Ping your blog, website, or RSS feed for Free

قضايا الدولة" تطالب رشيد وعز وعسل برد 660 مليون جنيه للدولة

Go to Blogger edit html and find these sentences.Now replace these sentences with your own descriptions.This theme is Bloggerized by Lasantha Bandara - Premiumbloggertemplates.com.

خالد سعيد رحمة الله عليه

Go to Blogger edit html and find these sentences.Now replace these sentences with your own descriptions.This theme is Bloggerized by Lasantha Bandara - Premiumbloggertemplates.com.

الرئيس الأمريكى باراك أوباما

Go to Blogger edit html and find these sentences.Now replace these sentences with your own descriptions.This theme is Bloggerized by Lasantha Bandara - Premiumbloggertemplates.com.

الدكتور محمد البرادعى

Go to Blogger edit html and find these sentences.Now replace these sentences with your own descriptions.This theme is Bloggerized by Lasantha Bandara - Premiumbloggertemplates.com.

الرئيس السابق حسنى مبارك

Go to Blogger edit html and find these sentences.Now replace these sentences with your own descriptions.This theme is Bloggerized by Lasantha Bandara - Premiumbloggertemplates.com.

الخميس، أبريل 25، 2013

Syrian troops capture key town near Damascus

Thank you for using rssforward.com! This service has been made possible by all our customers. In order to provide a sustainable, best of the breed RSS to Email experience, we've chosen to keep this as a paid subscription service. If you are satisfied with your free trial, please sign-up today. Subscriptions without a plan would soon be removed. Thank you!

A view shows a building damaged by what activists said was shelling by forces loyal to Syria's President Bashar al-Assad in Arbaeen near Damascus April 19, 2013. (Reuters)

After five weeks of battle, Syrian government troops captured a strategic town near Damascus, cutting an arms route for rebels trying to topple President Bashar Assad's regime, state media and activists said Thursday.

By taking the town of Otaybah, east of the capital, the army dealt a major setback to opposition forces that in recent months have made gains near the city they eventually hope to storm.

Also Thursday, the White House and other top Obama administration officials said that U.S. intelligence has concluded with "varying degrees of confidence" that the Syrian government has twice used chemical weapons in the civil war, which has dragged on for two years.

However, officials also said more definitive proof was needed and the U.S. was not ready to escalate its involvement in Syria beyond non-lethal aid despite President Barack Obama's repeated public assertions that Syria's use of chemical weapons, or the transfer of its stockpiles to a terrorist group, would cross a "red line."

Syria's main Western-backed opposition promptly called on the international community to act "urgently and decisively." The opposition's statement said: "Failure to act will be seen by the regime as encouragement to use chemical weapons on a larger scale in the future."

Ahmad Ramadan, a member of the Syrian National Coalition opposition group's executive body, called the U.S. assertion an "important step" that should be followed by actual measures. "The U.S. has a moral duty to act ... we are waiting for the next steps," he told The Associated Press by phone from Istanbul.

The Syrian conflict began with largely peaceful protests against the Assad regime in March 2011, but eventually turned into a full-scale civil war. The fighting has exacted a huge toll on the country, killing an estimated 70,000 people and laying waste to cities, towns and villages.

With fresh supplies of weapons from foreign backers, the rebels have recently seized military bases and towns south of the capital in the strategically important region between Damascus and the border with Jordan, about 160 kilometers (100 miles) away.

The regime has largely kept the rebels at bay in Damascus, although opposition fighters control several suburbs of the capital from which they have threatened the heart of the city, the seat of Assad's power. Last month, government troops launched a campaign to repel the opposition's advances near the capital, deploying elite army units to the rebellious suburbs and pounding rebel positions with airstrikes.

The director of the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, Rami Abdul-Rahman, said government troops regained control of Otaybah late Wednesday.

State-run SANA news agency said Thursday that the army has "restored complete control" over Otaybah. The official news services also said Assad's troops "discovered a number of tunnels which were used by terrorists to move and transfer weapons and ammunitions."

The regime and state media refer to rebels as terrorists and accuse them of being part of a foreign plot seeking to destroy Syria.

"It's a huge victory for the regime, and a big blow to the opposition that is now in danger of losing other towns and villages around Damascus," Abdul-Rahman said of the army's campaign.

On Thursday, the army was already capitalizing on the territorial gains, pounding southern suburbs of Damascus, including the long-contested Daraya with artillery barrages and airstrikes, according to the Observatory. The group, which relies on a network of activists on the ground, also reported fierce clashes between rebels and army troops to the east of the capital.

The army's offensive to dislodge rebel fighters from neighborhoods ringing Damascus is part of the government's broader campaign to secure central provinces of Hama and Homs, and areas along the Lebanese border. The region is of strategic value to Assad's regime because it links Damascus with the coastal enclave that is the heartland of Syria's Alawites and also home to the country's two main seaports, Latakia and Tartus.

Syria's regime is dominated by the president's minority Alawite sect - an offshoot of Shiite Islam - while the rebels are mostly from the country's Sunni majority. Assad's major allies, the Lebanese militant Hezbollah group and Iran, are both Shiite.

Otaybah is located on a road linking Damascus with the eastern suburbs of Damascus known as Eastern Ghouta. Rebels have been using the road to transport weapons and other supplies to the capital. Many of the capital's surrounding towns and neighborhoods have been opposition strongholds during the 2-year-old conflict.

Losing control of the town will make the defense of rebel enclaves in northeastern suburbs such as Douma, Harasta and others more difficult, Abdul-Rahman said.

In Hama, rebels ambushed and destroyed an army vehicle after a six-hour battle with troops. Amateur videos uploaded by activists online showed an army vehicle in flames amid sounds of intense gunbattles.

Another video showed rebels raising black Islamic flags over the Nasseh Alwani school after "liberating it" from troops who had transformed it into a military base, and what appeared to be the bodies of soldiers burning inside.

The videos appeared consistent with AP reporting from the area.

Fighting in Hama is rare because the government keeps it under tight control. The city was the site of a notorious massacre in 1982, when Assad's father and predecessor, Hafez, ordered the military to quell a Sunni rebellion. Amnesty International has estimated that between 10,000 and 25,000 people were killed in the siege, though conflicting figures exist and the Syrian government has never made an official estimate.

The fighting across the country has forced more than 1 million people to flee their homes and seek refuge abroad. Millions have also been displaced inside Syria.

International aid agencies have been pleading for funds to help refugees in neighboring countries such as Jordan and Lebanon. They have also been asking the Syrian government to allow aid convoys into the country and facilitate access to the area inside cities and towns that have been affected by fighting.

Jordan's U.N. Ambassador Prince Zeid al Hussein sent a letter to the U.N. Security Council on Thursday, saying the increasing influx of Syrian refugees had sparked "a grave humanitarian situation" that threatens his country's security and stability. More than 500,000 Syrians have fled to Jordan since the conflict began.

The letter asks members to make a determination that the refugee influx, "if left unchecked and in the absence of the financial assistance required to enable Jordan to cope," constitutes a threat to international peace and security, a statement obtained by AP said. The letter asked the Security Council to invite Jordan to a private meeting on the issue and to visit Jordan as soon as possible.

26 Apr, 2013


-
Source: http://english.alarabiya.net/en/News/middle-east/2013/04/26/Syrian-troops-capture-key-town-near-Damascus.html
--
Manage subscription | Powered by rssforward.com

Lebanon’s first civil marriage registered, agency says

Thank you for using rssforward.com! This service has been made possible by all our customers. In order to provide a sustainable, best of the breed RSS to Email experience, we've chosen to keep this as a paid subscription service. If you are satisfied with your free trial, please sign-up today. Subscriptions without a plan would soon be removed. Thank you!

The Lebanese interior minister signs the civil marriage contract of Nidal Darwish and Kholoud Sukkarieh. (AFP)

Lebanon's interior minister took the unprecedented step Thursday of registering a civil marriage contract after a years-long campaign to allow such unions in the multi-confessional country, the official news agency reported.

"Marwan Charbel has signed the civil marriage contract of Nidal Darwish and Kholoud Sukkarieh, the first Lebanese couple to celebrate a civil union" on home soil, the National News Agency said.

Sukkarieh and Darwish's campaign to register their marriage began more than a year ago. It started in secret to sidestep political obstacles, but in recent months their story triggered a massive debate over whether civil unions should be allowed in Lebanon.

Most faiths have their own regulations governing marriage, divorce and inheritance, and mixed Christian-Muslim weddings in Lebanon are discouraged unless one of the two converts.

Despite some clerics and politicians rejecting Darwish and Sukkarieh's union, public figures including President Michel Sleiman have been overwhelmingly supportive of the step.

"Congratulations on the registration of Kholoud and Nidal's marriage contract," Sleiman posted on Twitter on Thursday.

Speaking to private news network LBC, Darwish described the registration as "the first victory for the civil state in Lebanon, the state we all dream of."

He echoed calls for a state for all its citizens in Lebanon, rather than a nation fractured along sectarian lines.

"I am very happy today, and I never had any fear that my marriage to Nidal would not be legal," Sukkarieh told LBC.

"This is Lebanon's first historic step" towards institutionalizing civil marriage, she added.

Sukkarieh is four months pregnant, the broadcaster reported.

The couple's efforts to legalize their civil union "is a good thing for us all" in Lebanon, their lawyer Talal al-Husseini said.

"We have here a situation where something could have been legal all along, but where the right to practice civil marriage was blocked," he told AFP.

Lebanese authorities have all along recognized civil marriages registered abroad, and it has become common for mixed-faith couples to marry in nearby Cyprus.

Rather than follow that route, however, Sukkarieh and Darwish decided to work with legal advisers to try to create new jurisprudence, despite no history of civil marriage in Lebanon.

Both had their sect, Shiite and Sunni Muslim, legally struck from their "sejel an-nufoos" or family register, to be wed as a secular couple under an article dating from the 1936 French mandate that makes reference to civil unions.

"They decided to stand before the Lebanese state as citizens, not as members of this or that sect," said Husseini.

"Now that they have established this precedent, there is no going back. It is a big success, and it gives the right to others to follow suit," he added.

26 Apr, 2013


-
Source: http://english.alarabiya.net/en/News/middle-east/2013/04/25/Lebanon-s-first-civil-marriage-registered-National-agency-says.html
--
Manage subscription | Powered by rssforward.com

Dozens found alive as Bangladesh tragedy toll hits 250

Thank you for using rssforward.com! This service has been made possible by all our customers. In order to provide a sustainable, best of the breed RSS to Email experience, we've chosen to keep this as a paid subscription service. If you are satisfied with your free trial, please sign-up today. Subscriptions without a plan would soon be removed. Thank you!

Hundreds of thousands of workers walked out of their factories in solidarity with their dead colleagues on Thursday. (AFP)

Dozens of workers were found alive Thursday as they huddled in the wreckage of a collapsed garment factory bloc in Bangladesh, a rare success for rescuers who have pulled out 250 bodies.

In an announcement greeted by wild applause from thousands of relatives at the scene, an army spokesman initially announced that 40 survivors had been discovered together in a room, but the figure was later revised to 24.

Screams filtering through the cracks in the concrete suggested more survivors were awaiting help, but a steady stream of bodies saw the recorded death toll almost double on Thursday and hundreds remain unaccounted for.

The collapse of the building on Wednesday on the outskirts of the capital is the worst industrial accident in the country's history and is the latest in a spate of tragedies in the "Made in Bangladesh" clothing sector.

It prompted new criticism of Western brands who were accused by activists of placing profit before safety by sourcing their products from the country despite its shocking track record of deadly disasters.

Hundreds of thousands of workers walked out of their factories in solidarity with their dead colleagues on Thursday as flags flew at half-mast and a national day of mourning was held.

"The death toll is now 250," Moshiuddowla Reza, a senior police officer of Dhaka district, told AFP from the disaster site, adding more bodies were being recovered and that most of those who died are female garment workers.

Safety problems and poor working conditions plague the textile industry in Bangladesh, the world's second-biggest clothing exporter after China.

26 Apr, 2013


-
Source: http://english.alarabiya.net/en/News/asia/2013/04/25/Dozens-found-alive-as-Bangladesh-tragedy-toll-hits-250.html
--
Manage subscription | Powered by rssforward.com

U.N. approves peacekeeping force for Mali

Thank you for using rssforward.com! This service has been made possible by all our customers. In order to provide a sustainable, best of the breed RSS to Email experience, we've chosen to keep this as a paid subscription service. If you are satisfied with your free trial, please sign-up today. Subscriptions without a plan would soon be removed. Thank you!

U.N. approves peacekeeping force for Mali

People cheer on the side of the road on January 29, 2013 in Ansongo, a town south of the northern Malian city of Gao, as Niger troops enter the city. (AFP)

The Security Council unanimously approved a new U.N. peacekeeping force for Mali on Thursday to help restore democracy and stabilize the northern half of the country, which was controlled by Islamist jihadists until a France-led military operation ousted them three months ago.

The resolution authorizes the deployment of a U.N. force comprising 11,200 military personnel and 1,440 international police with a mandate to help restore peace, especially in northern cities. The U.N. peacekeepers are not authorized to undertake offensive military operations or chase terrorists in the desert, roles that will continue to be carried out by France under an agreement with Mali.

The U.N. peacekeepers would take over from a 6,000-member African-led mission now in Mali on July 1, although the deployment date is subject to change if security conditions deteriorate.

French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius welcomed the resolution, saying it "confirms the unanimous support of the international community for the stabilization of Mali as well as the intervention of France and the nations of the region to help this country."

Mali fell into turmoil after a March 2012 coup created a security vacuum that allowed secular Tuareg rebels to take over half of the country's north as a new homeland. Months later, the rebels were kicked out by Islamic jihadists who imposed strict Shariah law in the north.

When the Islamists started moving into government-controlled areas in the south, France launched a military offensive on Jan. 11 to oust them. The fighters, many linked to al-Qaida, fled the major towns in the north but many went into hiding in the desert and continue to carry out attacks.

Mali's Foreign Minister Tieman Hubert Coulibaly called the resolution "an important step" to help stem the activities of terrorists and armed groups, promote dialogue and reconciliation between Malians, and ensure peace throughout the country.

"Small cells of armed terrorists and rebels continue to represent a serious threat to instability and the territorial integrity of Mali as well as to peace and security in the region," he told the council after the vote. "This is why the government welcomes the international community to take active measures to deter and to prevent the return of armed groups."

French officials say combat in Mali has all but stopped and its intervention has severely eroded the insurgents' ability to stage large-scale operations such by deploying dozens of nimble pickup trucks to seize territory - which they did as late as January.

Before the French onslaught began, diplomats and defense officials in Paris estimated that the al-Qaida-linked militants could count about 2,000 fighters. French diplomats said Thursday that France estimates that about 700 of those have been killed, another 200 have been taken prisoner in Mali - while the rest are hiding out or have fled elsewhere in the region, including southern Libya.

The main jobs of the new U.N. force will be to stabilize key population centers in the north, support the re-establishment of government authority throughout the country, and assist the transitional authorities in restoring constitutional order, democratic governance and national unity.

The resolution authorizes the force "to take active steps to prevent the return of armed elements" to the northern areas, to rebuild the Malian police, as well as disarm and demobilize former combatants.

Because of the continuing insecurity in the north, the resolution requires the Security Council to review the July 1 deployment date for the U.N. force within 60 days to assess whether terrorists pose a major threat in areas where peacekeepers would operate or if international military forces are conducting major combat operations in those areas. If so, the council could delay the deployment.

The new U.N. force has a robust mandate to take defensive action - but not offensive military operations, a point stressed by Russia's U.N. Ambassador Vitaly Churkin who said "there must be a clear division between peacekeeping and peace enforcement."

While the mission won't be conducting offensive or anti-terrorist operations, U.N. peacekeeping chief Herve Ladsous told reporters "we know it's going to be a fairly volatile environment" and there will certainly be some attacks against peacekeepers where they will have to defend themselves.

He said most of the 6,000 African troops currently in Mali will become part of the new U.N. Multidimensional Integrated Stabilization Mission in Mali, to be known as MINUSMA.

France is gradually easing back on its presence in Mali - currently just under 4,000 troops - and French officials said they expect to have roughly 1,000 there by year-end. Some 750 of those will be devoted to fighting the insurgent groups, the rest will be 150 French peacekeepers in the U.N. force, and 100 or so trainers for the Malian military, the officials said.

The U.N. force will also operate alongside a European Union mission that is providing military training to the Malian army, which is ineffective, ill-equipped and divided.

France's U.N. Ambassador Gerard Araud said that when the Malian army is able to do its job and ensure the sovereignty of the country, the peacekeeping force will leave.

Besides improving the military and security, he said, "what we have to encourage, what we have to support, is a political process of reconciliation of all Malians."

Araud said pursing a national dialogue will be a top priority when a new U.N. envoy to Mali is appointed. French diplomats, speaking on condition of anonymity because no announcement has been made, said the frontrunner for the job is Albert Koenders of the Netherlands, currently the secretary-general's special envoy for Ivory Coast.

26 Apr, 2013


-
Source: http://english.alarabiya.net/en/News/africa/2013/04/25/U-N-approves-peacekeeping-force-for-Mali.html
--
Manage subscription | Powered by rssforward.com

Syria says backing rebels risks new attacks on America

Thank you for using rssforward.com! This service has been made possible by all our customers. In order to provide a sustainable, best of the breed RSS to Email experience, we've chosen to keep this as a paid subscription service. If you are satisfied with your free trial, please sign-up today. Subscriptions without a plan would soon be removed. Thank you!

Syria's Deputy Foreign Minister Faisal Mekdad says U.S. support for Syrian rebels may lead to more attacks on American soil like those of September 11. (Reuters)

U.S. support for Syrian rebels may lead to more attacks on American soil like those of September 11, said a senior Syrian official who warned that Islamist fighters would spread "the fire of terrorism" around the world.

Western powers are alarmed at Al-Qaeda militants joining revolt that began two years ago with rallies for democracy and President Bashar al-Assad has seized on that unease; now, 10days after the Boston Marathon bombings, Syria's deputy foreign minister told Reuters that U.S. aid to the rebels may backfire.

"Once the fire of terrorism spreads in Syria it will go everywhere in the world," Faisal Mekdad said in an interview.

Referring to foreign jihadists whose presence has made theUnited States and European allies wary of arming Syrian rebels, he said: "These chickens will go back to roost where they came from because encouraging terrorism definitely backfires ... Once these terrorists succeed in Syria, they will go everywhere."

Speaking in fluent English at the heavily guarded white, stone-clad complex in central Damascus which houses the Foreign Ministry and prime minister's offices, Mekdad drew a comparison, made also by Assad himself, with the U.S.-backed Muslim holy war against Soviet occupiers in Afghanistan that fostered Al-Qaeda.

And asked whether the Boston bombings, blamed on radicalized Muslim immigrants, might change American views of a Syrian conflict that Assad has long painted as a war on terrorism, hereplied: "I hope the American administration will remember again the Sept. 11 attack - which we strongly condemned in Syria – and not repeat these policies which encourage terrorism."

Of 37 nationalities of "terrorist" he said were fighting in Syria, many were European, Mekdad said, including some from Russia's Chechnya region, ancestral home of the Boston suspects.

Assad's critics have argued that he himself is paying a price for helping Islamists from Syria and elsewhere – letting them cross into Iraq to fight U.S. forces there; some of those seasoned fighters have now joined the campaign to overthrow him.

Like other senior officials interviewed lately in Damascus, Mekdad projected a breezy confidence in Syrian forces' ability to win the civil war and denied the rebels were gaining ground.

While condemning support for the mainly Sunni Muslim rebels from Sunni neighbors such as Saudi Arabia, Qatar and Turkey, as well as the Western powers, he said his government enjoyed broad international support, not limited to Russia or to Iran, whose Shiite branch of Islam is close to Assad's Alawite minority.

"I would like to say, with all confidence, that all Syria is controlled by the government but there are places where armed groups have been armed, financed, by certain circles – namely Qatar, Saudi Arabia, France and the UK and other European countries - who due to logistical reasons may control this or that part of Syria," he said. "But this is moving every day."

A man living near the Foreign Ministry, who did not want to be identified, told Reuters the complex had been attacked four times in recent months, twice with mortars and twice by men firing machineguns: "We are very frightened," he said, recalling how he took cover during the last mortar attack 10 days ago.

Asked when the government might win, Mekdad said it was combating "terrorist groups and usually in all those countries which have suffered the plague of terrorism it takes time."

"Once this support from neighboring and European countries ceases we can easily deal with it," said Mekdad, who hails from Deraa where protests began in March 2011 after teenagers were jailed for pro-democracy graffiti inspired by the Arab Spring.

He cited apparent success in offensives in Homs and near the western border, where rebels say Lebanese Hezbollah fighters are supporting Syrian troops. Going was also slow, he said, due to "the care practiced by the government with civilians."

The United Nations has said more than 70,000 people, have been killed and many countries have condemned shelling and aerial bombing by Syrian forces of residential areas.

Chemical 'lie'

Mekdad dismissed Western and Israeli claims that government forces had used chemical weapons, saying it was a "big lie" that Syria was blocking a U.N. investigation into the allegations.

He said Damascus had an initial agreement with the U.N. to look into claims that chemical weapons were used in the Khanal-Assal area near Aleppo but matters were complicated when the U.N. wanted to broaden the probe to include other allegations:"We are ready to receive immediately the team to investigate the case of Aleppo, to provide all the logistics, help and support and protection and it is the responsibility of the U.N. secretariat if this delegation doesn't arrive in Syria."

A former Syrian ambassador to the United Nations, Mekdadaccused Britain and France of trying to complicate the U.N. investigation to prevent evidence emerging of rebel use of chemical shells, but did not offer evidence for the allegation.

The United Nations wants inspectors to investigate claims of chemical weapons use in Homs in December; France and Britain say the mission should look into a third alleged case in Damascus.

President Barack Obama has warned Assad that deploying chemical weapons would cross a "red line" that could prompt the United States to intervene in unspecified ways in the conflict -so far, however, Washington has said firm evidence is lacking.

Mekdad denied that Damascus was receiving arms and military support from Russia or fighters from Iran or Hezbollah, Tehran's Lebanese Shiite ally; foreign supporters were providing only humanitarian aid and Syria had ample reserves of its own.

"We are not isolated, we don't feel isolated," he said of efforts to impose international sanctions. "Besides Russia, we have China, India, South Africa and we have almost all Latin American countries, and Africa and other Asian countries."

He warned the EU against helping rebels sell oil from captured fields in the north: "That is a direct theft of Syrian property," he said. "We are still a government and a strong government. We will stop them," he added without elaborating.

Mekdad reflected the government's contention that Syria has been targeted by U.S.-allied Sunni Arab powers because it was part of "an axis of resistance," along with Iran and Hezbollah, and accused Sunni-led states of secretly supporting Israel: "We believe the main objective in attacking Syria is to weaken it as a major power and to implement Israel's policies in the region in connivance with the United States and Western interests."

Asked how he believed the conflict would end, Mekdad sketched two scenarios: "Either we opt for a political solution as projected by President Assad in his speech on Jan. 6 ... or the other scenario where the main objective of arming, harboring and smuggling armed groups into Syria will continue."

"In this case, we have a strong army, we have a strong country, we have determination by the majority of Syrians to combat terrorism. But our preference and the preference of the Syrian leadership is to work for a political settlement."

Assad offered in that speech in January to negotiate with the opposition if they laid down their arms but he refused dialogue with "gangs recruited abroad" and his foes dismissed the offer out of hand as it did not mention Assad stepping down.

26 Apr, 2013


-
Source: http://english.alarabiya.net/en/News/middle-east/2013/04/25/Syria-says-backing-rebels-risks-new-attacks-on-America.html
--
Manage subscription | Powered by rssforward.com

Europol says terror attacks rising, warns on Mali and Syria

Thank you for using rssforward.com! This service has been made possible by all our customers. In order to provide a sustainable, best of the breed RSS to Email experience, we've chosen to keep this as a paid subscription service. If you are satisfied with your free trial, please sign-up today. Subscriptions without a plan would soon be removed. Thank you!

There has been 219 terror-related attacks in Europe last year in which 17 people died as a result, Europol says in its latest report. (AFP)

The number of terror attacks in Europe rose significantly last year, the continent's policing agency said Thursday, warning that conflicts in Syria and Mali provided potential breeding grounds for future militants.

In its latest "EU Terrorism and Trend Report," Europol said there had been 219 terror-related attacks in the 27-nation bloc last year in which 17 people died as a result.

"This and other findings in the report describe a threat from terrorism that remains strong and varied in Europe," said The Hague-based agency.

"The volatile situation in Mali also requires significant attention, as it offers a new theatre that may appear an attractive destination for those seeking to engage in armed conflict in support of religiously inspired insurgents," Europol said.

"These individuals may pose a threat on their return to the EU."

The same went for Syria, which saw a distinct rise in the number of EU citizens travelling to the country as jihadists to "fight alongside groups associated with religiously inspired terrorism."

"The full implications of increased participation of EU citizens are currently unclear but may have an impact on the future security situation in the EU," Europol said.
The EU's anti-terror chief Gilles de Kerckhove said in Brussels on Thursday that young Europeans were heading "in the hundreds" to Syria to fight, posing "a serious threat" to Europe's security.

The deadliest attacks in 2012 happened in France when Islamist gunman Mohammed Merah killed seven people in Toulouse and nearby Montauban in March.

In July, five Israeli tourists and a Bulgarian were killed in a bombing at the Black Sea Burgas airport which Sofia later pinned on Lebanese Shiite group Hezbollah.

The EU defines terrorism as "acts which aim to intimidate populations, compel states to comply with the perpetrator's demands and destabilize the fundamental political, constitutional, economic or social structures of a country or international organization."

25 Apr, 2013


-
Source: http://english.alarabiya.net/en/News/world/2013/04/25/Europol-says-terror-attacks-rising-warns-on-Mali-and-Syria-.html
--
Manage subscription | Powered by rssforward.com

Kurdish militants to begin withdrawal from Turkey in May

Thank you for using rssforward.com! This service has been made possible by all our customers. In order to provide a sustainable, best of the breed RSS to Email experience, we've chosen to keep this as a paid subscription service. If you are satisfied with your free trial, please sign-up today. Subscriptions without a plan would soon be removed. Thank you!

PKK fighters stand near the Qandil mountains near the Iraq-Turkish border. (Reuters)

Rebel Kurdishfield commander Murat Karayilan ordered his fighters to begin withdrawing from Turkish soil within two weeks and rebase in the mountains of northern Iraq as part of a peace plan with Ankarato end a three-decades-old conflict.

The pullout, negotiated by Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) chief Abdullah Ocalan jailed on a prison island near Istanbul, offers the best chance yet of settlement of a war that has killed over 40,000 and battered the Turkish economy.

"The withdrawal is planned to be done gradually in groups and targeted to be completed in the shortest possible time," Karayilan told a news conference in the PKK's mountain stronghold in the Qandil Mountains of northern Iraq.

The rebels are expected to move in groups of around half a dozen in a process monitored on the Turkish side by the MIT intelligence agency and across the border by the Kurdish regional government there.

Dressed in baggy olive green fatigues and flanked by other senior PKK rebels, Karayilan said the pullout beginning on May 8 would be halted and his fighters would retaliate if the Turkish army launched any kind of operation against them.

He said the third stage of a three-stage process, following withdrawal and constitutional reform to guarantee Kurdish rights, would be freedom for all PKK members including Ocalan, a step likely to be opposed by Turkish hardliners.

The third stage would be disarmament, something the Turkish government had said should precede the pullout. It was not clear how disarmament would be carried out and under whose supervision.

The Qandil Mountains have regularly been targeted by Turkish air strikes but the violence has dwindled since the PKK-designated a terrorist organization by the United States, European Union and Turkey - announced a ceasefire last month.

Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan has taken a huge political risk in allowing negotiations with the PKK despite fierce nationalist opposition before elections next year.

Karayilan's announcement bolsters a peace process launched six months ago, when jailed PKK leader Ocalan began talks withTurkish intelligence agents on his island prison near Istanbul.

The struggle has wrought huge human, social and economic damage in NATO member Turkey since the PKK took up arms in 1984 with the aim of carving out a Kurdish state in the southeast.That demand has now been reduced to one of greater autonomy.

The fighting has stunted development of the economy in the mainly Kurdish region, while tens of billions of dollars inmilitary spending has long burdened state coffers.

A peace settlement would also help Turkey's flagging effortsto join the European Union, improve its tarnished human rights record, and enhance its credibility as it seeks to extend influence in the energy-rich Kurdish region of northern Iraq andacross the Middle East.

Three-stage process

The withdrawal follows a call from Ocalan at the Kurdish newyear celebrations of Newroz on March 21 for the PKK to halt hostilities in preparation for their withdrawal to northern Iraq, where several thousand of them are based.

Karayilan disclosed details of what he said was a three-stage process.

He said the second stage after the withdrawal of PKK fighters related mainly to the "obligations of the state and the government," specifically the question of constitutional reform.

"It is vital that a constitution is created which ends the denial of the Kurdish people, accepts the existence and freedom of the Kurdish people and guarantees the rights and freedoms of all identities, beliefs and denominations," he said.

The third stage would involve an amnesty for fighters.

Since coming to power in 2002, Erdogan has extended rights to Kurds who make up 20 percent of Turkey's 76 million-strong population, breaking taboos deeply rooted in the conservative establishment, including allowing Kurdish television broadcasts and elective Kurdish language courses at state schools.

But his administration has also overseen the detention of thousands of Kurdish politicians and activists in recent years, while last summer saw the heaviest fighting in more than a decade with PKK militants.

PKK militants previously withdrew from Turkey in 1999 in response to a call from Ocalan, but hundreds of them were killed in clashes with Turkish security forces in the process.

Erdogan has said he guarantees there will be no repeat of such fighting but has said the rebels should disarm before heading for Iraq to remove the risk of firefights with Turkish forces.

26 Apr, 2013


-
Source: http://english.alarabiya.net/en/News/middle-east/2013/04/25/Kurdish-militants-to-begin-withdrawal-from-Turkey-in-May.html
--
Manage subscription | Powered by rssforward.com

U.S. says ‘chemical weapons were likely used against Syrian rebels’

Thank you for using rssforward.com! This service has been made possible by all our customers. In order to provide a sustainable, best of the breed RSS to Email experience, we've chosen to keep this as a paid subscription service. If you are satisfied with your free trial, please sign-up today. Subscriptions without a plan would soon be removed. Thank you!

U.S. says 'chemical weapons were likely used against Syrian rebels'

U.S. Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel first announced the assessment of the U.S. intelligence community that Damascus has used chemical weapons but on a small scale during a visit to Abu Dhabi. (Reuters)

The White House said Thursday that Syria had likely used chemical weapons against rebel forces on a "small scale," but emphasized U.S. spy agencies were still not 100 percent sure, AFP reported.

U.S. intelligence services had been investigating reports that Syrian President Bashar al-Assad's forces had used chemical arms -- a move Washington has said would cross a "red line," triggering possible military action.

U.S. Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel first announced the assessment during a visit to Abu Dhabi, saying the "decision to reach this conclusion was made within the past 24 hours."

"Our intelligence community does assess with varying degrees of confidence that the Syrian regime has used chemical weapons on a small scale in Syria, specifically the chemical agent sarin," National Security Council spokeswoman Caitlin Hayden said.

"Given the stakes involved, and what we have learned from our own recent experience, intelligence assessments alone are not sufficient," Hayden however cautioned.

The U.S. intelligence assessment is based "in part on physiological samples," the spokeswoman said, but she added the chain of custody was "not clear, so we cannot confirm how the exposure occurred and under what conditions."

"We do believe that any use of chemical weapons in Syria would very likely have originated with the Assad regime," a legislative aide to President Barack Obama, Miguel Rodriguez, wrote in a letter to U.S. lawmakers.

So far, U.S. intelligence indicates that "the Assad regime maintains custody of these weapons, and has demonstrated a willingness to escalate its horrific use of violence against the Syrian people," the letter said.

Meanwhile, the UK Foreign Office said that it has "limited but persuasive" evidence of chemical weapon use in Syria.

Earlier this week, an Israeli general in military intelligence alleged that Syria had used chemical agents more than once during the protracted civil war, which has left more than 70,000 people dead since it began in March 2011.

The general's comments came on the heels of similar assessments reported to the United Nations by France and Britain last month.

On March 20, during a historic visit to Israel, Obama said the use of such weapons would be a "grave and tragic" mistake on Assad's behalf and that it would be a "game changer."

If the allegations are confirmed, Obama -- who has sought to avoid any U.S. military role in the civil war -- would face increased pressure to intervene.

Asked if the intelligence assessment meant that Syria had passed the declared "red line," Hagel said that was a policy question and that his task was to provide the U.S. president with "options."

The use of chemical agents "violates every convention of warfare" and such arms are "uncontrollable deadly weapons" that most leaders view as being in a "different category," he added.

Hagel was speaking on the last stop of a tour of the Middle East with meetings in Israel, Jordan, Saudi Arabia, Egypt and the United Arab Emirates.
 

26 Apr, 2013


-
Source: http://english.alarabiya.net/en/News/middle-east/2013/04/25/U-S-says-chemical-weapons-were-likely-used-against-Syrian-rebels-.html
--
Manage subscription | Powered by rssforward.com

Warplanes hit rebels across Syria, watchdog says

Thank you for using rssforward.com! This service has been made possible by all our customers. In order to provide a sustainable, best of the breed RSS to Email experience, we've chosen to keep this as a paid subscription service. If you are satisfied with your free trial, please sign-up today. Subscriptions without a plan would soon be removed. Thank you!

A Sukhoi-22 fighter jet of the Syrian air force drops a 500lb freefall bomb over the rebel areas in Syria. (AFP)

Syrian warplanes launched air strikes on rebel enclaves across the country on Thursday, with at least 10 people killed in one raid on flashpoint town Qusayr near the Lebanon border, a watchdog said.

Areas of Damascus province, the northwestern province of Idlib, rebel-controlled Raqa in the north, Hasakeh in the northeast and Daraa in the south were also targeted, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said.

"The number killed in ongoing aerial bombardment of the town of Qusayr has risen to 10 men," it added.

Qusayr has in the past week become the focal point of Syria's spiraling war, and the opposition and a rights group say Lebanese Shiite movement Hezbollah has joined regular and militia fighters loyal to President Bashar al-Assad to try to crush the insurgency there.

Regime helicopters also strafed several targets in the Eastern Ghouta area, east of Damascus, a rebel stronghold and the scene of intense battles in past months.

Warplanes also struck Moadamiyet al-Sham and Daraya, southwest of the capital, where the army has battled rebels for several months.

Insurgents have used areas east and southwest of Damascus as rear bases and as gateways into the capital.

And in Hama in central Syria, fresh fighting broke out after insurgents took an army position in a significant move since the army considers the traditional opposition city to be a secure area.

The Observatory also reported fierce clashes pitting troops against rebels in the flashpoint Barzeh district of northern Damascus, which rebels have infiltrated from the east.

Elsewhere, warplanes struck Maaret al-Numan in Idlib province, as well as several villages in the Hasakeh and Daraa countryside.

In Raqa province, fighter jets struck an area near a sugar factory, and "fierce clashes pitting troops against rebels raged near army Base 17" near the provincial capital.

Rebels have had the base under siege for several weeks.

Although rebels have controlled the provincial capital Raqa since March, troops holed up in the base have managed to hold out.

According to a preliminary toll distributed by the Observatory, at least 49 people were killed in violence across Syria on Thursday.

26 Apr, 2013


-
Source: http://english.alarabiya.net/en/News/middle-east/2013/04/25/Warplanes-hit-rebels-across-Syria-watchdog-.html
--
Manage subscription | Powered by rssforward.com

Netanyahu says Lebanon drone incident ‘extremely grave’

Thank you for using rssforward.com! This service has been made possible by all our customers. In order to provide a sustainable, best of the breed RSS to Email experience, we've chosen to keep this as a paid subscription service. If you are satisfied with your free trial, please sign-up today. Subscriptions without a plan would soon be removed. Thank you!

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu describes a drone coming from Lebanon as an "extremely grave" incident. On Thursday Israel shot down the drone from Lebanon. (Reuters)

The Israeli air force on Thursday shot down an unmanned drone several miles off the coast of the northern port city of Haifa after it entered Israeli airspace from Lebanon, the military said.

"I view with great gravity this attempt to violate our border. We will continue to do what is necessary to defend the security of Israel's citizens," Reuters reported Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu as saying in a statement.

The military said the unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) was detected in Lebanese skies and intercepted by a F-16 fighter jet some five nautical miles (9 km) from the Israeli port city of Haifa.

The Israeli navy was searching for the wreckage in the sea.

It is the second known instance in which the Lebanese militant group, a bitter Israeli enemy, has sent a drone into Israeli airspace. Last October, the Israeli air force shot down an unmanned aircraft in a similar incident.

Israel and Hezbollah fought a month-long war in 2006 that ended in a stalemate.

Netanyahu has recently warned that Hezbollah might try to take advantage of the instability in neighboring Syria to obtain what he calls game-changing weapons.

25 Apr, 2013


-
Source: http://english.alarabiya.net/en/News/middle-east/2013/04/25/Israeli-military-Tel-Aviv-shoots-down-drone-from-Lebanon-.html
--
Manage subscription | Powered by rssforward.com

Fàbregas, Lebanese girlfriend in legal battle with ex-husband

Thank you for using rssforward.com! This service has been made possible by all our customers. In order to provide a sustainable, best of the breed RSS to Email experience, we've chosen to keep this as a paid subscription service. If you are satisfied with your free trial, please sign-up today. Subscriptions without a plan would soon be removed. Thank you!

The former Arsenal captain and the mother of his child, Daniella Semaan, are involved in a property battle with her former husband, Elie Taktouk. (Al Arabiya)

A love triangle, featuring World Cup winning footballer Cesc Fàbregas, his Lebanese girlfriend and her disgruntled ex-husband, came to light at a London Court of Appeal this week, reported the Times on Thursday.

The former Arsenal captain and the mother of his child, Daniella Semaan, are involved in a property battle with her former husband, Elie Taktouk.

The former couple divorced last year, months after photographs appeared in the media showing her on holiday in Italy with Fàbregas.

The two opposing parties are clashing over a multi-million pound flat in the area of Belgravia, Central London.

As part of their divorce, a judge ruled that the £7 million ($10,807,300) flat should be sold. £1.4 million was ordered to be set aside from the proceeds to allow Semaan to buy a new property.

The proceedings encountered an unexpected twist when a company, controlled by Fàbregas, put in a £5.4 million bid to buy the flat.

Tartouk claims the bid is part of a plot to allow his former wife to retain the apartment while banking a profit of almost £1.5 million, according to The Times.

Stephen Lyon, a barrister working on behalf of Taktouk, told the Court of Appeal that Mr. Justice Coleridge, a senior judge, would have made a different ruling regarding the apartment had he known Fàbregas's property plans.

"We say it is rather extraordinary that, less than three weeks after judgment was handed down, through his company in Barcelona, he was offering to purchase [the flat]," said Lyon.

Lord Justice Jackson, the appeal court judge, said Wednesday that he had denied Taktouk's right to appeal.

"Even if the company controlled by Mr. Fàbregas buys the former matrimonial home, this will still not be a property which the wife owns," he said. "She will live there only by the permission of Mr. Fàbregas."

25 Apr, 2013


-
Source: http://english.alarabiya.net/en/News/world/2013/04/25/F-bregas-Lebanese-girlfriend-in-legal-battle-with-ex-husband.html
--
Manage subscription | Powered by rssforward.com

Cross-dressing Kurdish men champion women’s rights

Thank you for using rssforward.com! This service has been made possible by all our customers. In order to provide a sustainable, best of the breed RSS to Email experience, we've chosen to keep this as a paid subscription service. If you are satisfied with your free trial, please sign-up today. Subscriptions without a plan would soon be removed. Thank you!

More than 150 photos have been uploaded depicting men donning female garments such as traditional dresses, veils and scarves. (Courtesy: Facebook)

Iranian men from the country's Kurdish community are championing women's rights in a rather peculiar fashion, by dressing in women's clothes.

The photos of the cross-dressed men are posted online via social networking websites in a bid to honor women, reported The Independent on Wednesday.

With more than 7,000 Facebook likes, the group, known as The Kurd Men for Equality, is making their message known.

More than 150 photos have been uploaded depicting men donning female garments such as traditional dresses, veils and scarves.

The campaign was launched following the closure of a high profile domestic abuse case in Iran.

A man accused of harming his wife was sentenced, by the prevailing judge, to walk the streets of a city in the north-western Marivan region of Iran, dressed in women's clothes.

The punishment was deemed misogynistic by feminists in the country, according to The Independent. 17 Iranian MPs wrote to the justice ministry decrying the ruling

25 Apr, 2013


-
Source: http://english.alarabiya.net/en/News/middle-east/2013/04/25/Cross-dressing-Kurdish-men-champion-women-s-rights-.html
--
Manage subscription | Powered by rssforward.com

White Muslim convert faces prison after terrorism charge

Thirty-year-old Richard Dart planned to attack the small town of Royal Wootton Bassett. (Reuters)

A white British male who converted to Islam was sentenced to jail early Thursday after he pleaded guilty to taking part in planning terror attacks on the heads of MI5 and MI6.

According to The Times newspaper, Thirty-year-old Richard Dart, who is "entirely committed to acts of terrorism," also planned to attack the small town of Royal Wootton Bassett.

He will be sentenced to jail at the Old Bailey after admitting his intention to perpetrate a mass-killing and his intention to travel to Pakistan to receive the necessary training.

Dart is on trial with his two team members, Imran Mahmood, 22, and former Metropolitan Police community support officer, Jahangir Alom, 26.

Mahmood and Alom will also be sentenced after pleading guilty to preparing for an act of terrorism, reported The Times on Thursday.

As part of their "commitment to fighting Jihad," Dart and Alom had planned to travel to Pakistan to receive terrorist training but were stopped by airport police in Nov. 2011.

They were not, however, arrested until July 2012.

Mahmood, who previously obtained training from Pakistan, acted as an advisor to Alom and Dart.


Queen's Council for the prosecution, Jonathan Laidlaw, said Dart and Mahmood, to avoid surveillance, carried out "silent conversations" by typing into a Microsoft Word document and deleting the conversation. However, the text was recovered by Scotland Yard detectives.

One of the written exchanges that was recovered read: "If it comes down to this, it is that or even to just deal with a few MI5 or MI6 heads."

The court has obtained information that a fourth British national, Mohammed Tariq Nasar, who allegedly aided Dart in planning the attacks, is still on the loose.

25 Apr, 2013


-
Source: http://english.alarabiya.net/en/News/world/2013/04/25/White-Muslim-convert-faces-prison-after-terrorism-charge.html
--
Manage subscription | Powered by rssforward.com

Afghan quake and floods kill 38

An earthquake centred in Afghanistan's east killed at least four people and injured almost 70. (Reuters)

A powerful earthquake and flash floods which struck Afghanistan this week killed at least 38 people and damaged hundreds of homes, the presidential palace said Thursday, offering aid to victims.

Wednesday's quake killed 17 and injured 126 in the eastern province of Nangarhar while 300 homes were damaged, a statement said. In neighboring Kunar province, one person was killed, four injured and 45 homes damaged.

The continuing flash floods in the northern province of Balkh have killed 20 and damaged 1,900 houses, it said.

Floods had also cost lives and damaged property in Ghor and Baghlan provinces, the statement said without giving any figures. President Hamid Karzai had ordered emergency help for victims, it added.

The quake centered in Nangarhar caused widespread damage in some villages because most of the houses are built of mud. Provincial government spokesman Ahmad Zia Abdulzai put the death toll there at 16 but said it may rise.

At an emergency meeting Thursday, the private sector and relief agencies agreed to provide emergency aid and the central government also offered assistance, he said.

Mud-built homes were also no match for raging floodwaters in Balkh.

"The badly affected areas are impoverished villages where most of the homes are mud-built and can be easily damaged when floods come," said provincial government spokesman Munir Ahmad Farhad on Wednesday.

25 Apr, 2013


-
Source: http://english.alarabiya.net/en/News/asia/2013/04/25/Afghan-quake-and-floods-kill-38-.html
--
Manage subscription | Powered by rssforward.com

Iraqi PM calls for dialogue, warns of attempts to spark new sectarian war

Maliki has slammed opposition calls to boycott the parliamentary elections in remarks broadcast on state television. (AFP)

Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki warned on Thursday of attempts to return the country to "sectarian civil war," as a wave of violence killed more than 140 people over three days.

Maliki called on clerics, and everyone worried about Iraq's future, "to take the initiative, and not be silent about those who want to take the country back to sectarian civil war," in remarks broadcast on state television.

Terrorism and al-Qaeda are Iraq's major enemies, Maliki said, urging all citizens to unite to face the threat.

Maliki said that the most dangerous thing to do during the current crisis is to leave the situation in the hands of those who stir up conflict and plan exploit the situation.

In the same vein, Maliki has slammed opposition calls to boycott the provincial elections.

"Demands will be met through dialogue," Maliki said. "What can be achieved through dialogue can never be achieved with terrorism."

"If a sectarian conflict stirs up in the country, there will be no winner; everyone will be a loser," Maliki added.

25 Apr, 2013


-
Source: http://english.alarabiya.net/en/News/middle-east/2013/04/25/Iraqi-PM-calls-for-dialogue-warns-of-attempts-to-spark-new-sectarian-war-.html
--
Manage subscription | Powered by rssforward.com

Aid workers set up camps for victims of Nigeria carnage

Borno State Governor Kashim Shettima (C) visits injured victims of heavy fighting at a hospital in Baga, in this April 21, 2013 handout photo. (Reuters)

Nigeria rescue workers set up temporary camps in a remote northeast town on Thursday and distributed aid to the masses displaced by brutal fighting that left 187 people dead.

The bloodshed in the town of Baga near Lake Chad last Friday likely marked the deadliest-ever episode in the insurgency of Boko Haram, a radical group which has said it wants to create an Islamic state in northern Nigeria.

The military has been accused of firing indiscriminately on civilians and setting fire to nearly half the town, but Nigeria's defense ministry has fiercely denied those charges.

"Our team has set up 10 camps for displaced people," said the spokesman for the National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA), Manzo Ezekiel.

"Definitely thousands of people have been displaced, but as for now we cannot give the precise number," he added.

The NEMA team includes medics to care for the injured, while food and clothing is also being distributed to the town which was the site of "barbaric" violence, area Governor Kashim Shettima said.

"If there is need, we are going to re-enforce immediately," the NEMA spokesman told AFP, noting that the devastation in Baga was still hard to quantify, nearly a week after the fighting.

Baga falls in Borno state, considered Boko Haram's home base, but the town had not previously seen such intense fighting.

The Islamist group has used Borno's capital as a base, but many of the insurgents have fled to more remote corners of the state following crackdowns by the security forces in the capital.

There are conflicting reports about what happened in Baga, with the military having described it as a typical encounter with Boko Haram, similar to those seen across northern and central Nigeria since the insurgency started in 2009.

But residents and local officials have said that after gun battles with the Islamists began, soldiers went on a rampage, firing on civilians while torching homes and a market.

Nigeria's security forces have previously been accused by leading rights groups of widespread atrocities, including summary executions, but the scale of the reported carnage in Baga is unprecedented.

The Red Cross has said that 187 people were killed, while the military has countered with a figure of 37.

The conflict with Boko Haram has killed more than 3,000 people since 2009, including deaths caused by the security forces.

The violence continued overnight Thursday, when suspected Boko Haram gunmen stormed a military post and two police stations in the northeastern town of Gashua.

The security forces returned fire, sparking a battle that killed two police and five insurgents, military spokesman in Yobe state Eli Lazarus said in a statement.

The northern half of Nigeria, Africa's most populous country, is mainly Muslim, while the south if predominately Christian.


 

25 Apr, 2013


-
Source: http://english.alarabiya.net/en/News/africa/2013/04/25/Aid-workers-set-up-camps-for-victims-of-Nigeria-carnage-.html
--
Manage subscription | Powered by rssforward.com

Pro-Assad hackers infiltrate The Associated Press, cause chaos

On its official webpage, the SEA asks supporters of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad to stand up against the "fabrication" of events happening on ground in the war-torn country. (snapshot of SEA's website)

The fake news of explosions at the White House, which was recently tweeted from The Associated Press' Twitter account, appears to be "the latest and most conspicuous cyber-attack" by the pro-Assad cyber army, The Telegraph reported on Wednesday.

Last week, pro-Assad hackers infiltrated The Associated Press' official twitter account and tweeted a fake alert that read: "Breaking: Two Explosions in the White House and Barack Obama is injured."

The tweet caused chaos on the U.S. stock exchange, briefly wiping out $136.5 billion and leaving AP's Twitter feeds suspended for a short period of time.

More hacking incidents were reported by the Syrian Electronic Army (SEA) last week. Several accounts were targeted, including CBS's Twitter page, the 60 Minutes TV show, NPR Radio and FIFA.

In March, the BBC's weather feed was attacked and bogus tweets were released regarding western support for Syrian opposition fighters.

Both the BBC and The Associated Press say "the SEA used fairly simple but well executed 'phishing' attacks via emails which encourage recipients to click on a link in order to access their password," the Telegraph reported.

On its official webpage, available in both Arabic and English, the SEA asks supporters of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad to stand up against the "fabrication" of events happening on ground in the war-torn country.

"Contribute with us in supporting the cause of the Syrian Arab people by armaments, with science and knowledge, against the campaigns led by the Arab media and Western media on our Republic by broadcasting fabricated news about what is happening in Syria," says the message written on the SEA's main webpage.

"We are a group of enthusiastic Syrian youths who could not stay passive towards the massive distortion of facts about the recent uprising in Syria, and this distortion is carried out by many Facebook pages that deliberately work to spread hatred and sectarian intolerance between the peoples of Syria to fuel the uprising," a mission statement on the group's website adds.
 

25 Apr, 2013


-
Source: http://english.alarabiya.net/en/News/world/2013/04/25/Pro-Assad-hackers-infiltrate-The-Associated-Press-cause-chaos-.html
--
Manage subscription | Powered by rssforward.com

Watchdog reports Syria air strikes near Damascus

People search for survivors among the rubble of an area, damaged by what activists say was a missile attack from the Syrian regime, in Raqqa province, east Syria April 25, 2013. (Reuters)

Syria's air force carried out air strikes on rebel enclaves near Damascus on Thursday, while clashes pitted rebels against troops in the north of the capital, a monitoring group said.

Warplanes also struck villages in the northwestern province of Idlib, rebel-controlled Raqa in the north, Hasake in the northeast and Daraa in the south, said the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.

Helicopters, meanwhile, strafed several targets in the Eastern Ghouta area, east of Damascus, a rebel stronghold and scene of intense battles in past months.

Thursday's violence comes a day after an army takeover of the town of Otaybeh, east of Damascus, which the Observatory said "opens the gate for the army into the Eastern Ghouta area".

Warplanes also struck Moadamiyet al-Sham and Daraya, southwest of Damascus, where the army has for several months tried to crush the insurgency.

Rebels have used areas east and southwest of Damascus as rear bases and as gateways into the capital.

The Observatory also reported fierce clashes pitting troops against rebels in the flashpoint Barzeh district of northern Damascus, which rebels have infiltrated from the east.

Elsewhere, warplanes struck Maaret al-Numan in Idlib province, as well as several villages in the Hasake and Daraa countryside.

In Raqa province, fighter jets struck an area near a sugar factory, while "fierce clashes pitting troops against rebels raged near army Base 17", near the provincial capital.

Rebels have had the base under siege for several weeks.

Although rebels have controlled the provincial capital Raqa since March, troops holed up in the base have held out.

On Wednesday, at least 138 people were killed in violence across Syria, the Observatory said. Among them were 44 civilians, 59 rebels and 35 troops.

25 Apr, 2013


-
Source: http://english.alarabiya.net/en/News/middle-east/2013/04/25/Watchdog-reports-Syria-air-strikes-near-Damascus-.html
--
Manage subscription | Powered by rssforward.com

Iran’s unlikely al-Qaeda ties: fluid, murky and deteriorating

Shi'ite Muslim Iran and strict Sunni militant group al Qaeda are natural enemies on either side of the Muslim world's great sectarian divide. (Reuters)

When al Qaeda leader Ayman al-Zawahiri spoke in an audio message broadcast to supporters earlier this month, he had harsh words for Iran. Its true face, he said, had been unmasked by its support for Syrian President Bashar al-Assad against fighters loyal to al Qaeda.

Yet it is symptomatic of the peculiar relationship between Tehran and al Qaeda that in the same month Canadian police would accuse "al Qaeda elements in Iran" of backing a plot to derail a passenger train.

Shi'ite Muslim Iran and strict Sunni militant group al Qaeda are natural enemies on either side of the Muslim world's great sectarian divide.

Yet intelligence veterans say that Iran, in pursuing its own ends, has in the past taken advantage of al Qaeda fighters' need to shelter or pass through its territory. It is a murky relationship that has been fluid and, some say in the intelligence community, has deteriorated in recent years.

"I wouldn't even call it a marriage of convenience. It's an association of convenience," said Richard Barrett, former head of counter-terrorism for Britain's MI6 Secret Intelligence Service and later head of the U.N. Security Council's monitoring team maintaining the world body's al Qaeda and Taliban sanctions blacklists.

"It's not a strategic alliance. An al Qaeda presence may suit the Iranians because it allows them to keep an eye on them, it gives them leverage in the form of people who are akin to hostages," he added.

"There has been a lot of travel between Iraq and Pakistan and I cannot imagine the Iranians are not aware of that," he said. But it was unlikely that Iran would take the risk of actively collaborating with al Qaeda against North America: "I don't think the Iranians would take it kindly if it turned out that there had been plotting by al Qaeda on their territory."

Canadian police have said there was no sign the plot had been sponsored by the Iranian state. Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman Ramin Mehmanparast said al Qaeda's beliefs were in no way consistent with Tehran's.

As yet, many details of the alleged plot remain unclear. However, a U.S. government source cited a network of al Qaeda fixers based in the Iranian city of Zahedan, close to the borders of both Pakistan and Afghanistan.

The source said they served as go-betweens, travel agents and financial intermediaries for al Qaeda operatives and cells operating in Pakistan and moving through the area.

Another Western source suggested that with relations deteriorating between Iran and al Qaeda over the civil war in Syria, Tehran had acted recently to stop fighters crossing through from Pakistan's Federally Administered Tribal Areas(FATA) to join Islamist militants fighting to overthrow Assad.

"Although the relationship between Iran and Al Qaeda has always been strained, this worsened after 2011 when the two sides lined up on opposite sides in the Syrian civil war," said Shashank Joshi, a researcher at the Royal United Services Institute think-tank in London.

"Syria's strongest rebel group is allied to Al Qaeda, and both have sharply criticized Iranian support for the Assad regime."

It is unclear whether the planning for the alleged Canadian plot, which Canadian police said had been in the works for some time, was carried out before Syria's war deepened the strain between Tehran and al Qaeda.

"There has been a loosening of the ties," said Barrett, noting that documents released after U.S. forces caught and killed Osama bin Laden in Pakistan in 2011 showed the al Qaeda leader saying he was not able to trust the Iranians at all.

"Since then we have Zawahri castigating Iran quite recently. So clearly something had gone wrong."

Iranian control far from clear


If indeed the al Qaeda network was based in and around Zahedan - which lies on the main road to Pakistan and is the capital of Sistan-Baluchestan province - it is far from clear how easy it would be for Iran to control.

The region is home to a toxic mix of drug smuggling, illicit trade and gun-running by insurgents. Afghan refugees long ago crowded into poor neighborhoods on the outskirts of Zahedan, although Iran, like Pakistan, periodically tries to push them out, arguing they are a security risk.

Iranian authorities have also been battling a Sunni urgency of their own in recent years by ethnic Baloch complaining of discrimination. The Jundollah group has claimed several attacks including a bombing that killed 42 people in2009 - there is no sign it is linked to al Qaeda, though it is often confused with a Pakistan-based group of the same name.

At the same time, on the Pakistan side of the border, Pakistani security forces are fighting an insurgency by secular Baloch separatists, while al-Qaeda linked militants in the Sunni sectarian Lashkar-e-Jhangvi group have carried out a string of attacks against the Shi'ite population there.


Pragmatic approach


Despite a common Western misconception that Iran, as the pre-eminent Shi'ite power, is motivated by religion, it has always been much more pragmatic in pursuing its national interest, analysts and diplomats say, allowing it to turn a blind eye to Sunni al Qaeda using its territory.

"The thing that has stymied people is that 'al Qaeda is Sunni and the rest of the people we are talking about here are Shia. They don't mix and match.' Well, they do. And they do it whenever they want to. They just look the other way," said Nick Pratt, a retired U.S. Marines colonel and CIA officer now with the George C. Marshall European Center for Security Studies.

Before the U.S.-led invasion of Afghanistan in 2001, Iran cooperated with India and Russia against the Pakistan-backed Taliban then in power in Kabul. When al Qaeda members fled Afghanistan after the overthrow of the Taliban, it detained them under house arrest in Tehran.

"Since 9/11 a number of senior al Qaeda figures including one of Osama bin Laden's sons and senior commander and strategist Saif al Adel made their way to Iran," said Nigel Inkster, former director of operations for Britain's MI6.

"They were detained under quite strict conditions by the Iranian authorities who subsequently sought to use them as a bargaining chip with the US government in their ongoing dispute about Iran's nuclear program," added Inkster, who is now director of Transnational Threats and Political Risk at the International Institute for Strategic Studies.

Vahid Brown, a U.S.-based researcher who has written extensively on al Qaeda, said in an article on the Jihadica website earlier this year that the men who fled to Iran constituted a dissident faction within al Qaeda, which in recent years had become increasingly vocal in their criticism of bin Laden and Zawahiri.

Divided by their views on the advisability of the Sept. 11,2001 attacks on the United States, broadly speaking, "thepro-9/11 group, including bin Laden and Zawahiri, fled to Pakistan, while the anti-9/11 group ended up in Iran, where they were placed under house arrest by Iranian authorities," he wrote.

Iran had been willing to cooperate with the United States on Afghanistan initially, but relations soured after Tehran was denounced by then President George W. Bush as part of the "axis of evil" in 2002 and worsened further after the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq in 2003.

Later, analysts say, Tehran allowed al Qaeda members - among them al Qaeda in Iraq leader Abu Musab al-Zarqawi - to transit through Iran.

But Iran has been vulnerable to al Qaeda as well. After one of its diplomats was kidnapped in Pakistan some years ago it released some of the al Qaeda members it had under house arrest in exchange for his freedom, according to Pakistani media reports.

"About 18 months ago the Iranians released most if not allof those they were holding, for reasons still not entirely clear," said Inkster.

"There may well be a residual AQ presence in Iran though I would be cautious about presenting it as something very structured or hierarchic," he added.

"AQ is far from being the organization it once was and what matters more are relationships between like-minded individuals. And that may well be what we are seeing in the Canada case. There seems to be no evidence of Iranian official involvement."

25 Apr, 2013


-
Source: http://english.alarabiya.net/en/News/middle-east/2013/04/25/Iran-s-unlikely-al-Qaeda-ties-fluid-murky-and-deteriorating.html
--
Manage subscription | Powered by rssforward.com

Iraqi official says Hawija incident harms army’s image

Suleiman al-Gamili, head of the Iraqi list said the Kirkuk incident places the military in a state confrontation with Iraq's people. (Al Arabiya)

The head of the Iraqi list, a parliamentary bloc, has criticized the government's decision to involve the army in the anti-government protest in Hawija, near Kirkuk.

Suleiman al-Gamili continued by saying the incident placed the military in a state confrontation with Iraq's people.

Dozens of people were killed and injured when Iraqi security forces stormed a Sunni Muslim anti-government protest camp in Hawija on Tuesday.

Gamili told Al Arabiya that all that was required was the arrests of two, three or even ten people, but instead, hundreds were killed and injured.

He added that what happened in Hawija has engaged the country in a heated debate and as a result, the "army has become the enemy in the eyes of the Iraqi people."

Meanwhile, Abdul Ghafour al-Samarraie, head of Iraq's Sunni Religious Endowment, held a joint press conference with head of Iraq's Shiite Endowment, Sayyed Saleh al-Heidari. Both called for putting an end to strife between Sunnis and Shiites in the country, particularly following Tuesday's events.

Violence erupts in Iraq's Kirkuk

Samarraie and Heidari also called on Iraqi leaders to attend a meeting in a mosque on Friday, hosted by the Sunni and Shiite Endowment, in order to discuss the country's political crises.

In other news, armed men seized control of the Suleiman Beik area which lies on the road between Baghdad and Kurdistan, following clashes with the Iraqi army, officials said.

The armed men kicked out security forces from the area and seized army equipment, officials also said, adding that the strategic road between Baghdad and Kurdistan is now closed as a result.

At least 110 people have been killed in Iraq since clashes broke out on Tuesday between security forces and gunmen following the raid on the Hawija camp.

25 Apr, 2013


-
Source: http://english.alarabiya.net/en/News/middle-east/2013/04/25/Iraqi-official-says-Hawija-incident-harms-army-s-image.html
--
Manage subscription | Powered by rssforward.com

U.N. to authorize Mali peacekeeping force

U.N. to authorize Mali peacekeeping force

French troops stand at attention during a handover ceremony of the Timbuktu mission from France to Burkina Faso at Timbuktu airport April 23, 2013. (Reuters)

The U.N. Security Council is set to adopt a resolution Thursday creating a peacekeeping mission in Mali, to take over from French and African forces in the conflict-torn north.

The force would be deployed July 1, for an initial period of 12 months, pending a Security Council ruling that the conflict has eased enough to allow the deployment.

Over the next 60 days, the council will decide if there has been a "cessation of major combat operations by international military forces" and "a significant reduction in the capacity of terrorist forces to pose a major threat" in order for the U.N. to launch its mission.

If not, the deployment will be delayed.

Mali's army launched a coup in March, 2012 which unleashed the chaos that allowed Tuareg rebels and their erstwhile Islamist allies to take over the northern third of the country and impose brutal Islamic rule.

French troops entered Mali in January after the government appealed for help to halt an advance by Islamist fighters on the capital.

French and Chadian forces drove the militants out of cities in northern Mali but now face a guerrilla campaign.

The operation presents "a challenge" for the U.N., emphasized one diplomat. "It is unusual to launch a peacekeeping mission before there is a peace to keep."

In a report in which he proposed the creation of the force, U.N. chief Ban Ki-moon noted the mission in Mali would face "significant threats," including "terrorist groups and tactics, the proliferation of weapons, improvised explosive devices, unexploded ordnance and landmines."

The U.N. resolution authorizes France to intervene if the U.N. troops are "under imminent and serious threat and at the demand" of U.N. chief Ban Ki-moon.

The French government has said it will keep around 1,000 troops in Mali, drawing down from the 3,850 currently on the ground by the end of the year. At its peak, the French deployment reached nearly 4,500 soldiers. France also has troops at bases in Senegal, Ivory Coast and Chad.

The proposed U.N. Multidimensional Integrated Stabilization Mission in Mali, to be known by its French acronym MINUSMA, would have a maximum of 11,200 soldiers and 1,440 police, "including reserve battalions capable of deploying rapidly within the country as and when required."

The core of the force will come from African troops already in the country: around 6,300 soldiers currently, from some 10 ECOWAS countries and Chad deployed in the capital Bamako and the north.

Its mission will not include fighting "terrorist forces," but will be "to stabilize the key population centers, especially in the north" and "to prevent the return of armed elements to those areas," according to the resolution.

The peacekeepers will help to retrain Malian security forces and will also play a key role in political efforts to rebuild the enfeebled Malian state.

They will help Malian transitional authorities organize "inclusive, free, fair and transparent" presidential and legislative elections and help start "an inclusive national dialogue and reconciliation process." A special representative for Mali will be named to direct the mission.

The U.N. will have to help overcome deep mistrust between the Bamako government and Tuareg and Arab minorities. The international community is also concerned about the lingering influence of the Mali coup leaders over the transitional government.

It will take months for MINUSMA to reach full strength, explained another diplomat: the number should be around 6,000 troops on July 1 and increase as the French contingent draws down.

Around 150 French soldiers will participate in MINUSMA, including commanding officers. According to one expert, the mission is expected to cost several hundred million dollars a year at full strength.


 

25 Apr, 2013


-
Source: http://english.alarabiya.net/en/News/africa/2013/04/25/U-N-to-authorize-Mali-peacekeeping-force-.html
--
Manage subscription | Powered by rssforward.com

عداد الزوار


المتواجدين بالموقع الان

Twitter Delicious Facebook Digg Stumbleupon Favorites More