track those “currently in Turkey/Syria/Iraq” and those “returned to Canada from Turkey/Syria/Iraq”.
While all the actual figures are redacted from the more than 300 pages obtained by the Sun, the classifications that they fall under are not. Those are listed as “last week” and “this week”, suggesting that during this time frame the numbers may have been changing on a weekly basis.
It’s difficult to reconcile this information with statements from both the Liberal government and law enforcement that the number of returnees has held at 60 for over two years. This figure appears in a December 2015 report but has been reaffirmed by Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale and others as the up-to-date number as recently as late 2017.
Former CSIS director Michel Coulombe testified before the standing Senate committee on national security and defence in March 2016 to offer the 60 count. Yet weekly summary reports that imply numbers may be shifting week-by-week were compiled both before and after Coulombe’s testimony.
“This would seem to imply that the threat picture is so insistent and compelling as to require almost real time reporting and analysis, especially taking into account the limited resources that Canadian intelligence has and the considerable costs that this kind of joint intelligence endeavour requires,” says David Harris, a Canadian intelligence expert with over 30 years experience.
A seemingly different but similar set of documents produced on a weekly basis are marked “Travellers in Syria / Turkey / Iraq” and run four pages. There are four columns of information the pages compile: name, date of birth, Canadian status and last reported location.
It’s unknown how many names are tracked on these four pages, as all of the other content is redacted. The documents are labelled as CSIS Travel Study, produced by the Intelligence Assessments Branch.
“The mere fact of their weekly frequency is the clearest evidence of the urgency of the situation as understood by our intelligence community,” notes Harris.
Another set of documents also reveals the way extremists are monitored and classified. “Canadian Foreign Fighting: Brief Situational Report” appears to be a prepared slideshow or power point presentation.
The report offers a count of how many Canadian foreign fighters are “returned” versus how many are “abroad”. The numbers are blanked out. It lists there are “many destinations” they go to, with Turkey-Syria-Iraq as the only set of locations not redacted. The redacted spaces suggest there are three other locations or cluster of locations that serve as a destination for Canadian extremists.
The reports offer several categories for how fighters returned to Canada are classified: return to “normal life” (their quotations), fundraising activities, radicalization and facilitation. However, there is another unknown category that is blanked out. It’s unclear if these are hypothetical classifications or if fighters who have returned home have already been assigned these statuses.
The slideshow also tallies “departures to Turkey – Syria – Iraq per yearly quarter”. These slideshows have dates ranging from March 1, 2016 to July 21, 2016 but it’s unknown which yearly quarters they track.
“The fact that they’re reporting it on a weekly basis suggests to me that the numbers which they say are fluctuating are doing so on a very regular turnover,” notes Tom Quiggin, a former military intelligence officer, RCMP contractor and author of the new book Submission: The Danger of Political Islam to Canada. “In other words, it’s worth reporting on this every week because the numbers changed every week.”
An internal CSIS memo reported on in part one of this series claimed that foreign fighter numbers “fluctuate constantly”. It’s unknown when these weekly reports began, when they ended and if they remain ongoing.
Part three of this series, appearing tomorrow, looks at internal documents from Canada’s spy agency discussing the future possibilities of terror attacks on home soil. Don’t miss it.
Read part one here.
afurey@postmedia.comTwitter: @anthonyfurey
FUREY: New docs reveal CSIS foreign fighter concerns | Toronto Sun
FUREY: Top secret CSIS reports shed light on tracking homegrown jihadists | Toronto Sun
 

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FUREY: Terror attacks in Canada 'likely to continue,' internal CSIS report says
Anthony Furey
More from Anthony Furey
Published:
January 23, 2018
Updated:
January 23, 2018 5:56 PM EST
Police investigate the scene where a car crashed into a roadblock in Edmonton on September 30, 2017.Jason Franson / THE CANADIAN PRESS
By Anthony Furey
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau shows little concern over the threat posed by battle-hardened jihadists returning to Canada. He even argues they can be rehabilitated. But documents unearthed from CSIS – some of them marked “top secret” – reveal alarming information about how Canada’s spy agency views the jihadist threat, what they’re doing to track it and their concerns about future attacks on home soil. Anthony Furey reports in part three of this three-part series.
Canada’s top spies believe terrorism will continue in Canada, according to a threat assessment report from CSIS.
It notes that “domestic extremists are likely to continue to target Canadian uniformed personnel and related installations in neighbourhoods that are familiar to them (such as police stations and military recruitment centres).” Earlier words in the sentence that may offer further context have been redacted.
The report was compiled by the Integrated Terrorism Assessment Centre (ITAC), which operates from within CSIS headquarters, in January 2017. It was obtained via access to information and provided to the Sun. The document looks at the ways terrorists, particularly homegrown ones, may attack Canada in the future.
The two terror attacks in October, 2014 – one in Quebec and one on the Ottawa Parliament buildings – resulted in the deaths of two Canadian Forces members. The Edmonton vehicular ramming and stabbing attack that occurred last September was against a police constable.
But according to ITAC, these attempts may not be behind us. The document marked ‘secret’ notes that groups like ISIS and Al-Qaeda “continue to pose a persistent threat to Canada and Canadian interests globally” and adds that “of further concern is the ongoing threat from extremists in Canada who continue to aspire or plot violent acts of terror.”
It’s unclear if ITAC is referring to known specific extremists or if they are speaking hypothetically. CSIS and the Canadian government officially state that there are around 60 terrorists who have returned to Canada from fighting abroad.
However part one of this feature reported on an internal CSIS document that stated those numbers “fluctuate constantly”. And part two of this feature disclosed how the CSIS assessments branch was at one point producing weekly reports on the numbers of terrorists who are still abroad and the number who have returned to Canada. While the actual numbers were redacted, security experts told the Sun this suggests there are changes occurring frequently enough to warrant writing weekly reports.
The game is also changing, making matters more complex. According to the report, “ITAC notes an ongoing shift in DAESH (an alternate acronym for ISIS) rhetoric since the last iteration of the (National Terrorism Threat Levels), which has intensified the call in supporters and followers to instead join the ‘virtual caliphate’ by remaining in the West and carrying out domestic attacks on behalf of DAESH.
“Guidance on plotting and conducting a lone-actor attack goes as far as to provide systematic steps to reduce the chances of detection by security agencies such as employing ComSec [communications security] measures and dressing in the style of a Westerner).”
The report reveals Canada’s spies were also nervous about Canada 150 celebrations. Writing in advance of the sesquicentennial celebrations, they note that such events “remain attractive targets for groups to amass large casualties in a very short period of time, and with relative ease.”
One specific potential attack they warn about that would involve Canadians isn’t actually on Canadian soil. Citing an October 2016 pro-jihad book, they state it “recommends an explosive laden-sea vessel, driven by suicide bombers, against targets including the Suez canal where Canadian flagged vessels are likely to port.” Over the past several years, ISIS leaders have repeatedly named Canada in their roll call of countries to attack.
The silver-lining is that ITAC does not predict large scale and complex attacks in Canada. They note that “while domestic extremists may seek to conduct a copycat attack such as [Aaron] Driver’s suicide-IED attempt, the primary terror-related threat to Canada is single firearm, or a vehicle.”
The language in this report – which is not publicly posted on the ITAC website – contrasts with the more sanitized language used in the Public Report on the Terrorist Threat to Canada. The latter is something of a public version of the ITAC document, released annually by the Minister for Public Safety.
While Minister Ralph Goodale, in the foreword, notes that the report “takes a clear-eyed view of the dangers to Canada posed by terrorism” none of the blunt observations in the ITAC report make their way into the public one.
For the most part, the public text – which was released just before Christmas last year – looks back on Canada’s past challenges instead of discussing the likelihood of future threats.
“As the threat from terrorism continues to evolve, Canada’s response must continually adapt and change to keep Canadians safe,” notes the executive summary. “The Government’s role is to respond to a terrorist threat or incident through a coordinated effort by multiple federal departments and agencies, and all levels of government.”
The public version also echoes the approaches to deradicalization and rehabilitation favoured by Prime Minister Justin Trudeau. “A key approach to countering radicalization to violence in Canada is establishing programming within communities,” the report notes, going on to detail various counter-radicalization endeavours.
There is no mention of any such programs in the ITAC report.
Part one of this series can be found here and part two found here.
afurey@postmedia.com, Twitter: @anthonyfurey
FUREY: New docs reveal CSIS foreign fighter concerns | Toronto Sun
FUREY: Top secret CSIS reports shed light on tracking homegrown jihadists | Toronto Sun
http://publicsafety.gc.ca/cnt/rsrcs/pblctns/pblc-rprt-trrrst-thrt-cnd-2017
FUREY: Terror attacks in Canada ‘likely to continue,’ internal CSIS report says | Toronto Sun

Ex-bouncy castle salesman from London now chief executioner for ISIS
Postmedia News
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Published:
January 23, 2018
Updated:
January 23, 2018 10:53 PM EST
Siddhartha Dhar is seen holding his son and an AK-47 in this photo he posted to Twitter.
A former bouncy castle salesman from England is now the chief executioner for ISIS, according to reports out of the U.K.
Londoner Siddhartha Dhar has taken over the killer gig from another Brit, Mohammed Emwazi, who was known as Jihadi John. Emwazi was killed by a drone strike in late 2015.
Dhar, who also goes by Abu Rumaysah, has been put on the U.S.’s global terrorism list, according to the Daily Mail.
“He is considered to have replaced ISIS executioner Mohammed Emwazi, also known as ‘Jihadi John’,” the U.S. State Department said the Daily Mail report. “Dhar is believed to be the masked leader who appeared in a January 2016 ISIS video of the execution of several prisoners ISIS accused of spying for the U.K.”
Dhar, a former Hindu who converted to Islam when he married his wife, Aisha.
He bolted for Syria in 2014 after being arrested in the U.K. for suspicion of belonging to Al-Muhajiroun, a banned group. He had just been released on bail — he’d handed over his passport — and was banned from traveling.
“What a shoddy security system Britain must have to allow me to breeze through Europe to (ISIS),” he said in a Twitter post. The accompanying photo showed him holding his newborn son and and AK-47 rifle.
Before becoming ISIS’s hand of death, Dhar sold inflatable bouncy castles that are popular with kids’ birthday parties.
A video grab from footage broadcast by the UK Parliaments Parliamentary Recording Unit (PRU) shows Konika Dhar, sister of Siddhartha Dhar, as she gives evidence to a British Home Affairs Select Committee in London on January 16, 2016. (Getty Images)
US government places 'Jihadi Sid' on global terror list | Daily Mail Online
http://state.gov/r/pa/prs/ps/2018/01/277594.htm
Ex-bouncy castle salesman from London now chief executioner for ISIS | Toronto Sun

Al-Qaeda chief urges Muslims to 'kill every Jew'
Brad Hunter
More from Brad Hunter
Published:
January 23, 2018
Updated:
January 23, 2018 3:21 PM EST
Khalid Batarfi, head of Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula is urging Muslims to kill Jews and Americans.GETTY IMAGES
Former terror big daddy Al-Qaeda is trying to win back fans with a new slew of slurs against Jews, Americans and other infidels.
Since leader Osama bin Laden was taken off the board by U.S. Navy Seals in 2011, the terror organization lost its lustre to Islamic State psychos.
Now, one of the group’s senior leaders is vowing hellfire on infidels and calling on Muslims to murder.
US Vice President Mike Pence visits the Western Wall in Jerusalem. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
New kid on the terror block Khalid Batarfi slammed U.S. President Donald Trump’s move to relocate the U.S. Embassy from Tel Aviv to Israel.
Batarfi described the move as “a declaration of a new Jewish-Crusader war”, the SITE Intelligence monitoring group reported.
Blah, blah, blah… infidels. Al-Qaeda has lost popularity and power since the death of leader Osama bin Laden in 2011. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
The No. 2 in terror released an 18-minute video called Our Duty Towards Our Jerusalem, adding that every Muslim has a duty to liberate the ancient city.
He said: “No Muslim has the right to cede Jerusalem no matter what happens. Only a traitor would give it up or hand it over. Let them (Muslims) rise and attack the Jews and the Americans everywhere.”
The latest outburst follows Trump’s announcement on Dec. 6 outlining his plan to move the embassy.
Batarfi dismissed concerns voiced by US allies protests as disingenuous “dust thrown in the eyes.”
He added: “The greatest responsibility lies upon the Muslims in America and the Western countries in the world. The Muslims inside the occupied land must kill every Jew, by running him over, or stabbing him, or by using against him any weapon, or by burning their homes.”
Al-Qaeda chief urges Muslims to ‘kill every Jew’ | Toronto Sun
 

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ISIS-loving ex-U.S. soldier gets life for gunning down Denver transit guard
Associated Press
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Published:
January 25, 2018
Updated:
January 25, 2018 7:50 PM EST
This file booking photo released on Feb. 2, 2017, by the Denver Police Department shows Joshua Cummings in Denver. (Denver Police Department via AP, File)
DENVER — A former U.S. soldier who killed a transit security guard in downtown Denver last year was sentenced Thursday to life in prison without parole.
After a three-day trial, a jury found Joshua Cummings, 38, guilty of first-degree murder in the death of Scott Von Lanken, 56. Cummings received the mandatory sentence shortly after the verdict was read.
Police said he walked up behind Von Lanken while the guard was speaking to two women late at night on Jan. 31, 2017, put a gun to his neck and shot him.
One of the women told investigators that Cummings said something like, “Do what you are told,” just before he opened fire and ran away, according to police. He was found a short time later hiding on the terrace of an apartment building with a handgun.
Von Lanken was a former police officer who was working as a contract security guard for the Denver area’s Regional Transportation District.
Cummings told The Associated Press shortly after his arrest that he supported the Islamic State group, but investigators said they had not found any evidence that the terror group had anything to do with the killing.
Cummings, who joined the Army in 1996 but never saw combat, said he pledged his allegiance to ISIS and fasted behind bars for three days to purge himself of an oath he took to uphold the U.S. Constitution.
The Islamic convert from Texas declined to discuss the crime with the AP or whether his support for the militant group led him to shoot Von Lanken.
Members of mosques in the Denver area reported concerns about him to authorities before the shooting.
On Dec. 24, 2016, a mosque leader emailed the Department of Homeland Security to say a man identifying himself as a Muslim convert named Joshua, from Pampa, Texas, made worrisome statements that day about fighting to establish “the rule of Islam.” The email also said the man had rebuked a speaker “as being soft” on Shariah law earlier that month.
The FBI has declined to comment on what, if any, action agents took after Cummings was interviewed in December 2016.
Cummings had been vocal on Twitter about his views on Islam, and he was both critical and supportive of law enforcement.
ISIS-loving ex-U.S. soldier gets life for gunning down Denver transit guard | Toronto Sun
 

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95 killed as suicide bomber in ambulance detonates in Afghanistan
Associated Press
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Published:
January 27, 2018
Updated:
January 27, 2018 1:21 PM EST
KABUL — A suicide bomber driving an ambulance coasted through a security checkpoint in Afghanistan’s capital on Saturday by telling police he was taking a patient to a nearby hospital and then detonated his explosives at a second checkpoint, killing at least 95 people and wounding 158 more in an attack claimed by the Taliban, authorities said.
The powerful explosion was felt throughout the capital, Kabul, and covered the blast area in smoke and dust. Dozens of vehicles were damaged or destroyed, and several shops, including some selling antiques and photography equipment, were decimated.
Windows at the nearby Jamhuriat government hospital were shattered, and its walls were damaged. People ran out to help, and ambulances arrived to transport dozens of wounded people to hospitals.
The Interior Ministry said four suspects in the deadly bombing, which occurred near the European Union and Indian consulates, had been arrested and were being questioned, but it didn’t elaborate.
“The majority of the dead in the attack are civilians, but of course we have military casualties as well,” ministry spokesman Nasrat Rahimi said.
A wounded man is assisted at the site of an explosion in downtown Kabul, Afghanistan, Saturday, Jan. 27, 2018. The Interior Ministry says a suicide car bomb attack in Kabul leaves dozens wounded.
A Taliban spokesman, Zabihullah Mujahid, claimed responsibility for the bombing, which sent thick, black smoke into the sky from a site near the government’s former Interior Ministry building.
The bombing came just a week after Taliban militants killed 22 people at an international hotel in Kabul.
It has been a month of relentless attacks across Afghanistan, with the Taliban and an Islamic State group affiliate making alternate claims of responsibility. The brutality and frequency of the attacks, including one in December at a Shiite cultural centre, has shattered Afghanistan’s usually quiet winter, when fighting normally slows down.
U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres quickly condemned Saturday’s attack, saying through a spokesman that “Indiscriminate attacks against civilians … can never be justified.” U.S. Ambassador to Afghanistan John R. Bass called the attack “senseless and cowardly.”
And the International Committee of the Red Cross seethed that the ambulance attack was “unacceptable and unjustifiable,” saying in a tweet: “The use of an ambulance in today’s attack in #Kabul is harrowing.”
It was the second Taliban attack in a week on high-security targets in the city.
Wounded people are assisted at the site of an explosion in downtown Kabul, Afghanistan, Saturday, Jan. 27, 2018. The Interior Ministry says a suicide car bomb attack in Kabul has left dozens wounded.
Last weekend, six Taliban militants attacked Kabul’s Intercontinental Hotel, leaving 22 people, including 14 foreigners, dead. About 150 guests fled the gun battle and fire sparked by the assault by climbing down bedsheets tied to balconies. The U.S. Department of State said American citizens were killed and injured in that attack.
The hotel attack prompted the United States to repeat its demand that Pakistan expel Taliban members who have found sanctuary on its soil, with particular reference to the Haqqani network. On Wednesday a U.S. drone slammed into Pakistani tribal territory that borders Afghanistan, killing two Haqqani commanders, said Pakistani officials, who deny providing organized camps for their safety. Pakistan says the Taliban cross the porous border that separates the countries along with the estimated 1.5 million Afghan refugees still living in Pakistan.
The recent attacks have infuriated Afghans, frustrated by the worsening security after 16 years of war. The Afghans have expressed their anger with neighbour Pakistan for harbouring insurgents and with the U.S.-led coalition for its inability to suppress the insurgency. They also have blamed the deteriorating security situation on a deeply divided government embroiled in political feuding that has paralyzed Parliament.
After Saturday’s attacks Pakistan issued a statement that condemned the bombing, saying, “No cause or ends justify acts of terrorism against innocent people.”
Afghan security forces, whose competency has been uneven, have struggled to fight the Taliban since the U.S. and NATO formally ended their combat mission in 2014.
U.S. President Donald Trump has pursued a plan that involves sending thousands more troops to Afghanistan and envisions shifting away from a time-based approach to one that more explicitly links U.S. assistance to concrete results from the Afghan government. The Republican president’s U.N. envoy, Nikki Haley, said after a recent visit to Afghanistan that his policy was working and that peace talks between the government and the Taliban are closer than ever before.
95 killed as suicide bomber in ambulance detonates in Afghanistan | Toronto Sun
 

Danbones

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Security #1: "Whats in the bomb case doood?"

Bomber: "nuttin!"

Security #1: *stares into the sun for a minute or two* "OK! Carry on..."
( gives suicide bomber secret "dakka dakka Mohammad jihad" hand shake)

I guess they are sick of having the Pakistanis help the US rape their country for the money the US is no longer paying.

This week the Human Rights Watch reports that in the second half of 2016, deportation threats and police abuses pushed out 365,000 of Pakistan’s 1.5 million registered Afghan refugees and over 200,000 of the country’s estimated one million undocumented Afghans. This is a process that has been building up for a number of years. It intensified after the Tehreek-i-Taliban Pakistan’s 2014 Army Public School attack in Peshawar.

(LOL FURTHER INSANITY OF THE WESTERN DUFFUS ):
Moreover, the movement of Afghans to Europe continues. Afghans already constitute the second largest refugee population in Europe, despite claims by Western deportation regimes that Afghanistan is a ‘safe country’.
https://www.dawn.com/news/1315598

 
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spaminator

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ISIS DEFEATED: U.S. starts Iraq drawdown after ‘battle against Daesh’ ends
Associated Press
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Published:
February 5, 2018
Updated:
February 5, 2018 7:56 AM EST
AL-ASAD AIRBASE, Iraq — American troops have started to draw down from Iraq following Baghdad’s declaration of victory over the Islamic State group last year, according to Western contractors at a U.S.-led coalition base in Iraq.
In Baghdad, an Iraqi government spokesman on Monday confirmed to The Associated Press that the drawdown has begun, though he stressed it was still in its early stages and doesn’t mark the beginning of a complete pullout of U.S. forces.
In this Aug. 20, 2017 file photo, U.S. Army soldiers stands next to a guided-missile launcher, a few miles from the frontline, in the village of Abu Ghaddur, east of Tal Afar, Iraq. (AP Photo/Balint Szlanko, File)
Dozens of American soldiers have been transported from Iraq to Afghanistan on daily flights over the past week, along with weapons and equipment, the contractors said.
An AP reporter at the Al-Asad base in western Iraq saw troop movements reflecting the contractors’ account. The contractors spoke on condition of anonymity in line with regulations and declined to reveal the exact size of the drawdown.
In this April 17, 2017 file photo, Decker, from the 82nd Airborne Division’s C Battery, 2nd Battalion, 319th Airborne Field Artillery Regiment is part of the team responsible for firing artillery in support of Iraqi forces battling Islamic State militants in Mosul, Iraq. (AP Photo/Maya Alleruzzo, File)
“Continued coalition presence in Iraq will be conditions-based, proportional to the need and in co-ordination with the government of Iraq,” coalition spokesman Army Col. Ryan Dillon told the AP when asked for comment.
Government spokesman Saad al-Hadithi said “the battle against Daesh has ended, and so the level of the American presence will be reduced.” Daesh is the Arabic language acronym for IS.
In this April 17, 2017 file photo, U.S. soldiers from the 82nd Airborne Division fire artillery in support of Iraqi forces fighting Islamic State militants from their base east of Mosul. (AP Photo/Maya Alleruzzo, File)
Al-Hadithi spoke just hours after AP reported the American drawdown — the first since the war against IS was launched over three years ago.
One senior Iraqi official close to Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi said 60 per cent of all American troops currently in country will be withdrawn, according to the initial agreement reached with the United States. The plan would leave a force of about 4,000 U.S. troops to continue training the Iraqi military.
U.S. Army soldiers move through Qayara West Coalition base in Qayara, some 50 kilometers south of Mosul, Iraq, Wednesday, Nov. 9, 2016. (AP Photo/Marko Drobnjakovic)
The official spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to talk to the media.
A Pentagon report released in November said there were 8,892 U.S. troops in Iraq as of late September.
The U.S. first launched airstrikes against the Islamic State group in Iraq in August 2014. At the time the military intervention was described as “limited,” but as Iraq’s military struggled to roll back the extremists, the U.S.-led coalition’s footprint in the country steadily grew.
In this Sept. 8, 2016 photo, a U.S. Army soldier guards a position at Camp Swift, northern Iraq. (AP Photo/Susannah George)
“We’ve had a recent change of mission and soon we’ll be supporting a different theatre of operations in the coming month,” U.S. Army 1st Lt. William John Raymond told the AP at Al-Asad.
He spoke as he and a handful of soldiers from his unit conducted equipment inventory checks required before leaving Iraq. Raymond declined to specify where his unit was being redeployed, in line with regulations as the information has not yet been made public.
The drawdown of U.S. forces comes just three months ahead of national elections in Iraq, where the indefinite presence of American troops continues to be a divisive issue.
Al-Abadi, who is looking to remain in office for another term, has long struggled to balance the often competing interests of Iraq’s two key allies: Iran and the United States.
While the U.S. has closely backed key Iraqi military victories over IS such as the retaking of the city of Mosul, Iraq’s Shiite-led paramilitary forces with close ties to Iran have called for the withdrawal of U.S. forces. The prime minister has previously stated that Iraq’s military will need American training for years to come.
The Iraq drawdown also follows the release of the Pentagon’s National Defence Strategy that cited China’s rapidly expanding military and an increasingly aggressive Russia as the U.S. military’s top national security priorities.
“Great power competition, not terrorism, is now the primary focus of U.S. national security,” Defence Secretary Jim Mattis said last month in remarks outlining the strategy.
Iraq declared victory over IS in December after more than three years of grueling combat against the extremists in a war Iraqi forces fought with close U.S. support. In 2014, at the height of the Sunni militant group’s power, IS controlled nearly a third of Iraqi territory.
While IS’ self-styled caliphate stretching across Iraq and Syria has crumbled and the militants no longer hold a contiguous stretch of territory, in Iraq, the group continues to pose a security risk, according to Iraqi and American officials.
IS maintains a “cellular structure” of fighters who carry out attacks in Iraq aimed at disrupting local security, U.S. Marine Corps Brig. Gen. James Glynn told reporters during a Pentagon briefing last month.
Glynn pledged continued support for Iraq’s security forces, but acknowledged U.S.-led coalition “capabilities” in Iraq would likely shift now that conventional combat operations against the group have largely ceased.
There were some 170,000 American troops in Iraq in 2007 at the height of the surge of U.S. forces to combat sectarian violence unleashed by the U.S.-led invasion of the country to oust dictator Saddam Hussein. U.S. troop numbers eventually wound down to 40,000 before the complete withdrawal in 2011.
——
Abdul-Zahra reported from Baghdad.
ISIS DEFEATED: U.S. starts Iraq drawdown after
 

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IS claims responsibility for deadly church shooting in Russia
Associated Press
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Published:
February 19, 2018
Updated:
February 19, 2018 9:55 AM EST
In this video grab provided by the RU-RTR Russian television a group of believers comfort each other after a memorial service in the Russian Orthodox Church in Kizlyar, Russia, Monday, Feb. 19, 2018. The Islamic State group has claimed responsibility for a deadly attack on churchgoers in Russia's predominantly Muslim Dagestan region. At least five people were killed and four wounded when a gunman opened fire with a hunting rifles on people leaving a Sunday service at a Russian Orthodox church in the Dagestan city of Kizlyar. (RU-RTR Russian Television via AP) ORG XMIT: XAZ106AP
MOSCOW — The Islamic State group on Monday claimed responsibility for a deadly attack on churchgoers in Russia’s predominantly Muslim Dagestan region.
At least five people were killed and four wounded when a gunman opened fire with a hunting rifles on people leaving a Sunday service at a Russian Orthodox church in the Dagestan city of Kizlyar.
Authorities say the gunman was a local resident, and his wife has been detained for questioning. But police haven’t commented on the possible motive for the attack.
Dagestan is a predominantly Muslim region situated between Chechnya and the Caspian Sea. Following two separatist wars in neighbouring Chechnya, an Islamic insurgency spread to Dagestan.
A statement from the Islamic State group, posted Monday on an IS-affiliated militant website, claimed responsibility for the shooting, saying a Muslim fighter attacked “a Christian temple” in Kizlyar. The authenticity of the statement couldn’t be confirmed, but the website is regularly used by IS for posting militant statements.
The attack happened less than two weeks after several top officials in Dagestan were arrested on embezzlement charges, part of the Kremlin’s efforts to strengthen control over the volatile region. The officials, including the head of Dagestan’s government, were arrested at their homes before dawn in a swift, military-style operation in Dagestan and flown to Moscow. Observers saw the latest arrests as part of Kremlin efforts to rein in the local elites and establish a degree of control over the economically struggling region.
IS claims responsibility for deadly church shooting in Russia | Toronto Sun
 

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1,000 jihadi brides set to invade West: Report
Brad Hunter
More from Brad Hunter
Published:
February 24, 2018
Updated:
February 24, 2018 3:34 PM EST
Hayat Boumeddiene, the most wanted woman in France is more than an ISIS cheerleader. She takes part in attacks.
Here come the brides!
A new report from the European Union has set off chilling alarm bells: More than 1,000 ISIS jihadi brides are expected to return to the West.
And that includes Canada.
Since punker turned terrorist Sally Jones was taken off the board by allied bombers, Samantha “The White Widow” Lewthwaite is the most wanted female terrorist in the world.
“An estimated 30% of 5,000 foreign terrorist fighters who resided in Europe, and left to Syria, Iraq or Libya have come back to the Continent,” the report from Frontex reveals, according to The UK Sun.
It’s believed about 1,000 European women signed on as bombmakers and babymakers with ISIS. Several hundred minors are believed to have been taken to the theatres of war in Syria and Iraq.
During her salad days, Reem Slaleh Raiyshi was the most wanted female terrorist in the world. She blew herself up in 2004. GETTY IMAGES
Now, with the death cult’s caliphate pulverized by allied bombing, the rats are scurrying.
Assessing how dangerous the threat could be is “difficult.” Increasingly, women aligned with Islamic State have pushed for a more active role in the terror group’s orchestra of death.
The report adds that the terror threat is constantly “evolving.”
“The challenges are even more complicated when adding the hundreds of brides and children,” it adds.
“Almost 1,000 women from Europe have joined the different jihadist groups in the Middle East, mainly Daesh. Furthermore, several hundred minors are also believed to have been brought to, or born in, the same region.”
Last October, a former British spy chief warned that women were complicit in almost 25% of terror attacks in Europe.
Meanwhile, the British Foreign Office warned that the jihadis are looking for new places to recruit members to do their bloody bidding.
The UK Sun names Canada, South Africa, New Zealand and Trinidad and Tobago as vulnerable.
bhunter@postmedia.com

1,000 jihadi brides set to invade West: Report | Toronto Sun
 

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ISIS death threats drove porn star Mia Khalifa from sex flicks
Brad Hunter
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Published:
February 28, 2018
Updated:
February 28, 2018 2:19 PM EST
Former porn star Mia Khalifa said death threats from ISIS drove her from the Sexxx-rated business.MIA KHALIFA/ INSTAGRAM
Former porn star Mia Khalifa is claiming death threats from ISIS made her quit the XXX-rated world.
Born in Lebanon, Khalifa, 25, moved to Miami when she was 10.
While she’s from an Arabic background, her family is Christian. ISIS called her a “disgrace.”
Former porn star Mia Khalifa said death threats from ISIS drove her from the Sexxx-rated business. MIA KHALIFA/ INSTAGRAM
“It all started to spiral out of control when the death threats from ISIS started coming in. That’s when I stepped away,” she told Lance Armstrong on his podcast.
“As soon as I started to gain popularity, that’s when I was like ‘get the f— out of this.’ This was not what I was trying to do whatsoever.
“I just wanted to let loose and rebel a little bit.”
Lance Armstrong and Mia Khalifa. MIA KHALIFA/ INSTAGRAM
The star of Pounding Mia Khalifa, Mia Khalifa and Her 34 DDDs, and Mia Khalifa’s Monster Threesome provoked outrage with one scene showing her having sex while wearing a hijab.
Former porn star Mia Khalifa said death threats from ISIS drove her from the Sexxx-rated business. MIA KHALIFA/ INSTAGRAM
Meanwhile, Islamic State headcases are urging jihadis to turn the tourist beaches of Egypt into rivers of blood.
An editorial in the death cult’s online weekly, Al-Naba, is calling on extremists to ramp up attacks on “belligerent” Christians and tourists in the country.
Former porn star Mia Khalifa said death threats from ISIS drove her from the Sexxx-rated business. MIA KHALIFA/ INSTAGRAM
The fanatics’ fanzine also wants ISIS members to kidnap tourists to deliver another body blow to Egypt and harm its tourism industry.
Egypt is still reeling from the 2015 terror attack when a Russian passenger jet was destroyed over the Sinai Peninsula. All 224 people on board were killed.
A Russian investigator walks near wreckage a day after a passenger jet bound for St. Petersburg, Russia, crashed in Hassana, Egypt, on Sunday, Nov. 1, 2015. (AP Photo/Amr Nabil)
ISIS controls territory to the north of Sharm el Sheikh, the Red Sea resort area popular with foreign tourists.
After a nearly three-year absence, British tour operators are again flying into the area.
A Russian family shows their heartache after ISIS shot down an airliner over Egypt killing everyone aboard. GETTY IMAGES
The U.K. Sun quoted the latest maniacal manifesto: “And it is worth mentioning in these days that the Mujahideen in all regions of Egypt aim to escalate their attacks against the apostates, belligerent Christians, and the polytheists from among the tourists (i.e. Christian and Jewish tourists), and others.”
One ISIS supporter sniffed online on Telegram: “The infidel Egyptian regime is attempting to demonstrate its presence, flaunt its power and take pride in itself, therefore:
“Operations targeting the Christians and seizing their property will embarrass the regime and show it up more than targeting the military and police.”
http://soundcloud.com/user-411867241/episode-84-mia-khalifa-the-forward-podcast-with-lance-armstrong
http://thesun.co.uk/news/5690929/is...-by-deliberately-targeting-christian-tourists
ISIS death threats drove porn star Mia Khalifa from sex flicks | Toronto Sun
 

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'I will not be silenced': France charges far-right leader Marine Le Pen with tweeting ISIS photos
Associated Press
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Published:
March 1, 2018
Updated:
March 1, 2018 2:34 PM EST
Far-right leader and candidate for the 2017 French presidential election Marine Le Pen acknowledges applauses as she arrives on stage for a meeting in Marseille, southern France, Wednesday, April 19, 2017.Michel Euler / AP
PARIS — French prosecutors filed preliminary charges Thursday against Marine Le Pen for tweeting brutal images of Islamic State violence.
The prosecutor’s office in the Paris suburb of Nanterre said the charges were issued for “distribution of violent images.” If the case eventually reaches trial and she’s convicted, Le Pen could face up to three years in prison and a 75,000-euro ($90,000) fine.
Le Pen’s December 2015 tweets showed executions by IS extremists, including the killing of American reporter James Foley. She posted them in the wake of the November 2015 IS attacks on Paris, accusing the government of not doing enough to protect France.
French far-right Front National (FN) party president Marine Le Pen, visits the 55th International Agriculture Fair (Salon de l’Agriculture) at the Porte de Versailles exhibition center on February 28, 2018 in Paris. GERARD JULIEN/AFP/Getty Images
Le Pen told BFM television Thursday “it’s clearly aimed at silencing me. Yet I will not be silenced.” Le Pen said she would consider a potential conviction as a “medal of patriotism and defence of the French people.”
The preliminary charges were made possible after the French parliament lifted her immunity from prosecution in the case late last year.
Lawyer Rodolphe Bosselut, representing Le Pen in the case, confirmed the charges but wouldn’t comment.
It's clearly aimed at silencing me. Yet I will not be silenced.
Marine Le Pen
It’s one of multiple legal cases targeting Le Pen or the National Front.
In one high-profile investigation, she and the party have to respond to charges over the misuse of European funds. She denies wrongdoing.
Le Pen, who was a distant runner-up to Emmanuel Macron in last year’s presidential run-off, plans to propose a new name for the National Front at a congress later this month, in an apparent effort to distance it from past problems and stigma. The party could also end the honorary presidency of Le Pen’s father and National Front founder Jean-Marie Le Pen, as part of a protracted family feud.
Marine Le Pen’s French-first, Islam-skeptic nationalism resonated widely in the wake of Donald Trump’s election and Britain’s vote to leave the European Union.
‘I will not be silenced’: France charges far-right leader Marine Le Pen with tweeting ISIS photos | Toronto Sun