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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Bradley Cooper producing miniseries about ISIS
WENN.COM
First posted: Friday, August 05, 2016 03:55 PM EDT | Updated: Friday, August 05, 2016 04:04 PM EDT
Bradley Cooper is re-teaming with The Hangover director Todd Phillips to develop a miniseries about terrorist group ISIS.
The miniseries will be based on Joby Warrick's book Black Flags: The Rise Of ISIS. The American Sniper star will serve as an executive producer alongside Phillips.
Black Flags will centre on the rise of the terrorist group and the intelligence organizations attempting to disband the group.
Author Gregg Hurwitz is writing the adaptation and executive producing and Tim Van Patten will direct.
The miniseries news follows a string of ISIS attacks around the world, including a terrorist attack in Nice, France in July, when 84 people were killed after a truck drove through a crowd watching fireworks at the Promenade des Anglais.
Bradley Cooper producing miniseries about ISIS | TV | Entertainment | Toronto Su
 

tay

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My first thought is this will certainly prioritize Sweden as a country to target even if it's some church unaffiliated with the government that most people aren't members of.

So what's the end game here? An Iraqi picks up the bible (and I'm assuming it's in their language and not Swedish or English and that the person with it is even literate in their language) , starts reading it, is so amazed with it he renounces Islam, gets caught with the bible, and is crucified for being an apostate by Isis?

I'm trying to wonder how this could, in any possible way, end up helping anyone. ........


A major evangelical church in Sweden is preparing to use drones to drop thousands of Bibles into areas of Iraq controlled by Islamic State.

The Livets Ord (Word of Life) church in Uppsala in the north of Sweden has said it will use drones flying at high altitude to release thousands of small, electronic Bibles into Iraq.

"The Bibles are the size of pill boxes and have a display. They require no electricity, but work on their own," the church's mission director Christian Åkerhielm told Swedish broadcaster SVT, according to the newspaper The Local.

"Our ambition is to pass on the hope and love of the Christian gospel to a population living in closed areas where they are being denied human rights," the Livets Ord said on its Swedish homepage.

The church said that another organisation in the area would be carrying out the operation, but did not name the other group. "We start our project in a few weeks and hope to drop thousands of Bibles," it said.

Livets Ord is the leading charismatic church in Sweden, and seen as in line with the Pentecostal movement in the US. It was founded in the 1980s, and is often criticised in secular Swedish society for being like a "cult".

It runs a series of evangelical schools for children.

The current leader of the Christian Democrat party, Ebba Busch Thor, who is from Uppsala, attended one until she turned 16.

Another criticism levelled in the Swedish press has been that the church has made donations to Israel that have gone towards building illegal settlements in the West Bank.

The church's founders, Ulf and Birgitta Ekman, leftin 2014 to convert to Catholicism.

Swedish church to use drones to drop thousands of Bibles in ISIS-controlled Iraq | Christian News on Christian Today
 

tay

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The Obama administration announced on Monday the beginning of US air strikes in Libya against ISIS targets, marking the fourth country the United States is currently bombing with the goal of “degrading and destroying” the terror group. A campaign that began two years ago this Sunday has now, 50,000 bombs and 25,000 dead ISIS fighters later, expanded to a whole new continent.

You’d hardly notice, however, if you followed US media. While the air strikes themselves were reported by most major outlets, they were done so in a matter-of-fact way, and only graced the front pages of major American newspapers for one day. The New York Times didn’t even find the news important enough to give it a front-page headline, instead relegating it to a quick blurb at the far-bottom corner of the page, next to a teaser about the G train “having a moment.”

Even many center-left outlets barely touched on the massive mission creep.

To give some perspective, Slate, Mother Jones, and Buzzfeed News all ran more stories about Trump’s dust-up with an infant than they did on what was effectively the start of a new war. ABC World News Tonight mentioned the Libyan air strikes for only 20 seconds, 13 minutes into the show, and NBC Nightly News didn’t mention the air strikes at all. The president’s announcement that the United States is bombing a new country has become entirely banal.

This is by design. Obama’s “frog in boiling water” approach to war removes a clear deadline, thus stripping his use of military force of the urgency of, say, Bush’s “48 hours to get out of Baghdad” Gary Cooper approach.

Meanwhile, an anti-ISIS bombing campaign that began as “limited” “targeted" air strikes in Iraq two years ago expanded to Syria six weeks later to Afghanistan in January of this year, and to Libya this week. Combat troops and special forces have also crept into play, with US military personnel first appearing in Iraq and Syria in 2014, 2015, or 2016, depending on how one defines “boots” and “ground.”

The question pundits should be asking themselves is this: Had Obama announced on August 7, 2014, that he planned on bombing four countries and deploying troops to two of them to fight a war with “no end point,” would the American public have gone along with it? Probably not.

https://www.thenation.com/article/o...paign-to-fourth-country-media-barely-notices/
 

spaminator

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U.K. girl who went to ISIS-controlled area of Syria to become 'jihadi bride' likely killed in airstrike: Lawyer
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
First posted: Friday, August 12, 2016 12:19 PM EDT | Updated: Friday, August 12, 2016 12:39 PM EDT
LONDON — One of three London schoolgirls who travelled to an area controlled by the Islamic State group in Syria to become “jihadi brides” is believed to have been killed in an airstrike, a lawyer for her family says.
Tasnime Akunjee told the BBC that Kadiza Sultana’s family had been told that she died in the ISIS stronghold of Raqqa several weeks ago. He said the family was “devastated.”
He said the death has not been confirmed. Akunjee did not immediately respond Friday to messages from The Associated Press.
Sultana was 16 when she and classmates Shamima Begum and Amira Abase — both 15 — travelled to Syria in February 2015 without telling their families. Their distraught relatives made emotional public appeals for them to come back.
ITV News, which first reported Sultana’s death on Thursday, broadcast phone calls between Sultana and her sister in Britain, in which Sultana said she felt wanted to return to Britain but could see no way of escape.
“I don’t have a good feeling. I feel scared,” Sultana said in one call. “You know the borders are closed right now, so how am I going to get out?”
Her sister, Hamila Khanom, told ITV: “We were expecting this in a way. But at least we know she is in a better place.”
Akunjee told ITV the only good that could come of Sultana’s death would be as “a testimony for others of the risks of actually going to a war zone, to dissuade people from ever making that choice.”
U.K. police estimate at least 800 Britons have travelled to join or support IS in Syria and Iraq, and dozens of them have been killed.
Kadiza Sultana. (Metropolitan Police/HO)

U.K. girl who went to ISIS-controlled area of Syria to become 'jihadi bride' lik
 

spaminator

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Feds urged to relocate ISIS sex slaves to Canada
By Maryam Shah, Toronto Sun
First posted: Wednesday, August 17, 2016 09:42 PM EDT | Updated: Wednesday, August 17, 2016 11:24 PM EDT
TORONTO - The Canadian government is being urged to resettle hundreds of Yazidis who have escaped sex slavery and torture under ISIS rule.
One Free World International (OFWI) and the Office of Refugees at the Archdiocese of Toronto (ORAT) recently returned from a fact-finding mission in northern Iraq, where they say they identified around 400 Yazidi girls and women who escaped sex slavery under ISIS rule and are in dire need of a safe country to call home.
“I’m talking about government sponsorship,” OFWI founder Rev. Majed El Shafie told a press conference Wednesday. “Move your behind and bring (these) girls home.”
According to ORAT director Dr. Martin Mark, a major roadblock in kicking off a formal resettlement process is that the Yazidis are displaced within their own country and unable to find their way to a safe third country to apply for refugee protection in Canada.
“We are not allowed, according to the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act, to initiate the resettlement of a person who is in his or her own country internally displaced,” Mark explained.
In his 15 years working with refugees, Mark said he’d “never met a community so desperate” as the heavily persecuted religious minority.
Mark and El Shafie, along with Conservative MP Tony Clement, shared a six-page joint proposal to help resettle around 400 Yazidi women and their families in Canada.
The proposal asks that the women be exempt on humanitarian and compassionate grounds from the requirement to be outside their country of residence, and the requirement to be registered with the United Nations.
El Shafie noted it took a few months to bring 25,000 refugees to Canada: “So if there is a will, there is a way.”
Immigration, Refugees, and Citizenship Canada told the Sun that it relies on the United Nations Refugee Agency, other “referral organizations,” and private sponsors to identify refugees for resettlement.
“We recognize the compelling nature of the need for protection of Yazidis both within Iraq and in the region,” the department said in an email.
Security issues in the area “present challenges in terms of accessing these vulnerable Yazidis in order to identify, select and interview them, not to mention getting them out of Iraq, while ensuring that our immigration officers, members of the Yazidi community ... remain out of harm’s way.”
The department “is continuing to explore options.”
ABOUT THE YAZIDIS
Yazidis are a small religious community in Iraq, whose faith combines elements of Islam, Christianity and Zoroastrianism.
The United Nations has said they are victims of genocide by the Islamic State group. Around 400,000 members of their community have been displaced from their homes, with thousands of Yazidi men killed.
As of July, around 3,000 women and children remained under ISIS control as sex slaves.
— With files from Associated Press
mshah@postmedia.com
Dr. Martin Mark, director Office of Refugees at the Archdiocese of Toronto, and Rev. Majed El Shafie, founder of One Free World International, urge the federal government to act fast in resettling hundreds of Yazidi girls and women who escaped sex slavery in northern Iraq, Aug. 17, 2016 in Toronto. (Maryam Shah/Toronto Sun)

Feds urged to relocate ISIS sex slaves to Canada | Canada | News | Toronto Sun
 

spaminator

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After escaping ISIS, raped girl sets self on fire to be undesirable to fighters
David Rising, The Associated Press
First posted: Wednesday, August 24, 2016 09:55 AM EDT | Updated: Wednesday, August 24, 2016 10:30 AM EDT
VILLINGEN-SCHWENNINGEN, Germany -- The Yazidi girl had been in the safety of a refugee camp in Iraq for two weeks when she imagined she heard the voices of Islamic State fighters outside her tent.
Petrified by the thought of again facing rape and abuse at their hands, 17-year-old Yasmin vowed to make herself undesirable. So she doused herself in gasoline and lit a match. The flames burned her hair and face, peeling away her nose, lips and ears.
That was her state when German doctor Jan Ilhan Kizilhan found her in a refugee camp in northern Iraq last year -- physically disfigured and mentally so scarred that she had falsely thought her former captors were coming for her.
Now 18, Yasmin is one of 1,100 women, mainly of the Yazidi religious minority, who have escaped IS captivity and are in Germany for psychological treatment. The pioneering program that Kizilhan helps run, which has attracted international attention, tries to address a basic problem: Long after the women are rescued, the trauma remains.
Recalling her ordeal today, Yasmin hunches over in her chair, grips her gnarled hands together and looks down at the floor. But she straightens up and her face brightens as she remembers when Kizilhan first entered her tent in the refugee camp and told her and her mother, in their own language, how he could help in Germany.
"I said, of course I want to go there and be safe, and be the old Yasmin again," she recounts. She asks that her last name not be used out of ongoing fear of possible reprisal from Islamic State sympathizers.
It was on Aug. 3, 2014, that IS fighters swept into the Sinjar region of northern Iraq, home to the majority of the world's Yazidis. They rounded up the Yazidis into three groups: Young boys who were made to fight for IS, older males who were killed if they didn't convert to Islam, and women and girls sold into slavery, like Yasmin.
Tens of thousands of Yazidis fled to the mountains, where the militants surrounded them in the scorching summer heat. The U.S., Iraq, Britain, France and Australia flew in water and other supplies, but many Yazidis died before they could be rescued.
Following the IS assault, "no free Yazidis remained in the Sinjar region," a United Nations expert panel wrote. "The 400,000-strong community had all been displaced, captured or killed." An estimated 3,200 are still in IS captivity in Syria, where they were taken after being captured.
As the attack unfolded, members of the estimated 100,000-strong Yazidi community in Germany approached politicians in Berlin for help. Winfried Kretschmann, the governor of the prosperous western state of Baden Wuerttemberg, was moved and decided to act.
"He asked us, 'what can we do?' We're a state, we don't have an army," recalls Michael Blume, the state's expert on minority issues. "We looked into it and said, no state's ever done it, but we could bring a special quota here."
The state parliament committed 95 million euros ($107 million) over three years to bring women abused by IS -- mostly Yazidis but also Christians and Shiite Muslims -- to Germany. Blume reached out to Kizilhan, a psychologist specializing in trauma and also a university professor and Mideast expert. Kizilhan, who is of Kurdish background, was born in Turkey and speaks Kurdish, including the Yazidi dialect, German, Turkish, Farsi, English and even some Arabic.
From February 2015 to January 2016, small teams of experts, including Blume and Kizilhan, went to refugee camps in northern Iraq. Kizilhan made 14 trips and personally interviewed the women and girls, trying to determine who would benefit best from the limited program.
"It was an evil that I had never seen in my life," he says. "I'm experienced in trauma, I had already worked with patients from Rwanda, from Bosnia, but this was very different. If you have an eight-year-old girl in front of you and she's saying she was sold eight times by IS and raped 100 times during 10 months, how can humankind be so evil?"
In the end, he decided upon 1,100 women and girls ranging in age today from four to 56.
Kizilhan and others then met with the head religious leader of the Yazidis, the Baba Sheikh, at the holy site of Lalish. He agreed not to ostracize the victims, despite the perceived affront to honour in their culture.
"The Baba Sheikh talked with each one of them, kissed them on the head and said, 'You belong to our society, you are still Yazidis and we are very proud of you, that you could come through this kind of horror and torture back to our society,'" Kizilhan says. "Most of the women cried, very shocked but happy to be accepted by the highest priest."
The women are primarily treated in more than 20 clinics in Baden-Wuerttemberg, though 70 have been sent to Lower Saxony and another 30 to Schleswig Holstein. They are kept at undisclosed locations with extra security out of fears that IS sympathizers may try to target them even in Germany. The last chartered plane with the victims arrived in January.
The program is being closely watched, with many queries from other states and countries, Blume said. Kizilhan is also working on establishing a trauma institute in northern Iraq to provide similar services for those not fortunate enough to be brought to Germany. Kizilhan noted that even in refugee camps in Iraq, some 60 Yazidi women have committed suicide.
About half the victims now in Germany need help just to stabilize. This means introducing them to the basics like going shopping, visiting doctors, and for children, going to school.
Among them is a woman whose four-year-old daughter was taken away by an IS fighter besotted with her blond hair and blue eyes, who told her he would "marry" her when she was nine. The mother escaped, but the daughter, now six, remains in the clutches of the extremists. The woman cries every time she sees a blond-haired and blue-eyed girl on the street, Kizilhan says.
Another was taken by IS at age 16 with her family and watched as her father and two brothers were killed. She was sold as a sex slave to a fighter from Tunisia, and then re-sold another dozen times or so over the next year. Finally escaping, she walked barefoot and without food east across Syria to the Iraqi border.
"In the view of the Islamic State ideology, these people are not human beings," Kizilhan says. "We experienced that also in the Nazi regime in Germany, they did the same with the Jews."
All of the women and girls have permission to remain in Germany for two years. Kizilhan notes that after what they have gone through, they could probably get asylum permanently if they want.
For Yasmin, there's no reason to go back.
Yasmin was 16 when she and her sister were separated from their family as they fled into the mountains, and spent seven days in IS captivity. Men were killed, and women and children taken, she says. After they escaped, she was still terrified and always crying.
She falters when trying to describe what led her to set fire to herself, talking vaguely rather than reliving the memory.
"Their voice was in my ears," she says. "I could hear their voice, I was so scared."
Then she heard what she thought was a shell exploding nearby.
"I couldn't take it anymore," she says. "And this is what happened to me."
Today she shares a modest single-family home with her parents, sister and two brothers. Her sister, a year older, won't talk about what happened to her, and nor will most of the other women in the program. But for Yasmin, the desire for people to know outweighs her hesitance to dredge up horrific memories.
"It is very important to tell our stories because the world should know what happened to us, so that it doesn't happen again," she says.
Yasmin wears loose-fitting clothing to protect her sensitive skin, and a machine at her bedside helps her breathe because of her damaged nose and airways. She hopes to eventually go to school, improve her German, learn English, and get a job involving computers. Yet she still fears the Islamic State, especially after two recent attacks in Germany claimed by the group.
She has somewhere between five and 15 surgeries ahead of her, Kizilhan says. She dreams of going out in public again without turning heads, without children looking at her and crying.
"I want to be through the surgeries and be healthy again," she says. "My family is here and I want to start a new life."
After escaping ISIS, raped girl sets self on fire to be undesirable to fighters
 

tay

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The House of Saud has plenty of money to splash around whether it's billions of dollars to fund radical, often violent, Islamic fundamentalism (link is external) around the world. A New York Times report shows that our esteemed customer and supposed ally in the war on terror is also the state that primarily sponsors Islamist theocracy and its often violent movements.

Don't like barbaric practices? Can't stand state sponsored Islamist terrorism? Well then don't sell them weapons.

Follow the link, read the report, ask yourself how hard does Justin Trudeau have to look the other way to support Saudi Arabia just like the previous Conservative government did.
 

spaminator

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Ex-hostages say American stayed brave amid torture by ISIS militants in Syria
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
First posted: Friday, August 26, 2016 07:56 PM EDT | Updated: Friday, August 26, 2016 08:05 PM EDT
PRESCOTT, Ariz. -- Former hostages say an Arizona woman slain by Islamic State militants remained steadfast in her Christian faith and stood up to her captors despite being tortured, raped and verbally abused.
Four ex-hostages who had shared cells with Kayla Mueller spoke publicly for the first time in an interview with ABC News set to air Friday.
Frida Saide of Sweden and Patricia Chavez of Peru and Belgium were among the women held with the 26-year-old Mueller for six weeks at an abandoned oil refinery in Syria in 2014. They said guards targeted Mueller more than other prisoners.
"They would scream at her, and they would, you know, blame her for everything that America has done in the world," Saide said.
Mueller and her boyfriend were captured after both left a Doctors Without Borders hospital in Aleppo. Omar Alkhani was released 20 days later after being beaten and interrogated.
Other hostages said Mueller of Prescott, Arizona, kept a positive outlook while sharing a 12-by-12 room with brick walls and a single light bulb where she could only tell if it was daytime if a bit of light appeared through a small vent.
Mueller sometimes entertained Saide and Chavez by doing impressions of the guards. Mueller also told them how she briefly cared for a 14-year-old Shiite girl and a woman while isolated for six months.
"She was amazing. She was a really strong girl," Chavez said.
Prisoners say Mohammed Emwazi, also known as Jihadi John, led three other guards who paraded Mueller around the refinery in March 2014. One hostage, Daniel Rye Ottosen, a Danish freelance photographer, recalled Mueller daring to contradict a guard who said she had converted to Islam.
Mueller was held captive for 18 months. Her family confirmed her death in February 2015.
Saide and Chavez said they managed to smuggle out three letters written by Mueller. One of the contacts she listed on the back of a letter was Kathleen Day, a campus minister at Northern Arizona University, where Mueller studied.
Day said the willingness to transport Mueller's letters was extraordinary because the women could have been killed.
"These young women and hostages were all alone," Day told The Associated Press. "They had no power. They had no voice. They had no money yet they stayed steady in their compassion and outreach to others."
Parents Carl and Marsha Mueller criticized President Barack Obama for not honouring a pledge to donate to Kayla's Hands, a foundation created to honour her commitment to serving the needy.
Carl Mueller told ABC News that Obama had promised during a private meeting in 2015 to make a contribution. Mueller also accused the Obama administration of failing to help secure his daughter's release.
"The president could have been a hero, but he chose not to," Mueller said.
Emily Lenzner, a spokeswoman for the Muellers, told the AP the couple would not comment further.
White House spokesman Josh Earnest said he would not discuss private presidential conversations but he expects Obama will contribute to the foundation in the future.
"It certainly is consistent with the kind of charity organization that the president and the first lady have supported in the past," Earnest said.
He said it's "entirely understandable" for the Muellers to feel pain and grief about their daughter not being saved from the terror group.
------
AP writers Terry Tang in Phoenix and Josh Lederman in Washington, D.C., contributed to this report.
In this May 30, 2013, file photo, Kayla Mueller is shown after speaking to a group in Prescott, Ariz. (AP Photo/The Daily Courier, Jo. L. Keener, File)

Ex-hostages say American stayed brave amid torture by ISIS militants in Syria |
 

spaminator

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Ashton Larmond's secret plan to join ISIL
Gary Dimmock
First posted: Monday, August 29, 2016 04:48 PM EDT | Updated: Tuesday, August 30, 2016 06:22 AM EDT
Ottawa jihadi Ashton Larmond was so bent on joining the Islamic State that days after authorities revoked his passport he started making secret plans to leave Canada undetected, crossing first into Alaska, then travelling to Russia by boat, and ultimately to Afghanistan.

Larmond had originally booked a flight for Istanbul to later join ISIL in Syria but authorities invalidated his passport three days before his scheduled Sept. 20, 2013 departure.

Increasingly frustrated about his travel ban, Larmond confided to an undercover RCMP agent that he was making plans to “escape Canada completely off the radar,” according to court filings from Larmond’s surprise guilty plea on Friday. He’s now serving 17 years in prison for counselling a person to carry out a terrorist activity.

In secretly-recorded conversations with the undercover agent, Larmond said he wasn’t afraid of going to prison, and noted that by the time he got out, he’d be a “very bad, well-versed person.”

In a search of his apartment on the day of his arrest — Jan. 9, 2015 — the RCMP found a book of handwritten notes, including co-ordinates for a location near a Russian Arctic port town off the Siberian sea.

Larmond started selling all his belongings and began assembling a survival kit for his jihad journey. At the time of his arrest, he had gathered the following gear: a red waterproof bag, a Zippo lighter, a magnifying glass, a master lock, a Canada Goose patch, “Middle Eastern clothing” with scarves and blanket, all stuffed in a green backpack. He had also purchased a black winter coat and was making inquiries about buying a winter tent, bag liners, camouflage gear, a backpacking frame and a snowmobile.

The Mounties found a list of the items he still needed, including orientation supplies, medical grade stitches, water filtration, orientation equipment, a fishing rod, bear bow (20 arrows), an AR-15 rifle (1,000 rounds), a buck knife, snare trap kit, throwing axe, combat shovel, hacksaw, clothes and camping gear.

The Mounties intensified their sights on Larmond after they intercepted online messages between him and fellow Ottawa convert John Maguire, a one-time hockey-playing punk rocker who radicalized before leaving Canada on Dec. 6, 2012 to join ISIL in Syria. Maguire, believed to have been killed in Syria, appeared in a highly-publicized ISIL recruitment video released on Dec. 7, 2014. In the video, Maguire declared a religious war on Canada and urged other Muslims to either go fight for ISIL overseas or launch attacks on Canadian soil.

In the Facebook and Skype conversations, Larmond said he longed to join his friend and the fight in Syria but visas and permits were a hassle and the RCMP and CSIS were shaking him down.

“I didn’t worry about any of that, just hopped on a plane. This country is very unstable so there was (no) need to worry about a visa or working permit,” Maguire messaged in August 2013.

Larmond and Maguire are said to have met at a lecture in 2012 and built a friendship based on their extremist views of Islam, with a shared desire to wage terrorism abroad.

Months later in November 2013, Larmond texted Maguire saying he was finding it hard to cope in Canada

“I love Canada, but don’t want to live here. I need to get my passport back.” (It had been revoked after he purchased a ticket to Turkey, the same route Maguire used.)

“I’m struggling here,” Larmond said.

“Like I think the government here thinks I’m a criminal/terrorist or something just cause we talk and we friends. Its messed up. Just because I support those who fight against those who kill innocent people,” (sic) said Larmond.

Larmond, a one-time Vanier drug dealer, helped radicalize his less-dominant twin brother Carlos, who pleaded guilty on Friday to trying to leave Canada to commit terrorism abroad. He was arrested at a Montreal airport on Jan. 9, 2015 after checking in for a flight bound for Frankfurt en-route eventually to Syria.

Carlos Honor Larmond, 25, is now serving seven years in prison, along with accomplice Suliman Mohamed, 23, who pleaded guilty to conspiring to commit terrorism.

The sentencing judge said homegrown terrorism is a virulent form of cancer and that the terror trio’s plans were a betrayal of the teachings of Islam.

The RCMP informant who infiltrated the Ottawa terror cluster was paid at least $800,000, including $250,000 in advance to testify at preliminary hearings that never happened.

The informant, a Muslim convert originally from New Brunswick, went from working at an Ottawa paintball shop to wearing a wire against jihadis — including the Larmond twins, their friend Suliman Mohamed and suspected ISIL fighter Khadar Khalib.
Ashton Carleton Larmond. Photo from Welcome to Platt Hockey League

Ashton Larmond's secret plan to join ISIL | Ontario | News | Toronto Sun

'There are only bones left'; ISIS buried thousands in 72 mass graves
Lori Hinnant and Desmond Butler, The Associated Press
First posted: Tuesday, August 30, 2016 02:15 PM EDT | Updated: Tuesday, August 30, 2016 07:06 PM EDT
HARDAN, Iraq -- Surrounded by smoke and flames, the sound of gunshots echoing around him, the young man crouched in the creek for hours, listening to the men in his family die.
On the other side of the mountain, another survivor peered through binoculars as the handcuffed men of neighbouring villages were shot and then buried by a waiting bulldozer. For six days he watched as the extremists filled one grave after another with his friends and relatives.
Between them, the two scenes of horror on Sinjar mountain contain six burial sites and the bodies of more than 100 people, just a small fraction of the mass graves Islamic State extremists have scattered across Iraq and Syria.
In exclusive interviews, photos and research, The Associated Press has documented and mapped 72 of the mass graves, the most comprehensive survey so far, with many more expected to be uncovered as the Islamic State group's territory shrinks. In Syria, AP has obtained locations for 17 mass graves, including one with the bodies of hundreds of members of a single tribe all but exterminated when IS extremists took over their region. For at least 16 of the Iraqi graves, most in territory too dangerous to excavate, officials do not even guess the number of dead. In others, the estimates are based on memories of traumatized survivors, Islamic State propaganda and what can be gleaned from a cursory look at the earth.
Still, even the known numbers of victims buried are staggering -- from 5,200 to more than 15,000.
Sinjar mountain is dotted with mass graves, some in territory clawed back from IS after the group's onslaught against the Yazidi minority in August 2014; others in the deadly no man's land that has yet to be secured.
The bodies of Talal Murat's father, uncles and cousins lie beneath the rubble of the family farm, awaiting a time when it is safe for surviving relatives to return to the place where the men were gunned down. On Sinjar's other flank, Rasho Qassim drives daily past the graves holding the bodies of his two sons. The road is in territory long since seized back, but the five sites are untouched, roped off and awaiting the money or the political will for excavation, as the evidence they contain is scoured away by the wind and baked by the sun.
"We want to take them out of here. There are only bones left. But they said 'No, they have to stay there, a committee will come and exhume them later,'" said Qassim, standing at the edge of the flimsy fence surrounding one site, where his two sons are buried. "It has been two years but nobody has come."
IS made no attempt to hide its atrocities. In fact it boasted of them. But proving what United Nations officials and others have described as an ongoing genocide -- and prosecuting those behind it -- will be complicated as the graves deteriorate.
"We see clear evidence of the intent to destroy the Yazidi people," said Naomi Kikoler, who recently visited the region for the Holocaust Museum in Washington, D.C. "There's been virtually no effort to systematically document the crimes perpetrated, to preserve the evidence, and to ensure that mass graves are identified and protected."
Following the release of the AP research, the State Department noted that it is providing assistance to Iraqi authorities for the investigation of mass graves.
"Sadly, we anticipate that additional mass graves will be discovered as additional lands are liberated from Da'esh," State Department spokesman John Kirby said in a statement, using the Arabic acronym for the Islamic State group.
Then there are the graves still out of reach. The Islamic State group's atrocities extend well outside the Yazidi region in northern Iraq.
Satellites offer the clearest look at massacres such as the one at Badoush Prison in June 2014 that left 600 male inmates dead. A patch of scraped earth and tire tracks show the likely killing site, according to exclusive photos obtained by the imagery intelligence firm AllSource Analysis.
Of the 72 mass graves documented by AP, the smallest contains three bodies; the largest is believed to hold thousands, but no one knows for sure.
ALL THEY COULD DO WAS WATCH THE SLAUGHTER
On the northern flank of Sinjar mountain, five grave sites ring a desert crossroads. It is here that the young men of Hardan village are buried, under thistles and piles of cracked earth. They were killed in the bloody IS offensive of August 2014.
Through his binoculars, Arkan Qassem watched it all. His village, Gurmiz, is just up the slope from Hardan, giving a clear view over the plain below. When the jihadis swept over the area, everyone in Gurmiz fled up the mountaintop for refuge. Then Arkan and nine other men returned to their village with light weapons to try to defend their homes.
Instead, all they could do was watch the slaughter below. Arkan witnessed the militants set up checkpoints, preventing residents from leaving. Women and children were taken away.
Then the killings began. The first night, Arkan saw the militants line up a group of handcuffed men in the headlights of a bulldozer at an intersection, less than a kilometre (half mile) down the slope from Gurmiz. They gunned the men down, then the bulldozer plowed the earth over their bodies.
Over six days, Arkan and his comrades watched helplessly as the fighters brought out three more groups of men -- several dozen each, usually with hands bound -- to the crossroads and killed them. He didn't always see what they did with the bodies. One time, he saw them lighting a bonfire, but he couldn't see why.
Finally, the jihadis brought in artillery and prepared to make an assault on Gurmiz. Arkan and his comrades fled up the mountain to where their families had taken refuge.
Now, since IS fighters were driven out of the area, the 32-year-old has returned to his home. But he's haunted by the site. As documented by the aid group Yazda, which has mapped the Sinjar sites, the graves are in a rough pentagon flanking the crossroads, largely unprotected. Around one of them is a mesh fence and a wind-battered sign. As Arkan spoke at the site, a shepherd herded his flock nearby.
"I have lots of people I know there. Mostly friends and neighbours," he said. "It's very difficult to look at them every day."
"THIS BODY IS WEARING MY FATHER'S CLOTHES"
As IS fighters swarmed into the Sinjar area in early August 2014, Talal fled his town along with his father, mother, four sisters and younger brother. They and dozens of other men, women and children from his extended clan converged on an uncle's farm outside the town of Tel Azer. They prayed it was remote enough to escape the killings that were already engulfing so many Yazidis.
It wasn't.
The jihadis fired at the house from a distance. Then they rolled up in their vehicles and shot one man in the head as they stood in the yard. They surrounded the farmhouse, ordered everyone outside and demanded the impossible: Convert.
The Yazidi faith, one of the region's oldest, has elements of Christianity and Islam but is distinct. Yazidis worship the Peacock Angel, fallen and forgiven by God under their tradition, and their shrines feature carved images of the birds and references to the sun. Muslim extremists condemned them as "devil worshippers" and over the centuries have subjected them to multiple massacres -- 72, by the Yazidis' count.
In its own propaganda, the Islamic State group made clear its intention to wipe out the Yazidi community. In an issue of its online English-language magazine Dabiq, it scolded Muslims for allowing the Yazidis to continue existing, calling their ancient religion a form of paganism. It quoted Quranic verses to justify killing the Yazidis unless they become Muslim.
Thwarted in their halfhearted attempt at conversions, the fighters separated about 35 teenage girls and young women from the rest, crammed them into a few cars and drove away. The militants herded the older women and young children into the farmhouse and locked the door.
Then they lined the men and teenaged boys against the wall of the stables -- around 40 in all, including Talal.
There were too many of them, too bunched up, to efficiently mow down, so the fighters then ordered them to lie on the ground in a row, Talal said. That was when his uncle told him to make a run for it. Talal bolted into his uncle's hayfield, as did several other men. The militants fired at them, and the bullets ignited the hay, dry from the summer sun. The fire covered Talal's escape, and he took shelter in a nearby creek.
There he hid, listening as the gunmen shot his family to death. He eventually fled toward the mountain, joined by three others who had survived the massacre. Four out of 40.
Back at the farm, the gunmen eventually left and the women and children emerged, looking around with growing horror.
Nouri Murat, Talal's mother, found her husband. His body was untouched, but his head was shattered. Her daughters, she said, were confused at first. "This is strange, this body is wearing my father's clothes," one of them said. As Nouri frantically searched around the property for any surviving menfolk, her 9-year-old daughter Rukhan lay down beside her father's corpse.
Finally, other women persuaded the family to head to the mountain before the Islamic State fighters returned.
As they began the long walk north, Nouri noticed Rukhan's bloody fist. Fearing her daughter was wounded, she pried open the girl's clenched fingers. Inside were a handful of her father's teeth.
"THEY DON'T EVEN TRY TO HIDE THEIR CRIMES"
Nearly every area freed from IS control has unmasked new mass graves, like one found by the sports stadium in the Iraqi city of Ramadi. Many of the graves themselves are easy enough to find, most covered with just a thin coating of earth.
"They don't even try to hide their crimes," said Sirwan Jalal, the director of Iraqi Kurdistan's agency in charge of mass graves. "They are beheading them, shooting them, running them over in cars, all kinds of killing techniques, and they don't even try to hide it."
No one outside IS has seen the Iraqi ravine where hundreds of Shiite prison inmates were killed point blank and then torched. Satellite images of scraped dirt along the river point to its location, according to Steve Wood of AllSource. His analysts triangulated survivors' accounts and began to systematically search the desert according to their descriptions of that day, June 10, 2014.
The inmates were separated out by religion, and Shiites were loaded onto trucks, driven for a few kilometres (miles) and forced to line up and count off, according to accounts by 15 survivors gathered by Human Rights Watch. Then they knelt along the edge of the crescent-shaped ravine, according to a report cited by AllSource.
"I was number 43. I heard them say '615,' and then one ISIS guy said, 'We're going to eat well tonight.' A man behind us asked, 'Are you ready?' Another person answered 'Yes,' and began shooting at us with a machine-gun. Then they all started to shoot us from behind, going down the row," according to the Human Rights Watch account of a survivor identified only as A.S.
The men survived by pretending to be dead.
Using their accounts and others, AllSource examined an image from July 17, 2014, that appeared to show the location as described, between a main road and the railway outside Mosul. The bodies are believed to be packed tightly together, side by side in a space approximately the length of two football fields end to end, in what the AllSource analysis described as a "sardine trench." Tire tracks lead to and from the site.
"There's actually earth that has been pushed over and actually moved to cover parts of the ravine. As we look across the entire ravine we only see that in this one location," said Wood. "Ultimately there are many, many more sites across Iraq and Syria that have yet to be either forensically exhumed or be able to be detailed and there's quite a bit more research that needs to take place."
The key, Wood said, is having photos to indicate a grave's location taken soon after its creation.
Justice has been done in at least one IS mass killing -- that of about 1,700 Iraqi soldiers who were forced to lie face-down in a ditch and then machine-gunned at Camp Speicher. On Aug. 21, 36 men convicted in those killings were hanged at Iraq's Nasiriyah prison.
But justice is likely to be elusive in areas still firmly under IS control, even though the extremists have filmed themselves committing the atrocities. That's the case for a deep natural sinkhole outside Mosul that is now a pit of corpses. In Syria's Raqqa province, thousands of bodies are believed to have been thrown into the giant al-Houta crevasse.
Conditions in much of Syria remain a mystery. Activists believe there are hundreds of mass graves in IS-controlled areas that can only be explored when fighting stops. By that time, they fear any effort to document the massacres, exhume and identify the remains will become infinitely more complicated.
Working behind IS lines, local residents have informally documented some mass graves, even partially digging some up. Some of the worst have been found in the eastern province of Deir el-Zour. There, 400 members of the Shueitat tribe were found in one grave, just some of the up to 1,000 members of the tribe believed to have been massacred by IS when the militants took over the area, said Ziad Awad, the editor of an online publication on Deir el-Zour called The Eye of the City who is trying to document the graves.
In Raqqa province, the bodies of 160 Syrian soldiers, killed when IS overran their base, were found in seven large pits.
So far, at least 17 mass graves are known, though largely unreachable, in a list put together from AP interviews with activists from Syrian provinces still under IS rule as well as fighters and residents in former IS strongholds.
"This is a drop in an ocean of mass graves expected to be discovered in the future in Syria," said Awad.
'There are only bones left'; ISIS buried thousands in 72 mass graves | World | N
 

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Government to stop using ISIL, will refer instead to Daesh
THE CANADIAN PRESS
First posted: Tuesday, September 06, 2016 06:53 PM EDT | Updated: Tuesday, September 06, 2016 07:00 PM EDT
OTTAWA — The Liberal government will no longer refer to the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant and will instead call the group by a different, potentially insulting name: Daesh.
Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale revealed the change in a report on terrorism released last month, saying ISIL is neither Islamic nor a state and that the report would instead use the group’s Arabic acronym.
Global Affairs Canada and the Department of National Defence also say they are both adopting Daesh to refer to the group.
The decision continues a trend that has been sweeping through western governments.
France and the United Kingdom are among those that have adopted the term in recent years.
But while the term has long been used by Arabic speakers and comes from the group’s Arabic acronym, it can also be considered an insult, with some translations meaning to tread underfoot or crush.
The group has forbidden use of the term Daesh within its territory.
There has long been a great deal of confusion and debate over what to call the militant group.
Canada and many other countries used its original name, the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant, or ISIL, for years. Others referred to it as the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria or the Islamic State of Iraq and al-Sham, or ISIS.
Government to stop using ISIL, will refer instead to Daesh | Canada | News | Tor

U.K. court sentences radical Islamic preacher to 5 1/2 years
Danica Kirka, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
First posted: Tuesday, September 06, 2016 02:33 PM EDT | Updated: Tuesday, September 06, 2016 02:45 PM EDT
LONDON — One of Britain’s best-known radical Islamic preachers was sentenced Tuesday to 5 1/2 years in prison for encouraging support for the Islamic State group.
Anjem Choudary has been one of the best-known faces of radical Islam in Britain for years, leading groups under names including al-Muhajiroun, Islam4UK and Muslims Against Crusades.
Several people who attended Choudary’s rallies and events have been convicted of violent attacks, including the pair of al-Qaida-inspired killers who ran over British soldier Lee Rigby and stabbed him to death in 2013.
His supporters shouted “Allahu akbar,” the Arabic phrase for “God is great,” as Choudary was sentenced at Central Criminal Court in London.
Until he was charged under the Terrorism Act last year, the 49-year-old firebrand preacher gained attention for headline-grabbing activities that provoked outrage but stayed within the bounds of the law. They included protesting outside the U.S. Embassy on the anniversary of the Sept. 11 attacks and burning memorial poppies on the annual Remembrance Day honouring slain service members.
But the London-born preacher ran into trouble in 2014 after his name appeared on an oath circulating online that declared the legitimacy of the “proclaimed Islamic Caliphate State.” Choudary denied encouraging his followers to support the Islamic State group and said the oath was made without his knowledge.
Police said Tuesday that evidence from authorities in Indonesia established that Choudary and co-defendant Mohammed Mizanur Rahman “were key in the publication of their oath of allegiance.”
“We have watched Choudary developing a media career as spokesman for the extremists, saying the most distasteful of comments, but without crossing the criminal threshold,” Dean Haydon, head of the Metropolitan Police’s Counter Terrorism Command, said. “At last we had the evidence that they had stepped over the line and we could prove they were actively encouraging support of (Islamic State.)”
Evidence presented during the trial showed that Choudary broadcast speeches online explaining his rationale for recognizing Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi as the leader of Islamic State or Daesh.
“Both men were fully aware that Daesh is a proscribed terrorist group responsible for brutal activities and that what they themselves were doing was illegal,” Sue Hemming, the Crown Prosecution Service’s head of counter terrorism, said.
Both Choudary and Rahman, 33, were found guilty of inviting support for IS between June 29, 2014 and March 6, 2015. Rahman also was sentenced to 5 1/2 years.
This is a Friday, April 3, 2015 file photo of Anjem Choudary, a British Muslim social and political activist and spokesman for Islamist group, Islam4UK, speaks following prayers at the Central London Mosque in Regent's Park, London. Choudary nne of Britain's best-known radical preachers Tuesday Sept. 6, 2016 was sentenced to 5 ½ years in prison for encouraging support for the Islamic State group. The 49-year-old Choudary has been one of the best-known faces of radical Islam in Britain for years. (AP Photo/Tim Ireland, File)

U.K. court sentences radical Islamic preacher to 5 1/2 years | World | News | To
 

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Google plans to stop ISIS recruits before they become radicalized, with information.


For the past year, Google’s Jigsaw has been developing a program that will combine Google’s search advertising algorithms with YouTube’s video platform to target new recruits. Google’s goal is to stop them from joining the Islamic State Group ISIS, or ISIL. They plan on doing this by supplying them with accurate information on the terrorist organization.

Named The Redirect Method, it is basically advertised alongside search results for any keywords and phrases that would result from an ISIS search being done. Ads will link users to both Arabic and English language YouTube channels. On each channel, preexisting videos that Jigsaw thinks will effectively undo ISIS’ propaganda.

Video’s include clips from interview with defectors, imams denouncing ISIS’ corruption of true Islam, and other information that will show the hypocrisy of ISIS. Jigsaw created a list of over 1,700 keywords that trigger ads leading to its anti-ISIS messages.

“This year’s pilot program for the Redirect Method was incredibly effective. Over two months, more than 300,000 people were drawn to the anti-ISIS YouTube channels. Searchers clicked on our ads three or four times more often than a typical ad campaign,” developers stated.

“The Redirect Method doesn’t seek to track those searching for the terms or identify them, and it isn’t designed to lead to arrests or surveillance. These are people making decisions based on partial, bad information. We can affect the problem of foreign fighters joining the Islamic State by arming individuals with more and better information,” Yasmin Green, Head of research and development for Jigsaw said.

http://themerkle.com/googles-jigsaw-helps-deter-isis-recruits-with-the-help-of-youtube/
 

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ISIS video shows prisoners hung from meat hooks and their throats slit
Postmedia Network
First posted: Tuesday, September 13, 2016 01:31 PM EDT | Updated: Tuesday, September 13, 2016 01:40 PM EDT
ISIS fanatics apparently spend the holy day of Eid hanging at least 24 of prisoners by their ankles from meat hooks and slitting their throats like ceremonial slaughters.
The latest brutal video was shared on social media by the terror group late Monday, according to watchdog group Raqqa is Being Slaughtered Silently.
Stills posted by the group show the men in orange prisoner suits hanging from their ankles in a slaughterhouse, their blood drained below them, killed in a similar way Halal meat is prepared.
During the celebration of Eid al-Adha — the “sacrifice feast” — Muslims traditionally prepare and distribute meat amongst their family, neighbours and the poor.
The 12-minute video also features snippets from Mission Impossible: Rogue Nation, likely indicating the men were suspected spies.
There was no indication where the video was shot.
ISIS execution: Jihadis 'worst ever' atrocity to mark Eid released by Raqqa campaign group | Daily Star
ISIS video shows prisoners hung from meat hooks and their throats slit | World |
 

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Islamic State claims responsibility for Minnesota mall attack
Jeff Baenen And Amy Forliti, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
First posted: Sunday, September 18, 2016 12:09 AM EDT | Updated: Monday, September 19, 2016 12:58 AM EDT
ST. CLOUD, Minn. — A man in a private security uniform stabbed nine people at a Minnesota shopping mall, reportedly asking one victim if he or she was Muslim before an off-duty police officer shot and killed him in an attack the Islamic State group claimed as its own.
None of the nine people who were stabbed in Saturday night’s attack received life-threatening wounds, St. Cloud police Chief Blair Anderson said. He said it doesn’t appear that anyone else was involved in the attack at the Crossroads Center in St. Cloud, which began at around 8 p.m. and was over within minutes.
At a news conference Sunday, FBI Special Agent-in-Charge Rick Thornton said the attack was being investigated as a possible act of terrorism and that agents were still digging into the attacker’s background and possible motives. Authorities were looking at social media accounts and the attacker’s electronic devices and talking to his associates, Thornton said.
An Islamic State-run news agency, Rasd, claimed Sunday that the attacker was a “soldier of the Islamic State” who had heeded the group’s calls for attacks in countries that are part of a U.S.-led anti-IS coalition.
It was not immediately clear if the extremist group had planned the attack or even knew about it beforehand. IS has encouraged so-called “lone wolf” attacks. It has also claimed past attacks that are not believed to have been planned by its central leadership.
Authorities didn’t identify the attacker, but the Star Tribune of Minneapolis said the man’s father identified him as Dahir A. Adan, 22. Speaking to the newspaper through an interpreter, Ahmed Adan, whose family is Somali, said his son was born in Africa and had lived in the U.S. for 15 years.
A spokesman for St. Cloud State University confirmed that Adan was a student there, but has not been enrolled since the spring semester. Spokesman Adam Hammer said Adan’s intended major was information systems, which is a computer-related field.
Ahmed Adan said police told him around 9 p.m. Saturday that his son had died at the mall, and that police had raided the family’s apartment, seizing photos and other materials. He said police said nothing to him about the mall attack, and that he had “no suspicion” that his son had been involved in terrorist activity, the newspaper reported.
Anderson said police had had three previous encounters with the attacker, mostly for minor traffic violations.
According to Anderson, the attacker, dressed in a security uniform and wielding what appeared to be a kitchen knife, began attacking people right after entering the mall, stabbing people in several spots inside the building, including corridors, businesses and common areas.
Five minutes after authorities received the first 911 call, Jason Falconer, a part-time officer in the city of Avon, shot and killed the attacker. Anderson said Falconer fired as the attacker was lunging at him with the knife, and continued to engage him as the attacker got up three times.
“He clearly prevented additional injuries and potential loss of life,” Anderson said. “Officer Falconer was there at the right time and the right place,” he said.
Anderson earlier said the man reportedly made at least one reference to Allah and asked a victim if he or she was Muslim before attacking them.
Leaders of the Somali community in central Minnesota united to condemn the stabbings. They said the suspect does not represent the larger Somali community, and they expressed fear about backlash over the attack.
Minnesota has the nation’s largest Somali community, with census numbers placing the population at about 40,000. But community activists say the population — most of it in the Minneapolis area — is much higher. The immigrant community has been a target for terror recruiters in recent years. More than 20 young men have left the state since 2007 to join al-Shabab in Somalia, and roughly a dozen people have left in recent years to join militants in Syria. In addition, nine Minnesota men face sentencing on terror charges for plotting to join the Islamic State group.
For years, law enforcement officials have worried that young Somalis who embrace radical messages might carry out violence in the U.S. While the motive in Saturday’s stabbings isn’t yet known, if it turns out to be a terrorist attack, it would be the first carried out by a Somali on U.S. soil, said Karen Greenburg, director of the Center on National Security at Fordham University School of Law.
The attack in St. Cloud, a city of about 65,000 people 60 miles (95 kilometres) northwest of Minneapolis, began shortly after an explosion in a crowded New York City neighbourhood injured 29 people. A suspicious device was found a few blocks away and safely removed. Hours before that, a pipe bomb exploded in Seaside Park, New Jersey, shortly before thousands of runners were due to participate in a charity 5K race. There was no immediate indication that the incidents were linked.
The mall remained closed Sunday. Of the nine victims — seven men, a woman and a 15-year-old girl — three remained hospitalized, officials said.
Photos and video of the mall taken hours after the incident showed groups of shoppers waiting to be released, including some huddled together near a food court entrance.
Harley and Tama Exsted, of Isle, were in St. Cloud to watch their son play in a college golf tournament and were in the mall when the attack happened.
“All of a sudden I heard pop, pop, pop,” Harley Exsted told the St. Cloud Times. “I thought someone tipped over a shelf. All of a sudden these people started running. I just saw everybody running our way.”
The couple were unharmed and said they helped another woman who was running from the scene to her car.
Falconer, who was shopping when he confronted the attacker, is the former police chief in Albany, which is about 15 miles northwest of St. Cloud, and the president and owner of a firing range and firearms training facility, according to his LinkedIn profile. His profile says he focuses on firearms and permit-to-carry training, and also teaches “decision shooting” to law enforcement students at St. Cloud State University.
No one answered the door late Sunday at a home address listed for Falconer, and a voicemail box for a telephone listing was full and not accepting new messages. In a brief interview with the Star Tribune, Falconer said he had “been trying to stay away from it all, for the time being.”
He told the newspaper he wasn’t hurt and declined to talk further, citing the ongoing investigation for not saying more.
Islamic State claims responsibility for Minnesota mall attack | World | News | T
 

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Amal Clooney, Yazidi rape victim demand prosecution of Islamic State
George Jahn, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
First posted: Monday, September 19, 2016 05:06 PM EDT | Updated: Monday, September 19, 2016 09:41 PM EDT
Joined by human rights lawyer Amal Clooney, a Yazidi woman who described praying for death while being raped by her Islamic State captors called on world leaders Monday to step up efforts to bring the militants group to justice for genocide and other crimes.
The two women said not one Islamic State militant has been tried for atrocities. British Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson suggested that could change soon.
Johnson, whose country helped organize a meeting of foreign ministers to address efforts to prosecute Islamic State militants, said he and Iraqi Foreign Minister Ibrahim al-Jaafari would urge the U.N. to take the lead on “the vital gathering and the preserving of evidence” of crimes committed by the group.
Nadia Murad, who was captured by the militants in 2014, said she was repeatedly raped and prayed for death until she escaped. Named U.N. special ambassador last week, the 23-year-old appealed to the world to “stop the extermination of my people.”
“Why is a survivor like me knocking on the door of the International Court of Justice to get justice?” she said at the meeting, held on the sidelines of the U.N. General Assembly summit.
Clooney, Murad’s legal representative, said Yazidi victims “want to appear before a judge.” She urged the U.N. Security Council to focus on “genocide against Yazidis.”
IS, she said, “has vowed to wipe them out simply because they are Yasidis” and noted that “there has not been a single member of ISIS held accountable anywhere in the world for its genocide.”
Earlier, Clooney told NBC’s “Today” show that she discussed with her husband, George Clooney, her effort to legally fight the IS group. She said he understands “this is my work.”
Amal Clooney takes ISIS to trial over human trafficking, genocide - TODAY.com
Amal Clooney, Yazidi rape victim demand prosecution of Islamic State | World | N
 

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ISIS reportedly uses welding torch to kill six youths in Mosul
Postmedia Network
First posted: Wednesday, September 21, 2016 01:36 PM EDT | Updated: Wednesday, September 21, 2016 01:45 PM EDT
ISIS reportedly used welding torches to execute six young men in Mosul, in the terror group’s latest sadistic public show.
The boys were suspected of belonging to a resistance group — a rising concern in the ISIS-held caliphate.
“The youths were first handcuffed and then a welding machine and a welding rod was used to kill them. The execution took place in Mosul in front of a large gathering,” an unnamed source told Iraqi News.
Resistance groups have been causing minor disturbances in ISIS-held areas, mostly spray-painting rebellious graffiti on city walls.
It’s why ISIS is appearing desperate to show its authority, and likely the reason behind the latest gruesome public executions.
“This came in order to create a state of fear and panic among the people,” the source told Iraqi News.
ISIS reportedly uses welding torch to kill six youths in Mosul | World | News |
 

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ISIS murdering their own frightened members trying to make a run for it
Postmedia Network
First posted: Thursday, September 22, 2016 07:27 PM EDT | Updated: Thursday, September 22, 2016 07:32 PM EDT
Death cult ISIS is now murdering it own members who’ve had enough of jihad.
Sickening accounts reported by the U.K. Daily Star revealed that a dozen former ISIS members were lined up in the town square of its stronghold, Raqqa, and executed.
In front of hundreds, they had their throats slit in a frenzy of evil.
“The ISIL (another term for ISIS) military leadership has publicly beheaded 12 of its own militants for evacuating their posts at the battlefront in eastern Syria without permission,” a source told the newspaper.
“The militants were executed on Tuesday evening in front of hundreds of people in central Raqqa.”
As ISIS’ long-lusted dream of a caliphate is obliterated by allied airstrikes and special operations, it appears to be turning on itself.
Meanwhile, ISIS has also been accused of massacring more than 100 civilians who were fleeing for their lives, the London Daily Mirror says.
The monsters released a video showing the fiendish murdering of men, women and children whom ISIS consider kuffar (non-believers).
The video shows blindfolded men forced to their knees in trenches, then shot in the back of the head after a lecture.
ISIS murdering their own frightened members trying to make a run for it | World
 

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ISIS terrified of burka-wearing female assassins
Postmedia Network
First posted: Wednesday, September 28, 2016 07:09 PM EDT | Updated: Wednesday, September 28, 2016 07:24 PM EDT
Burka-clad female killers are terrorizing ISIS thugs by randomly assassinating the death cult’s members.
According to published reports, two jihadists were recently targeted for oblivion on the streets of the terror group’s spiritual home of Mosul in Iraq.
A killer wearing the traditional Muslim outfit, which ISIS requires women to wear, produced a handgun and dispatched the two fanatics before disappearing into the night.
“A veiled woman carrying a pistol killed two fighters of ISIS, in the early hours of the morning, near a checkpoint in the vicinity of Numaniya neighbourhood in the city of Mosul,” a source told the Daily Mirror.
“The incident is the third of its kind in the city of Mosul this month.”
ISIS -- who previously shot women for appearing in public without the burka -- now wants the garments banned.
The source added: “This phenomenon raised ISIS concerns during the past weeks The incident surprised the organization and forced them to issue an alert of similar attacks.”
The warning comes as many of the group’s remnants gather for a final siege in Mosul. But there are also concerns the killings are the work of the elite British Special Air Service, known to disguise themselves in burkas.
ISIS terrified of burka-wearing female assassins | World | News | Toronto Sun
 

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‘I fought them. I beheaded them. I cooked their head,’ says ISIS-fighting granny
Postmedia Network
First posted: Thursday, September 29, 2016 04:56 PM EDT | Updated: Thursday, September 29, 2016 05:52 PM EDT
An AK-47-toting grandmother who beheads and cooks ISIS terrorists proudly sits atop the jihadists’ most wanted list.
Wahida Mohamed Al-Jumaily -- who lost her husband, father and three brothers to the death cult -- told Al Sabah she has killed 18 terrorists so far.
“I fought them. I beheaded them. I cooked their heads, I burned their bodies,” the 39-year-old Iraqi recently told CNN, adding she has survived six assassination attempts.
“I received threats from the top leadership of ISIS, including from (ISIS leader) Abu Bakr (al-Baghdadi) himself. I’m at the top of their most wanted list, even more than the prime minister (of Iraq, Haider al-Abadi).”
The long road from housewife to freedom fighter was one covered in blood, she told Al Sabah.
Her awakening was triggered when her son-in-law was mercilessly tortured by ISIS monsters, who cut off his hands and feet before executing him in 2014. Her second husband was also a victim of ISIS.
Now, she leads a group of more than 70 fighters who are the instrument of her revenge.
In Facebook photos, she proudly holds the heads of dead ISIS killers while a pot with two more heads boils. Her two daughters are ready to join her in battle but right now they’re busy raising their children.
And yet, for the terror she instils in ISIS, she still insists she’s a simple housewife. The threats and violence will not deter her -- even though she has been wounded and has a price on her head.
“All that has not stopped me from fighting,” she said.
Wahida Mohamed Al-Jumaily is pictured in this photo from her Facebook page. Al-Jumaily lost her husband, father and three brothers to the death cult -- told Al Sabah she has killed 18 terrorists so far. (Postmedia Network handout photo)

‘I fought them. I beheaded them. I cooked their head,’ says ISIS-fighting granny
 

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ISIS offers sex slaves to fighters who ferret out quitters
Postmedia Network
First posted: Friday, September 30, 2016 05:49 PM EDT | Updated: Friday, September 30, 2016 06:26 PM EDT
As ISIS’ dreams of empire are obliterated by airstrikes, its leadership is buying sex slaves for members who rat on comrades who quit.
The shocking claims were revealed in a bombshell interview with captured terrorist Abu Al-Mughaira Al-Muhajer who told Memri TV he finked on his own brother.
As thanks, he was gifted with three sex slaves kidnapped from ISIS occupied territories.
“Whenever ISIS took captives – they would bring slave girls,” he told the network.
“After I informed on my brother who wanted to leave ISIS, I was rewarded with three slave girls – one from Damascus and two from Homs. They told me that the girl from Damascus was a Yazidi and that the two girls from Homs were Christians.”
He added: “They told me that they had been captured, but it turns out they were wives of FSA fighters from the Islamic Front. The Islamic State would buy slave girls and give them as rewards.
“All of them had been beaten on their backs.”
And after the ISIS killers had finished with them? They would be taken to a slave market to be sold to the highest bidders.
“Their price would range from $250 to $500,” the fanatic said.
ISIS offers sex slaves to fighters who ferret out quitters | World | News | Toro